Luckily, the “miss” didn’t matter. The first shot struck the thug high on his forehead. The ball gashed open the flesh and ricocheted off the skull, throwing the man’s head back—and leaving his trachea exposed to take the second ball full on. He fell backward, out of the fight and mortally wounded.
Tom had only two rounds left. He felt a moment’s sharp desire for an automatic pistol with a large clip—and an even sharper desire for a twelve-pounder loaded with canister.
Doc, you better be out here when you’re supposed to be…
Tom made a split-second decision to fire his remaining two rounds at one assailant rather than trying to take down both men. He simply wasn’t a Wild West gunfighter—as demonstrated by the fact that only one of the four shots he’d fired so far had hit precisely where he’d aimed it.
He chose the smaller of the last two, whose double-barreled snaphaunce pistol was almost leveled at him.
He fired twice again—and was dry.
The choice to double-tap his third target saved his life. This thug had been the furthest off, and Tom’s first shot went a little high and wide: it only grazed the assassin’s shoulder. But that had made the target flinch; he discharged both barrels a split-second too early. One round cut a seam in the back of Tom’s boot; the other bullet spanged and whined off the center of the flagstone he was straddling.
As it did, Tom’s second and final shot vented the bottom of his target’s left ribcage. The assassin doubled over and went back with a shuddering moan. But the last of the ambushers was racing in, saber poised to start swinging through a lethal arc. Despite Tom’s ex-football-player reflexes, amplified by military training and combat, there was no way he was going to be able to—
Three sharp reports split the air just to Tom’s left: James Nichols had finally entered the firefight. His first shot missed entirely and his second shot inflicted a minor flesh wound in the man’s side. The wound wasn’t fatal. Just a crease, really, that might have broken a rib but hadn’t done much more damage. But it stopped the man’s charge long enough for the doctor to steady down and fire a third, careful shot. That ball struck the man squarely in the chest and he went down as if he’d been struck by a mallet.
“Damn, getting rusty,” muttered the ex-Marine from just behind Tom’s shoulder. He grinned suddenly. “Being honest, my street gang training didn’t really emphasize marksmanship.”
Tom barked a little laugh. Like him, Nichols was no master of the handgun. The doctor had been trained as a sniper when he was in the Marines—with a proper damn rifle, with a proper damn caliber and real by-God telescopic sights.
“Two out of three shots on time and on target are plenty good enough for me, Doc. Let’s get moving.”
Tom’s wife Rita emerged from the
Crotto Fiume,
which was still silent. The muttering and then shouting of the startled clientele would start soon enough, no doubt. “Done making noise out here, honey?” Rita asked. Despite the levity of the words, her voice was shaky.
“I sure hope so,” Tom replied. He also hoped his own voice didn’t sound as shaky as his wife’s—but he was pretty sure it did.
Rita shuddered as she started stepping over the bodies. “I’m never going to get used to situations like this.”
“And you shouldn’t,” put in Melissa Mailey, who emerged from the
crotto
, towing the shocked cardinal. “Accepting bloodshed is a necessary part of being human; failing to notice it means you’re becoming less than human. No offense, James,” she added with a glance at her Vietnam-veteran life-partner.
“None taken,” James murmured as he snatched up the double-barreled fowling piece, searched for ammunition, and kept a swivel-necked watch on both ends of the street. That didn’t deter him from some gentle teasing: “Of course, darling wife, your own rhetorical peacenik robes are starting to fray at the edges.”
“They’ve been reduced to threads and lint by living in this century,” Melissa responded grimly. Changing the direction and tone of her voice, she urged the cardinal, “Step quickly, Your Eminence; we need to move rapidly now.” The small, pudgy man nodded unsteadily, looking rather pathetic in the nondescript friar’s garb.
Bringing up the rear—and scattering coins, apologies, and wildly implausible explanations in their wake—Arco Severi closed the door gently and turned toward them, smelling of old garlic and fresh sweat. “
Merda
,” he breathed, “what now?”
“Now,” said Tom, snapping up his pistol’s barrel assembly so that it closed upon the fresh cylinder he had loaded, “we run.”
The small cardinal’s voice quavered: “Won’t that attract attention?”
