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The Broken Sphere Page 7


  Teldin – or “Captain Brewer,” as everyone called him – stood freely on the sterncastle of his ship, watching his crew load his supplies and prepare the squid ship for space. He shook his head slowly. How I’ve changed, he told himself. Captain and ship owner? What next?

  A quick chill shot through his heart as part of his mind provided an unwanted answer: Nothing different – just a much larger ship. … He took a deep breath, trying to force his sudden anxiety down to a manageable level. Not necessarily, he told himself firmly, the decision’s not been made. There are always alternatives ….

  *****

  Before leaving the ship to buy the final, last-minute supplies he’d thought of, Teldin put a few minutes into considering his appearance. For obvious reasons, it wouldn’t do to wander the streets of Compact in his black garb. Yet, as “Captain Brewer,” master of an armed and provisioned squid ship, the nondescript gray homespun he’d worn to the Great Archive wouldn’t do either. After some thought, he compromised, keeping the cut of his real clothes while using the cloak’s powers to change them all to gray, and to disguise their costly fabric.

  Apparently he’d made the right decision, he decided as he headed back toward the docks. None of the gray-clad Marrakites had cast him so much as a second glance. In the few ship chandleries he’d visited, he’d been treated with some measure of respect – that befitting a ship’s captain – yet if the proprietors had labeled him a stranger, they hadn’t made an issue of it.

  He patted the long rosewood box he carried under his left arm and smiled. After visiting the first two outfitters he’d started to despair of ever finding what he was after. Yet he’d persevered, and at the third establishment the proprietor had responded to his questions, not with a blank look, but by presenting the rosewood box he now carried. The price for the device inside was steep, but Teldin had no doubt it would be worth it.

  He’d finally acquired a spyglass, like the one that he’d used aboard the gnomish dreadnought Unquenchable’s longboat. He’d thought about the cunning device often, but he’d never had the chance to purchase one until now. He remembered the sense of pleasure he’d felt as he turned it over in his hands in the chandlery, enjoying its substantial weight and its smooth brass finish. He looked forward to showing his new acquisition to Djan.

  The blow came out of nowhere, slamming with stunning force into the side of his head. He staggered back as another fist drove into his abdomen. The world spun wildly around him, and his stomach knotted with nausea. Iron-hard hands grabbed his shoulders and upper arms, almost dragging him off his feet. His back, and the back of his head, crashed against something unyielding. The rosewood box containing the spyglass crashed to the road. For an instant he thought he’d fallen backward, but then he realized he’d been driven against a wall. The hands that had grabbed him now released him.

  Teldin’s vision was still blurred. He raised a hand cautiously to the temple where the first blow had struck, and felt warm wetness on his fingertips. His skull still rang like church bells, but at least his vision was starting to clear, the red-gray fog of pain that had descended fading away. He pushed a lock of hair back from his face and looked at his attackers.

  It could almost have been a repeat of his earlier encounter with the angry Marrakites, he thought at first. Facing him were six large men, all dressed in the familiar gray homespun. None had weapons drawn, though most had knives sheathed on their belts. The two who’d dragged him and thrown him against the wall – he could see he’d been pulled off the street a dagger’s cast down an alleyway – were backing off from him, watching him carefully.

  No, he realized with a chill of fear. No, it wasn’t just like the first time. These men didn’t have the sullen, disgruntled expressions of the first group. These had expressions that were cold, emotionless. He’d seen that degree of implacable determination before, but only on the faces of professional sellswords – the hirelings of Barrab, who’d tried to capture Teldin and Rianna on the streets of Rauthaven, for example. He let his hand drop to where the hilt of his short sword should be.

  Nothing was there, of course. The weapon was safely aboard the squid ship. Confident that his nondescript appearance would be all the protection he needed, the Cloakmaster was armed with nothing more than his boot and belt knives. As smoothly as he could, he changed the reach for the nonexistent weapon into a gesture of defiance. He squared his shoulders and hooked his thumbs into his belt.

  “What is your purpose with me?” he asked, injecting a combination of amusement and menace into his quiet voice. Carefully he watched his assailants’ faces for their reactions.

