The Ring of Winter (7 page)

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Authors: James Lowder

BOOK: The Ring of Winter
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Nelock pulled a battered felt cap from the pocket of his heavy coat. He raised the hat facetiously at Artus, then Pontifax. “We’ll be fast friends by the time a tenday’s out.”

Frowning at the sarcasm, Master Quiracus said, “No need to be discourteous, Nelock.” He ignored the startled look on the boatswain’s face. “I’ll take these gentlemen to the captain. You snap to it and supervise the stowing of the ship’s boat. Take their gear and pile it near the mainmast until the captain decides where to put them.” He turned from the portal and strode into the darkness of the ballista deck.

Artus and Pontifax hurried to keep within the glow of the lantern. The deck was a cramped, crowded place, smelling of sweat and sea salt. Huge ballistae hunched before the ports, a ready store of ammunition close at hand.

Hammocks slung from the deck-head beams near each siege engine held snoring, muttering sailors. Though he could not see the entire deck, Artus figured there to be at least one hundred men in this part of the ship alone.

The first mate took the steps leading to the upper deck two at a time. When he made to do the same, Pontifax slipped again and fell back against Artus.

“That spell you cast in the ship’s boat couldn’t have worn off already,” Artus said.

“Whatever do you mean?”

“Before you climbed into the ship you used a spell to give yourself steady footing.”

The mage snorted. “Hardly.” Lowering his voice, he said, “I cast a little incantation on the lazy dogs who enjoyed my difficulty. For the next few nights, they’ll be dreaming of nothing but slightly overweight mages dropping on them from great heights.”

“Hurry along, gentlemen,” the first mate called from the top of the stairs. “Captain Bawr is awaiting us on the poop deck.”

A cold wind blasted over the quarter deck, limning the rigging with ice and setting the masts to creaking. That didn’t seem to affect the sailors, who went quietly about their work. Toward the bow, Nelock and a handful of crewmen secured the ship’s boat. Others climbed the rigging to vantages high up the masts. From the activity, it appeared to Artus the watch was changing.

“Whatever you do,” Quiracus warned as they made their way to the rear of the ship, “be sure not to challenge the captain’s word. Go along with whatever she says.” He flashed them a warm smile. “If there’s a problem, I’ll do what I can to straighten it out later.”

Artus steeled himself as they climbed to the poop deck. The captain sounds like a real terror, he thought. Luckily, though, the first mate seems friendly enough.

“Captain Bawr, these are the two gentlemen you were expecting.”

In his mind, Artus had created his own Captain Bawr—a tall woman with cold eyes and a lantern jaw. Her clothes would be coarse, the sword at her side polished brighter than any smile she could muster. A widow’s knot would hold her hair tight. A perpetual air of disdain would lurk in her stance and her movements. Maybe she would bear a scar or two from mutineers—all of whom she would have sent to a watery grave.

“Welcome aboard my ship,” Captain Bawr said, her sweet voice like the whisper of an owl’s wings. She held out a dainty hand, gloved in kidskin against the cold. “I hope the authorities did not present too much of a bother to you in Baldur’s Gate.”

Pontifax shook her hand without pause, but Artus stood astounded by the petite beauty before him. She looked almost ghostly in the moonlight, her oval face brightened by an alluring smile. A red cloak, its hood capturing her dark ringlets, hung to her waist. Below that, a white skirt trailed down to silken hose and shiny black shoes. Her blue eyes sparkling with a hint of mischievousness, Captain Bawr reached out and took Artus’s hand, which dangled limp at his side. “I’ll take your silence as a compliment… .”

“Artus, milady. Artus Cimber.”

Pontifax stifled a groan. They’d agreed not to give their real names on this voyage, but Artus was obviously too smitten to catch himself. No use bothering now. “And I am Sir Hydel Pontifax,” the mage huffed, shooting Artus a gruff look. He removed a small purse from his belt. “This is the rest of the fee agreed upon by the company agent in port.”

The captain smiled and gestured to Master Quiracus, who took the purse. As the first mate silently counted out the coins, Captain Bawr asked, “What do you do, Sir Hydel, when you are not traveling?”

“I have studied the arts, both medical and sorcerous. I’ve made my living plying both.”

The first mate looked up sharply. “A doctor? That’s a nice bit of luck, eh Captain?”

