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The Firemage's Vengeance

Page 17

by Garrett Robinson


  “How do we know this is not a dead end?” said Kalem.

  “Because the boatmen fled this way,” said Mako. “They were afraid for their lives—they would not have trapped themselves here if there was no hope.”

  Indeed he proved right, for soon they emerged into another cavern. This one was much smaller, and opened to the Great Bay almost immediately, so that they could see by moonslight. They had come out into a small rocky shore that sank quickly into the water.

  “What now?” said Kalem, looking behind them.

  “There were likely boats here,” said Theren, pointing. Ebon saw that there was a spike in the rock wall, and several lines trailing from it, but nothing was attached to the other end of the lines. “The crew must have taken them all when they fled.”

  “That means we must swim,” said Mako. “Shed anything that will slow you in the water, and get in.”

  “It is the dead of winter!” said Ebon. “We will freeze to death.”

  Mako scowled at him. “We can reach the shore. Unless I miss my guess, it is just around the mouth of the cave. And if you or I stay here, we will land in a Mystic prison, and the family Drayden may fall.”

  Ebon looked fearfully at the water. “I am not a very good swimmer.”

  “Come off it, Ebon,” said Theren. She was already shucking off her Academy robes. Soon she stood in her underclothes, but even though she must have been freezing, she did not shiver.

  Kalem and Ebon looked at each other for a moment, but Ebon knew they had little choice. They removed their robes, throwing them into the water at Mako’s command, so that hopefully the Mystics would not find them and learn that Academy students had been present. Their boots they kept, for those would not be a great impediment to swimming, and they would need them to run once they reached land again. Once they had disrobed, both boys hesitated, standing uncertainly at the edge of the Great Bay’s water, for it looked even more frigid now.

  “Oh, darkness save us,” said Mako. He seized Ebon’s shoulders and flung him in.

  Ebon sank into the water with a yelp, and nearly gasped in lungs of seawater. It was colder than he could believe. A moment later he felt the splashing of another body beside him—Kalem, too, had been thrown in. Together they fought for the surface and hung there paddling, sucking in deep breaths of air that now seemed positively warm.

  Theren waded in beside them and struck out for the cave mouth. Mako was just behind her. Ebon and Kalem paddled after them, but were soon outpaced.

  “Wait!” cried Ebon. Then he took in a mouthful of seawater and lost his words to sputtering. But Mako and Theren glanced back from where they had almost reached the open water.

  “Sky above,” said Theren, swimming back. She passed Ebon and went to Kalem, who had fallen even farther behind. “Come on, then.”

  He clung to her back, holding on to her shoulders with a death grip. She struck out again, and though Kalem slowed her down a bit, she still passed Ebon easily. They reached Mako at the cave mouth, and he glared at Ebon as they approached.

  “I am not carrying you like a suckling newborn, boy.”

  “I did not ask you to,” said Ebon, though he had meant to, and was now secretly glad he had not.

  They broke out into the open water, and Mako’s earlier guess proved right. A sandy shore sank into the water a scant thirty paces away. Before they swam for it, though, Mako guided them farther out into open water, for the waves lapped against the stone cliffs of the Seat, and though the sea was somewhat calm, still it could knock them senseless against the rocks. Ebon soon fell behind again. Mako did not carry him the way Theren had Kalem, but he did reach back and seize Ebon’s collar, flinging him a little bit farther along every other stroke, so that he was just able to keep up with the rest.

  “Darkness take all useless goldshitters,” growled Mako.

  “I could not agree more,” said Theren, who was now fighting against Kalem’s weight to keep her head above the waves.

  By the time they reached land, Ebon could no longer feel his fingers or his toes. He fell upon the shore, expecting the air to be warmer than the water. But a wind was blowing, and his shivers only redoubled.

  “Up, and keep moving,” said Mako. “You will not freeze to death unless you try to rest.”

  “But where?” said Ebon. He fought to gain his feet, but it was hard when he could not feel his limbs.

