There were whoops among Redbeard’s pirates, and many enthusiastically went for their blades, but their enraged challenger never landed among them. As their swords and daggers flashed out, they saw Kurthe grunt, stagger—and suddenly fall from view back behind the rail of the Morning Bird, his sword tumbling into the waves.
There was a snap and the angry hum of a quarrel singing sunwards. The watchers on both ships saw Belmer calmly remove the butt of his crossbow from where his sudden sharp swing had brought it hard into the back of Kurthe’s head.
Redbeard stared at the imperturbable little man for a moment and then roared out his laughter. After a moment or two more of astonishment, his crew joined him, shouting out their mirth as The Black Dragon slowly slid away, its larger sails catching the rising wind.
“Farewell, little tigers!” the pirate captain bellowed at the mercenaries as the sea took his ship plunging away from them. “I was looking for hardened veterans of the Kissing Shark, but I see only nancy-boys out for a sail! Try to stay clear of ferocious fishermen, now!” His pirates joined him in a thunderous chorus of laughter as the most feared ship on the Utter Coast heeled over under a sudden gust, and then leapt ahead through the waters, racing west with its crew whooping and waving swords that caught the sundazzle of the fresh morning.
Their last ragged shouts gave way to a silence on the decks of the Morning Bird as six mercenaries looked down at the sprawled body of their comrade, and then up, hard-eyed, at the lone man with the empty crossbow in his hands. None of them spared a glance for Jander Turbalt, as the captain danced forward in an agony of anxious hand-wringing, looking fearfully from Belmer to the six mercenaries, and then back again.
As more than one of the Sharkers looked down at Kurthe for a second time, where he lay sprawled with his mouth open and his eyes half-shut, rolling slightly on the deck with the movements of the ship, Sharessa put one hand on the hilt of her sword and said grimly to Belmer, “I think it’s high time you told us just what our mission is.”
Belmer nodded as coolly as if she’d asked him the time of day. “It is indeed,” he replied. “I fear I’ve let events distract me from telling you what you need to know so that we’ll reach Eldrinpar as a cohesive team.”
“Eldrinpar, is it?” Rings muttered. “Thankee for informing us in so timely a manner, Master.”
Belmer nodded at him, ignoring the dwarf’s thick sarcasm.
“And in Eldrinpar—?” Brindra rumbled, prompting him.
“You must search for, find, and capture the woman Eidola… without attracting overmuch attention, of course,” Belmer told them. “I believe I know where to look for her and can soon show you a portrait of her that I’ve kept hid—”
The small man moved then, shifting a sudden pace to one side. A dagger, thrown awkwardly and wrong-handed, clattered on the deck boards by Belmer’s feet.
Its source glared at Belmer, and staggered to his feet. “Kidnapping wenches be damned!” Kurthe snarled. “Redbeard burns our ship, slaughters our comrades, and then laughs at us! And when I up and go for him, you scramble my skull for me! No man does that and fails to answer for it!”
Belmer lifted an eyebrow in what might have been a mild charade of surprise, as Kurthe spat on the deck in contempt. “Damned outlander!” the Konigheimer yelled, voice rising as he shook his head to clear it. He waved a furious finger, and then whirled to snatch one of Anvil’s spare blades from the sheaths that crisscrossed the battered veteran’s back.
He spun back to face Belmer, pointing with his borrowed blade. “You don’t know how things are done here on the Utter Coast, do you? We’ll start in on your wench-snatching after we send a certain pirate down below!”
Still raging, Kurthe stumped away down the deck. “Crowd on that sail, curse you!” he roared. “You, Elsger—and you, whatever your name is! Leap to it, now! We’ll catch that ship, or I’ll flog you until we do! Jump, you spawn of sleeping weasels!”
The crew gave him startled looks and then glanced at their captain, who was fairly babbling in frightened agitation. Kurthe stormed in among them, snatching sailors’ shoulders and shaking them as a dog shakes rats in its teeth. “I’ll have this boat running down Redbeard inside four breaths or know the reason why!”
