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'To meet Hakiem,' Mungo called, not slackening his pace.
'But where is he?' Jubal pressed. 'I do not know this rat run.'
'If you knew it, it would not make a good hiding place.' The boy laughed.'i.t's just a little further.'
As he spoke, they emerged from the crawl-s.p.a.ce into a small courtyard.
'We're here,' Mungo announced, coming to a halt in the centre of the yard.
'Where?' Jubal growled standing beside him. 'There are no doors or windows in these walls. Unless he is hiding in one of those refuse heaps ...'
He broke off his commentary as the details of their surroundings sank into his mind. No doors or windows! The only other way out of the courtyard was another crawl-s.p.a.ce as small as that they had just traversed ... except that it was blocked by a pile of wooden cartons. They were in a cul-de-sac!
A sudden crash sounded behind them, and Jubal spun to face it, his hand going reflexively to his sword. Several wooden boxes had fallen from the roof of one of the buildings, blocking the entrance.
'It's a trap!' he hissed, backing towards a corner, his eyes scanning the rooftops.
There was a sudden impact on his back. He staggered slightly, then lashed backwards with his sword, swinging blind. His blade encountered naught but air, and he turned to face his attacker.
Mungo danced lightly just out of sword range, his eyes bright with triumph and glee.
'Mungo?' Jubal asked, knowing the answer.
He had been wounded often enough to recognize the growing numbness in his upper back. A rasp of pain as he s.h.i.+fted his stance told the rest of the story. The boy had planted his dagger in Jubal's back, and there it remained. In his mind's eye, Jubal could see it protruding from his shoulder at an unnatural angle.
'I told you we were close,' Mungo taunted. 'Maybe the big folk are afraid of you, but we aren't. You shouldn't have ordered Gambi's death.'
'Gambi?' Jubal frowned, weaving slightly. 'Who is Gambi?'
For a moment, the boy froze in astonishment. Then his face contorted with rage and he spat.
'He was found this morning with his throat cut and a copper coin in his mouth.
Your trademark! Don't you even know who you kill?'
The blind! Jubal cursed himself for not listening closer to Sali-man's reports.
'Gambi never sold you any information,' Mungo shouted. 'He hated you for what your men did to his mother. You had no right to kill him as a false informer.'
'And Hakiem?' Jubal asked, stalling for time.
'We guessed right about that, didn't we - about Hakiem being one of your informers?' the boy crowed. 'He's on the big wharf sleeping off a drunk. We pooled our money for the silver coin that drew you out from behind your guards.'
For some reason, this last taunt stung Jubal more than had the dagger thrust. He drew himself erect, ignoring the warm liquid dripping down his back from the knife wound, and glared down at the boy.
'I need no guard against the likes of you!' he boomed. 'You think you know killing? A street-rat who stabs overhand with a knife? The next time you try to kill a man - if there is another time - thrust underhand. Go between the ribs, not through them! And bring friends - one of you isn't enough to kill a real man.'
'I brought friends!' Mungo laughed, pointing. 'Do you think they'll be enough?'
Jubal risked a glance over his shoulder. The gutter-rats of Sanctuary were descending on the courtyard. Scores of them! Scrabbling over the wooden cases or swarming down from the roofs like spiders. Children in rags - none of them even half Jubal's height, but with knives, rocks, and sharp sticks.
Another man might have broken before those hate-filled eyes. He might have tried to beg or bribe his way out of the trap, claiming ignorance of Gambi's murder.
But this was Jubal, and his eyes were as cold as his sword as he faced his tormentors.
'You claim you're doing this to avenge one death,' he sneered. 'How many will die trying to pull me down?'
'You feel free to kill us one at a time, for no reason,' Mungo retorted, circling wide to join the pack. 'If some of us die killing you, then at least the rest will be safe.'
'Only if you kill me,' Jubal corrected. Without taking his eyes from the pack, he reached his left hand over his right shoulder, found the knife hilt, and wrenched it free. 'And for that, you'll need your knife back!'
Mungo saw the knife coming as Jubal whipped his left hand down and across his body, but he froze for a split second. In that split second, the knife took him full in the throat. The world blurred and he went down, not feeling the fall.
The pack surged forward, and Jubal went to meet them, his sword flas.h.i.+ng in the sun as he desperately tried to win his way to the exit.
