Demonbane (Book 4) (39 page)

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Authors: Ben Cassidy

BOOK: Demonbane (Book 4)
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Marley staggered to his feet in blind, unreasoning panic. Someone slammed into him, and he spun back into the bar. The edge of the counter caught him hard in the stomach.

The first sailor got to his feet, blood running from several shallow cuts on his face. He raised his club and rushed at Kendril.

The black-cloaked man stepped back and elbowed a fleeing customer out of his way in the process. In one swift motion he drew a short sword, the smoking pistol still held in his other hand.

The sailor brought the club down towards Kendril’s cowled head.

Marley raced for the door. He heard a scream from behind him, then several shouts. He was buffeted back and forth by the exodus of sweaty bodies before he finally felt the slap of cold air on his face.

Off-balance, Marley stumbled and hit the slimy planks of the wharf. Rain pounded down on his head and shoulders.

Someone flew out of the front window of the waterside tavern. Glass exploded in all directions.

Marley tried to get to his feet, but collapsed again as the world spun around him.

A fleeing customer tripped into him with a curse, then ran off into the darkness.

Somewhere a whistle screeched.

Marley got to his feet with the help of a nearby barrel, and ran.

He didn’t know where he was going. He didn’t care. The rain slashed into his feet, tore the breath and warmth from him. He tripped, staggered, and stumbled down alleyways and docks, around crates and past moored ships.

In the distance he could hear the diminishing sounds of the fight at the bar, lost behind numerous dockside warehouses and shipping offices.

He stopped for breath, panting long gasping heaves of air in the driving rain.

That ship was cursed.
He
was cursed. There was no way he could go back now. He would run, hide here in New Marlin for a while, then find a job on some outbound ship, some—

A hand grabbed him suddenly by the shoulder and slammed him hard into the side of a large crate.

“I’m not done with you,” Kendril snarled. Rain dripped from the rim of his hood.

“Oh Eru,” Marley sobbed, holding his hands in front of his face. “Don’t kill me. Please Eru don’t kill me, I—”

“Believe me, if I wanted to kill you, you’d already be dead,” Kendril said. He loosened his grip, but still kept his gloved hand firmly on Marley’s shoulder. “Your ship. What’s the name?”

Marley blinked. Rain streamed down his face. “The—the
Justine
,” he managed. He turned his head, staring wildly at Kendril’s darkened face. This close he could suddenly see the twisted burns that covered half the man’s face. Terror seized Marley’s heart like an iron fist. It couldn’t be. He had heard rumors, whispered stories from the disaster of Vorten, but he had only half-believed them. He swallowed. “You…you’re a Ghostwalker, ain’t you?
The
Ghostwalker.”

Kendril gave a wicked smile. “You’re sharp, Marley. Now where’s the ship?”

Marley felt himself sobering quickly. “It’s…it’s in the harbor. Out there.” He gesticulated desperately with one of his hands towards the water.

Kendril scowled. “There’s a score of ships out there. Which one?”

Another whistle sounded somewhere in the distance. There was a faint shout.

Marley looked at the Ghostwalker. “They’re hunting for you.”

“Let them try.” Kendril looked out towards the harbor. “We have more important things to do.”

The old sailor felt his stomach ball up. “What—what do you mean?”

Kendril leaned in close, and clapped a hand on Marley’s other shoulder. “I can’t find that ship in the dark, and it may be gone by morning.” He smiled. “So
you’re
going to help me.”

Marley opened his mouth to respond, but no words came out.

The sound of tramping feet came echoing down the pier, followed by another shout.

“Let’s go,” Kendril said.

 

Rain hissed down from the dark sky, rippling in thousands of tiny impacts as it struck the water of the bay. The looming black shapes of anchored ships drifted by on each side of the dinghy as it cut through the water.

Kendril sat in the back of the small boat, his eyes scanning the harbor. He kept one hand on the handle of a pistol tucked beneath his cloak.

Marley breathed hard, pulling on the oars in steady, powerful strokes. Despite the rain and cold breeze, he was sweating from the effort.

The mournful cry of the harbor buoy bell floated over the water.

“What are you going to do?” Marley asked.

Kendril didn’t respond. He glanced back behind them. The dimly lit silhouette of the city loomed above the drifting masses of docked and anchored ships.

