The mockingbird alit upon a branch beside the raven and bade him good morning. The raven replied that it was evening already, and bade the mockingbird good evening.
The mockingbird laughed at this, saying that the sun rose and fell in turn. He said that there was little difference between either end of a day, and that he did not care for the distinction.
The raven scoffed at this, and warned the mockingbird that he would be thought of as a fool if he insisted that dawn and dusk were the sa.
Not the sa, the mockingbird said. He told the raven that he knew very well which was which. A good morning and a good evening are both good, and that is the greater share. All else is a aningless distinction.
The raven was still vexed, and asked the mockingbird why he insisted on being troubleso if he knew one from the other.
The mockingbird replied that so creatures do not think much at all unless they are troubled to do so.
- Pre-Gharic Ardan manuscript, vellum, c. 500 PE
The door to the barracks room slamd open, shuddering alarmingly on its hinges; Zabala looked up with an unimpressed expression. I told you they wouldnt listen, he said.
Next ti Ill show up with written letters of intent from the Ardans, Michael muttered, turning sowhat sheepishly to straighten the door. A few talkative prisoners. Written statents. Bills of lading from their damn ships.
Just the prisoners would probably be enough, Sobriquet said. Im not sure what you expected, Michael. Its little more than implication and rumor from soone theyd be happy to arrest if they could. Even if Bidarte liked you, hed be an idiot to move on that alone. And he doesnt like you.
He made that abundantly clear, Michael said disgustedly, turning from the door and pacing to the small pile of supplies they had managed to scrounge up; he eyed it for a mont, then turned to Zabala. This will last what, a week?
Zabala coughed. If you hate us, he said. Half that if were to actually eat.
Then we need more, Michael said. Field gear, so weapons for the n, more food - and a boat. He looked up. There has to be one sowhere around here we could steal.
Oh, wonderful, its been nearly a month since I did anything that could see court-martialed, Zabala sighed, rising from his seat. The supplies can probably be obtained legitimately, on the excuse that we intend to set out on foot. Bidarte has undoubtedly been told to keep an eye on us. I doubt hell actually stop us from leaving, though, even if we take one of the smaller patrol boats. Ill walk down by the pier on my way back from the quartermasters office and pick a likely target.
Michael gave him a grateful nod. Thanks, he said, still feeling restlessly indignant. It should be simple enough to navigate down the coast to Litora, at which point Im assuming the Ardans will be easy to spot. Ghar doesnt have enough going on within its borders to mask a significant military buildup.
Youd think, Sobriquet muttered. And yet ndian seems utterly oblivious to the unfolding disaster.
Zabala shook his head, grimacing. Inertia, he said. Weve spent centuries not caring about Ghars inner workings. Its an irrelevant vestige of a country, kept only as a reminder to those that would cross us. That anything arising from Ghar could be significant to greater ndian is inconceivable.
Idiots. Michael looked around the room; Michael and Sobriquet had commandeered the largest of the available rooms, aning it had beco the de facto command center for their operations on base. The other n were there, half-listening to the conversation amid card gas or repacking gear. I want to set out tonight. Marcus didnt give a concrete tiline, for all we know the Ardans are already marching.
The patrol boats are Ember stears, Zabala pointed out. Its why theyre so small and fast.
Michael looked at him. So? Im an Ember.
Ember stears, Zabala said, deadpan, are not typically very functional at night.
Michael muttered so half-articulated profanity, then paused. But Im a lucigens.
Sobriquet gave him an odd look, blinking a few tis. Embers need light to - wait. She frowned. That cant possibly work.
Why not? Michael asked, a smile spreading over his face. Its not like anyones ever had the opportunity to try.
Morning ca before long, and with it enough sunlight to heat the boats boiler on its own. Michael let the flow of heat drop and grasped the warm morning rays, seeing them briefly scintillate in jeweled splendor before the world around him dropped into blackness. He sent his sight higher to peer outside the inkblot.
They had worked their way around to the true south coast of Ghar overnight, although they had so distance yet before the southern extremity of the peninsula. It was likely that they could have made better ti cutting farther from the coast, but the seething winter sea made that an unappealing prospect - so they hugged the shoreline, snaking their way gradually south-west.
The seas grew worse as they continued, though, rocking the boat side-to-side with perilous force. Zabala woke from a too-brief sleep to wrap his soul around the ship, reinforcing the tal against the relentless assault from the waves.
It was the only reason the ship did not sink imdiately when it ramd into a rocky outcrop lurking beneath the waters surface; Michael saw the ocean draw back between waves to expose the glistening black rock a bare mont before the boat hit it. There was a screech of tal; Michael was thrown forward from the boiler and sent skidding across the deck.
Cursing, he grabbed at the rail to steady himself as the ship carod sideways, its aft towards the shore. Is everyone all right? he shouted.
Fine, Sobriquets voice said, sourly. Not the most pleasant way to wake up, but fine.
Charles erged from the deck hatch, soaking wet, a foul expression twisting his face. Lars! he yelled, stomping towards the helm. Youre damn lucky we had Zabala-
Lars erged from the ships helm, bleeding freely from a cut over one eye; his face was already beginning to bruise. Sorry! he gasped. Never tried to take a ship this big through seas like this before.