He flung a howling sailor away into the mast. The man struck it with a meaty smack, bounced away, and fell among ropes as limp and senseless as a thing of rags. Kurthe took hold of the next man by the throat, and shouted orders into the man’s choking, darkening face. “Crowd on the sail—the hardrunner too! And bring that bloody helm about! Now, or that wheel’ll be dark with your heart’s blood before I’m finished cursing!”
Tossing the sailor aside, he charged past the reeling man and bore down on the helm. “Are you deaf, man?” he roared, towering up over the sweating Tharkarian.
The steersman looked up fearfully at the raging Konigheimer. “But… but…” he protested. “My orders—”
Kurthe’s blade flashed out. “I’ll give you orders!” he snarled as his steel darted down—but the wild thrust was turned aside by a gleaming blade that came out of nowhere, soft and swift, to meet his with deft precision.
“Keep to your course,” its owner told the steersman calmly.
Kurthe stared along the sword and met the dark, dangerous eyes of Belmer, looking back at him expressionlessly.
“You!” the Konigheimer shouted as his eyes kindled into two red flames. “All of this started when we took your cursed writs—and became, it seems, Master Soft-and-Sweet, your slaves!”
He smashed his blade free of Belmer’s in a skirl of protesting steel and waved it menacingly, eyes narrowing. “That, little worm, is going to stop right now. I’m going to see the color of your innards, Belmer— here, on this deck, now!”
Belmer shrugged and spread his hands. With another snarl, Kurthe stepped forward and swung with vicious force.
The small man ducked and swayed smoothly, and the Konigheimer’s blade whistled through empty air. Belmer reached out with almost delicate grace and slid his own blade along Kurthe’s side, slicing through the Sharker’s stained old shirt and drawing a ribbon of dark blood along exposed ribs. Then he stepped away as if he had all the leisure in the world, in time to deflect Kurthe’s frantic backhand swing down into the deck boards with a ringing clang.
The other Sharkers watched, stepping slowly closer, and the crew of the Morning Bird—all save their moaning, hand-wringing captain—clambered up to perches low in the rigging to see better. Sobbing with rage and pain, Kurthe swung his borrowed blade in another great two-handed swing, to chop the fat little man in half at gut level.
The steel bit deep, ripping into Belmer. No blood sprayed, and they heard no wet thunk of metal biting flesh. Kurthe’s blade tore easily through soft leather, and cloth beneath it, and burst into view again, trailing a few tumbling glass vials—and they all saw that Belmer’s fat belly was a false thing: a front of padding and straps.
Belmer had taken the slash to stay close, bending over backward away from it, falling—no, he touched the deck with one spread hand, and in the same fluid motion used it as a spring to lunge back up, in behind Kurthe’s swing. His own blade sliced open the Sharker leader’s shoulder and shirt together, and—as Belmer glided swiftly sideways—peeled the shirt away to lay bare the Konigheimer’s whip-scarred back.
As the watchers gaped at that catlike attack, Belmer shot them a quick look and moved sideways again with the same gliding grace, unbuckling his false belly to let it fall. As the wounded leader of the Sharkers snarled around to meet him, the small man, suddenly thin and sleek, stood facing them all. Now, as Belmer fought, no one could take him from the rear.
Bellowing in frustration and rising pain, Kurthe advanced with his head lowered, like a bull seeking to drive an opponent into a corner, chopping and hacking in short swings that wove a deadly, oncoming wall of steel. Belmer took a pace back, braced himself, and then met those swings with his own blade. His strength surprised them all.
When the blades met and shivered, and the sparks flew, it was Kurthe’s steel that was turned aside, and the former slave who grunted with effort.
Calmly, icily silent, Belmer parried his furious foe, causing the Konigheimer’s blade to glance wildly hither and thither. Each time it clanged too wide, the tip of the smaller man’s blade darted in like the questing tongue of a serpent, slicing Kurthe’s wrist here, and his forearm there. Soon the panting pirate was streaming blood from a dozen small cuts, and his sword hand was slick with dark blood.
Kurthe’s fury mounted. He began to jump from side to side, seeking to startle his adversary, or use the momentum of his landings to jar the smaller man’s grip on that deadly, darting blade. Belmer calmly slashed away Kurthe’s shirt on his other flank, giving him a wound to match the first cut he’d taken on his ribs. The furious pirate balled up his own bloodsoaked shirt and swung it like a club, beating down Belmer’s blade so that he could launch a low, deadly thrust right through the smaller man’s belt.
