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Authors: Barb Hendee,J. C. Hendee

Tags: #Fantasy

Child of a Dead God (22 page)

BOOK: Child of a Dead God
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They were surprisingly robust; none appeared malnourished or inebriated. They quickly shifted positions, two flanking Welstiel on the shoreward side to back him and Chane into the water if needed.
“Be at ease,” Welstiel called, and held up both gloved hands.
The pebble-filled pouch dangled by its string hooked around his fingers, but the Ylladon did not lower their weapons. One sailor between the skiffs glanced toward the campfire as another man stepped forward from beyond the flames.
Somewhere in his late twenties, he wore a close-trimmed beard and was rather short of stature. He barked at the others, but his gaze never left Welstiel. This man had not drawn a weapon. The sheath on his hip was too narrow for a sailor’s cutlass, perhaps made for a saber instead. The sleeves of his azure shirt beneath the quilted and padded leather vest were a cleaner cut than the rest.
“Stop there,” he said in the old Droevinkan, his words strangely sharpened by the accent of his native tongue.
Welstiel halted, as did Chane.
“You are the captain?” Welstiel asked, and jingled the pouch. “We seek passage on your vessel.”
“Passage?” the man repeated.
He looked Welstiel up and down, snorted, and then cocked his head toward one of the two who had flanked Welstiel at the beach top.
“He captain,” the young man said in his broken speech. “But he not speak your words. I am helm.”
“Helmsman?” Welstiel corrected politely.
The short helmsman said nothing as the captain took a few steps down the sloping sand.
He was the tallest and bulkiest, and shirtless beneath his cloak and tunic. His thick leather vestment was adorned with spaced steel studs shaped like diamonds. Heavy armor for a seafarer.
His hair and face were hidden beneath a helm of hardened, shaped leather, with three evenly spaced flat iron strips across its skull top. The long nose guard and wide cheek and jaw wings were reinforced as well. This left only two eye loops connected to the narrow opening exposing the middle of his mouth and the front his chin. Welstiel found it difficult to gauge the man’s expression.
The captain never looked at the pouch—only at Welstiel—and inched forward with a thick short sword poised in his grip. Clearly these men thought it easier to take Welstiel’s money, and his attempt at barter was not even worth amusement.
Welstiel flipped the pouch up with his fingers and caught its falling bulk in his palm.
The captain paused, but still his gaze did not shift. Welstiel opened the pouch, pinching out silver coins into plain sight.
“We need passage for seven.”
“Seven?” the helmsman repeated, and rattled off something to his captain.
The captain growled a few words to the man behind him. That sailor scurried off the way Welstiel had come. Another bolted along the cove’s southern curve.
“Welstiel!” Chane hissed. “What are you doing?”
He stepped in, pushing back his cloak to expose his longsword, and kept shifting his head, watching all the sailors still in sight.
Again the captain appeared unimpressed, but he took a few quick glances. Not at the pouch and coins but toward the cove’s far reaches, where his two men had run off.
Welstiel slowly pushed back his cloak to expose his own sword.
The captain did not seem foolish, and the mention of seven in Welstiel’s party had made him wary. A piercing whistle carried from the north, and then another from the south. The captain clenched the shortsword’s hilt hesitantly.
Welstiel took another step forward. The helmsman closed quickly on him, but Chane moved in to block his path.
“Let him come,” Welstiel instructed.
Chane backed up one step and held his ground with a soft hiss.
“I offer more as well,” Welstiel said, waiting as the helmsman translated for his captain. “Something rarer than coin.”
He slowly swung his pack off his shoulder and dug inside it. At the glimmer rising from the opened pack, the captain raised his sword, its point reaching out.
Welstiel lifted his globe of three flittering lights.
“Tell him the lights never go out,” he said, and waited while the helmsman explained.
The captain reached out and wrapped thick fingers around the globe. He lifted it before his face.
Its light flooded the shadowed openings of his helm. He did not appear remotely awed, but his interest was clear. A good light source requiring no fire was useful to a seafarer.
Welstiel held up both pouches and shook the one from the monastery, so that its few silver pennies made noise.
“A third now . . . the rest when we reach the first port on your route.”
The helmsman repeated, and the captain returned a question.
“Why is you out here, where is nothing?” the helmsman asked.
“Not your concern,” Welstiel returned. “My people will stay below deck, and we are not to be disturbed. We have our own food and water, so we will be no more burden than the rest of your . . . cargo. Passage is all we require.”
The captain and helmsman broke into a quick and sharp exchange, and then the captain looked at Welstiel and nodded once. The helmsman held out his hand, and Welstiel rendered up his smaller pouch containing nearly all his true coin. When he reached for the globe, not offered as down payment, the captain curled it back in his grip and turned away.
The helmsman merely smirked.
Welstiel understood this game. The captain accepted the bargain, but now he would wait. Once his passengers were aboard in the hold, it would be far easier to take all of their possessions. No one would even find the bodies, sunk to the sea bottom.
“My name Klâtäs. You get people,” the helmsman encouraged. “We leave soon.”
Welstiel decided to stay and keep his eyes on these men. He also knew how Chane longed for real blood.
“Bring the others,” he told Chane, “but only as far as the turn into the cove. Keep them away from the camp until it is time to board.”
Welstiel found it puzzling that his ferals obeyed Chane in most things, especially the young female. As Chane disappeared down the beach, passing a returning Ylladon scout, Welstiel backed toward the water and away from the skiffs to consider his options.
