by Kody Boye
“Sir,” Odin said, raising his voice for the first time since they’d stopped for the night. “Are we going to be all right?”
“Don’t worry,” Miko said. “We will.”
Though the Elf smiled, Odin knew it was forced—an artificial replacement to a natural reaction.
Even he’s scared.
From the way the Elf had just expressed himself, Odin couldn’t help but wonder whether or not his knight master had said they would be all right just to put him and Nova at ease. It wouldn’t be completely outside his behavior, as he’d done it before, but that didn’t necessarily mean he’d lied, did it?
Did he?
“You ok kid?”
Odin nodded. Nova draped an arm across his shoulders. “It’ll be ok,” the older man whispered. “We’re safe in here.”
“Nova’s right,” Miko said. “We’re as safe as we can be.”
“Could the Kerma get in here if they wanted to?” Odin asked.
“No. The Kerma may be bold, but they aren’t stupid. They wouldn’t dare wander in a storm like this.”
After lying down and scooting back against Nova, Odin pushed an arm up and set his hand against it, watching the purple-pink flames dance and lick at the domed ceiling. Their vain attempts cast Miko’s barely-visible face in dull light.
“Is the flame duller because you’re tired?” Odin asked.
“Pardon?”
“The fire’s not as bright as it usually is.”
“Yes, I suppose it is,” Miko said, then frowned, watching the curious flames. “I am tired.”
“I can keep the fire going if you want. It doesn’t take that much energy.”
“I know, Odin, and thank you. I appreciate your offer, but I’ll be fine.”
“Besides,” Nova mumbled, setting his head just above Odin’s on his own outstretched arm. “Wouldn’t the energy just lessen after you fell asleep?”
“Yes. It would.”
“All right,” Odin sighed. “I was just offering. I don’t want you wearing yourself out.”
“Don’t worry,” the Elf said, spreading out along the length of the shelter’s floor. “Besides—traveling this way hardly wears me out at all.”
That’s good, Odin thought, closing his eyes, because I’m ready for all this to be over.
He got his wish three days later.
Rising up from the frigid depths of the sea, much like a lost icon to the world whom had been resurrected by the arts of dark magic, the boat drifted to shore like a wanderer in the night, three large anchors keeping it in place and a series of sails slowly tilting to accommodate the slight wind that tore from the north. Amidst the few men tending the anchors, wiping up the deck and navigating the boat with the sales, a twin series of lights lit up the pale, grey sky—one green, one orange.
Icklard! Odin thought. Domnin!
“We’re back,” Odin smiled, looking up at Nova and Miko.
“We sure are,” Nova laughed, thrusting a hand into the air. “Hey!”
“Hey!” Odin called, laughing and running forward, but careful to keep his distance from the shoreline. “Hey!”
As he neared the boat, the twin lights stopped moving, as if taking notice of the figures making their way toward the boat. The brothers appeared at the side of the boat a moment later. “Hey!” they both called, raising their hands in greeting.
“Call the captain!” Domnin yelled, breaking the chorus of his and his brother’s cheers. “Tell him they’re back!”
“So,” Icklard said, leaning back in his seat. “How was the trip?”
“Cold and miserable,” Odin sighed, nodding when Domnin offered a cup of tea. “I’m just glad it’s over.”
“How long were you out there?” Domnin frowned.
“I… I’m not sure.”
“Your cheeks are windburnt.”
Somehow, by miracle or chance, he resisted the urge to feel his cheeks and instead lifted his cup of tea. Honey tickled the inside of his mouth and the bottom of his tongue as he set it to his lips. “Thank you for the tea,” he said.
Domnin smiled and reached up to scratch a messy tuft of unshaven beard at his chin. “It’s no trouble,” the darker-haired brother said. “I wasn’t sure if you’d like honey or not. Icklard said he doesn’t.”
“I never said that,” Icklard smiled. “I just said it was too sweet.”
“And this is coming from someone who eats the most chocolate whenever it’s made.”
Icklard chuckled, raising his middle finger just slightly. Odin smiled and sipped his tea. “So,” he began, “anything new between the two of you?”
“Not really,” Domnin shrugged.
“We went back home for a month or so,” Icklard said, kicking his feet up onto the table.
“How was that?” Odin asked.
“I got to see my girl,” Icklard said.
“And I,” Domnin started, but stopped a short moment after. “Well… I didn’t do much of anything. I mostly just hung around the dock and helped Jerdai.”
“At least the two of you got off the water for a little while,” Odin said, taking another sip of his tea. “I’m surprised you two don’t get sick of the sea.”
“Oh, don’t worry,” Icklard laughed. “We do.”
“You can count on that,” Domnin added.
As the last of his tea disappeared between his pursed lips, Odin set the small cup down and brought his feet up onto the couch. He waited for either of the brothers to say something before he spread out across it.
