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    King's Blades 03 - Sky of Swords

    Page 8
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      day after ... allow one day for each house

      to debate. ... Probably they would move right

      after that, before foreign governments could lodge

      protests.

      "Five days!" she told Winter. "In

      five more days they'll come for me and cut off my

      head!"

      "Over my dead body," Dog said.

      She hit the far door with a bruising crash and

      turned around to scream at the apparition--not

      madness! Not that! She was not going to go crazy like

      her mother--

      He caught her in his arms and ended the

      scream before it properly got started. He had

      sounded like Dog. His kiss tasted like Dog's.

      He hugged like Dog. He smelled like Dog.

      He was much lumpier than she remembered Dog;

      under his peculiarly flimsy cloak he seemed

      to be studded with a variety of odd packages and

      hung about with a coil of rope--but he was Dog.

      Eventually they came apart one finger width.

      "You're all bones!" he growled.

      "You're all sharp edges." They kissed again.

      "You're trembling."

      "You're real! It's really you. Not a

      prisoner too?"

      "Hope not. Brought you this." He fumbled under his

      cloak and pulled out something that had once been a

      flower. It was badly mangled and smelled more of

      him than of rose; she could not see it in the dark,

      but she did not need to. She choked on tears.

      "Oh, Dog, Dog, Dog darling! No one

      has ever given me anything more welcome."

      "Better go now. Finish this later. What's

      outside?"

      "Just a walkway."

      He grunted. "How far are we from

      Rivergate?"

      "Right above it. The walkway is, I mean."

      He made a pleased sound. "Couldn't be

      better. Let's try that."

      "But--"

      He eased her aside, although she wanted to cling

      to him like ivy. He did something to the lock, and it

      clicked.

      "Golden Key?" Her voice was lost in the

      squeak of the hinges. Of course there had to be

      enchantment involved when a rescuer appeared like this.

      It was not illusion! It was really Dog! "They

      have White Sisters!" That use of spiritual power

      might have been detected.

      "Didn't meet any." Dog strode out and

      stopped to survey the iron bars overhead. Even

      as he did so, the moon fled behind a silver-edged

      cloud, leaving him in starlight. The wind ruffled his

      cloak, his hair shone like milk. "Was afraid

      ... might have to kill some. Where does that other

      door lead?"

      "Don't know." She was staying very close,

      unable to keep her hands off him. "The

      Rivergate's just below us." And if that conjurement

      he had just used had been detected, then the

      Yeomen would be on their way already. Tower

      windows overlooked this walkway.

      He pulled off the lumpy cloak and the coil of

      rope he wore over his shoulder, dropping them

      both. He jumped, caught hold, went up,

      swinging his boots up to hook in the bars farther

      along. He clung there like a bat, face up and

      back down, with Sword dangling below him like an

      icicle. He grunted, came down again. "Any

      of these bars loose? Rusted? Need to move two,

      maybe three."

      Her mind was muddled by shock. She could think of

      nothing except DogDogDog ... loose,

      rusted? "Along here," she said, and took his hand--

      that big, hard, familiar hand--to lead him to the far

      end, where water dripped off the other tower and moss

      had crumbled the mortar. "Try here. I'll get

      the chair."

      The moon peered out cautiously, just enough to give

      her a shadow as she ran to her cell and hurried

      back with the chair. Dog stood on it, peered,

      fingered. Then he said, "Stand clear!" and went up

      again. The moon vanished as if it disapproved,

      leaving him only a dark shape against the shining

      clouds. He grunted. She realized he was

      trying to pry bars loose, pulling with hands, pushing

      with feet. In a moment he came down and rubbed his

      hands, muttering angrily under his breath.

      "It can't be done!" she said. "We'll have

      to leave the way you came. Let's go, love!

      Let's hurry, not waste time here."

      "I would if I thought you could use the cloak.

      Here." He lifted his baldric over his head and

      handed her Sword in its scabbard. "Keep this

      handy." He went up again to try another place.

      "Must have been given these muscles for a reason

      ... ah!" Something scraped, metal on stone.

      She hugged herself, shivering, wishing she had her

      blanket but terrified to go and leave him again in

      case he vanished like a bubble. Besides, she was

      guarding Sword. Somewhere in the distance men's

      voices spoke loudly in the still of the night. Not

      shouting, not raising an alarm. Probably just

      changing the guard. Another bar scraped ...

      Escape, escape, escape ... It

      might have taken half an hour. It felt like

      years. At the end of it, Dog stood upright

      to catch his breath, rubbing one bleeding hand on his

      cloak and hugging her to him with his other arm. He had

      pulled two bars completely out, but they were not

      adjacent. He had loosened several

      others at one end only and bent them down, but he

      had not yet made a hole large enough for an

      escape.

      "Need more light," he muttered, and kissed her

      again. "They've been starving you," he mumbled when

      they broke loose.

      "Not really. How did you get here?"

