by Jean Rabe
There were thorny plants in that section of the woods and ones with supple stems and white, fist-sized flowers. More flowers, purple ones with yellow centers, grew on vines that hung from high branches. Tall grasses grew everywhere, and Saarh spotted a clump that had been chewed on by some creature. When she returned to the tribe, she intended to tell Brab to gather a party and explore, collecting plants and determining which were edible. And they’d catch insects, too, and learn which were the most tasty.
“A good home,” she pronounced, pleased that she had brought the goblins out of the caverns and to a place so abundant with space and food and good smells. “And a safe one.”
She’d seen no sign of dwarves or umber hulks-both races she was familiar with and hated. In significant numbers, they could threaten her tribe. During previous trips she’d not spotted anything in the woods that might pose a problem. It was a place where apparently even younglings could wander freely.
“A powerful place.” She’d been walking west because the arcane pulse that drew her out of the caverns still emanated from that direction. She hoped to find the source of that pulse that day. If it was too far away, she’d have to return to the tribe and move them in that direction. But she hoped that would not be necessary.
Saarh hadn’t traveled more than another mile before something else drew her attention. She’d never heard such a noise before, a “maaawww” that reverberated throughout the clearing she had entered. It sounded powerful, maybe fierce, but it wasn’t associated with the arcane thing she was seeking.
“What is it? What, what, what?” She headed toward the maaawwwing sound, veering a little to the south. She cursed herself for always being so curious, but she knew she would not be able to go on without finding the source of the sound.
A dozen steps later, and through a gap in some small flowering bushes, Saarh saw the maaawwwing beast.
“A bear.”
She’d seen a few in her younger years in the high caves in the mountain. She figured they were creatures of the range, and she’d not thought to find them in the woods. It was not terribly large, no more than the weight of four grown goblins, so she thought it might be a youngling. It had caught a small deer and had its snout stuck in its belly, feasting.
Saarh thought the young bear was a magnificent creature, with thick fur the color of mud, but silvery on the ends around its neck and hindquarters. It raised its head, blood dripping from its jaws, and made the maaawwwing sound again. It had a short, stubby tail, like the cave bears she’d seen, and a muscular hump on its shoulders. Its legs rippled as it tore into the deer more fiercely.
She’d seen enough, and she’d tell Brab about the sighting. But it was back to business; she promised herself no more distractions. She had started to withdraw when a throaty growl sounded, so loud that she felt the ripples of it against the bottoms of her feet. It was accompanied by a crashing sound and the appearance of a second bear, easily five times the size of the first.
Saarh stood rooted in awe. Terror seized her when she realized the great bear was charging straight at her. The shaman acted instinctively. She raised her right arm toward the clouds while dropping to a crouch and thrusting her fingers into the earth. The sky crackled with energy, and lightning flickered down, a thin bolt striking the large bear and another striking the top of a spindly oak. The ground surged around her fingers and churned outward in a growing ripple that turned to a mound right in front of the bear.
The creature reared in pain from the lightning. Saarh could feel its heart, hammering so wildly, she thought it would burst. She called down another bolt, which whipped its neck. The bear was knocked aside. The stench of burned flesh and fur filled the air, along with the smell of something acrid that the lightning had left behind.
Its claws were nearly as long as Saarh’s forearm, and she knew if the bear took a swipe at her, it would slay her instantly. Its head was round and large, its mouth filled with wicked, white teeth that flashed and sparkled because of the lightning. The creature’s growl had turned into a whimper of pain, however, as it slumped forward on the mound of earth Saarh had summoned.
Behind it, the smaller bear made a mewling sound, looking to its dead parent, then staring at the goblin. It raised its bloodstained lips and thundered forward. Saarh sent out another ripple of earth, that one uprooting a small tree and sending it into the small bear’s path. It only slowed the creature, but that was enough time for her to call down a final bolt of lightning to slay it.
