“Rozloom seems likable enough,” Teldin said cautiously, surprised to find that he could in fact like a man who was so blatantly self-serving.
“But …?”
Teldin shrugged, struggling to form his reservations into words. “The man seems to have no convictions,” he began. “Most people, for good or bad, have some set of principles that guide their actions. From what I’ve seen so far, I’d have to say that Rozloom runs on pure self-interest. How can you sail with someone who’ll follow the prevailing wind, no matter what?”
The half-elfs smile disappeared, and his eyes dropped. For a long moment he sat in silence, his meal forgotten.
“What is it, Hectate?” Teldin asked at length.
“Sometimes, sir, staying a chosen course despite the winds can be dangerous. There’s such a thing as holding too strongly to convictions,” the navigator said softly. Without explanation, he rose to his feet and walked out of the galley, leaving Teldin staring blankly after him.
Chapter Three
Tekura leaned farther into the dome of the port window, drawn by the austere beauty of the world below her, set in wildspace like a vast opal against a black velvet cloth. The swirling pattern of white streaks on the orb’s surface charmed her even though it probably indicated that a numbing blizzard awaited them. Intending to share the beauty, the elflike woman glanced back at the three ship’s officers.
Zeddop, their lamentable wizard, was slumped in the thronelike helm, his eyes glazed as he poured magical power into the ship, and his short silvery hair sticking up in random spikes around his pointed ears. Behind him stood the captain and the navigator, huddling together over a stolen star chart and completely absorbed with the challenge of charting their course. Sadness touched Tekura as she studied her adopted kin: Wynlar, a quiet scholar forced into a role of war leader, and his niece Soona, who possessed an exotic, flame-haired beauty reminiscent of elven royalty, as well as a reluctant talent for seduction. Soona had employed both gifts to learn of the secret gateway into the ice planet’s atmosphere.
As part of a centuries-old pact, a magical network enveloped the planet and alerted elven patrol ships whenever a craft entered or left the planet’s atmosphere. A long-ago elven admiral had created a randomly shifting gate to allow elven spy ships to slip through the net. Eventually the admiral’s overzealous activities were detected by the Imperial Fleet. The elves had supposedly reprimanded him, but they kept the gate open and secret. Tekura would bet her left hand that they weren’t above using it either.
“Merciful Ptah!” the captain swore in a dull whisper. His gaze was fixed on the starboard window, and the star chart he had been studying a moment before dropped unheeded to the floor.
Soona and Tekura stared into the velvet blackness, squinting as they tried to make out the danger their sharp-eyed captain perceived. “Over there, near Vesta,” Wynlar directed them, pointing toward the domed windows that were set like eyes on either side of the forecastle. Each window yielded a view of Vesta, one of the three large moons of the ice planet Armistice.
A shadow touched the edge of the pale violet disk. The small group watched with horrified fascination as the shadow grew, slowly metamorphosing into the silhouette of a huge, twisted butterfly.
“Man-o-war,” murmured the captain, stating what they all knew. An elven man-o-war was one of the most powerful and feared ships of wildspace. Their shrike ship was a sleek, birdlike vessel that could dart and maneuver like a spacebound sparrow, but in battle it would present little challenge to the elven ship. If the stolen cloaking device did not hide the shrike ship from the elves, their illegal cargo would not reach Armistice and their dream of revenge would die with them.
“It’s coming straight at us,” Soona reported in a voice tight with fear.
And coming fast, Tekura noted silently. The man-o-war had changed its course and was growing larger with frightening speed. Within moments they could see plainly both the ship and the dark purple shadow it cast back upon the moon.
“Tell me, Tekura, is your plan worth tackling that?” demanded Zeddop, nodding toward the approaching ship.
A small, hard smile twitched the young woman’s lips, but her gaze never left the man-o-war. “If the cloaking device works, Zeddop, we won’t have to fight,” she replied, absently tucking a strand of silvery hair behind one pointed ear.