      "Walked in the gate. Followed them when they

      took you back to your cell. We weren't certain

      where you were being held, see?"

      "This is conjuration!"

      "The cloak is. It's a Dark Chamber

      secret, but the College has copied it. ...

      Lothaire stole one for us ... not really

      invisibility, just unimportance. You knew I was

      there and paid no attention."

      "I was sure I was seeing a man-at-arms."

      "It does that." He hugged her tighter.

      "I'd put it on you and send you out, but it

      doesn't work for smart people. Ah!"

      The light was brightening as the moon headed

      bravely for a wide expanse of black sea between

      cloud islands. Dog knelt to fumble through the

      cloak.

      "Got more tricks in here ... You're sure

      we're right over the Rivergate?"

      She nodded, then said, "Yes."

      "Going to send a signal ... Got a boat

      standing by, but the Yeomen may get here first.

      I'll lower you on the rope to the dock. Do

      whatever I say, no arguing. Ready?"

      "Yes. Oh, I love you!" She kissed

      him, but he cut it off.

      "And me you." He stepped up on the chair and

      reached out through the bars. He must have thrown something

      down to the dock, because a moment later a

      brilliant flash lit the towers overhead. A

      ball of white fire s
    ailed up from the landing into the

      sky, brightening the entire Bastion before it faded and

      disappeared.

      Dog grabbed Sword from her hands, unsheathed

      it, and repeated, "Stand back!" Then he swung

      it against one of the bars he had bent down.

      Clang! Clang! Like a woodsman loping

      branches, he chopped iron, abusing that

      magnificent weapon, treating it like an ax.

      Clang! Clang! Clang! After the third

      blow there was a quieter ring as the bar broke off and

      hit the flagstones. But the racket must have been

      audible all over Grandon; and voices

      were raised now, candles flickering in windows,

      sounds of men running. Then a drum, rousing the

      Watch. Clang! Clang! Ring. Another

      bar fell.

      "There!" Panting, Dog dropped Sword and

      grabbed Malinda in both hands. He almost threw

      her up through the gap he had made. Voices high

      overhead showed they had been seen. She felt her

      dress tear on a jagged end, found a purchase,

      doubled over on the ladder to haul herself up, and

      Dog transferred his grip to her feet, pushing

      her. She scrambled onto the bars and rolled to the

      flat top of the outer wall, which was four or five

      feet thick. She turned to help Dog and a

      coil of rope was thrust in her face. Then

      Sword in its scabbard. Then Dog himself, who

      did not need help. Voices were shouting all

      around, the drum beating. She heard the hard

      thwack! of a crossbow, but could not tell where the

      quarrel went.

      "They're coming!" Dog said. "There, see?"

      Moonlight glimmered on a sail. Heeled

      over by the wind, a boat sped toward the landing

      stage, and it was the most beautiful thing she had ever

      seen. Thwack! again and now the clink! of the

      quarrel bouncing off stonework, much too close.

      "They're shooting at us!"

      "Let them," Dog said, looping rope around

      her, under her arms, knotting it. "Lucky to hit

      a tower in this light. Got you. Go!"

      Trusting him, she stepped backward off the edge

      and began walking down the wall. The rope cut

      into her ribs. It was hard to keep herself away from the

      rugged, abrasive stonework--she had not realized

      how weak she was. Unexpectedly her feet

      met air and she swung free, striking her shins

      against the capstone of the Rivergate arch. Then she

      spun, banging a shoulder against iron-studded

      timbers as Dog lowered her the rest of the way.

      She landed in a heap at the base of the gate. The

      rope went slack. She freed herself and jumped

      up.

      The landing stage was a stone shelf along the base

      of the wall. It was closed off at the ends by the

      protruding towers and could be reached only from the

      Rivergate or the river itself. The tide was in,

      so waves slapped foul-smelling spray up

      onto the paving.

      Time had stopped. The boat was coming, but

      painfully slowly. It had seemed much

      closer when viewed from above. She could see

      faces, though, and light flashing off steel.

      Dog was visible against the clouds, climbing over

      the top of the wall, starting to work his way down the

      rope. Crossbows sang their death song,

      thwack! thwack! and the quarrels replied from the

      stones: clang! clang! Fortunately

      crossbows took time to reload. The archers were up

      in the towers, shooting, she supposed, at Dog.

      The great Rivergate itself was still closed but even as

      she stood up, a smaller postern beside it swung

      open and a Yeoman ducked through and straightened up.

      Moonlight flashed on the spike and blade of his

      pike. She turned to flee on legs that suddenly

      felt like reeds. A quarrel rang off flags

      at her feet.

      She came to the end of the quay, right under her

      cell, and there was nowhere left to go. She turned

      at bay. A dozen Yeomen had emerged now, and the

      leaders were on her already. A hand grabbed her arm.

      She tried to claw at the man's face and that

      wrist was seized, also, and twisted up behind her

      back.

