Page 192
Story: The Liveship Traders Trilogy
A quickened liveship, through her wizardwood bones, could be aware of all that happened aboard her.
Much of it was mundane and scarcely worthy of attention.
The mending of a line, the chopping of an onion in the galley need not concern her.
Those things could not change her course in life.
Kennit could. In the captain’s quarters, the enigmatic man slept restlessly.
Vivacia could not see him, but she could feel him in a way humans had no words to describe.
His fever was rising again. The woman who tended him was anxious.
She did something with cool water and a cloth.
Vivacia reached for details, but there was no bond there. She did not yet know them well enough.
Kennit was far more accessible to her than Etta.
His fever dreams ran out of him carelessly, spilling into Vivacia like the blood that had been shed on her decks.
She absorbed them but could make no sense of them.
A little boy was tormented, torn between loyalty to a father who loved him but had no idea how to protect him, and a man who protected him from others but had no love at all in his heart.
Over and over again, a serpent rose from the depths of his dreams to shear off his leg.
The bite of its jaws was acid and ice. From the depths of his soul, he reached towards her, towards a deep sharing that he recalled only as a formless memory from a lost infancy.
‘Hello, hello, what’s this? Or who is this, perhaps I should say?’
The voice, Kennit’s voice, came to her in a tiny whisper inside her mind.
She shook her head, tousling her hair into the wind.
The pirate did not speak to her. Even in her strongest communions with Althea and Wintrow, their thoughts had not come so clearly into her mind.
‘That is not Kennit,’ she murmured to herself.
Of that, she was certain. Yet, it was certainly his voice.
In his stateroom, the pirate captain drew a deep breath and expelled it, muttering denials and refusals as he did so. He groaned suddenly.
‘No. Not Kennit,’ the tiny voice confirmed in amusement. ‘Nor are you the Vestrit you think yourself to be. Who are you?’
It was disconcerting to feel a mind groping after her reaction.
Instinctively she recoiled from the contact.
She was stronger far than he was. When she pulled away from him, he could not follow her.
In doing so, she severed her tentative contact with Kennit as well.
Frustration and agitation roiled through her.
She clenched her fists at her side and took the next wave badly, smashing herself into it rather than through it.
The helmsman cursed to himself and made a tiny correction.
Vivacia licked the salt spray from her lips and shook her hair back from her face.
Who and what was he? She held her thoughts still inside herself and tried to decide if she were more frightened or intrigued.
She sensed an odd kinship with the being who had spoken to her.
She had turned his aggressive prying aside easily, but she disliked that someone had even tried to invade her mind.
She decided she would not tolerate it. Whoever this intruder was, she would unmask him and confront him.
Keeping her own guard up, she reached out tentatively towards the cabin where Kennit shifted in his sleep.
She found the pirate easily. He still struggled through his fever dreams, hiding within a cupboard while some dream being stalked him, calling his name in a falsely sweet tone.
The woman set a cool cloth on his brow, and draped another over the swollen stump of his leg.
Vivacia almost felt the sudden easing it brought him.
The ship reached out again, more boldly, but found no one else there.
‘Where are you?’ she demanded suddenly and angrily. Kennit jerked with a cry as the stalker in his dream echoed her words, and Etta bent over him, murmuring soothing words.
Vivacia’s question went unanswered.
Kennit surfaced, gasping his way into consciousness.
It took him a moment to recall his surroundings.
Then a faint smile of pleasure stretched his fever-parched lips.
His liveship. He was on board his liveship, in the captain’s well-appointed chambers.
A fine linen sheet draped his sweating body.
Polished brass and wood gleamed throughout a chamber both cosy and refined.
He could hear the water gurgling past as Vivacia cut through the channel.
He could almost feel the awareness of his ship around him, protecting him.
She was a second skin, shielding him from the world.
He sighed in satisfaction, and then choked on the mucus in his dry throat.
‘Etta!’ he croaked to the whore. ‘Water.’
‘It’s right here,’ she said soothingly.