It has to work, Tekura thought fiercely, as if the force of her will could strengthen the magic cloaking device. The price she’d paid to obtain it was simply too high for her to accept the possibility of failure. The cloaking device already had cost years of her life, years spent pretending to be everything she abhorred. Passing as an elf, she had worked as a technician on one spelljamming vessel after another until her reputation earned her a post with the Imperial Fleet. Finally, her mission had required her to kill. The ironic justice of this did not escape her – after all, the elves had designed her kind as living weapons – but the necessary act had bruised and sullied her spirit. Whenever the burden grew too heavy, Tekura remembered the look on those elves’ faces when she had gone into the Change: first shock, then terror incongruously mixed with disgust. They had disdained her even as she had cut them down.
The man-o-war came on, pushing aside Tekura’s memories. Soon they would have to either run or fight. Tekura shot a glance at the captain. As she expected, Wynlar’s angular face was contorted by powerfully conflicting emotions. Although their mission depended on getting past the elven patrol ship, every instinct urged the captain toward battle. It was a compulsion Tekura knew too well, a compulsion she read upon every face in the room. To their race, running from a fight was not only unthinkable, but almost impossible. They were, after all, living weapons.
Tekura gritted her teeth, fighting the gathering battle-lust that threatened to overwhelm her every thought and sinew.
Her hands yearned for the feel of a weapon, and she rubbed her palms against her thighs as if the pebbly fabric of her uniform could quiet the itching, insistent desire to fight. She forced herself to ignore the weapons that the officers kept close at hand – the enormous swords and the two-pointed halberds that they could barely lift until battle brought the Change upon them. Tekura knew that, throughout the shrike ship, every member of the crew had similar weapons at hand. Perhaps some already had succumbed to the Change.
The man-o-war moved steadily closer, and throughout the shrike ship there was not a word, barely a breath. The sensitive bodies of the space-bred race could feel the first persuasive tugs of the large ship’s approaching gravity field. If the shrike ship continued on its carefully charted course, the man-o-war’s atmosphere would engulf it even if the stolen cloaking device did work.
After a long moment of silent struggle, the captain’s features settled into taut resolve. “Evasive action, Zeddop, at full speed,” he said in a soft tone as he briefly touched the helmsman’s thin shoulder.
The wizard nodded, looking faintly relieved. His hands clenched around the arms of the helm as he transformed magic into motion. The shrike ship turned in a tight arc and sped away, quickly putting distance between them and the man-o-war. Suddenly the elven ship banked sharply, leaving the pale violet moon behind and soaring with silent majesty into the darkness.
The small group expelled a collective sigh. The shrike ship had not been seen after all.
“Congratulations, Tekura.” Wynlar laid a hand on her shoulder. “Your vision and sacrifice have saved our plans.”
Now that the immediate danger had past, Tekura felt a little giddy. “I steal only the best,” she quipped, then she joined the others in a burst of tension-breaking laughter. Predictably, Zeddop remained immune to humor. The wizard clutched the arms of the helm with white-knuckled hands, and his thin, elflike face predicted disaster. Theirs was a contemplative race, but Zeddop habitually took this trait too seriously and too far.
“Now we face the simple task of dealing with orcs and ogres,” Zeddop noted. His words brought an involuntary grimace to
every face. Fueled by this reaction, the wizard continued. “Odds are, the savage beasts will tear us to shreds, then kill each other fighting over our cargo,” he intoned with the grim satisfaction of those who expect the worst and are seldom disappointed.
“Thank you, Zeddop. That was truly uplifting,” snapped Soona. She tossed a handful of red curls over her shoulder and glared at the wizard. “Instead of blinding us with your sunny disposition, why don’t you concentrate on the shrike ship? We’re off course.”
“I know my job,” Zeddop said stiffly.
“Then do it, both of you,” Wynlar told them, fixing a stern gaze on the pair. The captain’s tone indicated that further bickering would be imprudent, and the navigator and helmsman returned their full attention to their tasks. Within moments the birdlike vessel slipped through the invisible gap in the elven warning net, apparently without incident, and began the spiraling descent toward Armistice.
