The Drownway Chapter Eighteen – The Lair

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Captain Trill showed many of the behaviors Cassian had learned to associate with the best bravos that came to the forge. She knew what she wanted and asked sharp, incisive questions to pry the information she wanted out of him. It was quite gross. Still, after an hour of work they’d figured out the three most likely locations for the sea dragon’s lair.

The captain mapped out the fastest underwater routes between them and announced they would leave for the first location the next day. With that taken care of Cassian asked the obvious question.

“Will you allow us to make any claims on the treasure?”

Trill made her burping laugh noise again. “You surprise me, Monsignor Ironhand. Most humans are interested in treasure but your fixation is remarkably single minded.”

“Perhaps the Benthic are just less concerned with such things than the average human,” Cassian said. “Though there is more to it than simple desire for profit in my case. We have a reputation to uphold. My employer requested we retrieve the cargo from his caravan and it won’t reflect well on us if we come back empty handed.”

“Is that so.” Trill had developed a habit of staring at him whenever he said more than one or two sentences. This was no exception. The fronds and spines that seemed to do most of her emoting were all laid almost flat against her body, one of the clearest tells the Benthic gave. Unfortunately Cassian had only seen it as a sign of surprise or disbelief. “I suspect there is something about this you haven’t told us yet, monsignor.”

“Have you told us everything that your duties entail, captain?”

“I have not. However, if you were to conduct yourself in the way of most humans in the water and remain here until returned to your own people, the things I haven’t told you would pose you no danger. Stay with us as we travel and the same is true. If it turns out you have concealed dangers to me and mine or, worse, outright lied to us you will never breath air again. Do I make myself clear?”

“Perfectly, captain.” One wouldn’t think the chill water of the Ursus Nest left room for further cold, yet ice was exactly what Cassian felt in his stomach at Trill’s threat. He had no reason to think Cazador posed a danger to the Benthic. Whether she would see it that way or not was another matter. He would simply have to wait and see.

If Cassian and the others had been forced to march along the sea floor again the trip to the first possible location of the dragon’s lair would have taken a full day’s walk and then some. To avoid that the Benthic brought out two large nets made of woven sea plants. Cassian didn’t recognize the strange orange vines but Adalai examined them and said the plants weren’t poisonous. It wasn’t clear whether that was a factor of his Arminger’s Gift or some stray bit of learning he’d picked up on his own travels but Cassian was willing to take the assessment at face value. Discussing Gifts in front of the Benthic wasn’t a wise tactic either way. So the four of them climbed in, two to a net, then he and Marta were forced to spend several minutes persuading Braxton to remain behind. While Cassian thought it spoke well of the man that he made the offer to accompany them the reality was he didn’t want the Hexton man to there. Not only was he a landed nobleman of a foreign nation, which raised all kinds of issues Cassian wasn’t prepared to deal with, his attachment to Marta created a host of additional complications they weren’t equipped to deal with. Marta herself also seemed relieved that her baron was remaining behind. He was grateful for that element, at least.

So, with the baron remaining behind, the Benthic took to the seas and dragged the humans along behind them, catching a southward current that allowed them to reverse the previous day’s trip from the Drownway in less than an hour. They arrived close to high tide, which allowed the Benthic to swim through one of the low lying areas with only a minimal amount of squeezing. All the water made it more difficult than Cassian expected to recognize what part of the path they were crossing and, as a result, he wasn’t sure whether they were close to the place they’d originally met the dragon or not. It had looked like their course would go somewhere further west when they discussed it on Trill’s map. He’d just have to trust that was accurate if he got separated from the others.

Once they were over the Drownway their Benthic minders were much more careful about how they moved. Trill had asked for three volunteers for this little expedition, taking the fourth spot for herself. She’d introduced the volunteers to them before they departed but it turned out Benthic names sounded like a bunch of weird noises to human ears and Cassian had been forced to think of them as Burp, Sputter and Groan. He began rethinking the somewhat flippant nature of those names when he saw how they navigated hostile waters. Trill may have been a captain but she clearly wasn’t content to leave all field duties to subordinates. She worked with Sputter to drag the net Cassian was riding in and, despite all the added weight and drag, the Benthic managed to move about the sea floor in a way Cassian could only describe as wraith like. A Benthic in the water could explode forward as fast or faster than a human sprinter. At the same time, with their long, sinuous bodies they could contort themselves around obstacles as easily as the fluid they inhabited. Indeed, they seemed able to move through the drifting plant leaves or reaching limbs of anemones without causing any disturbance. On occasion Cassian wondered if they had actually transformed into water themselves.

Given the incredible stealth shown by their escorts, it was no surprise that he wasn’t able to see any other Benthic during their trip. The Tidallias Benthic were no doubt just as stealthy as Trill and her soldiers. They did see the occasional school of fish and, once, as they passed over a particularly deep trench that led further out into the open ocean, a massive shadow below that looked something like a whale. Trill had instructed her human passengers not to speak during the trip so Cassian wasn’t able to ask what it was. Truthfully the creature’s appearance was menacing enough he didn’t feel like making any noise, warned or not. Whatever it was it didn’t seem to take any notice of them and it was far too large to follow them back into shallower waters anyway.

Or so he hoped.

After another hour to hour and a half of travel from the Drownway they arrived at a shallow, sandy island covered in tall, stringy grass. Trill theorized that the dragon might have taken over the island and buried most of its treasure, a habit she claimed it would have learned from humans in the Gulf. Cassian had argued against that, both because he didn’t know anyone who would bury money for any reason and because the dragon had no legs, which meant it would have to get its enslaved Benthic to do the burying. Unless the creature enjoyed the taste of sand. Trill seemed to think it could have used its power to manipulate water to help bury the treasure somehow, that was apparently how the Benthic carved their fortresses on the sea floor, and insisted they investigate the island.

So investigate they did. After twenty minutes Adalai was ready to give up. There was no sign of anything solid on the island, just loose dirt and waving grass. In spite of that Cassian insisted they comb the entire island, confirming there was nothing buried just below the surface of the dirt. Once they had finished with that they’d been above the water for nearly an hour. The length of the time they’d spent there without a wrathful visitor, combined with the lack of any guards, traps, or treasure was enough for Trill to agree the the island was most likely not the dragon’s lair.

Their next stop was a low, rocky prominence that rose far out of the sea floor that, by the time they visited, rose a few dozen feet out of the water. The tide was starting to go back out but, based on the markings along the stone, Cassian guessed the rocky peak was at least ten feet above the waves even at high tide, which he thought made it a strange place for a sea dragon to store its treasure. On the other hand, it wasn’t an easy place for any sea creature to get up to and the rocky surface would make it difficult for land dwellers to approach without endangering their boat so it made sense if being hard to reach was the point. Once they looked around the surface they discovered a wide tunnel leading back down into the rock. Verina doubled back into the ocean and let Trill know they thought they’d found the lair then the four humans started the perilous trek down into the rock.

It proved to be more of a slide. The tunnel slope started off fairly gentle but quickly pointed down at a thirty to forty degree angle, spiraling around the inside of the rock for several dozen feet. The stone was worn smooth by water that constantly trickled down from the mouth and it proved impossible for any of them to remain standing on the slick, angled surface. After a few bruising falls they all sat down on the stone and let their weight pull them on towards the bottom. Cassian tried to picture fighting the sea dragon in a place like this and shuddered. By the time they reached the bottom they were moving so quickly Cassian had to use his Gift on his breastplate to drag himself to a stop before striking the wall at the end of the tunnel. He had just enough time to brace himself there before Marta came down whizzing around the bend. He caught her with one arm, bracing himself as best he could with his other, and managed to stop her before either one of them got more than a few bruises. He did the same for Verina and Adalai.

“Wonderful,” Adalai muttered once they were all situated at the bottom of the tunnel. “Back in the dark.”

“The tunnel turns hard right here,” Cassian said. He went a few paces down it and knelt. “Looks like there’s an underwater cavern here. The ceiling comes down to the waterline but I think I see some light filtering through from the other side.”

“Those eyes of yours must have gotten a lot better than ours,” Adalai said. “I can’t see anything. It’s pitch black down here, you’d think any light would stand out.”

“We haven’t seen the Linnorm for a while, Verina,” Cassian said. “Is he still out there?”

“Yes,” she said. “Be glad you haven’t seen him, signore. If he had manifested himself while we were underwater we’d all quickly boil alive.”

“Not ideal, I agree. Can he go and see what’s on the other side of the cavern?”

“He’s just returned.” Verina looked away for a moment then said, “The ceiling of the cavern rises out of the water again not far from here. It’s lined with unusual coral and pearls, the pearls are giving off a strange, dim light. There’s two Benthic on guard just past the lowest point in the ceiling, armed with the same kind of spears the dragon’s other thralls were using. The Linnorm can’t tell if they’re still under the dragon’s influence but they do have pearls in their foreheads. Speaking of boiling water, do you want him to deal with those two?”

“Too noisy,” Adalai said. “If there are any more Benthic on the far side of the cavern they’ll hear the steam explosion the Linnorm manifesting will cause.”

Marta patted her shield, which the Benthic had returned with their other weapons that morning. “I can create a perfectly circular shield so long as I’m inside it. If we can get close enough to them before they realize we’re there I can trap them and ensure they can’t get away. It takes some concentration, though, so I’ll need someone who can actually deal with them.”

“So long as water doesn’t interfere with the Ironhand’s gift that shouldn’t be too hard,” Adalai said, giving Cassian a meaningful look.

“It doesn’t.” Cassian chewed on his lip as he stared down into the water. “Verina, can the Linnorm see the bottom of this cavern?”

After a five second wait she said, “Yes. It’s beyond the limit of his reach but he can see it. Why?”

He was thinking about the huge shadow he’d seen earlier, although he didn’t want to admit to it. “I was just thinking blood in open water might not be a good idea. Still, it’s the best we have. We’ll go with Marta’s plan.”

It worked surprisingly well. Cassian watched the bleeding bodies of the enthralled Benthic sink into the depths, yanking his daggers free from their corpses with his Gift, beginning to wonder if everything was actually going too well. They were making their way along the sides of the cavern, Cassian’s plate armor and Marta’s chainmail making them far too heavy to swim, but other than that nothing had cropped up to impede their progress. Once the guards were gone they completed the circuit and found they could climb back onto dry land. There, amidst the glowing pearls and misshapen coral, were piles of shining coins, stacks of valuable fabrics and shelves of nicknacks that had to be worth a fair bit as well. Adalai wandered over towards the shelves, already pulling his gloves off. The two women sifted through the coins a bit, moving towards the back of the coral. Cassian found himself a good place to sit and kept his unnaturally keen eyes pointed towards the water. “See how far back this place goes,” he called to Marta. “Let me know if you find anything interesting. I’ll keep an eye out in case there’s more of those guys down there somewhere.”

“How long do you think we have to stay here until Trill is satisfied the dragon’s dead?” Adalai asked, picking up a highly decorated vase and turning it over in his hands.

“I have no idea. We’ll go and check with her in a few hours, I suppose.”

“Adalai?” Verina’s voice carried a strained, nervous tone. She’d stopped by a tall spire of coral and was staring at it intently. “Come look at this.”

He set the vase down, frowning. “Something wrong?”

“I think… I think this coral is growing on a person.”

The Drownway Chapter Seventeen – The Deal

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When Adalai first suggested using the fact that they’d eaten a dragon to make imprisoning them unappealing to the Benthic Cassian thought it was a clever idea. As he mulled it over he came to like it more and more. There really was no reason to think the prisoners were lying when they said they hadn’t heard of Cazador. If the Benthic hadn’t captured his brother staying among them wasn’t going to do Cassian any good and he didn’t see the point in beating around the bush when they went to visit the captain.

So he brought up the dragon’s fate immediately.

When she heard it Captain Trill burst out laughing and her subordinates joined in.