  If he’d been expecting some decrease in their confidence, he was sorely disappointed. Only one man’s expression changed at all, and that was to twist his lips into an unpleasant smile.

  The largest of the six men took a step forward. He glared down into the Cloakmaster’s face. “You be not welcome here, stranger.” The man’s voice sounded as cold as a midwinter wind that brings the snow. Yet there was something about the man’s tone that set off warning bells in Teldin’s mind. The words the man used fit, matching closely what the earlier group of Marrakites had said, but, to the Cloakmaster’s ear, they sounded somehow rehearsed.

  Teldin strove to keep his thoughts and doubts off his face as he returned the man’s stare evenly. “I be of Crescent,” he said as calmly as he could manage. “I follow the Way of the Plain, is that not so? Step aside and let me pass.”

  Now all of the men were grinning nastily. “You be plain,” the leader said with a grim chuckle, “but you be a stranger. You be not welcome here, stranger. We be here to teach you how unwelcome you be.” And with that, he balled his large fists.

  It took all of the Cloakmaster’s self-discipline to hold his arrogant pose and not reach for the knife sheathed behind his belt buckle. He kept an aloof half smile on his face, as he repeated, “I follow the Way of the Plain. Step aside.”

  “You be a stranger,” the leader snarled, and the others rumbled their agreement.

  In an instant, Teldin made his decision. He let his smile broaden. “You believe I’m a stranger, do you?” he said, his voice hardly more than a whisper. “Then maybe you should see just how right you are.”

  With the last word, he drew a deep breath and let his awareness expand to include the cloak at his shoulders. He let the disguise fall away from his clothes, allowing them to appear in their stark, striking blackness. Simultaneously, he altered his body – not grossly, but enough to add a dagger’s length to the width of his shoulders and a hand to his height. As an afterthought, he changed the lines of his face, enhancing the jaw-tracing beard and darkening and thickening his brows. He glared out of his new face at the men threatening him.

  Again, he was disappointed by their reaction … which was no reaction at all. Most people would have shown some response to having the bland-looking, gray-clad man facing them turn into a hard and piratical figure garbed in commanding night black. These six, however, just stared back at him as though they saw this kind of transformation all the time. (Or as though they had expected it, part of his brain added.)

  The time for talk – for bluff and counter-bluff – was over. The leader stepped forward, his ham-sized fist drawn back to strike the first blow.

  As he drove it forward, Teldin ducked under the man’s arm, simultaneously snatching his dagger from its sheath behind his belt buckle. The point of his shoulder slammed into his assailant’s chest.

  Although staggered by the impact, the big Marrakite’s reactions were blindingly fast. Instead of trying for another blow – which was what Teldin had expected – he threw both arms around the Cloakmaster in a great bear hug. Teldin tried to gasp as the air was driven from his lungs and his back bent like a bow. He tried to drive his knife into his assailant’s body, but the arms that were killing him also trapped his own arms at his side. In desperation, he brought his knee up with all the force he could muster, driving it into the big man’s vitals.

/>   The blow struck home. His assailant made a retching, gasping noise, spewing saliva into Teldin’s face. The crushing arms fell away. Even though badly hurt, however, the big man wasn’t finished. He made a wild slash at the Cloakmaster’s neck with a long-bladed knife that had almost magically appeared in his hand. With a spasmodic movement, Teldin was able to parry the thrust, then, instinctively, he riposted. His own attack opened the side of his assailant’s throat, and the big man collapsed to the stones of the alley.

  The Cloakmaster sucked air hungrily into his aching lungs and steadied himself with his left hand against the wall. His back was on fire, the muscles feeling as though they’d been torn apart, and his vision was faintly blurred. He knew he wasn’t injured badly, however, and that he’d be back to normal in only a couple of dozen heartbeats.

