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Authors: David Farland

BOOK: Sons of the Oak
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It was just about to do so.
 
 
 
Inside the inn, Blythe gave Stalker some news: “We lost time in that squall. 'Eard a rumor, I did. The black ship was 'ere two days ago. It's one of Shadoath's.” Blythe held back the rest of the news, waiting for a reaction.
So, Stalker considered, it was one of the Pirate Lord's ships. That couldn't be good. But Stalker was under Shadoath's protection. He paid thirty percent of his income for the run of the sea. “Any notion what she's after?”
“A pair of princelings,” Blythe said, eyes glittering. “Don't know 'ow, but they tracked 'em to us.”
Perhaps they only suspect, Stalker hoped. Could they really be sure? “Shadoath is willing to up the reward. Five 'undred gold eagles for the boys.”
Five hundred was a good offer, considering who they were dealing with. But if she offered five hundred, then they were probably worth ten times that much to her. Shadoath was a woman of unsurpassed cruelty. She ruled the sea with an iron fist.
But now that it came down to it, the thought of selling the boys to her rankled Stalker. Maybe he'd have sold to someone else, but not to Shadoath—not after what had happened to his own children, six years past, when Shadoath's hand had first begun to stretch across the seas.
He was away from home at the time, on a trading junket, when his children were taken. At first he thought it was kidnappers, holding them for ransom. It was a common practice among pirates.
Indeed, Stalker himself had spent two years as a hostage on a pirate ship. Looking back now, it had been a grand adventure.
But Stalker's children were placed in greater peril than he had ever been. With the first ransom note he'd received a foot, dried in a bag of salt, to prove it.
Shadoath tortured his children until Stalker agreed to pay for protection
for the rest of his life. That's where his thirty percent cut went. But it didn't go to ransom his children and buy their release.
No, the torturers had gone too far. His daughter had lost a foot, and her mind. His youngest son had had his neck broken and could not even crawl. Stalker was forced to pay not for the release of his youngest son and daughter, but for their merciful executions.
Otherwise, Shadoath would have continued to torture them for years without end.
That was the kind of woman he was dealing with.
Stalker was himself the grandson of a pirate, and he'd spent his early years aboard pirate ships. But he'd never seen cruelty that equaled Shadoath's.
Stalker hated the woman.
“So what you think?” Blythe asked. “You ready to sell them boys?” Stalker forced a smile. “I'm not sellin' to Shadoath. Other lords will pay more. Their own folk would best Shadoath's price ten times over.”
Blythe and Endo looked at each other.
“You're not goin' soft on the boy, are you?” Endo demanded. “That's not wise—not wise at all.”
The threat behind the words was palpable. If Stalker wouldn't sell, Endo would go behind his back.
I should kill them now, Stalker thought. I should draw my knife and gut them where they sit.
But he'd never killed a man for merely thinking about betraying him, and though his anger was thick in his throat, his hand didn't stray to his dagger.
“Be patient, lads,” Stalker assured them. “This isn't a game that plays out in a day or a week. We can tuck the lads away in Landesfallen, nice and safe, and bring them out anytime. The price will only rise as the weeks pass.”
“Patience may be fine for you,” Blythe said, “but it's the sound of coins in my purse that I like.”
It had only been a few weeks since Stalker had paid them both. They hadn't been in port long enough to spend their cash, and so he didn't offer more.
“Hang on,” Stalker urged them in his sweetest tone. “We'll be as rich as princes a'fore long.”
 
 
 