      "Take the bitch back to her kennel!"

      They pushed her forward so she almost fell. That

      seemed like a good idea, so she let herself go

      limp, and as a result dropped to her knees.

      She screamed and went on screaming. She tried

      to kick, without much success.

      "Behave, bitch!" one said. The rest of the

      troop arrived and got in the way. The two

      holding her hauled her upright, took her by the

      arms, and began to run her back toward the gate.

      She screamed, yelled, tried in vain to struggle,

      but they kept her moving. Despite all her

      efforts, she was too weak even to slow them down.

      The boat caught an eddy of wind off the

      Bastion. The sail went limp, then rippled.

      Voices cursed. It rolled, momentarily

      helpless. Slowly it regained way, but it was not

      coming fast enough for the men on board to save her. Once

      she was through the postern, she would be lost. She was

      too weak; they were too many. They were at the gate.

      Feet stumbled on the unneeded coils of rope.

      She looked up. Dog had stopped halfway

      and had somehow turned over, so that he was looking

      down at her and the Yeomen. He had his feet against

      the wall and the rope over one shoulder; he was

      stretched out from the stonework like some bizarre

      gargoyle. As the two men holding her were

      about to push her in through the postern, he howled at the

      top of his lungs and let go. It was deliberate

      --he threw himself down on them. Several of the men

      were hurled to the ground, including one who was gripping

      her. She went with them in a tangle of limbs and

      bodies and pikes. A couple were flung into the

      river. There was shouting, screaming, confusion. As the

      boat swept in, a dozen swordsmen leapt

      across the gap, some falling on the stones, two in the

      water, the rest landing on their feet. Battle was

      joined--but briefly, because a Yeoman against a

      Blade was a very unequal struggle and the

      newcomers had the advantage of numbers.

      Malinda was not interested. She was on the ground,

      tending to Dog. Blood was jetting from his chest, a

      black fountain in the moonlight. His eyes were

      wide, stark white.

      "They're here!" she said. "You've saved me

      ... Dog? Dog?"

      He tried to speak and made horrible grating

      noises.

      "What?"

      It sounded like, "Told you ..." but more blood

      gushed from his mouth and the sentence was never finished. It

      was probably, "Told you I would die for you."

      "Come quickly, my lady!" Audley shouted.

      "Oak, Fury, get him aboard--"

      "No!" Malinda screamed. "No! I will not

      allow this."

      The invoked are in no wise to be trusted and

      assuredly will seek to bend the vaticinators to their


      purpose, for they hold firm to the desires they

      held at their dissolution, yet know not the gentler

      prospects of the living, viz., not pity, love,

      nor hope.

      ALBERINO VERIANO, INVOCATION OF

      THE DEAD

      Judging by its smell, the boat's normal

      business was something involving fish. Caught in the

      lee of the Bastion walls, crammed to the

      gunwales with the living and the dead, it responded

      reluctantly to its rudder, tipped dangerously

      as it scraped along the tower's masonry, and

      took several more hits from quarrels before it broke

      free to open water. After that it was out of danger.

      Shivering, Malinda crouched on the

      boards with Dog a dead weight in her arms and his

      lifeblood cold all over her. No tears, not

      yet. Perhaps never. This could not be true. He must

      not be dead. It was some horrible illusion, some

      torture Horatio Lambskin had dreamed up.

      "We must go to an elementary quickly," she said.

      "Dog needs healing."

      Audley beside her: "He's dead, my lady."

      "He must not be!"

      "He fell on pikes, Your Grace! It

      was quick. But he is dead."

      "No!"

      He sighed and looked up at the faces gathered

      around. "What's the tally, other than Dog?"

      Men's voices answered from the dark.

      "Bullwhip."

      "Reynard."

      "Victor's missing. Could he swim?"

      "Lothaire took a bolt through the gut, needs

      healing soon."

      "Brock?" Audley said. "You bring those

      conjured bandages?" "Be all right," said a shaky

      whisper.

      "Mercadier and Alandale need healing too."

      "Piers has concussion, can't be sure how

      bad."

      "Jongleur's wrist is broken."

      "Just sprained," said another voice nearby.

      "Nothing serious."

      Then others still: "And a dozen Yeomen!"

      "I only counted eight."

      "Not enough of the bastards, anyway!"

      More chorused agreement.

      The words were slow to line up and make sense

      to her. So many men dead or injured. Just to rescue

      her. And many of the enemy, who had only been

      obeying orders. She struggled to free herself of

      Dog's dead weight; willing hands helped her.

      They sat her on a thwart, wrapped her in two

      blankets, and gave her a flask of strong wine

      to drink. The boat rocked on over the dark

      waves. The moon had gone, but the helmsman

      seemed to know where he was headed.

      "Thank you." It was hard to talk, her teeth

      kept wanting to chatter. "I am very, very grateful

     


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