62
As the Mamluk kettledrum grew louder, and their galley slaves worked the oars to its rhythm, A’rial grabbed Tycho’s hand, holding it in a vice-like grip. Her nails were black, her knees scraped and bare. Around her neck hung a yellowing bird’s skull, with large eyeholes and a dagger-sharp beak.
“You pay the price freely? This you must state.”
“I’m still waiting for you to tell me what it is,” he said, flinching as the red-haired child turned on him, her eyes sharp as broken glass.
“You know my price,” she hissed. “Pay it, or not.”
Tycho looked at her.
“State you pay it, or let me return home. You cannot summon me, and then quibble.” There was a fury to her words far more dangerous than shouting. He wondered, not for the first time, how old A’rial really was.
Whether she was human.
But who was he to ask those questions? And she was right. He knew her price. Although he imagined it was Alexa who really wanted it, and A’rial was simply her instrument.
“Take my life instead,” he begged.
A’rial shook her head dismissively.
“My soul then.”
Pushing her face close to his, she mocked, “What makes you think you have one? Or ever had one? Swear it by the goddess or Giulietta dies…”
He should have remembered there would be a full moon.
Pale as his skin, huge and poised just above the horizon. The sun might be sunk in its glory, firing a final sliver of horizon with sullen flames, but the moon had a whole night ahead of her, and a red-haired acolyte on the deck of a losing ship, taking promises in both her mistresses’ names.
“I will make Alexa an army,” Tycho said. “I will embrace who I am.”
Stepping on to the prow of Atilo’s ship, A’rial stood tall, brought her clenched fists to her forehead in a strange salute, then flung them back, with her fingers still clenched, her arms angled back and down like the wings of a bird.
Winds whistled around her.
Lightning cracked from an unbroken sky.
The storm began instantly. Clouds gathering on the dark horizon, banking and racing at impossible speeds towards the Mamluk armada like heavenly cavalry. Mamluk archers blinked to find spray in their faces. The crescent pennant above their admiral’s galley flapped so hard it sounded like cannon fire. Beneath Tycho’s feet, he felt the San Marco lurch as wind filled her sails and she listed dangerously.
“Lower the sails,” he shouted.
Atilo stared at him.
“My lord, drop the sails. Hack down the masts if you must. But get the canvas down and get Giulietta and Desdaio below… Please.” Maybe the final word helped. Because Atilo snapped out orders to cut the sails free, and hurried the women towards a hatch. Only returning to his post when they were below.
Thunder rolled across the sky, lightning lanced seawards. A Mamluk ship in the ring around them lost its mainmast as jagged fire split the wood, and sails tumbled before anyone had time to lower them.
“My lord, go below.”
“Tycho…”
“I must do this.”
“What have you done?”
“Paid the price demanded to save those I love.”
Tears rolled down Tycho’s face, harried by the wind. He could taste their sourness in his throat, and feel emptiness under his ribs where someone had cut open his chest and was replacing his heart with ice.
“Go,” he ordered.
Atilo looked shocked.
“Or stay,” Tycho growled. “And die. Those are your choices.”
“Those are my…?”
“You think we will distinguish between friend and enemy when the killing grows fierce?” He indicated A’rial in the prow; fierce winds gusting away the arrows aimed at her, her arms stretched back, her face raised to the sky.
She was mouthing incantations. Her fingers dancing as she pulled clouds across the sky and split ships in two with strikes of lightning. A lift of her chin produced a cliff-sized wave that crushed three ships, and faded just as quickly. In a flurry of waves and thunder she’d set about reducing the Mamluk fleet to a single vessel. There had never been a storm like it. And right in the middle, red hair streaming, stood the little stregoi, her face running with rain that filled her mouth and dashed from her chin like a million tears. She was laughing.
When he looked back, Atilo had gone.
Tycho wanted to be there, on the Mamluk galley, facing his enemy, ripping out the bastard’s guts. To think it was to be there. Stumbling, he glanced down, seeing the waves behind him. Fear filled his throat as he fought to balance on the rail.
How he got there didn’t matter.
“Over there…” A Mamluk archer shouted warning.
And Tycho stopped his arrow in mid-air, wrapped his fingers around it before the arrow could fall, and stabbed hard and fast into the neck of a man-at-arms who was advancing, short sword in hand. Twisting, Tycho felt barbs turn before he ripped the arrow free, tossed the dying man aside and hurled the arrow at the chest of the archer who’d fired it.