In the strictest sense it wasn’t laughter. The fronds and fins along their bodies rippled and spasmed, expanding and contracting rhythmically in time with a strange burping sound. It conveyed much the same meaning as laughter, though.

Cassian belatedly realized how absurd his claim sounded. There were plenty of stories about people killing dragons in Nerona. However he couldn’t think of any tales where a dragon was slain by fewer than ten people. Usually there were entire companies of men involved.

“Killed a dragon, did you?” Trill asked when she recovered herself. “I suppose you’ve spoken to all four Kings at the Corners of Eternity to confirm its death?”

“Just three of them,” Adalai replied, a surprisingly bitter tone in his voice.

Trill’s head moved to look at him with a looping motion. She studied him with a strange intensity then asked, “Which three were those?”

Adalai matched her stare for stare. “All save the King of Dawn.”

“Your thoughts on the Lord of Folded Waters?”

“We’ve never met. First time in the ocean after all.”

“These are not joking matters, dry born.”

“I didn’t invoke the Guardians of Eternity, captain.”

“And I was very serious about the dragon,” Cassian added, shooting Adalai a meaningful look. He wasn’t sure why the other a man was suddenly so irate. It didn’t really matter, either. The important thing was to convince the Benthic to let them go so that they could get back to searching for Cazador. “Two or three days ago it attacked us with several dozen of your people in its thrall. We lured it into the tunnels where your guards found us. Once it was there we collapsed the ceiling on it, which was enough to kill it.”

“Is this true?” Braxton asked, the question directed to Marta. “You will swear to it on the name of Clan Towers?”

“It is, Baron Green,” Marta said, placing her right hand on her left shoulder and half bowing from the waist. “Once the dragon was dead its hunger overtook us and we devoured it.”

“Then it must be so,” Braxton said. He turned his attention to Trill. “I’ve never heard of anyone eating a sea or river dragon but it could very easily grant the ability to breath water.”

“That may be so,” Trill agreed. “But it is very convenient, don’t you think?”

“How so?” Cassian asked.

The Captain’s frills twitched and she turned her attention to him. “The Baron tells me you are trying to retrieve a caravan you believe was stolen by the Benthic, are you not?”

“We are,” Cassian said, well aware that he was suddenly on very shaky ground. “However we have no reason to suspect that you did so. Most likely the dragon stole the caravan to sate its lust for gold and treasure. The signs of Benthic involvement no doubt came from its thralls. What use do normal Benthic have for air breather’s treasure?”

“Very little,” Trill admitted. “Though many things created by the most Gifted of you are just as useful to us as to you. But while the things we value are different the way we act to acquire them is not.”

Cassian pulled a your face. “You think we’re lying about killing the dragon so you will let us go.”

The fronds on her head lowered until they were nearly flat against her head. “A Benthic might do so. Are humans any different?”

“Not at all,” Cassian said. “However it’s very easy to prove we aren’t lying because I can take you to the place where we killed the dragon.”

Trill nodded, an action that looked very unnatural with the way it set her entire serpentine body bobbling. “That is a start.” She pointed at Verina. “Can you lead me to the place where the dragon was killed?”

“No,” Verina replied. “Cassian was the only one who could see in the mines. Adalai may be able to navigate there by touch, his Gift tends that way, but I couldn’t.”

Cassian resisted the urge to glare at her. The Linnorm had done a great deal more of the navigation than he had, Verina’s nature spirit would have a much easier time getting back to through the mines than he would. The deception didn’t make a great deal of sense to him. Undercutting her in front of the Benthic made even less sense so he let Verina’s gambit stand. “Is there something wrong with me taking you there?”

“I was simply wondering if you would take us to the same place,” Trill said.

“A fair thing to wonder,” Adalai said. “But there may be an easier way for us to prove the dragon is dead. Not that we ate it, but that the dragon is dead.”

“What does that a matter?” Trill leaned close to him to ask the question. “The Benthic are not quick to suffer the presence of dragon eaters but a dragon slayer? Dangerous in their own right, to be sure. However, not much more dangerous than any other dry born once in the ocean’s embrace.”

“It enslaved a number of your people, didn’t it?” Adalai asked. “They’re free now. I would think we deserve some consideration for that.”

“I’m afraid you’ve misunderstood the situation,” Braxton said. “Not surprising, we’re dry born after all. See, the Benthic in the Gulf and the Benthic outside are essentially different and very hostile nations. The sea dragon spends – or spent – most of it’s time on the ocean side of things. Although it abducted Benthic from both sides, ocean Benthic were the vast majority of victims. Any Gulf Benthic in its thrall when the dragon died were likely taken prisoner by the ocean faction.”

“Eaten,” Trill corrected. “The Benthic Tidallais are not of our ways. There are no treaties between us and them nor are the Benthic as a whole as given to mercy as the dry born.”

“And that’s saying something given how rare it is among us,” Adalai muttered.

Cassian folded his arms then quickly reversed the motion, remembering Braxton’s warning about Trill recognizing human body language. Better to avoid anything seeming too hostile. “It seems you don’t believe we slew and ate a dragon, which I suppose I can understand. That being the case, why did you call us here? It can’t be just to discover how we can breathe water.”

“That is a significant part of it, dry born,” Trill said. “The more we understand about the ways you can survive here the better we can be prepared for you. However we also wanted to know what part of the arid lands the dragon was hunting in. The Tidallais tend to avoid its movements and our patrols must shift to match theirs.”

“All the more reason to confirm the dragon’s death don’t you think?” Adalai asked.

Once again Trill swiveled about, bobbing along with the chamber’s gentle waves. “The dragon is not dead.”

“But we can show you where the body was,” Marta protested. “Part of the body will still be there, won’t it? It was on the other side of the cave-in and we couldn’t get to it.”

“The Benthic likely ate it,” Verina said. From the tone of her voice it sounded like the Linnorm had looked and seen exactly that happen.

“And a cave-in does not prove the dragon is dead,” Trill added.

Adalai turned to the table-like rock in the middle of the room. “Have you discovered where the sea dragon makes its lair?”

Cassian followed his gaze and realized the table was cluttered with rocks that created a passable map of the Drownway and, presumably, the surrounding sea floor. Trill considered him with her fronds prickling and twitching. “We have places we think it may be.”

“Then we can go to its lair. No dragon could possibly abide intruders in its lair so if it doesn’t come to kill us then it must be dead.”

“That would prove it,” Trill said after a moment’s thought. “However I don’t have any reason to risk my guards on this wild scheme of yours.”

“You actually do,” Braxton said. “In fact, you have two of them. First, as Signore Carpathea pointed out, you have an obligation to find out if the sea dragon is dead or not. Second, dragons collect treasures. Much of what a dragon values isn’t as valuable to the Benthic but their hoards often have at least a few Artifacts, Talismans or other powerful magical items scattered about. You can’t afford to let those fall into Tidallais hands.”

Her fronds snapped flat again. “And for a few trinkets I should risk sending a dozen of my best guards across the arid lands into the currents of the Tidallais?”

Sensing opportunity Cassian stepped forward and swept off his hat in spite of the awkwardness of the water. “Captain, I think you misunderstand what my friend Adalai was saying. When he said we should go to the dragon’s lair he didn’t mean the Benthic. He meant us – four of Nerona’s finest bravos. There are many tasks too important to ignore yet too dangerous for civilized folk. These fall to our kind. Humble servants who risk ourselves in exchange for a few coins and the promise of glory. You wish for someone to descend into the dragon’s lair and confirm its death? Look no further.”
The Benthic captain watched his speech dispassionately and let the silence after he finished grow long. Eventually she said, “What was your name, dry born?”

“Cassian Ironhand, at your service.” He considered offering a bow but decided that might be laying it on a little thick.

“Do you realize you’re a prisoner here?”

“If I didn’t would I try so hard to change that fact?”

“I have no gold or glory to offer you.”

“I will settle for our freedom, captain.”

Trill was quiet a second longer then she turned to the table map and said, “Show me where you met the dragon. It may help us narrow down where its lair is.”

A wash of intense satisfaction swept over Cassian. For the first time since his brother went missing he felt like things were definitely going his way. He eagerly approached Trill’s map to begin discussing the details when Adalai stopped him. He brought the underwater speaking pearl in his hand up until it almost touched his lips. “Cassian.” Surprisingly his voice came out in a whisper. “You do realize that a dragon doesn’t kidnap people unless it thinks it can ransom them, right? I’m sorry to say that if the dragon robbed the caravan your brother is likely dead.”

Cassian matched the other man’s posture and replied, “Perhaps. Let us wait and see.”

Adalai made a noncommittal sound but moved out of his way. Cassian joined the Benthic at the table and tried to hide how Adalai’s words killed his positive mood. He was growing more and more worried that Adalai was right.

The Drownway Chapter Sixteen – The Captain

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Adalai flopped down next to a steam vent, enjoying the feeling of warmth for the first time in a day or so. “They really have thought of everything here.”

“You seem pretty relaxed given where we are,” Verina said, making herself comfortable next to him.

“The mines were worse. All that dark, not able to talk for hours? I’ll take this over that any time.” Adalai studied their leader, who was pacing back and forth and glaring at Marta and her Baron. “Sit down, Cassian. You’re tired and walking around isn’t a good way to warm up anyway. Not when we have our very own slice of volcanic activity.”

Cassian turned his ugly stare towards them but Adalai refused to acknowledge it. Finally his shoulders slumped and he walked over to the vent. As he took his seat there grumbled, “We’re wasting time.”

“Let her have her moment,” Adalai said. “We have to wait anyway.”

“Waiting won’t help us,” Cassian hissed. “There isn’t going to be any emissary from the Court in Torrence, they’re currently in the middle of a succession crisis. Fionni and a handful of the other major cities aren’t recognizing the new Prince. It could take months to a year to sort out. I don’t think the Court will have the time for us while a third of his subjects are in revolt.”

“We’re not waiting on the Court, we’re waiting on the Captain.” Adalai gestured towards the opening they’d entered through. “Remember what that patrol leader said? One of the Benthic captains is going to ask us about the sea dragon.”

“I… don’t see how that helps us.”

“Depends on how things shake out,” Adalai said. “But if all else fails we can just tell them we ate the sea dragon. You said yourself that paints a target on people’s backs and towns that don’t want a dragon attacking on a regular basis throw people like us out. I doubt the Benthic will be any different.”

Cassian’s eyebrows shot up and he nodded approvingly. “Not bad, not bad. You could have mentioned this before we get stuck waiting here but it’s a clever idea.”

“We were underwater at the time so I couldn’t bring it up. Either way it was worth coming here. Marta found her Baron. We needed to be sure your brother wasn’t here and this was the easiest way to be sure.” Adalai glanced at Marta. “What do you think of that ?”

“I’m kind of surprised she actually knew the Baron,” Cassian admitted. “I was expecting him to be her liege but not a personal acquaintance. But there they are, thick as thieves.”

“Think the Towers clan might be more important than she was letting on?” Verina asked.

“No idea,” Cassian said. “Hessex isn’t a place that concerns smiths or bravos in Fionni very often.”

“I’ve met the Heracleans, they’re Hexton mercenaries,” Adalai said. “Very down to earth people. I liked them a great deal and Marta’s not that different from them in dress or speech. They weren’t nobles by any stretch of the imagination. So if you’re thinking she might be a Baroness herself… I disagree.”

“So how does she know Baron Braxton Green?” Cassian mused.

“That you’d have to ask them,” Adalai said.

“Is this important?” Venina asked. “There has to be something more important that we should be focusing on right now.”

“According to Signore Carpathea waiting for the Benthic captain to show up and ask us about the dragon is the best thing we can do right now,” Cassian said. He laced his fingers behind his head and leaned back to look at the ceiling. “Do either of you see that?”

Adalai looked up at the ceiling but it just looked like plain reddish brown stone. “What?”

“If you don’t see anything I wouldn’t worry about it.” Adalai and Verina shared an annoyed look over top of his head. “If I were you two I’d try to figure out what ways I’ve changed since that thing with the dragon. Something tells me it’s more than what we’ve seen so far.”

