The Night of the Swarm

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The Night of the Swarm Page 35

by Robert V. S. Redick


  Fire was still everywhere, though. At least four of the five creatures had exploded in like fashion. One had torn through the standing rigging, causing the entire mizzenmast to sway. The battle nets were burning, the port skiff was burning, halyards were burning on the deck in coils. Beside me, Jervik Lank threw a younger tarboy into the life-saving spray, & I swear I heard the hiss as his burning clothes were extinguished. At the forecastle, Lady Oggosk opened her door, shrieked aghast & slammed it again.

  Suddenly Rose exploded: “Mizzenmast! Belay hauling! Belay! Damnation! BELAY!”

  The men aloft could not hear him. Rose left the Turachs & ran straight through the fire, then swung out onto the mainmast shrouds, over the water, waving his hat & screaming for all he was worth. I saw the danger: high on the mizzenmast, the brave lads were trying to save their mainsail by lifting it clear of the smoldering deck. But a line was fouled in the sail—a burning line. They couldn’t see it for the smoke, but they were about to spread the fire to the upper sails.

  Captain Rose got their attention at last, & you may be sure they BELAYED. I looked around me, & by Rin! there was hope. All the creatures had been snuffed, the hoses were still blasting, & save for the mizzenmast the rigging was remarkably intact.

  “Two of them mucking animals burned up ’fore they could reach us,” said Jervik Lank, popping up beside me again. “And when their fire died they just fell into the sea.”

  So we were at the edge of their range. That answered one question: maybe they preferred to take us alive, but failing that they didn’t want us to escape. They’d waited as long as they dared to hurl those obscene fire-insects at us, then let loose before we could slip away.

  The hose-teams went on blasting, & it began to look as though we’d won a round. The Chathrand had lost her jibsail, one minor lifeboat, some rigging about her stern. It was an unholy mess, & work for the carpenters for a fortnight. But the daughter-ship was still miles off, & the day was ending, & they hadn’t sunk us yet. Best of all there was no sign of another volley like the first.

  “Captain Rose, you’ve done it—Aya Rin! Captain!”

  His left arm was on fire. “Nothing, pah!” he said, calmly stripping off his coat. But the Turachs were taking no chances. They still had hold of that writhing dragon of a fire hose, & with a cry they swung around & aimed it at their burning captain—and blew him right off the shrouds & into the sea.

  A fall like that (backward, sixty or seventy feet) is a brutal thing for a young & strapping lad. Our captain is ox-strong, but also ox-heavy & far from young. We ran screaming to the rail, tearing life-preservers from their hooks. I feared the marines had just written the last line in the tale of Captain Nilus Rotheby Rose.

  It would have been so, surely, but for the hero who stepped forward. A dlömic sailor, barefoot already, tore off his shirt & leaped to the shrouds, just where Rose had been standing. He balanced there a moment, a jet-black figure searching the waves. Then he saw what he was looking for, let go & dived.

  It was a breathtaking sight: he sliced the waves like a black dagger thrown point-down. Rose was unconscious, & already sinking, but the man surfaced beneath him & got his head above the waves, & swam easily enough (considering the great bearded bulk on his shoulder) to the nearest preserver, & held on there until we tossed him a sling.

  Rose did not move as we hauled him up. Chadfallow & Rain were waiting—and so, on the other side of the hauling team, was Sandor Ott.

  “That’s a corpse you’re lifting,” said the spymaster. “Fiffengurt, are we fifteen miles off that headland, as he requested?”

  “Nearly,” I replied, not looking at him.

  “What was his plan?” Ott persisted. “What was he building, with the blacksmith and the carpenters?”

  No one knew, so no one answered. “Night Gods!” Ott shouted. “The sun is going down, gentlemen! He must have told one of you how he meant to escape?”

  “Shut up, shut up till we revive him!” said Dr. Rain.

  “The man is dead, imbecile,” said Ott.

  We bent the captain over the rail. Water—quarts it seemed—gushed from his mouth. We laid him out, gray & cold upon the deck.

  “He is not breathing,” said Chadfallow. “Rain, stand by to compress his heart. You know the procedure, I trust?”

  Dr. Rain blinked at him. “The procedure? Yes, of course! The procedure. He’s rather large, though.”