A few fell before his first rush - he didn't know how many -but the rest scattered and closed about him from all sides. Sticks jabbed at his face faster than he could parry them, and he felt the touch of knives as small forms darted from behind him to slash and duck away.
Realization came to him that the hara.s.sment would bring him down before he could clear the wooden cases; abandoning his charge, he paused, whirling and cutting, trying to clear a s.p.a.ce around him. The urchins were sharp-toothed, elusive phantoms, disappearing from in front of him to worry him from behind. It flashed through his mind that he was going to die! The survivor of countless gladiator duels was going to meet his end at the hands of angry children!
The thought drove him to desperate action. With one last powerful cut, he broke off his efforts at defence and tried to sprint for the wall to get something solid at his back. A small girl grabbed his ankle and clung with all her strength. He stumbled, nearly falling, and cut downwards viciously without looking. His leg came free, but another urchin leapt on to his back. hammering at his head with a rock.
Jubal lurched sideways, sc.r.a.ping the child off along the wall, then turned to face the pack. A stick pierced his mask, opening a gash in his forehead which began to drip blood in his eyes. Temporarily blinded, he laid about him wildly with his sword, sometimes striking something solid, sometimes encountering air.
A rock caromed off his head, but he was past feeling and continued his sightless, mindless slas.h.i.+ng.
Slowly it crept into his fogged brain that there was a new note in the children's screams. At the same time, he realized that his sword had not struck a target for ten or fifteen swings now. Shaking his head to clear it, he focused anew on the scene before him.
The courtyard was littered with small bodies, their blood a bright contrast to their drab rags. The rest of the pack was in full flight, pursued over the rubble piles by ...
Jubal sagged against the wall, fighting for breath and numb from wounds too numerous to count. He watched as his rescuer strode to his side, sheathing a sword wet with fresh blood.
'Your ... your name?' he gasped.
'Zaibar,' the uniformed figure panted in return. 'Bodyguard to His Royal Highness, Prince Kadakithis. Your wounds ... are they...?'
'I've survived worse.' Jubal shrugged, wincing at the pain the movement caused.
'Very well.' the man nodded. 'Then I shall be on my way.'
'A moment,' Jubal asked, holding up a restraining hand. 'You have saved my life ... a life I value quite highly. I owe you thanks and more, for you can't spend words. Name your reward.'
'That is not necessary,' Zaibar sniffed. 'It is my duty.'
'Duty or not,' Jubal argued, 'I know no other guardsman who would enter the Maze, much less risk his life to save... Did you say a royal bodyguard: Are you...'
'A h.e.l.l Hound,' Zaibar finished with a grim smile. 'Yes, I am. And I promise you, the day is not far off when we will not be the only guardsmen in the Maze.'
He turned to go, but Jubal stopped him again, removing the hawk-mask to mop the blood from his eyes.
'Wait!' he ordered. 'I have a proposal for you. I have need of men such as you.
Whatever pay you receive from the Empire, I'll double it... as well as adding a bonus for your work today. What say you?'
There was no answer. Jubal squinted to get the h.e.l.l Hound's face in focus, and found the man was staring at him in frozen recognition.
'You are Jubal!' Zatbar said in a tone that was more statement than question.
'I am,' Jubal nodded. 'If you know that, you must also know that there is none in Sanctuary who pays higher than I for services rendered.'
'I know your reputation,' the h.e.l.l Hound acknowledged coldly. 'Knowing what I do, I would not work for you at any price.'
The rebuff was obvious, but Jubal chose to ignore it. Instead, he attempted to make light of the comment.
'But you already have,' he pointed out. 'You saved my life.'
'I saved a citizen from a pack of street-rats,' Zaibar countered.
'As I said before, it's my duty to my prince.'
'But-' Jubal began.
'Had I known your ident.i.ty sooner,' the h.e.l.l Hound continued, 'I might have been tempted to delay my rescue.' l This time, the slight could not be ignored. More puzzled ' than angry, Jubal studied his opponent.
'I sense you are trying to provoke a fight. Did you save me, then, to wreak some vengeance of your own?'
'In my position, I cannot and will not engage in petty brawls,' Zaibar growled.
'I fight only to defend myself or the citizens of the empire.'
