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1635: The Eastern Front: Chapter Thirty One

       Last updated: Wednesday, October 6, 2010 23:45 EDT

 


 

    For a moment, Mademann was paralyzed by the arresting sight of the procession coming out of the palace. Two of the palace guards had an upended table in their hands and were holding it above their heads. They came into Slottsbacken and started moving toward the Church of St. Nicholas.

    Then he realized that the Swedish princess and the Danish prince were underneath the table, being sheltered from the rain. Ulrik was in front, with Kristina just behind him. Behind her came the prince’s burly Norwegian aide.

    At last! They’d at least be able to take down two of their three targets.

    He turned his head and hissed, getting the attention of the five men hiding farther back in the alley. Charles was the lookout at the corner and the only one of them who’d seen the royal party emerge from the palace.

    “They’re coming,” he said. “Kristina and Ulrik, with the Norwegian. Two palace guards also.”

    In his excitement, he forgot to mention the table.

    The five Huguenots moved forward until they were all gathered near the alley’s entrance. Mademann was still the only one who could see the royal party, though. That was as it should be. Even in the pouring rain there was a chance they could be spotted lurking in the alley. One person there might be ignored. Half a dozen would cause alarm.

    The soldiers were almost trotting, obviously eager to get out of the rain. The party would come abreast of the alley’s entrance within seconds.

    Mademann gauged the situation. Tactically, given the downpour, there seemed to be only one sensible strategy. Just rush their targets and shoot them down.

    “Get ready,” he hissed.

 


 

    Mathurin Brillard was watching the scene from the other end of Slottsbacken. He was farther away but had a better view because he was looking through a window on the upper floor of a tailor shop. Half an hour earlier, when he’d come into the shop, he’d forced the elderly tailor to close the shop and come with him upstairs. Once in the bedroom above, he’d clubbed him senseless.

    Judging from the evidence of the bedroom, there should be a wife somewhere. Wherever she was, though, she wasn’t in the shop or in the living quarters above. Perhaps she was running an errand or visiting relatives. It was also possible the tailor was a widower but hadn’t been able to bear getting rid of his dead wife’s belongings.

    Whichever the case, all the woman had to do was stay away for a few more hours and it would all be over, one way or the other.

    He saw the party coming out of the palace and stiffened. That was the princess and the prince. Not his targets, technically, since he was supposed to take care of the queen. But the queen would probably never make an appearance, anyway, so Mathurin raised his rifle. If his comrades’ attack on Ulrik and Kristina ran into difficulties, Brillard would come to their aid.

    In good weather, he’d have positioned himself farther back in the room in order to avoid being spotted in the window by a passerby. In this downpour, though, he didn’t think that was a problem, and the direction of the wind was keeping the rain from coming into the room. He was standing close enough to the window that when he took aim, most of the rifle’s barrel would extend outside. It would get wet, but that wasn’t a problem with a breech-loading rifle like this one. Mathurin had fired the gun several times on the tavern’s island, to get accustomed to the thing. It was very accurate. A truly delightful weapon in every respect except that it was quite heavy. This was a full-sized rifle intended for infantrymen, not the carbine version of the Cardinal. Brillard didn’t envy any soldier who had to carry the gun on a long march.

    That was not something an assassin had to deal with, thankfully.

    Behind him, the tailor let out a soft moan. He was lying on the floor near the bed.

    Mathurin must not have hit him as hard as he thought he had. Now that the rifle was loaded, he didn’t want to use the gun butt again. So he went over and stamped on the man’s head. Once, twice, thrice. That should do it.

    Quickly, he returned to the window. The royal party was coming abreast of an alley where Brillard thought Mademann and the others were probably hiding. The fight should start any moment.

 


 

    “Now!” shouted Mademann. He rushed out of the alley toward the prince and princess.

    A shot rang out almost immediately. Then, another.

    The shots had come from behind him. Which idiot –?

    To his consternation, Charles saw that at least one of the two shots had struck the soldier holding up the front end of the table. The man was already collapsing. Much worse, so was the table.

    And God damn all quick-thinking princes!

 


 

    Ulrik caught the edge of the table and tipped it so the table would fall on its side and provide them with a barricade.

    Tried to, rather. The soldier holding up the rear end was too confused to understand what the prince was trying to do. He was still trying to hold the table up.