The look on her face made it clear the captain had little interest in doctors or mages. When she turned back to Artus, though, a tiny spark rekindled in her blue eyes. “And you, Master Cimber?”

“I, er, mostly travel, milady,” he stammered. “I’ve been a scribe and an explorer and a historian.”

Her pouting frown made it clear Captain Bawr found that answer even less interesting than Pontifax’s. “Ah, how … mundane,” she managed at last. “And why are you seeking speedy passage on a ship like the Narwhal, Master Historian? Did you mistakenly record the name of a king’s bastard in a chronicle? Perhaps you’ve run off with some money from an abbey.” She held up one slim-fingered hand. “I know, you misspelled a wealthy and influential merchant’s name in a town record and you’re now running for your life. It would have to be something that inconsequential, I’m sure.”

The sweetness in her voice had transformed into an unmistakable malice. That was enough to break the spell that had fallen upon Artus. He bristled at the insults, squaring his shoulders and jutting out his unshaven chin. “I’ve seen a great deal of danger in the last two tendays, milady, and I do not take kindly—”

“The only danger you’ve ever faced, Master Historian, was your patron’s wrath at a bottle of spilled ink,” the captain drawled. She idly waved a hand and turned her back on Artus. “Quiracus, take the old man down to the orlop, where he’ll be quartered as surgeon for the voyage. Our ink-stained friend will be put in Nelock’s charge.”

“Wait a minute,” Artus snapped. “What do you mean ‘in Nelock’s charge?’ We’re not signing on as crew, Captain. We’re paying passengers.”

The moment the words left Artus’s mouth, his medallion began to glow with a brilliant silver-blue aura. At the same time, Captain Bawr spun around, her face contorted by an unearthly rage. She had grown at least a foot—or perhaps it only seemed that way to Artus and Pontifax. The captain’s pale skin had become a mass of blood-red scales, her eyes a pair of glowing blue embers. “Get them out of my sight, Quiracus,” she howled. “Now!”

With surprisingly strong hands, the first mate grabbed both men and hustled them off the poop deck. “Gods,” he cursed when they were well toward the middle of the ship. “I warned you about questioning her orders.” He glanced back to the aftcastle, where Captain Bawr paced back and forth like a caged animal. “I won’t be able to change her mind about the assignments, not after you openly challenged her.”

“Then we’ll leave the ship now,” Artus said firmly.

Pontifax nodded. “Right. We’ll take the next vessel to Chult. This won’t do for a man with my record of service to the Cormyrian army. I refuse to be pressed into service aboard this slave ship like a drunk waylaid in—”

Quiracus clamped a hand over the mage’s mouth. “My apologies, Sir Hydel, but you’re crew now. If the captain hears you mutter that kind of mutinous talk, there’ll be nothing in this world that’ll save you from her wrath.” He let Pontifax go, then smiled. “Besides, we’ll be under sail in an hour, so the only way back to the harbor is to swim for it.”

Artus walked stiffly to the mainmast, where the sailors had dumped their gear. “We’ll have to make the best of it,” he growled, pounding the sturdy wood with a fist. He tossed one of the packs to the mage, then hefted the other two himself. “I’m sorry about this, Pontifax.”

The withering look he got in return told Artus it would take more than a simple apology to assuage his old friend’s wounded pride.

 

 

“Cimber, need I teach ya the proper way to tie off the topsail halyards again?”

Artus jumped at the sound of Nelock’s voice. The boatswain had taken a special interest in harassing him, pointing out his most inconsequential mistakes and meting out ridiculous extra duties for any transgression. “No, Master Nelock,” he said, biting back his anger and frustration. It would do him little good to pique the apelike petty officer.

“Well ya done this all wrong,” came the expected response. After a moment’s pause, the boatswain barked, “Into the rigging, Cimber. I thought I heard a sail tear on the mainmast, so ya better check it for me.”

“Yes, sir,” Artus managed to reply.

The explorer dreaded the long, unsteady climb into the rigging. Luckily, much of the ice had melted away from the ropes after the first tenday at sea, so they weren’t as slick as they had been. The weather, in fact, was fast becoming balmy. Still, the brisk wind hissing into the sailcloth and the not-so-gentle roll of the ship made the duty quite dangerous for someone as inexperienced as Artus. Moreover, he knew the sail to be perfectly sound; unless the cloth had torn from top to bottom, the boatswain couldn’t possibly have heard it over the cry of the gulls, the creaking of wood and rope, and the roar of the Narwhal cutting through the waters of the Sea of Swords.

