and he was squeezing, saying low in her ear, âRelease his hand or I will strangle you.â
She let the manâs hand go. He swore quietly, stepping back from her. The other man kept his hands around her throat and slowly turned her to face him.
He said, staring down at her, âLook who we have here, Oleg. We are blessed or cursed, depending on the pain in your hand. Ah, Iâm not mistaken, for there is a bit of light coming over my left shoulder. Aye, Oleg, it is the boy we were coming to fetch. He came to welcome us. Well, boy, how did you get out of the compound?â
Laren didnât move. She felt the other manâs blood trickling from the side of her mouth. She just stared up at the man. He was the one sheâd seen at the slave market.
3
S HE HEARD THE other man cursing in a furious whisper as he hugged his bloody hand against his chest. She stared up at the man who still held her by her throat, saying not a word, just staring. Then suddenly, she drove her fist into his belly and jerked up her knee to his groin.
That knee came up fast, too fast, and Merrik knew, even as the bony knee struck him, that he wouldnât like what was going to happen. And he didnât.
He sucked in his breath when the inevitable nausea struck, and clutched his belly as the pain washed through him.
Oleg cursed, then grabbed the damned boy by his neck before he could run, squeezing even harder than Merrik had because his hand hurt and was bleeding, and the damned little savage had kicked Merrik in his groin and sent him to his knees.
She saw blackness, and she cursed herself for not immediately running, but sheâd stayed there, frozen, watching the man sheâd struck, the man sheâd recognized from the slave market, wondering what he was doing here. In her hesitation, she missed her chance to escape. The blackness filled her mind then until she saw nothing at all.
*Â *Â *
Merrik stood very still, breathing deeply, until he could finally stand straight once again. Oleg was looking down at the boy in an unconscious heap at his feet.
âI should have killed the little sod,â Oleg said. âHe bit down to the bone.â
âWell, he kicked me down to the bone,â Merrik said.
Suddenly, with no warning, there was a fearsome growl and a man, a man both tall and slender, a man not a warrior, jumped on Merrikâs back.
Merrik, still dazed from the blow to his groin, didnât react as quickly as he normally would have. Oleg jerked his knife from its sheath at his waist and raised it to strike at their assailant. In that instant, Olegâs leg was jerked from under him. He teetered, astounded, for he saw the boy staring up at him, and knew that the waif had done it to him yet again, and he just couldnât believe it. He was off balance when he felt the boyâs fist in his gut, and fell against the timbered wall and over into a bush.
No one said anything. There were no curses, no grunts, no yells. The fight was a silent one for no one wanted Thrasco or his men to come bursting from the house.
Merrik managed to jerk the manâs arms free of his throat. He lunged forward, pulling the man over his shoulder. He flung him to the ground at his feet, knocking the breath out of him. He drew his own knife and was on his knees in a moment, the knife tip at the manâs throat.
âNo, donât hurt him!â
The boy was scrambling to the fallen man who was trying to sit up, shaking his head.
The boy grabbed his arm and shook it. âBy all the gods! Cleve, what do you here? You didnât come after me, did you? Is Thrasco close? Cleve, answer me!â
âHurt this ugly beggar?â Merrik said, his voice low, but filled with surprise and sarcasm. This was the strangest rescue heâd ever attempted. âWhy would I want to hurt him when he would have killed me? Would kill me even now if he could. Surely that makes no sense.â
Cleve came to his knees