    Baldur kicked him out from under it. The soldier was flung onto his back, his head hitting the street hard enough to be knocked unconscious. Baldur caught his end of the table. He realized what Ulrik was trying to do and followed suit with his own end. A moment later the table was lying on its side with its heavy top facing their assailants. Ulrik and Baldur crouched down behind it. The princess did so herself, without needing to be told.

 


 

    What a mess. Still, the situation favored them. Locquifier — another idiot! — fired a shot from his percussion cap pistol at the table top. The wood splintered, but it was thick enough that the bullet didn’t penetrate.

    That left Locquifier effectively disarmed, of course, because his percussion cap pistol only had one barrel. No way to reload in this downpour.

    The first idiot had been Ancelin. At least he’d had the sense to discard his pistol now that he’d fired both barrels. He drew a knife and ran toward the right end of the table.

    That was now the only sensible tactic. Get around the ends of the table so they had access to their targets.

    Mademann made to follow Ancelin. His foot slipped on one of the wet cobblestones and he fell, dropping his pistol. The weapon skittered off across the cobblestones, coming to rest ten feet away.

    “Merde alors!”

 


 

    By October of the year 1635, the Ring of Fire was four and half years in the past. Over that period of time, even though they numbered in the thousands, up-time firearms had come to be worth a prince’s ransom.

    Fortunately, Ulrik of Denmark was a prince.

    He owned three of the weapons, in fact: a bolt-action Browning .308 rifle, a Smith & Wesson .40 automatic pistol with a ten-round magazine, and a Colt Detective Special .38 caliber snub-nose revolver.

    He was carrying the revolver today, as he normally did in everyday matters. The little gun was easy to conceal in regular clothing, which the automatic wasn’t. Ulrik had been quite sure the queen would have objected had she realized he was coming into her presence armed. The revolver had a six-round cylinder, but Ulrik only had five of the chambers loaded. He disliked carrying the weapon with a loaded chamber under the hammer, even if the man who’d sold him the gun insisted it was quite safe.

    So. Five shots, and he had no way to reload since he wasn’t carrying any spare ammunition. He didn’t have that much anyway. The ammunition for up-time guns was also very expensive. By now, they were all handmade reloads.

    He was pretty sure there were at least six assailants, from what he’d seen before the table came down.

    The Americans called it Murphy’s Law.

 


 

    Mademann scrambled after his pistol. On hands and knees because when he’d tried to stand up he’d just slipped again.

    Out of the corner of his eye he saw that Ancelin was close to the table. André Tourneau was very close also, at the other end. He had his pistol at the ready.

    Suddenly, a figure rose from behind the table. The prince, from the hat, although it was hard to be sure. Hats got rather shapeless in this sort of downpour.

    Tourneau immediately fired a shot. He’d rushed it, Charles thought.

 


 

    So he had. The shot struck the very edge of the table and caromed off somewhere in the distance. The only damage it did was to send a little spray of splinters flying.

    One of the splinters struck Ulrik just below the eye. He’d already fired at the gun flash already. Now, startled, he pulled the trigger again.

    Two shots gone! He had only three bullets left.

 


 

    The prince’s first shot struck Tourneau in the arm, just above the wrist. Howling, he jerked around, dropping the gun — and moved right into the path of the second bullet. It was that one, despite being completely unaimed, that killed him instantly. The bullet entered his left temple and destroyed much of his brain before coming to a stop against the occipital bone.

 


 

    It was already obvious things were going badly. Mathurin took aim at the figure standing up above the table rim. He, also, thought it was probably the prince, although this cursed rain degraded visibility in the most terrible manner. It would not be an easy shot under these conditions, but he thought he could make it. If he missed, he would have time for a second shot.

    A sudden noise to the right drew his attention.

    The queen was coming out of the palace! Brillard hadn’t expected that. She was trailed by half a dozen palace guards.

    All of them had now stopped. They were just within the entrance, still out of the rain. The queen was staring at the bizarre tableau in Slottsbacken, her mouth wide open.

    The guards wouldn’t be much use. They were armed with ceremonial halberds, not firearms. The weapons could still do a lot of damage even if those great blades probably weren’t keep very sharp. But it would take them a while to reach the prince and princess.

    Mademann would have to manage without his help. Brillard’s assigned target was Maria Eleonora.

    He brought the rifle around. The queen still hadn’t moved. She seemed completely paralyzed with shock.

    This was much closer range. Even in the rain, he could hardly miss.

