"Is there anything below this floor?" Kitiara asked.
"Just the bilge." Something caught the candlelight. Sturm waved her to him. "Bring the light here," he whispered.
"What is it?" On the deck a few feet to the right of the steps were four long scratches, so deep that they scored through the charred wood's surface to the lighter, unburned wood beneath. The scratches were three inches apart and almost a foot long.
"What do you make of that?" Sturm asked.
Kitiara drew her sword. "Claw marks," she said grimly.
Toward the bow, a massive half cylinder descending from the ceiling divided the bulkhead in two. This was the lower end of the mainmast. On each side of the mast were doors.
Both had been hastily but solidly blocked with boards. The barricade on the right of the mast was intact; the one on the left was burst asunder – from the other side.
"Whatever it was, it came through here," said Kitiara.
"It?"
She didn't answer, but stepped carefully through the shat tered barrier into the forward hold. Sturm couldn't fit through the hole, so he broke out a few more boards. The charred planks split loudly.
The forward hold was even colder than the aft one. It was not sooted by fire. They found more bones, broken swords and cutlasses, and smashed helmets – the remnants of a fierce fight. Kitiara almost tripped over another form, this one still clad in a moldering brown robe. Where she had dis turbed the robe there was a glint of gold.
"This was a cleric," Sturm said. "The robe, the amulets, are the kind a holy man would wear." He groped in the folds of the robe and pulled out a necklace wrought in copper. He held it to the candle. "A rose. The symbol of Majere. At least he served a good god." He laid the necklace down rev erently on the dusky cloth.
Kitiara moved on to the facing wall. A ladder was set in the wall, going up to the forecastle. Halfway up, someone had sawed the rungs off. The stout base of the foremast intruded into the hold here, too, and beside it was another boarded-up door. This one was intact.
"Sturm, come here!" He stepped over the cleric's skeleton.
Kitiara thrust her candle to the battened door. Scarlet threads were woven back and forth across the rough barrier and gathered in a knot in the center of the door. A blob of sealing wax held the threads together, and in the wax was the impression of a ring seal.
"Can you read it?" she asked.
Sturm squinted at the image. "'Majere protect us' and
'Obey the will of Novantumus'." He looked back at the cler ic's remains. "He must have been Novantumus."
Kitiara put the point of her sword to the wax seal. "What do you think you're doing?" he said.
"There's something valuable on the other side of this door," she said. "I want to see what it is."
"It could be what killed all these men!"
She rapped on the door. "Hello, any monsters in there?"
The only sounds were the steady, muffled roar of the storm outside and the creaking of the ship's timbers. "See, no danger."
Sturm pulled her roughly away. "I won't let you tamper with it!"
"You won't -!" She snatched her arm free of his grasp.
"Since when do you give me orders, Sturm Brightblade?"
"I won't let you break that seal. It could mean our deaths."
Kitiara cut at the door. Sturm flung the shield out and deflected the blow. Kitiara uttered an angry snort. She set the candle down and assumed fighting stance. "Out of my way!" she declared.
"Will you think what you're doing? Do you want to fight, just to open that door? Look around, Kit. Do you think plague smashed up these armed men?"
"So they killed each other fighting over the treasure. Out of the way!"
Sturm started to reply, but Kitiara lunged at him. He backed away, unwilling to use his own sword. Sturm kept the shield up, fending off her cuts. This went on until Kitiara grew frustrated. She aimed a wild overhand slash at his head. Her blade hit the shield a glancing blow and skidded off. The arc of her cut ended against the door and shattered the brittle wax seal.
"Now you've done it," he said, panting.
Kitiara flung herself, sword and all, at the door. Sturm stared in amazement as she pressed herself against the wood. "At last," she said. "At last!"
There was a split second of silence, then a tremendous crash. Kitiara's sword was knocked from her hand as she flew backward and landed with a clatter among the bones.
The center board was bowed outward and cracked. Sturm tossed the shield aside and went to help Kitiara stand. From inside there came another crash, and the board above the first one flexed out.
"What is it?" Kitiara cried.
"I don't know, but it's coming out of there. Let's go!"
They fled in such haste that they forgot the candle.
Through the sooty midnight of the aft hold they ran and stumbled up the stairs to the armory. Kitiara made for the rope locker. Sturm called her back. "Help me with the hatch," he said.
They wrestled the heavy hatch into place and dropped it.
Then it was through the rope locker and up the ladder to the captain's cabin. Kitiara dragged some heavy chests over to block the ladder well. Rain drummed on the poop deck above them, and wind whistled around the louvered shut ters. They stood close together in the dark, breathing hard and listening.
The deck trembled beneath their feet and they heard wood breaking. The thing, whatever it was, was smashing its way out.
"I lost my sword," she said, deeply ashamed. She, a sea soned warrior, had lost her only weapon when she fell among the skeletons.
"It doesn't matter," Sturm said. "Swords didn't save the crew of this ship."
"Thanks," she said wryly. "-- Some txt missing--"
Metal rang and rattled. 'It' was in the armory. Sturm flexed his damp hand around the handle of his sword. The uproar below got worse as the thing expended its anger on the store of weapons. From the crash and clang, it sounded like every item in the cache was being battered, twisted, and crushed. Then, abruptly, all the noise ceased.
Sturm and Kitiara, by some common impulse, drew clos er together. Their arms touched in the dark.
"Can you hear anything?" he whispered.
"Just you. Shh." They strained to catch any stray sound.
The cabin door blew open with a bang. Rain poured in.
Sturm struggled to close the door against the press of wind.
By the greenish gray light that filtered in through the cyclone, he saw that the main hatch cover, forward of the mainmast, was blasted off.
"It's gone out on deck!" he shouted above the wind. "It could be anywhere!"
"We'll have to close that hatch," she said. "Or the ship will flood, yes?" He nodded. Sturm felt exhausted. At that moment, he wondered what silliness the gnomes were up to, and fervently wished he was with them to see it.
"Ready?" said Kitiara. She threw the bolt back, and they plunged out onto the storm-swept deck.
They were soaked with sea water before they took two steps. The heel of the ship with the waves was more notice able on deck. Mountains of green water rose and fell and the horizon swung from below eye level to nearly the masthead.
Holding hands, Sturm and Kitiara staggered to the main mast. The hatch cover was not just thrown open; gaping rents were torn in it. Sturm lost his footing twice as foaming sea swept over him. Finally, on their knees, they managed to get the hatch back over its coaming.
High above the rumble of the churning sea, a shrill cackle reached them. Sturm looked left and right for the source of the sound; Kitiara looked up and down. She spied the thing clinging to the rigging high over their heads.
– s' It was a horrid-looking thing, ghastly white and gaunt.
Except for its abnormal size, it might have been a man, starved and sallow. But this creature was seven feet tall. Its protruding eyes were like red burning coals, and its hands were clawed with silver nails two inches long. The head was round and hairless, the ears tall and pointed. The creature threw back its head and howled, showing long yellow fangs and a pointed black tongue.
"Suffering gods! What is it?"
"I don't know. Look out!" The creature sprang from the rigging to the stays hanging from the foremast. It swung under the spar and flipped over until its feet were on top of the yard. There it howled at them again.
They backed cautiously across the wet deck, ignoring the lashing rain and pounding sea. Once inside the cabin, they slammed the door and bolted it.
Kitiara turned. A strange white glow filled the rear of the cabin. They were no longer alone there, either.
Chappter 34
Pyrthis's Tale
The cold white light collected into a human form six feet tall. Kitiara pointed her sadly bent dagger at the appari tion, but Sturm pushed the weapon down.