Read By Heresies Distressed Online
Authors: David Weber
The other groups of attackers had gotten as close as they could to the duty sentries, yet they'd dared not get
too
close until the bivouac had been attacked. They'd waited, straining at the leash of discipline and their orders, until the abrupt sound of that single rifle shot launched them at the guardsmen they'd been able to locate.
Half a dozen arbalest strings snapped, but this time, the darkness was the guardsmen's friend and, despite the short range, most of the bolts missed their targets. Not all of them did, but the sentries, unlike their comrades in the encampment, had anticipated that any attack on the empress would begin with an effort to neutralize them. That was why they'd chosen their positions so carefully.
Despite the intensity with which the Temple Loyalists had observed the convent since Sharleyan's arrival, they'd been unable to locate all of the guard posts outside the wall. The
moving
sentries had been relatively easy to spot as they paced back and forth, but the others were another matter. Under the circumstances, the attackers had no choice but to rely on their superior numbers and the fact that they knew approximately where any guards had to be stationed, even if they didn't know their exact locations. And unlike the sentries, they'd known the attack was coming. When the rifle shot split the night,
they
were poised and ready, and the night outside Saint Agtha's erupted in small, ugly knots of violence as they tried to rush the gates.
They failed.
Even taken by surprise, the men charged with protecting Empress Sharleyan struck back hard. Although the Imperial Guard had adopted the rifle as its primary weapon, its men knew better than to give away their positions by firing. Instead, they demonstrated to their enemies just how lethally effective a bayonet could be. The Guard was equipped with the same weapon as the Marine scout-snipers, with the same fourteen-inch bayonets, and they used the reach advantage of their weapons' length ruthlessly.
Temple Loyalists screamed as guardsmen appeared abruptly before or behind them and they suddenly found themselves transfixed by knife-edged blades of tempered steel. Unlike the surprised guardsmen in the encampment, the sentries formed coordinated teams, operating with the smoothness of long training and familiarity, and the initial assault on the main gate and on the smaller gate in the western wall failed.
The one on the northern gate was another matter. The heavy woodland had allowed the Temple Loyalists detailed for that attack to get much closer before darkness fell. They had a clearer idea of where their enemies were located, and they charged furiously, prepared to accept their own losses if they could close quickly with the guardsmen.
They succeeded . . . almost.
All eight sentries on the northern wall died, but eleven more Temple Loyalists died with them. And before the sergeant commanding the detachment went down, he turned and threw the gate key over the wall. The senior surviving attacker screamed in frustration as he realized the stout iron gate was locked, but he wasted no time trying to batter his way through it. Instead, he and his remaining men turned and ran towards the western gate.
The ten-man reserve Captain Gairaht had posted just outside the convent chapter house reacted almost instantly to Seahamper's shout. They knew the drill for responding to a surprise attack as well as the sergeant did, and they closed in around the guesthouse in automatic reaction. It was their job to ensure the empress' safety first, rather than allowing themselves to be diverted into racing towards apparent threats which might well turn out to be diversions. Once the center was secure, they could move to reinforce the perimeter.
The eight men on the western gate killed eighteen Temple Loyalists at the cost of five of their own. The sergeant commanding the detail and one of his two surviving troopers were both wounded, but they managed to retreat through the gate and lock it behind them before the surviving attackers could get themselves reorganized for another attempt. The three guardsmen fell back to join the reserve around the guesthouse, even as rifle fire began to crackle at the main gate.
Lieutenant Hahskyn had been waiting for Captain Gairaht with increasing impatience. He, too, had begun wondering what could have been keeping Gairaht, even before Tyrnyr arrived at the main gate with Seahamper's message, but he'd no more suspected his commanding officer might already be dead than Seahamper had.
That didn't keep him from reacting quickly. He'd recognized the sound of the initial rifle shot even before he heard Seahamper shouting the alarm, and he and his men knew precisely what to do.
Just as the reserve's initial responsibility was to surround the empress and be certain
she
was secure, the perimeter teams' responsibility was to hold their positions at least until the situation had clarified. The ten men of Lieutenant Hahskyn's detachment didn't need him to tell them that.