“I would keep taking stock of it, too,” Adalai added. “It may take time for new abilities to settle and show themselves.”

“What makes you think that?” Verina asked.

He considered explaining that it took nearly four months for him to successfully use his Arminger’s Gift after the King of Dreams gave it to him. He hadn’t ever told that story to anyone. “I’m just saying that I haven’t noticed anything new except for the water breathing.” Adalai pointed towards the ceiling. “You think your seeing things might be one of your changes?”

“Possibly. I’ll need to find a chance to experiment but I think my Gift changed in some way as well as my lungs and eyes. Something for the two of you to think about.”

Adalai mulled that over. Armingers were a weird mix of abilities. They could glean information from objects, which was his specialty, and they could animate those objects to fulfill their purposes on their own. He had never been any good at that second one.

For six months after his arrival in Fionni Adalai lived with a mentor who had helped him understand the Arminger’s Gift. While Maestro Giorno wasn’t an Arminger himself his Symposium hosted a few of them from time to time. Adalai always envied the one who could make a broom sweep the floor on its own. It seemed like such a useful trick.

Unfortunately the animation of objects was never something he’d figured out. Sometimes he could tell what a man had eaten before throwing on the clothes he died in. Once he realized a waitress loved the drunkard in her tavern by picking up her serving tray. But animating that tray to serve drinks on it’s own? Impossible.

Perhaps that had changed now. He’d been told one of the simplest animation tricks an Arminger could do was making a pair of boots march on their own. However after an hour of tinkering with his own footwear he was nowhere closer to doing that than he was when he received the Gift. He was just starting to think about trying something different when Marta interrupted him.

She was alone when she rejoined their little group. Cassian immediately stopped tinkering with his armor and asked her, “What happened to your Baron?”

“He has some kind of direct line to the Benthic Captain.” Marta sat down next to Verina. “It seems he’s been acting as the lead prisoner for the last few months, serving as the warden and chief barrister all in one. Most people here don’t want to spend any more time in Benthic waters then we do and they’ll be happy if they can just get back to dry land safely. So Braxton has done his best to keep the peace. He didn’t know about the war brewing in Torrence so he initially thought most of the prisoners would be able to leave in a few weeks. If he’d known it would take so long he might have done otherwise.”

“Why doesn’t he try to escape now that he knows?” Adalai asked.

“He’s given his parole to the Benthic ,” Marta said. “To break it would tarnish his good name.”

“Reasonable,” Cassian said, much to Adalai’s surprise. “Did he say what brought him out here in the first place?”

“He said he was going to Renicie to deal with a pigheaded merchant.” Marta shrugged. “I hope that’s a saying that means something beyond the obvious in Nerona. Otherwise I’d have to say Braxton has become much more reckless than he was in the past.”

“How so?” Verina asked.

“Taking the Drownway just to speak to a merchant is wildly irresponsible based on what I’ve seen. Even ignoring all this,” Marta waved at the underwater fortress surrounding them, “the other hazards I’ve seen so far are nothing trifling. It’s not the kind of risk he’s fond of. He ran off to talk to the guard captain before I could ask him why he took it.”

“Because there’s only one pigheaded merchant in Nerona,” Adalai said. “Grigori Borgia, the head of House Borgia and one of the most powerful and least trustworthy men in Renicie.”

“Surely there’s more than one pigheaded merchant in all of Nerona,” Marta said.

“Only one who’s House uses a boar’s head on its coat of arms.” Adalai shot a glance over at the only native in the group. “You’re the resident expert here, Cassian, surely you’ve heard him called that before?”

“I never expected to spend much time outside Fionni,” he said. “Much less go all the way to Renicie. At least, not until a couple of weeks ago. I’m afraid the pet names of the wealthy and powerful in that city aren’t something I had time to learn.”

“No, of course not,” Verina said. “The Slavs aren’t natives to any place in particular anymore but I lived in Torrence’s territory most of my life and I’d never heard of him either.”

Adalai frowned, various small details swirling through his mind. Cassian clicked his tongue. “Well, Adalai, what is it? When you make that face it means you’ve some idea trying to work its way out.”

“I’m not sure,” he said. “If I’m remotely close with this idea it’s not important to what we’re trying to do.”

“Maybe you could let us in on the secret so we could decide for ourselves,” Marta said.

“I would have to get some answers from Baron Braxton before I’d be ready to share my thoughts with someone else.”

“I’d be happy to answer what I can.” Adalai swung his head around a hundred and eighty degrees so he could see the man in question, who stood near the middle of the cavern, holding a cluster of lumpy objects in one hand. “Before I can do that I’m afraid I have to ask you to come with me. Captain Trill wants to meet you.”

“This is the Benthic commander I’ve heard so much about?” Cassian asked.

“The same,” Baron Braxton said. He held out a handful of pale blue pearls. “I know one of you can speak underwater but the rest of you will need one of these.”

Cassian got up and took one, eyeing it with obvious suspicion. “We don’t have to put these in our foreheads, do we?”

“Just holding it in your hand is usually enough,” Braxton said with a hint of bemusement.

Marta and Adalai each took one as well. Adalai felt a cool sensation wash over his neck and the base of his skull. “Do I sound any different?”

Verina shook her head. “Just as raspy as always.”

“Wonderful.” Adalai tried to read some impressions off of the pearl, on the off chance it was human made. To his surprise he got the sensation of distant music. “These are Artifacts.”

“They are,” Braxton said, surprised. “As I understand it they were created somewhere in Torrence and both sides keep some on hand for these kinds of situations. How could you tell?”

“It’s what I do.”

As it turned out there was a back door to the cavern. Or perhaps it was the front door. Either way, it led up into Ursus Nest, into flooded parts of the mountain containing more and more Benthic. Along the way Braxton tried to give them an idea what to expect.

“Captain Trill deals with humans on a daily basis. Has for years. She’s not exactly good at reading our tone of voice or expressions but she can do it. Try not to give the wrong impression.”

“Any advice for how we’d best handle them?” Cassian asked.

“I don’t see them every day and I haven’t been here for years,” Braxton said. “But there is one thing – there are many more female Benthic than male. I don’t know why. But it results in some strange customs. Trill is female but she’s not a Lady, if that makes any sense. There’s a lot of Benthic females like that, it seems.”

“So what?” Adalai asked, struggling to keep his balance and match Braxton’s pace in the boyant water. “Are you just telling us to be polite?”

“I think that would offend her most,” Braxton said. “Best you just talk to her like she was a man.”

“Lovely, ” Cassian said. Whatever function of the pearls transmitted the sound through water so they could be understood apparently didn’t regulate volume. His voice had the tone of someone speaking under his breath but it came out in a normal speaking volume. Several pairs of curious eyes turned to stare at him for a moment.

The Benthic’s stares didn’t seem to bother Cassian but they gave Adalai an uncomfortable feeling. Maybe it was the blank eyes. Maybe it was the sheer number of them. Adalai guessed there were at least a hundred armed Benthic moving around the main chamber they passed through. None seemed surprised at the sight of five humans passing through. He still felt very out of place.

Most of the caves and chambers they’d seen so far were made of very natural looking stone. The captain’s chamber, located at the back of the main cavern, was the first one they’d seen that looked man made. Or Benthic made as the case may be.

All six sides of the room were flat and smooth except for a stone protrusion serving as a table and a sconce on each wall holding a glowing anemone. There were four Benthic in the room. Adalai guessed the captain was the one wearing bright green armor with a sash that looked like it was made of some kind of plant.

Sure enough, that was the one Braxton addressed. “Captain Trill, these are the four I told you about.”

Adalai didn’t know enough about Benthic to tell them apart. This could be the guard who found them at the mine exit for all he knew. But when she looked hard at him he felt something strange wash over him, different from the attention of other Benthic.

“How strange,” Trill said, her voice higher pitched than Adalai expected. “They are breathing the sea. Very different than you, Braxton. How is it you four can breathe the ocean?”

They all looked at Cassian, who took a deep breath of seawater and said, “That is because we killed and ate the sea dragon.”

The Drownway Chapter Fifteen – The Ocean Floor

Previous Chapter

After spending the better part of a day in total darkness Adalai was overjoyed to find himself in natural light once more, no matter how distant the source. The arrival at half a dozen armed Benthic did little to dampen his mood. The natural difficulty of moving through water did make drawing his weapons harder than normal and he omitted his usual flourish as he leveled their points at the undersea denizens but for a brief moment he was optimistic about their ability to deal with the creatures, out numbered or not.

Then the Benthic came to a stop floating ten feet overhead and Adalai realized the obvious. If it was just a question of martial skill they might have had a chance. However the Benthic were built for the water and in it they had the luxury of fighting in all three dimensions. Land bound bravos didn’t stand a chance.

One of the Benthic lifted up its spear and a voice echoed over them. “Dry born souls,” the creature said in rich, feminine tones. “The Gulf of Lum is closed to you. Is there not a treaty between our people and yours, signed by Lum the First and Porphyrio del Torrence? The arid land is pledged to the sons of men and the sinking land to the Benthic Stellaris. You have no place here.”

Adalai let his weapons drift down until the points were towards the sea floor. He’d never heard of a treaty with the Benthic. He did know that the City of Torrence was ruled by a family that shared its name. The Torrence family also had a claim to the throne in Lome, so perhaps one of them had come to an agreement with the Benthic at some point and signed it on behalf of all Nerona.

Unfortunately he was not in a position to explain that.

As soon as he realized that Adalai found himself staring impatiently at Verina, waiting for her to say something. While Cassian had already reached that epiphany and Marta didn’t lag too far behind the two of them, the Benthic themselves apparently weren’t waiting on an answer. “You will be held prisoner until such a time as the descendants of Torrence shall answer our summons and explain this injustice.”

“Wait!” Verina called finally realizing she was the only one who could communicate with the creature. “How long has there been any treaty between Nerona and the Benthic?”

The spokesperson for the guards drifted down until Cassian’s head was roughly equal with its waist. For the first time Adalai had the opportunity to take a good, hard look at a Benthic. To his surprise they did not look a much like the creatures they had seen the day before.

Their tails were long and thick but the edges were lined with delicate, almost frond like fins. Their upper bodies were more humanoid than Adalai had presumed. They had two arms in much the shape and place you might expect and their fingers, while decidedly webbed, were otherwise quite human.

The biggest difference was in their faces and heads. They had no hair, just more of the delicate fronds, on top of their heads and the eyes in front were small, beady and solid black with no visible pupils. The overall shape of the skull was more tear dropped than egg like. They had no discernible nose. And, of course all their exposed skin was covered in light blue-green scales.

The leader wasn’t showing much skin, though. She was covered, from neck to what Adalai thought were her hips, in what looked like the shell of a crab. It was presumably a form of armor. He wasn’t sure how effective it would be against steel weapons, though here under the ocean he suspected facing steel wasn’t something the Benthic did on a regular basis. She wore a helmet of the same material that covered the top and sides of her head but left most of her face visible.

Even without the helmet Adalai wasn’t sure how to read her expression. Like a fish, most of the Benthic’s skull bones were very close to the skin, leaving little flexibility in her face. The creature did have clear eyelids that flicked and fluttered and the fronds on her head twitched in ways that seemed to have nothing to do with the currents in the water. As she spoke to Verina the gills on her neck fluttered. Adalai wondered if that was how she spoke or if their speech was some kind of magic innate to the Benthic.

“How is it you speak on the waves, dry born?” The Benthic asked. “Even among the dry born those who can survive in the bosom of the ocean cannot speak without air.”

“I’m not sure,” Verina replied. “We fled into the tunnels behind us to escape a dragon that emerged from the ocean. Until we did that I had never put my whole self below water. I was as surprised to discover I could speak here as you were.”

At the mention of the sea dragon the Benthic leader motioned with her spear. Two of her underlings slipped past the human quartet into the tunnels with great speed. “You are fortunate to survive,” she said. “That creature has enslaved many of the Benthic Tidallais and bent them to its dark works. Does it still pursue you still?”

