Bloodaxe

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Bloodaxe Page 6

by James Tallett


  While Tarranau knew many to whom that style of life appealed, he was not among them. The apprentice looked for a role where he could own a house and enjoy the comforts of home and fresh food, small things perhaps, but rare enough for those who would set out on the ocean. One of Tarranau’s friends, a young man who had completed his apprenticeship a year before, possessed no home and kept what few things he owned in a crate, using whatever room was spare on those few times that he spent days in port. Money was easy for a man who had nothing to pay for, but no house and no roots was not a life that Tarranau looked for, and so, with the end of his apprenticeship in sight, he wondered where he could go. He could work with the crops, helping the waters reach the plants, but this was a wet island and work of that sort was often unneeded. Beyond that, there were many minor tasks that could be done, but none of those would pay as well as a ship’s mage, leaving Tarranau in the predicament of turning his back on the poverty of his family, the anchor that kept him firmly attached to the prospect of being a ship’s mage, even if it was not what his heart desired.

  Sipping at the dregs of his cup, Tarranau put his feet up and waved at the bartender to bring another one of the same over. Tarranau made sure the man noticed by placing two coins on the table in front of him, quickly swept up and replaced by a filled mug and a nod, the barkeep an experienced server who had seen many a person disappear into thoughts and drinks. Tarranau ignored the rumbling in his stomach and sank back into himself, seeing his face many years down the road, creased and weather beaten from salt and spray and wind, still alone and unmarried. He had spent too much time on the sea to have a wife and child, his parents were dead from old age, siblings gone their separate ways, and he was wealthy. It was a scenario that appealed not at all. However, no other option presented itself to Tarranau as he sat there, morosely staring into the fast emptying mug before him, thinking empty thoughts of wished for employment.

  A few more mugs of that drink left Tarranau with a muddled head, and he began the slow process of crawling back through the evening twilight to the school. Too late for dinner, he made his way into the room where he slept, fumbling with the latch as his uncoordinated hands tried to remember how to open a lock. Inside, he stumbled to bed, not bothering to undress or perform his evening ablutions before collapsing in a tipsy stupor, sleep quickly enfolding a dark, thick blanket over him.

  Tarranau awoke the next morning with a parched mouth and a throbbing head, reminding him of the morose and downbeat state of mind from the evening before. Struggling to the desk, he washed his face and drank some water, while his stomach complained bitterly about missing dinner. Tarranau went quickly to the food chamber, still dressed in the robes required, crumpled and worn after a night’s sleep. Grabbing at whatever seemed edible, he soon had a plate full of food, stuffing it down in order to make it to his class on time.

  The bell rang while he was only halfway done, and Tarranau scampered off, blue robes swishing around him as he strode to his class room, a baked roll still in his hand, idly munching on it as he made his way across the campus. Sitting down on the bench, off to the side so he had a wall to lean against, Tarranau looked around, wondering where the rest of the students were, and why Magister Holbenth hadn’t filled the board with writing and assignments, as was usually his wont for the early morning classes. Shrugging and slumping against the wall for support, Tarranau waited there, trying to remember if he had missed an announcement that today would be a day spent studying water on the ocean. Unable to recall any such event, he waited a few minutes, napping against the wall, before deciding that wherever the class was, he had missed it anyway. Grabbing his things and straightening his robes, the student walked out of the class building, back towards his dormitory. Tarranau had half an hour before his next class, so he might as well freshen up some more.

  “Oh blast, I forgot, today is rest day.” It was the one day a week where the students were not required to be learning, and could be the young boys that they were. Glancing around showed Tarranau a few other students sitting in normal clothing, laughing and chatting, having only just made their way out of bed into the bright sunshine of the morning. Smiling to himself at the realization that he had free time, the apprentice’s step lightened, a bounce coming into his stride as made his way to his room, changing into rougher, sturdier outdoor clothing, putting together a few pieces of food and drink to go with them, appropriate gear for climbing and hiking along the cliffs and seashores outside of the city. A grinning smile took him south out of Tregonethra, along the well worn road that branched into a dirt track as it left the urban sprawl behind and meandered up on the cliffs, glowing walls of stone constantly sprayed and battered with water. The roaring of the surf made a throbbing background noise, a low contrast to the high-pitched squawks of the sea birds as they fled along the cliff front, nesting in the crevices and little nooks dug into the face of the stone.

  Tarranau continued walking, heading to a little spot that was rarely bothered by other people. It was a small cove set between the cliffs where they sloped down, forming a little inlet that had stone walls and a sandy floor, hemmed in by dunes that marked the high tide line. Here, he would often spend his rest days, sunning himself as he lay on the beach, freed from the stifling robes. Now he stood atop of the path down, where it curved from the westerly spit to the sandy beach. Grinning, Tarranau saw no one on his shore, and jogged down the path, eager to enjoy the rushing water and welcoming sand. Piling his food and clothes in a dent in the beach, he lay down, eyes entranced by the natural beauty of the surroundings, lit by brilliant sunshine reflected off of the blue waters of the sea. However, the apprentice had too much energy for contemplation this day and he dove into the waters, swimming out into the waves, enjoying the cooling feel of the ocean on his skin, a boy at play in a warm and welcoming sea.

