TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword
INHERITANCE
by Matthew Ward
UNCERTAIN FATES
by David A. McIntee
THE SERPENT ENGINE
by Ben Counter
A NICE LITTLE NEST EGG
by Jonathan Green
BLACK JACQUES’ LEGACY
by Mark A. Latham
THE JOURNAL
by Gav Thorpe
THE CLOCKWORK CHART
by M. Harold Page
THE PRICE YOU PAY
by Peter McLean
ISLE OF THE SILVER MIST
by Howard Andrew Jones
RIVER OF FIRE (SCENARIO)
by Joseph A. McCullough
THE AUTHORS
FOREWORD
The Ghost Archipelago has returned. A vast island chain, covered in the ruins of ancient and otherworldly civilizations, the Archipelago appears every few centuries, far out in the Southern Ocean. At such times, pirates, adventurers, wizards, and legendary heroes all descend upon the islands in the hopes of finding lost treasures and powerful artefacts. A few, drawn by the blood of their ancestors, search for the fabled Crystal Pool, whose waters grant abilities far beyond those of normal men. It is only the bravest, however, who venture into the islands, for they are filled with numerous deadly threats. Cannibal tribes, sorcerous serpent-men, and poisonous water-beasts all inhabit the island ruins, guarding their treasure hordes and setting traps for the unwary.
INHERITANCE
BY
MATTHEW WARD
The banshee wail of the wind rises and falls in time with the Moonrunner’s bucking deck. Lightning splits the sky. The storm’s enjoying itself, revelling in every gale-tossed barrage of icy rain. The storm, and no one else. I can’t see the rest of the crew through the deluge, but I’ll wager they’re every bit as drenched as I. Hells, I can’t even see the gunwale. It’s only feet away, but in this mess it might as well be at the bottom of the ocean. Likely to end up there, if the deluge keeps on. Still, if I can’t see my crewmates, they can’t see me. All to the good, long as I’m not swept overboard.
No sooner has that thought formed when the storm punishes me for harbouring even that small hope. The ship’s plunging bow crashes into a rising wave. I feel the dull crack as a tremor in the decking more than I hear it. Water rushes across the deck, then recedes as the bow angles sharply upwards. My cold fingers lose their grip on the rail, boots skid on the slicked deck and then I’m falling backwards, flailing for long-lost balance.
My shoulder cracks painfully into the cabin door. The suddenness of it drives the breath from my body. Could be worse. Six inches to the left, and I’d have split my head open on the cabin lantern’s iron stanchion. A foot or so further on, and I’d have been down the companionway to the lower deck without benefit of the ladder. Good way to fetch a broken neck, that. Embarrassing way to go, if naught else. Couldn’t meet my old da’s eye if I met him in Davy’s Tavern.
The Moonrunner crests the wave and plunges into the trough beyond. I cling to the stanchion as the deck reverses pitch, and prepare a dash back to my post at the ratlines. Valdim’s cabin is off-limits to all but himself. I daren’t be caught here. Not now. It’d ruin everything.
So naturally, that’s when the storm ebbs.
The wind drops. Thunderheads part, revealing a watery grey sky through thinning rain. There’s the suggestion of land off to starboard. Not much. Just a dark, uneven smear that speaks to a cliff face, and maybe jungle beyond. Vaanden’s Isle? Maybe. Long overdue, if it is, but that’s the way of things in the Ghost Archipelago. Nothing’s quite where it should be. It’s taken Valdim two decades to find this place, far as I know.
Still ain’t fair weather, or anything like, but it’s a marked improvement. The Moonrunner shudders, and finally settles on something approaching an even keel. I glimpse a half-dozen bedraggled crewmates clinging to rigging and gunwales, all of ’em with the rapturous expressions of men and women certain they’ve been preserved through the intervention of a higher power.
Only Quezan seems unmoved. The wiry old devil’s a pace or two back from the bowsprit – exactly where he stood when the storm arose – with no support save for that gnarled sprig-staff of his. He’s as sodden as the rest of us, but otherwise has the manner of a man embracing the warmest of sunshine. I can’t see his craggy face, but I bet he’s smiling. He’s an odd one, even for a Warden. Reckons he’s got life all figured out, and maybe he has. Or maybe he just doesn’t care.
Time to move. Before eyes turn in my direction. I release the stanchion, and edge out across the deck. Softly now. Nothing draws the eye quicker than furtive footfalls. The heavy hand that falls on my shoulder tells me I’m too late.
