'Who do you think you are?' shouted Brys, storming forward. The newcomer leaned to the left, his right foot slamming into the mercenary's stomach, hurling him from his feet. Brys slumped to the ground, howling in pain. Dropping his dagger, he gasped for breath and continued to groan.
'You two will need to carry your friend back to his horse,' said the young man amiably.
'Kill him!' grunted Brys. 'Kill the bastard.' The other two men did not move or speak.
The newcomer knelt beside Brys. 'I think your friends are brighter than you,' he said, picking up the man's dagger and slipping it back into the mercenary's sheath. Rising, he turned back to the old man.
'Do you have any salt?' he asked.
Browyn nodded and the newcomer smiled. 'You have no idea what a relief that is.'
'What the hell's the matter with you two?' shouted Brys, struggling to his knees.
'He's Tarantio,' replied one of them. 'I saw him fight that duel in Corduin. I'm right, aren't I?' he said, looking at the newcomer.
'Indeed you are.'
'There's no gold here,' said the mercenary. 'We would have found it.'
Tarantio shrugged. 'Whatever you say.'
'Are you going to kill us?'
'No. I am not in a killing mood.'
'Well, I am, you scum-sucking bastard!' shouted Brys, drawing his sword.
'Brys! Don't!' shouted his comrades. But he ignored them.
'You'd better let me take him,' said Dace.
'No,' answered Tarantio. 'Sigellus trained us both, and I am not afraid.'
'Don't try to disarm him,' warned Dace. 'Just kill the whoreson.'
The mercenary attacked, his sword slashing towards Tarantio's head. The two short swords flashed up to block the stroke, but Brys was ready for the move and spun to his left, his elbow slamming against Tarantio's cheek. Tarantio staggered back, vision blurring. Brys aimed a wild cut at Tarantio's head. The blade slashed high, as Tarantio dropped to one knee and then surged upright, the left-hand blade snaking out. Brys made a desperate block, but the weapon pricked his shoulder, tearing the skin of his chest. Brys fell back. He grinned. 'You're good, Tarantio,' he said. 'But you are not that good. I am better.'
'He is right, you know,' said Dace. 'He'll wear you down and kill you. Let me have him.'
Brys launched a sudden attack, sword raised high. As Tarantio made to block, the voice of Dace hissed at him: 'He's got a knife in his left hand!' Tarantio leapt back -then launched himself forward. The move caught Brys by surprise and before he could react Tarantio's right-hand sword had slashed down on his hand. Three fingers were chopped away, the dagger falling clear.
'You bastard!' screamed Brys, charging forward. Terrible pain exploded in the mercenary's body . . . his sword fell from his hand and he stared down at the blade embedded in his belly. An agonized groan burst from his lips as acid fire filled him. His knees buckled, but the jutting sword held him upright, the blade driving deeper.
'Let me feel the joy!' shouted Dace.
'There is no joy,' said Tarantio, dragging the sword clear. Brys toppled to his right. Take the body with you,'
ordered Tarantio, turning to the other mercenaries. 'And leave his horse behind.'
'We don't want to die,' said the first man.
'No-one wants to die,' Tarantio told him.
Together the man and his companion lifted the dead man, and heaved him over the saddle of a brown mare.
Then they mounted.
As they rode away, Tarantio swung to the old man. 'How badly are you hurt?' he asked him.
'Not half as badly as I would have been. I am grateful to you. What they said is true. There is no gold.'
'No. But there is salt,' said Tarantio wearily.
'You were lucky,' whispered Dace. 'Where would you have been had I not seen the knife?
'Dead,' answered Tarantio, moving across the open ground to the dead man's horse. Just over sixteen hands tall, the gelding stood quietly as Tarantio ran his hand over the beast's flanks. The coat was flat with a healthy sheen, and the skin below was supple and strong. Its front conformation was good, the point of the shoulders in line with knee and hoof. At the rear it tended towards a slight cow-hocked stance, which in humans was called knock-kneed. This was probably why a mercenary could afford such a potentially expensive mount. Cow-hocked horses often strain ligaments on the inside of the limb. Speaking to it gently Tarantio moved around the horse, stroking its long nose and looking into its bright, brown eyes. Lastly he checked the legs. They were powerful, with no sign of heat or swelling, and the gelding had been recently re-shod. Moving to the rear of the horse, Tarantio watched the swelling of its rib-cage; its breathing was even and slow. 'Well, well,' said Tarantio softly, patting the gelding's flank, 'he may have been a vile man, but he certainly looked after you. I'll try to do the same.'
Browyn moved alongside him, checking the gelding's nose and mouth. 'I'd say around nine years old,' said the old man, 'with plenty of speed and strength.'
Tarantio stood back from the gelding, casting his eye along the line of its back, the length of the neck and the shape of the head. 'Without the cow-hocked stance, he would bring around four hundred in silver. As he is, he would fetch less than fifty.'
'There's no sense in it,' agreed Browyn. 'He is a fine animal.'
Browyn relaxed. In that moment a great weariness descended upon him. The aftershock of the attack caused him to tremble and Tarantio took his arm. 'You need to sit down,' said the warrior. 'Come, I'll help you inside.'
The cabin was a mess, papers strewn about the floor among shards of smashed pottery and two broken shelves. There was a beautifully carved bench seat by a large open hearth and Tarantio half carried the old man to it. Browyn sank down gratefully, and Tarantio fetched him a cup of water. Browyn began to shiver.
The fire had died down, and Tarantio added logs from a stack in the hearth.
'Age makes fools of all of us,' said Browyn miserably. 'There was a time when I would have fancied my chances of taking all three.'
'Is that true?' Tarantio asked him.
'Of course it isn't true,' said Browyn, with a smile. 'But it is the sort of thing old people are expected to say.
The real truth - if such a spectacular beast exists - is that I was a bridge-builder with no taste for violence whatever. And I have to admit that it is not a skill I ever wished to acquire.' His keen blue eyes stared hard at the younger man. 'I hope you don't consider that an offensive remark.'
'Why would I? I agree with the sentiments. You sit there for a while. I'll clear up the mess.'
Browyn eased his bruised frame back on to the bench seat and stared into the fire. Sleep came easily, and he dreamt of youth and the race he had run against the three great champions. Five long miles. He had finished ninth, but the memory of running alongside such athletes remained with him, like a warming fire in the room of memories.
When he awoke, the shutters of the small windows on either side of the main door were closed. His two lanterns, hanging in their iron brackets on the west wall, were lit, and the cabin was filled with the aroma of cooking meat and spicy herbs. Browyn stretched and sat up, but he groaned as the pain from his bruises flared.
'How are you feeling?' asked the young man. Browyn blinked and looked around. The cabin was now neat and tidy, only the broken shelves giving evidence of the day's savagery. Nervously he opened the path to his talent and sought out the image of the young man's soul. With relief he saw that there was only one. The beating he had taken at the hands of the raiders must have confused him, he thought. Tarantio's soul was bright, and as untainted by evil as any human spirit could be. Which, Browyn realized sadly, merely meant that the darkness was considerably smaller than the light.
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