'A point to port, Captain! Beating three-quarters! Hood's breath, we're right on top of her!'
The pirate vessel, a low, single-masted raider barely visible in the gloom, was less than a hundred paces away, on a tack that would cut directly in front of
'All hands,' the captain bellowed through the howl of the storm, 'prepare to ram!'
The First Mate bolted ahead, shouting orders to his crew. Kalam saw the marines crouch low to the deck, readying for the impact. Faint screams reached the assassin from the pirate vessel. The taut square sail, storm-jibbed, billowed suddenly, the ship's prow pitching away as the pirate crew made a last, doomed effort to avoid the collision.
The gods were grinning down on the scene, but it was the rictus of a death's head. A swell lifted
Masts snapped somewhere above him, sails whipping like ghost wings in the rain-tracked air.
Ragstopper settled, grinding, popping, canting heavily. Sailors were screaming, shrieking on all sides, but Kalam could see little of what was happening from where he lay. Groaning, he worked his way upright.
The last of the marines were plunging over the forward port rail, down and out of sight — presumably onto the raider's deck. Or
The assassin turned, but the captain was nowhere in sight. Nor was there anyone at the tiller. The wreckage of a snapped spar cluttered the sterncastle.
Kalam made his way aft.
The locked ships had no steerage. Waves were pummelling
Reaching the man, Kalam turned him over. It was the First Mate, his forehead sharply caved in. The blood was coming from nose and throat; the water had washed clean the killing blow, and the assassin stared at the damage for half a dozen heartbeats before rising and stepping over the corpse.
He climbed to the sterncastle and began searching through the wreckage. The man at the tiller had lost most of his head, only a few twisted ropes of flesh and skin holding what was left of it to the body. He examined the slash across the neck.
He found the captain and one of the treasurer's bodyguards beneath the sail. Splinters of wood jutted from the giant tribesman's chest and throat. He still gripped his two-handed tulwar. The captain's hands were shredded ribbons closed on the blade-end, blood pulsing from them to stain the swirling wash of seawater. A massive discolouring reached the span of the man's brow, but his breathing was steady.
Kalam pried the captain's fingers from the tulwar blade and dragged him free of the wreckage.
Glancing up, Kalam found himself looking into Salk Elan's dripping face.
'He lives?'
'Aye.'
'We're not out of trouble yet,' Elan said.
'To Hood with that! We've got to get this man below.'
'We've sprung leaks up front — most of the marines are at the pumps.'
They lifted the captain between them. 'And the raider?'
'The one we hit? In pieces.'
'In other words,' the assassin said as they manhandled the captain down the slippery steps, 'not what the treasurer planned.'
Salk Elan stopped, his eyes sharpening. 'Seems we've slunk on the same path, you and I.'
'Where is the bastard?'
'He's taken command … for now. Seems every officer's suffered an unlikely accident — anyway, we've got the other vessel closing on us, so, like I said, the fun's anything but over.'
'One thing at a time,' Kalam grunted.
They made their way down through the galley and into the passage. Water swirled ankle-deep, and the assassin could feel just how sluggish
'You pulled rank on the marines, didn't you?' Elan asked as they reached the captain's door.
'I don't outrank the lieutenant.'
'Even so. Call it the power of notoriety, then — she's already had harsh words with the treasurer.'
'Why?'
'The bastard wants us to surrender, of course.'
They carried the captain to his cot. 'A transfer of cargo in this blow?'
'No, they'll wait it out.'