17th of Summer, 509 AV “Seems like it’s just you and me,” Garth sighed, wiping blunt, bloody fingers across his leather coat. Ulric unleashed a string of curses. He hadn’t particularly liked Jem, but now the odds were stacked even worse against them, if that was even possible. For natural reason, he didn’t want to venture an estimate. He peeked over the crude barricade of barrels, sacks, and bolts of cloth, trying to discern whether the marauders were stirring in the shadowy depths of the forest. The muddy track was strewn with corpses and debris, like a scene from one of his worst nightmares. A wagon was burning, the tongues of flame sending up a cloud of thick, acrid smoke, while another had toppled onto its side, its muddy spokes pointing absurdly at the sky. The dead horses were already gathering flies where they slumped in their traces. There were arrows everywhere, broken into pieces, sticking into corpses, creating the facade of a great, slothful hedgehog on where the barricade. The ambush had been swift and brutal, a handful of men dying in the chaos before the pyromancer drove the marauders back into the forest, allowing the caravan master and his servants to form the wagons into a circle. Now he was dead. Everybody was dead. Ulric slithered over the charred earth, returning with the dead mercenary’s crossbow and a leather quiver with a pair of iron-tipped quarrels. “Why does this have to happen now,” he growled under his breath. He hadn’t done this sort of work in years, but the one time he decided to make some easy coin he ended up caught in the middle of a massacre. Lying against a pile of sacks, he thrust a boot into the stirrup so he could draw back the length of cord, his back and shoulder muscles trembling with the effort, and slip it over the catch. He fit a quarrel into the slot, casting another furtive glance over the top of the barricade. The forest was silent, but that didn’t mean the marauders weren’t out there, watching them. Ulric knew the pair of them were caught like fish in a barrel, reduced to hiding from the archers that concealed themselves into the forest. This wasn’t his sort of fight. The marauders kept melting back into the dense ranks of trees, which meant he was often engaging an enemy he could always hear, but rarely see. “Have enough bolts?” “Four,” Ulric said with a grimace. He wanted to charge into a knot of the marauders, hacking left and right, but they weren’t stupid enough to give him the chance. No, they recognized the disadvantage a group of lightly armed, no doubt poorly trained fighters had against a pair of heavies. “Jem have anything we can use?” “Just spears, and a few knives he took from the drivers. Here, take your pick.” Garth threw over the bundle. “His sword is mine, though.” “Never cared for swords,” Ulric caught the spears before they vanished over the bulwark. He shifted a few sacks aside, wedging the shafts through so their points protruded from the other side. An arrow whistled past his head. He slithered to the left, vainly trying to pick the archer out of the shadows. “Got a climber?” “Nope.” Ulric shook his head. “The angle was low.” He knew they couldn’t let their foes gain the advantage of firing down of them, which would negate much of the shelter afforded by the barricade. “We ought to make a run for it.” Garth dug the edge of his shield into the earth and began working to shore up the barricade, peeking over the opposite side at regular intervals. “We wait until dark, then we go.” Ulric said, knowing that was what Garth probably meant in the first place. It was suicide to go now, when there were a few bells of light remaining. “How are you doing with the chest?” “How about you focus on watching the front door?” Garth snarled. Ulric gave a shrug, for his nerves were also at a breaking point. A twig snapped, closely followed by another, then another. They’re on the move. He stared out from his vantage point, using a scrap of sack to conceal his face. More noise, but no sign of the archer. Where are they? He peered from one side to another, seeing nothing. How about under the wagons? No luck there, either. He moved to the other side of his sector, cradling his own crossbow to his chest. As he wiped the sweat from his brow, he could have sworn that he glimpsed a brief flicker of movement. “One, maybe more,” he growled, hearing the other man curse as he gathered up his recurved bow and covered the back, where the wagons to either side didn’t provide any cover from archers. Ulric scrambled back to the other side, where he’d left the other crossbow. He thought he saw a shoulder sticking out from one trunk, and the perhaps another man further back in the trees, sheltered by too many trunks for him to risk the last of his remaining quarrels. His eyes darted to the gap under the wagon to his right, but he couldn’t make out any crawling shapes. “Two here.” “Shyke.” Ulric knew what that meant. “You’d better not miss,” he snarled. His mouth was suddenly dry, icy tendrils of fear racing down his spine. He was consumed by an overwhelming