Peregrine may not have been as large as the massive cargo carracks that formed the bulk of the Senshall fleet, but at over a hundred and fifty feet long, and thirty feet across at her widest point, she was still a big ship. And busy, too. Corec had to wait his turn to ascend the ramp from the pier to the main deck, while the sailors ahead of him rolled a heavy barrel up the incline.
When he made it to the deck, he greeted Boktar, who was crossing items off a checklist.
âThere was nothing left to haul, so I took the mules back to the stable,â Corec said. âWeâre paid up four months in advance, and Treya left extra coin with Renny Senshall to pay the stablemaster more if weâre gone longer.â The group had pooled their money together to stable their animals in Tyrsall, since that wasnât included in the expenses Senshall was paying for.
The dwarf nodded. âThen I think we can cast off as soon as the crew is finished loading whatever it is theyâre loading.â
A large swell passed below, a wave on its way to the shore. The ship rocked just slightly. Corec closed his eyes and grasped the railing, trying to keep his stomach steady. They hadnât even set sail yet, and it was already starting. Normally he could ignore the smell of the ocean, but now that he was on board, all it did was make him think of how sick he was about to get.
âAre you all right?â Boktar asked.
âI donât like boats.â
The other man laughed. âAnd youâre coming with us? Weâre going to be at sea for almost a month.â
âIâll probably spend the first week below decks trying to keep from getting sick. Is everyone on board?â
âOur people are. Captain Valen is keeping track of his crew and the Senshall folks, but I think most of them are here.â
âWhoâs that?â Corec asked, eyeing a woman who was helping Marco tally up crates of food before the sailors hauled them below. âI thought the crew were all men.â The woman had the bronze skin and dark eyes of a Sanvarite. Her black hair was long, falling to the middle of her back, and she wore a modest white dress with a high neckline, and sleeves that covered her arms to the wrist.
âThatâs Leena, our new cook. I hired her yesterday. To be honest, I doubt sheâs done much campfire cooking, but I love Sanvari food. Plus, we didnât have a lot of choiceânobody else wanted to sign on at cookâs wages for a trip across the sea without knowing when theyâd return.â
âCan she cook at all?â
âShe said all the right things, I just got the impression she hasnât spent much time living rough. She seems a bit tooâ¦cultured. Oh, and she doesnât speak Eastern. Just trade tongue, Western, and her own language.â
Corec nodded. They usually spoke trade tongue anyway, since Shavalaâs Eastern wasnât strong. He wasnât sure if Sarette spoke Eastern either.
Another large swell passed by and he steadied himself again, his head feeling funny. Could he really handle a cross-ocean voyage?
Abruptly, he realized it wasnât seasickness he was feelingâor at least that wasnât the only thing he was feeling. There was a mage nearby. Casting his mind out, Corecâs eyes fell on the cook again. Any time he looked her way, he felt an oddly familiar sensation. He hurriedly clamped down on his magic, but it wasnât necessary. His mind wasnât forcing him to cast the warden binding spell the way it had with Razai. Instead, it was more like a gentle suggestion. Had he finally gotten control over the spell?
If Leena was a mage, why was she working as a cook? Was she spying for Varsin? Marco was along as Senshallâs official representative, but the trader may have sent someone less obvious too. Then again, Corec was a mage, and heâd been working as a caravan guard. Perhaps it wasnât that strange after all. Heâd keep an eye on her, but if she didnât cause any problems, heâd leave her alone.
Something had been nagging at Corecâs mind ever since heâd met with Yelena a few days earlier. Wardens were supposed to be able to sense other mages. Heâd felt somethingâthat strange sense of familiarityâwhen heâd first encountered Razai and Sarette, and now Leena, but heâd never felt it with Yelena or her bondmates, or with Priest Telkin, or Vartus or Galina back in Snow Crown. And heâd never felt it randomly on the street, though he must have passed by other mages along the way.
After heâd bonded Sarette and Razai, the feeling had stopped, and heâd never noticed it at all from Katrin or the others, though he wouldnât have been able to recognize it back in the early days. If it really was a wardenâs ability to sense other mages, then why had it only worked three times?
