CHAPTER 1
TEMPEST, DO THY WORST
Be
careful of what you wish for.
~ Truth ~
SEA SPRAY smacked him spitefully in the
face, causing him to splutter. An instant later, curse words rolled off his
tongue, his usual response to anything that irked him sideways. By the gods
great and insignificant, this weather truly tried a man’s resolve, didn’t it?
Ha, the fates were testing him. Had he not insisted on adventuring as the
ancients did? Well, best put his coin where his mouth had led him, and that
meant, damn it, coping with what the elements had in store for this
misadventure.
Ancient
mariner, my arse,
Echayn Valla fumed, and inadvertently swallowed another mouthful of icy ocean. Bloody
idiot, what were you thinking?
He
had thought to prove his mettle. Right, and as in the past, it had led him
directly into the maw of serious trouble. Lifting his waterlogged head to the
sails flapping like fishtails on a beach, he grimaced. Either they’d land up in
the drink or the air currents would hurtle them into the heavens. No steering
available now. Best to hang on. He was not giving in. No sorcery on this
trip, he’d promised himself that. Not that one could do anything in this kind
of weather; always a storm leeched away power.
Clutching
the rail, Echayn watched the heaving ocean threaten to overturn his suddenly
too puny ship. The Sea Sprite, pretty as she was, fast and sturdy, had
been built with tropical waters in mind. Sparing a glance for the five sailors
hunkering near the hatch, he grimaced once more. Old hands, they were, and
mortally afraid. He should hark to that, shouldn’t he? He smirked next. It was
also true that they were superstitious, and this tempest had the look of
portent, didn’t it? Thus, they hunkered instead of acting as sailors should,
believing some supernatural force had assumed control. No need to trim sails
and what not, then. A mindset he couldn’t fathom.
“Bring
the mainsail down!” he hollered, not caring if that was the correct way to say
it. He wasn’t the seaman. “MOVE!” Other than rolling their eyes at each other,
they didn’t budge. Fine. By the gods, then. Laughing, he threw his hands up.
“Let the fates decide!”
Famous
last words.
COUGHING and hawking, Echayn rolled onto
his stomach. He was still on the Sprite’s deck. Well, there was that, at
least. Hadn’t landed up in the drink when a spar broke free overhead and
knocked him into the black of oblivion. Rising to all-fours, he gazed blearily
around. Of the sailors there was no sign. Now what did that mean? Had they gone
overboard? Where …?
He
paused there in his thoughts, and in his movements. Silence. There was only
silence. No sound of crashing waves. Not even a whisper of the gale that had
nearly drowned him in sea spray. Not a creak or a flap of wood and sail. And
the ship was motionless.
On
his feet in a blur of concerted action, he levelled his sword at the surrounds.
“Who did this?” he croaked. “Where are you?”
For,
indeed, this silence was unnatural. Sorcery was absolutely in play. The kind
able to override a storm, by the gods.
No
answer came forth. Turning in every direction, he realised whoever or whatever
had achieved this state had absconded … or watched from a distance, choosing
not to reveal. Frowning, Echayn shoved his blade home and strode to the hatch
that led below deck. Intending to check the bowels of the vessel, he was
brought up short instead. In the narrow passage he discovered the five sailors,
all unconscious, all unharmed.
Well.
It seemed whatever being did this, needed them alive.
Why?
Three
were Valleur – golden-haired and eyed – two sailors were Senlu – red-haired
with blue eyes both – the latter having never sailed beyond the rocky bays east
of Grinwallin’s mountains. Of course, that stretch of sea was for madmen, given
its propensity for violent weather. The Valleur, on the other hand, sailed the
currents around the Grenle Archipelago where life on the ocean was calm and
warm for the most part. The odd tropical storm, of course, but nothing like to
the one that had smacked into them here. Old hands, yes, but not that
experienced regarding Luvanor’s great watery expanses when one broke it down to
brass nails and rope knots.
While
every man, woman and child of Valleur and Senlu extraction on Luvanor was
capable of deploying magic, there was degree of talent. He, Echayn, chose seamen
who were little versed. He wished to reach his destination by wits and sheer
grit, not the ease sorcery delivered. He wished for proper challenge … and here
it was.
Snorting,
aware what he had asked for had been given, and should not a man be so careful
of what he wished for, he shook the men. Soon enough, they sat in various poses
staring at him. Probably thought he used magic. Ha.
“Not
me,” he grunted. “Did anyone see anything?”
“It’s
quiet,” Girvin, born and bred to Grinwallin, stated. “Why is it quiet?”
