‘Closer to the wind,’ the old man told him in a gasp, and he flashed bloodied teeth in a death’s grin. ‘She can take it.’
‘Closer it is.’ Cartheron looked to the canvas. ‘Don’t reef the mains’l!’ he bellowed. ‘Keep her taut!’
‘Aye, aye,’ came the faint wind-whipped answering call.
The continued ferocity of the lightning storm lit the men-o-war. They were surrounded now by merchantmen, like wolves amid a pack of leaping hounds. Cartheron frankly thought them lost until a lightning strike came sizzling down to blast right through one of the merchantmen, which burst into an expanding cloud of shattered timbers and flame.
He blinked, shielding his eyes from the conflagration.
Hugged to his chest, Griff chuckled, almost inaudibly. ‘That’s our lass,’ he murmured, grinning through the blood.
‘Who?’ Another lightning strike blasted yet another vessel, leaving behind an after-image in Cartheron’s vision of light escaping through every seam in its side before the timbers flew apart. ‘Who?’
‘Our Tattersail…’ The man’s head sank to his chest. ‘She’ll see them through…’
‘That’s one ferocious battle-mage you have there, old-timer … Griff?’
Cartheron peered at him; the man now hung limp, pinned to the arm. Yet Cartheron did not relinquish his grip, legs braced, a hand either side of the corpse.
A bloody marine bearing a number of slashes climbed to the stern deck. Leaning close, he yelled above the storm, ‘Fire’s out! We’re hands short and you’re taking us into deeper waters?’
Cartheron recognized the burly squat fellow from among the boarding crew. ‘You fought your way clear of the trap?’
‘Aye.’
‘What’s your name?’
‘Call me Dujek.’
‘Very well, Dujek. Lay on more canvas. I plan to get us home.’
The fellow roared a laugh. ‘Might as well. I counted us dead a while back.’ He stamped down to the midship deck, bellowing, ‘Tighten the fores’l! Watch the sheets!’
Cartheron kept his weight on the tiller-arm and Griff’s cooling body. The Honest Avarice responded like a leaping colt. They sped past a caravel closing to cut them off, its decks teeming with soldiers who shot salvo after salvo of arrows after them, all of which flew wide in the raging winds. Steadying the arm, Cartheron sent them deeper into the teeth of the storm.
* * *
At dusk, Dancer took to the streets to find Wu. He hadn’t seen him all that day, which was quite unusual lately. It was overcast, as he was finding drearily normal for the island – even in the summer.
He was no mage and so couldn’t track the fellow down, or sense his direction, or anything preternatural such as that. However, as they’d become partners he’d come to know him quite well – perhaps better than he’d prefer – and one thing he’d noticed was that when out for walks the mage had a strange affinity for a certain quarter of the old town, just behind the waterfront. He set out to survey that quarter and sure enough, he soon found him – standing right out in the open too, like a damned bloody fool. A troop of scruffy kids were watching from a little way down the cobbled street.
He had his walking stick out before him, hands planted on it as he rocked back and forth on his heels before the overgrown iron gate of an old house that commanded an unusually large area of wild and tangled grounds. Dancer came up beside him, hissed, ‘You’re in the damned open.’
The short fellow’s brows rose and he peered up, blinking, as if coming back to himself from far away. ‘Ah! Dancer. Excellent.’ He pointed the stick at the house. ‘There it is.’
Dancer paid the place scant attention, saying, ‘You need to stay under cover.’
‘They’re hunting you, not me.’
‘Don’t be so certain. I still say that calling card was a mistake.’
‘We can’t go killing everyone.’ He made shooing gestures with a hand. ‘We need little people to order about. How can I delegate if there’s no one to delegate to?’
‘He’s not the type to work for anyone.’
‘We had to make the offer. Let it not be said that we did not observe the civilities. And in any case, he works for Mock, doesn’t he?’
Dancer gritted his teeth. ‘Well, sort of. He’s on his guard now, that’s for sure.’
‘No matter.’ He indicated the house again. ‘I’ve found it.’
Dancer couldn’t keep the irritation from his face and voice as he snapped, ‘Found what?’
‘The centre of the nest of power on this island.’ His expression clouded. ‘That is, if nests have centres … anyway, this house. Tell me … what do you see?’
Dancer cast the building a quick glance. ‘Just a decrepit old stone house. It looks abandoned … but,’ and he frowned, suddenly uneasy, ‘it’s not.’
‘No? It’s not? What do you sense?’
‘As if someone’s in there. Watching us.’
Wu was nodding to himself. ‘Good. You are no mage, but your training has heightened your senses. You can tell this place shouldn’t be meddled with.’
‘It makes me feel … tense. Nervous.’
‘That is an aura it is projecting. Camouflage. It does not want anyone approaching.’
‘You talk as though it’s alive.’
‘Some scholars claim it is – in a manner perhaps incomprehensible to us.’
Dancer crossed his arms, scanned the surrounding dark streets, half obscured by the misting rain; the urchins were whispering among themselves, and staring. He felt even more exposed and uncomfortable. ‘Hunh. So, why the interest?’
Wu said, with a strange grimness, ‘I intend to gain entry to that structure.’
Dancer snorted a laugh. ‘I’ve been getting into buildings all my life.’
‘Not like this you haven’t.’
‘Well, you have ruined the sneaking-in approach – standing out here like some kind of frightened tinker.’
Wu raised a finger. ‘True enough,’ and he pushed open the wrought-iron gate, which squealed loudly. Down the street the street-urchins let out audible gasps of awe.
Dancer wanted to slap his brow. ‘What are you doing?’ he hissed. Strangely, he felt like an urchin himself, prodding some unfamiliar slumbering beast.
Wu waved him onward. ‘Come. We’ll knock. Simple process of elimination, yes?’
Dancer edged forward on to the walk of laid flags, all wet and overgrown by moss and lichens. Why was he following this fool into yet another uncertain situation? Could he not let him get the better of him? Was it rivalry? No. He took hold of the heaviest blades at his baldrics. Reluctantly, he was coming to the realization that he actually felt quite protective of the helpless fellow; as one must watch out for a halfwit younger brother.
Ahead, Wu was apparently approaching the front door with complete nonchalance; he was tapping his walking stick, humming tunelessly. The walk curved around mounds that dotted the large overgrown grounds. Squat, dead or near-dead trees brooded over these mounds, their branches empty of all leaves, black and gleaming wet. A low wall of heaped fieldstones enclosed the property.
Wu used the metal head of his walking stick to rap on the stout door.
Dancer stood behind, scanning the rear and the grounds. Something about the forsaken unkempt yard troubled him more than the house itself.
‘Hello?’ Wu called. ‘Anyone there?’ He reached out to take hold of the wrought-iron latch and pulled, to no effect.
Silence from the house, while the rain hissed and the sea, not so distant, rolled against the rocky shore and the city wharves. The impression the place gave Dancer was of a hunched brooding bulk. It was constructed of dressed stones, two-storeyed, with one side slightly taller in what might be a tower of sorts, but all that seemed a façade for something else, something deeper. For example, a few small deeply seated windows dotted the structure, but the glass was faceted and smoky, as if merely ornamental. The only analogue he could come up with was a cenotaph, or a monument, constructed of solid stone and built to resemble a manor house, yet empty.