The arrow flew so fast it disappeared.
And then the archer was staring in shock at the shaft jutting from his mail coat. Tycho killed him, almost as an afterthought. The crack of the archer’s neck lost under the howl of the wind, the crash of the waves and the roar of blood in Tycho’s head.
He could feel hunger inside him. It stared through his eyes. Filled his mind. Its vision sharpening as the western horizon darkened, the final traces of daylight drowning below the waves. The Mamluk ship with its galley slaves, slave master and admiral became a frieze of red. Frozen, as time hiccuped and the sea slowed to a sullen roil, and the beast tested the bars of its cage.
“Do it,” said a voice in his head.
A’rial, Tycho decided. Unless he was talking to himself.
So many people to kill. So many throats to tear out, so much blood. He could drown himself in the red he’d spill on this one ship. They were firing arrows at him. The wind took most of them. The few that came close he swatted away, not even bothering to return them.
“I said do it.” Definitely A’rial. She sounded crosser this time.
Should he? Could he, and remain who he was? He knew the answer to that. The few times he’d embraced the moon’s rays he’d felt a sliver of ice enter his heart. Enough of those slivers and his heart would freeze. He couldn’t unlearn the lessons that changing taught him. And after he became himself again, the memories of what he’d been remained. But how could he save Giulietta without changing? He would have to accept his destiny.
Become the last of the Fallen. The last of his line.
Or perhaps the first…
Raising his face to the full moon, Tycho let its rays wash over him and felt his dog teeth descend. Sinews tightened, bones twisted, muscles tore, his throat filling with his own blood. Touching fingers to his face, he found his ears had shrunk away and left knotted holes in their place. His nose was flatter, his nostrils wide like a hunting animal. However bad the krieghund looked, he looked far worse.
Inside Tycho’s chest his heart froze, locking him into panic. Its beat was gone, his lungs were static, his breath disappearing. Only fear kept him upright. He was alive and dead in the same second.
“Sweet gods…”
Changing hurt more than he could imagine. A remorseless shriek of pain washing away his last dregs of being human.
This monstrous creature was what he’d become eventually. Tycho knew that for a fact. In the end, no matter how many times he reverted, this was how he would end. Monstrous and ugly. The world he’d been born into long dead. A new world in its place he could hardly bear.
His price for finally letting the beast free was that he’d spare the slaves. Because sparing them would prove to himself something human remained somewhere. And then Tycho stopped pretending he didn’t want what came next and—as A’rial let her storm subside—became himself.
The Mamluk galley had double rows of benches on both sides. The top row open to the sky, with a raised walkway used by the whip master. Tycho swallowed this information in a single second.
“Die, demon.”
You had to give the Mamluk sergeant credit for courage. He must have known he was about to perish. Lobbing his head over the side, Tycho kicked his body into the slave well, and faced the soldier beyond. Spiked helmet, chain mail, a wickedly curved scimitar. Tycho noted and dismissed his armour and weaponry.
The man’s first blow almost landed. His second one did, slicing Tycho’s lower arm to the bone and sticking fast. Grabbing the man, Tycho squeezed; throat armour buckling as Tycho crushed his voice box.
Shock, then pain. Tycho knew the sequence.
Ripping free the scimitar, he hurled it at the next man and watched him stagger back, the weapon protruding from his chest. The cut on Tycho’s arm was a memory. So he gave it to a man with a spear instead. The spear man gasping as Tycho touched a hand to his face. Staggering back, he clutched his healthy arm, screaming loudly. Tycho threw him over the side. The kettle drummer died as simply.
Tycho kept moving.
It was a whip that stopped him eventually.
An iron-tipped lash spun out of nowhere and slashed his face, blood dripping into his mouth. Sword deep, he could feel his teeth where his cheek should be. Turning swiftly, to protect himself from a second blow, he held his cheek’s upper and lower edges together and jagged flesh begin to mend.
The third blow he was ready for.
Catching the weighted end, he wrapped the thong around his fist and yanked, dragging the whip master to his knees on the walkway in front of him. The Mamluk never stood a chance. As Tycho moved for the kill, a slave grabbed the whip master’s ankle from below. Another hand snaked upwards, chains clanking.
The slaves held the man in place while Tycho popped his eyes with taloned thumbs and tossed him sideways into the slave pit.
He tossed the whip after.
