Authors: Piers Anthony
On the roof he finally spied a soldier, undoubtedly armed with a crossbow, looking down. The soldier seemed to be making a routine scan of the nearby woods. Yes, that was where St. Helens himself would have stationed a watch, had the situation been reversed. He steeled himself to wait until the man’s head had disappeared from his sight. Then he stepped quickly out of the woods, oriented on the window, and activated the belt.
He floated up, clicked the control into neutral, and looked in through the window at the woman he now thought of as his daughter. The cherished little-girl image was fading, and the adult version was taking its place in his heart. She had seemed like a stranger at first, there with her stripling husband, but now he knew she wasn’t.
Heln looked back, turning to peer out the window just at that moment. Since the belt made no sound and he made no noise, it was either sheer coincidence or feminine instinct.
“Father!” she said. Not St. Helens, but Father. His heart leaped with pride.
Then pain lanced into his left hip with shocking impact, catching him totally by surprise.
Chapter 12
Flight
ALMOST, ST. HELENS HIT the control in panic. Almost. He twisted his head, fighting the pain, resisting any urge to cry out. There in his left hip was the bolt. Down on the cobblestones was the crossbowman, taking aim for another shot.
Quickly, almost reflexively, he snatched out the laser, thumbed off the safety, pointed it, and fired. But the bowman loosed his shaft first; it just missed as St. Helens touched his lever and jogged aside.
The bowman, having no inkling of the nature of the weapon he faced, took no evasive action—and indeed, it would have done no good. The laser scored—and the wide red beam made an ugly smoking hole where the crossbowman had been. Not a hole in the man, a hole in the ground. What power in this Earth weapon!
“Father! Father!” It was Heln at the window, all astonishment, all surprise, all anxiety.
“Help me in!” St. Helens ordered. His fingers moved the control infinitesimally and he floated through the frame. In the process he bumped his wounded leg; he winced and almost lost consciousness.
“Oh, Father, you’re hurt!”
“Of course I’m hurt! Rip off a sleeve and get a tourniquet on that. Don’t get fancy; we haven’t time.”
Shaking, she did as he bade. Meanwhile he gritted his teeth, grasped the shaft, and wrenched the bolt from his thigh. New pain seared through him, but he was braced for it. The bolt tore out, and he threw it away.
He had to balance on his right leg and watch the blood coursing down the wounded leg and puddling. Heln wasn’t squeamish, he noted with peripheral satisfaction. She tugged at a sleeve of her silken dress—she was dressed like a princess, he saw with surprise—and when it wouldn’t tear she quickly turned her back and took it off. She wore only panties beneath. Suddenly he realized that they must have taken away her original clothing, to make her dependent on what was at the palace. How could she flee, wearing a royal gown? She would stand out among the peasants like the royal prisoner she was.
“Hurry, lass! Hurry, there’s no time!” For the report would be bringing guards clambering up the stairs to this suite; he expected to hear the pounding momentarily. If only he’d kept an eye on the ground as well as on the roof, and spotted that bowman. He had been such a fool to overlook the obvious. He’d been that way in the old days, too, which was why John Knight had been the commander. Old John had his points, good and bad, but he’d been a good leader in the crunch.
Heln turned, holding the bundled dress in front of her. She noted the size of St. Helens’ thigh and stretched out the dress, making a kind of rope of it. She hesitated, obviously reluctant to give up the scant concealment the dress offered; then she decided that squeamishness was foolish here. She knelt to pass it around his leg and knot it in front. Having no stick handy, she reached to take his laser.
“Uh-uh. I’ll hold it. Just knot it tight as you can and get on my back.”
“Your back!” In her amazement she straightened up, showing her bare breasts for the first time. What a looker she had turned out to be!
“Remember when you were tiny? I used to carry you that way. But grab something else from that closet. I’m not going to have the whole frame gawking at the naked body of any daughter of mine! Not that it’s a bad body, mind you—”
“Father!” she exclaimed in proper flattered outrage. But she hurried to the closet and grabbed another dress. Had she not been disoriented by his sudden appearance and his wound, she would have thought to grab a new dress as a tourniquet, instead of baring her body. She had missed the obvious—just as he tended to. She dived into the thing and jammed her feet into fancy slippers. Those would fly off the moment she tried to run, effectively hobbling her—but she wouldn’t need to run.
He heard the pounding of boots on the stair. “Now get on me!” he ordered. “Arms around my neck. Here, I’ll move to the bed.” He made two hops, braced himself against the footboard, and motioned with the laser for her to get on.