Tekura resumed her place at the forecastle window, dimly aware that Wynlar had left the bridge to address the crewmen gathered on the main deck just outside the forecastle.
“There is danger ahead, but we’ve laid our plans with care. The orc tribe under Ubiznik Redeye is one of the strongest groups on all of Armistice. It rules the land of Rakhar virtually unopposed. But remember, we must Change before meeting with the orcs. They would be, shall we say, put off by our elven forms.” A polite chuckle greeted the captain’s wry understatement.
Wynlar continued to speak, but Tekura’s growing excitement crowded out his words. Her dreams were edging closer to reality with each downward spiral of the shrike ship. The end of the elven domination of space had never seemed so close at hand. Beneath her feet, packed away in the ship’s hold, was a cargo that would steal the overwhelming advantage now held by the Imperial Fleet.
The cargo was not terribly impressive: a few battered ship fragments, two small, dead helms. It was but the first shipment of many. Over time, her expertise would help assemble the parts into a fleet, and her people would raise a new navy from among the ice world’s inhabitants. With these new allies, they would change the course of the War of Revenge. It was an ambitious plot, and it held terrible risks.
For centuries, the goblin races of Armistice had been trapped on a world of icy winds and violent earthquakes. Denied wildspace travel and driven underground by the brutal climate, the goblinborn had grow more primitive and warlike with each generation. Yet they remembered that others traveled the stars and they coveted spelljamming technology above all else. In exchange for the shrike ship’s cargo and skills such as Tekura’s, the Rakharian orcs had agreed to release an ancient, terrifying weapon. With it, the elven forces that patrolled Armistice could be systematically destroyed, and in time a powerful new goblin navy could escape into wildspace undeterred.
And after that, Tekura prayed silently, may Ptah protect us all.
*****
Rumors were the standard currency of wildspace. A good rumor could buy a round of drinks, or help to fill the tedious hours of void travel. Apart from the Spelljammer itself, few topics provided more speculation than the ambitions of the goblin races. Rumors abounded of vast orc fleets, ogre kings holding grim court, terrifying new war ships. But these were, after all, just rumors, stories designed to pass the time and bring a pleasant shiver or two. Few believed them to have any basis in fact.
Grimnosh, scro general and commander of the Sky Shark battalion, preferred to keep things that way for as long as possible. Even his ship, a newly built version of the ogre mammoth called a dinotherium, was the stuff of legend. Entirely built of metal and weighing almost a hundred tons, it was a grim and efficient war machine fitted with two long ramming tusks, six heavy ballistae, and four catapults. With good reason, the dinotherium had been named Elfsbane. Most elves did not expect to find such a monster lurking in the phlogiston rivers, and so far none who did had survived to spread the tale. It was the Elfsbane’s mission to meet and destroy elven ships on their way to the Winterspace crystal sphere, and thus weaken the elves’ formidable presence in that sphere. Grimnosh was doing his job well – far better, in fact, than his superiors suspected.
Not that his assignment was so difficult, Grimnosh mused with scorn. The elves were disorganized; they lacked vision, discipline, and leadership. It was ironic, really, that the very failings that had brought down the goblin races in the first Unhuman War now characterized their elven conquerors. But what had destroyed the goblins would just as surely destroy the elves. Soon the elves would prove the old bromide that those who disregard history are condemned to repeat it.
Actually, the elves made Grimnosh’s job pitifully easy. Communications between the elven ships and their elusive command base were notoriously bad; a ship could disappear almost without notice. Elves abounded who had been drummed out of the Imperial Fleet or who preferred a larger measure of autonomy than the elven command permitted. By restricting their attacks to lone ships or isolated elven worlds, the scro had inflicted significant damage over a period of time without drawing the notice of the elven high command.
The scattered and disorganized elves finally were awakening to the scro threat, however, and, once it bestirred itself, the Imperial Fleet could put up a credible fight. Of late scro losses had been heavy. When full-scale war finally erupted, Grimnosh intended to be ready. The scro general had glorious victories planned for the Sky Sharks, ambitions that vaunted far beyond his assigned mission.