Blythe left Stalker's table and took a seat in the inn, a thick mug of warm ale in his hands.
He wasn't a patient man.
He wasn't stupid, either. Blythe glanced back over to the captain's table. Fallion had come back, was sittin' there peerin' up at Stalker like he was some damned hero.
Stalker liked to think that he was the smart one, but Blythe knew that you didn't say “no” to Shadoath. And you didn't beg her to wait, or ask for more money.
If she offers you a deal, Blythe thought, you'd best take it before she slits your throat and boils up a pudding from your blood.
Stalker is a fool.
He knew that Stalker paid Shadoath for free passage. But that's what he got, free passage. Nothing more.
The captain was going soft on Fallion, Blythe suspected. Or maybe he just hated Shadoath too much. But he couldn't save the boy.
Maybe there was a chance that Stalker could buy the lad, but it would cost him dear, and he didn't have that kind of money, not anymore.
He'd paid it all to the torturers, to end his own children's pain, paid it all to save his oldest, the one that the torturers had left unmangled. But in the end, Stalker had bought nothing. His oldest son couldn't live with the horror of what had happened, the shrieks of pain. And after Stalker bought his son's freedom, he'd come on his first venture across the sea, and each night he woke in the cabin, screaming. One night, somewhere north of Turtle Island, out in the Mariners, he'd thrown himself overboard.
Now Stalker was too broke to buy a pair of princes.
But Blythe had it figured. He could take the reward himself, keep it all.
That was the smart thing to do. You couldn't stop Shadoath. You couldn't run from her. So you might as well get a little something in your purse from the deal.
He left the inn in the moonlight, stepped in the shadows at the side of
the building, and waited for a few minutes to make certain that none of Stalker's men followed him with a dagger for his back, then headed down the street.
There was a shack that the sailors all knew, a place where a man could get a bowl of opium to smoke, sleep with a whore, or purchase just about any other vice that one could dream up.
The proprietor was a tiny woman, an Inkarran dwarf with a crooked back.
“Yes?” she asked when she answered the door, her voice trailing off as she waited for Blythe to name his desire.
“I 'ave a message for Shadoath. Tell 'er that Deever Blythe aboard the
Leviathan
wants his five hundred gold pieces.”
The message would take days to deliver, maybe weeks. But Shadoath would get it. It was only a matter of time.
SMALL BATTLES
No war was ever won by those who stood guard. They were won by those who leapt into a fray, regardless of how slim the chances.
 
—Sir Borenson
 
 
 