Above, the sky darkened and lightning flickered in the thick clouds. Saarh’s magic had touched off another storm. As the wet drops started to fall, she shook out her hands, stood, and turned east.
Finding the source of the arcane pulse would have to wait. She needed to return to her tribe and direct them there. No use letting the bear carcasses go to waste; they would feed plenty of her people.
Mudwort sat in the sand, the waves surging in to cover her legs, then the water retreating and taking some of the beach with it. Her hands were thrust down at her sides, fingers buried and senses far from the shore of the New Sea, observing Saarh.
She was upset that Saarh had not found the arcane something that was drawing her westward. But at the same time, she was captivated by the shaman’s ability to pull lightning out of the clouds. Had the shaman not tarried and found the bears, Mudwort might not have learned about such wonderful magic.
Mudwort released the image and tugged her hands free of the sand. The seeing was no longer interesting. She had no inclination to watch Saarh retrieve the goblin tribe and watch them all devour the bears. But she would look in on the shaman later.
Mudwort looked up at the sky. There were thick white clouds up there, just as there had been over the Qualinesti Forest in her vision. Some had gray bellies full of water. She concentrated, her brow wrinkling in a painful-looking expression. She could send her senses so easily into the earth and across time. Could she, she wondered for the first time, also send her senses skyward?
Mudwort had never been taught magic, as she knew the Dark Knight wizard had. She accidentally learned of her arcane ability years earlier, shortly after being captured by the ogres and sold to work in Steel Town. During long hours in the mines, she started imagining that the stone was talking to her. At first she thought she was going mad. The goblins around her thought so too, telling everyone she had a sour mind. But eventually Mudwort discovered that the stone really was speaking, not exactly in the way one goblin talks to another, but conveying emotions and impressions.
She steadily and secretly honed her skills, learning to sense where the richest veins of ore were, discovering places where the stone was either weak or especially strong, and finally discovering how to send her senses through the stone to scry on other places and creatures. Mingling her magic with others, such as Boliver, came later, as did moving the earth to dig holes.
Could she work with the sky the way she worked with the earth?
Finally she felt the cloud swirl around her, though she still sat firmly on the sand. Her head throbbed from the effort; it felt like needles were stabbing at her eyes. New magic always affected her that way. However, there was always pain before the reward. Her spine tightened and her arms locked, and for an instant she couldn’t breathe. But in the same instant, she felt an odd energy, and she wrapped her thoughts around that energy and tugged.
The cloud directly overhead flickered with silvery threads of light.
She tugged harder, grinding her teeth together and straining as if she were chained and trying to break free. She tugged again and again and watched the silvery threads thicken and flash.
Mudwort couldn’t say how long her mind played with the energy in the cloud-hours maybe, as the clouds shifted to the east and she grew increasingly fatigued and achy. Goblins milled around her, curious about she was doing. Some asked her questions, but she couldn’t take time to answer them and risk losing her hold on the new magic. They eventually ambled away, muttering to themselves, so
me returning later only to leave again.
One of the bolts flashed strongly as it arced down and stopped just short of the water. A boom of thunder followed, and Mudwort fell back, her energy sapped and breath returning. An acridness assailed her nostrils, the same scent she’d registered in her seeing spell after Saarh pulled down a bolt.
It was the scent that had hung in the air in Steel Town when the clouds overhead danced with lightning but failed to follow with rain.
The surf swirled over Mudwort’s legs and chest and retreated. She listened to the surf shushing, the splashing noises of younglings playing in the water, goblin conversations both in the sea and up on the bank, and human words that she couldn’t wholly understand. The latter were being uttered by the priest, who was praying to his insipid god again.
Mudwort pushed herself back into a sitting position just as the surf rushed in again. Her shoulders and upper arms itched, and she saw a white powder on her dry skin and on the little of her tunic that was dry-salt from the sea. Maybe, indeed, the sea was chasing away the last bit of the deathly sickness.
