“Gods,” whispered Ankran, chewing at his lip.
Until that moment there had been the hope that some might have turned back or drowned in the river but, as with so many of Yarvi’s hopes, it had withered before bearing fruit.
“The greater their numbers, the greater our glory!” shouted Nothing. The blacker their plight the happier he grew. At that moment there seemed a lot to be said for inglorious survival, but the choice was made now, if there had ever been a choice.
No more running, no more tricks.
Yarvi might have mouthed a dozen prayers over the last few moments, to every god, tall or small, that might be the slightest help. But now he closed his eyes and sent up one more. Perhaps he had been touched by Father Peace, but this one he sent to Mother War alone. To guard his friends, his oarmates, his family. For each in their own way had proved themselves worth saving.
That, and to bring his enemies a red day. For Mother War likes a prayer with blood in it, that’s no secret.
“Fight or die,” murmured Ankran, and he offered out his hand and Yarvi gave his own, useless though it was. They looked into each other’s faces, he and this man that he had hated, plotted against, seen beaten, then struggled through the wastes beside and come to understand.
“If I don’t get glory but … the other thing,” said Ankran, “would you find a way to help my family?”
Yarvi nodded. “I swear it.” What difference if he failed to keep a second oath, after all? He could only be damned once. “If I get the other thing …” Asking Ankran to kill his uncle seemed too high an expectation. He shrugged. “Weep me a river?”
Ankran grinned. A shaky grin with the front teeth missing, but he managed it still, and it seemed at that moment high heroism to marvel at. “Mother Sea will rise with my tears.”
The long silence stretched out, split into aching moments by the pounding of Yarvi’s heart.
“What if we both die?” he whispered.
Nothing’s grating voice came before the answer. “Ebdel Aric Shadikshirram! Welcome to my parlor!”
“Like you, it’s a little past its best.” Her voice.
Yarvi pressed himself to a crack in the wall, eye straining towards the archway.
“We all are less than we used to be,” called Nothing. “You were an admiral once. Then a captain. And now-”
“Now I am nothing, just like you.” Yarvi saw her, in the shadows of the archway, eyes gleaming as she peered in. Trying to make out what was inside, and who. “An empty jug. A broken vessel with all the hopes leaked out.” He knew she couldn’t see him, but even so he shrank away behind the crumbling elf-stone.
“I sympathize,” called Nothing. “It hurts, to lose everything. Who knows better than I?”
“And what do you think the sympathy of nothing for nothing is worth?”
Nothing laughed. “Nothing.”
“Who’s with you in there? That lying little bitch who used to cap my mastheads? That sneaking maggot with the turnip for a hand?”
“I have a higher opinion of them than you, but, no. They went on ahead. I am alone.”
Shadikshirram barked a laugh at that, and as she leaned forward into the archway Yarvi saw the glimmer of drawn steel. “No, you’re not. But you soon will be.” He peered up towards the tower, saw the curve of Rulf’s bow, the string full drawn. But Shadikshirram was too canny to offer him a shot. “I am too merciful! That has always been my fault. I should have killed you years ago.”
“You can try today. Twice we have met before in battle, but this time I-”
“Tell it to my dogs.” And Shadikshirram gave a shrill whistle.
Men spilled through the archway. Or things that looked like men. The Banyas. Wild and ragged shadows, glimpses of white faces gaping, studs of amber and bone and bared teeth shining, weapons of polished rock and walrus tooth and whale jaw. They screeched and gibbered, whooped and wailed, mad sounds, like beasts, like devils, as if that archway was a gate to hell and what lay beyond was vomiting into the world.
The foremost dropped gurgling with one of Rulf’s arrows in his chest but the others plunged into the ruin and Yarvi stumbled from the crack as though slapped. The urge to run was almost more than he could stand, but he felt Ankran’s hand on his shoulder then, and stood, shaking like a leaf, every breath a wheezing whimper.
But he stood.
The screaming started. Crashes, the sounds of steel, of rage, of pain, almost worse for not being able to see who made them, or why. He heard the shrieking of the Banyas, but more horrible still was Nothing’s voice. A bubbling moan, a whispering sigh, a jagged growl. The rattle of final breath.
Or could it be laughter?
“Do we help?” whispered Yarvi, though he doubted he could move his rooted feet.
“He said wait.” Ankran’s crooked face was chalk-white. “Should we wait?”
Yarvi turned to look at him, and over his shoulder saw a figure drop from the wall.
He was more boy than man, hardly older than Yarvi. One of the sailors from the