It
took all his strength of will to keep him from running.
The farmhouse was silent. He
could hear the neighing of many horses in the stable. He could
smell something on the wind that he had smelled before. The stink
of burning human flesh was not something he could ever
forget.
He moved closer to the door
and heard the men inside. There were a lot of them. A quick glance
at the stables told him at least ten, judging by the number of
horses. His pursuers had been determined. They had ridden on even
under the full moon’s light. He supposed weight of numbers must
have given them confidence.
Kormak slid closer to the
door. They had left no sentries outside. No man wanted to wait out
doors alone when the Children of the Moon were abroad.
Light shone through the door
frame. They had kicked the door in. The farmer had not been as
hospitable to a large group of armed men as he had been to Kormak
and he had paid the price. High pitched near-hysterical laughter
echoed within the cottage walls. He steeled himself and stepped
through the door.
They were a group of rough
looking men in the garb of the Sturmgarde city watch. Kormak
recognized one of them, a brawny fellow with a bushy moustache and
a bald head. He had a bandage tied round the bicep that Kormak had
pinked earlier. In the gloom it took them some time to realize he
was there.
The little girl was dead on
the floor. Her mother lay close by, hands stretched out in death
trying to reach her daughter. There was blood pooled in one of her
eyes. It had overflowed and dribbled down onto the earthen floor.
It was easy to see what had happened here. His experienced eye read
the signs as if they were the pages of a book.
The guard had burst in. They
had started to question the family. The farmers had not answered to
their satisfaction. One of the intruders had seized the girl and
threatened her. That was when the boy had run forward and got his
brains smashed out by a panicky man.
Fear and anger had gotten
out of hand, and there had been a bloodbath. The old farmer lay
near his wife, a massive hole gaping in his chest. The eldest son
lay sprawled near the fire. His face was burned. His pitchfork lay
close at hand.
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