Magiere traveled south, but she had not come this far, judging by her position in his last scrying. Whatever might come, he could not allow her to get away from him. If she stopped short and headed inland, he would have to force the Ylladon ship to turn back north. But that was not likely, since the impassable Blade Range separated the eastern from the western coast. Magiere was far more likely to sail onward beyond the range’s southern end, where it broke into the scattered rugged terrain of the Pock Peaks. It was the only place he could think of that she might enter the high mountains on foot. If that was her plan, her ship might eventually catch up to Welstiel’s, and then he would have harder decisions to make.
Sgäile pulled in the oars and stood up as the skiff floated in beside the ship. No one had spoken since they pushed off the beach, and both Magiere and Léshil had been unusually quiet during their three-day return. Chap was fully recovered, much to Sgäile’s relief, but he dwelled on the gifts that the “burning” one had brought—and for whom the last two were intended.
Léshil had not taken his new blades from their canvas wrap. Those weapons, so like his own, were disturbing enough to Sgäile, but they were nothing compared to the items presented to Magiere: a war blade made of Chein’âs metal and a strange heavy circlet.
Sgäile had thought long and hard on this as he led Léshil and Magiere out of the granite foothills. Brot’ân’duivé could not have known Magiere would force her way into this journey, for the Greimasg’äh’s instructions only concerned Léshil. Yet somehow the Chein’âs had known she would come.
What was the hidden meaning behind these strange gifts, and the way that dark little one had looked at her with such pain? Its expression had reflected that of the séyilf who had appeared at Magiere’s hearing before the clan elders and claimed an impossible shared heritage with her.
One night in the granite foothills, Sgäile had heard Magiere mutter fitfully in her sleep and then sit up, breathing hard. He remained silent, watching her through the slits of his eyelids, until she finally curled up under the blanket with Léshil.
They were all traveling south to find an object for these human “sages,” but Magiere was much more involved than she admitted. Sgäile now felt as though he were the one being dragged along blindfolded.
“They are back!” a glad voice shouted from above. “Osha, quickly— come help!”
Sgäile glanced up to see Wynn’s smiling face hanging over the ship’s rail-wall. Osha appeared beside her an instant later.
“Hold on,” Osha called, and a crewman tossed down lines.
Sgäile stepped around Chap to secure the skiff’s prow. When he turned back, Magiere had done the same at the stern. About to reach down for his pack and the canvas bundle of gifts, he saw Léshil had already picked up the latter.
It was the first time he had touched them since leaving the tunnels. Sgäile could not comprehend Léshil’s reluctance.
Léshil handed off the bundle to Magiere and crouched as Chap approached him.
“I will carry him,” Sgäile said quickly.
Léshil’s face clouded, but he nodded. “I’ll head up and help haul him over. Magiere, go ahead.”
Magiere climbed up, and then Léshil, and Sgäile crouched to offer his back to Chap.
“Please allow me to assist you,” he whispered.
With a soft rumble, Chap hooked his forelegs over Sgäile’s shoulders, bracing his rear paws on Sgäile’s belt. The dog was heavy and made climbing the rope ladder precarious. When they reached the top, Wynn scrambled into Sgäile’s way.
“I will get him,” she said cheerfully, reaching out.
At the sight of her, Chap lunged.
The dog’s push-off flattened Sgäile onto the deck’s edge. When Chap’s weight lifted from Sgäile’s back, he climbed through the rail-wall’s opening and paused at the sight before him.
Wynn sat with legs splayed where she had toppled, and clutched the majay-hì’s neck. Chap lapped at her face as she laughed.
“I missed you!” Wynn said, grabbing his face by the jowls.
Sgäile shook his head. At least it was heartening to see this ancient one’s hidden burdens lifted for a moment.
“Greetings, Sgäilsheilleache,” Osha said. “It is welcome to see you.”
“Osha!” Wynn grumbled at him.
He groaned with a roll of his eyes and repeated his welcome in Belaskian.
The hkomas strode over, displeased as ever, and Sgäile steeled himself to remain polite. The ship and its keeper had remained idle for six unexpected days on this well-kept route between the coastal communities.
“We pull anchor,” the hkomas said. “We are far behind schedule for our next stop.”
“Of course,” Sgäile answered. “If I can assist in—”
The hkomas turned on his heel and began shouting to his crew.
A cold gust rolled across the deck, and Wynn crossed her arms with a shiver as she stood up. Osha immediately opened his cloak, stepping closer, and Wynn slipped in against his side as he pulled the cloak’s edge about her.
Sgäile stared silently, as did Magiere and Léshil, but the two young ones did not notice everyone’s attention fixed upon them.
“Hungry?” Wynn asked, peering from beneath Osha’s gray-green cloak. “Have you had supper?”
In the lingering silence, both Wynn and Osha finally noticed the tension around them.
“We need to get below,” Magiere said, still holding the bundle of gifts. “Now, Wynn.”
Some of the crew paused amid their duties, casting displeased and troubled glances at the returned foreigners. One stopped altogether to watch them. The continued interest of this young woman, the hkomas’s steward, did not escape Sgäile’s awareness.
Osha swept back his cloak as Wynn hurried after Magiere. Léshil and Chap followed. Sgäile watched with mixed feelings as they headed for the aft hatch. He prayed that Chap would keep his oath.
Uncertainty was a foreign state of mind for Sgäile, and lately he had been perpetually lost in it. He believed in his self-chosen purpose to protect Léshil. But Magiere’s presence nagged at him. Between the séyilf’s claims at Magiere’s hearing and the gifts and actions of the emissary at the fissure’s edge, Sgäile wondered what role Magiere played in Léshil’s future.
She was a monster. She could be irrational and consistently ill-mannered. But she also possessed attributes Sgäile found admirable—fortitude, courage, and an unshakable loyalty to those she cared for. He had once asked her to watch over young Leanâlhâm, and she agreed without hesitation. And two of the ancient races expressed mysterious interest in her.
Sgäile grew weary of thinking.
BOOK: Child of a Dead God
6.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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