He’d come a long way in the three days since his being taken aboard their ship. He had slept for a full day while the ship’s medics had tended to his wounds. The bullet had been promptly removed from his shoulder and his bruises salved with willow bark and hot compresses, so that he was up and conversing with his benefactors by the following evening’s supper. Captain DeMontaigne took great interest in him, having him dine at his table on the second evening that Crow was aboard the ship. It was there, amidst discussions of killim and the impending war between Dusty Yen and the western cities, that Crow and Oliver had met.
“Strange weapons indeed,” Oliver had said, when talk had drifted to combat techniques. “Throwing knives on strings. I’d like to see how they are used.”
Crow had responded in a manner his sister would have rolled her eyes at. “It would be an honor to show one such as yourself the fighting technique my father perfected in the War for the Green Lands. Perhaps we could have a friendly skirmish, just you and myself, on the decks above? This way, all the Boat People can see how these strange weapons are wielded in the hands of an expert.”
Oliver had gladly accepted his challenge. They were to skirmish at noon the following day. It was only that morning that Crow had begun to hear whispers about Oliver being one of the most skilled fighters amongst his people. He had silently hoped that his battle prowess would prove adequate, but once the battle began and every one of his thrown knives was knocked from the air, Crow was beginning to have his doubts.
“Shall we continue, friend Black Wing? Or have you sufficiently showed us how your weapons are used in the… how did you call it… the hands of an expert?” The crowd began to laugh, and Crow felt his face grow hot.
“I’m just getting started. Friend.” Crow spoke the last word through his teeth, then charged ahead, a knife in each hand.
Oliver had begun to swing one of his nunchaku around. It made it hard to see his movements, as if he were a snake slithering through dense foliage, its exact location camouflaged by its surroundings. DeMontaigne’s son was upon him before he even knew it. Crow felt the thwack of one metal rod on his arm, then another on his ribs. He tried to focus, but the hits were coming too hard, too quick. He knew he wasn’t at his full strength, and his stamina was fading fast.
“Focus, Crow.” The voice had not come from anyone near him, nor had it even been a sound upon the air. It had been in his head, just for him to hear. The voice belonged to her, the young woman with the gnarled oak tattooed on her back. Her name was Kara, Kara of the Nameless. Crow looked up, instinctively finding her atop the higher deck, staring at him intently with her gray eyes. “You know where he will strike.”
Crow felt another crack of the nunchaku on his hip, then another to his thigh. How could he possibly know where Oliver was about to hit him? The damned man was just too fast.
“Clear your mind, you idiot,” Crow whispered to himself. He had to focus, had to shut off the spigot of doubt flooding his head. He felt the worn leather of the knives in his palms, knew he had to trust them fully to strike and parry where they had to.
He could feel Kara smile and the crowd gasp as he blocked one of Oliver’s attacks with his knife, then another. Oliver was stunned; he had been overcompensating in his attacks, not counting on Crow being able to defend himself. He had left himself completely defenseless, which the young Black Wing capitalized on by spinning around and letting loose a horse-kick into Oliver’s stomach. The kick connected, sending the serpentine young Boat Person careening through the air before crashing back to the deck.
There was a hushed silence, as Oliver lay motionless on the deck. Slowly, he got back to his feet, and when a smile appeared on his face beneath his thin mustache, the Boat People watching erupted into laughter.
“Mercy, sir Crow. You have truly bested me.” Oliver brushed away the dust from his pants. His smile had not left, nor had the laughter from the onlookers. The throbbing pain that emanated through Crow’s body was to such a degree that he couldn’t feel anything else, save for bewilderment as to why everyone was still chuckling and pointing at him. What was so funny?
Oliver continued. “But tell me sir, is it customary for a Black Wing to remove his trousers when victorious in battle?” The laughter on the deck cascaded into a roar. Crow looked down to where Oliver was pointing his nunchaku: somehow, in the melee, Oliver had undid Crow’s belt and his pants had dropped around his ankles. Crow felt his face redden as he rushed to pull his pants back up.