“Your Eminence,” Tom said through a patient smile while wondering if the cardinal
could
run, “we’ve fired almost ten shots. We are leaving four attackers dead in the street, and one unconscious in the
crotto
. I think we’ve probably attracted about as much attention as we possibly could. Speed is our only friend, now.”
And setting his actions to match his words, Tom Simpson began running in the direction of the Mera River, trying to put aside the growing feeling that the pine-carpeted alpine peaks that soared up at every point of the compass—except due south—were closing in on, and even over, them.
They stayed close alongside those buildings whose shadows were already long enough to start creeping up the opposite façades. Two blocks shy of reaching the river, Tom turned left, leading them into a small lane that paralleled the main road—the Viale Maloggia—which wound out of town to the northeast. It followed alongside the Mera, which, although merely a shallow gorge at present, had been a white-frothed flume only one month earlier, due to the spring
Schmelzwasser
that had come rushing down out of the swollen mountain cataracts.
As the rest of the group caught up with him—Melissa wheezing almost as much as the cardinal—Tom looked downstream toward the town’s center: no reaction from there, yet. Good: with any luck, they might—
“Tom.” Melissa’s voice was very calm, low-pitched. Which meant disaster on the hoof.
“What is it?”
She pointed down. “That.”
Tom and the rest followed her finger: a dark, brown-red stain was collecting near his feet, dripping down from his traveling cloak. As a watch whistle shrilled back near the
crotto
, Rita stepped closer to her husband, her worried eyes scanning his body.
Tom shook his head. “But I’m not hit.”
Melissa nodded. “Of course you’re not. That’s not your blood; that’s your soup.”
Soup?
Tom stared at the stain, remembering the flurry of action—and wide spray of soup—that had immediately preceded their exit from the
crotto
.
We’re going to be tracked—tracked and killed—because I chose to have the
soup
?
Had the situation not been so desperate, he would have laughed. His life—and the lives of his wife, his friends, and charges—now hung in the balance because he had chosen to have a bowl of soup.
Tom looked up from the bloodlike spatter on the ground, glanced behind them and then toward the Viale Maloggia. He tore off his cloak and threw it aside: “We’ve got to run. Fast. Now.”
“We just
were
running,” complained Melissa, her hand on her side, one corner of her mouth wrinkled in the attempt to suppress what Tom guessed was a wind-stitch.
“We run or we fight.”
“So what are we waiting for?” asked Melissa, stretching her long legs northward to run parallel to the bending course of the Mera.
Four minutes of near-sprinting put the sound of the whistles a little farther behind them. As they panted to a halt in front of their
taverna
, the whistles of the town watch stopped abruptly.
“They found the cloak,” panted James. “Figuring out where to search next.”
“I will get Matthias—”
“I am here,” said the young German from one of their windows on the second story. “I just reestablished contact with Padua, and am in the middle of sending an update to—”
Tom shook his head. “Break down the radio, Matthias. Keep the up-time transmitter separate, in your pack. I’ll send Arco and the ladies up to help you load our—”
“No need,” he assured them as he detached the wire he had hooked to a roof-tile as an antenna. “All our bags are packed. Trail gear only. Everything else I have left under the beds.”
“Matthias,” gasped Rita, “how did you know to—?”
“Why, Frau Mailey suggested I have our gear ready, in the event that the rendezvous would be—what is your word?—‘compromised.’”
James straightened up. “It’s great to have a girlfriend who’s always thinking.”
“Particularly when no one else bothers to. Matthias, are you just about through?”
“Yes; could Herr Severi lend hands?”
Arco was inside before Matthias had completed the request.
Rita looked back down the road. “How long do you figure we’ve got?”
Tom shrugged. “Could be as much as ten minutes. They’ll have to gather together, see how many searchers they’ve got, and then eliminate which ways we definitely didn’t go. We’re near the northern limits of the town, here, and the lack of walls is a big help, but if we’re not moving soon—”
Matthias and Arco came bustling out the door, the latter adding, “Our account is settled, with a tip to encourage the owner’s tardy mention of our lodging here.”
“Excellent. Now, Matthias, dump the batteries in the river.”
“What? But Captain Simpson, they are priceless—”
“And make sure the jars break on the rocks. Everything else that will sink goes in the water as well. We can’t afford any extra weight and I don’t want them to learn that we had a radio. Did you get a general signal out?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And were the conditions right for it to be heard in both Padua and Chur?”