Of course, such gains were not without risk. The plan required regrettable alliances – scro as a rule disdained lesser races – but finding others who hated the elves and enlisting their aid had not been difficult. More challenging was keeping the fools in step with the plan: Grimnosh had learned that the damndest difficulties could arise when dealing with the lower goblin races and elf-spawned freaks such as the one seated before him, swathed in that ridiculous cowled robe.
“My dear K’tide, I’m afraid this ancient weapon of yours is proving far too costly,” Grimnosh observed mildly.
The speaker’s calm demeanor did not fool K’tide. As head of intelligence for the scro general, he collected information. Everything he knew about Grimnosh confirmed his own belief that the scro was a deadly foe and a dangerous ally.
“It is true that a few orcs were killed when the weapon was released,” the spy master said, deliberately choosing his words to minimize the loss. Although mere centuries of evolution separated the scro from their orc ancestors, the scro considered all other goblin races to be inferior and barbaric.
“As a rule, the death of a few orcs would not be a matter for concern,” Grimnosh conceded, folding his well-manicured hands on the polished wood of his desk, “but few orcs have the ability to control this weapon. Seven orc priests and three hobgoblin witch doctors are therefore a significant loss. Is it possible that the depleted ranks will prove insufficient to keep the situation, shall we say, under control?”
“Our allies on Armistice assure me that this is not the case,” K’tide said firmly.
“I should hope not, for all our sakes.” The statement was calm, offered in the deep, rounded tones that often made listeners pause and puzzle to identify an accent.
K’tide nodded briefly, acknowledging the implied threat. A wise person never took any scro threat lightly, and K’tide was a highly trained observer who was not fooled by Grimnosh’s cultured manner or elegant surroundings.
The office in which they met was a civilized marvel of polished wood and deep leather chairs, tastefully decorated with objets d’art from a dozen worlds. Books from many cultures lined the walls, as well as exquisite framed maps and star charts. It was, without doubt, a gentleman’s study.
The gentleman in question, however, still was a scro. Over seven feet tall and powerfully muscled, the general was the single discordant note in his elegant study. Grimnosh was a rare albino, with a white hide and almost colorless eyes. He wore the regulation black leather armor studded with small sharp spikes, but, while many scro paint
ed the studs in bright patterns or even substituted cut gems, his studs were fashioned from a dull, expensive silver-toned metal. The scro version of understated elegance, K’tide noted.
Although Grimnosh’s garments suggested a certain refinement, his ornaments revealed his true nature. His large canine teeth had been sharpened and decorated with mini-totems,” and his pointed, wolflike ears were festooned with tatoos. About his neck hung a toregkh, a necklace made of teeth taken from opponents who had met their deaths upon the general’s fangs. By scro custom, no other tokens of battle prowess were worn, though the scro carried many weapons and were expert with each. It was taken for granted that a scro warrior had many kills to his credit. The toregkh was therefore a nose-thumb gesture, a way of saying that scro could kill quite handily with no weapons other than those granted by nature. Perhaps Grimnosh had taken the recent evolution toward culture farther than most scro – indeed, farther than most members of any race – but he was no less deadly for it.
Other scro tended to overlook Grimnosh’s pretensions, as snide comments tended to lead to dismemberment. In fact, the general’s assistant, a sullen olive-green scro who skulked in a nearby corner, was missing one ear and the small fingers of both hands. Rumor had it that Nimick had offered some small insult to Grimnosh during their training. Grimnosh kept the green scro around as his adjutant, knowing that the maimed soldier’s presence was a powerful object lesson to others.
“Perhaps it is time to rethink our strategy,” Grimnosh suggested. “This weapon might not be worth the risks.”
K’tide inclined his head, acknowledging the scro’s remark while respectfully disagreeing. “Its first use was highly successful. The creature was catapulted aboard an elven armada, and it destroyed the entire crew. More than one hundred elves,” he concluded, weighing each word with quiet emphasis.
The Radiant Dragon Page 5