‘What ’ave we here?’
A hard shove spins me around. It’s Theo. Of course it is. His dark eyes brim with resentment for rejected advances.
‘Prying ’round the Captain’s cabin, Bonnie? You know better than that.’
His lips twist into a self-satisfied leer. He’s enjoying this. Maybe I shouldn’t have kneed him in the nethers that time. More likely I should’ve kicked his head off while he was down. Knew he’d hold a grudge.
I force myself to stillness. Panic won’t help. Clobbering Theo’s a simple enough proposition, but it won’t stop there. But maybe there’s a chance I can brush this off.
‘Don’t be daft. Storm flung me here, didn’t it?’
Theo grabs my shoulder. Pulls me close. ‘You think the Captain’ll believe that?’
‘I...’
A deep voice cuts me off. ‘The Captain will believe what?’
Some of the colour fades from Theo’s sunburnt skin. My stomach lurches in a way that has nothing to do with the Moonrunner’s slackening corkscrew-motions. No way this ends well, not now we’ve drawn Valdim’s attention.
Sorry, da. Looks like I’ve failed you. Should’ve stayed home.
I shake the apology away; channel my mounting fears into a two-handed shove that gets Theo out of my face. Then I turn, calmly as I can manage, to address Valdim. ‘He’s seeing things. Bashed his head in the storm, I reckon.’
Valdim doesn’t reply at first, but continues his descent from the quarterdeck. Even drenched to the bone, black hair plastered to his scalp and the rain spilling from his waterlogged weskit and trews, he cuts an imposing – almost regal – figure. A man fully seized of the notion that he’s meant for greatness. He doesn’t seem to notice the Moonrunner’s drunken motions. Not so much as a single booted step falls out of place.
‘Your pardon, Bonnie, but my enquiry was to Theo.’
I hang my head, as expected. Valdim adores etiquette. But even that silky tone of his can’t disguise the menace bubbling beneath. Not that it’s meant to. Valdim regards me in silence for a moment, then those piercing green eyes of his sweep away to transfix Theo. ‘Well?’
Theo swallows. Righteous indignation’s hard to maintain beneath that stare. ‘Saw her at your cabin door, captain.’
Valdim crooks an eyebrow. ‘Really?’ His tone hovers somewhere between surprise and polite disbelief. ‘Did she go inside?’
I hold my breath, fighting to keep a neutral expression. A nasty thought worms its way to the surface. Just how long was Theo watching me? I didn’t see him through the storm, but that’s no guarantee...
Part of me wants to make a break for it, take my chances in the water. Likely it’ll come to that anyway, given how the situation’s turned. Better without a slit belly than with. Even if there ain’t sharks hereabouts, it’s hard to swim with your innards hanging out.
A surreptitious glance to either side stalls that idea. We’ve drawn a crowd. Quezan’s still at the bowsprit, seemingly oblivious to the entertainment unfolding aft, but he’s the only one letting the moment slide. Too many eyes on me now. Too many grasping hands between me and the gunwale.
Theo’s face creases in what passes for concentration. ‘No, captain.’
I exhale softly, though I’m sure the rain covers the sound.
Theo shoots me a venomous look. ‘But she were scrabblin’ at the lock.’
My relief dissipates, snatched away as if by a cold wind. With that lie, I’m done. And it has to be a lie, because if Theo had seen me working the cabin’s lock, he’d have seen me slip inside too, and linger there for a good minute or so. You don’t cage a lass for stealing if you can set her heels dancing for slitting throats.
And speaking of throats, mine’s gone awful dry.
Valdim clears his throat as he faces me. There’s a shift in his manner. Theo’s words have tipped the balance, and not in my favour. He rests a gloved hand on the pommel of his sword. It’s all I can do not to stare at it. I wonder if this is how my da’ died.
‘Anything to say, Bonita?’
The Moonrunner dips. Seawater rushes across the deck and over my boots. There’s no shame in playing out the game as long as possible.
‘He’s lying.’
I don’t think the deeper truth shows in my voice, but Valdim’s no ordinary reaver. You don’t stay captain without seeing round a few corners. Loyalty to the living’s one thing, but when you’re dead you’re dead. No loyalty then. Just look what happened to my da’.