It was true. Surprising as it was, she was standing right beside him, a cup of water ready in her hand.
Her long fingers were cool on the back of his neck as she helped him raise himself to drink.
Afterwards, she deftly turned his pillow before she lowered his head again.
She patted the perspiration from his face and then wiped his hands with a moist cloth.
He lay still and silent under her touch, limply grateful for the comfort she gave. He knew a moment of purest peace.
It did not last. His awareness of his swollen leg rose swiftly to recognition of pain.
He tried to ignore it. It became a pulsing heat that rose in intensity with every breath he took.
Beside his bed, his whore sat in a chair, sewing something.
His eyes moved listlessly over her. She looked older than he recalled her.
The lines were deeper by her mouth and in her brow.
Her face looked thinner under the brush of her short black hair.
It made her dark eyes even more immense.
‘You look terrible,’ he rebuked her.
She set her sewing aside immediately and smiled as if he had complimented her. ‘It’s hard for me to see you like this. When you are ill…I can’t sleep, I can’t eat…’
Selfish woman. She’d fed his leg to a sea serpent, and now tried to make it out that it was her problem. Was he supposed to feel sorry for her? He pushed the thought aside. ‘Where’s that boy? Wintrow?’
She stood right away. ‘Do you want him?’
Stupid question. ‘Of course I want him. He’s supposed to make my leg better. Why hasn’t he done so?’
She leaned over his bed and smiled down at him tenderly.
He wanted to push her away but he had not the strength.
‘I think he wants to wait until we make port in Bull Creek. There are a number of things he wants to have on hand before he…heals you.’ She turned away from his sickbed abruptly, but not before he had seen the tears glinting in her eyes.
Her wide shoulders were bowed and she no longer stood tall and proud.
She did not expect him to survive. To know that so suddenly both scared and angered him.
It was as if she had wished his death on him.
‘Go find that boy!’ he commanded her roughly, mostly to get her out of his sight. ‘Remind him. Remind him well that if I die, so does he and his father. Tell him that!’
‘I’ll have someone fetch him,’ she said in a quavering voice and started for the door.
‘No. You go yourself, right now, and get him. Now.’
She turned back and annoyed him by lightly touching his face. ‘If that’s what you want,’ she said soothingly. ‘I’ll go right now.’
He did not watch her go but listened instead to the sound of her boots on the deck.
She hurried, and when she went out, the door shut quietly but completely behind her.
He heard her voice lifted to someone, irritably.
‘No. Go away. I won’t have him bothered with such things right now.
’ Then, in a lower, threatening voice, ‘Touch that door and I’ll kill you right here.
’ Whoever it was heeded her, for no knock came at the door.
He half closed his eyes and drifted on the tide of his pain. The fever razored bright edges and sharp colours to the world. The cosy room seemed to crowd closer around him, threatening to fall in on him. He pushed the sheet away and tried to find a breath of cooler air.
‘So, Kennit. What will you do with your “likely urchin” when he comes?’
The pirate squeezed his eyes tight shut. He tried to will the voice away.
‘That’s amusing. Do you think I cannot see you with your eyes closed?’ The charm was relentless.
‘Shut up. Leave me alone. I wish I had never had you made.’
‘Oh, now you have wounded my feelings! Such words to bandy about, after all we have endured together.’
Kennit opened his eyes. He lifted his wrist and stared at the bracelet.
The tiny wizardwood charm, carved in a likeness of his own saturnine face, looked up at him with a friendly grin.
Leather thongs secured it firmly over his pulse point.
His fever brought the face looming closer. He closed his eyes.
‘Do you truly believe that boy can heal you? No. You could not be so foolish. Of course, you are desperate enough that you will insist he try. Do you know what amazes me? That you fear death so much that it makes you brave enough to face the surgeon’s knife.
Think of that swollen flesh, so tender you scarce can bear the brush of a sheet upon it.
You will let him set a knife to that, a bright sharp blade, gleaming silver before the blood encarmines it… ’
‘Charm.’ Kennit opened his eyes to slits. ‘Why do you torment me?’
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