another, and more, and with a sick feeling in his stomach he realised that Ajax and his men were already hunting down Macro and his small band.
CHAPTER EIGHT
‘ S ir!’ a voice called to Macro. ‘They’re coming!’
He trotted over to the edge of the tower and saw the figures emerging between two rocks, less than a quarter of a mile away. They came on at a run and Macro quickly saw that he and his men were outnumbered at least three to one.
‘What are you going to do?’ asked Hamedes. ‘There’s too many of them. We should get out of here while there’s still time. Or surrender.’
‘Surrender? To that bastard? Never!’ Macro snarled.
‘Then let’s run.’
‘Run? Where? We’re on a bloody headland. There’s nowhere to run to, you idiot. Now shut up and give me a hand.’ Macro moved over to one of the bolt throwers and swivelled it round to face the oncoming attackers. ‘Open the ammunition box,’ he snapped and pointed at a weathered chest beside the wall. While Hamedes fetched a bundle of the heavy bolts, two feet long with heavy iron heads and wooden flights, Macro wound the handle and ratcheted back the thick tarry cord that stretched between the two arms of the weapon. Once it was ready, he took the first bolt from the priest and laid it in the long groove that passed between the boxes containing the torsion ropes. The first of the renegades was little more than two hundred paces from the tower now and Macro pulled out the elevation pin and then grunted as he raised the bed of the weapon, sighted the bolt thrower on the man, then slipped the pin back in. He straightened up.
‘Stand clear!’
He glanced round, then grasped the lanyard that released the ratchet. He gave it a quick tug and the throwing arms snapped forward against the leather buffers with a sharp crack. At once Macro looked over the rail and saw the slender shadow slash through the dawn air towards the oncoming men. It flew over the leading man’s head even before he was aware it was there. The bolt flew on, past another man before it hit the ground, sent up a spray of grit and ricocheted up and tore through the leg of one of the renegades, lifting him off the ground and sending him spinning into a small group close behind, knocking them down.
‘Ha!’ Macro growled with satisfaction, and hurriedly prepared the next shot. ‘Bolt!’ He held out his hand and Hamedes fumbled for the next round. He dropped it and ducked down to retrieve it as Macro cursed him. Looking up, Macro saw that the attackers had spread out and were picking their way forward more cautiously. That suited Macro well enough. All that mattered was to buy enough time to allow Cato’s ships to enter the bay. Three of Ajax’s men were creeping forward by the rocks where Macro’s party had hidden and he swivelled the weapon round and released the catch. There was another crack and the bolt whirred through the air. This time it struck one of the men cleanly in the chest, hurling him back against a boulder where he crumpled in an untidy heap, the end of the shaft projecting from his tunic.
As soon as Macro began to reload, there was a shout and the men sprinted forward in the interval before the next round was loaded. Macro just had time to lower the elevation and fire one last bolt, which flew over their heads.
‘That’s it.’ He stood back from the bolt thrower. ‘It’s hand-to-hand now.’
The first of the attackers reached the door and pounded on it. To little effect, as the door was secured with a wooden bar and some meal bags had been piled behind it. By the time Macro had climbed down and joined his men, as they snatched up the shields of the renegades they had killed, the first axe blows were thudding into the aged timber. A moment later a long splinter of wood shot back from the inside of the door. More splinters exploded as axes crashed home. Then a long sliver of wood bent down and the dull edge of the axe head protruded, a
Lisa Weaver
Jacqui Rose
Tayari Jones
Kristen Ethridge
Jake Logan
Liao Yiwu
Laurann Dohner
Robert Macfarlane
Portia Da Costa
Deb Stover