on

wasn’t staying

  • see
  • Marcos
  • was
  • i_
  • breath
wasn’t staying what Marco had figured on doing in the first place?
All right, if Caesare told him to stay in the marshes—well, Marco would stay. At least this time he’d arrived equipped to do a little better than just survive. Not much, but a little. So long as he could keep clear of the bandits, he’d manage. And he and Benito could go back to the old routine—at least he’d be near enough to keep in touch.
Now—the Montagnards—have I screwed up there too?

Benito waded through mud and freezing water; over his ankles mostly, sometimes up to his knees. His legs were numb, his teeth were chattering so hard he couldn’t stop them, and his nose was running. He kept looking over his shoulder, feeling like he was being watched, but seeing nothing but the waving weeds that stood higher than his head. There was a path here, of a sort, and he was doing his best to follow it. If he hadn’t been so determined to find his brother, he’d have turned tail and run for home a long time ago.
Rafael de Tomaso had told him the whole messy

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