The Raven Collection

Chapter 33.

Denser angled his body horizontal to the ground and tightened his grip on Erienne, who hung below him, his arms clasped under her b.r.e.a.s.t.s, her legs locked around his. He heard her mutter and drag at the air with her fingers as she finished the preparation. He flew over the archers, just thirty feet above their heads. One looked up instinctively, shouted and angled his bow. Too late.

Erienne jerked her arms downwards. The ForceCone flared out, battering the archers to the earth. Bows and limbs snapped as the pressure of the spell beat relentlessly down, compressing everything beneath it into a six-inch-deep indentation in the soft ground, perfectly circular and ten yards across.

Denser circled while Erienne maintained the Cone until the pleading and crying out had stopped. She thrust her arms again, hard. Denser imagined, only too easily, the ribcages crumpling. He wheeled back towards The Raven before any fire could be brought to bear on them, magical or otherwise.

"Angry about something?" he asked.

"You could say," she said. "My head is killing me."

Denser cruised in low over the left flank. Below them The Raven and Al-Arynaar were breaking the last of the resistance. With TaiGethen in behind them, the enemy were cut off and frightened. And while the Al-Arynaar, unused to in-line battle, were able to make little headway, The Raven had no such trouble and corpses littered the ground in their wake. One ma.s.sive strike from Aeb finished it. His axe smashed through an unprotected skull, top to bottom, the force of the strike taking the weapon through the man"s shoulder and shearing off his right arm. The survivors turned and ran.

"Go, go!" shouted Hirad, and The Raven charged after the fleeing enemy as they sought to dodge the TaiGethen, pursuing them through the gap in the cliffs, along a sandy beach and out into the flat, silt-filled estuary.

"Stay up," said Erienne. "a.s.suming your arms are up to it. I"ll prepare again."

"Anything in particular?"

"I thought HotRain."

"It"ll do the job."

Denser swooped low. "Hirad, we"re going forward, see if we can"t disrupt the runners or the defence."

"Be careful."

The mage pair headed up once more. Denser could see panthers in among the elves, joining the push forward, their enigmatic partners sprinting close behind, unarmed and unconcerned. The defenders on the other bank were falling back, trying to maintain an orderly retreat with the Al-Arynaar and the awesome TaiGethen pressing forward with increasing ferocity, though they were outnumbered almost three to one.

Denser flew on over the heads of the defenders and out into the estuary. A small knot of men was running towards one of ten or more rowing boats. Out in the bay, three ships were moored, flags fluttering atop mainmasts. One unfurled lazily as he watched, caught in a wash of pallid moonlight. It was unmistakable.

"I don"t f.u.c.king believe it." He dived for the knot of men. "Let"s get those runners."

"Suits me."

Denser flew in fast and low, keeping tight control of his concentration as his fury threatened to boil over. Erienne released the spell, sending a focussed cloud of HotRain spearing down, flaring in the sky as it fell, each drop of magical fire the size of her thumb.

Sudden blue light mixed with the orange of the spell as the HotRain crackled uselessly over the shield covering the runners.

"Dammit," snapped Erienne.

Denser growled his frustration and wheeled once more, looking down on the faces that craned to see who it was that attacked them. Arrows came from the night, flicking close but harmlessly by. And from somewhere DeathHail sheeted up at them, forcing him into a desperate climb and turn. Too close. Gripping Erienne tighter still, he took a last look down, meeting the eyes of a man he recognised.

"We"ll hunt you!" he called, as he rushed skywards beyond sight and arrow range. "Don"t you realise what you"ve done?"

"Calm down, Denser," said Erienne. "What"s got into you all of a sudden?"

"Tell you when we land."

The Raven were being left behind, refusing to sacrifice their discipline for a headlong charge. Not that it mattered. The TaiGethen and Al-Arynaar were outpacing everyone else.

