âRangers Onlyâ that narrowed to a skinny one-lane, winding deep into the woods.
âHere,â the guy with the dagger to my throat said. âStop here.â
âI will kill you both,â Bennacio said, still in that weird, calm voice. âFirst you with the knife. I will turn your own hand upon your throat and use it to sever your head from your body.â He nodded to the guy behind him. âThen you I shall gut as a hog in a slaughterhouse, and I shall spread your steaming entrails on the ground for the carrion to feast upon.â
This guy said something to the guy behind me. I donât know what he said, but it sounded pretty urgent. âFou!â the guy with the dagger hissed back.
âYou guys oughtta listen to Bennacio,â I said. âHeâs a knight and those guys never lie.â
âGet out,â the guy with the dagger said.
âAve Maria, gratia plena . . .â Bennacio began to pray. The guy behind him got out of the car, opened Bennacioâs door, and yanked him out.
âGet out,â the man behind me said. I got out. They dragged us into the trees. Dominus tecum. Bendicta tu in milieribus . . . . The ground was carpeted with pine needles and dead leaves, and there was a mist in the air and no sound, not even a bird singing. I looked over to Bennacio, now on his knees, with his arms hanging loosely at his sides. Et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Iesus. His eyes were half closed. The man standing before the kneeling Bennacio was heavy and broad-shouldered, with short-cropped black hair and a jutting brow. My guy was slighter and shorter, though I probably had at least ten pounds on him. He had shaggy blond hair and an ugly scar running from beneath his right eye, down his cheek, to his jawline.
I got a good look at the dagger too. It was about two feet long, black, double-bladed, with the image of a dragonâs head carved into its hilt. It looked like a miniature version of the swords Bennacio and the other knights used in Samson Towers. All these guys must go the same outfitters.
Santa Maria, Mater Dei, ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc, et in hora mortis nostrae.
âI want to pray too,â I said. I donât know why I said that, but Bennacio was praying and he seemed like the kind of guy who always did just the right thing in a crisis. I went to my knees, bowed my head, and started the Hail Mary, only in English, but when I got to the âpray for us sinnersâ part I stopped because I heard a scream and a loud snap like the sound of a branch breaking. Thatâs it, I thought. Bennacioâs bought it.
Then I looked to my right and saw Bennacio coming in a blur for the guy in front of me. The man raised his dagger.
He was moving in slow motion, though. Bennacio wasnât.
Bennacio grabbed his wrist and I heard another snapping sound, not quite as loud as the first, and with his other hand Bennacio grabbed the guy by his shaggy hair while he forced the dagger back toward his throat. I didnât want to see what was going to happen next, so I stood up and kind of stumbled through the trees and undergrowth, passing the bigger man, who lay twisting on the ground. I heard a soft thud behind me and I knew without looking that Bennacio had kept the first part of the promise he made in the car. Then I heard the pleading tone in the bigger manâs voice as Bennacio walked back to him, and I knew he was going to keep the second part too.
I went behind a tree and threw up. I was still bent over when I heard Bennacio call softly behind me.
âKropp! Alfred! Come!â
Donât look; donât look, just keep your head up and your eyes on Bennacio, I told myself as I walked back to the car. He was already sitting in the passenger seat. He had taken the Big Mac apart and was eating the patty, holding it in the palm of his large hand, using a napkin as a plate, cutting the meat with the side of his plastic fork. Donât
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