 



 


 

    Kristina managed to work the dead guard’s sword out of the scabbard. Shakily, she passed it on to Baldur.

    “My profound thanks, Your Highness.” For once, there was not a trace of mockery in the Norwegian’s tone of voice.

    One of the assailants came around the table, a knife in his hand. Baldur flung himself straight at him, not even trying to get to his feet. The sword point went into the meat of the attacker’s right thigh.

    His aim had been off a little. He’d been trying for the femoral artery. Still, the wound was severe enough to stop the assailant. He howled and clutched his leg.

    With his free hand, though. He didn’t let go of the knife. An experienced brawler, it seemed.

    Not that it would do him the least bit of good. Now, Baldur did come to his feet.

 


 

    It was no contest. Gui Ancelin was indeed considered a formidable man with a blade, in his own circles. But those were the circles of assassins and street fighters. Baldur Norddahl had learned his swordplay as an Algerine corsair and guarding caravans in the Sahara from Tuareg raiders.

    Not to mention that Gui had a knife and Baldur had a sword. The knife was razor sharp and the sword blade wasn’t, but it hardly mattered since the first thing Baldur did was cut off his right arm just below the elbow. With the Norwegian’s strength and experience, the precise condition of the blade didn’t matter. Even a relatively dull sword is a sword, not a butter knife.

    Ancelin stared down in shock. Not for long. Baldur’s next strike severed the right side of his neck down to the spinal column. Blood gushed everywhere and he collapsed to the cobblestones. Slottsbacken was not flat. The rain was coming down so heavily that the blood was carried away almost as fast as it came out.

 


 

    Brillard fired. The queen was knocked flat on her back. The guards stared down at her, still not moving. Clearly the Swedes were not using elite troops to guard the palace.

    They should have spotted the gunsmoke coming from the window where he was positioned. In good weather, even dullards like these couldn’t have missed the sound and sight of the shot. But the heavy rain distorted sound and obscured the smoke. He thought he was still undetected.

    He began reloading the rifle. There was time for another shot. Perhaps he could still help Charles after all.

 


 

    Mademann finally had his pistol. He started to get up again — and slipped again.

    Down onto one knee, this time, not on his belly. But he’d fallen hard and the knee was badly bruised. If he survived the next few moments, he’d be walking with a limp for a while.

    If he was lucky. The knee might also be broken. The pain was intense.

    Damn this rain!

 


 

    Robert Ouvrard fired when was ten feet from the prince. At this range, he could hardly miss.

    But he did. Ouvrard was not experienced at this sort of gun fight. He did not understand how often people missed their shots even at what seemed point blank range. They got excited and agitated — as he was — and the surge of adrenaline swept away all fine motor control. Ancient fight-or-flight reflexes took over, designed for crude actions like running or striking with fists, not the comparatively delicate work of aiming a pistol and squeezing a trigger.

    Instead, he jerked the trigger wildly — but he would have missed by a foot even if he hadn’t. The shot struck the wall of the royal palace, causing no damage at all beyond dimpling a brick.

 


 

    Ulrik fired back. And also missed, at point blank range.

    Both men cursed and both fired again — but Ulrik’s shot came just an instant sooner. That was the advantage of the revolver’s mechanism over that of the double-barreled flintlock pistol.

    His shot struck Ouvrard in the stomach. The Huguenot clutched himself, his pistol swinging wide. The shot he fired by reflex hit the cobblestones and caromed off to strike the wall of the church, where it caromed off again.

    With that sort of abdominal wound, Ouvrard was almost sure to die eventually. He was still alive but no longer part of the fight. He was disarmed and already falling to the street.

    So, naturally, Ulrik shot him again. A good shot, right in the center mass, certain to cause the man’s death even if the first shot didn’t.

    Also a completely stupid wasted shot, which left the prince with an empty gun.

    He was not experienced at this sort of thing either.

    But he didn’t have time to curse himself. Abraham Levasseur had been just behind Ouvrard and now he fired, also at point blank range.

    Two shots in very quick succession. Levasseur was familiar with double-barreled pistols and their somewhat intricate trigger mechanism.

    He’d also been in a gun fight before, unlike Ouvrard.

    Both of his shots hit the prince. Ulrik slumped to the ground.

 


 

    Locquifier started to clamber over the upended table, in order to stab the princess huddled behind it. He ignored Baldur altogether. His instruction from Michel had said nothing about irrelevant Norwegian adventurers.