Denser saw a TaiGethen come alongside a fleeing warrior, snap out an elbow and send him crashing to the ground, hands over his nose and mouth. The elf stopped and spun gracefully like a dancer, then stepped in to finish the man off, skewering his brain through an eye.

But they weren"t quite fast enough. Boats were already being pushed out into the bay, desperate oarsmen pulling hard, arrows fired at them sending the blue of HardShields flaring into the night. The Raven could see it all and slowed as one. Denser landed behind them and let Erienne out of his arms. Hirad, feet ankle-deep in estuary water, threw his sword down into the silt.

"What did they think we were doing, fighting for the good of our health?" he said, and directed a contemptuous gesture at the elves on the right bank.

All the boats were away now and the fugitives who hadn"t made it into one were plunging into the water and swimming out after them. Only a couple of bodies could be seen floating with arrows protruding from back or neck.

"They aren"t used to fighting like this," said Ilkar. "It isn"t their way. SpellShield down."

"No? Well they"d better learn fast if they want their precious thumb and writings back," said Hirad.

"a.s.suming those who escaped had anything."

"I don"t care about bits of parchment," said Ilkar. "I just want one of those we"ve killed to have the thumb in some inside pocket."

Hirad nodded. "Me too, Ilks, me too."

"What now?" asked Darrick.

The Raven began to walk back towards the Al-Arynaar, searching for Rebraal. Behind them, they could hear the cheers of the enemy as their boats neared their ships and safety.

"Let"s see what my brother has to say," said Ilkar.

Denser felt weary. He followed behind his friends in silence, hand in hand with Erienne. She wanted to know the cause of his anger but he ignored the questioning look on her face. All of them had to hear it together.

They found Rebraal in conversation with Auum, his fierce expression telling them all they needed to know about the results of the fight. They were standing by the bodies of the four strangers who had been running cloaked. Hooked from the swamp before the piranhas could do much damage, they"d been stripped and every st.i.tch of clothing searched and torn to shreds before being scattered on the ground around them. Ilkar asked the question before reporting back to The Raven.

"Parchment and texts only, I"m afraid," he said. "The thumb is on one of those ships."

"How can we be sure?" asked Erienne. "Any of them could have dropped it anywhere between here and the temple."

"Pray that"s not so," said Ilkar.

"Put it this way," said The Unknown. "The men that escaped are the only clues we"ve got. Whether they have the thumb or not, we have to catch them."

"So we need our ship very fast," said Darrick.

Ilkar nodded. "And the elves are coming with us. The message will be sent. Every elf with a sword or bow is going to be heading north to Balaia."

"They"re going to invade?" asked Hirad.

"What choice do they have?" Ilkar shrugged. "They don"t want to die. We don"t want to die."

"Right," said Denser, coming to a decision. "I"m flying back to Ysundeneth. Starting tonight. Jevin can sail round here, it"ll be quicker that way."

"Done," said Ilkar. "But I"m coming with you. You might just need a friendly elf."

Denser smiled rather sadly and felt the blood pounding in his throat. "Friendly, eh? Well here"s a new test of our friendship, Ilkar. You want to know who it was attacked the temple?

"It was Xetesk."

Chapter 33.

Jevin had confined his crew to the ship for the last three days and had paid two mages very well to travel with the Calaian Sun back to Balaia, whenever that day came. Like all elves Jevin wasn"t given to rushed action but the situation overtaking Ysundeneth was quite without precedent. For eight days he"d watched as first unease, then anxiety and finally panic had engulfed the city.

At the first signs of the plague being anything more than a localised infection, he had sent his crew out to hire the mages and to provision the ship. Water, cured meat, rice, grain, biscuit and root crops were the order, as well as apples and unripe grapefruit and lemons; anything that would keep longer than a few days.

Below deck, his cargo holds had already been converted to accommodate pa.s.sengers. Conditions were cramped and public but neither Protectors nor Xeteskian mages had made any complaint. He wasn"t sure exactly how many mages Ilkar expected to make the trip. Over a hundred if he could get them, and Jevin had provisioned for that number.

