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1634: The Baltic War: Chapter Twenty Two

       Last updated: Friday, March 2, 2007 06:57 EST

 


 

    Welch’s hand was already coming away from his neck with the dirk in it before Anthony even got to the “Paddy.” He’d been following the logic—and that wasn’t actually a dirk, it was a throwing knife. It struck one of the soldiers squarely in the throat, sinking almost to the hilt.

    Richard slammed into the legs of Doncaster, spilling him.

    Anthony seized Porter by the back of his head and drove the quill point into his left eye. Hard and deep enough to pierce the brain. Then—he was quite strong—lifted the small table and the corpse collapsing onto it and used them as a battering ram against the soldier who’d yet been untouched.

    A good man, that. He had the pistol out and even managed to get the doghead down before Leebrick could reach him. But between the shock and his haste, he had no time to aim. All he did when he pulled the trigger was shoot Porter in the back and kill him again.

    The impact slammed the soldier back against the side of the door. His helmet flew off, clattering into the corridor beyond. But it hadn’t protected him enough to keep from being momentarily stunned—and a moment was all it took Leebrick to get his dirk from his boot and stab him under the chin.

    He twisted the blade loose, letting the corpse fall into the corridor alongside the helmet. From the sounds behind him, there was still a struggle going on.

    He spun around. Not a struggle, as it turned out. The sounds he’d heard had been Doncaster’s boot heels drumming the floor. Richard was lying under him and had a garrote around his neck. Leebrick had forgotten that Towson carried the horrid thing, even though he and Patrick both made jokes about it.

    But even with a garrote, strangling was too slow. There’d be more guards coming any moment. Glancing over, Anthony saw that Patrick was still occupied trying to pry his knife from the other soldier’s throat. The throw must have gotten the blade jammed into the vertebrae.

    He strode over to the two men struggling on the floor and slammed the pommel of his dirk down on Doncaster’s head. Being an officer, Doncaster had been wearing a hat instead of a helmet and the hat had flown off, so there was no obstruction to the blow.

    Once, twice, on the forehead. Doncaster went limp. Leebrick seized his thick mane of hair and twisted his head sideways. Then, brought down a ferocious strike of the pommel on his temple. For good measure, did it again. That was enough. If he wasn’t dead already, he would be soon. Either way, he’d never regain consciousness.

    Anthony yanked Doncaster’s body off Richard, who’d already released one end of the garrote. “Let’s go! Quickly! For the love of God, Patrick, just leave the knife be!”

    Welch was still trying to pry the blade loose. But he quit the business, as soon as Anthony yelled.

    “That’s an expensive knife,” he hissed, leaning over and scooping the dead man’s unused wheel-lock from the floor.

    “Who cares?” said Towson. On his way off the floor, he’d scooped up the bag of silver that had wound up lying close to him. “We’ll buy you another. A hundred, if you want, with what’s in here.”

    Leebrick looked around for the document, but couldn’t see it anywhere. God only knew where it had flown to, in the fracas.

    There was no time to hunt for the thing, and it had no signatures on it, anyway. That wouldn’t help Wentworth, of course. But so it went. The Earl of Strafford was on his own.

    “Now, out!” Anthony just took enough time to extract Doncaster’s sword from its scabbard. He ignored the second wheel-lock. It had already been fired, and he doubted very much if they’d have time to reload it.

    Once in the corridor, Leebrick raced toward the main staircase with Patrick and Richard close behind. He’d have preferred to find a more obscure servant’s stairwell, but he didn’t dare risk the time it would take to find one. The only route he knew out of the mansion was the same one they’d taken when they were brought in.

    As it turned out, he was in luck. Hearing a martial clatter from the far end of the corridor, he realized that the mansion’s guards must have been stationed in the servant’s area themselves. So they were charging up that stairwell—while he and his two fellows would take the main stairs.

    Two guards did emerge from the main staircase, just as Anthony arrived, matchlocks in hand with the fuses lit. He cut one of them down. Richard booted the other back down the staircase, head over heels. The man’s musket went off, the bullet smashing into the ceiling above.

