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The Shadow of the Lion by Mercedes Lackey & Eric Flint & Dave Freer. Chapter 87, 88, 89, 90

Erik hesitated, unsure where to strike with the sword that wouldn’t risk hitting Manfred.

Then—

“Gah! What a stink!”

The monster’s head and back suddenly lurched up. Manfred, lying beneath the creature, was holding it up with his big hands clamped firmly around its gullet. Holding it up—and steady.

“Do me the favor, would you?” hissed the prince. Erik’s sword drove into the glaring blue eye and deep into the Woden’s brain. The monster twitched and shuddered. And kept twitching and shuddering, after Erik jerked the sword loose from the skull.

With another great heave, Manfred tossed the thing off. Soaked with blood, he rose to his feet and stalked over to the place where his sword had been sent sailing. Then, stalked back. The Woden was lying on its side, still twitching and shuddering.

* * *

Manfred spent the next considerable period of time hacking it into small chunks. He didn’t stop until each single piece of the monster was lying motionless and the blade of his sword was as dull as a table knife.

Erik tried to restrain him, early on, so that he could examine the prince for injuries. But Manfred would have none of it. “Dia a coir!” was repeated perhaps two dozen times, intermingled with other expressions which were vulgar and profane beyond belief.

Eventually, Erik gave up and went to help Lopez, who had begun tending to Von Gherens. The Prussian knight was alive, though still unconscious. But now that the Basque priest had removed the man’s helmet, Erik was relieved to see that the burn marks on Von Gherens’s face were not as bad as he had feared.

“He’ll be all right, with a little rest,” murmured Lopez. “The facial scars will be bad, but—at least he’s a Prussian. They treasure the things, so there should be no really adverse consequences.”

He glanced at Manfred, still furiously dismembering the already-dismembered carcass of the Woden, and smiled slyly. “Unlike your friend, who—I daresay—is adding years in purgatory with every oath that comes out of his mouth.”

Erik wasn’t quite sure how to respond. Lopez shook his head. “Not your problem, my fine young Icelandic friend. You are not responsible for protecting the Hohenstauffens from God, after all.”

Erik couldn’t help grinning. “True enough.” Seeing that Lopez needed no further help with Von Gherens for the moment, Erik went over to retrieve his hatchet from the corpse of Sister Ursula.

But . . . there was no corpse; just a burned piece of grass.

And there was no hatchet, either. Only the wirebound shaft remained.

* * *

After a time, Erik fell silent. Lopez clucked his tongue. “And I daresay you’ve just added as many years. Where did you learn to curse like that, anyway?”

Stolidly, Erik stared at the priest. Then, pointed at Manfred, who had finally left off with his hacking.

“Oh, sure,” grumbled the prince. “Blame everything on me!”

Chapter 89

Erik and Manfred stood in one of the bastions of the northernmost of the Polestine forts, watching the Venetian cannons finish pounding the last of the Milanese galleasses into rubble. It seemed a somewhat pointless exercise, since the galleass had ceased being a water-capable means of transport quite some time ago. But a quick glance through the gunports in either of the bastion’s retired flanks was enough to see the reason. The ditch in front of the curtain wall was a charnel house, with nothing more to fire at beyond a relative handful of wounded and maimed soldiers in Visconti colors.

Nothing alive, at least. The ditch was mounded with shattered bodies, all that was left of the Milanese mercenaries who had stormed the fortress thinking a quick rush would be enough to overwhelm the few surviving defenders. The rising sun cast a pale reddish glow over a landscape which seemed red-soaked already.

The mercenaries trapped at the curtain wall had tried to surrender, soon enough. But the Venetians were in no mood for terms. On this day, at least, the normal conditions of Italian condottieri warfare had been suspended. Milan had tried to destroy Venice; the city of the winged lion was returning the compliment. The gunners in the bastions had kept firing on the men piled up along the curtain wall until they had been turned into so much ground meat. Then, still raging, turned their fire onto the grounded and crippled galleasses. There too, clearly enough, they would not be satisfied until the ships had been turned into so much kindling.

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Categories: Eric, Flint
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