The man who’d hired them all flashed a smile at him and nodded his head in what might have been admiration, as he sprang sideways like an acrobat at a fair.
Kurthe’s seeking sword point found only empty air. Overbalanced, he couldn’t manage the grip he needed to stop Belmer from tearing his own blade free. The small man twisted past the snarling pirate, spinning to rap him on the shoulder with the pommel of a dagger that hadn’t been in his hand a moment before.
Jolloth and Brindra murmured in fearful unison at that as they watched—but when Kurthe and Belmer spun to a halt to face each other once more, the dagger was gone again, and the smaller man’s knife hand was empty.
“Still hungry to know the color of my innards?” Belmer asked as quietly as if he’d been asking his foe’s name.
Kurthe, panting for breath, only growled deep in his throat and leapt forward, swinging his blade again. The bloody rags of his shirt swirled from the wrist of his free hand; Belmer cut through them with a slash that sent a scrap of cloth flying out into the waves beyond the rail, parried Kurthe’s cutting blade, and then dipped to slice into the Sharker’s leg just below his knee.
Kurthe howled, hopped sideways in pain, and staggered back. Belmer did not pursue him, but stood waiting until his angry foe came at him again. A low, snakelike wriggle took the outlander out of the way of a mighty hack that would have cut clear through his shoulder, had it landed. Belmer calmly planted one hand on the deck, spun around on it, and thrust his sword alongside Kurthe’s other leg, laying it open in a spot that matched the wound above his other boot.
Kurthe roared in fresh pain, and more than one of the watching Sharkers swallowed. It was clear enough that Belmer was toying with their leader, showing everyone that he could slay the Konigheimer whenever he desired. Death could not be far off for Kurthe Lornar, for all his long struggle from the slavery in the upland orchards of his land to freedom on a heaving pirate deck.
“Give it up, Kurthe,” Sharessa cried, as the two men circled each other once more. “He can—”
Kurthe shook his head violently, and waved her away with the hand that trailed the bloody scraps of his shirt. She fell silent as Belmer said, “Obedience, man of Konigheim, is sometimes the most prudent thing.” Their blades met again, and Belmer sent Kurthe staggering back with a swift kick to the belly. “Can you see that?”
This latest humiliation seemed to drive Kurthe to the heights of rage. He chopped and hacked at the smaller man in a wild frenzy of blood, sweat, and singing steel. Belmer ducked and weaved and met him blow for blow, until the winded Sharker fell back, gasping for air. Blood was trickling into his eyes from where the smaller man’s deadly blade had cut away a lock of his hair. He stared around dazedly to see if he could find the place where it had fallen.
As he stood, panting and glaring, Belmer’s voice came again, still with that same maddening, unruffled calm. “Had enough?”
With a shriek of pure fury, Kurthe bent and snatched a knife from one boot, hurling it at Belmer’s face. The smaller man struck it aside with his blade—but Kurthe, still crouched, had followed it straightaway with a dagger drawn from his other boot.
End over end, like a silver spark in the morning light, it spun toward Belmer’s unprotected face. Calmly the small man reached over his own raised sword to pluck the oncoming dagger out of the air.
It quivered for a moment in his unharmed fingertips, drawing gasps from Ingrar and Sharessa, and a choked-out oath from Rings. And then, swift and sure, Belmer gave it back to its owner.
Kurthe’s neck grew a sudden steel protruberance. The big Konigheimer choked, turned to his comrades with an imploring look in his eyes, clutched vainly at his throat, and then toppled to the decks with a crash. He rolled back and forth, twisting his body in agony, gave a last, desperate gurgle around the deeply-planted dagger, and fell still.
Belmer stepped around the spreading pool of blood and strode toward the remaining Sharkers, the sword in his hand glistening with Kurthe’s blood.
“Are you still with me?” he asked them calmly. “Or am I going to have to—” he glanced back at the dead man “—cancel a few more contracts?”