“Tired?” the younger brother asked.
“A little.”
“You can sleep in here,” Domnin smiled. “We don’t care. Do we, Ick?”
“Nope.”
“I just don’t want to bother you.”
“You’re not bothering us, Odin,” Icklard said, sliding his feet off the table. He reached over and set a hand on Odin’s shoulder. “We’re your friends.”
“All right,” Odin smiled. “Thank you.”
“We’ll wake you if your master or your friend comes looking,” Domnin said.
With one final nod, Odin closed his eyes.
Darkness swallowed him.
“There you are,” Nova chuckled.
Odin jumped, nearly slamming the door in the process. “Sorry,” he muttered, closing the door as quietly as he could. “I fell asleep.”
“Hey, I don’t mind. I was just wondering where you got to.”
Odin turned to see Nova spread out along one of the far beds directly beneath the window. Seemingly-freshly-washed, the man’s skin gleamed in the faint light piercing through the window. “You look different with lighter skin,” he smiled, crossing the room to sit on the opposite bed.
“I know,” Nova said, pushing his back against the headrest. “It’ll be good to get back to the mainland.”
“It will,” Odin nodded.
Glancing around the room, he took everything in—from the small, rounded dining table to the bathing room tucked in the corner. It hadn’t changed a whole lot, though something about it seemed different.
“Does it seem different to you?” Odin asked.
“What?” Nova frowned.
“The room. Does it seem different?”
“I… I don’t know. Not really. Why?”
“Probably because we haven’t been here for a while. Don’t worry—we’ll get used to it.”
Yeah, but for how long?
While he liked the idea of going to a new and possibly-wonderful place, the fact that Miko preferred to keep the location secret bothered him. Did their next destination involve a rough, unstable climate like Neline, or were there dangers present but completely unaccounted for? Was that why Miko hadn’t revealed their destination before? To ensure that they would have to go, regardless of any uproar it might have caused?
He wanted to make sure we would go to Neline.
If Miko had told them outright that they’d be going to Neline, Odin doubted he would’ve agreed
to go, much less Nova. The man had thrown a big enough fit when they’d arrived—what would he have done if he’d known in advance?
“Nova,” Odin said, looking up. “Where do you think we’re going?”
“I don’t know,” the man shrugged. “Why?”
“Because I was just thinking about how Miko hadn’t told us we were going to Neline.”
“What do you mean?”
“I think he kept it a secret because he was afraid we’d fight him. I know I wouldn’t have been eager to go had I known what Neline was like.”
“You think he’s got another place like Neline in mind?”
“I don’t think so,” Odin said. “I—”
He stopped speaking when the door opened.
“Hello,” Miko said, looking between the two of them. “I was starting to worry, Odin.”
“I was with Icklard and Domnin, sir.”
“No need to worry about Odin,” Nova said, reaching over to ruffle his hair. “He won’t just wander off on us.”
“I’d hope so,” Miko said. “We’re leaving now. A storm’s coming in.”
“A storm?” Odin frowned.
“Yes,” the Elf sighed. “It would be best if you stayed with us, Odin. I have a feeling it’s going to be a rough night.”
He’d never been more scared in his life.
Outside, waves higher and larger than the boat itself surged, casting the Annabelle to and fro as if it were a demon itself. A pendulum, some would have been fit to describe it, swaying back and forth as if compelled by some higher force—it could be said that Death Itself had begun the motion of execution, as from the sky fell water that resembled coagulated drops of blood. They snaked along the windows and thundered down from the heavens as giant creatures of searing heat lit the sky, roaring infernos that cracked the air like whips against a horse’s hide. The air itself was quite terrifying, and completely unforgiving in all respects. Below, however, was even more frightening. The violent beauty of the sea seemed to rebel against the common fisherman as with its waves came the scratching of nails against wood, of silent banshees who could not scream over thunder and a tremor that rocked the entirety of existence.
Until that very point in time, Odin could have never imagined such a thing.
As if the Annabelle herself trembled within the presence of such horrible adversity, and as if she possessed some intelligence that bordered beyond the average idea of the life of wood, a seizure traversed the length of the ship and made everything upon its walls and foundation shake. Bowls tumbled from the table, shattering to the floor; paintings bolted to the wall tilted to one side then the other, obscured and indifferent of their surroundings; and books upon the shelves came flying forward, wild birds freed from their roosts and with wings spread in impossible flight. They could have screamed, Odin thought, if they were truly given a voice, and as they flew across the room, into the walls and onto the floor, it seemed that chaos had taken control of the world and that there seemed to be no sanity left at all—that life, as he knew it, had simply upended itself: not from choice, but nature, a cruel bastion through which the entire world existed.