Mudwort stood and waded out to her waist, bracing herself when a small wave came in and tried to knock her over. She was tired of being wet and suspected all the goblins still in the sea were tired of it, save the younglings. But more than her dislike of the sea, she didn’t want to catch the plague. She had too many other things to do, such as learning better how to pull the lightning from the clouds.
It was midafternoon, and there had been no sign of the wizard since he left. She remembered him saying he hoped to be back in the evening, after arranging a way to sail them across the New Sea. She knew Direfang was a little skeptical the wizard would return. But she knew he craved her magic too desperately, so he would come back. He was taking a long time.
She sloshed her way farther out, spotting Direfang standing alone, the water up to his chest. She wouldn’t go out that far, but she’d get closer to him and attract his attention. She’d show him that she could tug lightning from the clouds. She would practice her new spell until either the wizard returned or she became too exhausted.
Then she would learn how to use the wizard’s fire.
Earth magic first. Sky magic soon. Next, fire magic. Her eyes glimmered darkly with the promise of gaining more magic.
No, she decided at the last moment, turning back toward shore; she wouldn’t show Direfang her new magic. That would be her secret and her surprise. Perhaps she would show him later.
GRALLIK’S ARMADA
Twilight had claimed the sky by the time the Clare and the other five ships neared the mouth of the river. They didn’t sail too close to the shore as, even with high tide, the captains were uncertain of the depths. “Lower the longboats,” Gerrold ordered.
There were four on the Clare, and Grallik guessed each would hold twenty or so goblins, which meant several trips would be necessary for that ship alone. Linda’s Grady was the largest of the ships, with a full dozen longboats going over the sides.
Grallik had waited until the last possible moment before informing the Captain Gerrold about the true nature of the passengers he was about to pick up, giving the man a sapphire and promising him another when all the goblins were on board.
“I didn’t sign on for goblins,” Gerrold said irritably, rubbing his chin. “But I knew this would not be a normal run. Not with us coming here at night, and not after being paid so well. I suspect Captain Ghanger knew something odd was happening too.” He referred to the captain of the big merchantman, a sea elf who spent as much time over the side as on the deck. “And I know damn well R’chet had to be suspicious-not that he’d object, given what you’re paying.”
“I paid well,” Grallik echoed. “I bought these ships.”
Gerrold wasn’t the owner of the Clare, but earlier in the day he’d pointed Grallik to a wealthy merchant who owned her and three of the other ships he had engaged. The merchant was willing to part with the Clare for seven of the stones-a price Grallik considered outrageous, but in the end he handed them over. The rest of the ships commanded similar prices. Owning the ships would guarantee the sailors would have no choice but to accept the “cargo.” The Clare and the others could be sold later, though no doubt at a loss, at some port town near the forest where they were headed, though Grallik hoped Direfang might see the wisdom in keeping at least one.
The wizard kept the existing crews after changing fifteen more sapphires for steel pieces and distributing them evenly among the veteran seafarers. The pay was many times over what the sailors would have earned otherwise for a voyage to the Qualinesti Forest-or to anywhere else in the world for that matter. He hoped that steel would buy their loyalty, although he expected plenty of grumbling and complaints when the goblins materialized.
“Lower all of them,” Gerrold barked his commands. “Our … passengers … gentlemen, are goblins. No questions. No arguments.”
But there were arguments, of course, fast and heated ones, and the captain let them run their course for several minutes before silencing the sailors with a violent gesture. Grallik decided to accompany the longboats and climbed in the first one over the side.
“We’ve been compensated well to take the goblins on. The owner of our fair Clare,” he nodded toward Grallik, “has been more than generous. We certainly can stomach the foul beasties for a few weeks. No worse than hauling cattle, gentlemen. And he’s promised they’ll not be too much trouble.”
Oh, they’ll be some trouble, I suspect, Grallik thought as his longboat touched the water.
Bosun’s mate K’lars commanded that longboat. The half-ogre shielded his thick brow with his hand and peered toward the river’s mouth. The clouds were high and thin, so the moonlight revealed the army of goblins gathered on the shore. K’lars growled softly deep in his throat.
