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Sackett’s Land by Louis L’Amour

We tied our horses well back into the trees, and waited for Jublain and Corvino.

I had no worries about Sakim. He was perhaps the wisest of us all, and would not

be taken unawares. We went up the path in single file.

The night had grown increasingly dark. Stars gleamed above although there were a

few drifting clouds. It was damp and still. Picking our way over the fallen

stones and the remnants of a wall we found a door. It was closed and locked.

When I felt of the lock my fingers came away with cobwebs. An unused door,

evidently barred from within.

Moss covered the fallen stones, vines hung from the walls. We rounded the house

by a faint path.

Jeremy put a hand on my arm. “I like none of it,” he whispered. “The place

smells of a trap.”

“Aye, but we came to help the Earl. Trap or no trap, we shall do it.’

“There are the stables,” Corvino whispered. “Do you wait now.” He was gone in an

instant, back as soon. “There is a carriage outside, and a dozen horses within.

Several of them are still wet with sweat. They have been hard-ridden within the

hour.”

“A dozen? Perhaps four for the carriage, and eight for outriders or others. They

are eight or nine. Perhaps ten.”

“It is a goodly number,” Ring suggested thoughtfully.

“Enough to go around. Come now, no jealousy! Each of you will have at least one,

and two if you are lucky. Gentlemen, I think we are expected. Let us not keep

them waiting. As my name is Barnabas Sackett, I hope that Rupert Genester is

himself here.”

We started forward, then I stopped. “Jeremy? Do you and Corvino mind? Jublain

and I will enter alone. Do you follow us. In that way we may not all be trapped

at once.”

We went forward, up the few steps, and Jublain put a hand to the door. At my

gesture, he opened it and I stepped inside. There had been no chain on the door,

no bar. Truly, we were expected. Stepping inside, Jublain followed.

The great entranceway was dark and shadowed. Light showed beneath a door. I

stepped quickly forward and in that instant the big door slammed behind us and

torches flared into light.

We were in the center of a great hall and a dozen men stood about us, all with

drawn swords.

One stepped slightly forward. “You do not disappoint me, Sackett. You come

quickly to meet your death.”

“Of course. Did you expect me to keep you waiting?”

“They’ve barred the door,” Jublain said quietly.

“Aye, that makes it better. Not one of them shall escape us. And look, Jublain.

The rascal with the beard. It is Nick Bardle himself, trying to patch up the

mistakes he made.”

A move, and my blade was drawn. “I hope the Earl is still alive? Or have you

murdered him?”

Genester shrugged. “He will die … Why hasten it? I want no marks upon his

body, but on yours—”

“Of course. Will you try to put them there yourself? Or will you sprawl in the

mud again as you did in Stamford?”

His lips tightened with anger, and he took a half-step forward. I held my blade

low, smiling at him. “You were a fit sight for a lady, sprawled in all your

pretty silks in the mud! There was no occasion for it. The lady but asked for a

drink.”

“I shall kill you now,” he said.

“Will you try it alone? Or leave it to this pack of dogs that follows you?”

Above me, faintly, I heard a scrape of something. A foot on stone? What was

above? I dared not look up.

“Do not let him die too quickly,” Genester said. “But die he must.”

“And you, Rupert? Are you ready for the blade? I’ve chosen a resting place for

it, right under that pretty little beard.”

“Take him,” he said, and turned indifferently away.

They moved, but I moved first. I was within a long blade’s reach of the nearest

man and, taking a quick step, I lunged just as his sword came up. There was a

faint clang of steel, and my blade went past his and a hand’s length into his

chest.

His eyes stared at me down the length of the blade, the eyes of a man who would

die. I withdrew swiftly and then Jublain shouted, “At them!” And then there was

only the clang of swords, the whisper of clothing and the grunt and pant of men

fighting.

From above there was a shrill yell, then down a rope came Corvino, and then

Jeremy.

A man rushed at me, swinging a cutlass, a wide sweep with a blade that might

have been effective in a boarding operation. But not here. My blade was down and

I cut swiftly upward. The blade slit through his shirt front and parted his

chin—the very stroke I had planned for Genester himself.

At least two were down. I felt a blade nick my arm, the rip of my shirt. It was

close, deadly fighting, with no time for fancy work here. I thrust, slashed,

thrust again, moving always.

Corvino was down … no, up again. There was blood on his shirt. The torchlight

wavered and shadowed and unshadowed us. Faces gleamed with sweat. It was wild,

desperate, bitter fighting this.

A tall man lunged at me. I parried and he came in with his thrust and we were

face to face, our swords locked tightly. It was Darkling.

My left fist came up quickly in a smashing blow to his belly and he gasped and

stepped back. I followed him in, keeping our swords locked, and hit him again

… my attack totally unexpected.

Darkling fell back again, disengaged and tried to come into position. But my own

blade was far forward and, without drawing it back, I turned quickly left and

cut across his face under his nose, then right, and under his eyes. Neither was

deep, both were bloody. He fell back, shocked, and I let him go.

A blade ripped my shirt again and then we were forced into a corner, Jublain and

I. Corvino was down or gone. Jeremy was waging a desperate fight with three men,

his blade dancing, gleaming, thrusting. One man fell back with a cry, and Jeremy

dropped quickly to one knee—or almost there—with a sweeping blow at the next

man’s legs. Killing him as well.

Suddenly there was a banging upon the door, a shout, and Jeremy skipped quickly

to one side and, fencing adroitly to hold the man off, managed to flip the bar

from the door. Instantly it crashed open.

Captain Tempany! And with him four men!

Suddenly there was a break for the door, and desperate fighting there. Leaping

across a body I raced up the steps to the door through which Genester had gone.

I shoved the door slowly inward and a pistol coughed hoarsely in the small

confines of the room. Leaping through the door, sword in hand, I saw Rupert

Genester just beyond.

The Earl—at least I supposed him to be—sat up in bed, a woman standing near him,

her face pale and angry. Genester threw the now empty pistol at my head and then

ran around the end of the bed to come at me.

He was facing me, a desperate man. His face was pale, his eyes very bright and

hard. There was no coward in the man, for all I disliked him. His blade was up

and he was ready.

Though I had out-maneuvered him often, Genester faced me squarely. “Even if you

live to tell it,” he said, “they’ll not believe you. I will declare that you

killed the Earl.”

“But he is not dead!” I said. “I—”

His sword was down by his side in his right hand. Suddenly his left held a

dagger, and he lifted it to stab down at the old man who lay beside him. His

left fist gripping the dagger swung up and back.

I lunged.

The point of my blade took him at mid-chest and thrust toward his left side.

His arm was caught in movement, and my blade sank deep. He turned his head and

looked at me, his eyes wide, lips bloodless. “Damn you!” he gasped. “I should

have—”

I lowered my point and he slid off it to the floor, blood all about him, his

fingers loosening on the dagger. The dagger clattered to the floor.

“Your pardon, Excellency,” I said, “forgive this intrusion, but … my name is

Barnabas Sackett.”

“I know who you are,” the old man’s voice rumbled like a far off thunder in the

small room. “And you are your father’s son.

“By the Lord,” he said, sitting a little straighter, “as neat a bit of action as

ever I saw!”

Suddenly, I realized that Nick Bardle was gone … I’d forgotten him.

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Categories: L'Amour, Loius
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