Matthias shrugged as he sent the battery-jars crashing down among the rocks of the Mera. “It is a good time for a signal…I think.”
Tom led them into a sustainable trot. “You
think
?”
Matthias shrugged as he jogged. “You can never know for sure, Captain.”
Well, that’s just great,
thought Tom as he noted the cardinal already laboring to maintain the pace, and Melissa putting on a pain-proof, but increasingly pale, face.
Just great.
Odo leaned back from the radio, frowning. “No, Ambassador, it is neither a failure, nor meteorological interference. Matthias simply went off the air—like that.” He snapped his fingers sharply.
Sharon tried to keep the frown off her face. “Was there any word, any warning that—?”
Her husband put a fine, but very strong, hand on her shoulder. “Beloved, there was no warning. And nothing you could do that you have not already done.”
“I could have listened to you a week ago, Ruy, when you warned me against setting up this rendezvous. Getting our five people over the Alps is tricky enough with Spanish and Milanese troops watching the alpine approaches from Lake Como to Chiavenna. I should never have agreed to burdening them with the exfiltration of Cardinal Ginetti, as well.”
“My heart, it is most difficult to refuse a pope, particularly when his reasons are so compelling.”
A soft voice from the doorway echoed Ruy’s logic. “Indeed, Ambassadora Nichols, the fault—if any ill has befallen your father and your friends—is entirely mine.”
Sharon turned, wondering—given the very dark black complexion she had inherited from her father James Nichols—if the flush of heat she could feel in her face produced any visible sign. “Your Holiness, my apologies. I did not know you were standing there.”
“Hovering unseen outside doorways is, alas, a bad habit. It also provides much information one would otherwise not have.” Pope Urban VIII smiled. “I’m sure this bad habit had more to do with my becoming pope than any worthiness in the eyes of Our Savior.” His tone was jocular, but shaded with penitence, also. Urban had been more somber since his rescue from the Castel Sant’Angelo by Ruy and Tom. Or perhaps it was a result of learning that over a dozen cardinals who had been his friends, or at least allies, had been disappeared, and probably killed, by the Spanish invaders, based upon the thinnest of pretexts or, in some cases, outrageous prevarications. Urban seemed to feel their losses keenly, as though their deaths were an indictment of failure on his part.
Which, Sharon realized, was how Maffeo Barberini—now Urban VIII—had been brought up to think in relation to his allies. “Pontiff” had been a late addition to his many titles; first scion and incumbent head of the powerful Barberini family had been roles he inherited upon his birth. He had been trained to think in terms of stratagems against hereditary enemies, and sinecures for loyal vassals—and his ascension to the
cathedra
of the Holy See did not diminish his adherence to that
modus operandi
. Urban VIII, never forgetting his family or friends, had left a legacy (well-recorded in the up-timers’ books) of shameless nepotism—for which he was infamous, even among the many early modern popes that had been known for it.
But now, Sharon wondered, did she see some signs of regret? His brother Francesco was among the cardinals who had been slain attempting to flee Rome. His nephew, Antonio, had made good his escape to Sharon’s refugee embassy by only the slimmest of margins himself, and would not have succeeded at all had not her husband Ruy chanced upon him while he was trying to find a way to escape the city’s walls.
Urban’s hands were folded passively on the front of his cassock. “I shall pray for your friends and father, Ambassadora. I owe them all a great debt. And, in the case of Thomas Simpson, I owe him my very life—along with you, Señor Casador y Ortiz. If it was not for your bold rescue of me from Sant’Angelo, the rubble of Hadrian’s tomb would surely be my burial mound, now.”
Urban extended one hand and placed it briefly upon Ruy’s head. Then he turned and left. When Ruy rose, his face was transformed—utterly open, utterly without pretense—rather like a man who remembers, for one brief instant, the innocent hope and faith he had as a young boy. Sharon felt the strangest rush of both tenderness and arousal, seeing him so stripped of his façade for that moment—and then Ruy as she knew him was back: he smoothed aside one wing of his mustaches and turned to her, his dark brown eyes glittering and alert. “We should send word to the exfiltration team in Switzerland,” he said.