“You’re…
him
, aren’t you? The Demonbane,” Marley said between pulls. “I’ve heard stories about you. Are they true?”

Kendril glanced to one side. “I guess that depends on what you’ve heard.”

Somewhere off in the rain-shrouded night a sailor begin singing an old sea chanty. His voice was badly out of tune.

“You—you’re going to kill them? Kill…that thing?” Marley asked.

Kendril wiped the rain from his face. “Keep your voice down.”

“There’s just one of you.” Marley let the boat drift for a second and rubbed the rain out of his own eyes. “You can’t take the whole ship by yourself.”

“Just row,” Kendril said irritably. He looked out across the moon-lit water of the harbor, scanning one ship after another. Most were dark and lifeless.

“What do you care, anyways?” Marley asked between pulls on the oar. “Why—?”

“How many men are onboard?” Kendril asked abruptly.

Marley shook his head. Despite the amount of alcohol he had consumed that evening, the increasing danger was sobering him quickly. “I don’t know. A dozen, perhaps? Then there’s the first mate, a nasty fellow he is—”

“The rest of the crew? Are they new hands like you, or like the two we met back at the tavern?”

The old sailor hesitated for a moment in thought. “They’re a tight bunch. I joined on at Cayman. The captain needed a decent cook. I guess the last one fell overboard during a storm—”

“They’re in on it, then.” Kendril drew one of his short swords and checked the blade. It glistened softly in the wavering moonlight. “Arms?”

Marley shrugged. “The
Justine
’s a cargo ship, not a man o’war. There’s about half a dozen muskets kept locked in the powder room, along with a dozen or so pistols.  One cannon, mounted on the fore deck. A six-pounder.”

Kendril replaced his blade. “Swivel-mounted?”

Marley gave a short nod. “Aye. Just a pop-gun, really.”

The Ghostwalker raised an eyebrow. “Still enough to blow a dinghy out of the water.”

The old sailor swallowed and said nothing.

Kendril lifted his eyes to the yellow moon above them. Its pale light fell on the harbor, glittering and reflecting off the rippling water. There was no way they would approach the
Justine
unobserved, not if anyone on the deck was keeping a lookout.

“There she is, sir,” Marley breathed. He nodded over his shoulder towards the darkened shape of a ship towards the edge of the harbor, anchored near the breakwater.

Kendril sat up in the dinghy, looking with interest. The cargo ship was large, a three-master. There were no lights aboard her. Kendril thought he could make out movement on the deck.

“I don’t want to go on that ship again,” Marley began, his voice starting to quaver. “I already told you, sir, what’s down below—”

“What’s down below
isn’t
why I’m boarding her,” Kendril said tersely. “When we pull up alongside her I want you to go up first.”

Marley stared at his companion in horror. “Me? But I thought—”

“Hush,” Kendril hissed. He put one hand on the hilt of his pistol as they neared the ship.

A face looked over the side. “Who goes there?” a voice called.

Kendril glared at Marley from under his raised hood.

The old sailor took a deep breath, then called back. “Ahoy! It’s just me, old Marley.”

There was a pause. “And who’s that with you, then?”

Marley froze. He looked over at Kendril for inspiration.

Kendril tightened his grip on the pistol and half-drew it from his belt.

“Stefan,” Marley said at last. “It’s Stefan. Drank like a fish, he did. I’m bringing him back on board to sleep it off.”

There was a grunt of acknowledgement. The face disappeared.

Kendril looked at Marley questioningly.

The old sailor brought in the oars. “You
shot
Stefan,” he said in a low voice.

The dinghy bumped against the side of the ship, rocking up and down under the gentle swells of the harbor.

“Go,” Kendril whispered.

Marley closed his eyes, breathed a whispered prayer, then grabbed the rope ladder. He clambered up onto the deck.

“Thought you’d stay out longer for shore leave,” the sailor chuckled as Marley climbed over the railing. “Rumor is we’re leaving on the morning tide, and—” He turned as Kendril climbed on board, and his eyes grew wide. “Hey, you’re not—”

Kendril leapt forward before both his feet were even on the deck and drew his sword.

The sailor reached for a cutlass at his belt, his hand frantically grasping for the handle.

