“We’re hardly overburdened with friends in the city,” said Thorn.
“You’re hardly overburdened with friends anywhere,” said Brand.
“It could be that Mother Scaer has sent a welcoming party,” said Yarvi.
“Weapons,” growled Rulf. He tossed Thorn’s sword to her and she snatched it from the air.
“By God, I’m happy to fight anyone,” said Dosduvoi, seizing a spear, “as long as it’s not her.”
Brand drew the blade that had been Odda’s, the steel frighteningly light after the practice sword. Fear had quickly solved the problem in his trousers, if nothing else.
The door shuddered from more knocks, and it was not a light door.
Koll crept over to it, going up on tiptoe to peer through the spy-hole.
“It’s a woman,” he hissed. “She looks rich.”
“Alone?” asked Yarvi.
“Yes, I’m alone,” came a muffled voice through the door. “And I’m a friend.”
“That’s just what an enemy would say,” said Thorn.
“Or a friend,” said Brand.
“The gods know we could use one,” said Rulf, but nocking an arrow to his black bow even so.
“Open it,” said Yarvi.
Koll whipped back the bolt as though it might burn him and sprung away, a knife at the ready in each hand. Brand crouched behind his shield, fully expecting a flight of arrows to come hissing through the archway.
Instead the door creaked slowly open and a face showed itself at the crack. A woman’s face, dark-skinned and dark-eyed with black hair loosely twisted up and held with jewelled pins. She had a little scar through her top lip, a notch of white tooth showing as she smiled.
“Knock, knock,” she said, slipping through and pushing the door shut behind her. She wore a long coat of fine white linen and around her neck a golden chain, each link worked to look like an eye. She raised one brow at all the sharpened steel and slowly put up her palms. “Oh, I surrender.”
Rulf gave a great whoop, and flung his bow skittering across the floor, rushed over to the woman and gathered her in a great hug.
“Sumael!” he said, squeezing her tight. “Gods, how I’ve missed you!”
“And I you, Rulf, you old bastard,” she wheezed, slapping him on the back, then groaning as he lifted her off her feet. “Had my suspicions when I heard a ship called the South Wind had landed. Nice touch, by the way.”
“It reminds us where we came from,” said Yarvi, good hand rubbing at his neck.
“Father Yarvi,” said Sumael, slipping free of the helmsman’s embrace. “Look at you. Lost at sea and desperately in need of someone to pick out the course.”
“Some things never change,” he said. “You look … prosperous.”
“You look awful.”
“Some things never change.”
“No hug for me?”
He gave a snort, almost a sob. “I’m worried if I do I might never let go.”
She walked over, their eyes fixed on each other. “I’ll take the risk.” And she put her arms around him, going up on her toes to hold him close. He put his head on her shoulder, and tears glistened on his gaunt cheeks.
Brand stared at Thorn, and she shrugged back. “I guess now we know who Sumael is.”
“SO THIS IS THE EMBASSY of Gettland?” Sumael poked at a lump of mold-speckled plaster and it dropped from the wall and scattered across the dusty boards. “You’ve an eye for a bargain.”
“I am my mother’s son,” said Yarvi. “Even if she’s not my mother anymore.” The crumbling hall they ate in could have seated forty but most of the crew had gone their own ways and the place had a hollow echo to it now. “What are you doing here, Sumael?”
“Apart from catching up with old friends?” She sat back in her chair and let one stained boot, strangely at odds with her fine clothes, drop onto the scarred tabletop. “I helped my uncle build a ship for the Empress Theofora and one thing led to another. Much to the annoyance of several of her courtiers, she made me inspector of her fleet.” A strand of hair fell across her face and she stuck her bottom lip out and blew it back.
“You always had a touch with boats.” Rulf was beaming at her as if at a favorite daughter unexpectedly come home. “And annoying people.”
“The empire’s boats were rotting in the harbor of Rugora, down the coast. Which, as it happens, was also where the empress’s niece Vialine was being educated.” That strand of hair fell loose again and she blew it back again. “Or imprisoned, depending how you look at it.”
“Imprisoned?” asked Brand.
“There’s little trust within the royal family here.” Sumael shrugged. “But Vialine wanted to understand the fleet. She wants to understand everything. We became friends, I suppose. When Theofora fell ill and Vialine was called back to the First of Cities, she asked me to go with her, and …” She lifted the chain of eyes with a fingertip and let it fall clinking. “By some strange magic I find myself counselor to the Empress of the South.”
“Talent floats to the top,” said Rulf.
“Like turds,” grunted Thorn.