“Where’s Kel—?”
“Later, lass, later! Just get a hold!”
She climbed on, moving carefully. Her left leg barely touched his, but the pain was excruciating. But he’d taken injuries before; he could handle it, because he had to. He had to get her to safety before he passed out from loss of blood. He allowed no more than a gasp to escape as he fought to concentrate on her problem as well as on his own.
“Lock your arms! Get a good hold—I don’t want you dropping off.”
“I’m ready,” she said bravely. “Ready to fly.”
“Lock your legs around my middle.”
She struggled to obey him, hurting his leg again. “I—I’m afraid I can’t—”
“Yeah, too much gut on me. All right, just hold on.” He touched the control as he bunched his good leg for a painful but necessary hop. He wanted to nudge the lever just slightly, just the right amount. There was more weight now, so he needed more lift than before.
The pounding reached the door. It was locked; there was a respite while someone rumbled for the key. Time to act.
He nudged the lever, released the headboard, and hopped, jumped, and fell at the window. Behind, the door burst open. Floating almost as if in a dream, he lowered his head and shoulders and felt Heln flatten herself against his back. Then he was out the window and bobbing in the air, trying to keep his balance when his body was off-balanced by hers.
There were soldiers below, and they all had crossbows. There was another at the window behind. He hit the control hard, and they shot off and away at roof height. Turning his head, he saw crossbow bolts cleaving the air behind them at the spot where they had exited.
“Father—you—you’re rescuing me!”
“What else?” A bolt flew by his face, far too close. From the roof, or the window. He had to counter that, and fast. He pushed up the lever and they rose at a belly-lurching rate. When they were higher than he judged crossbow range to be, he neutralized the lever and looked down at the toy palace and its miniature grounds.
“Father! Fa—ther!”
“Just hang on! You’ll get used to it.” What a flying device was this flying device! It sure beat the jetpacks he had trained on. Not only more maneuverable, but no roar. Truly this Mouvar’s people had a technology.
“Father, I can’t hold on!”
This was the last news he wanted. “Yes, you can!” he replied gruffly.
“I—I can’t! I’m going to—going to—”
“You aren’t either! You aren’t going to faint!” That was all he needed! It was all he could do, trying to hang on to his own consciousness.
But he felt her arms loosening around his neck. Frantically, still holding the laser with his right hand, he grabbed her left-handed. He missed her left hand and his leg protested, and then he was dropping the laser and grabbing her with the right. He caught her right wrist and held on.
They floated while the laser fell butt over muzzle, spinning around. He followed it down, but knew it was hopeless. There would be no getting that back again, and that was the only existing laser and what he considered his irresistible weapon. Down below it bounced from the cobblestones and bounced again. He knew it would be in no fit condition to fire.
“Fa-ther!”
He stood to lose more than the laser! “Here, get hold of me! Arms tight around my neck!”
She did as directed. What a relief! Her problem was evidently just the height; now that they were lower, she could handle it.
But without that laser, just what could he do? Well, he still had the gauntlets, and this belt. Conquering might be harder than intended, but then it always was.
The wind hit them out of nowhere. One moment all was calm, the next they were being pushed by this incredible blast. Hanging on to Heln, thankful that the gauntlets multiplied his strength and influenced his dexterity, St. Helens looked down and saw a small dark figure with arms stretched in their direction. Melbah! If only he still had the laser!
Now they were moving, really moving, and the belt was putting up no resistance. They had to push back against the wind, to resist it with all the power of the belt. He moved a gauntlet to the control and tried to concentrate. The wind took away his stockelcap and streamed out Heln’s hair and dress. The gauntlet had to move the control to push them back. It touched the control as he concentrated, hard.
Now they were resisting the wind, and they were moving back. But suddenly they were doing it very fast, as the wind ceased as abruptly as it had begun.
He hit the neutral position. Then, just as suddenly, they were moving again. Independently of what he wanted. They swept above the palace in a curve, the ground and flagstones blurring. They were curving more and more, spiraling. They were in a whirlwind!
Frantically he worked the control. They were moving horizontally but still losing altitude. The forest was below, and a great big tree directly ahead. He grasped Heln tightly to him as the tree limb whipped out in the wind like a scythe and the branches opened and closed like grasping, evil hands.
Something struck. Things whirled, faster, blurring. Then everything went black.
