Jim Baen’s Universe
Page 38
The captain’s reply drew her back to the moment. “Baskers for sure, Dir Skalda, but the southern seas? Not damn likely, excuse me, even if the fish were willing to climb in the holds. The Enemy was scouting those parts long before their bows dipped into the Hinter Island Sound. Dir Rathe knows that.”
“Dir Rathe knows it is time to go below and continue our preparations,” that worthy snapped, walking away with one hand reluctantly clamped on the wet railing to counter the increasing plunging of the deck as the Pride entered the channel and rose cheerfully to meet the incoming swells.
“Dir Rathe,” Skalda informed the offended captain in a low voice, “also knows this deck will surely be splashed as we pass between the Cove’s arms.”
Captain Lienthe’s eyes met and held hers with unexpected directness. She realized Rathe’s rudeness hadn’t bothered him after all. He reached out as if to touch her arm. “Dir Skalda. I confess I’m not-comfortable-” words seemed to fail him, and his face paled suddenly, as if seeing a whirlpool ahead into which he was about to plunge. “Forgive my impertinence, Dir Skalda. But I worry about the children. The hazards of this journey. They looked so young when you brought them on board. And they sleep.”
Skalda found she had no comfort to offer him. His eyes went dull as he looked into hers and understood. “Like that, is it,” Lienthe said in a voice oddly free of bitterness. “As well they sleep, then. Would we all could.”
****
Men rained down on me one day. I watched them come, limbs given grace by the ocean, armor catching sun glints as it dragged the bodies to me. The great flocks, startled apart by the disruption, disappeared beyond my crust. Moments later, they coyly returned to start their feast. Blood clouded the water beyond my eye, but it was a temporary blindness. I’d seen all this before.
****
They practiced below decks, rehearsing ritual none understood and, truth be told, none trusted. Skalda’s urgings from the beginning had been to follow the Summoning Spell without modification, including use of the archaic language forms used in the parchments. Agnon, their best linguist, had coached them all in how to pronounce the words, since subtle changes had occurred since this Spell was last cast. If it ever had been. Rathe expressed all their doubts.
“The Summoning. It promises to bring the destruction of our foes, to guarantee utter and uncontestable victory. Explain to me then, if it worked before, how could our Enemy have rebuilt its fleets?” he objected one last time as they rested. Captain Lienthe had sent word down. They would reach the Blood Reef at sunset, coinciding with the highest tide of the season in this place: safety for his ship’s keel but most importantly, the appointed hour for the Spell.
“There may have been another Enemy,” Agnon answered, always the reasonable one. “It was certainly long ago.”
Skalda sipped from the mug of mulled wine, thanking the sedir-priest who brought it warm to her hands. It was cold below deck, cold and redolent of the Pride’s usual cargo. But the fisher had been the best choice available: speed and camouflage in one, her low profile on the water an aid to what they must do.
So there was no luxury in the Pride, beyond that given the sleeping children, and no food for any of them until the deed was done. She noticed the others drank cautiously as well, valuing the heat in their empty bellies but keeping their thoughts cool and directed. “If you have another plan for our salvation, Dir Rathe,” she snapped, losing her patience, “we’d all be grateful. After all, you are the only one of us here to contest the Enemy’s forces directly in battle. Perhaps you believe the Circle’s Fleet can defeat them at sea?”
There were six of them around the crude table, all dir-priests: of the six, she, Rathe, and Agnon would bear the action of the Spell, casting it over the Blood Reef. There was a second for each of them, a source of strength if any faltered, replacement if any were killed. For herself, Dir Clefta, a grim, silent man from the Hinter Isles. His community had been the first to abandon their homes to the Enemy’s newest offensive; he and three sedir priests all that survived to protect their few ships as they fled to the Circle Cove. Dir Segon would stand at Rathe’s back; she, though young, was already believed heir apparent to Skalda’s own place in the council. It was dangerous to risk her here, Skalda thought with regret, but this throw of the dice risked far more than the life of her promising apprentice. Agnon would rely on the quiet good sense of his own brother, Dir Agnar-theirs being one of very few family pairings within the priesthood. It added a strength to their abilities beyond either alone.
Strength? Experience? We have those, Skalda said to herself, gazing at each in turn, collecting a somber reply of determined, if anxious looks. Let’s hope we also have the blessing of the Depths and Her Quiet God on this ancient magic as well.