Five of the Sharkers looked uneasily at each other, and then back at Belmer, their hands on the hilts of their weapons.
The sixth, Sharessa, collected their gazes almost fiercely with her own dark eyes, turned deliberately to face the man who’d hired them, and said firmly, “We’re with you.”
As Rings and Ingrar nodded slowly, she added crisply, “Landfall in Doegan, and a lady to find, was it not?”
A sudden smile broke across Belmer’s face, and he bowed to her as one might to a court noble. “Lady, it was.” he said.
Epilogue
Back in the rigging again.
The man who was no longer fat hung in his favorite spot in the shrouds and smiled at that thought as he watched the moonlight turn Sharessa’s bared shoulders to pearly marble below him.
Her dark hair was a swirl of wet black flame in the waters of the deck-tub he’d pumped full earlier, as she bathed unconcernedly, ignoring him. Belmer kept as still as a stone, his eyes moving from her to the endless dark waves and back again. As alert as he always was… and always must be.
The magic his patron had given him for this task was almost all gone now. He’d had to use the prayer-token of Umberlee from Doegan that had cost him so much in Tharkar, and the box of mists. Kurthe’s desperate blade had smashed two of his precious vials, but he still had the long waxed climbing-cord bound about his waist, and the boot-heel daggers under his feet. Yet, as usual, his wits would have to be his first and best weapon in the days ahead, as he hunted down this Eidola, who must die. Who would die.
The six surviving pirates led by the lonely woman below were his second weapon in that hunt. He hoped the task wouldn’t take all their lives—he hated waste—but after all, as the ballad said, all true pirates found their deaths through fire, sea, or sword.
As he’d had to slay the Konigheimer. Belmer sighed, stirred like a silent shadow, and slipped away aloft, climbing along the rigging like a surefooted cat.
In the tub below, Sharessa watched the mysterious man move away: Kurthe’s killer, and the man who was all too likely to lead them all to their deaths—and shrugged away a stray tear. The gods can take us all, at any time. Why not go down fighting?
As the catlike form moved away from above her, one by one, from behind him the stars came out again.
WELCOME TO THE UTTER EAST!
THE DOUBLE DIAMOND TRIANGLE SAGA
The story continues…
The bride of the Open Lord of Waterdeep has been abducted. The kidnappers are from the far-off lands of the Utter East. But who are they? And what do they really want? Now a group of brave paladins must travel to the perilous kingdoms of this unknown land to find the answers. But in this mysterious world, nothing is ever quite what it appears.
Look for the other books in the series
The Abduction
J. Robert King
The Paladins
James M. Ward and David Wise
Errand of Mercy
Roger E. Moore
An Opportunity for Profit
Dave Gross
Conspiracy
J. Robert King
Uneasy Alliances
David Cook with Peter Archer
Easy Betrayals
Richard Baker
The Diamond
J. Robert King & Ed Greenwood
More from the Double Diamond Triangle Saga
By Ed Greenwood
In the mysterious land of the Utter East, a shadowy figure hires a group of unemployed pirates to aid him in a dangerous mission. What is their connection to the kidnapping of a young bride that has taken place in the faraway city of Waterdeep? Behind the mission lies a hidden purpose. Yet secrets may be revealed as you follow the quest of the mercenaries.
By Roger E. Moore
The paladins sent by the Lord of Waterdeep to rescue his kidnapped bride have arrived in a kingdom of the Utter East. The monarch seems friendly; but the kingdom is beset by menacing fiends. Before the ruler agrees to help the paladins in their quest, there is just one small task they must perform….
By Dave Gross
The pirates hired to assassinate the kidnapped Waterdeep bride are hot on the trail. Having landed on the shores of the Utter East, they face fiendish perils and desperate dangers—all without knowing the identify of their employer. Now fate has set them on a collision course with others whose motives are quite different from their own.
About the Author
Ed Greenwood is the creator of the FORGOTTEN REALMS® fantasy setting, an award-winning game designer, and a best-selling author whose fantasy novels have sold millions of copies worldwide in more than thirty languages.
Forgotten Realms - [Double Diamond Triangle Saga 03] - The Mercenaries Page 7