The only possible answer was that heâd been wrong. The oddly familiar sensation wasnât how wardens identified other mages after all.
But then, what was it? Could it have something to do with how heâd accidentally cast the binding spell five times? And had it truly been accidental? Katrin, Ellerie, and Yelena had all pointed that he was only bonding women. At this point, it had to be deliberate. The sensation he was feeling from Leena might provide him with a clue, if he could just figure out what it meant.
And how did wardens recognize other mages? Yelena had confirmed that they could, but sheâd never actually mentioned how it worked.
Corec glanced back at the raised deck to the rear of the ship, where Katrin and Shavala were standing. They were mages, so why couldnât he sense anything different about them? If he concentrated, the warden bond would tell him what direction they were in, but that was the only unusual feeling he could identify.
He stared at Katrin, focusing until he could almost feel his eyes crossing. Luckily, she was facing the other way, and wouldnât see him making a fool of himself. Then he felt itâjust a slight tingling sensation. He tried again with Shavala, and it happened faster this time. When he focused on Leena, it happened almost immediately.
It was getting easier. He had to concentrate on a specific person, but it only took a moment. All heâd had to do was try, rather than expecting it to happen on its own.
One mystery had been solved, though it still didnât explain the other sensation he was feeling from Leena. If the ship hadnât been preparing to leave, heâd have tried to talk to Yelena about it.
âCaptain Valen,â Boktar said suddenly from behind him, âthis is Corec Tarwen of Larso, the last member of our party. Weâre all aboard and ready to go as soon as you are.â
Valen was short, hardly taller than Boktar, but he had the self-assured air of someone who knew what he was doing.
âCaptain,â Corec said, greeting him with a nod. âCan you tell us when weâll be leaving?â Asking the question made his stomach churn.
âWeâve got a good wind at the moment for getting out of the harbor,â Valen replied. âIf it keeps up, weâll set out when the purser returns from the company office, though I think weâre waiting for one more member of the Senshall group.â
âIâm sure sheâll be here on time,â Boktar said.
Corec furrowed his brow. âWhoâs missing?â
âRenny Senshallâs representative. I never caught her nameâoh.â The dwarf stopped talking and stared past him.
Corec turned to the loading ramp to see who Boktar was looking at.
#
Razai was waiting two berths away from the Peregrine when Corec strode past on his way to the ship. He didnât notice her in the sailor disguise she was wearing.
She couldnât help laughing. Her father had won after all.
Why hadnât she gone somewhere farther away? Why had she stayed in a city Corec visited regularly? Sure, Vash was here, but he wasnât that close of a friend. Instead of Tyrsall, she could have gone to⦠Her mind drew a blank. She knew people across the entire continent, but they were all like Vash. Acquaintances, or people sheâd worked with once or twice. Hells, half of them were probably dead of old age by now. Humans aged quickly, and most demonborn did as well.
In the distance, Corec climbed the steep ramp leading to Peregrineâs deck.
She shook her head, still laughing at the futility of it all. All those times Renny had talked about her former roommate, but until sheâd mentioned the name, Razai hadnât made the connection. In the weeks sheâd spent following the group, sheâd never realized Treya was a Sister of the Three Orders. The girl certainly wasnât a concubine, and that was the limit of what Razai knew about the Orders.
She could still runâsimply tell Renny she wasnât going to take the job after allâbut she had never run from a threat before, so why continue trying to escape from inevitability? Vatarxis always got his way in the end. Besides, it was hard to turn down four or more months of good, steady pay, and if she knew where Corec was at all times, she could stop worrying about him turning up unexpectedly. It wasnât him she had a problem with.
Razai composed herself and rubbed at her eyes. Her laughter must have crossed over into hysterics, judging by the strange look she was getting from a nearby fisherman, who was staring up at her from where heâd been scrubbing the deck of his boat. She winked at him and shed her illusion, taking on her own appearance. There wasnât any point in hiding her identity. It wouldnât take long for Corec to realize who she was.
The fisherman gaped and jerked erect at the sudden change. When she gave him a wide smile, showing her fangs, he stumbled backward and fell into the harbor with a splash.