Tentatively, Artus climbed into the shrouds. The tar-soaked ropes were sticky on his bare feet, but he’d learned on his first day aboard the ship that his boots were not made for nautical feats. As he went, he scanned the huge sails of the mainmast—at least, he made a show of looking them over for tears. His mind was actually drifting in languid turns over the events of the last few tendays. First the cursed medallion, then Theron Silvermace’s news of the ring and the flight from Suzail. Now he was paying for the privilege of being a slave aboard a galleon. He’d been right about the ship being a pirate vessel, but he never could have guessed the rest of its past.

Artus had been told of the Narwhal’s short, but astounding history his first night aboard ship. The costly vessel had once flown the flag of Cormyr’s navy, but Captain Bawr had gathered a fleet of pirate ships together in the Inner Sea and taken her by force. Next she cut a deal with the villainous masters of Zhentil Keep, who provided her with the services of a group of stupid but extremely brawny giants. The monstrously strong creatures carried the Narwhal across the bulk of Faerun, from the land-locked Inner Sea to the wide-open Sword Coast. Now Bawr alternated between outright piracy and high-paying cargo runs for the Refuge Bay Trading Company, carrying supplies to their outposts in the jungles and returning with the ship’s holds full of near-priceless Chultan teak and ivory.

Of Captain Bawr herself he could learn little. The crew spoke of her in hushed tones, but always in glowing terms. They were loyal, but fearful, too. They’d all seen her transform at various times, though no one dared venture a guess as to her true nature. The only thing Artus discovered was she never came on deck during the day; when the sun shone, Master Quiracus and the other officers ran the Narwhal.

Artus shook his head. The contrast between the sweet young woman and the creature she became … He shuddered. It was horrifying to think on the matter too closely.

All thoughts of the captain fled his mind in that instant, driven away by sudden panic. Lost in his musings, he’d taken a wrong step. For a moment, the realization he was going to fall overwhelmed Artus. Then he toppled head over heels down the shroud. The net of ropes burned his arms and legs as he slid. He reached out, but discovered painfully he was moving too fast to stop his fall. It seemed he was going to either roll right down the shrouds and over the side, or slip from them and plummet to the deck.

Fortunately, Skuld was not about to let his master break his neck on the quarterdeck or drop into the sea like so much shark bait. A glowing silver hand shot from the medallion and clamped down on the shroud. Artus gasped, then choked as the chain pulled tight. His momentum gone, he slipped limply between the ropes. The explorer hung below the shroud for an instant, the medallion’s chain and the silver arm suspending him like a hangman’s noose. Then he was falling again, this time like an autumn leaf drifting slowly to earth.

When the chain had loosened its chokehold and the blood ceased to throb in his temples, Artus tried to sit up. The silver arm was gone, but it was clear everyone near the mainmast had seen his unearthly rescue.

“What’s this all about?” Nelock shouted. He stood over the dazed explorer, his hands on his hips. “No sailor’s allowed to use magic without the officers knowing about it. The captain will want you—”

“Sent to the surgeon to see about his wounds,” interrupted Master Quiracus. The first mate was at the boatswain’s side. When Artus looked up, a halo from the sun ringed the blond man’s bead. “Go on, Cimber. Have Pontifax see to those cuts.”

It was then Artus realized his shirt collar was heavy with blood. The chain had dug into his neck, but only enough to draw a ring of crimson. When he moved to lever himself to his feet, he found his hands gouged and bloody, too.

“It looks worse than it is,” Quiracus noted calmly. “Still, better to clean out the wounds before they become infected. Don’t you agree, Master Nelock?”

The boatswain muttered his agreement, then turned to the crowd of sailors who had paused in their work. “Awright, back to yer duties, ya bilge rats.”

As Nelock looked around, he saw men and women pulling lines out of synch, and midshipmen caught in idle speculation about the strange magic that had saved Artus’s life. The crew had been working at top form, like the well-tended engine they were trained to be. Now they were at odds, slowing the ship and making their own tasks harder by working against each other.

In his deep, growling voice, Nelock began to sing. The chanty was an old one and had a hundred variations all along the Sword Coast. The crew soon picked up the song. Its rhythm became the pulse of the ship, and the crew began to once again work in harmony.

 

My love was a lass from Shadowdale,

A beauty with hair of silver.

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