  “There,” said Mako. He pointed down the shore, where they could see the glow of the western docks. “There are torches for warmth, and mayhap we can steal some clothes.”

  So by moonslight they ran on, their steps hampered by the soft sand that grasped for their feet. Mako reached the dock piles first, and by the time they joined him he had popped his head up over the edge of the wooden planks to look.

  “There are no guards nearby,” he whispered. “And there is a carriage not far off that I think is unoccupied.”

  “You mean to steal a carriage?” said Kalem.

  “No, idiot. If there is a carriage, it is because someone means to take ship, or has boarded already. But their things are still in bags atop the carriage, and there we may find clothes. Theren, look after them, and keep out of sight—I shall return in a moment.”

  He slithered up and into the open. Theren poked her head up to look after him, and in a moment Ebon and Kalem did the same. They saw him reach the carriage, climb up top, and pull open a travel sack. He threw it aside before opening another. This one he took up and ran back to them, avoiding torchlight wherever he could.

  “Here we are,” he said. “Trousers and tunics aplenty. No cloaks, but we will not be in the cold much longer.”

  The children hastened to don the clothing. Ebon studied Mako as they dressed. The bodyguard stood stock still, with no quiver in his limbs, though his clothes still dripped seawater.

  “There are clothes enough here for you, too.”

  Mako sneered, and the clotted blood of his lip burst, sending a crimson rivulet forth to mingle with the saltwater droplets. “I am not some weakling who is troubled by a chill.”

  Soon they were done. They all had trousers of brown, and Ebon and Theren had found tunics of white. But the only shirt that fit Kalem was flamboyant red, with gold trim at the collar and sleeves.

  “Well, this does not make me look an utter idiot at all,” said Kalem ruefully, holding out his arms and shaking his head.

  “Who cares what you look like?” growled Mako. “We have tarried too long. Up on the dock.”

  And so up they went, and once they had passed the carriage and gone a little distance on, they slowed to a walk, strolling along as though nothing untoward was happening—except for Mako, who still stole from shadow to shadow, eyes roving everywhere to watch for a threat.

  “The docks seem curiously empty, do they not?” said Kalem.

  “I had noticed the same thing,” said Ebon.

  “That may be why,” said Theren.

  She pointed ahead, where a large cluster of people had gathered. There were perhaps two score of them, packed in a tight little group, and all facing towards the center, except for some who looked about, as though seeking aid.

  “Stay away from there,” said Mako. “All the better that they will not notice us.”

  “They will not notice us regardless,” said Ebon. “They are looking at whatever is in their midst.”

  He pressed forwards, away from his friends and towards the crowd, ignoring Mako’s frustrated growl behind him. Something was wrong. He could see it in the worried faces of the onlookers, the way they kept looking about, expecting—or hoping—for someone else to arrive, to sort out whatever lay in their midst.

  The crowd was packed tight, but he pushed through them, and Theren was at his shoulder. Soon they reached the center, and there they stopped, frozen in shock.

  Isra lay there. Dead, clearly, her sightless eyes staring up at the sky. Seawater had turned her skin dark and bloated, and blue veins stuck out in the torchlight. Fish had begun to
peck at her cheeks, it seemed, for the skin was open, though the desiccated flesh put forth no blood. Only a few scraps of her Academy robes still clung to her corpulent frame.

  “She perished, then,” Theren whispered. Ebon heard a grim finality in her voice—no trace of joy, but a steely resolve, a tone like the ending of a tale. “I did not mean to drown her. But neither am I sorry. The nightmare is over.”

  “Silence,” said Ebon quietly. He took her arm, and Kalem’s, who had stepped up beside the two of them, and drew them both back through the crowd. They drew away from the people standing there, where Mako waited with a dark look in his eyes.

  “Well?” he said. “What is it?”

  “It is Isra,” said Ebon. “Dead.”

  Mako’s eyes shot wide, and he pushed past them to dive into the crowd. When he returned, his face was no less grim—in fact his scowl had deepened.

