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The Crimson Campaign(The Powder Mage Trilogy)(79)

By:Brian McClellan


Dust rose off the plateau, a billowing trail of the kind made when multiple riders were coming hard. "Saddle my mount," Tamas said to Olem. "Quickly!"

Tamas ran through the camp. A few hundred yards from his own tent, the powder mages were camped together. Most of them were there, their legs splayed, boots off, talking as they passed around a bottle they'd got from who knew where. Vlora stood when she saw Tamas.

"Andriya, Vlora," Tamas barked. "With me! The rest of you, raise the general alarm. Riders on the northern horizon."

"How many, sir?" Vlora asked as they headed back to the north end of the camp.

"That's what we're going to find out," Tamas said. "Do you know where Gavril is?"

"Ranging," Andriya answered.

"Where?"

"North, I think."

"Pit. You two, get horses."

Olem brought Tamas his horse and rifle. He threw himself into the saddle and headed north, not waiting for anyone else. Olem caught up to him quickly enough  –  he'd not yet unsaddled his own mount from the day.

"What's happening, sir?" Olem shouted over the sound of hooves thundering on the dusty soil.

"Riders," Tamas said. "A lot of them."

"Could it just be Gavril's rangers?"

Tamas wanted to say yes, but he fixed his eyes on the cloud of dust rising in the distance. It was getting larger. Too big to be less than twenty horses, and Gavril's rangers worked in pairs.

They left camp behind and headed north along the main road. A glance over his shoulder told Tamas that more riders were following him out of the camp, a few hundred yards behind him.

Tamas fumbled in his pocket for a powder charge as his body rocked up and down with the motion of the stallion beneath him. He put it straight in his mouth and bit down, tasting the bitter sulfur and the grit between his teeth. He spit the soggy charge paper out as the powder trance coursed through his veins.

The ground rushed by beneath his charger's hooves and the horizon came into stark relief. He found the cloud of dust and traced it to the source. There, miles away, a single horseman.

Tamas frowned. Just one? The horseman lay low on his mount, clinging to the horse's neck. Tamas thought he recognized him as one of Gavril's rangers.

A few moments later, breasting a rise in terrain behind the ranger, came more riders.

Their uniforms were blue with silver trim, and they wore the conical, horsehair helmets of Adran dragoons.

Tamas swore. Adran dragoons? It couldn't be. If they were, the ranger wouldn't be fleeing before them. Tamas looked over at Olem, but the bodyguard couldn't see that far.

"Dragoons," Tamas shouted at him. "Chasing one of our rangers! They're wearing Adran blues, but they're not friendly."

Olem responded by urging his mount harder.

Tamas put his head down and counted the beats of the hooves as they closed the distance between themselves and the ranger. As he drew closer, he was able to tell that the dragoons were perhaps a half mile behind the ranger. The ranger's horse frothed at the mouth, shaking its head hard. It wouldn't last much longer.

Tamas waved his pistol at the ranger, motioning for him to stop. The ranger's horse shuddered and swayed, eyes rolling as the ranger reined in beside Tamas. The ranger's face and front were covered in dust, smeared and muddy from his sweat.

"Where's Gavril?" Tamas demanded.

The ranger gasped for breath, trying to speak, before he threw his hand out behind him. "Far …  back …  fought so I could …  escape."

"Who are they?"

"Kez! We thought they were friendlies, but they fell on us the moment Gavril spoke in Adran."

Tamas whirled toward the dragoons and quickly counted. Sixteen. They waved their carbines and hollered, showing no sign of slowing at the sight of Tamas and Olem. They'd be upon him in minutes. He raised his off hand to steady his pistol and closed one eye. He squeezed the trigger.

In his head, he counted seconds, concentrating on the powder, keeping the bullet flying far beyond when it should have fallen. At the same time, his hands worked to holster one pistol and draw the other.
 
 

 

One. Two. Thr …

A dragoon near the rear of the group fell, the bullet taking him neatly in the eye.

Tamas steadied his second pistol and fired. Another dragoon fell. Again, at the rear of the group. Tamas didn't want to scare off the dragoons, and it didn't seem like they noticed their comrades' fall.

"Olem! With me!"

Tamas dug his heels in and spurred his horse forward. He holstered his second pistol and drew his heavy cavalry saber. It felt good in his grip, the old leather handle worn and strong.

The dragoons aimed their carbines at seventy yards. They fired, and Tamas heard one bullet whistle past his ear.