“No. When I last saw it the tunnels proved too narrow for it to proceed.”
For once Adalai was glad he couldn’t speak under water, it made clamping down on his laugh fairly simple. The Benthic leader just nodded. “It has always come over the arid walls in the past so I am not surprised.”

“You’re familiar with the dragon?”

“It has been a plague the Stellaris as well as the Tidallis for some eight cycles of the evening light.”

Verina perked up a bit. “Perhaps we could offer you some help with the dragon to compensate for our trespass in your territory? We came here because we were in great danger. Furthermore I have never heard of a treaty between you and the Prince of Torrence.”

“Yet it exists.” The two Benthic that had left earlier now returned. Adalai didn’t hear them say anything but from the way they stared at their leader while gesturing he got the feeling they were communicating somehow. After a few seconds of that the leader gestured down at the anemones. The other Benthic quickly began moving the glowing things out of the way. The lead Benthic motioned them out of the ring. “You will come with us.”

Verina gave a resigned nod. “If we must. Where are we going?”

The Benthic leader bobbed along beside them at head height but with her body trailing behind her, parallel to the sea floor. “You will be taken to the Nest of the Ursus. The dry born can be held there until the Court of Torrence takes custody of you.”

Cassian grabbed Verina’s arm and gestured to her. The Slavic woman gave him a blank look. “What?”

Cassian tried a number of things, like counting on his fingers, pointing upwards and finally clapping his hands in rhythmic fashion. Verina did her best. “Numbers? The sea? Applause? Clapping? Counting claps…” The idea visibly clicked into place. “Counting time. How long will it take for someone from Torrence to answer you?”

“It depends. In the time I have served the Descendants of Lum it has taken between eight and twenty days. However no one has come to us from the Court in the last four cycles. You may have to wait at Ursus Nest quite some time.”

Cassian immediately got upset, trying to tell Verina something with an increasingly frantic set of gestures. She ignored him, instead staring off into space for a long moment. “Tell me, do you know how many dry born have been found in this area in the last month? Or the last cycle.”

The Benthic leader gave her a sharp look. “I haven’t found any but there are many who patrol these waters just as there are many who guard the arid wall, as we do. Are you seeking someone who was lost?”

“Yes, some of us are.”

“Then you will be given the chance to look for them at the Nest. I can tell you no more.”

Cassian calmed down some after he heard that but he still didn’t look very happy about it. Although he lacked the other man’s personal stakes in the matter Adalai was sympathetic. Hopefully they’d reach the Nest quickly. He also wanted out of the water as fast as possible. It was cold, dark and the boyancy made every movement three times more difficult than it needed to be. Frankly, he didn’t know why anyone deliberately trespassed on Benthic territory.

The walk from the exit of the mines to the Ursus Nest was hard to judge, what with the lack of sun from above and the lack of watches in Nerona but Adalai guessed it took them almost two hours. By the end of it even the Benthic were visibly frustrated with their pace. It had to be nice having the option to swim freely over any obstacle in their way. Adalai was tempted to try it himself once but as he started testing how much upward motion he could create using his arms the guard leader said, “Stay on the sea floor. The currents here are strong. Few humans have the strength to swim against them. Even if you were one of them you’d do better to conserve your strength for the journey.”

So they walked. The sea floor proved very beautiful. There were plenty of anemones littering the sea floor, most casting a dim light like those they’d seen by the mine. The mix of pale blue, green and yellow light gave the ocean an unearthly appearance. The leafy and frondy sea plants that sprouted among them cast odd and haunting shadows. The silhouette of fish darted among them but didn’t approach. They seemed as wary of Benthic as rabbits were of humans.

Ursus Nest itself was a sight as well. Adalai had been expecting coral, as it was something sturdy and relatively easy to shape underwater. If you had the time to direct its growth, at least. However Ursus Nest proved to be an enormous cave complex that looked like it had been carved out of a spur of rock. It towered almost forty feet off the sea bed. It was a halfmoon shape with the bottom pointed towards them. The sides tapered slightly towards the top and were riddled with openings. A constant stream of Benthic were coming in and out of it.

Their escorts brought them in through a lower entrance. Instead of going up into the main spur of rock the entrance sloped down into a large cavern. They stopped at the entrance, which had an odd distortion across it. “You will stay here,” the Benthic lender announced. “The captain may wish to question you about the dragon but that may not happen some time. You will be fed meals that have proven compatible with humans.”

Verina nodded and said, “Of course. Are all the humans the Benthic capture held here?”

“Only those captured by the Stellaris. Enter now.”

There wasn’t much to do but cross the distortion. It proved to be little more them a sideways surface to the ocean. On the other side was breathable air, dim lighting provided by anemones is shallow pools scattered about and maybe a dozen people scattered about a cavern some fifty or sixty feet in diameter. The air was damp and fishy but very breathable. Adalai indulged in a few deep breaths before he took stock of the rest of the situation.

Naturally, Cassian was already marching through the cavern looking people over. “Is there a Cazador Clayheart here? Or anyone who traveled here with him?”

“Sorry, friend,” said a big man with particularly long hair and beard growth. “The name isn’t familar.”

“Is there any other place the Barthic keep prisoners?”

“If you try to escape they put you somewhere else,” the bearded man replied. “If he got here before me he could have wound up there before I saw him. But I’ve been here a good six mouths, maybe more. It’s hard to keep track down here.”

Marta paused in the middle of wringing out her kerchief. “No. It’s been longer than that. Braxton, is that you?”

The bearded man straightened up in surprise. “Marta Towers?”

The Drownway Chapter Fourteen – The Gulf of Lum

Previous Chapter

It turned out they could all breathe water, presumably just one of the side effects of eating the sea dragon. That had its uses, the most obvious being salvation from sufication. It also made it possible for them to explore the flooded shaft for as long as it took to get back to the surface.

Marta was skeptical about abandoning their digging efforts but the air in the tunnel was already growing poor. The roof hadn’t caved in again but it was looking more and more unstable by the minute. Ultimately, Cassian made the decision to abandon the attempt to dig out and chose to swim, both because of the risk of a cave-in and because of the air situation.

Convincing the others to go along with this idea wasn’t easy. Even after they’d all climbed down the rope and stuck their heads under the water to confirm they could all breathe water as easily as air there was still resistance to the idea. Adalai wondered if the abilities they’d gained would wear off, leaving them with no way to breathe underwater. In many cases Cassian would have considered that a fine thing to worry about. However any Neronan familiar with dragon stories knew that it wasn’t possible to undo the changes brought about by eating a dragon so easily.

So they went down the mineshaft with Cassian in the lead. Along the way they discovered a number of new things about their condition. While they could all breathe the water the only one of them that could speak to the others while submerged was Verina which made keeping eveyone together difficult. Doubly so as Cassian was the only one that could actually see.

Clearly they had all had a different reaction to eating the dragon’s corpse. Doubtless Marta’s scales reflected some kind of change in her but whatever it was it wasn’t constant. In the time it took them to climb down into the water the scales on her skin had entirely disappeared. Adalai showed no obvious changes, which didn’t mean much given the circumstances.

Since he was the one who could see Cassian navigated with Adalai and Verina holding onto his shoulders. Marta took the rear, holding Verina’s free hand. That way Verina could tell Cassian if Marta got seperated from her and the extra weight of Cassian and Marta’s metal armor was distributed equally and would hopefully keep them from being swept away by a sudden current.

For the most part it worked. The group kept together and they managed to reach the first horizontal shaft without incident. However once they were there Cassian kept getting distracted by odd glimmers on the wall. He tried to point them out to Verina but he couldn’t explain them to her and she apparently couldn’t see them. That suggested there was more to his own changes than just seeing in the dark. He’d have to look into it more once they were on dry ground again.

In spite of their ability to breathe not everything about travelling under the water was easy. The shafts and tunnels had surprising currents and eddies in them. They were frequently forced to crawl on hands and knees in single file to make it through the narrowest parts of the tunnels. When struggling to ascend or descend a vertical shaft they frequently got seperated and Cassian found his stamina flagging after spending five minutes dragging himself up and down a particularly twisty vertical shaft, trying to pull the group back together after they were seperated working their way around a corner.

Behind it all was a constant, numbing cold. The mines had not seen the sun since long before Old Lum drowned them. The water within them was just as cold as the ocean without. If Verina had not known where a pocket of air was located thanks to the Linnorm’s scouting they might have given in to despair.
As it was it took them the better part of an hour to get down two mineshafts, cross two tunnels, climb up to their destination tunnel and emerge into the air again. At least the air pocket proved breathable. It wasn’t much progress but it was something.

They’d arrived at an intersection of two tunnels and whoever had built the mine had enlarged the area to create a staging ground. A few crates of half rotted supplies, piles of rusting tools and heaps of stones lay scattered about. One passage was collapsed and the other three were flooded. However there must have been a small passage out somewhere in the ceiling because they could feel a cold breeze washing over them the moment they scrambled out of the water.

It wasn’t much but after the night’s march, the frantic battle with the dragon and the grueling swim through pitch black tunnels they were all exhausted. Cassian picked through the debris, piled up the least rotted bits of rope, baskets and crates then doused them in lantern oil and lit it with his flint. After ensuring the smoke was venting through some crack in the ceiling they all flopped down beside the fire to dry out. Cassian wound up drifting to sleep as the warmth worked its way into his bones.

He woke up to the sound of a man dying. A deep, rasping cough echoed through the tunnels and, as he looked around through bleary eyes, Cassian realized it was coming from Adalai. The other man had withdrawn to the collapsed end of the tunnel and was in the process of trying to regurgitate a lung. Cassian dragged himself into a sitting position. Verina had collected a few more crates and was feeling them to the fire one board at a time. Their eyes met and he asked, “What’s wrong with him?”

She tsked. “He’s a man. Do you really think he would tell me? He has to pretend he’s tough even though we can all tell he’s teetering on the brink of Eternity.”

Cassian snorted. “Of course. If he despised you he would tell you all about his scratchy throat so that the feeling would be mutual. At least we know he holds you in high regard.” He spotted Marta lying at the edge of the firelight and gestured to her. “Has she woken up yet?”

“No.” Verina gave the Hexton woman a concerned look. “Her arm looks like it’s healed already but it’s taken a lot out of her.”

“It’s got to be better than making the entire trip here with a broken arm.” He dragged himself to his feet and shook himself out, trying to drive the last vestiges of cold and damp out of his feet and legs. After flapping his limbs around some to warm them he crossed over to where Adalai was hunkered down.

The Arminger didn’t look like he was dying. He wasn’t flushed or sweaty, he just sat staring at the fire with a glossy look in his eyes, a handkerchief over his nose and mouth. He didn’t seem to notice Cassian’s approach until the other man spoke. “Did you catch a chill in the water, Adalai?”

He jerked as if prodded with a dagger and his eyes slid over to study the Ironhand for a long moment. “Cassian?”

“Who else?”

“You wouldn’t believe me.”

Very cryptic but not at all helpful. “Are you sick, Adalai?”

His gaze wandered back to the fire. “No.”

Frustrated by the man’s obtuseness he plopped down next to him and said, “You don’t sound healthy, at any rate. Why are you sitting all the way over here? You’d do better to finish drying yourself out by the fire before we have to go back into the water later on.”

“Can’t.” Carpathia paused to lower his handkerchief and spit a wad of blood and phlegm onto the floor. “The smoke bothers me. I stayed as long as I could but I can’t. Not that close. Not in a place like this.”

Cassian frowned. That explaination did not really explain much. However it wasn’t really his place to pry into the lives and insecurities of the others. They were not really a company of bravos. They were just a handful of souls, joined together for the moment, trying to make it out of a bad situation. How one of them could be reduced to a coughing mess just by sleeping next to a campfire, a very common experience in Nerona, was not the most pressing concern. “Well, try to get some more sleep if you can. There’s not a lot left to burn and not much more left to eat. We’ll need to move on soon.”