desire to remain where he was, but he angrily shook his head, trying to force the terror away. “Ready?” “Ready.” Ulric rose slightly, making a show of sighting down his crossbow. Garth, if you miss, he scowled, but then the mercenary was barking out a warning. He hurled himself to the side, hearing a pair of twangs, followed closely by a single twang. As the arrows streaked over his head, he brought up his crossbow, catching the man in front breaking cover as he drew back the string of his longbow. Ulric sent a quarrel at the archer, ducking the arrow that flew toward him, and snatched up the other crossbow. He’d missed, but at the same time, he’d managed to get the archer to leave cover. Now firing out of a different position, he took more time with his next shot, his patience rewarded by a strangled cry. “Winged him,” he grunted, casting a glance at the other mercenary. “One down, one running,” Garth chuckled. Ulric’s mouth curled into a savage grin, for they had finally hurt the marauders. It felt good, turning the tables like that, but he suspected it wouldn’t last for long. He began to reload, grunting as he wrestled with the cords of his heavy weapons. “They’re probably doing the same as us,” Garth spoke after a while. “They wait for cover of darkness, then send everybody in at once, try to overwhelm…” “What’s wrong?” Ulric snapped his head around, fearing that Garth had been struck by arrow. Instead, his eyes widened as he saw one of the corpses stir from where it sprawled against a mud-encrusted cart. “Fesul, you’re supposed to be dead,” he exclaimed, barking a hoarse laugh. “Not dead,” the scrawny man croaked, rising up on his elbow. “What happened?” He shook his head woozily, clearly trying to gather his thoughts. Garth snatched up the man’s discarded helmet. “Rhysol’s cock, would you look at that?” He turned it over, displaying the twisted concavity where a badly bent bodkin protruded. Ulric shook his head, “Well, how about that,” Ulric grinned, scarcely believing the evidence of his own eyes. He grinned at Fesul. “How’s it feel to get shot in the noggin?” Fesul gave him a wan scowl. “Bad,” he said sharply, then doubled over, spewing the contents of his stomach. Ulric waited until he was done, then tossed him a skin of wine that he’d found among the belongings of their intrepid, but dead caravan master. “Go on, drink some of that,” he urged. Fesul took a deep swig, wiping his lips as he stared at the ruins of the caravan. “What’s going on?” “We’re at a stalemate,” Ulric explained, recalling that Fesul had gone down early. “Mara, Lars, and Jem are dead, not to mention the merchant, and that screwy mage we picked up a few days back.” “What about the others” “Kept dropping like flies.” Ulric jerked a thumb at the corpses stacked over his section of barricade. “We’re all that’s left, and we’re up against what… a dozen of the bastards?” Garth snorted. “Something like that,” said the mercenary. “We bled them good, though.” Fesul scratched at muck caking one side of his face, mixed with the blood that began to trickle from his scalp wound again. “They got wounded?” “Some, but not many,” Ulric nodded. “We’re just trying to hang on until night, so we can get the petch out of here.” “You mean, running with our tails between our legs?” Fesul snarled. “I’m not going anywhere until I crack a few heads.” Ulric was deeply shaken by these words. He’d never thought the man very daring, but making a last stand? He was a mercenary; he fought for coin, but he wasn’t supposed to die for the sake of wounded pride. Garth gave a shrug, and when he spoke, Ulric was shocked to find that he was alone in his disbelief. “Now that Fes is back we ought to stand a fairly good chance,” the man cajoled. “Jem’s head was full of rocks. Fes, on the other hand, knows how to fight.” Ulric kept shaking his head. He couldn’t believe what Garth was saying. How could they risk their necks like this? Fesul’s defiance must’ve spread, and now they were asking him for the unthinkable; to lay down his life not only for the sake of greed, but also for the sake of vengeance against men who were probably just trying to survive. We’re facing odds of at least three to one,” he spat, “And you want to stay and fight? This is madness.” “Look, we can’t take the chest with us,” Garth argued. “Let’s face it, we’d probably get picked off even if we left it behind, and even if we did get away, we’d just end up broke, without supplies, in another mess of trouble.” “Sometimes, you have to take a stand,” added Fesul. “We could just take the spices,” Ulric started to protest, but he already knew that he wouldn’t be able to sway the other. He suddenly felt like a craven, a weakling. He prided himself on being pragmatic, but if there was one thing he hated, it was acting as a child would in front of men. “Fine, we see this one through,” he grumbled. “But we’re going to slaughter the petchers, down to the very last man.” “Shyke on their corpses,” Garth sneered. “Grind their bones,” said Fesul. “Leave them for the worms,” Ulric sighed. |