Back on the open sea, one evening while Myrrima and the children were all in the galley eating dinner, Fallion sought out Smoker. He found the old fellow sitting at the forecastle, nursing the flames in his pipe.
Fallion bowed to him and said, “Sometimes, when a candle is sputtering, or Cook's fire is guttering, I hear Fire whisper my name.”
Smoker nodded. He seemed to understand what Fallion was going through. “Fire will whisper, beg you surrender, give self to it. The big fire talk with loud voice, and strong pull.”
“What happens when you give yourself to it?” Fallion asked.
Smoker hesitated. “It share power with you. It fill you. But in time, it consume you. Must be care.”
Fallion considered this. It was said that anyone who gave himself to one of the greater powers eventually lost his humanity. Fallion's father had done it, had traded his humanity in order to save mankind.
Fallion stared out to the open sea. Night was falling, but the sea was lit from beneath. Millions of luminous jellyfish stretched across the still water, making it look as if the sea were on fire.
“I understand,” Fallion said. “Will you teach me?”
Smoker hesitated, inhaled deeply from his pipe, and Fallion added, “Myrrima will be mad. I know. She'll be mad at both of us. But I'm willing to take the risk.”
Smoker smiled. “I not fear her,” he said in his thick pidgin. His eyes
suddenly blazed as if with an inner light. “But is danger if I teach you. And greater danger if I not teach … .”
And so it was understood, Fallion would become his pupil.
Smoker inhaled deeply, blew some smoke, sending it into the air, and said, “Little fire, easier to control. Smoke sometimes easier than fire. You try make shape.”
So Fallion began his lessons in stolen moments. Fallion tried turning the puffs of smoke into the forms of fish or seagulls. He tried envisioning shapes while whispering incantations; he tried to force the smoke with his mind. He tried to surrender his will. But hour after hour, Fallion found that he had no knack for it.
“It will come,” Smoker assured him. “Must make sacrifice to fire. Must burn something. But not enough wood on ship. We wait. Maybe make huge fire on island. We wait.”
So they just talked. Sometimes they talked about how to serve Fire, and Smoker told Fallion some of the secret powers that he had heard about. Some flameweavers became so adept at sensing heat that they learned to see it, as if their eyes suddenly became aware of new colors in the spectrum. “We all flaming creatures,” Smoker assured Fallion, “if we had eyes to see.”
Fallion learned much in these conversations, but just as often he found that the lessons came as a complete surprise during the course of normal conversations. So it was that he came to what he thought was rather esoteric. “Why are children born now different from those born before the war?”
Fallion hadn't expected an answer, but Smoker leaned back, pulling a long drag on his pipe. “The world was no balance,” he said at last, the smoke issuing from his mouth. “Now, great harmony coming.”
“How did it get out of balance?” Fallion wondered aloud.
“One True Master of Evil sought make it her own. That problem. The One World, the Great Tree, even One True Master of Evil—all shattered. All broken and twisted.”
Fallion knew the legends. He'd learned them from Waggit and others. But he'd never considered that he was living in a time of legends. “But why is our world changing now?”
Smoker shook his head, as if to say, “Some things even wizards didn't
know.” But then he drew long on his pipe, and eventually, when the coals were burning hot, it seemed that his eyes glowed with inspiration and he said, “Someone fixing world.”
“Right now?” Fallion asked. “Someone is fixing it? How do you know?” Everyone knew that the world had changed when his father defeated the reavers. But few seemed to notice that it was changing still.
“Many powers found in Fire. Not all destroy.” Smoker exhaled, and Fallion struggled to make something from the smoke that had formed. Smoker continued. “Light. Is great power in light …” Smoker took some puffs on his pipe, until the bowl glowed brightly. “All world is shadow, is illusion. Land, trees, grass, sky. But light pierces shadow, shows us the real.”
“So can it teach us new things?”
“Sometimes,” Smoker admitted, “like now. Fire whisper, ‘There is wizard at heart of world.' That how I know someone changes it. Sometimes, light shows things far away, future. But mostly … it make sense of things. It pierce illusion. Watch.”
This is what Fallion wanted most right now in his life—understanding. He felt as if everything around him was hidden. There were loci on the ship. Smoker had told him so. But neither of them knew where. Was one in Captain Stalker? Fallion liked the man, but he didn't trust him completely. Maybe that's what a locus would want—for Fallion to like it. But Fallion wanted to pierce through the illusions, to see into men's hearts, and so he eagerly drew near.
Smoker stoked the fire in his pipe, and together they peered into the bowl for a long time, watched the embers grow yellow, then orange, then develop a black crust while worms of fire seemed to eat through them.
“In light is understanding. You, you creature of light, so you drawn to Fire. But why you not touch Fire, use Fire, let it touch you?”
Fallion shook his head, wondering, wishing to know how he could unlock the powers that lay within him.
I'm afraid, he admitted to himself. I'm afraid that I'll get hurt.
Suddenly the bowl of the pipe blazed all on its own.
“You keep light hidden,” Smoker said, “deep inside. You not let it out. But when fear is gone, when desire blaze like this bowl, you become one with fire.”
“How do you blaze?” Fallion asked.
“Many ways,” Smoker said. “Passion. Love, despair, hope. All desires can lead you to power. Rage. Rage is easiest. Let rage build. Must rage like inferno. That release fire in you.”
Fallion considered. A seagull cried out on the sea.
He must be lost, Fallion thought.
They were days out from port.
“Is that how immolators do it?” Fallion asked. “They let the rage in them burn?” Fallion imagined himself at the height of power, saw himself drawing light from the heavens, channeling it down into fiery ropes, until he too burst into flame, clothing himself in an inferno and walking unscathed, like the flameweavers of legend.
Smoker gave him a sidelong glance, as if he had asked the wrong question. “Yes,” he said. “But you not want be immolator.”
“Why?”
“Because, Fallion, is easy throw life away. Living, that hard.”
“But immolators don't die.”
“Not live, either. When fire take them, when burst to flame, flameweaver's flesh remains, but soul does not. His humanity turn to ashes. His heart goes to other.
“Must take care,” Smoker urged. “Fire whisper to you, beg you to give self. But once is done, cannot undo. You be dead, and Fire will walk in your flesh.”
“Have you ever immolated?” Fallion asked.
Smoker shook his head. “No.”
“Then how do you know that you can?”
“Power is there, always whisper. I know I can do. Fallion, immolation is easy. When rage take you, is
not
become fire that is hard.”
For long hours, Fallion had struggled to find any vestige of power. He'd tried shaping the smoke with his mind, imagining fish swimming through the air. He'd even tried pleading with Fire, seeking acceptance.
Now he peered over his shoulder, as if Myrrima might come walking the deck any moment.
And Fallion surrendered to rage. He thought about the past weeks, about how the strengi-saats had attacked Rhianna, about the fresh loss he'd felt over the death of a father that he hardly knew, about his terrifying
flight from Asgaroth, his mother lying cold beside the fire, and last of all he imagined Humfrey the ferrin, broken and twisted like a rag.
The rage built as he considered the unfairness of it all. It became a hot coal in his chest, fierce and wild, tightening his jaw.
“Now shine,” Smoker said, exhaling, sending tenuous threads of blue smoke issuing from his nostrils. Fallion did not try to shape it, didn't try to imagine anything.
He just let his rage release, like a light that burst from his chest.
A strengi-saat took shape in the smoke and floated up into the air, soaring, its visage cruel as its jaws gaped.
Smoker looked at Fallion with pride and gave a satisfied grunt.
Just then, at the back of the ship, Myrrima called.
Fallion whirled, caught a partial glimpse of her between the ropes and pulleys on deck.
Immediately he ducked, crawled over the forecastle, and went walking down the far side of the ship.
 