They didn't need him to tell them how to do it, either, because he and Gairaht had walked the entire perimeter together immediately after their arrival. They'd discussed contingency plans for each position and briefed their men on exactly what they were supposed to do under each of those plans, and now the men on the gate put that briefing into action.
Unlike the Guard's other positions, the approach to the convent's main gate was relatively well illuminated, and Hahskyn had positioned additional lanterns farther down the approach lane, along both sides, to extend the reach of the existing lighting. Because of that, the Temple Loyalists assigned to seize the gate had found it impossible to work their way as close as their fellows had managed to do at the other gates. They had farther to go, which gave the guardsmen more time to realize what was happening, and when
they
charged, they met the accurate fire of ten rifles at point-blank range.
A third of them went down, thrashing and screaming. The others continued their charge, but the sudden carnage in their own ranks had half-stunned them and shattered their formation. This time, it was the guardsmen who met the shock of combat unshaken, and their white-hot fury and the reach of their weapons proved decisive. Only one of them was lightly wounded, and the handful of surviving Temple Loyalists fell back, leaving the approach to the gate carpeted with the bodies of their fellows.
“Sergeant Tyrnyr!” Hahskyn snapped while the gate detachment reloaded quickly. “Get back to Sergeant Seahamper and make sure the Empress is safe!”
“Yes, Sir!”
The sergeant dashed towards the guesthouse, and Hahskyn turned to his senior noncom.
“Check the other gates!” he said. “Then report back here.”
“Yes, Sir!” The second sergeant saluted quickly and disappeared into the darkness, and Hahskyn looked at the remaining members of his detachment.
“All right, boys,” he said grimly, “I don't know who these bastards are, but there's Shan-wei's own lot of them. Fall back behind the gate.”
Faces tightened as his men realized what he was saying. They and the other perimeter guards were supposed to be the reaction force, the ones who counterattacked once the situation had been stabilized. Closing and locking the gate behind them was an explicit admission that they were too outnumbered to consider taking the fight to the other side.
“Shan-wei take it!”
Charlz Abylyn swore viciously as he surveyed the bodies sprawled outside the convent's main gate. The carefully worked out plan had visualized getting inside in the first rush, where the Temple Loyalists could get to grips with the entire strength of Sharleyan's bodyguards while the guardsmen were still stunned by the sudden surprise attack. The last thing they'd needed was to allow troops of the Imperial Guard's caliber to recover from their initial shock and confusion!
Unlike some of his fellows, Abylyn had always had his reservations about the likelihood of successfully rushing the gates, yet even at his most pessimistic, he hadn't anticipated the carnage Lieutenant Hahskyn's men had wreaked. He didn't know how well the attacks on the other gates had gone, although it was obvious they hadn't broken through, nor did he knowâyetâhow well the attack on the bivouac area had gone. If the other prongs of the assault had taken casualties as heavy as his, however . . .
He looked up as a runner dashed up to his position. He recognized the newcomer as one of Nailys Lahrak's men, although he didn't know his name.
“Well?” he asked sharply.
“Their camp's gone,” the runner panted, his expression fierce with triumph in the dim glow spilling from the gateway's distant lanterns. “All of themâdead!”
Abylyn grunted in satisfaction. Although he didn't share the other man's obvious pleasure at the death of men who were only doing their duty, however mistaken their loyalties might have been, at least he could be confident the other half of the empress' bodyguards weren't going to come swarming up his backside while he dealt with the ones in front of him.
“Where's Nailys?”
“On his way.” The runner's breathing was beginning to steady down, and he wiped sweat from his forehead. “We lost a few men of our own, and he's reorganizing. He'll be here shortly.”
“That's good,” Abylyn said sourly, and waved one hand at the locked gates. “As you can see,
we
lost more than âa few men.' I haven't heard anything from the other gates yet, but it's pretty damned obvious they didn't break through, either. It looks like we're going to have to do it the hard way, after all.”
The runner's face tightened as he followed Abylyn's gesture and the sprawled bodies of his fellow Temple Loyalists finally registered.
“God
damn
them!” the man hissed venomously.
“Whatever else we may think of them, they're doing their duty as they understand it, and they'll do it well,” Abylyn said sharply. The runner looked at him, and Abylyn shook his head. “Don't make the mistake of thinking anything else. Not unless you really want to die out here tonight.”