Lord of Ashes (Steelhaven: Book Three) (23 page)

BOOK: Lord of Ashes (Steelhaven: Book Three)
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Without another word Waylian took Aldrich’s arm and guided him away from the gate. He glanced to the north and thought about whether to head back to the Tower of Magisters to report his failure. But then he’d reported enough failures to his mistress. He’d been given a mission and he would bloody well carry it out, even if it killed him. Not that very many of the missions she gave him were without life-threatening peril.

‘Come on,’ he said to Aldrich. ‘There must be another way over.’

Aldrich followed obediently as they made their way along the base of the wall. Before long they reached the stairs leading up the parapet, and with no other option they both climbed up to the battlements. The pair of them crouched below the crenellated wall and carefully Waylian peered over the side. Under the moonlight he could make out the crescent bay, the still waters looking black beneath the night sky. In the distance the fire ships sat in a row, their decks lit by burning braziers. Had they not been so dangerous, had they not flung so much death and destruction on his city, Waylian might have thought them beautiful.

Leaning his head out further he looked down to the ground below. He couldn’t estimate the distance but it was obviously too far to jump.

‘Think, Waylian,’ he said aloud. He knew there was no point addressing Aldrich – he couldn’t understand the lad at the best of times, and now in such a state of terror it was unlikely he’d make any more sense. ‘There must be a way.’

He looked up and down the wall. Perhaps there’d be a rope somewhere. Perhaps a fisherman’s net he could fashion into a ladder. As he moved along the walkway he realised Aldrich wasn’t following. Turning he saw the apprentice was staring out to sea.

‘We need to move,’ Waylian whispered, though why he was whispering he didn’t know. It wasn’t as if the mariners on the artillery ships were going to hear him.

Without a word of reply, Aldrich clambered on the wall, gripping the merlons to either side of him.

‘What are you doing?’ said Waylian, panic gripping him.

He rushed to Aldrich’s side, reaching out to pull him back, but with unexpected speed, Aldrich gripped his wrist and pulled him up onto the battlements.

‘What the fu—’ was all he had a chance to say before Aldrich leaned back and pulled them both over the lip of the wall.

There was no time to scream. No time to try and stop himself as he fell into the darkness. The air rushed in his face, his stomach lurched violently. As they fell Aldrich gripped him around the arms and Waylian squeezed his eyes shut, girding himself for the impact.

When he opened them again they were both standing at the base of the wall, Aldrich still holding him in a surprisingly tight grip. They looked at one another as the sea breeze brushed their faces. Aldrich didn’t say a word, letting go and leading the way down to the dock. Waylian stared for a moment, not quite able to believe he was still alive, then followed, on legs like jelly. He had no idea what magicks Aldrich had used to halt their fall but he was thankful for them anyway.

‘Next time, bloody warn me,’ he whispered. If Aldrich heard him he gave no answer.

They made their way down to the waterside and along the great crescent harbour, their shoes making barely a sound on the wood. As they moved through the dark another flaming missile was fired from one of the ships, soaring past them and over the city wall to land with a dull explosion.

Waylian was following his fellow apprentice now, who seemed to have taken the lead. He should have been put out about the sudden change in their dynamic, but if he was honest with himself he didn’t really have a clue what he was going to do when he got to the harbour anyway.

When they were level with the ships, Aldrich stopped, glaring out at the row of vessels anchored in the water.

‘What now?’ asked Waylian. ‘I hope you’ve got something spectacular planned.’

Aldrich turned, smiling now, and he offered his hand to Waylian.

‘Oh indubitably,’ he replied. ‘But your assistance is required.’

‘How so?’ asked Waylian, reluctantly taking Aldrich by the hand.

‘You have tapped the Veil before, haven’t you, Waylian?’

‘Of course I have.’
By mistake, but I’ve still bloody done it.

‘Then let’s try it together. It’s quite the most quickening of experiences.’

Aldrich knelt beside the harbour, laying his palm on the wooden boards at his feet while still gripping Waylian’s hand. At first there was nothing, no incantation, no magickal signs, only the pungent smell of the sea carried on the night breeze.