“Goblins,” he muttered. “Rats what walk on two legs, they are.”
“Why are we hauling ’em to the Qualinesti Forest?” one of the oarsmen asked. “What’s wrong with the woods over there?” He gestured to the trees west of the river.
“What’s wrong with the mountains?” asked another. “Or the Abyss, for that matter? And why’d you need so many ships for ’em?”
Grallik didn’t reply.
“By the gods!” K’lars shouted when he got closer and saw the spreading mass of goblins. “There must be thousands.”
“Yes,” Grallik said dryly. His shoulders sagged when he realized there were more goblins on the shore than when he’d left them in the morning. Somehow hundreds more had heard the “call” that Mudwort was sending out.
“Four thousand, I’d guess,” K’lars said. He shuddered and spit. “Four thousand, five maybe. Rats, all of them.”
Minutes later, the first wave of goblins climbed into the longboats, chattering and hissing, unnerving the sailors, and crowding in the center of the boats to keep away from the water. Not one had been on the water before, and several of them retched from seasickness before they even made it to the ships.
Staring around at the sailors and other goblins almost contemptuously, Mudwort was among those who climbed into the first boat, settling herself almost regally amid the others.
Yet there were screams and shouts when the first longboat reached the Wavechaser, captained by a minotaur named R’chet. It took an overly tall goblin called Thya to calm the panicked goblins down.
Horace remained on the shore with Direfang, who was trying to convince some of the goblins most reluctant to accept the strategy of the sea crossing, when the longboats returned for a second trip.
“Rather walk some more,” Skakee argued. “Walking is better. Can’t swim, Direfang. Walk to the Qualinesti Forest. Walk, walk, walk.”
“Can’t swim,” voice after voice echoed.
“You don’t have to swim,” Horace said, stepping close to Direfang and lending his support to the hobgoblin leader. The priest spoke slowly and clearly in the goblin tongue. “The ship does it for you.” He cupped his hands togethe
r, imitating the vessel, raising his voice so many could hear. “It will carry you across the water and-”
“What if it sinks?” Skakee asked. She shivered at the notion. “If it sinks, all the goblins will drown.”
Direfang spoke in Horace’s ear, and the priest began a spell. Horace had relied on variations of the spell whenever the goblins became unruly in Steel Town. There had been three other priests in the mining camp, and all of them used similar enchantments on the goblins and hobgoblins from time to time. The divine coercion had been particularly useful after the earthquakes struck, keeping some of the goblins from escaping; it worked best on those with simple minds, the priest told Direfang.
“No fear,” Horace intoned. “Have no fear of the longboats and the great ship. Have no fear of the water on which we will sail.” The words were repeated, the sound was rich and melodic, almost like a song, and the goblins nearest to the priest were listening intently. “The sea belongs to Zeboim, and she will keep us safe.”
Even Direfang found himself caught up in the priest’s incantation.
“Safe,” Skakee said. “Have no fear of the water. Zeboim.”
“Have no fear of the great ship,” Two-chins said. He swayed back and forth in time with the bobbing of the longboats. “Safe, safe, safe.”
Direfang shivered. The hobgoblin was thankful for the priest’s incantation in that instance. But it worried him that Horace retained the power to sway the simple minds of the goblins.
“Into the boats,” Direfang ordered.
“Safe in the boats,” Skakee echoed. She was quick to climb into the closest boat, settling herself next to a sailor who was clearly repulsed by her presence. Regardless, she plucked at his shirtsleeve and oohed over the colorful stripes in the material.
“Skull man, watch the sailors,” Direfang cautioned.
“Aye, Foreman. My spell can soothe the men too.”
Despite Horace’s enchantment, eighteen goblins refused to budge from the sand. They saw what was happening to the others; they refused to look the priest in the eye, and they plugged their ears with their fingers, managing to resist his persuasive words.