I nearly didnt get that patched, Charles growled. As it stands weve got water up to my knees down there, and the pump isnt working. Well have to bail out sohow.
Michael caught himself as the ship pitched again; the wind had caught the drifting stern and was pushing them closer to the shore, helped along by the relentless waves. He shook his head. This is going to happen again if we keep on, he said. We cant risk the shoreline or the open ocean anymore, not when the sea is like this. Lars, can you steer her into shore?
Not well, Lars said dubiously. Itll be a beaching, and we wont get her back out again.
Michael nodded. Thats fine. The boat served its purpose; were probably within a day or twos walk of Litora, and well be less conspicuous arriving on foot. It will give us so options besides imdiately fighting any Ardans we see, at least.
Charles grumbled at that, but soon enough they were bracing themselves as the boat ground against the rocky beach. The artifex hopped down to draw spikes from the hull, anchoring the boat firmly into the rock; a mont later he simply tore away a section of front hull. Water gushed out across the newly-ford ramp, but when it had cleared they had easy access to offload their supplies.
That part went quickly, and before the sun had risen to its height they had set off towards a distant, battered road that Michael saw so distance from the coast. It was not a promising track, when they reached it - it bore the appearance of a well-built road, artificed stone bonded tightly to itself and sunk deep into the sandy soil. From the overgrowth, though, it was obvious that it had suffered little traffic in recent years. Sections of it had succumbed to ti, cracking and washing towards the coast; other parts were buried under thick mats of soil and vegetation.
Has to lead sowhere, Lars said optimistically.
Charles snorted and kicked at a stray tuft of grass. But not soone, from the looks of it. If there were any villages using this road, theyve long ago gone elsewhere.
Good thing were not looking for a village, then, Michael said, shifting his pack. Zabala, can you help us out?
The fortins gave a groggy nod. For a bit, he said. His soul stretched out, and the others stood straighter under the burden of their supplies. Id appreciate this being an early night, though.
Michael grinned. I think we deserve it. Co on. He began to jog along the road, followed by the others. They made decent ti considering the state of the path, speeding along vast stretches of deserted coastline. The road continued on along the coastline, disappearing for long stretches into forests or beach dunes that had subsud its stone surface. A few tis, Michael was sure that they had lost the path for good, only for it to reerge later under their feet.
It was good that it did, for it was their sole companionship on the long, lonely journey. They did pass a few villages, or what might have been villages in centuries past. All that remained now were stone foundations and a few lonely chimneys huddling under vine cloaks.
At the third of these, Michael called a halt. The sun was beginning to dip lower, and though they had plenty of daylight left it was unlikely theyd find a better spot to rest before night ca, driving off what little warmth the sun had managed. This particular village sported a white stone building that was almost intact, its three remaining walls sheltering a small grove of trees that had grown up inside. There was just enough space between them to make a comfortable campsite.
Zabala fell asleep almost before they had stopped walking; Richter and Leo nudged him to the side and draped a blanket over him. They began the business of clearing out their campsite, with Richter starting a small fire to cook so dinner. Michael found himself wandering through the desolate town, walking past squarish stone outlines that marked where a house once stood.
There were signs of the old buildings, if he looked closely enough. One had the remnants of an old earthen stove still standing in a corner; another had a partial wall with a space for a window. He paused at these, wondering who lived there - who their children beca, and where they went when this village died.
Youre brooding, Sobriquet said, walking up behind him. Her hand found his, squeezing. Nervous?
Michael shook his head. Just thinking, he said, looking back to the ancient house. People lived here for a long ti - hundreds of years, maybe. Yet one day, soone was the last person to live in this house. Whether it was war, famine, or sothing else entirely - they did away with what they knew, what their family had always known, and struck off elsewhere. He paused. I was wondering what they thought, in that mont when they abandoned their - foundation, their solidity, and decided to risk it all on the world.
Sobriquet gave him a flat look, pulling away. You should stop thinking, she advised. Or at least pick less maudlin subjects. The people who lived here left because they had to, most likely. Land has a draw to it, but ultimately its because it gives you what you need - shelter, food, water. If it stops providing, you do what you have to do in order to survive. You adapt.
So they adapted, Michael murmured. Changed to fit the circumstance.
She shrugged. Or they didnt. Plenty of people cling to ideas that are killing them. Either way, the structure didnt have value, nor did the land. People left and didnt return. She paused, peering at his face. Why do I get the impression that youre thinking about sothing foolish?
Id say its because you know , Michael said, leaning over to kiss her on the forehead, then straightening up with a sigh. Youre probably right. I should enjoy tonight; its likely to be the last quiet, peaceful night we see in so ti.
Sobriquet nodded. Just like old tis, right? Sleeping rough, walking across country. Hard to believe weve co this far from where we started.
Quite a ways left to go, Michael said wryly. He turned back to the camp, but paused to glance at the old building once more. I have a feeling well find our way through it, though.
And now youre strangely cheerful, Sobriquet noted.
Michael laughed, pulling her back towards the warm light of the fire. Why not? he asked.
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