The captain had to laugh.
‘I was planning to chew on your toes,’ he said, and drew a laugh from the onlookers.
He saluted, Tom saluted, and they were on their guards again.
But they’d both shown their mettle, and now they circled – Tom looking for a way to force the action close, and the captain trying to keep him off with short jabs. Once, by thrusting with his whole sword held at the pommel, he scored on Tom’s right hand, and the other man flicked a short salute, as if to say ‘that wasn’t much’. And indeed, Ser Hugo stepped between them.
‘I don’t’ allow such trick blows, my lord,’ Hugh said. ‘It’d be a foolish thing to do in a melee.’
The captain had to acknowledge the truth of that assertion. He had been taught the Long Point with the advice
The captain’s breath was coming in great gasps, while Tom seemed to be moving fluidly around the impromptu ring. Breathing well and easily. Of course, given his advantages in reach and size, he could control most aspects of the fight, and the captain was mostly running away to keep his distance.
The last five days of worry and stress sat as heavily on his shoulders as the weight of his tournament helm. And Tom was very good. There was really little shame in losing to him. So the captain decided he’d rather go down as a lion than a very tired lamb. And besides, it would be funny.
So – between one retreat and the next blow – he swayed his hips, rotated his feet so that his weight was back, and let go the sword’s hilt with his left hand. Eastern swordsmen called it ‘The Guard of One Hand’.
Tom swept in with another of his endless, heavy, sweeping blows. Any normal man would have exhausted himself with them. Not Tom. This one came from his right shoulder.
This time, the captain tried for a
And nothing happened. Tom was
His master-at-arms had never covered this situation.
Tom whirled him again, trying to shake him off. They were at a nasty impasse. The captain had Tom’s sword bound tight, and his elbow and shoulder in a lock too. But Tom had the captain’s feet off the ground.
The captain had his blade free – mostly free. He hooked his pommel into Tom’s locked arms, hoping it would give him the leverage to, well, to do what should have happened in the first place. The captain’s sense of how combat and the universe worked had received a serious jar.
But even with both hands-
Tom whirled him again, like a terrier breaking a rat’s neck.
Using every sinew of his not inconsiderable muscles, the captain pried his pommel between Tom’s arms and levered the blade over Tom’s head and grabbed the other side, letting his whole weight go onto the blade.
In effect, he fell, blade first, on Tom’s neck.
They both went down.
The captain lay in the sheep muck, with his eyes full of stars. And his breath coming like a blacksmith’s bellows.
Something under him was moving.
He rolled over, and found that he was lying entangled with the giant hillman, and the man was laughing.
‘You’re mad as a gengrit!’ Tom said. He rose out of the muck and smothered the captain in an embrace.
Some of the other men-at-arms were applauding.
Some were laughing.
Michael looked like he was going to cry. But that was only because he had to clean the captain’s armour, and the captain was awash in sheep dip.
When his helmet was off, he began to feel the new strain in his left side and the pain in his shoulder. Tom was right next to him.
‘You’re a loon,’ Tom said. He grinned. ‘A loon.’
With his helmet off, he could still only just breathe.
Chrys Foliack, another of the men-at-arms who had hitherto kept his distance from the captain, came and offered his hand. He grinned at Tom. ‘It’s like fighting a mountain, ain’t it?’ he asked.
The captain shook his head. ‘I’ve never-’
Foliack was a big man, handsome and red-headed and obviously well-born. ‘I liked the arm lock,’ he said. ‘Will you teach it?’
The captain looked around. ‘Not just this minute,’ he said.
That got a laugh.
Harndon Palace – The King