Assail

Free Assail by Ian C. Esslemont

Book: Assail by Ian C. Esslemont Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ian C. Esslemont
Tags: Fantasy
them.
    ‘Back inside,’ he growled through a ragged beard.
    Fisher motioned to the lad. ‘He’s not with us.’
    ‘Doan’ care. Back inside. We’re arrestin’ you lot.’
    ‘What for?’ Fisher asked, almost smiling at the conceit.
    But the question didn’t buy any time at all as the man spat to one side and smiled behind his beard. ‘For bein’ a damned foreigner.’
    Fisher slowly raised his hands, and as he did so a coin appeared in each. Large ones that gleamed something other than silver in the moonlight. The man-at-arms’ tongue emerged to wet his lips and he peered about. He took his hand from the crossbow’s trigger bar and motioned for the coins to be tossed. Fisher threw them one after the other, then urged the lad onward with a hand pressed at his back. The man-at-arm ignored them as he held the coins up to the moon, squinting at them first through one eye then through the other.
    The lad stumbled onward and kept slowing to peek back. ‘Keep going,’ Fisher whispered. Once the man was left behind, the lad scowled and hunched his shoulders.
    ‘I didn’t ask you to spend no coin,’ he finally complained.
    Fisher understood the lad was worried he would press the debt upon his family. ‘Don’t worry about it,’ he answered, quite untroubled. ‘The coins are from the Lether and worthless. The gold plating their brass is thinner than Letherii generosity – which is non-existent.’
    The lad frowned, still uncertain. ‘Well …’ he finally judged. ‘All right.’
    Fisher peered ahead into the night where the land fell to the coast. ‘You’re taking me to the harbour.’
    ‘Aye. We have him in our boat.’
    ‘I see.’
    He was led, not to one of the fishing docks, but onward, past the built-up shore to where the waves surged among black rocks and the footing became sodden and treacherous. Here, almost invisible from shore, a tiny boat, a skiff, bobbed with the sullen gleaming waters. As they closed, a pale face rose over the worn and gouged gunwale. It was a lad even younger than the first one, fear quite plain in his wide eyes.
    ‘Just the two of you?’ Fisher grunted, surprised.
    ‘Aye.’
    He was amazed they’d brought the man all this way and didn’t simply toss him overboard and call the errand finished. Something of his thoughts must have shown on his face for the lad bristled and thrust out his chin. ‘We was told to bring him!’ Then he shrugged, his outrage melting. ‘Besides, Father said he doan’t want his ghost hauntin’ us in the night.’
    His ghost? Intrigued, Fisher edged down the slippery rocks to where the younger brother kept a handhold. The moon and clear night’s starlight revealed a tall form wrapped in burlap and rags in the skiff’s bottom.
    ‘He’s a tall one,’ Fisher observed.
    ‘That’s not all,’ said the lad, and he nodded to his brother, who knelt down and pulled the covering from the figure’s head.
    Fisher almost plunged into the cold waves as the night revealed the black elongated features of a Tiste Andii.
    How long Fisher squatted awkwardly on the rocks staring at that face he knew not. All he knew was that he lost the feeling in his feet and had to gingerly adjust his seating to work the blood back into them. Jesting gods! An Andii here on these shores! What could be this one’s purpose for being here? Not the hunt for gold, that was certain.
    Then he saw how mist wafted from the figure, and how hoar frost limned the burlap. He pointed, hardly able to speak.
    ‘That?’ said the older lad. ‘That’s nothing. Covered in ice he was when we dropped him in. And the water in the scupper froze solid beneath him.’
    Fisher could hardly credit it. ‘Ice, you say? And what of the ship – the wreck?’
    The boys exchanged wondering glances and the elder stroked his chin in a gesture out of place in one so young. ‘Was none that night. Now as you say it. Maybe he fell overboard.’
    Fisher did not think so. The lads, he noted, had been

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