“Enough, enough,” Captain DeMontaigne said, stepping between the two young men. “We’ve seen enough here. A good show of technique by the both of you.”
The captain looked at his son with a steely gaze that seemed to say ‘you went too far,’ but Oliver was too preoccupied with the praises being lavished upon him by the other Boat People to care much for his father’s silent scolding. Crow felt the captain’s eyes turn to him, but he couldn’t meet his gaze. He was too embarrassed, had made too much a fool of himself. He looked instead for Kara, who wasn’t where she had been when she had silently spoke to him. She had probably been too embarrassed for him to stay.
By Elon’s grace, he had never been so bested in a fight, so thoroughly made a fool of. Oliver seemed to occupy a place similar to to the one he did amongst the Black Wings; it made him realize that he had been nothing but a tree amongst a forest of saplings. And these Boat People, particularly the DeMontaignes, were the mountains he was now standing against. It made him feel small, foolish, naive.
Crow was so lost in his thoughts that he failed to see the largest mountain of all approaching him. Captain DeMontaigne put a firm hand on his shoulder. His steely eyes were kind when Crow looked up to meet them. “Don’t be too hard on yourself, young man. You put up a great fight, and in my view, it was a draw. That my son had to do something so underhanded is proof that you fought well. Besides, you’re not even at your full strength. I hope to see a rematch when you are.”
“Thank you, Captain.” The older man’s words were but a minor salve for Crow’s wounded pride, and the Black Wing felt himself looking anxiously for a way to get away. When he looked down at his shoulder, where the bandage was beginning to be soaked through with blood, he saw his chance. “Looks like I should get this redressed. All that movement must have reopened the wound.”
“Yes, I see that. Mon Dieu...” DeMontaigne looked up towards the ship’s central mast as the foghorn’s bellow cut through the air. The lookout in the crow’s nest was calling for all eyes to the starboard side. Quickly forgetting his reopened wound, Crow followed DeMontaigne as the captain rushed over to the base of the mast, calling up to the lookout for more on what he was seeing.
“Les corps!” The lookout shouted down. “They are all on the shore! More undead than I’ve ever seen in the Teeth!” The Teeth were where the Hud met the ocean, so called because of the ruins of buildings that rose out of the water in various spots like the jagged molars of a drowned god. There had been a great city here once, some even said the greatest city of all, but now most of it was underwater. The little that still met the air had completely fallen into ruin and posed a grave risk to all ships passing through. The Teeth were infamous for being a graveyard for the reckless.
“Hand me some binoculars! Quick!” The nearest person to DeMontaigne gave him what he asked for. His face grew dark when he saw what had amassed upon the shore.
“What is it? How many are there?”
“Here, Crow. Look for yourself.” Crow took the binoculars from the taller man’s hand, his breath quickening as he peered through the lenses. The killim on the shore were shoulder to shoulder and as thick as the Hud below was deep. Every rotten hand clawed at the air, their gazes focused on the ship and the Boat People aboard it. The waters of the Teeth were wide; the absolute avoidance of any submerged ruinous buildings meant sailing through the river’s middle, which they had been doing since that morning. The shores on either side were mere lines on the horizon, and the dead should not ha
ve been able to sense them this far out. It sent a chill down his spine.
“How do they sense us?” Crow asked, handing the binoculars back to DeMontaigne.
“I don’t know. In all my days, in all my travels, I’ve never seen anything like this.” All talk had ceased, as everyone had come to the starboard side to gaze out at the undead, which were but a trembling white blur on the shore without the aid of binoculars. The wind would occasionally carry their grunts and groans to them, making it sound as if the living corpses were underdeck, lurking amidst the barrels of grain and corn meal. After a few minutes, DeMontaigne turned to his people and spoke.
“This does not change anything,” he boomed. “We are still bound for the Ruins of the Nameless. Les Corps do not venture out into the water, as we all know. It is one of the reasons we as Boat People thrive, while those on the land live in fear of the shadows that move in the night. There will be no undead to worry about in the Ruins of the Nameless. It is an island, lest we forget, and we should be arriving there within the hour. I need all crew to man their stations and prepare for our disembarkment. Hurry now.”