    Such is the folly of paying too much instruction to orders.

    By now, Kristina had taken one of her jeweled hairpins out of her hair. The thing was only three inches long and not particularly sharp, but it was all she had. As soon as she saw Locquifier coming over the table, with an upraised knife in his hand, she shrieked and lunged upward, jagging at his face.

    The hairpin did no damage, because Locquifier flinched away from it. But his attack was delayed for two seconds or so.

    That was all the time Baldur needed, now that he’d finished with Ancelin.

    Again, the flashing sword sent a hand flying, cut off this time just above the wrist. And again, an instant later, a neck was cut open to the bone. This time, since Baldur hadn’t been quite as rushed, the windpipe was severed along with the carotid and jugular.

    For all practical purposes, Guillaume Locquifier was dead before his body met the cobblestones.

 


 

    Mademann shrieked with fury at the sight. He’d never liked Guillaume, but he was still a comrade. In his rage, he fired a shot at the prince’s companion who’d killed him.

    The shot missed. He fired again — and that put the Norwegian down. At least, Charles thought it had. The man was behind the table again, no longer visible.

 


 

    Reloading a Cardinal could be done very quickly, but the fight in the street below was moving more quickly still. By the time Mathurin had the rifle reloaded, he had no targets left. Prince Ulrik was down already. Brillard could see his body in the street. And whatever might have happened to the princess, she was hidden somewhere behind that cursed table. It would be foolish to shoot at it blindly.

    Besides, he had another target, and the one to which he’d been assigned.

    He was almost sure his first shot had killed the queen. But there was no reason not to make sure.

    The six guards were no longer standing around her. Three of them had moved into Slottsbacken with their halberds ready, headed toward the table. One of them had vanished altogether. Mathurin assumed he’d gone to get help.

    The remaining two were still guarding the queen. Clearly, though, their concept of “guarding” was not that of trained bodyguards. Instead of shielding Maria Eleonora, they were standing at least two feet from her.

    Their halberds were posed in most formidably martial fashion, to be sure. But the bullet Mathurin fired cared not in the least. He’d had time to take careful aim, since the queen was now unmoving, flat on her back in the entrance. The bullet passed between the guards and struck her under the chin. When it exited from the top of her head, brains and blood and bits of bone flew out in a horrid gush.

    The guards stared at the sight, their halberds still held at the ready.

 


 

    The sound of the rifle shot drew Mademann’s attention. That was the second shot Brillard had fired. Given the man’s marksmanship, that meant the queen was certainly dead.

    So was the prince. Of their three targets, only the princess was left.

    Charles was tempted. But . . .

    Mathurin would now be making his own escape. Of the others, only Charles himself and Levasseur remained alive. And they’d used all their shots. In this rain, they’d need to find shelter in which to reload, by which time the princess would certainly have fled back into the palace.

    They could go after her with their knives, but his knee was uncertain — and the three guards with halberds were fast approaching. Could Levasseur alone kill the princess while fending them off?

    No chance. It was time to make their own escape, if possible.

    “Abraham!” he shouted. “Help me!”

 


 

    On his way out of the bedroom, Brillard paused at the door to consider the tailor. He’d intended to let the old man live, assuming he survived the injuries he already had. But now that the mission was over and the possibility of escape was at hand — which Mathurin had never seriously expected — it might not be wise to leave a witness who could identify him.

    Mathurin Brillard was not a man to agonize over decisions. He raised the rifle and brought the butt down on the tailor’s head. Again, and again, and again. It took only as many seconds as it did blows. Not too long, and there would surely be no witness now.

 


 

    When Ulrik opened his eyes, he immediately had to close them again because of the rain. It was not quite like being under a waterfall, but close enough.

    He could feel a small body clutching him where he lay on the street. A trembling child’s body. It was making snuffling noises, too.

    Kristina, he thought. She was still alive, then.

    He turned his head to get his eyes out of the direct path of the rain and opened the left one, which was now sheltered.

    Yes, it was Kristina. The only other things he could see were the upended table and, coming toward him, more halberds than Ulrik had ever seen in one place.

    Swedish palace guards were attached to the weapons. Looking very stalwart and none too bright.

    He made a mental note to make sure he had guards armed with something more useful, in any palace he had any control over. Smarter ones, too.

    “What’s happening?” he croaked.


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