Authors: Margaret Weis
The sun-chasers arrived on schedule. Two stayed to take aboard Dumaka's tribe. Others traveled around the shoresof the seamoon, gathering up the remainder of the humanpopulation of Phondra.
Haplo was pleasantly surprised at the dispatch and efficiency of the humans, who managed to collect everyone on board the submersibles with a minimum of fuss and confusion. Looking around the deserted camp, he was reminded of how easily the Squatters had been able to pack up their belongings and move on.
“Our people used to be nomads,” Dumaka explained. “We traveled to different parts of Phondra, following the game, gathering fruits and vegetables. Such a life caused wars, however. Men always imagine that the antelope are fatter in another man's portion of the jungle.
“Peace has come to us slowly, we have worked long and hard for it. I am saddened to think we may be forced to go back to war.”
Delu came to him, put her arm around him. The two of them looked wistfully around their now-empty, all-but-deserted village.
“All will be well, Husband. We are together. Our people are together. The One who guides the waves is with us. We'll carry peace in our hearts and offer it to these Sartan as our greatest gift.”
Hopefully, they'll spit in your face, Haplo thought. His one worry was Alfred. Alfred would not only take these mensch into his home, he'd give them the shabby velvet coat off his back. But Haplo was coming to think Alfred wasn't a typical Sartan. The Patryn expected better things of Samah.
Once the humans were taken on board the submersibles, they shed only a few tears at leaving their homeland. Those tears soon dried in the excitement of the trip, the anticipation of a new and purportedly rich world.
There was no sign of the dragon-snakes.
Haplo sailed on the largest of the submersibles with the chief and his family, friends, and members of the Coven. The
sun-chaser was similar to the much smaller submersible he'd sailed in before, except that it boasted several levels.
They reached Gargan, found the dwarves packed and ready to go, but did not find the elves, to no one's surprise. Even Haplo had made allowances for them to be late; his dire threat of leaving them behind had only been intended to prod them on.
“It'll be chaos,” Yngvar predicted dourly. “But I've sent my best men to captain the vessel and thrown in the army to boot. We'll have them here
in
time, if not
on
time.”
The elven contingent arrived only four cycles late; the submersibles moving slowly, rolling in the sea like overfed whales.
“What's the meaning of this?” Yngvar demanded.
“We're overloaded, that's what, Vater!” the dwarven captain raved, on the verge of tearing out his beard. “It would have been easier to drag the seamoon behind us. We might as well. The blasted elves brought along everything else! See for yourself!”
The dwarves had taken care to build bunks for the elves, but the Elmas took one look at them and refused to sleep in anything so crude. They had then attempted to bring their own heavy, ornately carved wooden bed frames aboard, at which the dwarven captain told them there was either room for the beds or for the elves, take their pick.
“I was hoping for the beds,” said the dwarf dourly to Yngvar. “At least they don't make any noise.”
The elves eventually agreed to sleep in the bunks, then proceeded to drag aboard goose-feather mattresses, lace-edged sheets, silk blankets, and down pillows. And this was only the beginning. Every elven family had valuable heirlooms that simply could not be left behind—everything from fanciful magical clocks to harps that played themselves. One elf arrived with a full-grown tree in a pot; another with twenty-seven songbirds in twenty-seven silver cages.
Finally, everyone and everything was stowed aboard. The elves were, for the most part, satisfied, though it was impossible to move through the sun-chaser without tripping over something or someone.
Then began the truly difficult part—leaving their homeland. The humans, accustomed to constant moving about, had been matter-of-fact. The dwarves, though giving up their beloved caves was a wrench, took the departure with stoic calm. The elves were shattered. One dwarf captain reported that with all the tears shed in his ship, he had more water on the inside than the out.
At last, however, the huge fleet of sun-chasers was assembled and ready to sail to their new homeland. The heads of the royal households gathered on the deck of the flagship to lead the people in prayer, asking the One to grant them a safe journey and a peaceful landing.