'And I will not knowingly raise a sword against one who has saved my life ...
save in self-defence,' Jubal retorted. 'It would seem, then, that we will not fight each other. Still, it seems you hold some grudge against me. May I ask what it is?'
'It is the grudge I hold against any man who reaps the benefits of Rankan citizens.h.i.+p while accepting none of the responsibility,' the h.e.l.l Hound sneered.
'Not only do you not serve the empire that shelters you, you undermine its strength by openly flaunting your disrespect for its laws in your business dealings.'
'What do you know of my business dealings that allows you to make such sweeping judgements?' Jubal challenged.
'I know you make your money in ways decent men would shun,' Zaibar retorted.
'You deal in slaves and drugs and other high-profit, low-moral commodities ...
but most of all, you deal in death.'
'A professional soldier condemns me for dealing in death?' Jubal smiled.
The h.e.l.l Hound flushed red at the barb. 'Yes. I also deal in death. But a soldier such as myself fights for the good of the empire, not for selfish gain.
I lost a brother and several friends in the mountain campaigns fighting for the empire ... for the freedoms you and your kind abuse.'
'Imagine that,' Jubal mused. 'The whole Rankan army defending us against a few scattered mountain tribes. Why, if you and your friends hadn't been there, the Highlanders certainly would have swept down out of the mountains they haven't left for generations and murdered us all in our sleep. How silly of me to think it was the empire trying to extend its influence into one more place it wasn't wanted. I should have realized it was only trying to defend itself from a ferocious attacker.'
Zaibar swayed forwards, his hand going to his sword hilt. Then He regained his composure and hardened his features.
'I am done talking to you. You can't understand the minds of decent men, much less their words.'
He turned to go, but somehow Jubal was in his path - on his feet now, though he swayed from the effort. Though the soldier was taller by a head, Jubal's anger increased his stature to where it was Zaibar who gave ground.
'If you're done talking. h.e.l.l Hound, then it's time I had my say,' he hissed.
'It's true I make money from distasteful merchandise. I wouldn't be able to do that if your "decent men" weren't willing to pay a hefty price for it. I don't sell my goods at sword point. They come to me - so many of them, I can't fill the demand through normal channels.'
He turned to gesture at the corpse-littered courtyard.
'It's also true I deal in death,' he snarled. 'Your benevolent Rankan masters taught me the trade in the gladiator pits of the capital. I dealt in death then for the cheers of those same "decent men" you admire so.
'Those "decent men" allowed me no place in their "decent" society after I won my freedom, so I came to Sanctuary. Now I still deal in death, for that is the price of doing business here - a price I almost paid today.'
For a fleeting moment, something akin to sympathy flashed in the h.e.l.l Hound's eyes as he shook his head.
'You're wrong, Jubal,' he said quietly. 'You've already paid the price for doing business in Sanctuary. It isn't your life, it's your soul... your humanity.
You've exchanged it for gold, and in my opinion, it was a poor bargain.'
Their eyes met, and it was Jubal who averted his gaze first, unsettled by the h.e.l.l Hound's words. Looking away, his glance fell on the body of Mungo - the boy he had admired and thought of bringing into his household - the boy whose life he had wanted to change. When he turned again, the h.e.l.l Hound was gone.
BLOOD BROTHERS.
by Joe Haldeman
Smiling, bowing as the guests leave. A good luncheon, much rea.s.suring talk from the gentry a.s.sembled: the economy of Sanctuary is basically sound. Thank you, my new cook ... he's from Twand, isn't he a marvel? The host appears to be rather in need of a new diet than anew cook, though the heavy brocades he affects may make him look stouter than he actually is. Good leave ... certainly, tomorrow.
Tell your aunt I'm thinking of her.
You will stay, of course, Amar. One departing guest raises an eyebrow slightly, our host a boy-loveri We do have business.
Enoir, you may release the servants until dawn. Give yourself : a free evening as well. We will be dining in the city. * And thank you for the excellent service. Here.
He laughs. Don't thank me. Just don't spend it all on one woman. As the servant master leaves, our host's bluff expression I fades to one of absolute neutrality. He listens to the servant-master's progress down the stone steps, overhears him dismissing the servants. Turns and gestures to the pile of cus.h.i.+ons by the huge fireplace. The smell of winter's ashes masked by incense fumes.
I have a good wine, Amar. Be seated while I fetch it.