The captain turned and marched straight for his quarters, barking a word or two at people as he passed, snapping them out of their reveries. He left Crow without so much as a parting word. Crow looked around; there was not one Boat Person without anxiety carved into his or her face. It seemed to him like none of them wanted to be here, in the Teeth, that they were all grudgingly performing a job they were conscripted into against their will. Boat People only ventured into the Green Lands for business; their home was in the north, beyond the Aderon Mountains, where DeMontaigne said they lived in houses on stilts built in the middle of shining lakes. They tried to stay as far away from killim, what they called les corps, as possible.
So why were they coming this far south? What was in the Ruins of the Nameless that they so desperately needed to attend to, and with so many people? Kara had said there were people who wanted to meet him - who were they? Posing these questions at various times over the past few days had only yielded cryptic responses. Perhaps the Boat People didn’t even know why they were going to the Ruins. It would explain their reluctance, their trepidation.
As he got his shoulder repatched, Crow thought about Kara and her strange powers. How was she able to speak to him with no movement of her lips? It was as if she had a mind-link with him, the same his sister had with Leo. Yet, Brook said she was only able to communicate feelings between her and her pup, not actual words. Kara’s voice actually resonated in his head, as clear as if she was speaking right next to him.
What also amazed him was how the Boat People tiptoed about the young woman with ribbons in her hair and oak tree tattooed on her back. It reminded him of how some of the older Black Wings interacted with the clay statues of Elon, whispering and bowing and lighting sage in the corners of the longhouses where the alters were built. The Boat People revered Kara as though she were divine, and perhaps she was. Crow hadn’t seen anything to think otherwise.
“All hands on deck!” DeMontaigne called from above, his thunderous voice enhanced by the use of a large horn. “Prepare to dock!” The ship’s medic finished her bandaging and gave Crow a smile.
“You were very brave out there today. Not very many would go toe to toe with Oliver.” Crow mumbled thanks, the embarrassment from earlier rearing its head again. He grabbed his cape and ran above deck. He stopped in his tracks atop the steps, his mouth slack and eyes wide at what the ship was slowly approaching.
There were around a dozen metal towers rising from the Hud’s sloshing waters, the glass on their surfaces brightly gleaming in the sun of the late afternoon. Vines and grasses grew on the metal framework, flowers in brilliant hues like rainbow quilts draped over their girths. Ropes and nets snaked from building to building, forming a wall of canopies and bridges. Crow saw people hanging from them, watching as the large boat approached. They looked much like Kara, at least in how they were dressed, with only a modest amount of fabric to cover their sexes. These were the Nameless, while the collection of buildings were the ruin they called home.
Kara stood at the bow of the ship, her toes hanging over the lip of the deck. She silently watched her people, and they did the same of her, until she threw her arms in the sky and screamed a high-pitched warrior’s cry. The Nameless spread out through the ruins of the buildings returned her shout with a collective one of their own, washing over Crow like a tidal wave. He looked among the Boat People; if they were not busy with fastening hatches or pulling ropes, they stood in reverential silence, their hands clasped together, watching the Ruins of the Nameless approach. Some even had tears in their eyes or wept freely.
There was no dock that jutted from the buildings, just an aerial bridge which was at the same height as the deck of the ship. It was next to this bridge of hemp rope, wood and steel that the Boat People expertly anchored. The engines quieted, a sound and vibration that Crow had grown so accustomed to that the silence that followed was unnatural, unsettling. It was a quiet he had never known, not even in his many solo sojourns through the forest. He felt it was without depth, that to give in to it and go as deep as it beckoned would unravel his mind. He couldn’t resist it though, and felt his ear plumbing the silence for the secrets it contained. There was a rhythm beneath it, drumming and chanting…
“You hear it, do you?” DeMontaigne said, coming up next to him. The man’s presence calmed his nerves and brought him back from his reverie. “Your ears don’t deceive you. There is a ceremony going on in the middle of the ruins. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t know what it was about, or who it was for.” Crow didn’t need to look at the mountain of a man to know he was referring to him.
