The ShadowSinger

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The ShadowSinger Page 47

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  “Sorceress!” The ship mistress suddenly jabbed a hand in the direction of Secca's right. "There!"

  Secca turned to see Richina sprawled on the deck, the younger woman’s body sliding toward the railing. Alcaren moved first, darting around Secca and reaching the fallen sorceress just before Secca did.

  Needle-like droplets of rain began to sting Secca’s ex­posed neck and face, and the skies continued to darken. The roaring of the wind took on a howling overtone.

  “Get her below! Best get everyone below!” Denyst called. "Another blow coming. Won’t be so bad as the last, but won’t be easy.”

  “Clear the decks!” came a call from somewhere. “Clear the decks!”

  “Storm rigging! Storm rigging!”

  “Players below!” ordered Palian, a rasping edge to her voice.

  Alcaren lifted Richina, almost as if she were a child, al­though the younger woman was as tall as he was. “Go! Wait at the bottom of the ladder in case I need help.”

  Secca hesitated.

  “Now!”

  With a quick look backward, the redheaded sorceress turned and made for the ladder, squinting to make her way through the increasingly heavy rain and the daystars that flashed in front of her eyes. By the time she was on the main deck, Alcaren was at the top, Richina over his shoul­der. He started down.

  His boots came down hard on the planks of the main deck, and Secca reached out to steady him as he turned. toward the hatch door that led aft. Secca held the door, and Alcaren carried the limp form into the passageway and then into the first small cabin.

  Palian appeared in the passageway behind Secca. “If you would let me see her, lady?"

  “Of course.” Secca stepped back, flattening herself against the bulkhead.

  The chief player and healer slipped into the small cabin behind Alcaren, who had laid Richina on the lower bunk. He slipped back as the chief player entered. The space, Secca judged, was barely larger than one of the wardrobes in Lord Robero’s suite in Falcor, and she stood in the door­way because there was no space for her to enter.

  "What happened?” asked Palian.

  “After the fireballs flew by,” Alcaren said, “while we were singing the spellsong, she collapsed.” He glanced up at Secca.

  Secca opened her mouth. For a moment, no words came as she realized what must have happened. Finally, she spoke. “Those . . . fireballs . . . they were sorcery.

  .

  “The wards?” asked Alcaren.

  “They kept them from hitting the Silberwelle,” Secca said.

  “But not the other ships?”

  Secca had no answer, but had to reach out and brace herself against the bulkhead as the Silberwelle listed to port, then pitched forward.

  “She’s breathing, Lady Secca,” Palian said, “but she is very weak.”

  “Chief player,” Alcaren said. “Can the players perform the ward spell?"

  Palian looked up, and Secca turned.

  “We need the wards, it is clear,” her consort said quietly. “Lady Richina has done all she can for now. I must hold them.”

  The redheaded sorceress finally nodded, “In a few moments . . .” began Palian.

  The Silberwelle pitched forward, this time, abruptly enough that Alcaren had to brace himself against the bulk­head to avoid slamming into Secca.

  “After the storm subsides,” Secca suggested. “We would lose players and more, on the deck now.” She doubted that anyone would be doing much sorcery for the next few glasses. You hope so. Repressing a sigh, she looked back toward Palian and the unconscious Richina.

  “She will recover,” predicted the chief player.

  Secca hoped so. All around her, others were paying the price for sorcery. Another two ships had perished, if not more, with crews and lancers from both Loiseau and Encora. Richina had fallen on the deck of the Silberwelle. The Mai­tre was burning his way across Nescrea toward Defalk.

  And for all of that, Secca had yet to set foot on land in Liedwahr.

  104

  In the gray light of an overcast morning that oozed, green-tinged, into the tiny cabin, Secca sat on the edge of the lower bunk and handed Richina yet another sliver of bread, then offered her a cup of water. The younger sorceress sipped quietly for a moment and, after letting Secca take the cup back, slowly chewed another morsel of bread.

  “I feel so weak . . .” Richina murmured.

  “Keep eating, and it will pass.” Secca did not look di­rectly at the deep and dark circles under the younger woman’s eyes, nor at the reddish welt along her jawline that was already beginning to purple.

  “Not in time, I fear.”

  “In time for what?’ asked Secca with a laugh. “It will be another two days at least before we port in Lundholn. Just eat and rest for now.”

  “Do we have a signal? From the Council Leader?”

  “Not yet . . . but it could take almost a week to get a mes­sage to Lundholn by messenger.”

  “Am I so tired . . . Just from the wards?"

  Secca shook her head. “The Sturinnese sent those firebolts against us. They were guided by sorcery . . .”

  “The wards moved them?"

  “We think so. You collapsed alter the second one just missed the Silberwelle. Alcaren and I think the effort to protect us caused that. We may never know with certainty.” Secca offered a rueful smile. “I would not wish to see such again.”

  “We are unprotected?" Richina lurched upright, as if alarmed.

  “No. Everything is fine.” Secca leaned forward, easing Richina back against the thin single blanket folded into a pillow. “You need not worry. Alcaren took over the wards this morning.”