Razai peered down into the water, checking to make sure he hadnât hit his head when he went over the side. After reassuring herself heâd be able to climb back up on his own, she hefted her pack over her shoulder and headed down the pier, mentally preparing herself. Sheâd known this moment was coming for six days nowâever since Renny had told her the names of the group sheâd be traveling withâbut sheâd put it off as long as possible, resisting the concubineâs suggestion of an earlier meeting.
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At the top of the ramp, she found Corec talking to the stoneborn man, Boktar. The redhead and the wood elf were up on the quarterdeck, standing at the railing and looking down into the water of the harbor. The rest of the group must have been below decks. Boktar saw her first and stopped talking.
Corec turned her way, his eyes widening. âRazai! What are you doing here?â
âRenny Senshall sent me,â she said flatly. âThatâs the only reason I came, so donât go getting any ideas. I work for her, not for you.â
âYouâre the woman she mentioned? I thought you didnât want to be anywhere near me.â
Razai shrugged. âI gave her my word before I knew youâd be here, but the payâs good.â
He stared at her suspiciously. âAre you really working for Senshall, or for someone else?â
âIâm no longer associated with my former employer,â she said. Her father may have tricked her into following Corec again, but if Vatarxis wanted any information out of her, sheâd make him work for it. âIâm here to make sure Rennyâs investment is used wisely.â
Corec had the gall to laugh at that. âWell, I guess Iâm glad itâs someone we know. Welcome aboard.â
What did he mean by that? Did he think sheâd go easy on him? She grunted in response. âWhereâs my cabin?â
âAhh, I havenât actually seen mine yet either. Boktar, what do we have?â
âWeâre taking up all six passenger cabins,â the stoneborn man said. âTwo people per cabin. Razai, weâve never really spoken before, but thank you for your help back in High Cove. If youâre the woman Mistress Senshall is sending along, youâll be sharing with the cook we hired. We couldnât put her in with the crew. The cabins are small and cramped, but at least we each have our own cots.â
âI thought Varsin said his brother used this ship himself?â Corec asked.
âI imagine he takes over the captainâs chamber and stateroom when he does, but this is still better than being in hammocks with the crew. These ships just arenât built for comfort.â
âI suppose we donât have a choice at this point,â Corec said. âLetâs go see what weâve got.â
Razai followed the two men. Out of habit, she eyed them for weaknesses. She knew from experience that Corec carried his sword almost everywhere, but neither he nor Boktar were wearing their plate armor, and their mail didnât protect the whole body. They didnât have their helmets either, probably not expecting any threats within the city. She could kill them both easily enough if she took them by surprise.
That would still leave the women, thoughâall mages. Treya in particular was a problem. As a priestess, if she was strong enough, she could stop Razai where she stood. Treya would have to be first, but if Razai were to ever kill Treya, Renny would never forgive her, even if there was a good reason for it.
The others could be a problem too. Razai didnât know much about what they were capable of. And the stormborn woman was new. She carried a staff-spear like Wotarâs, but if she was traveling with a warden, she was likely a mage as well. What could she do?
Razai pondered different scenarios as Boktar showed her and Corec around the ship.
#
Sarette carefully stepped onto the wooden beam, wrapping one arm around the mizzenmast for support as she let go of the rigging. A huge, square sail hung from the beam below, while a smaller one billowed out directly ahead of her, attached to another beam above. From her perch, she could see the ocean spreading out in all directions.
âI like it up here!â Shavala called out from the other side of the mast. âBut none of the others will come with me.â
âI can see why!â Sarette was no stranger to heights, but the swaying caused by the wind was different than looking down from Runnerâs Summit. It was more like how Vartus had described flying a storm, but Sarette had never been strong enough to try that. Yet, she amended in her mind. âAre you sure weâre allowed to be here?â
âI donât think theyâll need to adjust the square sails again until the wind changes. I hope thatâs soonâweâre going slower now than we were yesterday.â The elven woman sounded disappointed.
âBecause the windâs at the wrong angle?â Sarette asked. She didnât know anything about sailing, but it seemed obvious.