  “She must have washed out of the grotto on whatever current was meant to carry that ship,” said Theren. “Strange that she should have reached the docks before we did, but then, the sea is wild.”

  Ebon frowned, but he did not wish to speak. It was Kalem who looked up, fear in his eyes, and met Theren’s look.

  “No, Theren,” he said. “That is impossible. Not just how quickly she came here—but she, herself. She has been dead a long time. Weeks, most likely.”

  Theren stared at him, uncomprehending. Her gaze shifted to Ebon, who met her eyes, and then to Mako, who was scowling off into the night, chin buried in his fist, lost in thought.

  “That is impossible,” she said. “We just saw her. It was less than an hour ago, and she was as alive as you or I.”

  Ebon shivered as he looked back towards the crowd, all of them still clustered around the body. “Yet it is the truth. I have no more explanation than you do. But Isra is more than a month dead.”

  twenty-seven

  THREE AMIGOS [14]

  They did not know what else to do, and so they made their way into the city and back to the Academy. The dock gates stood open, as constables had been summoned to inspect the corpse, and so they entered without trouble. Before they returned to the citadel, Theren took them to the inn where Lilith kept her extra room. Mako waited on the street as they ducked within. At the door to the room, she produced a key from around her neck, hanging on the same chain as Kekhit’s amulet.

  “I used to have the key, you know,” she said, looking embarrassed and refusing to meet the eyes of either Ebon or Kalem. “She only recently gave me one again. In case we should need it, for something like this.”

  “Of course,” said Ebon carefully.

  She let them in and showed them where Lilith kept extra sets of Academy student robes. Soon they had changed, and Mako led them on through the streets. Curfew was a distant memory, and so he took them around the Academy’s east end, to the cleaning sheds that housed his secret entrance.

  “I must cover your eyes,” he said, looking at Theren and Kalem.

  Theren scowled. “Why? I can keep a secret as well as the next.”

  “It is not yours to know, much less to keep,” said Mako. “It is bad enough Ebon knows how I get in and out. No others need the knowledge.”

  He tore strips of cloth from their sleeves and covered their eyes, and then he and Ebon led Theren and Kalem into one of the sheds. Inside, Mako had Ebon turn around while he flipped a switch, and the secret way opened before them. The passageway was utterly dark, and Ebon did not know how Mako could see—yet he must have been able to, for soon he opened the door at other end of it, and they stood upon the Academy grounds.

  “I suggest you rest well,” said Mako. “Doubtless I shall see you all again soon.”

  “Thank you, Mako,” said Ebon. “Though some things are unclear, it seems at least that this is all over.”

  Mako gave him a hard look. “I hope you are right, though I doubt it.”

  He vanished, and Ebon and his friends made their way into the Academy. It was far too late to be wandering about the halls, but they encountered no instructors, and soon had climbed the stairs to their dormitories. They stopped at Kalem’s, where the common room was empty, for the younger children had gone to bed. A fire burned low in the hearth. Ebon threw two more logs on, and then they sat in armchairs around it.

  “I cannot fathom all that has happened,” said Kalem. “There seems no sense to it.”

  “Isra is dead, at least,” said Theren. “I can worry about the rest of it another day.”

  “Is she, though?” said Ebon. “That corpse was long decayed from seawater. We all saw it, Theren.”

  Theren threw her hands towards the ceiling. “What, then, does it mean? Has she been a walking corpse for the last month? We have seen her alive. And tonight we saw her dead. Mayhap you guessed wrong, and thought the body more decayed than it was.”

  “Her clothes were rotten, and fish had begun to eat her,” said Ebon.

  “Mayhap we are wrong in another sense,” said Kalem. “Mayhap the corpse was not her, but only someone who looks like her.”

  “You do not believe in such a coincidence any more than I do,” said Ebon. “We have seen her, studied beside her, and even fought against her. We know what she looked like—it was her body.” But then a thought struck him, and he straightened in his seat. “Unless it was not. It could have been a weremage. Think of it. What if she mindwyrded a weremage to look just like her, then killed them and threw them into the Great Bay? When the body was recovered, it would cast any investigation away from her.”