But as he watched the disaster unfold in Ysundeneth and heard rumours of similar events in other cities, he wondered if Ilkar and The Raven would be back at all. It was unutterably depressing having to watch helplessly as the elves of Calaius"s largest port turned from calm private individuals into an angry mob in so short a time. Not altogether surprising, though.

The plague, and such it had to be, had gorged itself on the population, but at random. There were no patterns of contagion, just as there was no cure. It struck at eight members of a family and left a sole survivor with nothing but grief as a companion. No areas were immune, but in the middle of a street one house would be free, while in the next street it would be the opposite: one household annihilated, the rest untouched. The randomness inspired hope and hatred in equal measure but far more destructive to Ysundeneth society was the latter. Survivors in devastated areas had been persecuted as carriers of the plague, some beaten, some even killed for the crime of living.

But elsewhere those free of the disease pooled their eroding strength and demanded help from city authorities quite unable to provide it. Food had been looted and h.o.a.rded, rubbish had started to pile up in the streets. And so, latterly, had corpses. Businesses, inns and shops were closed and boarded up. Markets were empty.

Jevin, like all the skippers at the dockside, had moved to anchor offsh.o.r.e. It wasn"t just disease that concerned him; it was the mobs roaming the docks wanting out of the city by the quickest means possible. Already Ysundeneth was empty of every non-elf. They had been the first targets of suspicion but, being primarily merchants and seamen, they had simply hauled anchor and sailed back to Balaia, not that the Northern Continent was exactly stable. But a dozen ships had no cargo and therefore no financial means to sail.

And for elves to leave would be desperate, even futile. The plague was not contagious; it did not spread through the air or in food or water. It was something far deeper than that and it attacked elves at their core. There was no escape.

At a meeting on board the Calaian Sun, the remaining twelve skippers had agreed to monitor the situation and play the waiting game for as long as they could. Eventually, someone would have to sail north and beg for help. Jevin had said that he would go, but only when The Raven reappeared. Until then, the dozen ships would remain anch.o.r.ed in a defensive formation, protect themselves from attack by boat and magic and wait for the inevitable. For if one thing was certain, it was that one day, probably very soon, they themselves would begin to die.

Jevin stood with one of the mages at the port rail, gazing out at Ysundeneth on a perfect sunlit morning with the mist dispersing and the first clouds rolling across the mountains far to the south. From where he stood, the city was a tiny interloper in the ma.s.s of lush verdancy that was the rainforest. But his keen eyes could penetrate the quiet streets and see the catastrophe that had overcome it.

"How many do you think have it now?" he asked the mage.

Vituul was a young elf of average height, his dark blue eyes set in a cla.s.sically angular face. His long black ponytail fell down the back of his light brown leather cloak. He had no family in the plague city and to be offered - with his equally poor friend, Eilaan - a good wage and a way out was a prayer answered. People were increasingly demanding that elven mages produce a miracle cure. The miracle wasn"t going to happen.

"It"s almost impossible to say," he said. "The total is probably in the region of a third of the population, but as people start to die in large numbers so the actual number of live cases, if you"ll excuse the term, will decrease also."

"But there are a hundred thousand people there," breathed Jevin.

"Not any more," said Vituul. "Thirty thousand are already dying."

"And no word on a cure," said Jevin.

It hit him then like it hadn"t before. He"d managed to ignore the ramifications of what was going on in front of his eyes but Vituul"s numbers scared him to the bone. If those numbers were right, in fifty days there"d be less than twelve thousand people left alive in Ysundeneth, and four thousand of them would be dying. And with that level of mortality possibly affecting the whole continent, Jevin wasn"t just witnessing a devastating plague, he was witnessing the death of the elven race. He shivered.

"How can there be a cure?" Vituul looked at him matter of factly.

"No one is going to be alive long enough to do the research. And there"s no spell that can even slow its course. We don"t even have a lead yet."