Their prayers concluded, the dwarven sea captains began exchanging a flurry of signals and the submersibles sank beneath the waves.
They had only traveled a short distance when a first officer, face white and panicked, approached Yngvar, knuckled his forehead to the dwarven king, and said something to him in low tones.
Yngvar frowned, glanced at the others. “Dragon-snakes,” he reported.
Haplo had been aware of the snakes' presence a long time: the sigla on his skin itched and burned. He rubbed at it irritably; the runes on his hands glowed a faint blue.
“Let me talk to them,” he said.
“How can any of us 'talk' to them?” Yngvar demanded gruffly. “We're underwater!”
“There are ways,” said Haplo and headed off for the bridge, accompanied—whether he wanted them or not—by the mensch royalty.
The warning blue glow of the runes shone through his shirt, reflected in the wide eyes of the mensch, who'd heard this phenomenon described by their children, but who'd never witnessed it.
It was useless for Haplo to try to tell himself that the dragon-snakes did not present a threat. His body was reacting to them as centuries of instinct had trained it to react. The only thing he could do was ignore the warning and hope that over time, his body would come to understand.
He entered the steerage, found the dwarven crew huddled together, muttering among themselves. The captain pointed out to sea.
The dragon-snakes hung in the water, huge bodies undulating with sinuous grace, eyes red slits in the green water.
“They're blocking our way, Vater. I say we turn back.”
“And go where?” Haplo asked. “Back to your homeland and sit waiting for the ice to come? I'll talk to them.”
“How?” Yngvar asked again, but the word came out a gargle.
A shimmering, ghostly image of a dragon-snake appeared on the bridge. Fear flowed from it like chill water. Those members of the dwarven crew who could still move did so, fleeing the bridge with loud cries. Those who were frozen in terror stood staring, shivering. The captain held his ground, though his beard quivered and he was forced to keep his hand on the wheel to steady himself.
The royal families remained, too, for which courage Haplo gave them grudging credit. His own instinct was to run, swim, tear the wooden planks apart with his bare hands in order to escape. He fought against his fear, and managed to subdue it, though he had to work to find saliva enough in his mouth to speak.
“The sun-chaser fleet is assembled, Royal One, We are sailing for Surunan as we planned. Why do you stand in our path?”
Slit eyes—merely a reflection of the real eyes—glowed red, gazed steadfastly at Haplo.
“The distance is far, the way is long. We have come to guide you, Master.”
“A trick!” breathed Yngvar, teeth clicking together.
“We can find our own way,” added Dumaka.
Delu raised her voice suddenly in a chant, held up some kind of rock she wore on a chain around her neck, probably some crude mensch form of protective magic.
The red eyes of the dragon-snake narrowed to slits.
“Shut up, all of you!” Haplo snarled. He kept his own gaze fixed on the dragon-snake. “We thank you for your
offer, Royal One. And we will follow. Captain, keep your vessel in the dragon's wake, order all the other sun-chasers to do likewise.”
The dwarf looked to his king for confirmation. Yngvar's face was dark with anger and terror; he started to shake his head.
“Don't be a fool,” Haplo warned him in a quiet undertone. “If they wanted to kill you, they would have done so long before now. Accept their offer. It's no trick. I guarantee it… with my life,” he added, seeing the dwarf king still hesitate.
“We have no choice, Yngvar,” said Eliason.
“And you, Dumaka?” the dwarf demanded, breathing heavily. “What do you say?”
Husband and wife exchanged glances. Delu shrugged in bitter acquiescence. “We have our people to consider.”
“Go ahead, then.” Dumaka agreed, frowning.
“Very well,” stated Yngvar. “Do as he says.”
“Yes, Vater,” the captain answered, but he cast Haplo a sullen glance. “Tell the creature it must take itself off my bridge. I can't run my ship without a crew.”
The dragon-snake was already starting to disappear, fading from view slowly, leaving behind the vague uneasiness and half-remembered fears that assail a sleeper waking suddenly from a bad dream.
