The Lion of Farside by John Dalmas

He went back in and closed the door softly behind him. Malakum took a swig, exhaled a forcible “Ah!” and handed the bottle to Olvi. “Good stuff,” he said. “Strong.”

Olvi drank and grunted. “Better than my Uncle Loth brews. Freck is all right, bringing us this.” They continued passing it back and forth, and after a bit sat down on the top step, their spears lying beside them. Olvi had been part of Orthal’s Company when Macurdy first turned up, and without exaggerating much, told stories about their commander. By the time the jug was empty, each man had relieved his bladder onto a shrub, and the moon had set.

Then a woman’s scream tore the air, from inside, and both guards jumped to their feet, spears in hand, unsure where it had come from, though it almost had to be . . . It was followed almost at once by a roar of anger, also inside, and a moment later another, this time from the balcony outside the marshal’s suite.

“Get beneath the balcony!” Malakum snapped, then banged through the door, headed for the stairs, and bounded up three at a time. From the far wing, boots hammered down the hall, for the windows were open, and the screams had reached the guardroom. At the last door on his left, he grabbed the handle, turned it and yanked, then dashed in. The only light came from the corridor, enough to see dimly a large figure half dragging and half carrying a smaller, who was struggling and swearing. The marshal’s voice shouted, “Bring a lamp, for God’s sake!” and Malakum sprinted back out to take one from a tripod in the hall. By that time two more guardsmen came dashing up, one of them barefoot, and ran in.

The marshal stood naked, one thick arm across the throat of a man fully dressed. Blood ran down the marshal’s right forearm, and both men were smeared with it. The bed was overturned, the mattress partly beside and partly beneath it. “Get manacles,” he said, his voice controlled now. “And turn the bed over. I think Colonel Melody’s under the mattress.”

Malakum, holding the lamp, stared while the barefoot guard upended the bed onto its feet and threw the mattress on it. On the floor was the marshal’s naked bride, bloody from face to feet, either dead or unconscious. More men came in. Malakum looked back at the marshal. The officer of the guard tried to manacle the intruder, and when he resisted, the marshal’s arm tightened against the attacker’s throat till he went slack.

As soon as the man was shackled, the marshal moved to his wife, swept the sheet off the bed and threw it to a guard. “Make bandages!” he snapped, and the guard began to tear it into broad strips. The marshal’s hands went to two of his bride’s worst knife wounds, and he began to chant. After a minute he turned to the guardsmen, his voice level but intense. “Send someone to the Sisters. Fast! Tell Sister Omara what’s happened, and bring her right away. And take that—” he gestured with his head at the prisoner “—outside. But don’t damage him. I’ll do the damaging myself, later.”

Then he turned back to his bride as if none of them were there, continuing to touch and chant while Private Malakum stood wooden with dismay.

Lieutenant Sarsli and one of the guards took the intruder out between them, the man’s feet bumping down the stairs. “Be glad it’s not your head,” the guard said. Macurdy had dislocated the man’s elbow, and the soldier jerked the arm a couple of times, making the man cry out in pain. “Stop that!” Sarsli snapped. “You heard what the marshal said.” They hustled the prisoner out the front door and onto the lawn, where the soldier threw him down.

“How did you get in there?” Sarsli demanded.

“How do you suppose?” The man’s voice was high-pitched with emotion. “I climbed the vines to the balcony. And I’d have killed him, if it hadn’t been so damned dark in there. I stabbed his whore by mistake.”

“The vines?” Sarsli turned and stared at Olvi, who’d come back to the porch.

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