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Articles of Faith

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2019
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Chel nudged the prince, who woke after a couple of shunts. Chel motioned to keep quiet, then upward at the grille.

‘Highness?’ came the voice again.

‘Who’s there?’ Tarfel said in as soft a voice as he could manage.

‘A loyal servant, highness. Here to rescue you.’

‘How many are you? We’re well-kept.’

‘There’s a boat coming, but we must be ready for it. I’ve opened the hatch on this side – unbolt it on yours and I’ll raise it.’

Tarfel and Chel exchanged glances. The prince was beaming in the gloom. One-handed, Chel clambered onto a barrel, then reached up and ground open the lower latch on the grille. Slowly, the man above them levered it out, and a wider swathe of starlight flooded the hold.

The man’s arm thrust down into the gap. ‘Highness, your hand. Quickly, please.’

Tarfel went to climb for it, but Chel shook his head in the gloom. Let me check. The prince nodded, twitching with impatience. Chel steadied himself, then reached up to take the man’s outstretched hand. It was cold to touch, and rough, but it gripped him with an iron strength and dragged upward. Chel braced his feet against the wall of the store, hoping its creaks would be covered by the noise of the barge’s passage.

As soon as his head and good shoulder crested the hatch in the deck, he found himself looking up at the face of their rescuer. He was rangy, shaven-headed, a single gold earring glinting in the starlight. His eyes widened as the light caught Chel’s face.

‘Who the fuck are you?’

Still Chel dangled in his grip, one-armed, his toes braced against the wall below the hatch. ‘I’m s—’

His gaze caught the knife in the man’s other hand, wheeled back to strike.

The man’s eyes followed his, then they locked stares. Without a word the man thrust forward with the blade, and Chel did the only thing he could think of. He drove back with his legs, pushing away from the wall, and yanked the man into the hatch after him.

His attacker slammed his head on the lip of the opening as he fell, and for a split-second Chel congratulated himself before his own thumping impact, spread across a splintering crate and a sack of something solid. The man fell straight onto him like a dead weight, crushing the air from his lungs, the knife vanishing into the darkness.

‘Chel? Chel? What’s happening?’ Tarfel’s voice was urgent and timorous in his ear.

He tried to answer, but his abdomen was in spasm and he could barely breathe, let alone speak. Instead he honked in what air he could and wrestled his good arm free. The man was moaning and stirring, and Chel swung feeble, one-armed punches past his head.

‘Hoy, what’s going on in there?’ It sounded like Lemon on the other side of the door. ‘Don’t make me come in and sort you out, you pestilent pissants.’

Tarfel looked at Chel with fearful eyes. He did his best to look reassuring while gasping like a harpooned seal and jabbed a finger toward the door with what he hoped was encouragement.

‘Get Lemon?’ the prince said.

‘Get … Lemon …’ Chel croaked.

The man crushing his lungs shook his head and pushed himself up, and for a moment Chel managed a real inward breath. Then he couldn’t tell which bangs were Tarfel thumping on the door and which were the assassin landing punches into his sides as he flailed his good arm and struggled beneath the man’s weight.

Light burst brilliantly across the store as the door to the hold flew open. Lemon stood framed in the doorway, a small, wiry silhouette, an orange halo around her head.

‘Right, yon fucker!’

The weight lifted from Chel’s chest as the man struggled to his feet. Something whistled through the air and connected with the assassin’s head with a dull clunk. Lemon strode through the door and over Chel’s prone form and punched the reeling man in the throat as he staggered. He collapsed to the floor, gasping, and Lemon crunched her knee into his face. The assassin slumped, passed out on the floor.

‘Where’d this shite-box come from?’

Chel’s own breathing was barely under control, and he felt like the room was spinning even as he lay beside the broken would-be assassin. He managed to wave his good arm toward the empty hatch above.

‘He said he was here to rescue me,’ Tarfel said from his hiding place in the opposite corner.

‘Aye, right. Course he was.’ She stooped to reclaim her hammer.

‘He said there’s a boat coming.’

‘Ah, ancestors’ piss-wine! Now I have to wake everybody up.’

Lemon turned and marched back to the doorway, then paused. ‘Stay here, dullards. For all that is sweet in this shitty world, do not fucken wander off again. Yes?’

Tarfel nodded. Chel managed a groan. Lemon disappeared into the flickering light of the hold, then a moment later a coil of rope came whistling through the door and thumped down onto the boards. ‘And tie that fucker up!’

***

By the time Chel had recovered his feet and spat a bloody mouthful into a corner, Tarfel had made a decent fist of tying up their attacker. Not being a natural knotsman, he’d gone for quantity over quality, and thick balls of contorted rope jutted from the man’s constricted limbs. He’d also found the man’s knife, which he presented to Chel with great solemnity. Uncertain of what to do with it, Chel took it in his good hand and tucked it in his belt as he’d seen others do. He hoped he could keep his balance and avoid falling on it, which seemed the most likely prospect at that point.

Sounds filtered down through the open hatch. Cries and clangs and thumps.

‘Someone’s fighting,’ Tarfel said.

Chel nodded. ‘More than likely. Let’s go, highness.’

‘What do you mean, let’s go? The Clydish oaf said to stay here!’

Chel chewed something salty around his mouth. He could feel his face swelling up again. ‘She did. But all we know at the moment is that people are trying to kill us, or maybe just me to get to you, and that we’re in the hands of mercenaries employed by interfering foreigners. That doesn’t strike me as people we should be bending over backward to keep alongside, highness.’

‘But what good is going up there?’

‘Up there,’ Chel said, ‘is a boat. And if we time it right, we can be away before anyone knows we’re missing, leave these bastards to sort things out between themselves. All we need to do is get to shore. We’re still well north of the lake – this part of the world must be teeming with folk loyal to the crown. So, I say again: let’s go, your highness.’

This time, Tarfel followed.

They crept through the empty hold and up onto the lower deck. The moon was lost behind drifting clouds but the stars were bright, and the scattered forms of bodies lay clear across the planking. Three on the lower deck, another over the rail on the fore tower. The sound of combat came from over their heads, the aft upper deck. Chel ignored it. He had seen what he was looking for.

‘There, grapples!’

He limped forward, feeling every wound and trauma as he crossed the deck with the prince in his wake. A rope ladder dangled from rusty hooks from the barge’s high rail, and Chel peered over the side. There on the slick water below bobbed a long, narrow rowboat, tied against the side.

There was someone in it.

The figure below gave a cry and raised the crossbow in its grip, its projecting bolt-head gleaming in a sudden burst of moonlight. Chel floundered, too shocked to react.

Something whistled past his face, close enough to flutter his hair, and he assumed the bolt had fired and missed. Yet still he could see it in the crossbow below him, even as its owner wobbled. He refocused. Something long and dark was projecting from the top of the figure’s head. Something fletched. Another black arrow swished down toward the boat, thudding into the crossbow wielder. The crossbow clattered against the boat’s hull.

Strong hands gripped him and pulled him back from the rail. He looked around to see Foss, the braided hulk, steering him back toward the hold. Spatters of blood shone on his face in the starlight. Tarfel was already walking ahead of them, unprompted.
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