    Patrick picked up the gun that had been held by the soldier he’d sabered. Fortunately, while the blood gushing from a neck hacked halfway through had soaked the barrel—and was still soaking the carpet, as the body slid down the staircase—the grip was clean. He handed it to Welch, who checked to make sure the match was still smoldering.

    Edging to the side to keep from slipping on the blood, they scurried down the stairs and into the mansion’s great entrance hall. Once they reached the bottom of the stairs, Anthony pressed the tip of his sword against the throat of the man who’d been sent flying by Richard’s kick. But there was no need to kill him, since he was clearly unconscious. Leebrick had made it a point to kill Doncaster because of the officer’s treachery, but this was just a common soldier.

    Just as he straightened up, two more guards emerged, bursting into the room from a side door. Richard shot one with the wheel-lock; Patrick shot the other with the match-lock. The Irishman’s shot was dead on into the chest, punching right through the breastplate. Patrick’s only struck his man’s arm.

    It didn’t matter. The guard was down and would stay down. A three-quarter-inch musket ball did terrible damage when it struck any solid part of a human body. If the man didn’t bleed to death, he’d probably lose the arm. If he survived the surgeon, which he probably wouldn’t. Either way or any, Leebrick didn’t care at all.

    There was a doorman standing at the front entrance. Standing quite still, paralyzed with shock and terror, just staring at them.

    That was good enough, too.

    “Open the fucking door or I’ll kill you,” Anthony said, speaking almost conversationally. The man was so frightened that a shout would probably just keep him paralyzed. “Now, damn you.”

    The man did as he was told. “Leave him be,” Leebrick ordered, on his way through the door. There was no point in killing the doorman. It wasn’t as if there was any chance of hiding their identities, after all.

    In the event, the mercy was pointless. Before Leebrick and his two companions made it down the outer stairs to the street, soldiers from within the mansion started firing at them. They missed, mostly because the doorman was still standing in the doorway, gaping down at the three fleeing men. Four bullets struck him and sent him flying. His body hit the street just a split-second after Leebrick and his fellows started racing off.

    “Racing,” at least, insofar as the term could be applied to men who were skating as much as they were running. The footing wasn’t quite as bad as it had been on Tyburn Hill Road, but it was still terrible.

    Anthony was glad of it, however. The same footing would slow the pursuing guards just as much. Probably more, in fact, since they were the pursuers and not the prey. The hound runs for his meal; the hare runs for his life.

    Best of all, it had started snowing again and it was now late in the afternoon. The sun set very early in London, in mid-winter, even on a clear day. The visibility was bad and it would soon get worse. Within an hour, they would have the further shelter of nightfall.

    One more shot was fired, just as they went around the first corner. At them, presumably, but Leebrick couldn’t see where the bullet had gone. As confused and anxious as the mansion’s guard force had to be, after the carnage, whoever had fired that shot might well have just hit a building across the street. Or simply fired into the air at nothing at all.

    Glancing back as they went around the next corner, Leebrick saw that they’d outraced the guards completely and were now finally out of sight. He turned the next corner the other way and then came to an abrupt halt. He needed to catch his breath, before they did anything further. From the way their chests were heaving, so did Patrick and Richard.

    He leaned over and planted his hands on his knees. Started to, rather, until he realized he still had the sword in his hand.

    Fortunately, while Cork had taken their swords, he hadn’t taken the scabbards. Fortunately also, Doncaster had favored a blade not too dissimilar from Anthony’s own. It didn’t fit the scabbard perfectly, and it would have to be yanked out with some effort in the event of another fight, but it would do. An officer making his way through London with a sword in a scabbard was a common sight. If he kept it in his hand, people would notice.

    He saw that Patrick and Richard had already disposed of their guns somewhere along the way. “Better throw away your scabbards too,” he said, still gasping a little. “Empty, they’ll be noticed.”

    Richard complied instantly, tossing the thing into some bushes. Welch followed, after a moment’s hesitation. Good scabbards were as expensive as good knives, and the Irishman was something of a miser. On the other hand, he wasn’t stupid.

