Read The Sea Devils Eye Online
Authors: Mel Odom
“I’ve heard of Azla,” a man said as he helped himself to the short sword. “As pirates go, she’s not a bad’n.”
“Are there any more weapons in this hold?” Jherek asked.
A woman took a lantern from a peg on the wall and said, “They keep swords and knives back here.” She pointed to a small room at the back of the cargo hold.
“Those of you who want to join in fighting for your freedom,” Jherek said, “get weapons and come topside. It’s not going to be easy.”
Jherek turned and dashed back up the steps leading to the main deck. The two armed former slaves followed him.
*****
Pacys floated near the great whale. Generally the creatures were not overly friendly. They had their own agenda and didn’t often give time to humans, elves, or anyone else.
How is it that you know me? the old bard asked.
By your heart. Just as the whale song fills all of Seros, there are those among us who can identify individual heartbeats of any who live below and any who live above. Your heartbeat has been known to my kind for thousands of years. By now, after all you have seen and heard in Seros, you shouldn’t be surprised that you and the Taker are in our histories.
In truth, Pacys wasn’t surprised. Every society he’d encountered in Seros told tales of his arrival, as well as the Taker’s.
What do you want with me?
To give you that which you seek.
Am I here, or am I still among the locathah?
You are safe among the locathah, Taleweaver. Only your mind journeys far at this moment. The locathah chieftain’s herbs freed your thoughts. I merely captured them for a moment with my song.
You know I seek the boy, Pacys said.
Jherek. Yes, we know.
His name is Malorrie.
That is the name he gave you, Taleweaver, the whale replied. He is in hiding, from himself and from the fears that have chased him since childhood. He is not whole.
Pacys gazed into the great eye and saw the compassion there. I was told he would not be whole.
Your voice, your heart, Taleweaver, only these things can heal him.
Where is the boy? he asked.
He is far from here now, but he will be here soon.
Why?
It was foretold. The whales must help him forge his destiny.
Then I should be here.
No, the whale said. Your time will not be then. You must journey to Myth Nantar. Your destiny lies in that direction … for the time being. When everything is as it should be, you will find Jherek.
Wouldn’t it be better if I found him earlier?
It would be easy to write a song in the heat of passion, but that should not be the only time you work on it. Passion and skill must both be applied to make it strong enough to stand in the hearts and minds of those who listen. Time is the glue that binds the two. When the time is right, you will find each other. The eye closed and reopened slowly. Our time here grows short. My song only transports your thoughts here for a few moments. Like you, I am a bard to my people. It is my duty to record our histories, and to talk to you at this moment.
You’re a bard?
Yes. Who else do you think sang the first songs of Seros, then gave music to the people above and below that they might spread it across the dry lands?
There are many stories… the bard admitted.
Even now, the whale went on, my people gather along the Sharksbane Wall in an attempt to hold back the tide of sea devils overflowing into the Inner Sea. It is foretold that we will fail.
Then why try? Pacys’s heart ached to hear the quiet acceptance in the whale’s voice.
Because we must all play our parts. We must all follow our destinies.
*****
Topside, Jherek looked at the carnage littering the slave ship’s deck and felt his resolve weaken. Blood ran in rivulets across the wood, watered down by falling rain. Black Champion’s crew formed a half-circle with Glawinn as their center. The paladin lunged forward, slamming his shield into one of the slavers, then running his sword through the body of a second.
With a cry of warning, unable to attack the men from the back without letting them know he was there, Jherek rushed the slaver crew. He caught one man’s blade with the cutlass and stopped another with the hook. Striding forward, he kicked the first man, then used the cutlass to slit the throat of the second.
Bodies rolled on the slaver’s deck, shifting with the pitch and yaw of the pirate ship tethered to her. The clang of metal on metal punctuated the sounds of screamed curses, prayers, and the wounded and dying. Footing became treacherous.
Arm aching with effort but never failing, Jherek fought on. Blood splashed into his face but he distanced himself from it, from all the death around him. Malorrie had trained him to think that way, to live past the moment.
Sabyna fought nearby, using twin long knives to turn attacks, then spinning inside an opponent’s offense and delivering blows herself. She moved as gracefully as a dancer, sliding through the press of men around her and searching out opportunities. Skeins floated at her side, wrapped tightly into a whip that struck out men’s eyes or tore their faces when they threatened its master.