  Chadfallow knitted his eyebrows, but there was no time for talk. He tilted the captain’s bushy head, pinched his nose, & sealed his lips to Rose’s own. He blew; Rose’s chest lifted like a balloon. Again the doctor breathed, & again. The crowd grew. Men were praying, quite a few upon their knees. Without Rose there would be panic; without Rose we’d be at the utter mercy of an assassin. Chadfallow delivered a tenth breath, then glanced up at Rain.

  “Now.”

  The old fellow turned, took aim, & fell on his bottom in the center of Rose’s chest. He began to bounce, vigorously.

  “Onesie! Twosie! Threesie—erch!”

  Sandor Ott shoved him aside. He knelt over Rose’s chest & started pressing down with both hands. “Just twice!” said Chadfallow, & at once started breathing again. We waited. The captain lay limp. The dlömu who had rescued him was hauled over the rail in turn. “Press harder this time, Ott,” said Chadfallow, & the process went on.

  I heard an old woman mumbling beside me: Lady Oggosk. She too was praying softly, leaning on her stick, tears caught in the wrinkles of her ancient face.

  Ott and Chadfallow worked on. From above came an eerie sound: the beat of wings. Niriviel had just alighted on the fighting top.

  The rain began at last. Then Sandor Ott ceased his efforts and stepped away. “It is over,” he said. “Rose served his part well enough. And your skills are needed elsewhere, Doctor.”

  Chadfallow ignored him, delivered the compressions himself. No one spoke save Ott & Niriviel, discussing what the bird had seen of the Behemoth’s weaponry. “A glass cube?” said Ott, sounding almost delighted. “How intriguing. But are you certain it had no entrance, no doors?”

  The rain strengthened. The light sank low. Finally, ashen, Chadfallow sat up. He licked a finger & held it to Rose’s parted lips. Then he shook his head. “Now it is over,” he said.

  Lady Oggosk shrieked.

  From the look of agony she wore I thought her heart had burst. Nothing of the kind: she raised her stick high & swung it like a club, narrowly missing the doctor’s chin. “Backstabbers! Parasites!” she cried. “You’ve sucked his blood every day he’s been on this ship!” We retreated. Oggosk swung her stick over & over, as though fighting wolves in the night. “I dare you! I dare you to stand there and watch him die!”

  “Duchess,” said Chadfallow, “he has passed on. If I had any remedy—”

  “Silence, bastard, or I’ll kill you!” She threw her stick away, dropped on her knees by Rose’s head. “I will drive you from the ship! Chamber by chamber, deck by deck! I’ll uproot you, tear you out with these hands, watch you blow away like dust!” She curled her old fingers in Rose’s beard. “Are you listening? After all this time do you doubt my word?”

  It was too sad. I knew she cared for the skipper, but this was beyond anything. It wasn’t just her heart that was broken but her mind.

  Then Rose bolted upright.

  He gave a horrendous, moaning gasp. His mouth was open & his eyes were bugging from his head. We stood transfixed. There were no cries of joy, only staggered silence. Lady Oggosk had raised the dead.

  But wasn’t there something changed in Rose? Not just his pallor, which was still that of the drowned. No, it was something less tangible, but undeniably there. Like the charge in a cat’s fur: you could feel it, even before the spark that made you jump.

  “Captain,” I whispered, “d’ye hear me?”

  “CLEAR THE DECK!”

  The cry was in his old, storm-shattering voice. All at once he was scrambling to his feet, bellowing the command again
as he did so, waving & gesticulating.

  There were quite a few gawkers to be sure. “You heard the captain!” I cried. “Clear out, there, give him some breathing room! Topmen, back to your—”

  Rose leaped on me, smacked his hand over my mouth. “I SAID CLEAR THE DECK! ABANDON MASTS, ABANDON RIGGING! ALL HANDS BELOWDECKS! THE LAST MAN BELOW GETS HIS BUTTOCKS WHIPPED TO BLARY RIBBONS!” He released me & waved his arms. “Officers! See them below in ninety seconds or I’ll have your hides! Run!”

  There was of course no room for argument. We carried out his orders as though we had not just seen him lying dead at our feet. Even as we did so a cry of dismay rang out: the men aloft had spotted something heading our way. “Down, down!” we screamed, & down they came like troops of monkeys, some of them from three hundred feet above the deck. What had they seen, though? I heard “shiny” & “spinning” on a few lips, but nothing I could make sense of.