 



 

    “Now where?” asked Richard. “Don’t dally about, Anthony. The guards will be here any minute. They’ll search every street.”

    Leebrick already had part of the answer—the end goal. What he wasn’t sure of, was how to get there.

    “I’m not that familiar with Westminster. Either of you?”

    Towson nodded. “I know it quite well. Spent years as a lad, helping my father make deliveries in the area.”

    “You lead the way, then.”

    “Lead the way, where?”

    “Southwark. Liz will hide us.”

    Welch and Towson stared at him, their expressions both full of doubts.

    Different ones, as it turned out, as were their different temperaments. Richard inclined to the practical, being from Derbyshire; the Irishman, to the acerbic.

    Richard expressed his first, as he led them down an alley. “Only way across is either London Bridge or taking a boat at Westminster Stairs, which I don’t advise. It’s the first place they’ll look, and boatmen talk.”

    “It’ll have to be the bridge,” said Leebrick. He wasn’t looking forward to a walk of two or three miles on streets in this bad a condition, but he saw no choice. Taking a boat would be madness, unless they could steal one—and finding an unguarded boat in midwinter was a dubious proposition. Any time of year, for that moment. Boats were expensive, too.

    “They might close off London Bridge before we can get there,” pointed out Welch.

    “Not likely,” said Leebrick. “This wasn’t part of any well-planned conspiracy. Cork is just putting it together as he goes, taking advantage of happenstance. The ink was barely dry on that stinking document of Porter’s. There’s no way Cork has control of the military forces in London yet. Not all of them, for sure—which means not enough of them to seal off every exit.”

    “True,” mused Towson. “But London Bridge is a pretty obvious one, I’d think.”

    Even while talking, though, he’d been leading them as quickly as the ground allowed in the direction of the Bridge. By now, they had to be far ahead of any pursuit coming from Cork’s mansion.

    “No, actually, it isn’t,” said Anthony. “Aside from the two of you, no one knows of my liaison with Elizabeth Lytle. I’ve kept it—”

    Seeing the sour expression on Welch’s face, he let that drop for the moment. “The point is, no one has any reason to think we have any connection with Southwark. So why would we try to hide there, instead of leaving the city entirely?”

    “Same reason any criminal does,” snorted Welch, his tone sounding as sour as his face looked.

    “Not the same thing, Patrick. All a common criminal has to evade are the courts and constables. We’ll be charged with treason—and Cork has enough money to offer a huge reward for us. Southwark’s the worst place in England for someone to hide, if there’s money being waved about to find their whereabouts, unless they can stay completely out of sight. Scratch any criminal and you’ll find an informer.”

    Patrick came to a sudden stop, planting his hands on his hips. “Right, so you will. And here’s what else is true, Anthony Leebrick—and I’ll say it straight out even if Richard won’t. Scratch any whore and you’ll find an informer, too.”

    So, there it was. Towson drew in a breath, almost hissing.

    But Leebrick had seen it coming, and was ready for the matter. “She stopped whoring when she took up with me, Patrick, which not even you will deny.”

    He paused, forcing Welch to answer.

    The Irishman drew in a sharp breath of his own. “Fine. No, I’ll not deny it. I’ll go further and say that I’ve no particular animus against whores to begin with. On average—and this is based on lots of experience—I’ve found them no more dishonest than most and considerably less than some.”

    A quick smile came to his face; Patrick’s saving grace was that he was acerbic about everything, himself not excepted. “Including just about every soldier I ever met, leaving aside thee and me and Richard here. But they’re still no less the mercenaries, themselves, even if they use fleshy instead of iron tools in their trade. So, tell me, Captain Leebrick. Why wouldn’t your precious Liz turn us in for the reward?”

    But by the time Patrick had finished—as Anthony had expected would happen—he’d already talked himself out of his position. Halfway, at least. It was obvious just from his expression. And he’d talked Richard completely around.

    “Oh, leave off, Patrick,” said Towson, sounding quite acerbic himself. “The woman dotes on our dashing captain, you know it as well as I do. Even whores fall in love, you know.”

