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He pointed with his saber towards one pair locked together; it shouldn?t have been physically possible for two men to choke one another to death that way, but the swollen purple faces and bulging eyes were unmistakable. And the same smile was on their faces, the same as all the others.

Ignatius mastered himself and swung down, his armor clanking. He was in the full knight?s gear of knee-length chain hauberk, coif and visored helm, plate greaves and vambraces, armored gauntlets on his hands and steel sabatons protecting his feet. The well-trained destrier stood stock-still as he dropped the reins, though its eyes rolled piteously and shivers went over its black coat. One young man still lived despite the wounds that leaked blood over chest and belly and groin; his hand was locked around a chain that held a silver crucifix, and his eyes moved towards the priest. ?What happened here, my son?? Ignatius said, going down on one knee in the sticky redness that covered the asphalt. ? He… came,? the young man gasped.? He… came.?

Ignatius nodded. Now I know where the Corwinite diabolist is, he thought grimly. Trying the rear entrance. But first – ?What did he do??

The dying man?s face jerked, and he began to sob; not with the pain, but as a lonely child might. ?He showed me myself,? he whimpered, then began to thrash.?He showed me myself! Oh, God, I?ll die and I?ll have to see him again-?

Ignatius leaned forward, and locked the wounded man?s eyes with his, pouring his will through the joined gaze. ?He lied, child of God. No sin is beyond forgiveness if you accept Christ?s mercy. Throw yourself upon His love.?

The priest felt something flow out of him… or through him, for it left him stronger, not weaker. A measure of sanity returned to the other?s face for a moment; he slumped, and whispered slowly: ?Bless… me… Father… for I have sinned.?

Aloud he spoke the words as the boy died. Within himself, silently, he added: Lady pierced with sorrows, this man too was born of woman. Intercede for him, I beg. And for us all, now and at the hour of our deaths.

Then he stood, looking up at the blank wall as he drew his sword and pulled on the leather strap to slide the kite-shaped shield around and onto his left arm. There were narrow windows running up the brick wall, one per flight, but they were covered with grills bolted to the frames. The ends of the bars curved outward in sharp points. ?They?ve gone through here just a moment ago, but they barred it behind them. We?ll have to go around to the front of the building,? he said crisply.?And pray we?re in time.? ?No, we won?t!? Virginia shouted.

She snatched the lariat free from her saddle bow and brought her horse around in a broad circle across the street and down a little. The silver spreader-weight flashed in the faint, distant light of the gas lamps as she whirled it overhead, and the nimble quarterhorse sprang off its hindquarters and came pounding down the pavement at a gallop that struck sparks from concrete and echoed off the blank walls in rattling blows of sound. Frederick ducked in the saddle as it flew over his head, and then the loop settled over the bars of the first story grill as she sped past.

A heavy whunk sound came, a whipcrack snap as the tough braided bison hide came rigid as a steel rod, and with it a scream of equine protest as the horse was thrown back on its haunches by the shock transmitted through the lariat snubbed around the high horn of the Western saddle-for a moment Ignatius felt a cold stab of fear that the beast would be flipped backward on its rider and crush her against the unyielding pavement.

Then there came a scream of shearing metal from above him; the half ton of fast-moving horse and rider had snapped the bolts that held the grid across. Ignatius ducked again as the buckled, twisted metal fell to the ground and landed with a nauseatingly soft sound on one of the murdered State Police troopers. ?Too small,? Ignatius said, his eyes on the gap; a little light leaked out of it, as if there was a lamp several stories higher. ?Without taking off my armor, at least.? ?Not for me!? Virginia said.

She brought the horse up the stairs; it snorted and picked its way between the bodies with its ears laid back, but stood obedient with its forehooves on the topmost. The young woman from Skywater Ranch put her bowie knife between her teeth, kicked her feet out of the tapadero-enclosed stirrups, vaulted up to stand on the saddle and then jumped. Her gloved hands caught the frame of the window; for a moment she hung with her high-heeled riding boots kicking, and then she eeled her way through the narrow opening. ?Help her! God, gods, somebody, help her!? Frederick muttered.

His face went stiff as a yell came through the window; a man?s voice shouting in alarm, and then in pain; and overriding it Virginia?s wild cry: ?Skywater forever! Yippie-kye-ey, motherfucker!? ?Get ready!? Ignatius said crisply.

Frederick tumbled out of the saddle and reached for an arrow. Ignatius poised, light on the balls of his feet despite the sixty pounds of gear and fifteen of shield, blade ready over his head. There was a metallic clanking as the door swung wide, and the woman catapulted backward out of it-she?d pushed it open with a thrust of her shoulders, and turned the motion into a controlled tumble head-over-heels as a shete lunged for her.

Snap. An arrow from Frederick?s bow flashed by, and then a crack as it slammed into and through the overlapping plates of metal-rimmed lacquered leather that covered the Cutter?s chest. His face went slack and he fell forward, the weapon spinning away. Another was on his heels, heavy curved blade raised and round shield up. ?Jesu-Maria!? Ignatius shouted from deep in his chest, and sprang forward crabwise, left shoulder tucked into the curve of the long western shield.

His met the smaller round plainsman?s model blazoned with the rayed sun of the Church Universal and Triumphant. There was a hard thudding impact, and he grunted as his own weight and momentum overbore the other man?s charge. That rocked the soldier of the Sword of the Prophet back staggering on his heels, and the warrior-cleric?s blade came down. His lips drew back from his teeth as he felt the edge cleave leather and then flesh.

God forgive him, he thought as he wrenched it back with furious urgency. And me. ?Back me!? he called to the others as he pushed through the door.

He came in crouching a little so that the shield covered him from eyes to shin; he left the visor locked up for better vision in the dimness, but there was no part of him not covered except the narrow space between shield-rim and eyes. ?I lead. I?ve got the gear for this!?

The two youngsters followed, arrows on the strings of their powerful recurve bows. The stairwell was dark, but not absolute blackness. It showed the shadowed outlines of two more Corwinites rushing down at him, and the faint light caught blue on the honed edges of their blades. ?Cut! Cut! Cut!? ?Jesu-Maria!? ?Skywater!?

Then Thurston?s bellow; some distant corner of Ignatius? mind made a silent tsk sound: ?Ho la, Odhinn!?

More feet were pounding on the metal treads above, the heavy ringing sounds of boots with iron heel plates and metal-strapped toes.

We?re not enough, not with only three, Ignatius knew; he knew also that they must try anyway. Where are our friends? ?Can we kill?em?? Jake sunna Jake asked.?Please??

Beyond him on the crest of a roofline two dark figures came to their feet and gestured urgently. They used the broad gestures of Battle-Sign, which was common to Mackenzies and Dunedain: Come quickly.

Edain Aylward Mackenzie swallowed; the folk from the west- from Montival, he thought-had taught the Southsiders some of the formulas of courtesy, but this please wasn?t quite the sort of usage they?d had in mind.

The Chief said not to hurt any of the town folk if I could help it. Now, can I help it, or not?