She screamed again and again. His eyes flickered to her but only after a long look did he see that most of the left side of her upper torso was
He wished the screaming woman would just die.
A pair of nuns wrapped her tight in a sheet, round and round, and the sheet turned red as fast as they could wrap another layer, and still she screamed, becoming one voice amongst a chorus of anguish that filled the night.
He staggered up and stumbled to Michael, who lay crumpled against the chapel.
The boy was alive.
He looked around for Amicia. She had been standing right there – there, where the woman screamed. But she was gone. He shouted for a sister – for anyone – and four responded. They ran their hands carefully over him before lifting him away from Michael.
Men were shouting now. Even over the screams, their shouts were triumphant, but he ignored them and dragged himself over to Tom.
Tom was sitting against the stable. ‘Backplate took it,’ he said with a grin. ‘Christ, I thought I was done.’ He pointed at the sword. ‘Nice trick, that.’
‘Half-sword versus wyvern,’ the captain said. ‘A standard move. All the best masters teach it.’ He stripped away the ruin of his left glove and wrapped it tight around his cut. ‘I just need more practice.’
Tom chuckled. ‘Sauce just killed t’other, I’ll wager,’ he said, pointing at the cheering archers.
Sure enough, the next moments brought the mounted sortie back through the main gate, dragging the head of the second wyvern. Brought to earth by fifty arrows, it had died on their lance tips without injuring a single human.
Tom nodded. ‘That was well done, Captain.’
The captain shrugged. ‘We were ready, we laid our trap, you burned their camp and surprised them, and they
Tom shrugged back. ‘They killed a lot of people.’ He raised an eyebrow. ‘But not many of
‘You’re a hard bastard, Tom Mac Lachlan.’
Bad Tom shrugged, obviously taking it as a compliment, then something caught his eye in the chapel. He wrinkled his nose as if he’d smelled something bad.
‘What?’ asked the captain.
‘Ever notice how they’re always smaller when they’re dead?’ Tom asked. ‘It’s just the fear that makes ’em seem so big.’
The captain nodded. He was looking at the wyvern too, and he had to admit that it
Almost pitiful.
Tom smiled and started to get to his feet, and the Abbess was there.
He expected anger or recriminations from her, but she merely extended a hand and took his.
‘Let us heal your people,’ she said.
The captain nodded, still pressing his glove tight around his hand. There was a lot of blood. She got an odd look on her face, just before he fainted in her arms.
Albinkirk – Ser Alcaeus
Deep in the marches of the next night, the enemy attacked the castle of Albinkirk.
Ser Alcaeus had passed beyond fatigue. He was in a world lived one heartbeat at a time, and events passed him in a series of illuminated flashes, as if lightning was playing on all of them.
There were some assaults on the walls of the castle, but unlike the low stone curtain walls of the town the castle walls were too high and too well maintained for the flood of Wild creatures to climb. The handful of beasts who made it to the top were killed.
But every attack cost him a little more.
One flash was a fight with an irk – a tall, thin, beautiful creature with a hooked nose like a raptor’s beak and chain armour as fine as fish scales that turned his sword again and again. And when, by dint of desperate strength, he knocked it to the stones, and its helmet spun away, the irk’s eyes begged for mercy. Like a man’s.
Alcaeus would remember that. Even as his dagger terminated it he registered that it, too, had humanity.
. . . and what followed was worse.
Because something came.
It was huge and foreboding, out in the horrifying fire-lit ruins of the town. It strode forward with a hideous shambling gait, and it was as tall as the city wall or taller.
It was
And now it raised its staff – the size of a mounted knight’s heavy lance, or bigger – and a line of white-green fire struck the castle wall. The stone deflected in it a wash of white-green fire for as long as the terrified men on the wall might have counted to ten.
And then there was a rending
Then the monster raised its arms and seemed to call the stars down from the heavens, and as they began to plummet, Alcaeus fought not to fall on his face and hide.