  “I am so sorry I failed you, Lady Secca. I am so sorry . . .I tried, but I was so tired---"

  “Nonsense” replied Secca tartly. “You allowed us to de­stroy the Sturinnese fleet. The very last Sea-Priest fleet. If you had not held the wards, we could not have done that.” She extended the cup of water. “You need to drink some more”

  Richina took another swallow of water. “You’ll have to do everything now . . . if Alcaren . . .“ She yawned. “So . . . tired.”

  Secca shook her head. “You’ll have time to recover. Now . . . you need to rest.”

  Once she had Richina--- already half-asleep——settled back into the narrow bunks Secca eased out of the tiny cabin and made her way up to the poop deck, where she found Denyst and Alcaren beside the helm platform.

  A faint chill drizzle fell from the formless gray clouds overhead, and while the wind was stronger than before the battle, it was still comparatively light. Without full forward speed and the heavier swells, the Silberwelle seemed, at least to Secca, to be pitching more, and she grabbed the taffrail for support.

  “How is she?” asked Alcaren.

  “I got her to eat more, and she’s sleeping.” Secca shook her head. “She looks so tired and frail. Weeks ago, she was a strong, almost strapping, young woman.”

  “Sorcery,” commented Denyst. ‘What it does to others is terrible, but it takes a terrible toll on you sorceresses. And sorcerers,” she added as her eyes fell on Alcaren.

  There was a moment of silence.

  “One of those fireballs struck the Liedmeer,” Denyst said. “And another took the Morgenstern. She was one of the ships you captured for us. Not a trace of either. Did your glass show aught?”

  Alcaren shook his head. “There was no sign of either, nor of any Sturinnese ship.”

  “Didn’t think it could be done, Lady Sorceress,” Denyst said. “Oceans swept clean of the Sea-Pigs. Had it been any others, would have felt poorly at their fate. Terrible it was, and no more than they deserved.”

  “It’s far from over,” Secca said slowly. “Unless we can defeat the Maitre, it will just go on and on.”

  “We cannot just defeat him, my love,” Alcaren replied. “Defeat the Sturinnese never accept. We must destroy him, or he will destroy us.”

  Secca’s lips tightened, even as she nod
ded. He‘s already destroyed so many. Why is it that everything you do hurts those around you and those who follow you? Why must you destroy all the Sturinnese just in order to survive? Why?

  She didn’t have an answer. Not really, although she knew that what Alcaren had said was true, and that everything that had happened in the past year was proof of that.

  Proof or not . . . an enormous blanket of sadness wrapped itself around her as she looked aft, back west. Back across the dark waters that held too many shattered ships and bro­ken bodies.

  105

  Northwest of Elioch, Neserea

  The white-clad lancers are unfastening the side panels of the Maitre’s tent. The remaining panels flap in the stiff breeze, but the Maitre remains seated on the folding stool behind the camp table, even as his tent is being dis­assembled around him, studying the scrying glass and the image of empty dark blue waters it holds.

  On the other side of the table, still standing and holding the angular lute, is jerClayne, his forehead damp. His eyes are dark-rimmed and bloodshot.

  The Maitre looks up from the scrying glass, his eyes cold. “Two ships . . . that is all? Two ships? JerStolk lost an entire fleet of two and a half—score vessels to destroy two ships?”

  The younger Sea-Priest remains mute.

  “I have spent a lifetime building. Sturinn. I have spent a score of years creating ships and fleets. The moment I am not there, there is failure! One small woman. One! And she has turned them all into mewling children! A fleet com­mander, and he has five times the number of ships, and all are armed. He has a half-score of sorcerers, and he can de­stroy but two ships! Two unarmed ships crewed by women!”

  “Yes, ser,” murmurs jerClayne.

  “Were he not already dead . . . The Maitre shakes his head. “Incompetent idiot! And now the Ranuans have more ships than do we. Never. . seven ships, and they have more than do the Sea-Priests of Sturinn. How did this happen?”

  “Her storm sorcery... their wards...”

  “They are still warded, are they not?” asks the Maitre.

  “Ah . . . yes, ser,” replies jerClayne. “That is, we cannot use the glass to view the sorceresses or the consort of the shadowsinger. Or the Assistant Sorceress of Defalk.”

  “Two sorceresses—one of them barely more than a girl and a Ranuan tool of that weakling Matriarch. . .“ The older Sea-Priest stops, as if at a loss for words. “A half-score of our sorcerers gone.”

  “They were on different vessels, as you ordered,” jer­Clayne points out.

  “Did they even try sorcery against them after the fire-bolts?”

  “How could we tell, Maitre?”

  The Maitre’s eyes harden, as does his voice. “We must do better. Much better. We will do better.”

  The younger Sea-Priest does not speak.

  “You say nothing, but your eyes ask me how.” A tight smile appears on the Maitre’s face. “It is simple. We make her hasten. We ride directly to Defalk . . . and there we begin to ravage the country. We turn keeps into piles of stone. We do not kill the peasants, but we kill the lords and the mer­chants. We move to where we have an advantage, and then we wait while she comes to us.”

