Read Dragons on the Sea of Night Online
Authors: Eric Van Lustbader
âBut all the Makkon are dead,' the Dai-San said. âThere were four and they all died.'
Qaylinn shook his head. âWhat you hold on your sword, Dai-San, is a Makkon's tongue. It is fresh, unpreserved. It is proof that either one Makkon lived somehow or â¦' His voice petered out, his words hanging in the air.
âOr there are more than four.'
âYes.' The Rosh'hi refolded the layers of leather, set them aside. From the pocket of his robe he threw five small items across the floor. âI have cast the foot bones of the snow-hare, Dai-San, and they tell of a new attempt by the forces of Chaos to enslave our world.'
âThe Dolmanâ'
âExists no more,' Qaylinn said. âYou made certain of that when you sundered it with your magic dai-katana. But Chaos did not die when the Dolman ceased to exist. It was thrown into disarray and torment, and we wished to assume that it would remain leaderless and, therefore, without threat to us. Now the bones of the snow-hare have told us the truth. There is a new leader in Chaos, and it means to succeed where the Dolman failed.'
âI knew my work was not yet done,' the Dai-San said.
âI wonder whether it ever will be, my friend,' Qaylinn said.
The Dai-San flipped the tongue into the air, caught it on the talons of the scaled, six-fingered glove, made from the hide of a Makkon. âWhere was this tongue found?'
âOn a Kintai clipper during a routine inspection,' Ojime said, pleased that the tactical phase of the discussion had begun. Since the Dai-San's return to Ama-no-mori, the islands had been opened up to trade. âA keen-eyed tariff assessor spotted a nervous crewman and ordered the ship searched from stem to stern. The tongue was found secreted within the crewman's sea-chest.'
âI would question this crewman,' the Dai-San said.
Even being asked questions by him was painful, and Ojime sucked in his breath before he said, âI am afraid that is impossible. The crewman took his own life.'
âAre you certain this is the way it happened?' the Dai-San asked. âYour men are still unused to outsiders. They are notorious for over-reacting.'
Ojime noticed the Dai-San's gaze meet Qaylinn's, and he found himself deeply envious of their relationship. âAbsolutely certain,' he said stiffly. âThere are half a dozen witnesses.'
âAll men under the tariff assessor's command, I will warrant,' the Dai-San said.
âWhy the Makkon's tongue was being brought here we have no idea,' Ojime said, desperately trying to deflect the Sunset Warrior's wrath. âBut we did discover where it came from: the Great Rift.'
âThat is a long way from here,' the Dai-San said. âBeyond the Mu'ad desert of Iskael, the country of my bond-brother, Moichi Annai-Nin.'
âUpon the summit of the sacred mountain of Sin'hai,' Ojime affirmed. âWe need you to beat back this new threat, Dai-San. We believe that something
or someone
is using the depths of the Great Rift to break through from the dimension of Chaos.'
The Dai-San nodded. âWho knows, perhaps the Great Rift itself is the tunnel built by the new forces of Chaos. I will go there immediately.'
He turned to depart but Qaylinn's voice stopped him in his tracks. âThere is something else the snow-hare revealed.'
The Dai-San turned his baleful gaze upon the two men. âTell me.'
âYes, Dai-San.' Qaylinn recognized an order as well as did the minister. âThere is an agent â a human agent whom the Chaos forces are using to help them gain a foothold in our world.'
âHave you a name?'
âYes.' Now, to Ojime's astonishment, the Rosh'hi actually appeared to quail beneath the burden of his message. In the face of his cowardice, Ojime spoke.
âThe bones of the snow-hare were cast and there can be no mistake,' he said quickly, before he, too, lost his nerve. âThe agent, the traitor, Dai-San, is your bond-brother, Moichi Annai-Nin.'
PART ONE
I
SKAEL
ONE
S
EA
-C
HANGE
The ship heeled over
and Moichi Annai-Nin shouted, âHaul away! By the Oruboros, haul away now, lads!'
