
“John, we can't get up the stairs. There are five or six of them up there. We're going to burn them out."
John glanced back at the window. Neither the swordsman nor the machine gun barrel was visible. He
would have preferred to have captured the gun intact, but that appeared to be impossible.
“All right,” he said, “but try to keep it from spreading. I want this town as a base, not a ruin. If you can
take anybody alive, take them, and don't hurt them more than you have to. I want to know where they
got that thing. And once the gun's out of the way, go house-to-house; take all the prisoners you can, burn
out anyone who gives you trouble, but keep enough standing for us to use."
“Aye, Captain.” Habakkuk raised his right hand in salute, then vanished back through the doorway.
John watched the window, sword ready, but saw no further activity there. A moment later the smell of
smoke reached his nostrils, and shortly after that his men came spilling out the doorway, coughing,
swords bare in their hands. One blade was spattered with red, and only three men emerged where four
had gone in.
He turned his horse, keeping one eye on the window. He heard renewed shouting inside as the defenders
struggled to put out the fire. No sign of life showed at the window.
A few moments later the first two staggered out the door, choking and gasping. John's men were waiting,
swords drawn; the villagers threw down their weapons and surrendered, to no one's surprise. This was
not the first time John had seen smoke take the fight out of men.
A third villager emerged and was taken, but after him came a long moment of near-silence. The smoke
pouring from the door grew thicker, and thin streamers began to leak from the upper story.
Finally, a fourth defender dashed out, sword ready, and not willing to give in easily. Two warriors
pursued him, leaving John astride and Habakkuk afoot to watch the door and guard the three prisoners.
John shifted his grip on his sword; he was certain that the fleeing enemy was a diversion.
Sure enough, a few seconds later another man emerged. He swung immediately to the side and engaged
Habakkuk, while behind him a sixth villager appeared, lugging a long, heavy metal thing. John spurred his
horse and clouted this last man with his sword. The villager managed to duck at the last instant, but the
blade gouged his scalp and he fell, dropping his burden—the machine gun, John was certain. One end
was identical with the barrel that had protruded from the window; though the rest of the mechanism bore
little resemblance to an ordinary gun or rifle, John had no doubt what it was.
Flames were licking at the doorframe; the defenders had waited until the last possible minute before
making their break. John was sure that any who might remain within the house were doomed.
The three who had surrendered, upon seeing their comrades putting up a fight, attempted to join in,
grabbing at Habakkuk from behind; John urged his mount forward again, trampling over the downed
gunbearer to get at them, his sword flashing in the sun.
More of John's warriors, hearing the combat and seeing the smoke, were emerging from wherever they
had fled, and in moments three of the six villagers were dead, another seriously wounded, and the
remaining two captive. A horse's hoof had caved in the gunbearer's skull, and John saw, to his disgust,
that the machine gun had been broken open somehow in the melee, scattering small bits of metal in the
street.
“The machine gun is ours!” Habakkuk cried, and more of the invading cavalry reappeared. “Take the
village, house by house!"