  But that was time he didn’t have. Seeing their leader felled didn’t seem to deter the five other large men, and they advanced on the Cloakmaster, keeping a rough semicircle to prevent him from escaping. Their weapons were all drawn now – nothing larger than a belt knife, but since there were five blades to his one, that wasn’t overly reassuring. With a harsh cry, Teldin feinted at the face of the man to his far left, then spun and gashed the forearm of the attacker directly before him. The man howled in agony but riposted with his own weapon. Teldin danced aside, feeling the razor-edged blade scribe a line of fire across his ribs, and battle was joined.

  A broad-bladed knife stabbed at him from the right. He didn’t have time for a proper parry, but he managed to slam the pommel of his own weapon into the attacker’s wrist, deflecting the blow. He thought he felt the small bones of the other man’s wrist shatter under the impact, but he couldn’t be sure. He didn’t have time to think about it. He had to fling himself aside to avoid another weapon driving for his heart, and felt a third blade tear the flesh of his left shoulder.

  As the pain exploded in his brain, he felt energy bloom behind him. It was the cloak. In an instant, the movements of the five attackers surrounding him slowed as though the men were immersed in thickening molasses. A knife blade glinted in the sunlight as it arced toward his throat in what should have been a blindingly fast killing stroke. Now, however, the Cloakmaster had all the time in the world to raise his own blade in a perfect parry, then riposte and watch the long knife plunge into his attacker’s heart. Before the newly dead man had time to fall, Teldin had slammed a blow into another attacker’s throat and sidestepped yet another attempt to kill him.

  He could see the amazement and horror blossom in slow motion in the remaining attackers’ eyes. What must this seem like to them? he wondered with fierce amusement. To them, I’m moving as fast as lightning, as fast as a death god’s avatar. They can’t touch me, and I can slice them apart at my leisure.

  As if to reinforce that thought, he turned to avoid another wild cut at his stomach, stepped inside the aggressor’s swing, and drew his blade smoothly across the man’s forehead, laying it open to the bone. Before the wounded man’s face began to register the pain, the Cloakmaster had backed off again, well out of range of the panicked answering slash.

  Two of the attackers’ number were dead, and none of the other four was unharmed. Teldin could clearly see the survivors’ morale desert them. As one, they flung their weapons to the ground – the Cloakmaster saw them fall with unnatural slowness – and turned to flee. To his magically enhanced senses, it was as if the men were leaving at a saunter, even though he knew they were pelting headlong for safety. It would have been so easy to slay them from behind, but Teldin didn’t have it in him to kill anyone so totally defenseless, even though they’d shown no qualms about killing him. He watched them sprint out of the alleyway into the street and disappear around a comer.

  With a sigh, he let the power of the cloak slip away. Time resumed its normal speed around him, and as it did he felt – as if for the first time – the fiery throbbing of his multiple wounds. With a tired groan, he reasserted his nondescript appearance and followed the long-departed assailants out of the alley.

  *****

  Good thing Djan’s crew included at least one priest capable of using healing magic, Teldin told himself sourly a couple of hours later. Even though his wounds weren’t serious, let alone life-threatening, their pain had been a nagging reminder that something was going on, something that he didn’t fully understand. As the magic knitted the sliced and torn flesh and soothed away the pain, he was able to think clearly about what had happened. Teldin was again walking the streets of the city, searching again, but not for a spyglass this time.

  The confrontation in the alleyway hadn’t been a random event, not like his first run-in with the Marrakites. (And was even that random? he found himself wondering.) Even though at first glance that conclusion might seem paranoid, on closer inspection there was sufficient evidence to support it.

  First, his assailants had claimed to know he was a stranger. How? In his visits to the ship chandleries, nobody else had shown any suspicion that he wasn’t a native of Crescent. Why pick him out for special attention, when his magically altered appearance was specifically chosen to divert such unwanted attention? The only explanation was that the men knew – somehow, from some source – that Teldin was a stranger.

  Second, at the time the Cloakmaster had felt there was something wrong with the encounter, felt that the leader of the attackers was reciting phrases that were rehearsed, that the man was acting out a role in some play.

  Third, and perhaps most telling, was the fact that the attackers hadn’t shown any reaction when he’d used the cloak’s magic to change his appearance. How would most people have responded if the nondescript man they were talking to suddenly changed into a black-clad, piratical-looking figure? With fear and doubt, almost certainly, or at least with shock, but his assailants hadn’t shown even the slightest hint of surprise.

