pistol closer against Giovanna’s temple; Frank felt as though he was going to pop straight out of his own skin. “And the woman will get the first bullet, right through her brain.”
Castro y Papas looked at him sideways. “You wouldn’t,” said the captain, his gun still held steadily upon the others.
“I would-and you’d better be ready to do the same. We have to hold off whoever is on the stairs-and the roof-until some one comes to check the lazarette. And this little bitch”-he prodded his pistol deeper into Giovanna’s temple-“is the only way to keep them at bay.”
“Yes, but you are only bluffing. You wouldn’t kill a woman-a pregnant woman.”
“Idiot. Of course I would. And don’t give me any of that merda about hidalgo honor, you ass; this is war.”
“Is it?” asked Don Vincente in a strange voice.
“What the hell is wrong with you? Of course it is. Now draw your sword and take the husband in hand; if I’m forced to kill the bitch, you’ll need to immediately threaten the other hostage to make them back off. You can do that, can’t you, noble sir?”
Don Vincente Jose-Maria de Castro y Papas seemed to consider the order judicially for a moment. “No, I can’t,” he answered. He turned and shot Dakis in the head.
When Harry heard the two SKS reports, just beneath him, he dropped the handset and hustled over to the southern side of the lazarette’s battlements, holstering his. 357 automatic and unslinging his own SKS as he went. Damn, but the party is starting early. Peering around the merlon, he saw why.
Evidently a guard had escaped from Frank and Gia’s room-where, now, he heard a single shot. That was not according to plan, but he’d handle that later. The escaping guard had been fleeing over the walkway when Eubanks had come down to the landing that gave access to it, as well as the prisoners’ room. Eubanks had thought and fired quickly, bringing the man down. But in the process, he had further alerted the Spanish to exactly where their enemies were: a dozen of the men tasked to walk patrols on the roof and tend the bay-pointing culverins were now closing on the walkway, running at a crouch and drawing weapons.
Oh well, I hate waiting anyway, thought Harry as he snapped an AK-47 magazine into the SKS. He drew back the bolt, let it fly forward with a sharp clack, and leaned over the sights.
The light was not good, but with watch fires and cressets mounted on the other three towers, he could still see target outlines. He dropped the sights, leading the closest of the responding guards, exhaled slightly, and squeezed the trigger. He recovered and squeezed again. The running figure tumbled into a long forward slide and lay still. Which Harry only saw peripherally as he moved on to the next target…
Owen Roe O’Neil came to the top of the stairs, and paused; the basic lesson of fortress combat, particularly when one had the advantage, was to waste no time. Press a charge and take some casualties, particularly if it will allow you to take an important defensive position. But here, with so few troops behind him, and constant training in the duck-and-weave tactics extolled by the up-timers and that damned sassenach, he decided, Let’s spend a moment seeing what we’re up against. He swept the capelline helmet off his head, put it on the tip of his sword, and, raising it to eye level, had it “peek” around the corner.
The response was immediate: two discharges from the right and perhaps four from the left sang off the sandstone, sending chips and dust flying. His battered helmet banged down the stairs.
He smiled down the staircase at the dark figures behind him. “You know,” he said, “That little volley means a whole lot of them are reloading now, or are down by one readied piece…”
Thomas leaned out of the Castell’s broad entry passage to look around the entirety of the arms ground. North squinted across the arms yard. The men with Donald Ohde had now swept through all but three of the ground-floor rooms, one of the Hibernians getting wounded in the process. As he limped behind, Paul Maczka of the Wrecking Crew took his place as point man for entering the next room.
As they set up for the assault, one of the other ground floor doors banged open and several Spaniards came charging out.
“SKS’s: supporting fire!” called North to the suitably equipped members of his team. They leaned over their sights, took hasty aim and fired, usually two shots per figure just to be sure. The muzzle flashes and crashing reports-intensified by Bellver’s constraining walls-lasted only five seconds; by then the Spanish were all on the ground. One was writhing; the rest were still.
From across the arms yard, Donald Ohde waved his thanks and then gave Paul Maczka the signal to enter the next room. He and the Hibernians did so, one kicking the door as another went in low. Two flashes and reports, a moment of quiet, and then Paul came out, giving a thumb’s up to Donald Ohde.
Which was the very moment that a clutch of muskets from the upper gallery fired down into the arms yard; two of the balls hit one of the Hibernians mid-torso; he went down backward, his blood spattering back into the room he had just cleared. Another one hit Paul, who twisted around and fell against the wall, either dead or stunned.
Donald and his men crouched and scooted to head back to the room they had just exited. North elevated his weapon, looked for targets on the second floor gallery, saw faint movement, and shouted “Suppression!” Long, bright up-time muzzle flashes led angry roars up at the place where he had seen the movement.
Using the cover fire, Ohde and his team charged out, one pulling Paul back through the doorway he had just exited, the rest making directly for the last room to be secured on the ground floor. One objective completed, thought North, but if Owen can’t take the head of the stairs, and we don’t link up with the element in the lazarette…
North decided he didn’t want to think about that. He concentrated his focus on the second floor gallery and wondered if this might be a good moment to swap his current magazine for a fresh one.
CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE
Frank flinched as the door burst open. A man in a cuirass, equipped exactly like those he had seen in the courtyard of the Palazzo Mattei, came in at a crouch, a wicked-looking up-time rifle in his hands. Its muzzle swung swiftly, surely, in Don Vincente’s direction.
Frank jumped in front of Castro y Papas, arms spread wide in a covering gesture.
The man in the doorway snarled “Shite.” Then, louder: “You want to be rescued or not, Francis Stone?”
“Yeah, but you don’t have to kill him to do it.”
Don Vincente threw down his pistol in disgust. “Evidently not.” He turned to Frank. “How well you have learned the lessons of Rome, Frank. Deceit piled upon deceit. You have outdone your enemy, in this. Dakis was right: this is war-and I was a fool. I may have been a fool for one second, and he may have been a brute and a monster-but I was still a fool.”
Frank took a step toward the man he had once again started to consider a friend. “Vincente, tell me: is it ever right to kill a pregnant woman?”
Don Vincente frowned, then looked away. “No. Of course not.”
“So you were not a fool; you were a man with a terrible decision to make. And you made the right one.”
“Right for you, at any rate.”
“Yes, it helps us escape. But it also lets you keep your soul.”
Turlough Eubank shook his head in annoyance, shouted, “Two minutes!” and ran back out the door toward the fortified walkway.
Peering around a different merlon-no reason to give the bastards a consistent muzzle-flash to aim at-Harry Lefferts saw that Turlough Eubanks had at last arrived in his position just beyond the door into the lazarette. And just in time.
At some predetermined signal that Lefferts failed to detect, almost thirty Spanish rose up from behind the culverins, from out of the two closest towers, and from the cupola covering the stairs down to the upper gallery. A few paused to knock the torches from the cressets affixed to the towers; the rest charged for the fortified walkway that was the sole means of access to the lazarette. Lefferts measured their progress, assessed that he had maybe two seconds to spare, and spent it scanning the rest of his kill-zone. Sure enough, he spotted movement on two of the other towers: low, stealthy hints of arms, shoulders, heads over the edges of the battlements. These were the