  He spent the rest of the day out there, alternately sunning himself in the warmth of the blue sky and swimming in the azure sea that flowed beneath, riding waves as they came up the little inlet onto the beach. Finally, the sun rolled down the horizon, deepening into the red as it touched the waves, and Tarranau gathered his things, squeezing what moisture he could out of his damp clothing. The remains of his food packed away, he headed up the path, watching the sun set, free of the nagging worries that had haunted him the day before. With little but idle thoughts on his mind, the student made it back to the school, grabbing some food to eat from the dining hall as he went to his room, sluicing himself down and cleaning away the salt of the ocean. Refreshed, exercised, and full, Tarranau collapsed into bed, dreams quickly snuffed out as deep sleep overcame him.

  “Dammit, Holbenth, bring that lantern over here. I want good light when I find what I’m looking for. That boy has never performed as well in my classes as he has as anyone else’s, and I’m sure he’s doing it just to show me up. This is probably his idea of revenge for being assigned extra work to make him catch up with the rest of his class. I’m sure its somewhere in his chest, that boy said he saw Tarranau carrying it this evening. Plus, no one had seen him since the morning. He was probably plotting how to get that amulet from me. Bloody insubordinate wretch of a child.” Magister Gothren’s invective trailed off, more from running out of air than from any lack of things to say. He had the upper half of his body in the chest at the foot of Tarranau’s bed, the contents strewn around the room, having been picked over as Magister Gothren searched. Magister Holbenth hovered nervously over him, carrying a lantern fired by oil rendered from fish. The light was fitful and not that bright, and Gothren continually muttered or yelled for more light, or light closer to him, or some other directive to Holbenth.

  Tarranau came awake with a start at a particularly loud expletive from Gothren. “What? What are you doing in my room? Get out of my chest! Those are my things, and I’ll have them folded and put back, right now!”

  Gothren extracted himself from the chest, stretched to his full height and walked over to the bed. He towered over Tarranau, who was trapped i
n the sheets and blankets, and groggy from waking up. “You, boy, have been accused of stealing a valuable amulet from my room, and reported as carrying that amulet by another student. Now, I am exercising my right as a senior teacher of this learning institution to search your room. Magister Holbenth is here as the required observer. You will sit still and not interfere with this investigation, or you will be presumed guilty for trying to interrupt my rightful act of search.” Gothren had been glaring down at Tarranau this whole time, and now turned his eyes toward the other teacher in the room, holding a glare no less stern than that given the student. “Holbenth, if he needs clothes, hand him a few of the ones already searched. And while you may like Tarranau as a student, I would suggest not doing anything foolish, unless you wish to join him on his way out of this school.”

  “I… I’m sorry Tarranau. Magister Gothren woke me from my bed, handed me this lamp, and dragged me to your room. I don’t really know what is going on here any more than you do. I just wish we’d followed proper procedure, and waited till morning.”

  Gothren spun away from the chest, his eyes locking onto Magister Holbenth’s. “Wait till morning? Wait till morning? Had I been so foolish and inept as to do that, my amulet would have been gone, disappearing with that child” his arm waving at Tarranau, “probably to be sold down on the docks to whatever trader would offer him a half acceptable price. And this is the proper procedure, dolt, and I’ll not have you questioning my motives. Now tie your mouth shut and bring that lamp here, so I can see what I’m doing.”

  Holbenth gave Tarranau a resigned shrug, indicating there was nothing that he could do in this situation, and that they all just needed to play along. Tarranau gestured at a few of the clothes laying around the room, and the Magister handed them to the apprentice, who dressed himself, feeling a little more appropriate and less vulnerable now that he was properly clothed. Even so, there was nothing Tarranau could do, aside from watch Gothren tear and paw through his clothes and belongings.

  It went on for some time, with Magister Gothren grubbing around in every pocket and seam, searching for the lost amulet. He finally came to the bottom of the chest, emptied and with no amulet to show for it, and rounded on Tarranau. “Where did you hide my amulet you little scamp? I know it’s in this room! I will find it, and you will show me where it is! And for your own safety, you shall not have sold that amulet already or I will exercise every ounce of my power to see you ruined, your family ruined, and your career so destroyed that you will have to flee this island and lie about your very name to earn a job as a ditch digger. Find me that amulet!”

  Magister Holbenth placed his hand on Gothren’s shoulder, easing him upright from where he had been bent over Tarranau, shouting directly into the apprentice’s face. Holbenth took a step back when Gothren’s eyes turned on him, but steadied and regained some composure. “I do think you’re being too hard on the boy, Gothren. After all, have you considered that if you don’t find the amulet here, someone else might have hidden it, and that Tarranau might not be the one who took it? After all, he is a well regarded student here at the school.”