It was some time before Waylian realised his hand had turned to ice. A cold he’d never felt before crept up his arm where Aldrich gripped him, into his flesh and into his bones. He wanted to call out but he had no voice, wanted to pull away but there was no strength in his limbs.

He looked down to see that where Aldrich’s other hand was touching the planks they had turned to ice, a solid sheet that spread from the young man’s fingers and down the side of the strut on which the crescent harbour stood. The more he stared the more he saw the ice spread out from the base of the harbour and into the sea. Waylian could hear the ice cracking as the sea solidified and all the while he grew colder.

Just as he thought he could stand it no longer and would be turned into a solid block of ice, Aldrich released his hand. Waylian collapsed to the boardwalk, feeling heat instantly flood back into him. Aldrich merely stood, looking out to sea and at the pathway they had both made. Waylian saw it led out into the night, towards the waiting artillery ships in the distance.

‘What now?’ he mumbled through gritted, frozen teeth. ‘Are we supposed to just stroll up and put their fires out?’

‘No,’ Aldrich replied. ‘There is no way we would succeed with such a strategy. But they could.’ He pointed back up towards the city.

Waylian looked, but through the dark he couldn’t see a thing. Then, through his cold-numbed ears, he thought he heard a sound like thunder.

TWENTY-FIVE

T
hey rumbled through the streets on horseback. Twenty of them, fully armoured with shield and sword. This had all seemed like such a good idea at the time – and fact was, they were riding away from the battle that raged to the north – but now Merrick was beginning to see the error of his ways. Just twenty men against a phalanx of ships anchored south of the city. Just twenty men taking on an entire fleet. Granted, they were the meanest, hardest bastards Merrick had ever had the misfortune to meet, but still; they were only human.

The Lord Marshal hadn’t said a word to him as they prepared their destriers for the mission. Merrick had half expected the old man to approach him, demanding that he change his mind, but Tannick said nothing. Maybe deep down he was proud. Maybe some part of him was glad Merrick had volunteered for the most perilous of tasks. Or maybe he just didn’t want to lose face in front of the Wyvern Guard by chastising his son who’d volunteered for such a perilous mission.

Whatever the reason, Merrick was glad of it. There were enough things to think on without arguing with the old man. Things like not getting stabbed or burned or drowned were much higher on his list than worrying about the punishments Tannick Ryder could come up with for his disobedience.

As they made their way further south through the city, Merrick got to see first-hand what carnage the artillery ships had wrought, and for the first time he appreciated the importance of their mission. Dockside and the Warehouse District were in ruins. To the south-east the Temple of Autumn seemed relatively untouched, but that did little to assuage the devastation that had been wreaked on the rest of the city’s southern quarters. Merrick only hoped there had been no one living here when the bombardment began. Deep down he knew there must have been. Deep down he knew most of these houses would have bodies in them, burned and black and clawing at the sky with dead hands.

And that makes you angry, doesn’t it? That makes you want to kill. That moves you and you don’t fucking like it, Ryder.

Merrick gripped his reins tighter, his jaw setting. He tried not to look, not to think, but it was impossible. This wasn’t war, this was murder. For all his selfishness, for all his self-indulgence and arrogance and acting the jester for so many years, this hurt. There needed to be a reckoning for this.

But you’ve never been the vengeance type, Ryder. You’ve never given enough of a shit. Revenge is a waste of time; it just gets in the way. What happened to Merrick Ryder the pragmatist?

‘He’s dead and gone,’ he said through gritted teeth.

Only time will tell, Ryder. Let’s wait and see, shall we? There’s still plenty of time for you to prove you haven’t changed.

The twenty horses gradually made their way to the sea wall. Cormach led the way, the white pelt he wore across his shoulders bobbing in time to the stride of his warhorse. Just before they reached the gate a fireball cut the sky above them, smashing into a street a hundred yards away. It was an unnerving reminder of why they were here, but did little to curb Merrick’s determination.

They reined in, their horses milling before the great portcullis. It was blackened and charred and Merrick wondered if the mechanisms that opened it would still work.

‘Open the gate,’ Cormach shouted.

Merrick looked at the base of the portcullis. In the dark he hadn’t even seen the soot-encrusted men cowering there.