  I ran as far as the forecastle house & back again, & in that time all but a few dozen sailors had made it safely to the deck. But there was trouble at the hatches. The previous attack had brought men to the topdeck in their hundreds—perhaps twice as many as could be sensibly used to fight the fires—and now they’d been joined by two hundred more from the rigging. Many were wounded; some were in stretchers. Add to this the hoses, buckets, fire brooms, fallen cables, scorched canvas & other debris in & around the hatches & it made for awful bottlenecks. Rose was nearby again, howling & kicking men down the ladderways. Somehow, in a solid shoving mass, they went. But it was not fast enough for Rose. He drew his sword & jabbed the descending men with the point, between the shoulders. A few more seconds & the last men were squeezing down.

  “Back from the hatches! Stand clear!” Rose whirled around & looked at the sky once more. “Great flaming Gods!” he howled. “Fiffengurt, you mucking fool!”

  I caught a glimpse of the missile—a cube of glass the size of a house, plummeting from above. Then Rose slammed into me like a stampeding rhino, & he bore me backward into the tonnage hatch.

  There was battle netting over it, of course, but the nets were scorched, & we narrowly missed a hole that would have meant the death of us both. The captain seized me in a bear-hug & rolled, three or four times, & when we stopped he was above me, & the dark mass of the longboat on its sling loomed over us like an umbrella. And then came the blast.

  It was not as loud as I had expected & no conflagration followed. Instead I heard a sound like fine furious hail, & the sky around the longboat filled with glass. The cube had exploded in midair, showering the Chathrand in a million needle-thin slivers of death. Screams erupted from the ladderways: not everyone had made it safely below.

  “Gods, what a weapon!”

  Ott’s voiced echoed up through the tonnage shaft. I turned my head: there he was, one deck below, displaying a handful of sharp, shattered crystals. “It could kill an entire ship’s company, and leave the vessel perfectly sound!” he cried, delighted.

  “Captain,” I said, “you saved my life.”

  Rose looked at me somewhat hatefully, as if I’d accused him of a crime. Then he heaved himself over so that we lay side by side. “Bedour spoke the truth,” he said. “Captain Bedour. He’d seen it used, that weapon. He knew what was coming at us out of the sky.” Rose stared up at the belly of the longboat. “I was dead, Fiffengurt. The ghosts were thick over the water, clawing at me, biting.” He raised a hand to his face, remembering. “They were trying to tear my soul away from this flesh. Your time’s come, they said. You’re one of us now. Let go. Give in.”

  “You were lifeless on the deck,” I said. “We did everything we could to revive you. Chadfallow finally gave up.”

  “Yes,” said Rose, “but I didn’t. They were going to have to rip me away. And they were getting down to it too. Oggosk’s threats scared them off at first. They need this ship to carry them to their final rest, and don’t fancy being cast to the winds. But the eldest ghosts are so tired of being trapped aboard Chathrand that they have ceased to care. They kept at me, even on the deck. My grip on this flesh was breaking. In the end it was the bird that saved me.”

  “The b-b—?”

  “Ott’s falcon. It spoke of that cube, & Bedour overheard. He recognized the cube, somehow, and knew it would be the end of the Chathrand.12 And there was only one man aboard who could do something about it. That was when they understood that they had no choice. The ghosts shocked my heart back into service, so that I could save this ship.”

  His eyes drifted skyward. “You see, Fiffengurt? Everyone, even the dead, ultimately depend on Nilus Rose.” Then he looked at me & barked: “Off your back, Quartermaster! Did some other commander grant you a holiday? Get the men to their blary stations! We shall tack west, a close reach around that island! Now, Fiffengurt. I want immediate headway, is that clear?”

  He was alive, all right. And in the next few minutes, as the light failed, he showed us what he’d been building those many hours. It was a barge made of barrels, with a sturdy platform atop it, & a steel tripod mounted on the latter. Dangling from the tripod was a big emergency signal-lantern: one of our spares. Coiled beneath it, in a kind of metal chimney, was a long braid of tobacco leaves. The end of the braid was tucked into the lamp’s ignition chamber.

  “A tobacco fuse,” said Sandor Ott, inspecting the contraption with a smile. “Very good, Captain. How long do you imagine it will burn?”