“This
is why I’m asking.” Rolling his eyes, Echayn stood and retreated to the hatch.
“Join me on deck.” He ducked through.
Beyond
what amounted to a bubble of still atmosphere and ocean, the storm they’d
landed up in continued to rage, showing no sign of letting up. Massive waves
broke with regularity over their air pocket. A sobering sight. Truth was, had
they not had their arses saved, this ship would be in the depths.
“Would
you have taken us away?” Jaffiel of Kantar, whose name meant ‘loves the water’,
the reason he chose a sailor’s life, demanded. “It looked as if you wanted us
shipwrecked.”
That
was an accusation, and who could blame the man? “I don’t know,” Echayn
admitted. Would he have lifted them ship and all to calm waters? Despite his
promise to eschew sorcery? Would he have had the power to do so in a storm? Who
could tell? Then again, never had he stood aside when another needed saving.
“Probably, somehow,” he sighed. “Someone else did this, though. Did you see
anything?”
All
shook heads.
“Well,
we wait it out. Once that tempest blows itself into surrender, we go on.
Meanwhile, let’s attend to repairs.” He eyed the sorry lot. They were not
happy. “Tell me what to do; I’ll help.”
“Bloody
crazy Vallas,” Jaffiel muttered, and swung away.
Leering
at the others, Echayn spread his hands. Truth, after all. To the last, his
family could not be called ‘normal’.
NIGHTFALL brought no change, and thus they
gathered in the small space set aside for meals. Darris, a Senlu from the farms
below Grinwallin’s plateau, prepared fresh bread, and soup from the remaining
vegetables. Good fare, and his proficiency in the kitchen, or in this case, the
galley, was the other reason Echayn had hired him. Pairing the offerings with
ale, they sat around the table eating and drinking in silence.
“You
misled us,” Jaffiel eventually said, shoving his emptied bowl to the side. “You
said we’d be in no danger, an adventure of a lifetime …”
“Shut
it, Jaff,” the brothers Ilan and Kelby growled simultaneously.
Young
still, with Ilan the oldest, both plied the waters of Grenle, fishing in
blissful conditions. Ilan could finger snap for a fire, and Kelby had a nose
for bad weather, which was why Echayn brought him in. The two came as a team,
and he was happy to accommodate them. Kelby, in fact, revealed at dawn that a
storm headed their way. Given his warning, they had tried to outrun it.
“Yes,
quiet,” Girvin put in.
“Why?”
Jaffiel demanded. “I must watch my mouth because Echayn Valla hired us? You
know what happens when you follow a Valla? Chaos!”
Leaning
back with his ale, Echayn studied the man. Most of that was bravado. The sailor
was afraid. If memory served, his single magical talent was for knots, most
suitable in his line of work, but it meant he had not the wherewithal to
protect himself. Not magically, anyway. Echayn suspected the man would be handy
in a brawl. Before he could formulate a response, Darris did so for him.
“Pal,
you agreed to follow this Valla. We all did. Can’t go crying in your soup about
it now.” The cook slapped the table. “And don’t go blaming him for the weather.
We’re at sea, idiot, and shit goes wrong sometimes.”
“Quit
complaining,” Kelby said around a mouthful of ale.
Enough
of this. Echayn carefully set his goblet on the worn table. “Truthfully, I
should be the one taking the lot of you to task. You did nothing. Did I
not hire you to steer this vessel upon oceans calm and stormy? Shit does
happen. You hid from your duties, considered your fate another’s rather than
make your own. You are Valleur and Senlu, for all gods’ sakes. You do not
cower. What has you this terrified?”
They
stared at him, with the brothers dropping their gazes first. Jaffiel sniffed as
he said, “There’s a reason Senluar was abandoned.”
“Yet
you took my coin.”
The
man had the grace to appear shamed. “Didn’t think we’d get this far.”
Ah,
they thought the crazy Valla would either magick them to their destination or
turn the ship around when the going got tough. He’d bet his sword that they
hunkered during the storm hoping he’d admit defeat and take them home. With
their pockets filled, life would be pretty easy for a time. He’d wager the one
who sold him the Sea Sprite had lined his pockets also; this ship was
ill-suited to purpose.
“My
lord …” Ilan began, only to be cut short.
“Out here I’m not bloody ‘my lord’.” Echayn stood. Reaching for his ale, he slurped the dregs in before slamming the goblet down. “Call me Echo, hear? That is who I am out here. Echo.” He marched away before he slapped someone.
COMING SOON!
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