Behind Tycho were archers he didn’t remember killing. Mamluk sailors, their heads twisted so far they stared in the wrong direction. A ship’s mate dead on the walkway, his throat torn out, eyes missing, his guts in a pile between his knees. Tycho’s thumbs dripped blood, his doublet was sticky. At no point did it occur to him to use a dagger. At no point had there been a need.
The red edges of the world faded with that realisation.
And inside Tycho’s chest his heart started beating, and his lungs shuddered and drew breath. Bones twisted and muscles contracted. As stars lost their brightness in the sky, the full moon changed from scarlet to a rose-pink, and the waves began to ebb and flow at close to their normal speed.
Tycho checked behind him.
Atilo’s ship stood there. A’rial still on the prow. But her arms were no longer flung back and her face no longer turned to the sky. She was staring between ships, and Tycho saw her smile as their gazes locked.
Around them lay wreckage. Broken masts and spars, vast canvas jellyfish made from sails that held pockets of air. A rudder floated with a man at arms slumped across it, an arrow in his neck. Bodies bobbed like stunned fish, rising and falling with the swell. Most were ordinary sailors, Mamluk, Cypriot or Venetian. Those rich enough to own mail were on the seabed already.
Apart from Tycho, only one free man remained alive on the ship.
And maybe he was the only one really. Because Tycho doubted he was human, and was certainly not free. A slave to his hunger if nothing else.
The Mamluk admiral was young, tall, thin and brave.
He had to be brave to stand in the door of his tiny cabin. Elegant riveted mail glinted silvery gold in the moonshine, the brand he clutched highlighted the gold-filled etching of his helmet. He wore a rich helm with a jutting nose-piece, steel cheek protectors and a gilded spike at the top. A silver crescent arched up over his eyes. It was the armour of a Mamluk prince.
“Demon,” the man said.
Firelight from his flaming brand rippled along the sharpened edge of his sword, revealing tightly hammered damascene. Steel had entered the young man’s soul and stiffened his spine. It was revealed in his steady gaze. Tycho was impressed.
“What are you?”
The changes Tycho had fought against became less savage as his face finished shifting shape, his ears regrew, his nostrils closing. His teeth were the last to go, retreating into his upper jaw. They hurt as viciously as ever, but this time it was less frightening. Taking a step back, the Mamluk appeared more terrified by the man than he had been by Tycho’s shifting shape only moments earlier.
“It can’t be you,” he protested.
In that second Tycho decided to spare him. At least for a while. “You know me?” he said. “You know who I am?”
A brief nod was his answer.
“Then you know more than I do,” Tycho said. “Because I don’t know you.” Slowly the Mamluk undid his helmet.
And it was Tycho’s turn to step back. Because the last time he’d seen that face, Sergeant Temujin was cutting its throat before burning an entire ship. At the start of Tycho’s time in Venice, with no moon over the lagoon, and a Mamluk vessel freshly boarded by Dogana guards.
“You recognise me now?”
“I watched you die,” Tycho said. “Saw your ship go up in flames.”
The Mamluk closed his eyes, and his lips opened in prayer. He touched his hands to his heart, his mouth and his forehead in turn; in formal goodbye to someone. And then told Tycho who.
“My twin,” he said. “She insisted.”
“Insisted on what?”
“Accompanying your ship. It was stupid. But she was my father’s favourite and he indulged her. Until you spoke, no one knew for certain she was dead. I could feel an emptiness in my heart but I couldn’t lose hope. My father will be upset.” From the way the young man said those words, much went unspoken.
Unbuckling his armour, the Mamluk dropped it at his feet, barely noticing it clatter down steps to fall into the slave well where oarsmen watched in silence. A single tug pulled fine mail over his head and he let that drop too. Reversing his scimitar, he offered it hilt first with a slight bow.
“Make it clean,” he said. “And when I reach paradise I will beg for your release from the curse that afflicts you.”
Tycho swung the scimitar experimentally.
A beautiful weapon, with its handle wrapped in a strand of gold wire, and a blade weighted so it carried on the down stroke, whistling as it cut through the air.
“My curse is forever,” he said, lowering the blade.
“Forever?”
“Anyway, you must live.”
“Why?”
“So you can take news of this defeat to the sultan. So I can discover why your sister was on that ship. Because enough brave men have died…”
Tycho felt so tired his bones ached at the thought of it. Atilo had once spoken of sadness after battle being like the sadness that comes after sex, only bleaker. Tycho had not dared say he had no knowledge of either. This was worse than he feared. A desolation that carried the taste of carrion.