“What do they want from me?” Crow asked, as some of the Nameless came across the bridge and dropped onto the boat. He had felt safe and secure in the care of the Boat People, but the ruins were jarring a voice in him that said his chances may be better jumping overboard and dealing with the killim on the shore.
DeMontaigne put his hand on Crow’s shoulder. “No harm will come to you. I give you my word as captain of this ship. The Nameless believe you have an important part to play in the events that are unfolding in the Green Lands and the world beyond. What part that is, your guess is as good as mine. All I know is that those who live amidst these ruins are a mystical people, who occupy a place between waking and dreaming. Time to them is like a lake they can swim through rather than the fast-moving river which the likes of you and I are caught in. It is why we respect and protect them the way we do. Their powers are great and strong, and they’ve helped us thrive as a people, but they are not warriors. Be strong now, Crow. They approach.”
Three Nameless had crossed the bridge. Kara met them when they jumped to the boat’s deck, touching her forehead to theirs one after the other. She gestured in Crow’s direction, and they all turned, as did the heads of all the Boat People gathered. It wasn’t so much the amount of gazes on Crow that made his face grow hot, but rather the eyes of the Nameless, which, though of different hues, still shone with the same lucidity and knowledge that Kara’s did.
She approached him, her gray eyes afire. “Come with us, Crow. There are those who have been waiting for your arrival for sometime, and they wait inside.” She touched him, and he felt an intense calm wash over his body. He found himself wondering how it was she could do that, but the thought was quickly swept away. There was no need for fear or doubt when she touched him.
“Okay.” His voice sounded to him as though it were packed away in a hemp sack of millet or barley. He was tired, he realized, feeling as if he could fall asleep standing there. He felt like he was sleepwalking, half-awake. There was a magnetism that permeated his body, something that was not only keeping him up but also drew him after the Nameless as they climbed back up the ropes and began their way back over the bridge. He swung deftly up after them and followed their dexterous footfalls, his sleepiness fading the further he got away from the boat, rep
laced by an anxious excitement.
Feeling more lucid, Crow realized he hadn’t said goodbye to any of the Boat People. He turned his head, and the first set of eyes he fell on were Oliver’s. Beneath the young man’s thin mustache was a frown, in his dusky violet eyes the trembling conviction that it should have been him being escorted into the Ruins of the Nameless, that he was the one who was meant to have a destiny beyond that of being a Boat Person.
It’s not as if I chose this, Crow thought, but knew that he had always wanted more than what life as a Black Wing afforded, particularly in the years after the War for the Green Lands, when his people had shifted from being nomadic warriors righting wrongs throughout the land into a tribe of hunter-gatherers. He had wanted the same thing Oliver wanted now, and would be burning with jealousy if he and the young Boat Person exchanged places. Oliver nodded at him, then smirked. It was as if Oliver was saying, you may have this, Black Wing, but I’ll best you again. You’ll see. Crow smiled back, the challenge accepted.
“Watch your step Crow,” Kara said, as they neared the end of the bridge. The ropes and cables were tied around large steel columns which rose out of the water and acted as the frame for the entire building. The floor of the room was covered in sod, out of which grew various grasses and plants.
The drumming had stopped. Nameless slinked out of the shadows, their fiery eyes never wavering from the Black Wing. They moved slowly as they approached, cautiously, as if the ground below their feet could disappear at any moment, which Crow figured was very possible, considering how old the building must have been.
“This is Skalla Ta, the lost raven?” The Nameless who looked Crow up and down was ancient, with burning eyes beneath his matted, straw-like hair. Tattoos of stars and constellations, the ink as old as the man himself, dotted his body. “He looks no older than twenty winters.”
The Undead King: The Saga of Jai Lin: Book One Page 17