âYes. We shouldnât have to wait for it, but I tried to change the direction of the wind once and almost passed out.â
âWith wind, you always have to be careful. How did you do it?â
âI grabbed hold of the wind blowing in my hair and tried to push it away, but there was too muchâit just kept coming, and I couldnât hold on.â
âWind is dangerous. Do you remember the lightning storm? Itâs like that, but it has its own rules. When you move wind, what takes its place?â
âNothing?â Shavala suggested. âItâs just air.â
âNo, there canât be nothing. The air behind it fills in the gap. And then the air farther behind fills in that gap.â
âIt moves like water, then?â
âI donât think itâs quite the same thing,â Sarette said. Sheâd never been able to master the weather during her training, but sheâd spent four years learning how it worked. âWater is either there or not, but when you move wind, you create more wind. The air around you never ends, and each bit of it is connected to more. If youâre not careful, youâll use up your strength and go into drain shock. Instead, push it just a little bit at a time, and then more will follow on its own. It wonât keep going for long, but itâs enough to save your strength. When it dies down, you can do it again and again.â
Shavala peered at her from around the mizzenmast and nodded. âSo I push the wind toward the sails, then let go and wait?â
âItâs more complicated than that. If the wind isnât already blowing in the direction you want, you have to counter its force first. If it blows diagonally from the right, then you match the angle and strength from the left.â Sarette let go of the mast to demonstrate, with her hands coming together in the shape of an arrowhead. âWhatâs left over is pushed forward. And then, if you want more strength, you can add a second air stream blowing straight ahead. But all of that only works if the angle is already close to what you want, like it is now. The rules change depending on the angle of the wind and what youâre trying to do. If the windâs coming toward you, you have to push directly against it, and you may have to counter your own blowback too. Youâll be working against yourself, so you wonât be able to maintain it long enough to push the ship.â
Shavala tilted her head to the side. âI see why Meritia said to wait before trying to affect the weather. Can you teach me?â
âIâd like that,â Sarette said. She needed to practice it herself now that her magic was getting stronger. She understood the concepts but had never been able to apply them before. âTo get started, use your weather senseâI mean, your elder sensesâto measure how strong the wind is blowingâ¦â
#
Treya knocked on the door to Corecâs cabin, then entered, finding him lying on his back on a cot, with his left arm draped over his eyes. There was a bucket near the cot, just in case.
âKatrin tells me you had a bad night,â she said.
âNo worse than during the day,â he muttered, without looking her way. âI just had a hard time falling asleep.â
She sat on the cot and laid a glowing hand against his chest. While she couldnât eliminate the seasickness entirely, either from him or from herself, sheâd grown adept at lessening the symptoms.
âThere,â she said. âThat should help for a few hours.â
He drew in a deep breath, then sat up next to her, swinging his legs over the side of the bed. âThanks. How are you doing?â
âNot as bad as you. I really think youâd feel better if youâd come up on deck. The sailors say that looking at the ship makes it worse. You have to look away instead.â
âIâll think about it,â he said. âRight now, Iâm just hoping it wears off like it did last time. Five days, right? I just have to make it three more days. Unless it takes longer because weâre crossing the ocean this time rather than following the coast.â
Treya winced. She hadnât even considered that. âI hope not.â The idea of being sick for four weeks wasnât pleasant. âIâll ask Captain Valen. He must have had seasick passengers before.â
âHowâs everyone else?â Corec had started to sound more like his old self, but he kept his eyes closed and didnât stand up from the bed.
âBored, I think, but Katrin would know more than me. Iâm not doing that much better than you.â
âAhh, well, I wasnât really in the mood to talk by the time she came to bed last night.â
âI know,â Treya said with a grin. âShe wants to trade cabins with me. She says Shavala will be better company than you.â
âWhat?â he asked, opening one eye and peering at her.