‘What the fuck is wrong with everyone tonight?’ said one of them. ‘This gate stays closed. By order of the queen.’

Cormach trotted his horse forward, staring down from the saddle.

‘Open the gate,’ he said, his tone measured in that
don’t fuck with me
way he had about him.

The gate guard looked up at him. Merrick could tell he wanted to argue, but a quick glance at the twenty Wyvern Guard, all armed and armoured and ready to kill something, and he quickly changed his mind.

The filthy Greencoat gave a nod at the rest of the men. Three of them scuttled into the small wheelhouse and within moments the gate started moving. It shuddered and creaked, soot and charcoal falling from it in great clumps as the three men wound the winch. Merrick could hear them gasping from inside the tiny building as they strained to turn the wheel. All he could do was stare through the gate at the harbour below.

The ships were waiting, sitting there like they were beckoning him forward. He was most likely going to die down there and he’d bloody well volunteered to do it.

Remember those shattered houses? Remember the bodies inside them? What happened to vengeance, Ryder? What happened to the old you being dead and gone?

Before he had time to think on it further, Cormach spurred his horse through the open gate. The rest of the Wyvern Guard did likewise, the sound of their hooves on the cobbles ringing out like bells across the harbour. Trot turned to canter turned to gallop as they headed down towards the crescent bay. Cormach’s sword rang from its sheath, nineteen others ringing after it. The sound of the horses’ hooves changed timbre as they galloped from the cobbled road and onto the wooden jetty.

Merrick could feel the wind in his face now, the thrill of the charge. There must be a plan to this, something he hadn’t been told, because how they were going to ride across the bay and onto those ships was a question he hadn’t been made privy to.

As they clattered along the boards he kept his eyes fixed on the ships, wondering if at any moment they’d send one of their burning missiles hurtling towards the Wyvern Guard. He quickly realised he needn’t have worried. The artillery ships weren’t designed to be manoeuvrable. They’d never have a chance to aim before the Wyvern Guards’ steeds reached the end of the jetty … and plunged straight into the water.

Cormach’s horse pulled ahead and he raised his blade. It was almost impossible to see where they were going, their way lit only by the moon, but thankfully it was bright enough so that none of them rode off the edge of the boardwalk.

Just when Merrick thought they’d run out of pier, Cormach yanked his reins violently, steering his horse to the left and off the side of the gangway. Merrick felt his heart lurch at the insane manoeuvre, thinking Cormach would plunge headlong into the freezing cold bay, but he saw the horse was still running, its hooves clacking against a new surface.

Without thinking, without even considering how mad this was, Merrick followed, his horse snorting in agreement with the insanity of the whole thing. As he reined the steed after Cormach’s he felt the difference under its hooves, heard the clacking and cracking as though he had just ridden onto a bridge of … ice?

The Wyvern Guard galloped down onto the sea, following Cormach as he rode towards the first of the artillery ships. They were approaching at the fleet’s flank, the bridge spanning out before them, taking them right up to the gunwale of the first vessel. Merrick could hear the mariners aboard their ships, shouting in panic. They’d heard the approaching knights now, and could more than likely feel the rumble of hooves on the ice bridge.

As he followed Cormach up the slope onto the deck, Merrick was almost blinded by the fire still alight on board the ship. He just had time to see Cormach cut down a sailor, just had time to see another member of the crew trapped under a sheet of ice that had consumed the deck, his eyes staring up in blank terror, before he was off the other side, his steed leaping the gunwale.

Cormach didn’t stop, and Merrick was determined not to let him get too far ahead. There were twenty Wyvern Guard, all eager for the kill. No use crowding the first ship when there were over a dozen more to go at.

The second ship was better prepared, sailors shouting, brandishing their billhooks and cutlasses threateningly, but Cormach’s steed bowled past them as though they weren’t there. They rode on, taking the third ship, the fourth. Merrick could hear the sounds of battle behind as the Wyvern Guard engaged those sailors still able to fight and not trapped in the ice. He began to think this might not quite be the suicide mission he had first anticipated. Maybe his righteous anger would be sated after all. Those women and children burned alive back in the city avenged by his hand. The hand of Merrick Ryder. Reborn as a divine weapon of—

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