    Patrick did his best to rally, essaying a sneer.

    “Oh, come on!” Towson jerked a thumb at Leebrick. “Why else do you think he keeps her a secret from everybody except us? Most officers brag about their kept women, especially ones as good-looking as Lytle. The reason he doesn’t is because he knows he’d be the laughingstock of the companies if they found out he was keeping one he planned to marry.”

    “Against my advice, I remind you,” said Patrick. “I want that registered on the record. This current mad scheme even more than that idiot proposal of marriage.”

    From Welch, that was complete capitulation. Towson set off again, leading the way to the bridge.

 


 

    They got across London Bridge with no problems at all. So far as Anthony could determine, whatever pursuit had been organized still hadn’t gotten out of Westminster.

    “So, here we are in Southwark,” said Patrick, a while later, “about to test an legend. Is there really such a thing as a whore with a heart of gold?”

    From anyone else, Anthony would have taken offence. But he and Patrick went back a long way together. So he just chuckled. “And after it’s all over, you’ll insist the test was false, anyway.”

    Welch frowned. “Why would I do that?”

    “You idiot,” said Towson, chuckling himself. He dug into his coat and pulled out Porter’s bag. “I’ll be glad to set this great heavy thing down finally, I can tell you that. Patrick, you benighted Irishman, there’s enough silver in here to offset any reward of Cork’s. Halfway, at least.”

    Welch stopped again, planting hands on hips. “You miserable bastard, Leebrick. You’re cheating!”

    “That’s why he’s the captain,” said Towson, “and we but his lowly lieutenants.”

 


 

    “Dear God,” said Richard Boyle, his face pale. “Endymion? Murdered?

    He looked away, his eyes ranging across the crowd that was now packed into the outer rooms of the palace. Mostly courtiers, standing about and gossiping pointlessly, with some harried officials here and there trying to make their way through the mob. The king had arrived, just minutes earlier, and Cork had had to threaten to have soldiers fire on the crowd to clear a path for the litter. Then, do the same shortly thereafter to clear a way for the royal heirs and the queen’s corpse.

    “Dear God,” he repeated. “I can’t believe it. He was alive—right here!—just—just—”

    “Cork, pull yourself together,” said Sir Paul Pindar sharply. “I’m as sorry as you are about poor Endymion, but Wentworth will be here any moment. Don’t you understand? Porter’s murder casts the final die—and it’s perfect.

    The earl gaped at him. For all his ruthlessness, Cork was a man who’d made his way up using money, not steel. The same could be said of Pindar, of course, but the merchant’s fortune had come from the often steely demands of the Levant trade, not peddling influence and making advantageous marriages.

    “He’s right, Richard,” said Sir Francis Windebank. “A signed testimony is one thing. Might be forged, who’s to say? But now there are bodies to point to, corpses anyone can look at. Brutally slain, by men whom everyone can now see must have been skilled and deadly assassins. Appointed to their posts by Strafford himself. Probably working in collusion with a foreign power.”

    That was sheer gibberish, from any logical viewpoint. But Boyle was starting to regain his wits. Gibberish, yes, if you pulled it all apart. But if you ran it all together quickly—past a dazed and grief-stricken monarch—and you controlled the ensuing investigation yourself…. and had plenty of money to throw around…

    “Yes, you’re right. Poor Endymion—but he’d be the first to tell us to seize the occasion.”

    There was a stir at the outer entrance. A moment later, Thomas Wentworth was forcing his way through the crowd.

    “Clear a path, damn you!” he shouted angrily. “Make way! I’m the Earl of Strafford!”

    He caught sight of Richard. “Cork!” he cried out. “Is there word of His Majesty? I could find no sign of him—”

    Before Wentworth got halfway through that last sentence, Boyle had already gauged the crowd in the vicinity. Courtiers, mostly, not actual ministers except the secretary of state standing right beside him. Best of all, the soldiers were the same ones he’d used to bring in the king. And given their captains the promise of a very hefty bonus.

    “Arrest that traitor!” he bellowed, pointing at Wentworth.


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