Adalai nodded. “Has the Linnorm found a good place for us to head to next?”
“I haven’t asked yet. That is the next thing I need to look in to.”

As it turned out, the spirit had actually found two likely locations to head towards. Continuing in the direction they had been travelling would take them down below the water again but it was a fairly straight path. The Linnorm reported that, at the furthest reaches of its range the tunnel turned upwards again and may eventually return above ground. The surface was apparently only ten to fifteen feet overhead.

On the other hand, if they turned and headed to the left they would find a shaft leading down to a tunnel that exited into the Gulf only a short distance away.

“The Gulf will have more tides and currents than we’ve faced so far,” Adalai said. “It will be a lot easier to get separated out there.”

“But we know it will get us out of the mines,” Marta said. “Even if the other tunnel goes up there’s no telling if it will take us all the way out to the surface. Even five feet of dirt is a lot to dig through safely. We’re three times that deep now and we don’t even have tools.”

Verina nodded. “More than that, we’re here to try and find the caravan and Cassian’s brother. If the dragon took them then it would have stashed them with the rest of its treasures.” She pointed out towards the Gulf. “It’s lair is doubtless out there somewhere. The creature was far to large to fit down here.”

“What if it had its Benthic thralls hide its treasure down here?” Adalai asked.

“Dragons wouldn’t risk losing their treasure just because its servants die,” Cassian said. “It would keep them in a protected place, sure, but one it could get to on its own.”

Marla sighed. “I was hoping we’d be done with the water soon.”

“Aren’t your people great seafarers?” Verina asked.

“The Hextons? Yes. Clan Towers? We prefer the land.”

The journey out to the Gulf wasn’t as time consuming as the previous leg of the trip. Cassian estimated it was half are hour, no more. When they emerged into open water the others were excited to find that even they had enough light to see by. However that was the end of the good news.

Not all the light they found there came from the sun filtering through the waves. A great deal of it came from a ring of sea anemones that grew around the tunnel exit and glowed with a soft blue light from deep within. Each plant was the size of a large dog and they were grouped unnaturally close together. It was impossible to pass through them without brushing against one of their stinging fronds.

But keeping them contained was very much the purpose of the anemones. That and illuminating them for the six armed Benthic that swept down from above, brandishing spears.

The Drownway Chapter Thirteen – The Fate of the Dragon

Previous Chapter

Cassian pulled himself upright, head swimming, and looked around. He was sitting in a mound of rubble. Dirt and stones slid off of him in small avalanches. The dust of the cave-in still hung in the air, obscuring the world around him. Something sticky clung to his hands.He looked down to see them covered in dark, blue gray blood. So thick and clinging was the substance that he could not see his own natural skin tone through it. He shoved himself to his feet, his mind already trying to assess the situation and figure out what needed to be done. The first step after any accident in the smithy was to check on everyone in the area.

He’d caused the cave-in deliberately but otherwise the basic idea was sound. So he licked his lips, spat out the grit and said, “Adalai? Verina, Marta can you hear me?”

No answer came and, after waiting for nearly a minute, Cassian started to pace around the cramped area still free of rubble. It was about fifteen feet from cave-in to cave-in. Not a lot of space for three people to disappear in yet there was no sign of them, just a wedge shaped puddle of the same goo he was covered in. He pivoted to look back at the spot he’d woken up. He’d been the closest to the collapse so in theory he should have been the only one under the rubble. Theory didn’t go for a whole lot at the moment.He started digging through the rubble. “Marta?” Moving the rubble proved much easier than he was expecting. “Adalai? Verina?”

He’d just reached out to move a rock the size of his head, the biggest piece he’d come across so far, when the rubble on the far left side of the corridor erupted and Verina got shakily to her feet, pulling Adalai along behind her.

“Finally!” Cassian kept digging but spared one eye to study the two of them. “Is he okay? How did you get stuck under there, I thought you were further back.”

The yaga shook her head to clear it then looked around aimlessly. “Cassian? Is that you?”

“Of course it’s me, who else would it be?” A soft gleam caught his eye a few steps ahead and he moved forward to dig it out.”Where are you ?”

“What are you, blind? I’m right here.” It wasn’t the right moment to lose his temper but he was starting to get close.

“Of course I’m blind, Cassian, if you have the time to complain about it you might try lighting the lantern instead.”

Cassian realized he hadn’t seen the lantern during his brief look around the corridor earlier. “It’s around here somewhere. I can see just fine.”

He uncovered Marta’s shoulder and carefully dragged her out of the rubble, taking care not to jostle her shield arm too much. Once she was free he discovered two surprising things. First, her arm no longer looked broken. Second, her shield seemed to glow with a strange, silvery light. He wondered if she had strained her Gift in some way there at the end and this was some indication of it.

“What are you talking about?” Verina demanded. “I can’t see anything here. The lantern must have gone out when the roof collapsed.”

Cassian turned Marta face up and discovered, to his shock, that her skin had taken on a scaled pattern much like that of the Benthic. He looked around frantically, a cold feeling settling in his stomach.

“Zalt,” he whispered. “We ate the dragon.”

A long moment passed before Verina whispered back. “What?”

“I can see in the dark, the dragon’s corpse isn’t here and I don’t know how we all wound up buried in rubble unless we were eating it and wound up eating our way under the rubble.”

“We ate it?” Verina sounded faint.

“That’s what happens when a dragon dies. Haven’t you heard any of the stories? It’s hunger has to go somewhere and when people kill the dragon it’s almost always moves into the killers. Then they eat it.”

Verina made a soft gagging sound. For a moment Cassian was worried she was trying to force herself to vomit up what she’d eaten, which clearly wasn’t going to work. Even if they hadn’t eaten the dragon’s whole body, just the head and neck that had been in reach on this side of the collapsed tunnel, it was still a volume of meat greater than the largest cow he’d ever laid eyes on. To say nothing of the creature’s bones. Yet their stomachs showed no signs of gorging on such a huge quantity of food. It seemed the dragon’s hunger did more than drive them to eat. It also helped them absorb what they took in. Hopefully the supernatural powers of consumption and digestion wouldn’t last forever, or the provisions they’d brought along were not going to last.

Verina was still distraught. Her eyes were tracking something not even Cassian’s dragon enhanced vision could see and her lips moved without producing sound. He hoped she was just speaking to the Great Linnorm. He decided to give her a moment.

Taking a rope he tied a rag to one end, lowered it into the flooded mineshaft and let it absorb some water. Then he took the rag and used it to sponge some of the dirt off of Marta and Adalai’s faces. As he’d hoped that got them coming back to wakefulness. He also located the lantern and took possession of it, quickly draining the oil into a flask and tucking them both away into his bag.

As he finished Adalai sat up, rubbing his head, saying, “What happened? Did we get the dragon?”

“That’s one way to put it.” Cassian gently helped Marta up and brought her over to sit with the rest of them.

“It’s dark,” she muttered. “Let me find the lantern.”

“No lantern,” Cassian said. “We’re currently trapped in a very small space with no connection to the outside air. What air we do have is going to turn bad soon and lighting a lantern won’t help. The way I see it we have three ways to get out of here and we need to decide which one we are going to try very quickly.”

“Three ways?” Adalai sounded surprised at that assessment. “We can try and dig our way out the way we came or we can try to dig past the old cave-in. What’s the third way?”

“We can swim,” Verina said. Clearly finished with whatever communing she had been doing, the yaga’s attention was now on the matter at hand. “The Linnorm has gone to see if the flooded shaft connects aboveground anywhere. Or at least leads back to a shaft above the waterline.”

“There’s no way of knowing whether we can breath the air on the other side of the sunken mines, if there is any,” Adalai pointed out.

“That’s true of digging out the old cave-in as well,” Marta replied.

“And the fresh cave-in is the most likely to collapse if we disturb it,” Cassian concluded. “None of these are particularly good options. Honestly, I’d like it if we didn’t have to do any of these things but if we stay still then we are doomed and I’m not prepared to face Eternity just yet. So we have to choose one.”

“One?” Adalai cocked his head in contemplation. “Why not two? That way we don’t lose time if one of them doesn’t work.”

“We don’t have enough room to dig both ways at once,” Verina pointed out. “We’d just wind up with a new wall of rubble between us and that would make things difficult if we find a way out and need to join up again.”

“We could throw anything we move down the flooded mineshaft,” Marta suggested.

“Sure,” Adalai said, “but I was thinking one of us could swim the flooded shaft and the rest could dig towards the entrance.”

“Let’s hold off on swimming until we know what the Linnorm finds,” Cassian said. “How far from you can he go, Verina?”

“It depends on a number of things but right now, about a hundred and fifty feet. He should return soon.”

So they took a few minutes to dig towards the entrance, struggling against waves of loose dirt and stone that trickled from the ceiling. Cassian had just called a halt after a secondary collapse brought tons of falling debris down on them, undoing almost all the progress they’d made when Verina reported the Linnorm was back.The spirit reported that it hadn’t seen any new exit from the mines via the submerged tunnels. It did discover a large network of tunnels leading in all directions. There were even a few places where the Linnorm said there was no water although Marta was quick to point out again that that didn’t mean breathable air. Cassian still felt it was worth taking the time to explore. It did lead to another question, though.

“I should go,” Verina insisted. “If I move around then the Linnorm will be able to scout further. It will also be easier to pull me up out of the mineshaft if I don’t find anything. I weigh much less than you.”

“I can see,” Cassian said. “That’s going to be much more important to getting around safely down there than anything else.”

“You can see?” Adalai asked. “Since when?”

“Since eating the dragon.” He’d explained what he thought happened to the others while they were digging but hadn’t gotten around to mentioning the changes he saw as a result.

“Eating a dragon makes you see in the dark?” Adalai shook his head in bewilderment. “That’s amazing. I know they’re incredibly dangerous and all but why don’t I hear about people hunting down and eating these things on a regular basis?”

“Because the power held in dragon flesh is intended to pass down to their hatchlings,” Verina said. “When it winds up in the hands of others the dragons that should have inherited it chase them down, kill them and devour them to get it back.”

“That’s pretty bad,” Adalai agreed.

‘”Worse, no one wants the people who have eaten dragons around,” Cassian said as he passed a rope around his waist. “Too much collateral damage results.”

“That’s understandable.” Adalai braced himself and started lowering Cassian down into the mineshaft.To his surprise, once he reached the water he found it to be surprisingly warm. Given that the waters of the Gulf tended towards the chilly side of things at that time of the year Cassian found that rather surprising. It was not the only surprise in store for him.He also found that his enhanced eyesight could easily see through the surface of the water and down to the bottom of the mineshaft, which he estimated was at least a hundred feet below. He spotted at least three side tunnels branching off in various directions. “Okay, Adalai, there’s a rock here I’m going to tie the rope to so it doesn’t get lost. Go ahead and anchor your end somewhere. I’ll call for you if I need pulled back up.”

“Got it. We’ll keep digging, then. If we find a way out then I’ll light the lantern. Stay here if you see it and I’ll check in every so often until you come back.”

It was as good a plan as anything. Once he had everything in place Cassian dove under the water, intending to dive down to the first tunnel and look down it before surfacing for air. However he hadn’t descended more than half the distance to the tunnel in question before he subconsciously took a breath, sucking water into his lungs. Then he scrambled upwards through the water, using his Gift to add bouyancy to his armor. Once he broke the surface he called out, “Adalai, Adalai! I can breathe the water!”

The Drownway Chapter Twelve – The Mines

Previous Chapter

Whatever the half buried building had been before the sea took the Drownway, Adalai presumed it wasn’t intended as a living space. Although the doors that had once occupied the entrance were now long rotted away the sheer size of the opening they left behind suggested it was some kind of public building with grandiose double doors. There were no windows at ground level. The handful that were visible in the poor light were all located overhead, near the point where the walls met the roof.