There had been soul-searching and argument far beyond Rathe’s reasonable doubts. While magic had been the tool of priests since records were first kept, that tool had evolved with their society’s growth and change. Today’s magic was precise, wellschooled, applied by specialists. The older magic had been, as far as their researches could discover, larger in scope and far bloodier in cost.
Skalda had deliberately sought the fabled old magic, once reports were confirmed that the Enemy-no, she would not keep them faceless-the P’okukii were about to crush the Island states once and for all.
The P’okukii had been content to rule the vast interior of the Western continent, trading for generations with the islandfolk for the riches of the sea. They had little in common, relying on a halting trade tongue and neither side interest in learning more about the other. The first of many mistakes, Skalda and many other Islanders realized too late. For while they knew the P’okukii feared invasion from some mysterious eastward land-a fear the more widely traveled islanders dismissed as superstition-they had not appreciated the depth of that fear. After all, who would take seriously a people who refused to step from the land.
Then, fifty years ago, a new soothsayer had appeared in the desert, warning the P’okukii that the doom from the east was coming. The tiny island states between, with their fierce independence and strange ways, must be conquered and fortified to defend the continent itself.
The inconceivable resources of the P’okukii were turned to the ocean they feared. Ports were closed; shipbuilding went on at a feverish pace. The amused Islanders simply took their trade elsewhere, among themselves, blind to what was coming.
For during Skalda’s childhood, the P’okukii flooded seaward, melded into a vast fleet consisting of more and larger ships than all of the islands together possessed. All that saved them wa
s the caution of an enemy new to the sea. The Enemy was fearful, their sorcerers grappling with the unpredictability of land spells over water, their commanders inexperienced. The Circle Isles defended themselves in surprise, expecting offers of reconciliation, resumptions of trade.
What they received was unending war. At first, it was an even conflict, the sea-knowledge of the islanders and their priests more than a match despite the superior numbers of their foe. Then, slowly, island after island was conquered, their inhabitants forced to flee or die. The Enemy, while never embracing the ocean, learned her ways. Their sorcerers became deadly, gaining spells stripped from the minds of dir priests captured before they could kill themselves. Somehow the battle magic of the islanders, blessed by the Depths and her Quiet God, had proved even more effective in the hands of pagans.
There were, Skalda sighed, never guarantees on what offended deity.
“’Ware Ships!” the cries from the crow’s nest pulled them all on deck, only those responsible for the wind filling the sails ignoring the distraction. Skalda whispered a seeing spell, hearing muttered echoes from either side and behind as the multitude of priests did the same. The captain steadied his telescope, not needing magic to see what was swarming over the horizon.
Rathe and other survivors hadn’t exaggerated, Skalda thought with regret as her vision focused on the wavy line of painted prows and tossing masts. It wasn’t a fleet-it was as if an entire nation had armed and loaded itself on to the sea. Why do they think us such a threat? she wondered again. The very old tales held rumors of a decisive battle centuries ago, one in which the island states gained their freedom from the mainland. But battles, successful or otherwise, seemed unlikely to spawn such hate and fear as this. Unless, she thought uneasily, it was how that battle was won.
“Why are they here, Dir Skalda?” It was the captain pulling at her elbow urgently. “There is nothing in this direction worth attacking. Just the deserted Outer Islands and then the open ocean.”
Segnon’s clear, calm voice had the slightest shiver to it as she drew the conclusion they all feared. “The Blood Reef. They have learned about the Summoning Spell. They seek to stop us.”
“Or to use it themselves,” Skalda said flatly. “Or use it themselves.” She deliberately turned her back on that threat and raised her voice so it soared over the murmurs and speculations filling the deck. “Raise all the sail the Pride carries. Dir-priests. Spells of protection, especially for the hull and the sedir-priests. We must not be hindered. We will not be stopped. For the Cove!”
“For the Cove!” they chanted back, eyes afire with purpose, gnarled hands rising in the air beside smooth young fists to accept her challenge.
The Pride drove her prow deep into the waves as speed became their best weapon. Skalda stayed well away from the railing now, knowing she had no right to risk herself so close to her duty. Wind whipped her hair free of its knot, lashing her cheeks.
“’Ware! The Blood Reef! 'Ware below!” came the cry heartbeats later. Priests scrambled to drop the Pride’s sails. The Enemy fleet had already halved the distance between them; now its ships were close enough for shouts to carry, close enough for protection spells to be tested by the magic of sorcerers. So far, only those in the crow’s nest had been harmed, caught in the boundary between forces, screaming as they were blinded. Another victory for their Enemy.