The mensch breathed deep sighs of relief, though their dark looks did not brighten. The submersible's crew and officers returned, shamefaced, avoiding their captain's irate glare.
Haplo turned and left. On his way out, he nearly ran down Grundle, Alake, and Devon, emerging rather hastily from the shadows of a nearby doorway.
“You're wrong!” Alake was saying to Devon.
“For your sake, I hope I—”
“Shush!” Grundle caught sight of Haplo.
The three fell silent. He had obviously interrupted an important conversation, and he had the feeling it was about him. The other two had heard the dolphins, too, apparently. Devon looked ashamed, kept his gaze averted. Grundle, however, stared at Haplo defiantly.
“Spying again?” he said. “I thought you'd learned your lesson.”
“Guess not,” muttered Grundle, as he passed.
The remainder of the voyage was peaceful. They didn't see the dragon-snakes, their dread influence could no longer be felt. The submersible sailed along in the wake left by the huge bodies, swimming far ahead.
Life aboard ship was boring, claustrophobic, uneventful.
Haplo was certain that the three mensch were up to something. But, after a few days of keeping a close eye on them, he concluded he must be mistaken.
Alake avoided him, devoted herself to her mother and her studies of magic, in which she had developed a renewed interest. Devon and a host of younger elves spent their time practicing shooting arrows at a target they had set up. Grundle was the only one who gave Haplo cause for concern, and then only as a minor annoyance, like a gnat.
More than once, he caught her trailing after him, staring at him, her expression grave and thoughtful, as if she was having difficulty making up her mind about him. And when she discovered him looking at her, she'd give him an abrupt nod or shake her side whiskers at him, turn around, and stump off. Alake had said Grundle didn't believe the dolphins. Apparently, Alake'd been wrong.
Haplo didn't waste time trying to argue with the dwarf. After all, what the dolphins had told the young people was true. He
was
using the mensch.
He spent most of his waking hours with them, molding them, shaping them, leading them to do what he wanted. His task wasn't easy. The mensch, terrified of their dragon-snake allies, might come to greatly admire the would-be enemy.
This was Haplo's one fear, the one toss of the rune-bone that would end his game. If the Sartan welcomed the mensch with open arms, clasped them to their bosoms, so to speak, Haplo was finished. He'd escape, of course. The dragon-snakes would see to that. But he'd have to go back to the Nexus empty-handed, make a humiliating report to his lord.
Faced with that choice, Haplo wasn't certain he would go back at all. Better to die … Time passed quickly, even for the Patryn, impatient to at last meet his greatest foe. He was lying in his bed when he heard a grinding sound, felt a jolt pass through the ship. Voices cried out in alarm, only to be reassured the next moment by their king.
The submersibles floated upward, broke through the water. Open air and sunshine—bright sunshine—surrounded them.
The sun-chasers had caught the sun.
ALFRED SPENT MOST OF HIS DAY AND A GREATER POR
tion of his night listening to the echo of the conversation he'd overheard between Samah and his son. He heard it all, over and over again in his mind, but one portion kept returning to him, louder and more persistent than the rest.
We should do to him what we did to the others.
What others?
Those who had discovered that they were not gods, that they were (or should be) worshipers? Those who had found out that the Sartan were not the sun, but just another planet? What had happened to them? Where were they?
He glanced around, almost as if he expected to find them sitting in Orla's garden. The heretics weren't in Chelestra. They weren't on the Council. Despite the fact that there was some division, the Council members, with the exception of Orla, appeared to be solidly behind Samah.
Perhaps all Ramu meant was that the heretics had been counseled, finally converted back to proper Sartan ways of thinking. This was a comforting thought, and Alfred wanted very much to believe it. He spent almost an entire hour convincing himself it must be true. That nagging unfortunate part of him that seemed to be always going off on its own (and taking his feet with it) argued that he was, as usual, refusing to face reality.