All the sheets were being struck, coming down in fluted columns as the howling wind tore at them in great clawing gusts. But the mainsail, larger than the others and therefore more vulnerable, was caught out of position. The carefully tied rigging gave way beneath the violent storm's startlingly sudden fist. It tore the fittings like corks out of a line of bottles: pop! pop! pop!, the highest end of the triangular sail a serpentine banner, slapping wetly against the rain-slick mast before shredding into ragged tongues.
Moichi, his great brawny dusky-skinned body fighting aft toward the terrified tillerman, felt rather than saw the heightened agitation of the sea. The diamond set into the flesh of his right nostril flashed blue light as he drew in the sharp, charged scents of the storm, and he thought, damn this Bujun vessel and its delicate construction â unless I can straighten our course we'll go under for sure. He unsheathed one of the pair of copper-handled dirks that were his trademark, cutting through ratlines that had broken free and were whipping about the halyard.
Outwardly, he grinned hugely as he urged his men on with his immense confidence. But inwardly he cursed each and every one of their grimy souls, for he recognized the panic that had gripped them all on the
Tsubasa's
decks at the storm's initial onslaught. Well, he told himself resignedly as he went from group to group, hauling hawsers here, lashing down wildly swinging spars there, what can you expect from a crew dredged up from Sha'angh'sei's bituminous waterfront dens but drunken ex-sailors and drugged-out petty criminals whose dreams had been faded by time and evil incidence? He should never have allowed himself to cobble together such a crew, but the urge to return to his native Iskael with his love, Aufeya Seguillas y Oriwara, had been too much for him. He had been on dry land far too long.
This morning, six-and-a-half weeks out from Sha'angh'sei, the principal port on the southern face of the continent of man, he had been belowdeck with Aufeya, having already tested the wind thrice during the cormorant watch and learning nothing for his efforts. Or else he had been distracted by Aufeya. He had asked her to marry him when they reached his home in Iskael and she had accepted, her joy igniting the copper of her eyes.
A gray-green wave, opaque in its turbulence, sprang over the taffrail, soaking Moichi where he labored with a tangle of loose and shattered tackle. On his knees, he shouted a warning to those down below as the water roared across the mid-deck. It was then that Moichi felt the underlying power of the storm, and he knew that this was no ordinary tempest that periodically whirled through the eastern stretches of the Iskael Sea. For an instant, his mind seemed aware of something beyond the storm, yet quite a part of it, almost â and this was almost laughable â a kind of malevolent presence, as if the typhoon itself were alive. But that was quite impossible, he told himself, and went on with his frantic duties.
To make matters worse, the
Tsubasa
was no ordinary ship on which he had learned the art of navigation and sailing; it was a Bujun vessel â a gift from Moichi's bond-brother, the legendary Dai-San, who had saved the world of man from the Dolman and the invading forces of Chaos in the Kai-feng, the final cataclysmic battle that signaled the end of the Ages of Darkness and Necromancy.
The
Tsubasa
was like all things Bujun â that remote island chain the Dai-San had visited â delicate and mysterious as the mist that enshrouded its shores. The Bujun were reclusive, master warriors who preferred their own company. Many tales existed regarding the Bujun. One such insisted that they rode through the skies astride great horned and winged dragons called Kaer'n.
Though Moichi was a master navigator, he had yet to fully grasp the intricacies and peculiarities of this magnificent, superbly constructed Bujun vessel. As he rose, dizzy, blowing seawater from his nostrils, he cursed the impatience that had led him to set out for home too soon and with an improper crew. He staggered down the companionway to the mid-deck like an over-confident wrestler who, having stepped into the ring, was only now realizing the hidden reserves that lay behind the obvious strength of sinew of his opponent.
He risked a glance upward. There was no horizon. Instead, scudding clouds like angry bruises dipped to meet the rising sea, creating an almost seamless whole, a vast, writhing beast within whose belly the ship rocked and yawed dangerously. In every groan from the seasoned
kyoki
-wood timbers, from every pitch the ship took in the ever darkening swells, from the precarious bowing of the masts before the shrieking, gyring winds, his senses picked up the beginnings of the
Tsubasa's
death throes.
God bear witness, he berated himself, this would not have happened if I'd not been so involved belowdecks. Aufeya! Even now his thoughts betrayed him, straying to the silkiness of her creamy skin, the look of longing and love filling her copper eyes, the pleasure â sometimes gentle, other times fierce â of their nights together in the captain's cabin.