The Pride settled into position above the Blood Reef. There was a sudden hush, as all realized they would soon be within the range of more mundane weaponry, against which they had no defense.
“Wake the children,” Skalda said calmly.
****
A finger of darkness scratched the crystalline sky above me, a moving finger casting its shadow and more into my sight. Six forms detached from it, drifting down to me in synchrony and sacrifice. In their wake, I could hear the old words.
The Summoning.
The forms, small and devoid of armor, fell closer. The flocks converged, undeterred by blessing or purpose. Blood stained my vision and didn’t diffuse into the ocean as it should. Instead, it flowed down to me, coated me, entered my mouth tasting of innocence shed for rage’s sake.
At last!
If I had slept, this was the moment I awoke.
****
“It’s working!” shouted a voice, panic-fringed rather than triumphant. Something was happening, Skalda amended to herself, bracing as the deck of the Pride shifted under an ocean seeming to rise under their feet. A barrel came loose and rolled, making the sedir-priests jump to dodge it.
The water lifted impossibly beside them, with no wind, no swell to explain it. The Enemy fleet was caught as well, cries of alarm ringing over the strange silence of the sea. Only the noises of human and ship broke against it.
The Pride began to slip down the side of a watery mountain, the movement so delicate and deceptively slow the captain let go his death’s grip on the wheel and simply stared, openmouthed at what was becoming plain.
For it wasn’t a wave rising to loom beside them. It was the Blood Reef itself, its coral-crusted bulk shedding water in a fall miles long as it rose beyond the ocean’s grip, the roar enough to drown out any screams. Fish died, caught by spurs and outcrops of stony growth, imprisoned helplessly in air. Other things were caught as well: bits of bone and flesh, swords and armor, a child’s robe.
Skalda found it contradictory that she could hear the sounds of Dir Agnon losing his mulled wine beside her over the din of the waterfall.
She clung to the rail, more to hold what was human-scaled than because the ship was unsteady. The waterfall ended, replaced by a single loud whoof of air as whatever they had summoned expelled its first breath.
“What is it?” breathed Clefta, his hand still tight on her shoulder.
Skalda shook her head, then realized she did know just as what looked like a promontory to one end of the floating reef turned to regard her through a gleaming black and yellow eye easily as tall as the Pride’s mast.
“It’s the Quiet God himself,” she whispered, “roused to war.”
****
Vision sharpened and added the plane of horizon, distracting with its promises of far and new. I sought the Summoners. There. There must be three.
****
“There must be three,” Skalda said, repeating from the parchment.
“Yes, yes. Three to Summon,” Rathe added, moving to stand beside her and Agnon. His voice held the same mixture of pride and horror they likely all felt. It was one thing to pray daily and interpret blessings-quite another to wake a God and wait.
“Three to Aim,” Skalda said in the same stunned whisper, tearing her eyes from that one great eye to seek out the scattered but formidab
le fleet of their Enemy. “But how? "Each to become an Eye," the parchment said. "What do we do?”
“Sweet Depths,” breathed a voice behind her. She couldn’t recognize it and didn’t turn to see. Her question was answered as the huge, unbelievable head turned fully towards them. There were two more eyes, similar in size to the first, opening slowly as coral cracked away from their lids to splash in the water below.
“Quick!” Skalda ordered, her voice grown cold and calm. A shame her insides were the opposite, but that was a distant problem. “Run out the plank!”
“Remind me not to be near you when you are wrong,” Rathe said, his eyes fever-bright. He undid the sword belted low around his hips and let it drop to the deck, an instinctive and accurate disarming, Skalda decided, following suit. Agnon had no weapon beyond his wit. He looked as though he’d prefer to pick up one of the deadly blades himself.
The Enemy fleet, perhaps reassured by what appeared to be merely a new island, had begun to reorganize. Catapults fired test shot, thumping into the ocean just distant from the Pride, cautiously not too close to the Quiet God. “Hurry,” Skalda urged the others, moving first to the plank.
It was broad and dry, quite secure to walk along. As if fully aware of what was happening, the Quiet God slid closer, closer, until the end of the plank hung not over open water but grated delicately against a cheek of dying coral and sponge. Something held the Pride rock steady; looking down Skalda thought she could make out an immense ridge of coral disappearing under the keel.