  What did all that tell him? His assailants had known who he was – if not what he represented – and at least some of what to expect from him. That, in turn, meant that someone had told them, and hired them to make trouble for the Cloakmaster. There was another possibility, though he decided it wasn’t likely: that his assailants had set up the whole tiling on their own initiative.

  The implication was that there was somebody – or several somebodies – in Compact who had serious interest in the movements of “Aldyn Brewer.” The Cloakmaster, in turn, had serious interest in him, or them.

  Again he’d disguised his appearance using the cloak, but this time he’d decided to use the full range of the artifact’s abilities. He smirked to himself. Let the people who were after him scour Compact for a thirty-something, sandy-haired human of average height. They wouldn’t give a second glance to a snowy-haired and bearded dwarf, stooped with age.

  Teldin’s plan of the moment was simple. By asking around at taverns, ship suppliers, and similar establishments, he would get a line on anyone who’d been showing inordinate interest in the whereabouts or actions of Captain Aldyn Brewer. He’d then track down those people and ask them some hard questions about their interests and intentions.

  As he walked along one of the major streets leading to the docks, he wondered again if he should have brought Djan – and maybe some other members of the crew – as reinforcements, or, at the very least, as moral support. No, he thought. This is a task for one.

  His plan was working out better than he’d expected. He’d already learned that two individuals had been asking about the “stranger who arrived in the one-man ship.” In fact, the second person he’d spoken to about this – the bartender at a dockside tavern – had given him a description of the people involved.

  “A woman, one of them,” the large man had told Teldin. The man casually breathed a warm reek of sour wine into his face. “Didn’t see no face under that cloak of hers, but she sounded real fine. And her bully boy partner – a big sod, couple axe handles across the shoulders, jaw like he could chew granite, and black hair down to his shoulders. Didn’t say nothing, he didn
’t, he just looked like he was thinking bad thoughts.” Teldin smiled as he remembered the man’s description. Colorful, he thought, and something I’m not likely to forget.

  He’d asked similar questions at several more establishments, building up a mental picture of the pair’s movements. As he’d expected, they’d been quartering the port area of the city, gathering as much information as they could about “Aldyn Brewer.” Now, it seemed, they were heading back toward the docks themselves – specifically to the area of the docks where the Cloakmaster’s squid ship was moored. He smiled to himself. If they were still following the pattern he thought he’d established for their movements, he was pretty sure he knew their next destination – a small wineshop called “Curbert’s,” only a few spear casts from the Cloakmaster’s ship. He picked up his pace, cursing for the moment his choice of a dwarf for his disguise; he’d be making much better time if he had longer legs. If his timing was right, he might be able to set up some kind of ambush for the pair when they emerged from the wineshop.

  Curbert’s was less than a dagger cast ahead of him when he saw the front door open and two figures emerge. He slowed his pace immediately to an apparently aimless stroll. Damn it to the hells, he thought, almost.

  It was them all right, the pair that the bartender had described. The woman was short, of relatively light build, but that was all he could make out. She wore an ankle-length cloak of light gray homespun, with the cowl pulled forward over her head. If it weren’t for the large figure beside her, Teldin would have paid no more attention to her than to any other Marrakite woman. Her companion was definitely striking, however – striking and familiar. Even though he couldn’t see the big man’s face, Teldin knew it was the same man he’d seen on the street near the Great Archive – the man who’d prompted that strange, inexplicable reaction in the Cloakmaster.

  Mentally, he assessed his emotional reactions, in much the same way he might probe a tooth to see if it ached. This time there was no strange aversion; the figure was just another big man … and a big man who didn’t seem to be carrying any weapons, he noted with satisfaction. Teldin let his hand fall to the hilt of his short sword (he’d made sure to bring it this time), which felt more like a broadsword in comparison to his dwarven frame. He picked up his pace, enough to start to close the distance with his quarry but hopefully not enough to draw attention to himself.