Birds Of Prey

The dragon had finished its meal. It was a sloppy eater. Behind on the blood-splashed ground lay the donkey’s head and left forequarters. The latter, at least, was meatier than some of the chunks the creature had bolted. The dragon wandered back up the hill with its tail swinging, as if the beast had forgotten the inn and those trapped there. Perennius was far from sure that was the case.

Judging from his expression, Ursinus was equally doubtful. “We thought it might leave us be if we kept hidden a couple days,” the Gaul said. Then he added, echoing the statement an archer had thrown out in anger, “I hope by the Bull that your lot didn’t convince it to stick around longer.”

“It’s fed now,” the agent suggested mildly. He walked toward the spiral staircase again as if oblivious to the way the Gaul’s fingers were toying again with his sword hilt. There was not enough room on the narrow stairs to draw the long spatha quickly. “Might be a good time for a break if your horses have had a day to rest.”

Ursinus snorted as he fell in behind the agent. Their boots clicked and scuffled again on the stone treads. The Gaul’s hand was relaxed again. “Right, with it south of the ford for sure we’re supposed to ride past it. Not fucking likely, bud. And don’t think one donkey’s going to fill that bastard up, no. . . .”

The mortar had been less discolored than the stones by soot from the poorly-vented fires. The walls of the common room, curving upward to groins, were a latticework of pale on dark to Perennius as he stepped out of the stairwell again. He was in time to hear Gaius asking, “Say, you fellows were in Rome about a month ago, weren’t you?”

The younger man had seen Perennius work. In the youth’s ignorance, he thought he was duplicating the agent’s subtlety. He should never have done that on his own hook, and even he should have realized that the question identified the asker as surely as the answer could have done the Gauls.

“It’s them!” shouted one of the archers, out of Perennius’ sight beyond a pillar.

Somebody else would have to handle that, the agent thought. Behind him he heard the rattle and curse of Ursinus trying to clear his spatha and jarring his elbow on stone. It was Perennius’ own damned fault. He knew that Gaius was smart enough to connect these Gauls with the earlier ambush … and he should have known that Gaius was too inexperienced to keep from blurting the connection in his pride.

Ursinus was good. Reflex had tangled his arms with a sword half-drawn in the strait stairway, but the Gaul met Perennius’ lunge with a kick. The agent had not delayed to draw a weapon of his own. He had thought he would be on Ursinus before the Gaul could respond effectively. Now Perennius did the best he could, grabbing the bigger man’s foot even as Ursinus tried to hop back around the core of the helical staircase.

Perennius had underestimated the Gaul once. Now it was Ursinus’ turn to think he could surprise his opponent by leaping toward him instead of trying to pull away. Perennius had the advantage of being at the base of the stairs with all the room he needed to maneuver the flying Gaul. The agent stepped back and kept Ursinus’ right leg rising. The Gaul hit the floor on his shoulders and left

hand, unwilling to release his sword to take some of the shock with his right arm too. The crash did not stun Ursinus, but it left him open for Perennius’ hob-nailed kick to the head.

The agent drew his own sword and dagger. He put the sword into Ursinus’ chest with a swift lunge that ended when the point jarred against the stone beneath the Gaul. The killing was a judgment call that Perennius did not especially care to make .. . but the fight was not over, and Ursinus had proven himself too damned good to be put out of it by a quick boot. Perennius tugged the blade free without examining the damage. He was running toward the sounds of fighting from the far end of the big room.

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