Other than a hole the size of a barrel in the front wall, about ten feet from the doorway, said doorway was the only way to see the world outside. Much of the building’s interior was just as obscured. A little light came in through the doorway and a touch more peeked through holes in the tiled roof. At least the contrast in the lighting was in their favor. The rain was beginning to let up and, although it was hardly bright, the skies outside were still lighter than things inside. So Adalai posted himself by the break in the wall and peered out, watching for the Benthic to make themselves known again.

While he waited he found himself absently rummaging through his bag. His fingers had just closed on a packet of jerky when a clatter of stones inside the building caught his attention. He blinked twice as he turned his attention inward. His eyes rapidly adjusted to the change in lighting and he discovered that Cassian was digging through a pile of dirty reddish rocks as Marta held a lantern aloft to illuminate his work. As far as Adalai could tell there was nothing particularly important about the rocks. He glanced at Verina but she was watching the doorway.

“Cassian,” he hissed. “What are you doing?”

“Do you know where this is?” Cassian threw down the stones he’d been rummaging through, got to his feet and dashed towards the back of the cavernous structure.

A moment of panic washed over him. Up until this point the Ironhand had been a remarkably clear headed decision maker. Now it looked almost like a madness had taken hold at him. Adalai was not the only one who had noticed there was something off with the other man. Marta followed closely behind him, a lantern she’d just lit in one hand.

“Cassian?” She caught up to him before had gone more than fifteen feet and stopped him with a hand on the shoulder. “Where are you going?”

Instead of answering he took the arm holding the lantern and pushed it upwards to illuminate more of the ceiling. Adalai sucked in a deep breath as it revealed a set of heavy timbers bracing up not a stone tiled roof but a dirt tunnel at the back of the building.

Cassian put a finger to his lips and they stoool in silence for a long moment. As his heartbeat quieted Adalai caught the soft sloshing sound of waves drifting out of the passage behind them. “This is an old iron mine,” Cassian whispered. “The tunnels go deep enough that they must have flooded when the ocean overtook it.”

“We’re outflanked,” Marta replied in the same tone. “Even if the dragon can’t fit through whatever passages lead in here his pet Benthic can.”

Adalai glanced back out through the hole in the wall. “They haven’t come this way yet.”

“What was that?” Cassian sounded bewilderd. “Chew your food. Is this really the time to stop for a snack?”

Adalai started, suddenly aware that he had a hunk of jerky in his hands and more of it between his teeth. He chewed twice more and swallowed. “What…”

“It’s the dragon’s presence,” Verina said, never taking her eyes off the doorway. “They are hunger incarnate and the power of their need manifests in mortal creatures near them in the form of insatiable gluttony. There may be a way here underwater but the dragon is coming by land. The Linnorm is watching it.”

With an effort of will Adalai shoved the jerky back into his bag saying, “Does that mean you can manifest him again?”

“No. But he’s still here and able to see the world even if he cannot influence our part of it.”

“Well tell him to watch the mine shaft then,” Cassian said. “Just because the dragon isn’t coming that way doesn’t mean its minions aren’t. The last thing we need is getting caught in a pincer.”

Adalai cast a quick glance out the doorway, made sure there were no signs of the creatures approaching, then knelt down by the Slavic woman. “Are you well? I’ve never seen an Invoker who reacts like you when a spirit they’ve Invoked is injured.”

“Few bind a spirit to themselves as the yagas do, and for exactly that reason,” she explained, a hand absently rubbing her shoulder at the place her tattoo ran over it. “I’ll recover, assuming we survive the night. Even with the Linnorm weakened he does much for me. I am sure I don’t feel the influence of the hunger to the same extent you do, for example.”

“Adalai,” Cassian hissed, “they’re here.”

Moving quickly, Adalai joined him at the entrance, taking position on the opposite side of the empty doorway. If the sea dragon had sent any of its servants around to the sunken mineshaft it wasn’t evident. There were at least twenty Benthic massing at the bottom of the hill, although it was still impossible to get a full count of the number in the faint light. More concerning than the numbers was the massive globe of water two of the Benthic levitated above them.

“Do we have away to avoid getting washed away by that?” Adalai asked.

Cassian glanced at Marta, who had left the lantern at the back of the building behind one of the rock pile and moved over to the hole in the wall. “What’s our Shieldbearer’s opinion?”

“Not possible for me. I’ve never been good at creating barriers that last for a long period of time, maybe fifteen seconds, though I can make one big enough to cover the building if that helps.”

“Not particularly,” Cassian said. “Switch places with me. Use the shield to keep they from swarming the door so Adalai can fight them one on one or two at a time. I’ll do my best to pick one or two off from over there.”

It was a good plan. Adalai had worked with other bravo captains in the past and he found the speed and decisiveness Cassian displayed to be better than the average. He made good use of people’s abilities as well. However the legends say that the dragon is a creature more cunning than any man. The sea dragon that had pursued them put the proof to those tales.

As the Benthic grouped together and came charging forward in their bizarre crawling run there was a deafening crash and the building’s roof shook in under the weight of the dragon’s coils suddenly slamming into its tiles. One of the holes overhead caved in further as the dragon’s head shoved the tiles out of the way.

For a breathless moment Adalai watched the debris fall in slow motion, his mind scrambling to come up with some idea of what he should be doing. Stone tiles were raining down towards Verina. The sea dragon’s neck bulged with water as it prepared an attack. The Benthic continued towards them, heedless of the danger from man or beast.

A flash of terror lit Verina’s face for an instant before a brighter light subsumed it in verdant luminescence. The heat haze silhouette of the Linnorm filled the room for a brief second. One head swatted the debris from the air while the other butted the sea dragon on the chin, spoiling the serpent’s aim. Then the green light was gone again, and the Great Linnorm with it.

In that moment Adalai clearly saw what had to happen. He grabbed Marta and spun her around, pushing her shield up at an angle with his free hand while frantically gesturing from the dragon to the doorway with the point of his sword. There wasn’t time for anything more but thankfully Marta understood what he was getting at.

The dragon had already begun spewing water but, with its head out of position, the torrent flew uselessly towards the corner of the room. As the serpent swung its head back towards them the dome of Marta’s shield appeared, sending most of the water cascading off and out the doorway towards the encroaching Benthic. Cassian threw his remaining daggers at them – in the conventional fashion, not with his Gift – and dashed towards Verina. She had collapsed again and this time she wasn’t even twitching.

The sea dragon ran out of water but this time it wasn’t done. Instead of closing its mouth it lunged forward and did its best to sink its fangs into Marta’s shield dome. Adalai expected its teeth to just slide off the dome but he’d underestimated the abilities of a dragon. A sickly gray shadow spread through the dome’s bright white light from the points where the teeth touched it. Marta cried out and the dome vanished.

The after image of the dome was still fading when the dragon struck again, diving towards Marta, its teeth snapping. She managed to get her physical shield between them as she tried to dodge but the dragon’s horse sized head still struck a glancing blow. Adalai braced her and she kept her feet but he heard a sickening popping sound in the process. There wasn’t time to worry about that.

By reaching down into the building the dragon had left itself exposed. Long, pulsing gills flapped open and closed along its neck. Adalai put the tip of his sword against the dragon’s flank and pushed it forward, scraping along the creature’s gleaming pearlescent scales until it caught in the gills. As soon as the blade was in place he put both hands on the hilt and shoved as hard as he could. The sword plunged in up to the hilt.

Adalai left it there. He sprinted towards the back of the building, Marta already a half step in front of him. Cassian was shaking Verina but she remained unresponsive. Adalai came in and scooped her into a shoulder carry. Once she was off his hands Cassian pulled out his vial of quicksilver and broke it open. As the dragon thrashed around in agony, tearing the roof apart and threatening to topple the whole building, Cassian twitched a finger twice and pulled the quicksilver out of its container and shot it at the serpent in a trio of deadly droplets that splattered across the creature’s gills with an odd hissing sound. Or maybe that was also the dragon expressing its agony.

“To the mineshafts,” Cassian declared.

They hurried deeper into the building as quickly as they could. As they passed the lantern Marta had set down she slung her mace and took it up again, illuminating their path down into the depths. They had not gone very deep into the mines before. Now they discovered that there was not much deeper to go. They barely ran ten seconds before they came to a deep hole at the end of the tunnel.

There might have been more tunnel beyond the downward shaft but rubble and rotted timber filled it, blocking the way. The downward shaft ended in a dark sheet of water some fifteen feet below. As they stared at it Adalai felt his stomach rumble.

Cassian looked around, considering the tunnel, looking for something, though Adalai couldn’t guess what. Adalai adjusted Verina slightly and tried to unbuckle one of the extra swords he’d strapped to his pack. As he worked he said, “Quicksilver is a poison, yes?”

“If you breath it, yes,” Cassian said. “It can kill a man after a few hours or days, though dragons can supposedly eat anything so I doubt they’d be poisoned easily, especially by a kind of silver.”

Nerona hadn’t discovered the table of elements and Adalai didn’t think it was the time to try and explain it to a blacksmith. “Then I suppose we just have to stab it.”

Cassian looked back at Marta. “How’s your arm? Can you make a shield to block the tunnel for a few seconds?”

She looked down at her shield arm, which hung at an unnatural angle. She set the lantern down and put her free hand on the shield’s edge. “A few.”

“Help me with this, Adalai.” Cassian gestured to a fallen timber and together they dragged it over to a wall and braced it there. Cassian climbed up the timber, stripped off his gloves, placed his two hands on the timber holding up the ceiling and closed his eyes.

Adalai’s stomach growled fiercely, the noise almost enough to drown out the sound of scales scraping over stone. The eel head of the sea dragon pushed into the small circle of light cast by the lantern. Marta held up her shield, lifting it as much by the rim as by the arm it was strapped to. The dragon’s lips spat a small globe of water at her and knocked her flat. A second and third attack were fired at Adalai, though he avoided them by ducking behind some of the rubble from the cave in.

The dragon turned it’s attention to Cassian. With a yell he pulled his hands away from the timber and scrambled away from the dragon. It lunged after him, hissing. The Ironhand took three steps, turned back and throw the nails in his hands at the dragon. The timber overhead he’d taken them from groaned then collapsed.

For a brief moment Adalai saw fear in the dragon’s eyes. Then it vanished under the crushing weight of stone.

The Drownway Chapter Eleven – The Sea Dragon

Previous Chapter

The sea dragon and the Great Linnorm locked eyes and roared, their combined voices shaking the air and, for just a moment, overwhelming the the sound of the storm. The horde of Benthic clambered out of the surf and charged towards them across the beach. Cassian studied the forces arrayed against them and shouted, “Fall back! Don’t let them surround us!”

“Where are we going?” Marta yelled back, straining to be heard over the cacophony.

“Inland,” Cassian replied, dashing around the side of the dunes toward the center of the island. “Hopefully that dragon can’t follow us.”

“Don’t bet on it,” Verina said, struggling to keep pace with him. “Just because the dragon swims doesn’t mean it can’t fly.”

Behind them the sea dragon’s body tensed and rippled, swelling with terrible potential until it unleashed a massive torrent of rushing water on the Linnorm. The two headed spirit exhaled twin streams of pale green fire in response. The three blasts collided with an ear splitting shriek and an explosion of steam that hid the ocean from view. Steam did little to stop the sheer mass of the sea dragon’s attack. The rush of water swept past the twin dragon’s fire and slammed into the spirit’s flank, creating a second burst of steam and sending it rolling across the beach for a split second before the Linnorm vanished and Verina pitched face first into the sand.

“Zalt,” Cassian hissed, sliding to a stop then scrambling back to drag the yaga upright. Her eyes rolled in her skull like dice in a gambler’s cup and all her limbs hung limp so the Ironhand wrapped her arm around his neck, grabbed her waist then started to drag. Two or three steps later Marta caught up and took Verina’s other side.

Yet even with two of them to manage the Slav’s dead weight they were losing ground. The Benthic weren’t made for moving quickly over land but even they were able to close the gap and by the time Cassian and the others rounded the nearest dune the sea dwellers had closed to within two hundred feet. Adalai had waited for them to catch up and kept pace next to Marta as they withdrew. “What happened?”

