Riyria Revelations 02 - Rise Of Empire

“Aye, sir.”

 

 

“Mr. Grady, you are now boatswain. Dr. Levy, please take Mr. Bulard below so that he can be properly cared for. Let me know if there is anything you need. Mr. Derning will be top captain. Seamen Defoe and Melborn, report to him for duties. Mr. Deminthal, carry on.”

 

“Your sword.” Hadrian addressed Staul. The Tenkin hesitated but, after a nod from Thranic, handed the blade over. As he did, he laughed and cursed in the Tenkin language.

 

“You’d have found that a bit harder than you think,” Hadrian replied to Staul, and he was rewarded with the Tenkin’s shocked expression.

 

Wyatt had everything nonessential and not attached to the ship thrown overboard. Then he ordered silence and whispered the order to change tack. The boom swung over, catching the wind and angling the little ship out to sea. Well behind them, the last light of the Emerald Storm disappeared, swallowed by the waves. Not quite so far away, they could see lanterns bobbing on the following ships. From the shouts, it was clear they were displeased at losing their prize. All eyes faced astern, watching the progression of lanterns as the Dacca continued following their previous tack. After a while, two ships altered course but guessed incorrectly and turned westward. Eventually all the lanterns disappeared.

 

“Are they gone?” Hadrian heard Wesley whisper to Wyatt.

 

He shook his head. “They just put out the lanterns, but with luck they will think we’re running for ground. The nearest friendly port is Wesbaden back west.”

 

“For a helmsman, you’re an excellent commander,” the young man observed.

 

“I was a captain once,” Wyatt admitted. “I lost my ship.”

 

“Really? In whose service, the empire or a royal fleet?”

 

“No service. It was my ship.”

 

Wesley looked astonished. “You were … a pirate?”

 

“Opportunist, sir. Opportunist.”

 

 

 

 

 

Hadrian awoke to a misty dawn. A steady breeze pushed the tartane through undulating waves. All around them lay a vast and empty sea.

 

“They are gone,” Wesley said, answering the unasked question. “We have lost them.”

 

“Any idea where we are?”

 

“About three days’ sail from Dagastan,” Wyatt answered.

 

“Dagastan?” Grady muttered, looking up. “We’re not headed there, are we?”

 

“That was my intention,” Wyatt replied.

 

“But Wesbaden is closer.”

 

“Unfortunately, I confess no knowledge of these coasts,” Wesley said. “Do you know them well, Mr. Deminthal?”

 

“Intimately.”

 

“Good. Then tell us, is Mr. Grady correct?”

 

Wyatt nodded. “Wesbaden is closer, but the Dacca know this and will be waiting in that direction. However, since it’s impossible for them to be ahead of us, our present course is the safest.”

 

“Despite our earlier differences, I agree with Mr. Deminthal,” Thranic offered. “As it turns out, Dagastan was the Storm’s original destination, so we must continue toward it.”

 

“But Dagastan is much farther away from Avryn,” Wesley said. “The Storm’s mission was lost with her sinking. I have no way of knowing her original destination, and even if I did, I have no cargo to deliver. Going farther east only increases our difficulties. I need to be mindful of provisions.”

 

“But you do have cargo,” Thranic announced. “The Storm’s orders were to deliver myself, Mr. Bulard, Dr. Levy, Bernie, and Staul to Dagastan. The main cargo is gone, but as an officer of the realm, it’s your duty to fulfill what portion you can of Captain Seward’s mission.”

 

“With all due respect, Your Excellency, I have no way to verify what you say.”

 

“Actually, you do.” Wyatt pulled a bent and battered scroll from his bag. “These are Captain Seward’s orders.”

 

Wesley took the damp scroll and asked, “But how did you come by this?”

 

“I knew we’d need charts to sail by. Before I left the Storm, I entered the captain’s cabin, and being in a bit of a hurry, I just grabbed everything on his desk. Last night I discovered I had more than just charts.”

 

Wesley nodded, accepting this and, Hadrian thought, perhaps choosing not to inquire further. He paused a second before reading it. Most men were awake now and, having heard the conversation, watched Wesley with anticipation. When he finished, he looked over at Wyatt.

 

“Was there a letter?”

 

“Aye, sir,” he said while handing over a sealed bit of parchment.

 

Wesley slipped it carefully into his coat without opening it. “We will maintain course to Dagastan. Being bound by imperial naval laws, I must do everything in my power to see the Storm’s errand is fulfilled.”

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 13

 

 

 

 

 

THE WITCH OF MELENGAR

 

 

 

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