Dammit, no! Moichi had been born to be master of the seas: a navigator. And now, as captain of his own ship, he had at last achieved a lifelong dream. No storm, unnatural or no, would rip his new charge from beneath his bootsoles. Oh no, he vowed, gripping the railing to regain his balance. By the Oruboros, the great sea spirit who guides all mariners, I will not allow it!
The roiling clouds above his head mangled the murky periwinkle daylight into patches of shifting, menacing shadow that raced across the ship's foundering flanks as if they were working in concert with the angry sea in trying to pull it under.
The fittings howled in protest and the
Tsubasa
again shipped water dangerously. On Moichi's shouted orders men ran, stumbling, toward the bilges, manning overworked emergency pumps. But the wind was rising, sudden violent gusts like the claws of some evil-tempered beast making the tying off of the sails almost impossible. Moichi tried to shout further instructions to his crew but the storm cried him down hysterically.
The ship canted over, almost capsizing, and Moichi turned, heading back aft to the tiller. He was halfway up the companionway when he heard a cracking from over his head like the sundering of a roofbeam. He did not have to look up to know that the mizzen mast â the thinnest of the clipper's three masts â had been bent past its breaking point and had splintered.
He launched himself up the companionway and raced across the shuddering deck. Unmindful of the treacherous footing, he shoved men out of the way of the hardwood as it came crashing down in a bird's nest of rigging and tackle. Nevertheless, one of the cross-trees struck the first mate across his face, his flesh gashed open as he reeled backward, arms flailing in a vain attempt to right himself.
Moichi lunged after him, stretching to his full limit, slipping, then catching himself. His powerful fingers encircled the mate's wrist as a combination of his own momentum and the violent motion of the ship sent the man arcing over the side rail.
With a shriek, he disappeared, and Moichi was dragged several heart-stopping feet after him across the deck. He fetched up against the side with a rib-jolting blow. Half-dazed he held on, gritting his teeth with the effort, his muscles bulging, veins popping in lightning streaks.
He peered over the side, his face filled with seafoam and rain. He saw the mate's mouth twisted in terror, his eyes staring wildly. Blood ran off him like pink rain.
âHold on! I have you now!' Moichi shouted into the storm as he gathered his strength to bring the mate up onto the deck. But just then, the
Tsubasa
lurched sickeningly, sending the side they were on plummeting downward into the thrashing sea. My God, Moichi thought, it's dark down here. Like the underside of the world.
And with just an indifferent flick of its bulk the ocean took his mate from him, tearing his hand from Moichi's. The man's mouth opened in a silent shriek as the water in great black swirls lifted him into its embrace, up, up, and then, quite suddenly, sucking him into itself, down and away.
There had been absolutely no sensation of him slipping away, no intimation of what was to come. One moment Moichi had him firmly in tow, the next instant there was nothing to hold on to, just the chill wetness all around, moaning and pitching as if in agony.
God of my father, Moichi thought, I have never seen the sea like this.
His head came up and he squinted through the typhoon, thinking, No! By the Oruboros, this is too much!
But in truth his ears had not deceived him. They were picking up a vibration rather than a true sound â a horrid, bone-chilling rumbling that reverberated through his body and buzzed evilly in his brain.
With a bellow of rage, Moichi stormed the high poop deck and, shouting mingled instructions and encouragements to the young, petrified tillerman, brought his own brawny weight to bear on the protesting steering mechanism. It would not budge.
He raced to the railing, leaped down onto the mid-deck, gesticulating as he picked himself up and ran for the mainmast. âRaise the mains'l!' he cried. âRaise the mains'l!'
No one reacted. The best of them knew only to trim all sail, batten down all hatches and tackle in order to ride out a storm. Raising sail in the face of foul weather was unthinkable. What their captain was asking of them was sheer madness.
âMove,' Moichi shouted, âor we'll all be dead men, lying at the bottom of the sea and food for the big fish!'
As if to underscore his words all light left the world. In the unnatural blackness the men turned aft. There came a shriek among them; or perhaps it was the infernal typhoon itself, laughing at its height, at the puny creatures who dared ride its coruscating back.