“Fight, you dogs!” Azla screamed, urging her men on. “The first of you who turns tail on me now I’ll personally deliver to Umberlee!”
She fought in a two-handed style, her scimitar flashing in her right hand while a long-bladed dirk was held in her left. She blocked a thrust from a half-ogre with her scimitar, then stepped forward and ripped the dirk across the creature’s throat.
Incredibly, the slaver crew backed away before the onslaught of the pirates, giving ground steadily as they retreated to the stern castle.
A tall man strode to the front of the stern castle railing, above the trapped slavers. He was deep chested and long-limbed, dressed in crimson and gray clothing, a dark red cloak riding the breeze behind him. Gold and silver gleamed at his wrists, neck, and chest-plain bands with runes carved into them.
“I am Tarmorock Hahn, son of Jakyr Hahn, and I am captain of this ship,” he declared. “Who is captain of that floundering pirate?”
The fighting broke off, and the two groups formed lines of demarcation.
Azla stepped forward, and three of her pirates and Jherek stepped with her, keeping a protective ring about her.
“I am Azla, captain of Black Champion.”
Tarmorock grinned at her, gave her a cocky salute with the jeweled sword in his hand, and said, “You’ll not be captain for long from the looks of her.”
“I’m standing on my next ship,” Azla stated.
“Confidence!” the slaver roared. “Gods, but I do admire that in a woman.”
“As captain of a slaver,” Azla retorted, “I find you offer little to admire.”
“And a cutting tongue as well as good looks. Would that we had met under other circumstances, I’d have offered you a dinner by candlelight.”
“It’s just as well,” Azla said. “Offered aboard a slave ship with the stench you find here, dinner wouldn’t have stayed down.”
Tarmorock glared at her, stung even more when Azla’s crew hurled taunts at him. “I offer you the opportunity to duel for my ship,” he said. “Captain to captain. I offer this as a man of honor.”
“There’s no honor in slavery,” Azla said, “and I’ve no reason to fight you for anything. I’ve taken out your weapons, lashed my sinking ship to this one to drag about like a stone, killed over half your crew, and freed the slaves from the hold to fight against you as well. There’s nothing here for me to fight for. Resist and we’ll kill you anyway.”
“I offer you honor in battle.”
Jherek felt a response stir within him. Azla was correct in her assessment of the situation, but a need rose in him to recognize Tarmorock’s challenge. He was barely able to still his tongue.
“I don’t need honor,” Azla stated. “Honor doesn’t have sails nor cargo space. I have your ship in all but name. You offer me nothing I care for.”
“Captain,” Glawinn said, stepping forward. Blood stained his copper-colored armor and fresh dents and scratches showed. “If you don’t mind, I’ll stand him to his battle of honor.”
“Ah, a true warrior among you,” Tarmorock said. “You, sir, are a man of the blade?”
“Till the day I die,” Glawinn said.
Pride welled up in Jherek as he watched the knight stand tall in front of the slaver captain.
“No,” Azla said. “There’ll be no battle for this ship. I’ve won her, fair and square, and I’ll take her if I have to gut you down to the last man.”
Tarmorock glanced at Glawinn and said, “Pity. Apparently there’s no prize to be won, but what say you to honor itself? Will you be part and party to a bandit’s approach to stealing my ship? Become a thief yourself?”
Glawinn’s cheeks reddened, but Jherek couldn’t tell if it was from anger or embarrassment.
“I’m no thief,” the paladin said. “Nor shall I ever be.”
“Those are harsh words that drip from your lips,” Azla said coldly. “Especially from a man whose livelihood depends on stealing the lives of others.”
“And you’ve never spent a life or three in the pursuit of your own wealth, Captain Azla?” Tarmorock hurried on before she could respond, switching his gaze back to Glawinn. “I was trained in the sword, and conducting myself honorably on the battlefield, long before fate handed me this vocation. You understand this?”
“Yes,” Glawinn answered.
“Then you’ll fight me?”
“Yes.”
Tarmorock grinned. “And if I should win?”
