The Black Lung Captain - Chris Wooding [190]
Frey took a moment to reload, glancing around at his crew through the acrid haze of gun smoke. Malvery and Silo were grim-faced. Crake was scared out of his wits. But it was Jez that concerned him. Did she regard the Manes with hatred, or did it pain her to kill them? Did she feel each death, or was she glad of the slaughter? He couldn’t say, but he worried for her state of mind.
It was only moments before the flood began to overwhelm Bess. Even though her body blocked them, they clambered over her or ducked beneath her huge arms. The area around the golem was piled with Mane casualties, but they showed no signs of abandoning their assault. If anything, the deaths of their fellows had increased their frenzy.
The dam burst a second time, and this time the weight of numbers was too great to withstand. The Manes poured into the square. The defenders’ gunfire became unfocused as their targets spread out, and more of them broke through as a result. The balance had tipped. They couldn’t be held back.
“Stay together!” Drave shouted, more for the benefit of Frey’s crew than the Knights.
The Knights chose their targets with icy precision and took them down. The air was a terrific percussion of rifles, shotguns, and pistols, underpinned by the steady report of Grudge’s autocannon and the artillery detonations from overhead. There was no use taking cover, since the Manes weren’t firing back. This was a game of nerve. Crake had lost his: he was trembling visibly as he fired. Malvery was getting panicky, blasting every which way. But Frey and the others drew strength from the men and women at their side. They aimed and fired steadily, and though the breaking wave of Manes came closer and closer, they were made to pay dearly for every meter they gained.
But nothing could stop them.
Frey’s pistol fired empty. No time to reload. He shoved it in his belt and drew his cutlass. He knew now they’d be overrun. The battle would go to close quarters.
Bring it on, then!
He was awash with adrenaline. His teeth were bared in a snarl. All the anger and disappointment and hate that had been inspired by Trinica’s betrayal sharpened in that moment to a fine point. It didn’t matter whether he lived or died. It just mattered that somebody paid.
Some of the others drew weapons, ready for hand-to-hand fighting. Kedmund Drave pulled out a huge two-handed sword. Others stuck to their shotguns or rifles. They’d use boots and gun butts to fend off the enemy long enough to get a point-blank shot in. To Frey’s right, Eldrew Grissom threw open his greatcoat, revealing an array of knives like the inside of a butcher’s cupboard. He selected two gleaming cleavers.
“Choppin’ time!” he yelled, with a crazed glint in his eye, and he went to work.
The Manes attacked all at once, jagged nails reaching out, mad faces behind them. Frey stepped to the fore, led by his cutlass. There was little he could do but surrender to its will. He could almost hear the singing of the daemon within as it took control, slashing in broad arcs, dismembering this and severing that. For his part, he simply concentrated on not getting hurt.
But for all the efforts of Frey and his crew, it was the Knights who held the Manes back. They moved like quicksilver, slipping fluidly between positions, always where they were needed. Whenever two Manes tried to take on Frey at the same time, there would be a Knight at his side to assist him, or one of his enemies would go down with a bullet in the brain. Even Drave and Grudge, who were more cumbersome in their heavy armor, seemed untouchable. They didn’t have the speed of their companions, but they anticipated every strike and moved to counter it before it came. The Manes couldn’t match them.
For a time, Frey lost himself. All thought disappeared in a bloody chaos of limbs and blades and teeth. His hands were spattered red. His breath