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Dewey Lambdin - A King`s Commander

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Heedless of their horses, they kneed them into a gallop, aiming to cut off the fleeing rider with the cloak flying behind his back, Mister Peel in front, with Lewrie and Mountjoy behind, neck and neck.

Almost at once came the shrill call of a trumpet to the right-rear as the troop of Austrian lancers entered the valley and wheeled to form two ranks across as they trotted forward, quickly changing to the canter.

"Peel!" Lewrie warned. "We've got company!"

"Bugger 'em!" Peel threw over his shoulder, drawing his saber and laying it point-down, extended beyond his horse's neck. "On!"

"They think we're French…" Lewrie panted, "runnin' away… and you'll think buggery!" He turned his head to see the front rank lower its lances and break into the charge at the urging of a trumpet. "They're after us, you damn' fool! Speak… bloody German… anybody?"

"I do, sir!" Mountjoy called, his clothes filthy with clods of earth and grass thrown up by Peel's horse's hooves. "Some, anyway. I… picked up a few phrases… from Rahl and Brauer!"

And before Lewrie could tell him not to, Mountjoy reined in and turned away to trot back toward those glittering lance points, into the teeth of the charge, with his hands up, screeching "Meine herrйn, meine herrйn, bitte! Hilf mir! Eine Fransozich spion voir verfolgen! Bittel"

"Bloody damn'…!" Lewrie yelped, knowing it was suicidal, but unwilling to abandon the hen-head! He reined back himself, slowing his horse so quickly it crow-hopped after its skid, quite willing to throw him off! He swung back to join Mountjoy, at an inoffensive canter, his hands empty and outstretched. The only thing he knew that might identify himself was to break into a loud song-"Rule, Brittania"! The lancers came on, like an imminent collision between two ships, lances still lowered as Mountjoy continued yelling. He had a childlike urge to cover his eyes, and only watch the outcome through his fingers!

At the very last second, though, the front rank parted, raising its lances and sawing back to a lope, to circle him and Mountjoy. Alan let out a huge whoosh of relief, and plastered a grin on his phyz.

"Guten morgen, mein herr," Mountjoy was babbling to a pimply faced young officer. "Herr leutnantP Mein kapitan, Lewrie… Konig George, Britisch Kфniglich Kriegsmarine? Wir verfolgen ein spion."

"Parlez-vous Franзais?" the blotch-faced young lieutenant said.

"Well, oui … certain, s'il vous plais, mein herr."

"Good." the officer laughed. "German is so inelegant. What do you say you do, m'sieur?"

"Thank bloody Christ," Lewrie muttered under his breath, once Mountjoy got to slanging. Grateful that it wasn't just the Russians' aristocracy who hated their own tongue, and mostly spoke in French.

"They'll help us pursue, sir!" Mountjoy announced. "Leutnant Baron von Losma will follow us with his troop. I've told him that he shouldn't mistake Mister Peel for Choundas, when we catch him up."

"Bloody good. Let's be at it, then." Lewrie beamed.

"Trupp!" von Losma piped, his teenaged voice breaking with the effort, though damned elegant in his movements. "Vorwarts!"

Off they went again, the lancers in a column of twos, thundering up through those bouldered, bushy hillocks, through a patch of forest, and out into another, smaller valley, where they caught up with Peel, perhaps only a half mile from where they'd split off from him. He was circling his horse at a breather-trot, waiting for them. Beyond, they could see Choundas, just as he put his struggling horse to a slope. "What'd you stop for?" Lewrie demanded, reining in.

"Them, damn 'em," Peel spat.

"Oh." Lewrie cringed.

A little beyond Choundas, at the top of that grassy slope sat a troop of French dragoons-heavy cavalry. It wasn't 150 yards off, but it might as well have been the distance to the moon! A column of blue-coated infantry could be seen to the north, at the head of the small valley, marching for the low, bouldery ridge they'd left.

"Goddamn the man's shitten luck!" Peel cried. "After all we've done, got so close on his heels… now this] It's as if he's in league with the Devil, damn his blood."

"Still a chance," Lewrie muttered through a dry mouth. He alit from his horse, trotted to the tumbled ruin of a rock fence just beside the road, and unslung his Ferguson rifle. He'd killed Lanun Rovers at 200 yards with it-winged 'em, anyway.

One complete turn of the trigger-guard lever, to lower the screw breech and open the barrel's hind end.

"Lewrie, it's over," Peel pointed out. "We sit here, this dumb and happy, they have the slope of us. Sooner or later, they'll charge. And lancers ain't meant to tangle with heavy cavalry, head-on."

"It's not over yet, Peel," Lewrie snapped. "Sooner he's dead, the sooner you and Twigg leave me the hell alone."

He bit off the folded end of a premade cartouche, the powder bitter on his tongue. Bullet end up the spout. Crank the breech shut and pull the flint striker's dog's jaws back, checking to see that the flint was firmly seated and didn't slip against the leather under the clamping screw's face. At half cock, he flipped open the frizzen, to bare the pan, and primed it with a measure from the powder flask that held the very finest, talclike igniting powder.