Huddled beneath his blankets and trying his hardest not to cry, Odin drew up against the wall and desperately willed the storm to stop with thought alone.
It will work, he thought, shivering, his body long since devoid of strength. It has to.
Who was he kidding, though? He was no weather mage, no spell caster who could control the elements and bend them to his will, no elementalist who could call from the world the forces of nature and beg them to stop, to turn aside and leave these men alone. Try as he may—both physically, mentally, and perhaps even spiritually—there was no way a child like him could control such a freak even of the natural world, much less even begin to attempt to stop it. Gaia, the Goddess of Nature, was believed to be greedy, and though her gifts were many she bore from creation tragedy—of storms, weather, waves and blood that could shadow over everything and swallow anything whole. To think that such a cataclysmic event could be plaguing their travels had to spell something in his life. Were they being punished, Odin wondered, for Miko’s misgivings, for his terrible act he’d inflicted upon a virginal woman, or was this simply an accident—a thing that, while completely terrifying, was not in the least bit intended for them?
“No,” Odin whispered, shaking his head, tears spilling down his face. “No, no, no…”
“Odin,” Nova whispered. “You ok?”
“No!” he sobbed, no longer able to contain his feelings. “I’m scared!”
“I am too, buddy.”
“Is Miko asleep?”
“I’m not sure.”
A moment later, Nova slid out from under his covers and came to Odin’s side. He sat on the mattress for a moment, watching the world outside with calm but wide eyes, before spreading out alongside him.
“What?” Odin frowned, not sure what to expect.
“I’m laying down beside you.”
“Why?”
“You wanna know the truth?” Nova asked, a smile appearing when a burst of lightning lit up the inside of the room. “I’m scared shitless.”
“We’re going to be ok, right?”
“I’m not sure, Odin, but I think we will. I mean, we’ve got Miko here, and Domnin and Icklard are just down the—”
“We should go check to see if they’re all right.”
“Odin—”
“Please.”
“What about Miko?”
“You can go.”
Both jumped at the sound of the Elf’s deep, if somewhat-calm voice. “Keep to the walls,” Miko explained, “and try to hold on to something even if you think it might come off. It won’t be easy to navigate the halls with the ship rocking back and forth.”
“Are you sure?”
“I’m sure.”
Odin crawled out of bed and stumbled toward the door, turning his eyes on Nova to see if he would follow.
For a brief moment, he considered the possibility that he would be going alone.
No.
Before his thoughts and fears could overwhelm him, the older man sighed, nodded, then crawled out of bed.
“We’ll be back,” Odin said, about to go for the door. He stopped in midstride, turned to his knight master, then stepped forward to set a hand on his shoulder. “Thank you, sir. We’ll be ok.
“I know you will,” Miko said, reaching up to set a hand on Odin’s face. “Don’t worry, Odin—everything’s going to be all right.”
Old wood creaked beneath their feet.
While the ship groaned in protest, Odin and Nova made their way down the hall, grappling onto anything they could. Several times, and during moments in which the waves seized the ship and tousled it, Odin had to grab onto both Nova and one of the candelabra to keep them from soaring into the opposite wall or flying down the hall. Such feats of strength left him breathless, as it took all his might in order to maintain both himself and his friend.
“Hey, kid,” Nova breathed, holding himself steady after the most recent wave passed. “We should go back.”
“I have to know if they’re all right!”
“They’re just fine, Odin. They’re—”
Odin took off down the hall before Nova could finish.
Another wave rocked the ship.
It sent him into the far wall.
“Fuck!” Nova screamed, throwing himself toward the nearest object he could grab onto. “This is crazy, Odin!”
“I don’t care! We have to make sure they’re all right!”
“Ok! Ok! I heard you! Just keep going.”
As his older friend instructed, Odin turned, but made sure Nova knew where to follow before continuing deeper into the ship.
Icklard and Domnin’s room, which sat at the very end of the hall, stood no more than a few dozen feet away.
I can make it.
But how, he thought, would he, if there wasn’t anything to hold onto? With no candelab
ra in plain sight or any securely-bolted tables, he’d either have to run and risk getting thrown into the walls or wait until the ship stopped moving.
Do I really want to wait that long?
Taking a deep breath, Odin threw himself forward, kicked a foot out when the ship sent him into one wall, then pushed his arms forward when the resounding pendulum force sent him into the opposite. From there, he jogged with his back to the wall until he got to the door.
“Come on!” Odin cried, grimacing as he caught sight of Nova flying into the wall he had just narrowly avoided.
“I’m trying, Odin.”
“Here!” He turned, made sure he had a firm hold on the doorknob, and extended his hand.
God, please, don’t break on me.
The moment Nova gripped his hand, Odin turned, pushed the door open, and threw both of them inside.