“Linnorm. Overwhelmed.” Verina was starting to come around, though her feet still dragged limply behind her.

“I didn’t think Invokers worked that way.” Adalai clicked his tongue and pivoted to walk backwards while he watched the Benthic’s steady approach. “This must be another side effect of the yaga being bound to their spirit.”

“Just need a few seconds,” Verina panted. “Then I can walk. The Great One needs longer before he can show himself again.”

“Fantastic,” Cassian said. “The Linnorm was the only thing we had in a sea dragon’s weight class.”

There was a soft thud and a long, thin spear sprouted from the sand to their left. “They’ve got javelins,” Adalai reported. “Marta, switch out with me, we’re going to need your shield in pretty short order.”

“No, I can stand,” Verina said. She visibly gathered herself and got her feet under her. She swayed for a moment as the other two withdrew their support but remained upright.

Marta immediately turned around and began walking backwards as well. Adalai rummaged in his bag for a moment then held out the daggers he’d taken from the bandits the day before. “You’re our best long range worker, Cassian. You’ll need all the ammunition you can get.”

Cassian took the three knives and stuck them into his belt then tugged his left glove off and tucked it in there as well. With his other hand he directed his own sword forward to slash at the approaching Benthic. The weapon darted in and out of the approaching crowd, menacing them enough that their advance was slowed and occasionally scattering dark red blood on the sand. The Benthic weren’t wearing anything like armor but their scales were tough and they were quick to block most attacks with their sharp coral or bone spears. But every now and then he got lucky.

Adalai shot him a sideways look as they rounded another dune and put it between themselves and the Benthic. “You plan to Ironhand those things any time soon?”

“It’s not that simple,” Cassian said, taking one of the daggers in his left hand. “I don’t know this metal yet. I made the weapons and armor I brought with me so I already had a grasp of it but these things are new to me. It’s going to take a minute or two.”

“What happened to the knives you brought with you?” Verina asked.

“I didn’t get a chance to call them back before the sea dragon showed up,” Cassian said, splitting his attention between learning the dagger in his hand, controlling the sword harrying the Benthic and carrying the conversation. “They’re well out of my reach now.”

As if to drive that point home the sea dragon threw it’s coiling bulk up onto the side of the dune, sending an avalanch of sand rushing down towards them as the dragon’s belly churned the grains about, seeking purchase. They had yet to see more than it’s head and a half dozen feet of its body at any one time but, from the way its entire mass seemed to flex and sway with its movement, Cassian guessed it was one of those dragons that had no legs, just a worm like body. The pearl in its forehead flickered with a sinister internal light. In response the Benthic abandoned all efforts at defending themselves from Cassian’s darting sword, dropped to the sand and scrambled forward on all fours.

Or rather, all threes. Their new posture made it apparent that one reason they hadn’t overtaken Cassian and his party was how truly ill suited they were to moving about on land. Their bodies seemed to end in a long, tapering, eel-like appendage twice or perhaps three times as long as the legs of a comparably sized man. The tail alone clearly didn’t allow them to move very fast. However, with the added propulsion of their upper bodies they began to close the distance at an alarming rate.

Cassian felt a pang of regret. From the clear self destructive behavior and the glow from the pearls in their foreheads it was obvious the Benthic were not acting of their own accord. However he didn’t see much he could do about that. So he did his best to set them free painlessly, driving his sword’s point down through their backs quickly and ruthlessly as soon as they came within the distance his Gift could operate in. Very quickly the bodies of three, then four of the pitiable creatures lay twitching and dying on the sand, their arms and tails no longer possessing the strength to move them.

It wasn’t enough. The sea dragon seemed to have two or three dozen Benthic in its thrall and they were all pouring over the dunes towards the human quartet. They clawed their way across the sand with a manic intensity. When Cassian’s sword flew through the air over their heads they snatched at it with their bare hands, heedless of the danger. One lost a finger and others suffered deep cuts. Yet it was clear to Cassian that they were going to get ahold of it sooner or later and he didn’t want to lose the only weapon left he could use well with his Gift.

So he called the sword back to his hand. He weighed the new dagger in his off hand, feeling it’s strong buzz in the back of his head, and estimated how much control he could exert over it. Certainly not enough for anything delicate. He’d just have to settle for throwing the weapon and calling it back to his hand.

By the time they were off the dunes and climbing inland Cassian had managed to kill another Benthic and injured two more. As he started scrambling over scrub grass the Benthic were nearly in range to strike with the short spears they carried. Cassian was drawing back his arm for another throw when Manta yelled, “Hold!”

At first he wasn’t sure what she had in mind, since the Benthic had stopped throwing things at them when they got down to one spear apiece. The Hexton maid had continued to pace him in spite of that. Now she stepped forward, her shield glowing brighter than he had ever seen it, and thrust it forward until it almost touched the closest Benthic. A barrier in the shape of a half dome appeared, bright as the sun in the storming dark, and swept forward, throwing the creatures back in disarray.

Up until that point the sea dragon had watched its servants’ struggles with dispassion, doing little more than slither from dune to dune to keep them in sight. When Marta’s barrier swept over the Benthic it raised up again, the pearl in its head pulsing faster. As the barrier faded the dragon’s jaw gaped open and its throat swelled like a frog’s before spewing another enormous stream of water that smashed the remains of Manta’s glowing shield and cast her back several steps.

Cassian dropped his weapons and caught her, bracing himself against the torrent of water and doing his best to keep her from being swept away. The surge did catch his sword and dagger and he only had the focus and control to snag his sword out of the wave before it was swept away. Then the real danger of the dragon’s plan showed itself. They were going uphill and water naturally wanted to move downhill so, as the force the dragon had put behind it died away the wave turned around and swept past them again, this time full of rocks and driftwood that battered them as they swept past. A large piece of flotsam caught Cassian in the side and he would have been swept away if Adalai hadn’t grabbed his belt.

A loud croaking sound rose up over the din of combat and surussus of rain. Panicked, Cassian looked around for the source only to realize it was coming from the sea dragon. The creature had risen up like a snake about to strike and was booming out the wet, belching sound like a general barking out orders. Except the dragon ordered its thralls with the pearls in their foreheads. It didn’t need to make noise to communicate with them. It was just laughing.

The dragon was watching them struggle for its own amusement.

Two of its Benthic servants were gathering the receding wave up using their watery arts, massing it into one place. Whether their plan was to attack with it themselves or just return it to the dragon Cassian couldn’t begin to guess but whichever it was it spelled disaster for them. “Run,” he gasped, suiting actions to words. “Just get as far inland as you can, we’ll try to find some place their powers are less effective.”

In truth he suspected they’d gone as far as there was to go. Dragons often attacked caravans for the treasures they carried and, if this one had enslaved some Benthic to help it scout for desperate souls using the Drownway, that would explain what had happened to Cazador and his group. They’d been taken by the dragon to feed its appetite for treasure and food.

“There’s an old building on the south side of the summit,” Adalai panted as they sprinted uphill, pulling the still groggy Verina along as she began to lag. “I spotted it on our way here. It’s fairly large and sturdy looking. It might not stand up to multiple hits from the dragon but it will slow down the Benthic.”

“Lead the way.”

It was a harrowing three minutes getting up to the island’s summit and around to the building Adalai had described. There was a slight reprieve. Cassian suspected that, just like he could only use his Gift on metal within a certain distance, the dragon could only control the Benthic if they stayed close to it. He wasn’t sure why the serpent didn’t follow them immediately. Perhaps it was summoning more Benthic from the deep. Perhaps it was refilling some internal reservoir of water by returning to the ocean or drinking the liquid the Benthic had gathered. Perhaps it just liked watching them run.

Regardless, the dragon and its servants didn’t molest them along the way. It was almost more nervewracking to make the trip in safety than it was to be harried the entire way. Still, they arrived safely at the rundown ruins of a huge, simplistic rectangular building half buried in sand and scrub brush. Without hesitation they darted into the cavernous entrance to prepare for the next assault. It was only as Adalai sat Verina on a low sand pile and Marta fumbled to light a lantern that Cassian realized how bad an idea coming there really was.

The Drownway Chapter Five – The Dangers of the Path

Previous Chapter

The massive, two headed form of the Great Linnorm heaved itself out of the sea and straddled the Drownway, water running down its sides in sheets. Within the pale, shimmering green spirit was a slim, feminine form. Cassian groaned. Clearly Verina Highplains hadn’t taken no for an answer.

“Calm down,” he said to the others, “I don’t think that one’s out to get us. Well, maybe me after what I said yesterday but she’ll probably give you two a pass.”

“She?” Adalai’s question had a decidedly pointed tone.

“Yes, she.” Cassian gently pulled Marta back, motioning for Adalai to lower his weapons with his other hand.

The Great Linnorm surged forward, a pair of leathery bat-like wings unfurling from its back, and it lept over the waves to land in front of Cassian with a titanic splash. Unlike Verina, who was protected by the body of the spirit she had Invoked, Cassian wound up drenched by the spray. Almost as soon as it appeared the body of the Linnorm vanished and left Verina on the shore, a massive serpentine gap in the water behind her slamming closed with a crash of rushing water.

“Signorina Verina,” Cassian said with a polite bow. “It’s a pleasure to see you again so soon.”

“Is it?” She directed a skeptical look in Marta’s direction. “Perhaps it is. Your opinion on things has changed a great deal over the past night.”

“Others have made a compelling case for a different approach,” Cassian replied. “I admit I am a little surprised to see you here today, although given the way things have been going so far perhaps I should have been expecting it.”

Verina’s mood markedly changed when her gaze stopped on Adalai. She stood motionless and a little wide eyed for a moment when their eyes met then she took hold of her skirts, curtsied, and said, “Greetings, stranger. My name is Verina Highplains, a daughter of the People of the Steppes, a yaga of the Lost Slavs.”

It was evident from his expression that Adalai didn’t understand what she had said. Whether that was because Verina’s accent combined with Adalai’s poor grasp of Neronan kept him from comprehension or the man just didn’t know what the terms meant Cassian couldn’t tell.

At least he wasn’t rude about it. He bowed saying, “My name is Adalai Carpathea, a bravo from far away.”

“Far away?” She leaned forward to peer at him, her expression unreadable. “How far? I do not recognize the sound of your speech.”

“I’d rather not say.” Adalai turned and gestured to Marta. “The Lady Towers is of Hexton lands and serves at the pleasure of their king.”

Verina inclined her head towards the other woman but didn’t acknowledge her otherwise. Instead she looked over to Cassian and said, “What made the difference? Has your luck taken a turn?”

“That’s one way to look at it,” he grumbled. “Perhaps I never had any to begin with. Before you ask, yes, if the Linnorm still insists on partaking in this disaster in the making I suppose you can come along. Provided your brother has given his permission. The last thing I need to happen is for the whole of the Highplains cavalry to follow us out onto the Drownway. Especially when they’re under levy.”

A blinding smile transformed Verina’s face, changing her dour Slavic features into a beacon of delight. “Many thanks, Signore Cassian. My brother and I are once again in your debt.”

“You and your Linnorm, too. I just want you to understand that you’re to be very careful how you Invoke that thing.” Cassian gestured out at the land bridge gradually poking its way out of the waves. “That’s not the place to carelessly flail about with a spirit of that size, understand?”

“It’s the privilege of the Linnorm to act as it needs and the duty of the yaga to assist it as we can.”

“If it can’t see a way to act that doesn’t throw us into the ocean then it stays here, understand?” Cassian didn’t wait for an answer. The tide was moving out and, barring the Linnorm flailing about, the waves were pretty calm. It was best to get a head start. As he’d said to Marta, they only had a few hours of low tide to travel in.

Cassian picked his way across a rocky outcrop towards the submerged portion of the Drownway, the slick stone sending the soles of his boots slipping and squeaking as if the ground itself was conspiring against him. “Did you bring provisions suited to the situation?”