Valdim glances at the cabin’s lock, then steps closer. Even now, there’s no anger in his face, only polite interest. ‘Oh, I’m sure he’s still smarting from that disagreement at Sterport.’
Quicker than the eye can follow, he lunges. A fist closes around my bedraggled straw-blonde curls. I gasp in pain as Valdim yanks me towards him. Another tug, and I’m on my knees beside the cabin door.
‘But did you really think I’d miss the scratches on the lock?’ The first hint of darkness creeps in beneath the gentleman’s tone.
I’d hoped he might. I hear tell there’s a method of tilting a lock that leaves no trace, but I’ve never learnt it. ‘Let go of me!’
I claw at the hand holding me captive. I already know I can’t match him. Valdim may be thin as a miser, but there’s not a sea rat on the Southern Ocean can match him strength for strength. That’s his Heritor’s gift, and he uses it well. The crew watch in rapt silence, practically slavering for what happens next, Theo most of all. I bet they’re recounting all the reasons why I deserve it. Tam’s remembering how I took my share of the plunder at Sterport, but scrimped on my part of the killing. Ritha reckons I’m too deep in the Captain’s confidence for my tender years, or my length of service – she doesn’t know the struggle I’ve had concealing my loathing for Valdim these past months. And there’ll be shallower, pettier reasons harboured amongst the sea of faces. I don’t blame them for that. Didn’t I do the same when Crabbe went in the ocean ten days back? Doesn’t take much to tarnish a soul. To turn a blind eye.
Valdim’s grip doesn’t waver. ‘I honestly thought you’d a future with us.’ A tug on my hair hauls me upright. A gloved fingertip traces my cheek. ‘A face to charm the drowned dead back to the shore, and a wit to make ’em dance. Such a shame.’
My mama’s looks, and my da’s cleverness, in other words. Were it the other way around, I’d have been chum at our first meeting. ‘I meant nothing by it.’ My pleading tone comes naturally. ‘Got curious, is all.’
He shakes his head. ‘I wish I could believe you. Truly I do.’
The wind picks up. Angry clouds swallow Vaanden’s Isle. The rain lashes down with renewed vigour. With a mighty crash, a wave breaks across the Moonrunner’s bow. The deck dips. Theo grabs at the ratlines for support. I keep my footing mostly due to Valdim’s grip, and even then it all but costs me a hank of hair.
Valdim doesn’t move an inch. ‘See to the ship! I’m not plunging to Davy’s Tavern because you’re longing to see the colour of her blood!’ As the crew scurry away, Valdim spins on his heel and glares sternward. ‘Quezan! Strangle the cursed storm! What am I paying you for?’
‘It is young and restless.’ The Warden’s bellow is half-lost to the renewed gale. ‘Its spirits are not easily tamed.’
He strikes the deck with the foot of his staff, and begins a low-rumbling chant in the Drichean tongue. It rises and falls like the Moonrunner’s heaving deck, the disjointed syllables barely audible. I’m not really listening. I’ve no attention for anyone but Valdim. With the crew banished to the business of keeping the ship upright, there’s no audience – no obstacle between me and the side of the ship. Now there’s only the matter of Valdim’s vice-like grip, and I’ve an answer for that.
‘Now then, young Bonnie... arrgh!’
Valdim’s cry of pain masks the sound of my boot knife piercing his forearm. His clenched fist spasms open. All at once, I’m free. If only his heart had been in reach.
I stagger away, the fear of the previous minutes bleeding away into bravado. ‘Jac Cochran sends his regards.’
Valdim stares, his mouth agape in a rare moment of wrong-footedness. ‘You’re Cochran’s brat?’
I grin. This is a good moment. Not the one I imagined it’d be, but I may as well enjoy it. I dip a hand to my weskit pocket and produce the prize I wrestled from Valdim’s strongbox not five minutes earlier. Even in the darkness, the medallion gleams. ‘Come to claim my inheritance.’
I hardly see Valdim move. But for the Moonrunner’s sudden lurch, he’d have had me. As it is, he barrels past with an animal growl, slamming into the companionway rail.
I ride the momentum of the heaving deck, cursing my cockiness as I slip the medallion safely away. I’ve come too far to botch this now. But Valdim’s not the only one with the waters of the Crystal Pool in his veins.
Valdim’s sword scrapes free of its scabbard. ‘A hundred crowns to the one who lays hold of her!’