In disgust, he rolled a dead archer into the well with the scimitar’s tip. The following thud made him feel sadder still. Where was the elation? Atilo said some men felt that.
“I am Sir Tycho. Once an apprentice blade.”
The Mamluk bowed slightly. “I am Osman. My father is the sultan. My sister, nicknamed Jasmine, was his favourite. But I am his heir.”
Tycho bowed in return.
“You can kill me,” said Prince Osman. “Keep me for ransom or free me. Even, it seems, send me as a messenger to announce my own defeat to my father if that is the load you put on me. Although he will not believe my tale.”
“Why not…?”
“A storm-summoning witch? A ravening, shape-shifting demon? My fleet destroyed by waves, wind and lightning? My archers’ arrows swatted aside? The Venetians do not have that kind of power. My father would believe I made excuses.”
“So what will you say?”
“My slaves refused to row. That I commanded poorly. The bowstrings of my archers were wet. That I surrender my command and accept my fate.”
Prince Osman’s eyes were bleak. His father had a reputation for cruelty. He also had enough sons, by both wives and favoured concubines, to sacrifice one if an example need be made.
“Stay here,” Tycho ordered.
As if the Mamluk prince had anywhere else to go.
Atilo crossed himself when Tycho appeared from the door behind him. He opened his mouth to say something and left his mouth open as Tycho stalked past, only stopping when he reached A’rial. “I need something.”
“Favours cost.” Her green eyes were sharp. “You know that.”
“Name your price.”
“One kill. At my choosing.”
“Your mistress’s choosing?”
“Mine,” the little stregoi said, her voice hard. “One time, when the hunger is on you I will ask for a kill. You will grant it without question.”
“Not Giulietta, not Desdaio, not Pietro.”
A’rial’s smile was sour. “You’re not in a position to bargain. But all the same, I agree. None of those three.”
Tycho told her what he required.
A few dozen people were to forget what they’d seen and remember what they believed they saw. As Tycho stepped back, A’rial drew herself upright and a shimmering wrapped itself around her. Once the space between her hands shone bright enough she began to chant the true history of the battle. The one the Mamluk slaves would remember.
“Tycho…”
“We’ll talk later,” Tycho said.
Atilo il Mauros opened his mouth and closed it once again. He was a man fond of saying the world held more than one could know. He just hadn’t expected to come face to face with its strangeness that night.
“The duchess knows?” he managed finally.
Knows what? Tycho wondered. About my hunger? About the changes that come with it?
“Yes,” he said. “Undoubtedly.”
Tycho took the smoky brand from Prince Osman’s hand and thrust it close to the face of a red-bearded slave, who recoiled from its flame. “No one’s going to hurt you,” the prince promised. Although the whip scars on the man’s shoulders said he’d been hurt already, many times and brutally.
“What did you see?” Tycho asked.
The slave looked at him.
“During the battle. What did you see?”
A nod from Osman told the man he could answer.
“The Venetian fleet. It was vast. Masts like a forest circling us. So many ships, my lord, I’ve never seen so many. I thought we’d never escape.”
Tycho could see bodies and broken spars, upturned ships and bobbing flotsam, the spreading aftermath of a naval battle. The slave could not. But when the man shivered Tycho knew he realised what was out there.
“What happened?”
For all the man had been Western once, a northerner to judge from his hair and the red in his beard, he answered as if the Mamluk fleet’s fate and his were inextricably entwined.
As they were, of course.
“We were encircled. Their archers slaughtered our sailors. They had mage fire. It spread across our decks, burning everything it touched.” The man’s eyes were bleak as he remembered what never happened. “It was only his highness’s skill that saved us. In the middle of a terrible storm he fought the Venetians to a standstill. Their entire fleet destroyed at a terrible cost.”
Prince Osman’s eyes were saucers. His glaze flicked between Tycho and the slave, unable to believe what he was hearing.
“Ask any of them,” Tycho said.
“What will he say?” asked Prince Osman, jerking his head towards Atilo’s flagship.
“That you lie. What do you expect him to say?”
“And I say he lies?” Prince Osman nodded. He was beginning to understand how this worked.
Tycho smiled.
“Your price is I tell you how I know you?”
“And a favour given without hesitation. Not involving a death in your family,” said Tycho, remembering the price A’rial had extracted in her turn. “Beyond that I can’t say, because I don’t know.”
The prince looked up sharply.
“Start with how you know me…”