 
 
That night as Fallion slept, Myrrima told her husband, “We've got to put a stop to this. Fallion's running with the crew, thick as a pack of wolves. And tonight I saw him with Smoker.”
Borenson lay beside her on blankets that had been washed in seawater earlier that day, and so smelled of salt. “Fallion's a good boy,” he said with a sigh.
“He's being drawn to evil,” Myrrima argued. “The Fire is pulling at him.”
“We can't hold him back,” Borenson said. “We can't keep him from gaining his powers.”
“He's not old enough to choose wisely,” Myrrima objected. “Fire draws to its adherents more than any other power. It seeks to consume them. I think we should talk to him.”
“If we try to hold him back,” Borenson said, “he'll think that what he's doing is shameful.”
“Maybe it is,” Myrrima said.
From the cabin door came a soft clapping. It was late, and Borenson lay there for a moment wondering who could be calling when everyone else was asleep. Finally, he pulled on his tunic and opened the door.
Smoker stood outside in the shadows, a single candle in his hand, his eyes reflecting the light from it with unnatural intensity.
“Must speak with you and wife,” he said.
Myrrima was already throwing a blanket over her, wrapping it around her like a cape. She crept up behind Borenson, put a hand on his shoulder, and peered over.
Smoker said one word, “Asgaroth.”
“What?” Myrrima asked.
“Shadow hunts Fallion. Asgaroth is name of shadow. Fire told me. Is near.”
“On the ship?” Myrrima asked. She looked out the door. The other refugees in the hold were all abed. The animals slept. No one seemed interested in eavesdropping.
Smoker nodded. “Yes.”
“Where? In whom?”
“Not sure. More than one shadow on ship. Two, maybe three. I feel them. Not know where. They hide.”
Myrrima peered at the pale old man, the wrinkles of his face, and wondered. More than one locus was on the ship?
Myrrima had worried about this for days. Her water magic was strong in healing power and in protection; each morning she had been washing the children, drawing runes of warding upon them, just in case.
“Your magic help protect boy,” Smoker said. “But Fallion need more. He must fight. You know, I know. Day will come when must fight. My magic strong in battle, but is also danger. You know. You feel urge to surrender to your master. Fallion feel, too, thousand times stronger.”
Instinctively Myrrima had distrusted this man, but now he was proposing a truce. They had something in common; they both cared about Fallion.
“I don't want him to lose himself,” she said. “He needs to understand the dangers.”
Smoker closed his eyes and bowed slightly, a sign of agreement. “Power seductive; come with price.”
“We both know that it doesn't just come with a price,” Myrrima said. “Fire consumes those who serve it—just as it is eating at you. You cannot bear to be away from it. You smoke your pipe and take your dying slow. But
you're like a fly caught in a spider's net, and there is no escape for you. You will be consumed.”
Smoker nodded, closing his eyes in resignation. “Still, is power he will need. Fallion very strong. You know: he very good, but dangerous. We both must watch him.”

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