  “What about the other sorceress, ser? The one protecting Lord Robero?”

  “She has fled from Falcor, did you not say?"

  “That we know. She is in one of the western keeps.” Tilting his head slightly, jerClayne frowns. “Dubaria. She also is warded.”

  “Then . . . we will bring it down around her. When we get there. We will take Denguic first, and then Fussen so that we need not worry about troublesome lords following us... and so that those in Dubaria will know what we can do.”

  “What of Lord Robero and Falcor?"

  “Once we have crushed his sorceresses, what can he do? Many of the old lords will prefer a rule under our sufferance to one under that of the sorceresses . . . and those who do not will either submit or perish. They will indeed.” His voice rises into a laugh.

  “Submit or perish,” repeats jerClayne, a hollow smile on his gaunt face, even as his eyes glitter almost as much as those of the Maitre.

  106

  Secca stood beside Denyst near the helm platform as the Silberwelle edged toward the single long pier that jutted out almost half a dek from the semicircular stone shingle beach. Alcaren stood by the starboard railing, trying to ig­nore the ship’s motion. The wind had picked up over the past days, and Denyst had shifted the sails into harbor rig well out from the port. With the wind had come clouds, still high and gray and scudding southward swiftly, and higher waves.

  Secca herself felt better than she had in weeks, but when she glanced at Alcaren, she could see the tiredness in his eyes, and she still worried about Richina.

  “No lancers, no armsmen?” asked the ship mistress again, as if to make certain, even though Secca’s glass had shown the blue banner flying, to confirm the Council’s agreement with a landing by Secca’s force.

  “The glass shows none,” Secca confirmed. “None except two officers and a single squad of lancers.” She gestured toward Elfens, the chief archer, and his squad.

  As if he had seen her gesture, the long-faced archer turned and inclined his head. “We stand ready, Lady Secca.”

  “We shouldn’t need you, Elfens, but we’d rather be pre­pared.”

  “As would we, lady.”

  “Looks as though he’d just as soon nock that arrow and send it whistling through someone as spit,” noted Denyst, before turning her head and calling an order to the woman at the helm. “Another point to starboard!”

  “Coming starboard.”

  Secca just watched the pier while the ship mistress began to issue commands, and sails were reefed in, and crew mem­bers-scampered through the rigging as the vessel eased to­ward the long stone pier. She could tell Lundholn was an old town, a gray ancient whose stone walls and streets had had all color bleached from them by endless generations of brutal winters and winds off the Bitter Sea. Even the few shutters that she could see on the warehouses behind the pier were gray and weathered, as were the heavy timbers that sheathed the stone pier.

  The blue pennant at the end of the pier was held almost horizonal by the stiff wind out of the northwest, and almost directly below it stood a man and a woman, each wearing a black-and-silver uniform, with silver bars on the collars of their uniform jackets. Their eyes remained on the Silber­welle as Denyst called out commands, and the mooring lines were thrown to a pair of men in faded brown jackets and trousers. Neither officer on the pier moved as the Silberwelle was winched into position at the second berth from the sea­ward end of the pier.

  Secca stepped toward the railing to watch, and to get a better view of the two officers who waited. “What do you think?" she asked Alcaren.

  “They’re waiting for us.”

  "Double up . . . make her snug!” ordered Denyst.

  The hull creaked as the harbor waves lifted the ship and pushed her against the pier and the hempen bumpers. Still, there was no one on the long pier, save the two hands who had taken the mooring lines and made them fast to the bol­lards and the two officers in silver and black.

  Delcetta appeared on the poop deck and halted before Secca. “If you would not mind, Lady Sorceress, I would first meet with those on the pier.”

  “Let her,” murmured Alcaren.

  Secca nodded. “Tell them I would be happy to talk with them.”

  “That I will.” Delcetta bowed and turned.

  From the forward section of the poop deck, Elfens glanced toward Secca.

  “If you would stand ready for a bit yet,” Secca called to the chief archer, “until we have a company disembarked and on the pier.”

  "We will stand ready so long as you need us,” returned the long-faced archer. An incongruous smile appeared, then vanished.

  Secca watched as the blonde overcaptain of the South Women walked down the gangway, followed by two lancers, and neared the two Norweians. The conversation was brief, a
nd then all five tuned and walked back up the gangway. Delcetta and the two Norweian officers climbed the ladder to the poop deck and walked toward Secca.

  Both officers halted a good two yards from Secca and bowed deeply.

  The woman spoke first. “Lady Sorceress. I am Captain Salchaar. This is Undercaptain Eztaar. We have been sent to serve as your guides and escorts to Morgen and to the border with Defalk. The Council is more than happy to grant you passage and any supplies you may need. If you do not have the golds at hand, we will take draughts that you can repay once your campaign against the Sea-Priests is com­plete. The Council felt that if we led you, there would be no misunderstandings, and all would understand that you are a welcome guest in Nordwei.”

 

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