  Kalem shook his head. “That is not how therianthropy works. When the wizard dies, they resume their true form.” But now it was his turn to look up in realization. “What if the corpse from the Bay was Isra, and a weremage has been impersonating her?”

  Theren looked at him with disdain. “She has used mindmagic against us, Kalem. How could she have done that, if she were only a weremage playing a part?”

  The boy’s face fell. “Of course,” he mumbled. “I should have thought of that.”

  Ebon ran the facts through his mind, but he could think of none that made sense—and he knew, too, that he was less able to guess than his friends, for many ways of magic were still strange to him.

  Either the corpse was Isra’s, or it was not. They could not hope to guess at the truth. But either answer brought another, more urgent question: where was Erin? If Isra was still alive, doubtless she held the boy in captivity. But if Isra was indeed dead … was the boy now a captive of the family Yerrin? Or had she left him somewhere else entirely?

  Thoughts of Erin brought thoughts of Xain, and his blood went cold.

  “One thing is certain,” he said at last, speaking quietly against the crackling fire in the hearth. “There will be an investigation now. And we are the only ones who claim to have seen Isra since she disappeared.”

  They all looked at each other. Then Theren rose from her chair and left without a word, making for the halls. Kalem left a moment later, stepping through the opposite door that led to his dormitory. But Ebon sat there until morning, staring into the fire, exhausted beyond reckoning, and yet unable to even think of sleep.

  XAIN [15]

  It did not take long for the faculty to redouble their investigation. Ebon guessed that news must have reached the Academy during the night, for the moment he reached Perrin’s class she commanded him to visit the Dean.

  There was no instructor in the hall to walk with him, and so Ebon stood there for a moment, frozen by indecision. He had a tremendous urge to turn the other way, to make for the Academy’s front doors and leave forever, begging for help from Halab and Mako. They could whisk him away to some forgotten kingdom, or even, perhaps, home to Idris, there to be hidden from all knowledge.

  But after a time he turned to the right instead, and made his slow way towards Xain’s study. He had done nothing wrong—or at least, nothing wrong when it came to Isra. He had seen her within the Academy. He and his friends had not drowned her in the Great Bay weeks
ago. He must cling to that, for it was, in fact, the truth. And only the truth could save him now, because outside of what he had seen with his own eyes, he was not even certain what the truth was.

  Xain stood outside his office—but much to Ebon’s relief, Jia was also there, as was Dasko. Dasko looked somewhat worse for wear; his face was still gaunt, and his eyes roved all about. But his hands were steady, and Ebon saw no trace of madness in him, the sickness that came over those who had long been under mindwyrd. It had faded in him remarkably fast. Ebon nodded to the Instructor, and received a brief jerk of the head in return.

  “Drayden,” said Xain, speaking through gritted teeth. “Come with us.”

  He stalked off down the hall. Jia and Dasko followed at a somewhat more sedate pace, with Jia holding out an arm to help Dasko along. Ebon decided to match their steps rather than Xain’s, and soon the Dean was forced to slow.

  Ebon had had scant reason to visit the Academy’s healing ward before, but that was where they turned their steps now. It lay on the bottom floor of one of the citadel’s great wings, the one that stretched west, and there were many beds arranged in rows with tall windows that stretched from waist-height almost to the ceiling. One of the beds nearest the entrance was covered, and Ebon saw the shape of a body beneath it. He could smell decay mixed with seawater.

  Jia paused a respectful distance away, but Xain pushed forwards. Ignoring the healer who stood by to help, he threw back the sheet to reveal Isra’s bloated corpse. Removed from the seawater, her skin had turned darker still, and her eyes had swollen into pale, milky globes, the color of which could hardly be discerned. Yet it was still clearly her, as any fool could see. She had been stripped of her clothes and cleaned up, but still the sight of her almost made Ebon retch.

 

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