Kendril smashed the hilt of his short sword into the man’s face.

Without a sound the sailor crumpled to the deck boards and lay still.

Across the deck another sailor turned, then ran for the hatch that led below.

Kendril spun. A knife flashed in his free hand, glinting in the soft moonlight. A half-second later it blurred through the air.

The second sailor gave a strangled gasp and collapsed to the deck a few paces short of the hatchway. The knife protruded from his back.

Marley gave a stifled cry and dashed for the rope ladder.

Kendril intercepted him and smashed the cook hard against the ship’s railing.

“You’re
crazy
,” Marley gasped, “I won’t—”

Kendril clamped a gloved hand over the cook’s mouth. “That dinghy’s the only way back to shore short of a long, cold swim, and I’m not letting you take it. Now take me to the woman, or I’ll gag you and tie you to the mast.”

“I won’t—“ Marley blubbered. “I—I
can’t
—”

“Hey!” came a shout from behind them.

Kendril and Marley both snapped their heads around.

A sailor was standing by the open hatch, staring at his two fallen crewmates in horror. His eyes fastened on Kendril for a moment, then he swung back to the hatchway. “Intruders!” he yelled. “We’ve been boarded!”


Talin’s ashes
,” Kendril cursed. He released Marley, stepped back and whipped out a flintlock pistol from underneath his cloak.

The sailor stepped forward. He put his hand on the hilt of a long knife tucked into his belt.

Kendril’s pistol banged out through the driving rain, lighting the deck in a flash of orange fire.

With a cry the sailor lurched back through the open hatch.

Marley leapt up and dove for the rope ladder again.

Kendril glanced over at the fleeing cook. He holstered his pistol and drew another short sword. “Marley!”

The cook disappeared over the side.

Kendril turned back to face the hatchway. “Perfect,” he mumbled.

Two men erupted from the hatchway, cutlasses in their hands. From somewhere below a whistle blew.

Kendril charged. He swiped his swords in short, precise attacks at the oncoming men.

The sailors fell back before the aggressive attack. Steel clanked against steel as they fought and parried against the black-cloaked man.

One of the sailors gave a sudden cry and dropped his weapon. His arm gushed red blood from a severe gash. He fell back over a pile of tackle on the deck.

Another crewman dashed out from the open hatchway, fumbling with a short-barreled musket.

Kendril swung his swords around and cut down the second sailor he had been fighting.

The man fell to the deck, a red stain forming beneath his unmoving body.

Two more sailors bundled out. They both hesitated as they saw the number of fallen men on the deck.

The crewman with the musket cursed as he tried to use the obviously unfamiliar weapon. He struggled desperately with the firing mechanism.

Kendril turned back. He swiftly stuck the tip of one of his short swords straight down into the planks of the deck, where it stood hilt-up. He yanked out another flintlock with his free hand, and thumbed back the lock.

The sailor raised the musket in panic.

The other two crewmen with the cutlasses actually backed away.

Kendril pulled the trigger. The gun in his hand sparked and roared.

The man with the musket jerked back, his body twisting unnaturally like a ragdoll. He fell over the railing into the water below.

Kendril allowed himself a triumphant smirk. He put away the smoking pistol and took up the second sword again.

There was a wooden
thump
from behind him.

Kendril turned his head slightly.

The fore hatch of the cargo ship had been opened. A huge man, dressed in a dark robe and with a black turban wrapped around his head, climbed easily out. He stood to his full, tremendous height, then flashed his white teeth at Kendril in a smile.

“Take him alive, Abid,” came a thin voice from in front of Kendril.

Kendril turned his head back.

A man stood idly by the first aft hatchway, his hands folded placidly in front of him. He wore a dark red robe with a hood that overshadowed his face. Around his neck dangled a golden ornament.

A serpent with wings.

The two sailors cringed back, reluctant to move forward.

Kendril ignored both of them, and whirled to face the gigantic man behind him.

Abid shook his left hand and a coiled rope of some kind fell loose from his grip. His other hand lifted a massive scimitar which gleamed menacingly in the pale moonlight. He smiled again at Kendril.

From below decks came the sound of more shouting. Undoubtedly more crewmen were on their way.

There was no time to reload the pistols. It would have to be sword work.

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