  Gothren rounded on Holbenth with a fury unblemished by the early hour or the many rages already this night. “So,” he sneered, “am I to assume that what I know, right here” at this he jabbed himself fiercely in the head, “is wrong? That what another young, upstanding gentleman like this one told me was a lie? That one of my best students can’t even tell the truth to his own teacher? Or maybe I should look for other explanations, perhaps? After all, you’ve always been soft on Tarranau, haven’t you Holbenth? He’s never, ever, been the best student in your class. Oh no, not for the last four classes you taught him, either. Do you know why I grabbed you out of your bed at this hour when any other teacher would do? Because I wanted to see if you helped him with this. Oh yes,” at this Gothren began to shake a finger in the young teacher’s face. “Oh yes, I know about how you and some of the other young teachers grumble about ‘how poor old doddering Gothren is unfit to teach’, and the guilty looks you give me when I come by unexpectedly. I’ve seen them all, and I might just have to have a word with the other head teachers about this matter.”

  Magister Holbenth stared and sputtered. “There has been no such thing, Gothren! I will not have you impune me with these slanderous accusations! None of the teachers with whom I associate myself have ever mentioned any statements of the sort that you bring forth here. And yes, Tarranau has been the best student in my classes. He is innately gifted at the style of water magic that I teach and he does well because of it. It is not because I play favourites. I’ll thank you to not repeat these accusations.”

  “And Tarranau has been the worst in mine! Am I to presume that someone elsewhere so gifted in the arts of this school cannot transmute a single bucket of sea water to something potable within an entire week’s time? That a student who was about to receive our seal of approval in only a few short weeks would be worse than mere children who are five years younger than he is? Or that he has taken a dislike to the one teacher in whose classes he cannot perform? I’ll let you think on that, Holbenth. Now, this discussion is over, and you will sit quietly on that desk, right there” Gothren pointed with a single, thick finger “and you will not speak until spoken to. However, first, escort this boy out of the room; he’s crowding things up and getting in the way.”

  All this time Tarranau had been stuck sitting on his bed, watching the fight rage back and forth between Magister Gothren and Holbenth. Now he struggled to his feet, and looked to Holbenth for further instructions.

  “You might as well go to the dining hall or one of the study rooms and try and catch some more sleep. I’ll find you in the morning when we have everything sorted out.”

  Tarranau grabbed a blanket and pillows from the bed. He would bed down on these to recover what little sleep he could.

  “Leave those, boy. I don’t want you taking anything out of this room. You are still not yet innocent.”

  With those words following him, Tarranau headed out to find a place of mental peace from the last hour. As he walked down the hallway, other boys who had been awoken by the shouting came out of their rooms, a few asking “What happened? What’s got into Gothren now? Why did I see Holbenth with a lantern? What’s going on?” He dismissed all of them with a brief shake of his head or a quiet “Not right now, I’ll tell you in the morning.” As these were the older students at the school, many of whom had seen Gothren’s wrath before, they slipped back into their rooms, careful not to draw too much attention while the teacher was still in the full flow of his rage and anger.

  Tarranau made his way to the small but exquisite library, home to works that could be found nowhere else, and within which Tarranau had spent many a pleasant day. Finding a booth in the back, he leant there in a daze and attempted to come to terms with the results of the early morning awakening.

  Tarranau knew he hadn’t taken anything. After all, he hadn’t even been in the school most of the day. Unfortunately, he had been alone, enjoying a private sunning on the beach, and thus had no people he could turn to for support, especially as the only time that he was back at the school was the time that he was accused of stealing the pendant. Although, if he hadn’t been seen coming out of the teacher’s rooms, he should be fine, since they couldn’t find an amulet in his room that he hadn’t stolen, after all.

  “Play out the day in your head Tarranau, let’s see what happened. First, I woke up and didn’t realize that I had no classes, went to the classrooms, then finally figured it out. After that, got changed, grabbed some food and went off to the beach for the entire day. Enjoyed that, set out for home a little after sunset, got there, ate, and then collapsed with exhaustion from a great day out. The next thing that happens after that is waking up and being screamed at by Gothren. Bastard. If only he didn’t get his jollies by trying to break those who stood up to him. Not going to let that happen to me. Going to present my case in front of the more reasonable teachers if it co
mes to that. Well, not much more I can do about it until they finish up searching my room and find nothing. Gothren will have to eat crow at that point and I’ll have to be careful if he does. Vengeful sort, that.”

  Tarranau shifted around as he tried to find a comfortable position in a chair clearly designed to keep the seated person awake and alert. Rest was eluding him, and so he sat fully awake, the events of the last day replaying over and over in his mind, till they latched onto one phrase: “that one of my best students”. Gothren’s best students were his lapdogs, people who would kowtow to him and act as yes men, pumping up his ego whenever he needed it, and listening intently to his every word as if it was a drop of long lost knowledge. They always got an easy ride through the school, because although they would never exert themselves in another teacher’s class, they always worked their utmost for Gothren, and their status as lapdogs prevented them from being given a poor grade by any other teacher.

 

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