  “Longer than my patience with your insolent questions.” He picked up a fine hand-drill & set about boring a tiny hole near the top of one of the barrels. This action he repeated on every second barrel, until he had worked his way completely around the barge. Then he lifted an oil canister & soaked the lamp’s wick, but poured none at all into the tank beneath it.

  Ott looked at me; his eyes said, Your skipper’s a madman. The lamp would light, sure enough, but with an empty tank it would not shine for more than a minute.

  I had a prior worry, though. “Captain, you do realize that it’s only just gotten dark?”

  “Since I am neither blind nor witless: yes, I do.”

  “Oppo, Captain. What I mean is, they may have been able to see us, when we made our turn for westward.”

  “May have? Your imprecision wears on me today, Fiffengurt. They did see us; the point is not open to question. Tanner! Get this barge above, along with the deadweights. Fiffengurt, see that no one comes anywhere near us with a source of light—douse every light on the topdeck, in fact. And close the gunports. And see that the gallery windows stay dark. And bring me four cables, six fathoms long apiece. Use the fallen rigging, there is more than enough.”

  We all scrambled. Tanner’s men hoisted the barge by cargo crane to the topdeck, which was by now quite dark. The Chathrand was on her new heading already, drawing away west of the island’s rocky point. Behind us, the Behemoth glowed like a weird, pale gas lamp, & the daughter-ship had gained another several miles. At this rate it would catch us by morning.

  Rose stood by his invention for some fifteen minutes in silence, as we dragged the four lines he wanted into position, & secured them to Tanner’s 200-pound deadweights. Then Rose ordered the barge lifted a few feet in the air. On her underside we found four iron rings, & to these we tied the other ends of the cables. Then Rose struck a match & eased it into the metal chimney. The odor of sweet tobacco wafted over us.

  “Get her afloat,” he said.

  We raised the barge & swung it over the rail. Deadweights dangling, the whole assemblage descended into the lightless sea. When it was safely afloat Rose gave the order to cut it loose.

  “Now, Officers,” he said, looking at us all, “hard about, and brace up fore and aft. We are going east around that headland. As we did off Talturi: silent and invisible. Go to.”

  It was vintage Rose. The turn was sharp but not perilous, & the wind from the south was as friendly to our new course as it had been to our old. The men stepped lively, too: they knew Rose was trying to bluff death once again, someh
ow, even if they couldn’t guess the particulars.

  The daughter-ship, in no fear of us apparently, still had her running lights ablaze. She had not turned to intercept us, but was coming on straight at the point. For nearly two hours she kept that course, as we made east under the cover of those blessed clouds. Once the Behemoth fired another round of living fireballs, & we braced ourselves for the worst. Two went east, three west, but they all burned out well before they neared us, & no one was the wiser of our position, I’m sure.

  Suddenly, miles behind us to the east, a light flared up bright & fitful. It was the signal-lamp, of course, & it sputtered & winked & died in thirty seconds: just as Rose had intended. And not three minutes later his gamble paid off: the daughter-ship broke westward round the point.

  What could I do but smile? The ruse was brilliant. We’d had to break left or right around sprawling Phyreis, & had waited to choose until the darkness was almost upon us. But under that barrage of hellish weapons we’d seemed to panic, turning west before the light was truly gone. A feint? Well, maybe. The daughter-ship had taken no chances & kept straight on, hoping for some sign, some giveaway. And that’s what Rose’s decoy had provided. It would seem an accident: a carelessly opened gunport, a lamp carried above deck by some foolish lad & quickly smothered. And the beauty of it was that they would never spot the barge & learn that they’d been tricked, for all this while the sea had been trickling in through the holes Rose had drilled in the barrels. Soon the weight of lamp & tripod would sink the barge like a stone. They’d sail west all night, trying to catch up with a ship that wasn’t there.

  “You’re a prodigy, Nilus,” said Lady Oggosk, clinging with both scrawny hands to his arm. “And to think how they scorned you back in Arqual: a lowborn smuggler with the arrogance of a king. But there were some who meant that as a compliment, you know.”

  Friday, 22 Halar

  Left Phyreis behind this morning. No pursuit, no sails. For two days we’ve been alone on the seas. Five men & one dlömu dead of their burns. And I escaped with no more than a hair-scorching, & a little spot behind my left ear that crackles at the touch.

 

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