“You’ll have all I own,” the paladin replied, “and your freedom from this ship.”
“There will be no fighting,” Azla stated, staring at Glawinn.
The paladin looked at her, gentleness in his eyes. “Lady, I have given leave to your ways though they are not my own, and I have stood in good stead when you needed me. I ask that you give me leave to stand by my own principles in this matter.”
“You did the honorable thing by helping rescue the prisoners aboard this ship,” Azla told him. “This isn’t just about stealing something that didn’t belong to you.”
“There are times,” Glawinn said in a patient voice, “when a man must stand or fall on his own merits, to be weighed and measured by the depth of his heart and the strength of his arm.”
“You’re risking this for nothing.”
“On the contrary,” Glawinn stated, “I’m risking this for all that I am.” He looked at her. “If I may have your leave.”
“Damn you for a fool, knight.”
Glawinn spread his bloodstained hands and said, “If only I can be an honorable fool.”
Azla waved her men back, clearing the space in front of the stern castle.
Tarmorock descended the stairs and stripped away his crimson cloak. “There is one thing further I’d ask of you.” He rolled his bastard sword in his hands, causing it to dance and spin effortlessly. “Even should I lose, I want my men spared. The ones that yet live. I ask only that they be put overboard in lifeboats with provisions. This far out at sea, that’s a grim prospect, and I know that, but it’s the best I can do for them. They’re a motley crew, but they are my responsibility.”
“Done,” Glawinn replied without hesitation.
The slaver captain glanced at Azla.
The half-elf gave a tight nod. “For the knight’s honor, not yours.”
“Of course.” Tarmorock bowed.
“Do you have any armor?” Glawinn asked.
“No.”
“I have an extra set aboard the ship,” the paladin offered.
“Thank you, no,” Tarmorock replied. “I was trained in the art of the blade without the benefit of cumbersome armor. My father felt I was destined for better things. Through no fault of his own, I managed not to find those things.”
“Young warrior,” the paladin called.
Jherek hurried over to Glawinn’s side.
“This is Jherek of Velen,” the paladin said as he began unbuckling his armor. “He will stand as my second.”
Fear and pride swelled within the young sailor at the same time. He started helping Glawinn take his armor off and asked, “What am I supposed to do?”
“Take care of my armor,” Glawinn said, “see to it that the promises I have made to this man are carried out, and stay with me as I die… should it come to that.”
*****
Myth Nantar must be open again, Taleweauer, the whale continued, and made whole once more. You are the only one who can accomplish this. That which is secret must needs be known. Only then will the impenetrable wall that surrounds Myth Nantar be broken and the mythal once again protect those it was designed to protect to promote peace above and below.
How will I do this? Pacys asked. I am told the way is impassable.
You are the Taleweaver, the whale replied. This is your destiny. It will not be denied. Trust in the songs that are given to you. Now, there is one thing more. Stretch out your hand.
Without hesitation, Pacys reached out to the whale. A warm tingle filled his hand. When he looked, he saw an ivory orb lying in his palm. It was as smooth as a pearl, no larger than the ball of his thumb, and with a slight translucence.
What is this? the bard asked.
It is your key to Myth Nantar, Taleweaver. This was created by the whales who first saw Myth Nantar lost to the Dukars, then to the sahuagin. When the mythal hardened and-kept all out, the great whale bard of that time created this key, knowing it could only be used by you.
How could he know this?
She, the great whale bard corrected, knew it the same way you know a song is strong and true, that it will wring joy or tears from its listeners. Do you question your muse, Taleweaver?
No. Oghma be revered, I am thankful for the inspiration that comes my way.
The key is like a song that comes to you unbidden. The great bard drew upon her skill and magic and forged it, as was her destiny. You haven’t yet understood why Myth Nantar is called the City of Destinies. It was created to knit the worlds below and above in harmony, to establish that which all the rest of Toril might follow. Those who live in Seros know we are all of one. We must live as one if the seas are to survive. That is what we are taught, Taleweaver, and your efforts will help teach others.
Pacys studied the ivory ball in his palm, opening himself to it and feeling the magic inside. It felt very old and powerful, and it drew him to it like steel to a lodestone. The music that filled his heart let him know the talisman was his to use.