Knights of the Hawk (Conquest #3)

‘Go,’ I shouted to the others, who were with me now, and indeed overtaking me in their pursuit of the fleeing guards, and of the slave-girls as well, who were shrieking as they dropped their pails and fled down the rise, deeper into the woods, albeit in a different direction entirely to the men. ‘Don’t let the girls get away. We need them!’


While Serlo, Pons, Sceota and ?lfhelm went after them, the rest of us charged on after Haakon’s men. Two were making for the edge of the copse where they’d tethered their horses, at the foot of the hill, while the other was striking out through the undergrowth.

‘Go after that one!’ Magnus yelled to Dweorg and Godric. ‘Leave the other two for us,’ he added, by which I guessed he meant himself and me.

Leaving the corpse of that first Dane behind me, we crashed on down the slope after our quarries, between the birches and the elms, hacking a path through the brown bracken, strumbling across the uneven ground. We were gaining on them, and they knew it, too. Each risked a glance over his shoulder, and I glimpsed the whites of their eyes. It was a risk too many for the shorter, dark-haired one. He gave a cry as his knee twisted and he tumbled forward into the undergrowth. He struggled to get up, shouting for help, but either his friend didn’t hear him or else didn’t care enough, and he was still prone on the ground when Magnus’s seax found the back of his skull, silencing him.

The taller one ran on towards the nearest of the four horses. I wasn’t far behind him. No sooner had he vaulted up on to its back and, red-faced and sweating, pulled his knife from its sheath, ready to cut through the rope tethering the animal, than I was upon him, seizing his leg and with my other hand grabbing his sword-belt, dragging him from the saddle. He landed awkwardly, falling on his shoulder as he struck the ground, and I would have finished him then had not his mount, panicked by the commotion and the sight of naked steel, suddenly reared up, pummelling the air with its forelegs. I threw myself backwards, just in time, as an iron-shod hoof passed inches in front of my face, before landing on my arse on the hard earth.

Straightaway I scrambled to my feet, expecting to find the Dane striking out across the open ground that lay beyond the woods in the direction of the fortress. But the fall from the saddle must have injured him worse than I’d realised, for he was still on the ground, lying on his back, his chest rapidly rising and falling as softly he whispered words I could not understand. I stood over him, staring into his fearful eyes. Fearful, because he knew that his end was at hand. Blood, thick and dark, burbled from his nose and mouth, streaming down his cheek and his chin. He clasped his hands together, imploring me to grant him mercy, to grant him his life.

In vain. He must have seen the look in my eyes and realised this, for suddenly he tried to scramble backwards in crab-like fashion. He didn’t get more than a couple of paces before I laid my foot upon his chest, pinning him to the ground, and he had enough time to let out a yell before the point of my sword came down on his neck, piercing flesh and bone. At once his flailing limbs were stilled, his chest ceased moving, his eyes glazed over and his lifeless head lolled to one side.

Silence. Breathing hard, my lungs burning with the cold air, my sword’s fuller dripping with crimson, I gazed out into the mist in case these Danes had any friends nearby, but no one came to challenge us. Hurriedly I sheathed my blade, although not before wiping it upon the grass to clean the worst of the blood from it, then set about dragging the man’s corpse back into the woods where it would be less easily spotted.

‘Help me,’ I said to Magnus, who was with me now. The Dane was heavier than I’d imagined. The Englishman took hold of the feet while I lifted the shoulders. Together we carried him back up the slope a short way into the copse, where no one was likely to happen upon him. We threw him down amidst the bracken so that he was hidden from sight, and there we left him, although not before stripping him of his cloak, his silver brooch, his boots and his necklace of ivory beads. We did the same to the one Magnus had felled as well as the other two, not as spoils but as preparations for the next part of our plan. Having found Godric and Dweorg again, we ventured back towards the hill’s summit, where Pons, Serlo, ?lfhelm and Sceota were already waiting for us with the four trembling slave-girls, who sat around the trunk of the broad-bellied oak, keeping close together, regarding us with wide eyes.

‘Did you catch them all?’ Serlo asked when we reached them. ‘Are they—?’

‘All dead,’ I replied as I let the collected garb of the Dane I’d slain fall in a heap on the ground. I cast my gaze over the girls, who looked down, doing their best to avoid my attention. They looked pale, and freezing in their thin, mud-stained dresses. Terrified, too, and I supposed they had every right to be.

‘Have you told them who we are and why we’re here?’ I asked Serlo.

‘Not yet. We were waiting for you and Magnus.’

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