we'll say no more about it.'
Pepper's mouth twitched.
Hawkwood shrugged. 'It was worth a try. How's Mr Morgan?'
'Not happy. You've caused him a great deal of bother,' Pepper said drily, eyeing the pistol. 'He's anxious to make your re- acquaintance.'
'I can imagine,' Hawkwood said.
Pepper did not smile. 'Didn't expect you'd end up back here. We thought you'd be across the water by now.'
'How'd you find us?'
Pepper jerked his head. 'Seth here told us he happened to be in the neighbourhood, thought he'd pay the widow a visit on account of they're related and saw Captain Lasseur loitering with intent. We figured you'd not be too far away.' Pepper put his head on one side. 'You all right, Constable? You know, you don't look too well.'
'It's
'Best to be prepared,' Pepper said.
'And I suppose you'd like me to give myself up?'
'Got it in one,' Pepper said. 'Captain Lasseur as well, if it's not too much trouble.'
'You know, that's what I miss about you, Pepper: your sparkling wit.'
'It'll go badly for you if you don't.'
'I suspect it'll go badly for us if we do,' Hawkwood said.
'True, but then the Widow Flynn and the old man get to walk away.'
The inference was clear.
'I thought Morgan didn't make war on women,' Hawkwood said.
'Sometimes he's willing to make an exception. You want time to think about it?'
'No,' Jess Flynn said. 'We don't.'
A look of surprise began to fan across Pepper's face, then the air was ruptured by the blast of a gun behind Hawkwood's right ear. He stood transfixed as every horse started in fear and Seth Tyler, arms outflung, mouth forming a perfect oval, was catapulted backwards. As Tyler's corpse landed among the herbs, the remaining horsemen scattered, drawing weapons. Pepper, showing commendable dexterity for a one-armed man, wheeled his horse about as Hawkwood threw himself through the open door, dragging Jess Flynn and the rifle with him. He heard a chorus of sharp reports and the sound of the balls striking the wall behind him. Somewhere a window shattered, the noise sounding as if it might have come from upstairs. The dog began to bark.
Lasseur kicked the door shut.
'Looks like the parley's over,' Gadd muttered sardonically.
Hawkwood handed the pistol back to Lasseur and took the rifle from Jess Flynn's shaking hands. It was a beautiful gun; a double-barrelled Manton with grooved barrels. Not a light weapon by any means, yet she had wielded it well and clearly hit what she'd aimed at. He remembered then her threat to Tyler.
'Rab, hush!' Jess Flynn called the agitated dog to her.
'Tom's right, Jess,' Hawkwood said. 'You killing Tyler means Pepper's through talking. He's got nowhere else to go.'
'You certainly did for the bugger,' Gadd said, peering out of the window. 'Can't see the others, though.'
'They're there,' Hawkwood said. 'They'll be coming.' He suspected Pepper and his crew had found sanctuary behind the barn.
'Let them.' Jess Flynn raised her chin defiantly, though her face was pale. She stroked the dog's head. It began to quieten. The barks turned to deep growls.
'Four against nine,' Lasseur said. 'That evens it up.' He stretched out his left arm and Jess Flynn moved into his embrace and rested her head on his shoulder. The dog, still restless, prowled the room.
'You any good with that?' Hawkwood nodded to the fowling piece.
Gadd grinned. 'Got those two coneys, didn't I?'
'Rabbits don't shoot back,' Hawkwood said. He held out the Manton. 'Do you have any more ammunition for the rifle?'
She moved away from Lasseur's embrace. 'Only what's in the second barrel.'
Hawkwood felt his heart sink. 'Tom, what about you? Any refills for the Mortimer? What about powder and shot?'
'I've powder. Only a few shot though. Not enough for all
'She's only light. Twenty.'
He turned to Jess Flynn. 'Are there any other weapons in the house?'
'There's a pistol. It was Jack's. He brought it back from the navy.' She pointed to the dresser in the corner.
Hawkwood went to investigate. The pistol was in a drawer next to a small flask of powder and some squares of cotton wadding. The gun was military issue. It was in good condition though it didn't appear to have been oiled in a while. He found tools for making ammunition but there was no lead or spare shot. Theoretically, since it was a larger bore than the Mortimer, it would take the smaller ball, provided more wadding was added. Failing that, it could always be used as a club in the last resort, Hawkwood supposed.
'No other guns?'
She shook her head. 'No.'
'Then we'll make do with these,' Hawkwood said.
While Jess and Tom Gadd kept watch, Hawkwood and Lasseur attended to the guns at the kitchen table. The fowling piece was already loaded, and there was enough ammunition for an additional five shots between them. As Hawkwood had expected, the balls cast for the fowling piece were of a smaller bore than the service pistol. Hawkwood compensated by wrapping one of the balls in a thick wad of cotton. When he used the rod to ram the ball down the pistol's barrel it felt tight enough, but there was no way of knowing if it would be effective when the trigger was pulled. He would just have to make sure the target was close enough to be certain of his shot. They divided the remaining ammunition between them.
Hawkwood considered the layout of the house. The downstairs was effectively one large space divided in two by a central chimney breast which effectively formed the wall between kitchen and parlour. Each room had one window facing the front of the house and one facing the rear. There were two ground-floor entrances: the front door, which led into the parlour and the stairs to the upper floor, and the back door, which opened into the kitchen.
'We should barricade the front door,' Hawkwood said.
'What about the windows?' Lasseur asked.
'We need to see them coming, but we don't have enough guns to cover all points so we'll block one off. The front window in the kitchen will be the easiest.' Hawkwood pointed to the nearby dresser. It was almost six feet tall. 'We can use that.'
'It seems to me you've done this before,' Lasseur said as they manoeuvred the dresser across the floor. The room darkened immediately as the light from outside was obscured.
'Once or twice. Sometimes I've been the one trying to get in.'
They moved to the parlour, upended the settee and propped it against the front door. They used the long- cased clock to obscure half of the parlour window at the front. It wasn't much, but it was better than nothing.
'We need a redoubt,' Hawkwood said. 'Somewhere to make a stand.'
'Don't like the sound of that,' Gadd said.
'There are more of them than there are of us, and I'm guessing they're a lot better armed. They're going to get in, sooner or later.' Hawkwood indicated the kitchen table. 'We can retreat to the pantry and block off the door with the table to restrict their access point. Maybe we can use the cellar as a last resort. Does it have another entrance?'