“Certainly,” Verina assured him. “The Highplains are no strangers to long campaigns. I have brought jerky and hardtack sufficient for two weeks along with a mercurial glass to judge the weather, though I see that you have one of your own.”

Cassian nodded his grudging approval. “It never hurts to have a spare of any tool made of glass.”

“Then she will be coming with us?” Marta asked.

“She will,” Cassian confirmed.

“Can the spirit just carry us over the water?” Adalai was studying Verina with a keen eye and she returned his scrutiny with equal intensity.

“I’m afraid not.” She held up one hand to display the faintly glowing tattoo there. “Without the marks of a yaga a person cannot safely touch the body of the Great Linnorm, or any other ancestral spirit of the Slavic lands.”

Marta eyed the woman suspiciously. “For the best, I think. Two of us are seeking to discover the fates of family or friends who have traveled this path. If we were wrapped in the coils of such a large spirit we might overlook signs they have left behind.”

“That reminds me,” Cassian said, crouching down by the water, “do you have any idea where the Baron you are looking for went missing?”

“None, sir.”

“How about you?” Adalai asked. “You had that wheel axel, do you know where that came from?”

“A courier crossing in the other direction discovered it and marked the location with a flag.” Cassian sent his tin mirror out over the waves again as he spoke. “He planted it only a few days ago so there is a good chance the flag is still in place now.”

“Then we should make all haste,” Marta replied, poking at barely submerged stone with the toe of her boot.

“Wait,” Cassian said, grabbing her wrist and pulling her back. “There’s sharks in the water out there, see the fins?”

She squinted and stared out at the waves. “Surely the water is too shallow for them to reach us.”

“The animals know the patterns of nature far better than we do,” Verina said. “If they are lurking around here then there is a chance that they could eat. Respect that.”

Marta sighed and stepped back until she was again standing on solid ground. “If you insist.”

“Water in your boots is just as bad,” Adalai said. “Don’t underestimate how nasty a case of trench foot can be if you never get your feet dry again.”

“You think of such lovely things,” Marta said dryly.

“I do try, especially at moments like this.”

In a mere five minutes the water receded enough that they were able to start hopping across the dryish portions of the path, keeping their balance as best they could. In truth Cassian understood Marta’s sense of urgency. Every moment they lost was another chance for Cazador to lose his life. However every craftsman knew the fastest way to work was slow enough to avoid mishaps and, from the stories he’d heard from customers, it was much the same for bravos. So he did his best to keep the group’s progress as steady and deliberate as possible.

Unfortunately things did not go as smoothly as he might wish. It was little things at first. Verina hadn’t seen a map of the Drownway, nor did she know the route, so the small island she’d waited on wasn’t on the path. That wouldn’t have caused a delay except she’d left her pack and provisions there and they’d been forced to go out of their way to retrieve it. Only a five minute delay but Cassian bristled at it none the less.

Then, as the tides began to roll back in, Cassian called a halt at the beginning of a high, narrow ridge that crossed the gap between two larger land masses. At one point a previous expedition had strung a rope as a handhold between two posts driven into the rocks but, from the frayed end of the bits that remained, Cassian concluded that something had caused it to break. The ridge was narrow and uneven. That wouldn’t have been a problem if there hadn’t also been a strong westerly wind blowing.

By all accounts danger was part of the bravo’s calling. Foolhardiness was not. So they hunkered down on the side of the ridge for nearly half an hour until the wind died down. Then Cassian carefully picked his way across the expanse, using his Gift to grab ahold of his armor and push himself more firmly towards the ground. He made the trip with a coil of rope around his waist. Once it was firmly tied to the post on the far side the rest of the group made the trip with no issue.

Unfortunately the prolonged pause left them far enough behind schedule that the tides had turned. They had just enough time to scramble through a final low point in the path before the waves closed over it. The small island that left them on was the first of its kind they’d seen.

Marta stared around at the old, crumbling buildings that dotted the low hill and said, “I thought this place was cut off from the mainland most of the day. How did someone get all this stone out here? Did they carry it over that ridge?”

“There’s other routes through the Drownway,” Cassian replied. “They’re used by caravans like the one we’re looking for but the path is a good five miles longer. This is the fastest route through the Drownway and the one your Baron probably took if he was trying to move quickly. It merges with the caravan route later on. Since I have an idea of where Cazador’s group went missing I plan to head there first and spiral out from that location rather than retrace the caravan route and lose a day to the tides.”

“That doesn’t explain how they got the stone out here,” Verina said.

“They got it from right here.” Cassian gestured to the Gulf. “There was a time before Lum drowned half of Nerona, when these lands were joyful and prosperous rather than hidden by waves. This was probably a fishing village once. There is wreckage from Nerona’s lost cities washed up along the path as well. These buildings are still on their foundations so I presume this is where they were built.”

Adalai had climbed up the remains of a nearby wall, which had crumbled into a stair step shape. Now he suddenly jumped down. “There’s smoke rising from the far side of the island.”

Cassian frowned. “Well, it’s not a bad place to hunker down til low tide. The ruins give some shelter after all.”

“How common is it for people to travel this way?” Marta asked.

“Not that rare,” Cassian said. “But hardly commonplace either.”

“Should we go have a look?” Adalai asked.

“Let’s.”

The island wasn’t very large. If they’d been moving at a full march, aiming to make another crossing before the tides came back in, they could have made it across in eight to ten minutes. Cassian chose to move much slower, using his reflective tin to help them carefully scout the way, checking behind each wall and inside each ruin they passed. As a consequence it took then almost half an hour to get from one side of the island to the other.

Once there Cassian carefully slid his tin around a wall to get a glimpse of the source of the smoke. Tin didn’t make for the best mirror in the world but it showed enough that Cassian could make out three men crouched around a campfire with crankbows leaned against nearby rocks. That, in and of itself, was not unusual. Only fools would travel Nerona’s wilds unarmed.

However one of the men suddenly sat up, quietly motioned to his companions and pointed towards the piece of tin. He must have seen the sun reflecting off of it. Whatever clued him in, his reaction didn’t bode well. He and his friends immediately reached for their weapons, worked the levers and slipped bolts into place.

“Bandits,” Cassian hissed. “Make ready for battle.”

Indie Fiction Round-Up For Winter 2023

I’ve been involved in critiquing and reviewing a number of independently published novels in the past year and I thought I’d bring you my thoughts on three of the best I’ve read so far.

Jiseidai – by Daniel P. Riley

This is a series with two installments so far, focusing on rogue assassin Gabriel on the run from the dystopian megacorp that raised him, trained him and gave him superpowers. Gabriel stumbles upon Hana, a young, abused girl and agrees to save her. He winds up fleeing into the ruins of old Tokyo with Hana, doing his best to avoid pursuit and come to grips with what his role in life is going to be now that he’s left everything he’s known.

There’s plenty of dystopian cyberpunk stories out there and plenty of stories about hardened killers turning over a new leaf. The general direction of these two genres is contradictory so Riley has a hard row to hew here. However so far he’s done a pretty good job of balancing the fun, scifi concepts of near future scientific progress run amok with a much more straight forward narrative of grace and redemption. While I do feel that classifying Jiseidai as true cyberpunk is a bit of a misnomer otherwise it hits what it aims at.

In particular the description of Gabriel’s fighting techniques is quite good. I don’t know if Riley studied budo or kenjutsu in a dojo but he clearly has a decent grasp on the basic concepts and manages to make them halfway believable in the technologically enhanced world Gabriel and Hana live in. Another common concept in Eastern development that runs through Jiseidai is cultivation. In most martial arts stories cultivating refers to the process of isolating and enhancing your internal energies, a foundational concept to the mystic elements of those tales. In Jiseidai what we get instead is a cultivation of relationships. Human connections, human empathy and human morality are central to the growth of our protagonists and seeing them spending as much time refining those instincts and potential is very gratifying. Far more so than the sterile, medicinal processes of cultivation in more run of the mill wuxia fair, although there is a cybernetic flavor of that too.

The Curse of the Star Wraiths – by The Lord Otter

This is a tale of two brothers who must set right the wrongs they have endured. The Curse of the Star Wraiths is a very sword and sandal, Conan the Barbarian style story of vengeance and triumph. Normally this kind of thing is not my cup of tea. However it also involves airships, ancient civilizations and floating ruins and that, my friends, is 100% my caffeinated beverage of choice, so I was willing to deal with the rest.

Don’t get me wrong. Otter has written a story with a lot of elements tailor made to get my attention but the story is by no means perfect. His prose is a little rough at points and his transitions between some scenes or between points of view are often a little jarring. His dialog can feel a bit stilted, although I believe part of that is a purposeful attempt to make it feel archaic and in that it succeeds. It won’t work for everyone, though. All in all, the rough prose is not a big issue. It is his first work and there’s plenty of room to allow for improvement there and I think most people can enjoy the narrative in spite of that. On the other hand, the core of the story is something he handles very well so far.

Steel and Stormbright, his protagonists, have a wholesome, brotherly relationship. It sounds odd to say that but seeing such simple, straight forward and wholesome male friendship its rare and precious these days and I’m very glad the effort has been put into it. Likewise, the target of their vengeance, General Caerst, manages to feel worth of their ire without lapsing into caricature. While Caerst’s goddess does come off as a bit cartoonish… she is a pagan deity. Subtlety is not their forte.

In short, if you want a crazy story about two brothers looking to save their father from slavery and avenge themselves on the civilization that enslaved them, The Curse of the Star Wraiths will bring you the first installment in just such a story with the promise of more to come from an author with a creative mind and promising skill. It’s my hope that sticking with it will let us see the brothers grow into something truly special.

The Waking Nightmares – by M.D. Boncher

If you’ve ever wanted a Flash Gordon style serial about a powerful, almost godlike invader destroying Earth and leaving a handful of people to pick up the wreckage, the Tales from the Dream Nebula series might be just what you wanted. The Waking Nightmares is the third installment in that series. In it, interplanetary truckers Winston and Bubby find themselves crashing with their new patrons, the Junkers, while their damaged ship is repaired.

While there, the two get shown around the estate and reach the mail room just as a suspicious package is delivered. The package turns out to be a colony of terrifying, flesh eating monsters. Hooray! From there our heroes have to fight a desperate, running battle with creatures they barely understand in an attempt to save their hides and hopefully keep their new patron alive as well. There’s a lot of inventive thinking and well paced action in the story.

The stories we’re looking at today have ideas that appeal strongly to me, personally, and in The Waking Nightmares it’s the tricky task of monster slaying. Winston, Bubby and the others have to keep their wits about them to beat the creatures and I find that a lot of fun. The action is also clear and easy to follow, in spite of how chaotic it is. That’s a real achievement in this kinds of fast paced, action adventure stories and is another part of what I really liked about book.

Also impressive is how well I felt I knew Winston after the tale was done. There are several parts of the story where previous events in his life were referenced and each time they came up I had a pretty good idea how those events shaped him, even if I didn’t know what the events themselves were. That’s slick work right there. On one occasion I felt like having a little more context about what those events actually were would have helped me understand a moment better but, outside of that, I feel like Boncher hit a really good balance point in hinting at the past and pushing his story forward. If you want a swashbuckling scifi story to sink your teeth into, this might be just what the doctor ordered.


Now it bears pointing out that these are books published independently and perhaps they are not quite as slick and finished as something you might get from a mainstream publisher. However they are good, fun reads written with a great amount of heart. If you can bear with a few rough edges and you’re looking for rousing adventure of a kind you don’t see from big publishers that often anymore they’re worth checking out.

With this we’ve reached the end of my publications for the year. I’ll be taking next week off for the holidays and we’ll return to our regularly scheduled blogging in 2024. As always I’m grateful to all of you who turn up to read the words I painstakingly put together and I hope you enjoy looking at them as much as I enjoy writing them. May your time with family be a blessing and the Lord give you joy this season.