The twin banks of oars lifted the
The mad sorcerer's storm still gained on them, slower than before, yet an undeniable threat nonetheless. The mage strode to Heboric's side.
'Is this your god's warren?'
The old man scowled. 'Not my god. Not his warren. Hood knows where in the Abyss we are, and it seems there's no easy wakening from this nightmare.'
'You drove the god-touched hand into Stormy's wound.'
'Aye. Nothing but chance. Could have as easily been the other one.'
'What did you feel?'
Heboric shrugged. 'Something passing through. You'd guessed as much, didn't you?'
Kulp nodded.
'Was it Fener himself?'
'I don't know. I don't think so. I'm not an expert in matters religious. Doesn't seem to have affected Stormy … apart from the healing. I didn't know Fener granted such boons.'
'He doesn't,' the ex-priest muttered, eyes clouding as he looked back at the two marines. 'Not without a price, anyway.'
Felisin sat apart from the others, her closest company the pyramid of staring heads. They didn't bother her much, since their attention remained on Gesler, on the man with the siren whistle of bone dangling on his chest. She thought back to the round in Unta, to the priest of flies. That had been the first time sorcery had been visited upon her. For all the stories of magic and wild wizards, of sorcerous conflagrations engulfing cities in wars at the very edges of the Empire, Felisin had never before witnessed such forces. It was never as common as the tales purported it to be. And the witnessing of magic left scars, a feeling of overwhelming vulnerability in the face of something beyond one's control. It made the world suddenly fey, deadly, frightening and bleak. That day in Unta had shifted her place in the world, or at least her sense of it. And she'd felt off-balance ever since.
She looked over at the severed heads. The eyes did not blink. They were drying, crackling like egg white splashed on hot cobblestones.
Like a long-limbed ape, Truth came scrambling down from the rigging, landing lightly on the deck and pausing close to her as he brushed dusty rope fibres from his clothes. He had a couple of years on her, yet looked much younger to her eyes. U
He noted her attention, gave her a shy smile. 'He's in the clouds,' he said, his voice hoarse with adolescence.
'Who is?'
'The sorcerer. Like an untethered kite, this way and that, trailing streamers of blood.'