âSheâll stay with Shavala for the next few nights and Iâll stay here. There are separate cots, so itâll be fine. Sheâs worried youâll need a healer in the middle of the night.â
He snorted. âSure, I guess we can make each other miserable for a few days. But you have to bring your own bucket.â
Treya laughed, then had to force herself to stop before the laughter made her queasy. âAre you ready to eat? I donât think I could stomach whatever it was the sailors had this morning, but Leena baked fresh bread and made a sausage gravy. I didnât risk the gravy, but the bread was good.â
âI need a little more time before I try standing up. Did you know sheâs a mage?â
âWhat?â
âLeenaâsheâs a mage. I told Ellerie and Katrin about her, but I thought youâd want to know too. Donât worry, I didnât cast the binding spell.â
âWhy is a mage working as a cook?â Treya asked. Leena hadnât said much about herself in the two days since the ship had set sail. Sheâd mostly kept to herself, other than conversations with Boktar and Marco about their food supplies.
âI wondered that too, but then I realized sheâs not much different than us. Weâre mages and weâre here. Everyone needs to make a living.â
âThatâs true, but does Boktar know?â
âEllerie was going to tell him. I donât know if theyâre going to talk to her about it or not.â
From above them came the sound of the shipâs master shouting out commands to trim the sails. As always, the words sounded like gibberish, but the sailors never seemed to have a problem understanding them.
âWhy are they changing the sails so often?â Corec asked.
âI havenât been up much today, but yesterday, Captain Valen said the winds keep shifting. We havenât lost any time because theyâre stronger than normal for this time of year, but it means we have to keep making adjustments.â
Corec nodded.
âHave you given any more thought to Four Roads?â Treya asked, changing the subject. Of all the plans theyâd discussed, that was the option she liked the best. She still had a few friends in Four Roads, and wouldnât mind settling down there with Corec, Katrin, and Shavala. Perhaps Bobo and Sarette would stick around too.
Things had changed since Treya had first met Corec. Sheâd been angry about the binding spell in the beginning, but once theyâd discovered what it was, and that it was likely the reason her healing magic had gotten stronger, sheâd come to appreciate it. And she enjoyed traveling with the group. Perhaps Shana liked to work alone, but Treyaâs traveling companions had become her friends, as close as anyone sheâd ever known except perhaps for Renny.
âFour Roads isnât very far from Larso,â Corec said. âWe need to figure out what to do about Prince Rusol first. I still have no idea why heâs trying to kill me. Maybe Yelena will discover something while weâre gone, or maybe my father will have an idea. Oh, in the letter I sent him, I told him to send his reply to Sister Treya at the Three Orders chapter house in Tyrsall. Youâre the only one I know who lives in the city. Well, other than Yelena and Varsin Senshall, but I didnât think I could ask them to hold onto my mail for me.â
âThatâs fine,â Treya said, then bit her lip. She took a deep breath before continuing. âI told Mother Ola everything. About wardens and the red-eyes, and about Rusol and how heâs trying to kill you.â
Corec turned to face her. âWhat did she say?â
âSheâs worried. She doesnât know you, but Rusol is heir to the throne of Larso. His mother is a Three Orders concubine.â
âSo was mine.â
âI told her that, and I think it helped, but she asked me not to write to the Highfell chapter house. Rusolâs mother grew up there. If we ask the wrong questions, word might get back to herâ¦or to him.â
Corec nodded. âMy mother was from the Highfell chapter house too. I never thought about thatâI wonder if they knew each other. But she died a long time ago. I suppose no one at the chapter house is likely to remember her.â
His eyes had grown distant while he talked. Treya laid her hand over his, and he gave her a small smile.
âMother Ola wasnât aware of any problems in Larso,â she said, âbut sheâs going to ask around discreetly to see if she can find out whatâs going on. Sheâs also going to try to find Shana, who may have a better idea.â
âShanaâs your teacher, right?â
âSometimes. Sheâs the reason I joined the Order of Mystics. I met her when I was young, back when she was hunting down a band of hillfolk bandits whoâd been raiding the farms west of Four Roads.â Treya couldnât quite bring herself to mention that it was those bandits whoâd killed her own parents. If theyâd even been her parents. Godborn or not, she couldnât forgive Bishop Lastal for raising those doubts in her mind.
âThank you for helping,â Corec said. âMaybe weâll find someone who can tell us whatâs going on.â
Treya nodded. âCome on,â she said, standing up. âYouâd better get some food before the healing wears off.â