Although he sat within arm's reach of the tattooed old man, Kulp could sense his own warren. It felt ready — almost eager — for release. The mage was frightened. Meanas was a remote warren, and every fellow practitioner Kulp had met characterized it the same way: cool, detached, amused intelligence. The game of illusions was played with light, dark, texture and shadows, crowing victory when it succeeded in deceiving an eye, but even that triumph felt emotionless, the satisfaction clinical. Accessing the warren always had the feel of interrupting a power busy with other things. As if shaping a small fraction of that power was a distraction barely worth acknowledging.
Kulp did not trust his warren's uncharacteristic attentiveness. It wanted to join the game. He knew he was falling into the trap of thinking of Meanas as an entity, a faceless god, where access was worship, success a reward of faith. Warrens were not like that. A mage was not a priest and magic was not divine intervention. Sorcery could be the ladder to Ascendancy — a means to an end, but there was no point to worshipping the means.
Stormy had rigged a small, square sail, enough to give control but not so large that it would risk the weakened mast. The
Kulp glanced at Heboric. The ex-priest sat with his left shoulder against the mast, squinting out into the darkness. The mage was desperate to open his warren — to look upon the old man's ghost-hands, to gauge the serpent of Otataral — but he held back, suspicious of his own curiosity.
'There!' Truth shouted, pointing.
'I see it!' Gesler bellowed. 'Move it, Stormy!'
The
Beyond it, the billowing clouds twisted, creating an inverted funnel. Lightning leapt up from the waves to frame it. The
Kulp did not even have time to scream. His warren opened, locking in instant battle with a power demonic in its fury. Spears of water slanted down from overhead, shredding the sail in moments. They struck the deck like quarrels, punching through the planks. Kulp saw one shaft pierce Stormy's thigh, pinning him shrieking to the deck. Others shattered against Heboric's hunched back — he had thrown himself over the girl, Felisin, shielding her as the spears rained down. His tattoos raged with fire the colour of mud-smeared gold.
Baudin had hurled himself onto the forecastle, one arm reaching down and out of sight. Truth was nowhere to be seen.
The spears vanished. Pitching as if on a single surging wave, the
Then it was falling.
Gesler pushed past Kulp. 'Take the oar!' he yelled above the roaring wind.
The mage scrambled aft. Steer? Steer
Gesler clambered forward, grasping Baudin's ankles just as the big man started to slip over the bow. Pulling him back revealed that Baudin held, with one hand, onto Truth, his fingers wrapped in the lad's belt. Blood streamed from that hand, and Baudin's face was white with pain.
The unseen wave beneath them slumped. The
Heboric scrambled to Stormy. The marine lay motionless on the deck, blood gushing in horrifying amounts from his punctured thigh. The flow lost its fierceness even as Kulp watched.
Heboric did the only thing he could, or so Kulp would remember it in retrospect. At that instant, however, the mage screamed a warning — but too late — as Heboric plunged a ghostly, loam-smeared hand directly into the wound.
Stormy spasmed, giving a bark of pain. The tattoos flowed out from Heboric's wrist to spread a glowing pattern on the soldier's thigh.
When the old man pulled his arm away, the wound closed, the tattoos knitting together like sutures. Heboric scrambled back, eyes wide with shock.