Hitting a single riding target from horseback was difficult at best, if you weren't a powder mage.

He cocked his saber back and eyed the lead dragoon. The man was missing an ear. Earless stowed his carbine and drew his straight cavalry sword in one quick motion.

Hand still on the reins, Tamas dug into his front uniform pocket for a small handful of bullets.

Tamas studied the position of Earless's sword, then ran his eyes over the next few dragoons, all in a pair of seconds. Tamas leaned to his right, bringing his saber up high.

Then they were upon each other.

Tamas slid to his left in the saddle, narrowly avoiding the stroke of Earless's sword. His cavalry saber bit through soft flesh, the top three inches cleaving through Earless's neck. Tamas worked a bullet up to the top of his fist and flicked it in the air with his thumb, burning powder from a spare charge to send it into the heart of the next dragoon. He followed through with his saber cut, bringing it over his horse's head and deflecting the stab from a dragoon on his left.

He flicked another bullet into the air and burned powder, sending it backward and into Earless's spine.

Back over his mount's head with his saber, Tamas sawed on the reins. A dragoon at the rear of the group leaned toward him with a savage slice.

Parry. Parry again.

The dragoon was fast, and skilled. Tamas flicked a bullet into the air, sending it into the dragoon's shoulder. The dragoon dropped his sword, clutching at his arm, and Tamas rammed his saber into the man's chest.

Tamas spun around, looking for the next enemy, only to see two of the dragoons surrender to Olem. In the distance to the south, puffs of powder smoke rose from a pair of figures  –  Vlora and Andriya. Tamas rode to one of the surrendered dragoons.

"Where is Gavril?" he said in Kez.

The dragoon stared back at him.

"Where is Gavril? A big man! Where is he?"

The dragoon shook his head.

"Pit." Tamas cleaned and sheathed his sword. "Olem, with me!"

"Sir, my horse is lame." Olem was already dismounting. His horse was in a panic, blood streaming from a wound beneath its neck.

"Then take one of theirs!"

"The prisoners … "

"Leave them! I'll not lose another brother in this forsaken country!"

Tamas pushed on without waiting for an answer. A while later, he looked over his shoulder to see Olem and the powder mages struggling to keep up.

The sun set on the western horizon, bathing Tamas in twilight. He kept on, the hot night air whipping his hair and jacket, drying the blood on his cheeks. His charger began to struggle, breathing hard, slowing despite his continued urging.

Olem was lost to him as darkness spread on the plateau. The eerie sound of howling brush wolves reached his ears above the whistling of the wind. His powder trance wore off, and he chewed another powder charge to bring it back again. The road passed in a blur and the pounding of hooves.

He did not know how far or how long he'd ridden when his charger stumbled. He jolted from the saddle, thrown for several feet, and landed hard on his shoulder.

Tamas staggered to his feet. Silence. Nothing in the night. No sound of hooves from his soldiers following. No sign or sound of dragoons. Just the desperate gasping of his charger.

Where was Gavril? What had happened to him? Tamas ran a hand through his sweaty, dirty hair. His hat was gone, blown off he knew not when. He stumbled over to examine the horse, his legs wobbly from riding too long and too hard.

The charger lay on its side. It rolled its eyes at him, foam and blood at its nose and the corner of its mouth. Tamas blinked away tears and tried to calm the beast with a hand on its flank. It twitched and tried to stand up, only to let out a shuddering scream. The sound shook Tamas's soul.

The horse's leg had shattered, bone sticking out from the side. It must have stepped in a hole and stumbled from exhaustion.

Tamas drew his pistol. He loaded it slowly, carefully.

The shot rang out across the plateau.

Tamas gathered his saddlebags, ammunition, pistols, and rifle. He began to walk north.

He didn't know when he'd stopped. Only that he was suddenly on his knees, staring at his hands. They were raw from the reins. Where had his riding gloves gone? He shook his head and thought to stand and keep going.

Instead, he dropped his head into his hands. Another brother. All that remained of his family gone except, perhaps, his son. Tamas had failed again.

He should have stopped. Interrogated those Kez dragoons. Found out if Gavril was even alive, and where they'd taken him. How many dragoons in their company.

Tamas knew he'd been a fool, riding on like that. A desperate fool, trying to save his brother. Alone.

Tamas wept.

The tears were dry when Tamas heard hoofbeats on the road. They came on at a steady canter from the south. One set, from the sound of things.