"Er, sir?" Mountjoy bickered. "The Herr Baron von Losma says we should hightail it. Soon, sir. He's found the Frogs, so…"

"A minute." Lewrie sighed. "A minute."

He pulled the Ferguson back to full cock and put it to his eye, resting the barrel on the rocks, settling himself. It looked to be at least 200 yards, maybe more? And there was Choundas, stopping beside a French dragoon officer, pointing back to the valley. Smiling like everything, he suspected. Bragging about his escape, too!

There was the wind to consider; it was blowing from behind the cavalrymen on that far slope, and a little to Lewrie's right. A shot uphill, almost into the wind? He held high, aiming a foot above his nemesis's hat, a touch to the right, maybe a foot beyond Choundas's shoulder.

"Might as well shoot at the moon, sir, the herr leutnant says," Mountjoy interrupted. "With a musket, at this range…?"

"Shut up, Mister Mountjoy!" Lewrie barked. "Not a musket."

There was a raven's caw off to his left, so near his ear that he almost jerked the trigger. Tramp of marching feet, thud of a drum. Another column of infantry emerging far to left of the slope where the cavalry sat and stared. At least a battalion, coming to use the road they were on.

The raven swooshed past, zooming upward, gliding and tilting to gain altitude before beating its wings, again. Flying toward Choundas. Once it was past, the wind faded, the grass tips before Lewrie stilled their slight wavering, and he inched the barrel a bit more left. Took a quarter-inch more elevation.

"My congratulations on your breathtaking escape, Capitaine," the dragoon officer enthused, offering Choundas a silver brandy flask. "Though it is not every day we see our Navy among us. Do you wish me to sweep those Austrian scum who chased you away? Just sitting there, counting heads, the damned fools. Lancers… they're insane!"

"Their infantry is not far behind them," Choundas cautioned as he slurped down a restoring measure of brandy.

"We wait for the rest of the squadron, then," the dragoon said in disappointment. "For the infantry to flank them away." "We march on Vado Bay, at last?" Choundas beamed. "Indeed, Capitaine. Soon, your ships will anchor there." Choundas turned to look at the Austrian troop, and at the men in civilian dress who'd accompanied them, hoping that one of them was his bкte noire, Lewrie. Was that him, kneeling down? So close, at last, so far from his ship, and all aid. With a word, he could urge this cavalryman to gallop down and take him for him. He could have Lewrie in chains in his cellars at Nice by the next evening, to begin the exquisite revenge he'd planned so long. Just a word, and…

There was a puff of smoke from the fence, from the kneeling man. "It is him!" Choundas crowed. "The desperate fool!" "Far past even the best musket shot," the dragoon officer cried in derision, and his troopers guffawed at the hopeless gesture. "Capitaine Jonville, perhaps…" Choundas began to say. A raven came soaring up the slope, flaring and riding the thermal off the hillside, climbing, climbing, then beat its wings, beginning to circle- to Guillaume Choundas's right hand. He raised his right arm in supplication, remembering what the old people had told him…

"… couldn't hit a house, at that…"

A second or two in flight, arcing up, then down, as it lost its momentum, plummeting like a howitzer shell and regaining velocity…

The.65-caliber ball slammed into Guillaume Choundas with the impact of a heavy, hard-swung cudgel, smashing into the flesh and bone of his upraised right arm, just below his armpit! His horse screamed, almost as loud as he did, as he was flung sideways in the saddle, and dragged to the right and down by the force of it! His horse whirled as if to bite its own haunches, rearing and backpedaling for balance and slinging Choundas's total weight onto that weak left leg caught in the stirrup, shuddery and nerveless from his desperate gallop, caught by the iron brace that stiffened the thick left boot. He flailed to stay in the saddle, but his right foot was free, and he was falling, to land on that right shoulder and arm, and the back of his head, get dragged for a few paces in a maddened circle before a trooper sprang down to grab the reins, and another rushed to free his foot.

"Merde alors!" The dragoon officer breathed in stupefied awe. "Miraculous!"

"Eatttt thatt, you bassttardd!" Lewrie screamed as he rose to his feet, his face mottled, and split by a feral, heathen grin. Alan trotted back to the horse Mountjoy held, took the reins, and slung the Ferguson over his back before mounting. "That's all for him!"

"Gott in Himmett" Lt. Baron von Losma peeped, turning pale.

"Good shot, hey?" Lewrie crowed, riding in an impatient circle.

There was a sudden sputter of musketry up the valley, among the trees. A platoon firing, at first. Then what sounded like a whole regiment lit off. The flat bangs of a three-gun battery of light artillery joined them… followed by another regimental volley.

"Heraus!" Lt. von Losma shouted, waving his arm in the air in a signal. "Mach schnell, heraus! Wir zuriickziehen. .. zur ruck, jetzt!"

The French infantry column on the road, still 300 yards away, lumbered out from column to line, four deep, and began to load for a volley of their own, their skirmishers out in front already firing.

"Time to scamper, sir," Mountjoy translated as the lancers with them wheeled away, almost in a headless panic. As the French dragoons came flowing from the trees, down off that far slope's crest.

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