“Get out of the boat now,” the old man told him.
The Irishman frowned and climbed out. Laconic, these rural types are, he thought.
There was a clearing littered with torn hides and splintered wood and the trampled remains of a campfire, but he could see no bodies. He wasn’t sure whether to feel better about that or not.
Chapter Five
TOWARD MIDDAY the wind died down. It had blown away the cloud cover, and the sunlight began to make Duffy sleepy, so he laid his cloak under a tree and stretched out on it, dozing in the dappled evergreen shade.
He was snapped awake an hour later by a sound that was lately becoming uncomfortably familiar to him: the clang of swords. He got up, rolled his cloak, and padded a few yards deeper into the woods. This, at least, he resolved, is a fight I stay out of.
“Get the bastard!” someone was calling. “Don’t you see him?”
“No,” echoed a reply. “He was down in that thicket a second ago.”
“Well—Oh Jesus—” Three quick clangs followed, and a gasping cry.
There was silence for a few moments, then the second voice spoke up again. ‘Bob? Did you get the hunchback or did he get you?”
There was no answer. It’s my guess the hunchback got Bob, Duffy thought with a hard grin.
Footfalls crackled somewhere near him, and he breathed a curse. Surrounded, he thought. I may have to climb a tree.
Exploding abruptly out of a bush in a spray of broken twigs and leaves, a little curly-haired man with an absurdly long sword leaped at the Irishman, whirling a quick cut at his head. Not having his own sword out, Duffy leaped up and parried the cut with the heel of his boot, and the impact flung him two yards away. The little man followed up the attack furiously, but Duffy had scrambled up and drawn his rapier now and was parrying the blows fairly easily, for the little man’s two-handed sword was too heavy to be used deceptively.
I’m going to have to riposte soon, Duffy thought, exasperated, or he’ll break my blade. “What is this?” Duffy asked, blocking a hard cut at his chest. “I’ve done nothing to you!”
The hunchback—for, the Irishman noticed, that’s who it was—stared at him for a moment, choked with rage. “Is that right?” he yelled finally, redoubling his attacks. “You call all that nothing, do you? Watch, while I do nothing to your filthy entrails.”
First demons, Duffy thought unhappily, and now madmen. I guess I’ve got to kill him.
He shifted his sword to his inside line, inviting a cut at the shoulder. When he goes for it, he calculated, I’ll parry outside, feint a direct riposte to his inside line, then duck around his parry and put my point in his neck.
The hunchback cocked his arm for the expected blow, but at that moment four armed men strode up through the tangled brush. “Kill them both,” growled one of the newcomers, and they advanced with their points extended.
“God help us,” gasped Duffy, alarmed by this escalation. “We can finish our fight later,” he barked to the hunchback. “Deal with these boys now.”
The little man nodded, and they turned on their four attackers. Duffy engaged the swords of two of them, trying to draw one into an advance so he could put a stop-thrust in his face, but the hunchback leaped at his pair, whirling maniacal hammer-strokes at them. The forest resounded like a dozen smithies.
Duffy struck down one of his opponents with a lucky remise that sheared across the man’s throat; the other man tried an attack while Duffy was thus occupied, but the Irishman bounded back out of distance immediately and let the blade swish through the air unobstructed. I’ll cripple this one, he thought, and then grab my stuff there and run like a bastard. That crazed hunchback will just have to be satisfied with dismembering the next stranger he meets.
Beating aside a badly aimed thrust, Duffy threw himself forward in a punta sopra mano—but when his leading foot hit the ground the boot heel snapped off and he fell, twisting desperately in mid-air to keep his sword between himself and his attacker. Blows rained down on Duffy for a good ten seconds—while he lay in the leaves, parried desperately and tried to riposte at the man’s legs—and then there was a meaty chunk and the man fell on him.
Duffy got his sword point up in time to spit the man under the breastbone, but when he threw the corpse aside and hopped to his feet, he saw a deep, spine-severing cleft dividing the dead man’s back.
“I already got him,” explained the hunchback, wiping sweat off his forehead. “What kind of move was that, anyway? Diving on the ground like that?”
Duffy grinned sourly. “It would have been a damned good move if you hadn’t split my boot heel a few minutes ago.” He looked past the hunchback, and saw the other two men sprawled gorily in the clearing. “I suppose you still want to kill me?”
The hunchback frowned. “Uh, no.” He wiped the blade of his two-handed sword and slid it into a scabbard slung over his shoulder. “I owe you an apology for that. These weasels have been following me for days, and I took you for one of them. I’m sorry about your boot.”
“Don’t worry about it. One of these lads doubtless has feet my size, and I see they were all high-class bravos, well-shod.”
“I never could have stood the four of them off alone,” the hunchback said. “I’m indebted to you.” He stuck out his right hand. “I’m Bluto, a Swiss.”
Duffy shook his hand. “Brian Duffy, an Irishman.”
“You’re far from home, Duffy. Where’s your horse?”
“Well...” Inquisitive little bugger, he thought. Still, he did save my life—after jeopardizing it in the first place. “I’m afoot.”
“Just out for a stroll, eh? Well, these gentlemen had horses. They left them tethered in a clearing about a half mile back. When you’ve chosen a pair of boots, perhaps you’d care to select a horse.”
Duffy laughed and wiped his sword off on the dead man’s shirt. “All right,” he said, “let’s go take a look at them.”
Half an hour later the two men were riding north. Duffy allowed himself a gulp of the wine, which was running low, and offered the wineskin to Bluto.
“No, thank you,” the hunchback said. “Not right now, or I’ll get sick. You’re bound for Vienna, I assume?”
Duffy nodded.
“So am I. I’ve been hired to organize the city’s artillery.”
“Oh? You know about that stuff, do you?”
“It’s what I do. I’m a freelance bombardier. What is it that’s bringing you to Vienna?”
“Nothing so dramatic. I’ve been hired to be the bouncer at an inn there.”
“Hah! These Viennese range far afield for their employees. There was no local talent?”
The Irishman shrugged. “Apparently not. The guy who hired me—weird little man named Aurelianus—”
“Aurelianus?” Bluto exclaimed. “Black clothes? Trembly? Afraid to open windows?”
Duffy frowned, mystified. “That’s him. How did you know?”
“I met him two months ago, in Bern. He’s the one who hired me to take charge of the artillery.” For a minute or two they rode along in silence. Finally Bluto spoke. “I don’t suppose there have been murderers chasing you around, have there?”
“Well... there has been an incident or two.”
“Ah. I might hazard a guess, then, that there are those, enemies of Aurelianus, perhaps, who don’t want us to get to Vienna.”
Duffy snorted skeptically. “Who’d care whether or not the Zimmermann Inn gets a new bouncer?”