*
Heln felt the gauntlet holding her slipping on her hand. Then she was falling. She reached out, grabbing and grasping for anything. She caught hold of rough bark. She held on, and looked down to the ground so far away. She felt dizzy, dizzier than when they had been far higher. Her fingers hurt on the bark, and she realized suddenly that there were branches holding her, and that she wasn’t about to fall after all.
She looked at St. Helens, held there with his belt. The belt was pushing hard against the trunk. St. Helens himself was out, head down, breathing but unconscious. The blood from his wound was leaking from her crude bandage, running down his leg and dripping through the leaves to land far below.
The first thing she had to do was stop that belt. St. Helens’ face was right up against the trunk and it looked squashed, though she thought that was just from the pressure. She had to stop the belt from pushing—but how? He had moved that little lever, but if she moved it wrong, what might happen? St. Helens could shoot up into the sky and then that whirlwind could come and suck him down again. Yet she had to try.
The gauntlets—perhaps if she put them on? They were supposed to know what to do, weren’t they? Kelvin had spoken as though they did. And where was Kelvin? Why did her natural father have her husband’s gauntlets and why did he have his laser and this belt? There were many things she did not understand, and there was no time to think them out. Perhaps Kelvin needed her—but how could she know?
The blood on St. Helens’ leg bothered her. The head of the bolt might not have lodged in the bone, but it had certainly torn up the flesh. The way he had yanked it out—she could never have done that! It might have been better to leave it until there was competent help. At any rate, she hoped it was merely a flesh wound. St. Helens had a lot of flesh, and that was his good fortune, maybe. But she had to stop that blood.
The dress was knotted as it had been, but it had slipped. Consequently it was pressing against the bolt and the wound was being pushed partially open. She wished she were less squeamish, and that she had Jon’s touch for this sort of thing. But she had to do what she could.
She pushed the blood-sodden dress a bit higher on his thigh. She took St. Helens’ sword from its sheath and cut a stick from a branch, then rested the sword in a crotch. Next she loosened the red-stained knot, pushed the stick through its center, and twisted a proper tourniquet.
There,
she thought,
maybe I’m not as helpless as I sometimes think.
St. Helens did not thank her. He remained unconscious. He seemed to be breathing adequately, and his heart maintained a steady beat. But his face remained pressed to the trunk.
Well, maybe this will help.
She stripped the gauntlets from his hands. The soft leather with the metal plates yielded readily to her touch. She slipped her own fingers into the gloves until her hands were all the way inside. To her amazement the huge gauntlets fitted her perfectly, and now seemed like an extension of her skin. It was apparent that any roundear could wear them, though the prophecy applied only to Kelvin.
Hesitantly she reached with her gauntleted hand for the control on the belt. This little lever must move forward and back. But which way should she move it now?
Use your own judgment, gauntlets,
she thought.
Her fingers acted. She was not certain whether she controlled them or the gauntlet did. The lever moved, pressing back all the way. The belt changed its thrust, and St. Helens’ body shot through the branches with a speed and motion she had not expected. She watched helplessly as it left their tree and was stopped by the trunk of another.
She had to get him down! She knew that—but the neighboring tree couldn’t be reached from this one. Even worse, the tree St. Helens was now in was growing straight up and down, with no branches at the lower levels. How was she going to touch him, let alone get him safely to the ground? She had expected the gauntlets to help her, and instead they had only made things worse.
A movement at ground level took her attention. Two horsemen were there, astride their steeds, looking up.
“There he is, Corry. How’re we going to get him down?”
“Don’t ask me, Bemode. We’re going to need some help. Look over there!”
“What?”
“His daughter. How’d she get over there?”
“I dunno. What’s that shine?”
“A sword. Must be St. Helens’. You up there, girl, you hurt?”
“N-no,” Heln said. “But my father—”
“You climb on down. Bring the sword.”
She hesitated. But according to Kelvin, the gauntlets were good at climbing. Besides, she had done some tree climbing in the past. Still, there was the blade. If she tried to carry that down without its sheath, there was every chance she might cut herself. She started down without it.
“Bring the sword, I said!”
There was no helping it. She was largely helpless, with or without the sword, and would only make things worse if she tried to defy these rough men. She reached up with the left gauntlet and it took up the sword as if it belonged in that hand. As she drew it down to her lower level she saw that there was an inscription on the blade that she hadn’t observed before. Her eyes read it without conscious effort “Given in Eternal Friendship, From His Majesty Phillip Blastmore, King of Aratex.” Now what did that mean? Had St. Helens stolen the sword, or had he and the king really been friends?