"What can we do then?" Jevin felt helpless. "There must be something. "

Vituul smiled but there was no humour in his face. "Wait for it to pa.s.s."

"And if it doesn"t?"

"Pray that Yniss forgives whatever sin we"ve committed, because the way it looks now, we"re all going to die, sooner rather than later."

Jevin leant on the rail. He should be doing something. Every elf should. To his knowledge no one had survived having the plague so far, but then not many were in the final stages yet. Just one survivor could give them some hope. But what could he do? This wasn"t a question of tending the sick or supplying the herbologists with raw materials. There was no battle to be won. Not yet. Elf catches plague; elf dies.

Jevin"s own family lived deep in the rainforest and he preferred not to think about them. It kept his hopes alive.

"So why have none of the crews gone down yet?" asked Jevin. "Odd, don"t you think? Surely that"s a lead?"

"It"s a point, I suppose. No stranger catches it. No travelling elf catches it. Yet."

"Surely it means something?"

"We are still Tual"s creatures. Perhaps the curse of being away from the forest also carries a blessing. Perhaps your sin isn"t as great as ours."

Jevin had been looking for something less theological. But this mage, at least, had no answers.

"You see what I"m getting at?"

"There is no biological reason why any particular elf catches the plague," said Vituul with a shrug. "It must be something else. I don"t believe you, I or any of the crew have greater immunity than the poor souls on sh.o.r.e."

Jevin was considering his reply when his eye was caught by movement on the dockside. There was activity on the approach roads to the east and the odd shout echoed out across the water. The tone was of surprise, even astonishment, but not fear. People were congregating on the dock. Not a mob. Not the hundreds, even thousands, they"d seen a couple of days ago, but a slowly growing crowd.

It continued to grow over the course of most of the morning. Jevin thought at first that it was city folk gathering for a demonstration, but every time he looked up from his duties there were more of them. Just standing there like they were waiting for a ship to dock. Then Jevin realised what he was looking at. These weren"t Ysundeneth elves; the city folk"s clothes were so much brighter than the greens and browns he could see.

Around midday he rejoined Vituul, who had barely left the rail all morning. Despite his life taking him from the land of his birth and his G.o.ds, Jevin prided himself on having enough of the Calaian elf in him still to understand his people. But not this. Left and right, the rails of other ships were crowded with crew and it seemed a quiet had descended across the city and the sea.

"They are who I think they are, aren"t they?" he asked.

Vituul nodded. "TaiGethen," he said, pointing vaguely, but his voice was edged with excitement. "Al-Arynaar. And ClawBound. I see the panthers. I see them."

It was something most elves had never expected to see in the forest, let alone on the dockside at Ysundeneth.

"What are they doing?" Jevin implored anyone who might hear and answer him.

These people never, but never, came out of the rainforest. Never stepped on the worked stone of the streets. They thought them evil. Necessary but evil. A sin Yniss allowed because civilisation had to flourish. To them a city was an alien landscape. An imbalance in the harmony of the forest, its air, magic and denizens. Yet here they were, gathered and waiting, and quite suddenly, the disaster that faced the elves became so much more real.

"What do they want?" This time the question was directed at Vituul alone.

"Whatever it is, it isn"t good."

"We should launch a boat," said Jevin. "Ask them."

But answers came far more quickly than that. Up in the crow"s-nest, the lookout shouted and pointed east. Two dots were flying in from the forest, low and erratic. They swept over the docks, stopped momentarily and spiralled into the sky again, before moving out to sea and the ships moored there.

Jevin followed them, half knowing who it was, seeing them change direction twice before heading straight for the Calaian Sun. One of them dipped very low, called out, rose and then fell into the water a hundred yards from the ship. The other didn"t pause but flew over the deck, landed and collapsed in a flurry of limbs. When Jevin reached him, Ilkar had managed to turn onto his back and was gasping in air.

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