The nearest crewers respond at once, staggering like drunkards across the bucking deck. Theo’s amongst them. Truth be told, they’d kill me for a lot less than a hundred crowns.
Taking a deep breath, I draw upon da’s gift. My gift. At once, I feel the prickling beneath my skin. The pain comes close behind – the same pain that held me back from trying this before. Now I’ve no other choice. It’s worth it as soon as I hear the first confounded cry. Right now, I love the storm. My birthright needs a backdrop to mimic, and the downpour’s just heavy enough to count.
‘Hey! Where’d she go?’ yells Tam.
I drift carefully past his shoulder, catching a glimpse of my reflection in the cabin door. I’m no longer flesh and bone, not to look at. I’m part of the rainstorm, a thousand dancing raindrops, kin to the spirits Quezan seeks to quieten. If I concentrate, I can just about make out the curve of my brow, the outline of my jaw – the dark hollows where my eyes glint like morning dew. But I know what to look for. My erstwhile crewmates don’t. Tam stares right at me without ever knowing I’m there. Then I’m past him, heading for the starboard gunwale.
Predictably, Valdim gets it first. ‘She’s a shifter!’ he roars. ‘Watch for her footprints!’
Clever. Then again, he and da’ tore down many a flag before their falling out. Course he’d know what I’m about. Easier to watch for the imprint of water sloshing around my boots than the rain-cast hollow I leave in the air.
The Moonrunner rolls into a trough as I pass the companionway. I grab at the rail for support. My hand grows smooth and dark, mimicking every knot and blemish in the wood beneath for as long as it’s in contact.
Ahead of me, Ritha’s flailing at raindrops like a woman trying to find her way through a darkened room. I slip behind her, unable to suppress a smile at how ridiculous she looks.
The pain intensifies, burning like fire in my veins. I can’t keep this up much lo
nger. I won’t have to. I’m nearly there. Then all I have to do is keep from drowning. Does Vaanden’s Isle still lie to starboard? There’s no way to tell if the Moonrunner’s kept its heading. I hope it has, otherwise I’ve come a long way for nothing.
Something strikes me from behind, bearing me to the ground. Something heavy. I roll clear, and up onto my knees.
‘She’s here! I’ve got her. I’ve...’
Theo’s exultant shout ends in a cry of pain and a shattered jaw. Hard to block a blow you can’t see coming, and I’ve a wicked elbow. But I’ve no time to crow. My birthright’s fighting me now, burning me from inside out. I need to get off this ship.
‘Hold her, you imbecile!’ Valdim’s an onrushing shadow in the rain, his face full of fury. Likely it’s been years since someone played him for a fool. ‘Don’t let her escape!’
‘’ee ’oke ’y yaw,’ moans Theo, both hands cradled to his mouth.
I dive for the gunwale. The Moonrunner heaves. I collide with the outer rail, hip cracking painfully against the tar-stained timber. The shock of it breaks my grip on my birthright. The fire recedes, and the illusion fades. Flesh and blood once more, I stare down into the maelstrom of white wave crests, and reflect how this seemed a much better plan a few moments back.
Valdim slows his advance. Reckon he knows what’s in my mind. ‘Give me back the medallion, girl. We’ll put you ashore, call it evens.’
‘Like you did my da’?’ I brace my back against the outer rail, and slide upright. ‘Sorry “uncle”. I’ll take my chances with the deep.’
Valdim roars and lunges for me with outstretched hand. He’s a lifetime too late.
Bracing my feet against the deck, I tip my shoulders back. Gravity does the rest. The murky black flank of the Moonrunner rushes away above, and the cold waters of the Southern Ocean welcome me to their embrace.
* * *
The fire’s naught but thin grey ashes when I awaken. My clothes are still wet from the desperate swim for shore, my shirt sleeves ragged from clambering over rocks.
I’m still not sure how I made it here. Part of me’s convinced that all of this – the spent fire, the sunlight glimmering at the cave mouth – is one last hallucination before I drown. But only part of me. The rest’s too sore to agree. I’m lucky to be alive – not least because the storm gasped its last scant minutes after I struck the water. At least I think it was minutes. Truth be told, there’s a lot of last night still jumbled in my head. Lots of gasping for breath before the next wave hits. More praying for salvation than I care to admit. Maybe I am drowning, after all.
Frostgrave: Ghost Archipelago: Tales of the Lost Isles Page 1