Seaborn Chapter 36: Dangerous Song

Novel: Seaborn Author: captaink-19 Updated:
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I didnt sleep much, which was for the better since I wanted to spend as much ti healing as possible. My spell did wonders, but my back was far from whole. I didnt look forward to the recovery period shortened as it may have been.

When I could feel dawn readying itself on the horizon with a fresh storm, I ended my therapy session. I removed myself from my knotted harness and then anchored myself. The effect was swinging down through the water like a pendulum, below the keel of the boat and then aft again. That was just for fun and a bit of showmanship. If anyone was watching the rope, theyd wonder what in the world was happening. I went adrift again before climbing the rope, so I didnt overtly strain my back muscles.

As soon as I broke the surface, I lost that luxury. Ahoy! I called to the watchers on the quarterdeck because there was indeed a small audience there. Pull up, will ya?

I looped the rope around a leg and stepped on it, easily keeping myself upright while they hoisted up like there was a liopleuro circling . With the trick I pulled ssing with the line, they just might think sothing big was causing trouble whoops.

I spilled onto the deck as casually as an unclothed man pulled from the sea could, thanking my fellows while donning a spare set of clothes from my bag. Pulling a shirt over my head wasnt fun but compared with the mory of the lashings still so fresh in my mind the pain was minimal. More than one person had wide eyes, seeing so at ease after being flogged and dragged behind the ship all night.

Rhistel climbed up the quarterdeck and analyzed before motioning to follow him. The surgeon would like to examine you.

I followed imdiately, leaving whispers and half-serious jokes behind . I was cutting a mysterious and powerful figure, but the rumors were adding to my mystique as a mage not creating suspicions about my cursed nature. I rather liked that.

Myota was just as surprised by my seemingly chipper attitude as the progress my healing spell had made. The healing certainly contributed to my outlook, but the real reasons were that my ti in the sea last ti was more revitalizing then Id expected, and Id felt incredibly vindicated and assured that Id done the right thing.

Improved recovery or not, Myota declared I wasnt ready to go back to work and instead wanted to imdiately go do so more healing. When I asked if I should check in with the captain first, Myota overruled with a significant look.

Im the surgeon here. If the Captain wants to overrule let him pull you up! I nodded, understanding what he was doing. I peeked into the slaves hold on my way up and saw that Myota had already started implenting changes. The slaves that saw all had a strange look in their eye; either they thought I was a madman or so kind of savior. I told myself Myota was seeing to everything and left before anyone tried to speak with .

I downed so food before jumping over the stern to calls of sailors asking to watch their fishing lines. I spent the rest of the day and part of the next healing, the only excitent coming when a four-foot shark failed to realize the foolishness of assuming I was a free al. I tied my harness to its tail after dispatching it and had the crew pull it up. I heard Zamari made a fuss about it, but everyone else was happy for the fresh at.

Burdette demanded to see my injuries after my extended healing sessions. I obliged, and while I couldnt see my own back without a mirror I could use my imagination. Cleansing waters could reduce how bad a scar would be, but it didnt create baby-smooth flesh like so healing spells. Id carry the marks of my decision. Such scars were often seen as marks against an unruly sailor, but I felt proud of mine.

Burdette just turned to his surgeon. Hes skin and scar tissue. His HP is full. Any reason he cant get back to work?

No, Myota said. But hell have to work on his range of motion

Id already taken to stretching and getting myself back to top shape. My healing spell was more helpful in that regard than Myota gave it credit for, but I did have so things to work on.

More importantly, my ti of healing had felt too much like idleness. I needed to work. So I was truly appreciative when Burdette threw back into my full-ti duties, doing the work of multiple n on the understaffed crew.

We had so interesting adventures in the ti we took sailing north. Before we distanced ourselves too much from Tulisang, we were approached and boarded by pirates. Id cast my buffs and was fingering my weapons, but Burdette ordered us to co to a full stop! There he welcod a small group of pirates aboard, showed them so docunt that said hed paid off the right friends of the pirates, and they left with only a small chest of coin and no trouble.

I scarcely believed it and had been standing on a yardarm ready to fill any below with harpoons. Burdette scowled at when they departed and barked an order to get to back to work.

Id spent ti with pirates in Tulisang, ti spent training, working or socializing all with equanimity. Stepping aboard a ship and hearing pirates had reverting to earlier perceptions. Those werent entirely unfounded as Lawless Jack illustrated but it was easier to see piracy as the business its practitioners claid.

Even Lawless Jack had been only been rcenary in his dealings. If I hadnt been introduced to him as my pirate captor, we probably would have got along quite well. He was an intelligent, knowledgeable Chortin, with just the right ratio of daring and stability. If circumstances were different

But they werent. He was culpable in the deaths of people Id felt responsible for. Maybe that wasnt enough for to establish him as my nesis, but I didnt have cause to let things go, either.

Sapient creatures werent the only things that held us up. One afternoon a shadow eclipsed the sun. Once we saw what caused it, the ship stirred like a drowner swarm. It was a Roc: a bird of prey with a wingspan of 30 paces. We put most of the crew below decks, and the few of us that stayed up top kept a weather eye on it. Rocs could easily be trouble, because there was hardly anything we could do to them. The Consort had only token artillery on board, and that was in poor repair. Breaking out the bows and getting enough arrows into it to drive it off was unlikely to happen without skilled archers not before the bird snatched whatever it wanted.

Thankfully, Rocs werent as temperantal or territorial as wyverns. Apart from eyeing us up for a few hours and giving us heart attacks with a few playful dives, it didnt cause any harm.

If only that could be said for all creatures.

I was helping another sailor stow the mizzen topgallant sail when he pointed to sothing and said. Look at all those dolphins coming towards us! Were bound to have safe travels now!

I finished tying my knot and looked in the direction he indicated, wiping the light rain out of my eyes. A mont later my blood chilled.

SIRENS! I bellowed, my voice carrying to everyone aboard. Sirens off the port beam! Theyre coming for us! Sirens!

Burdette had been in his cabin poring over maps, no doubt trying to figure out how to eek so more speed out of our slow journey. He burst out to see what was going on. To his credit, he took the threat seriously as soon as he saw I was raising the warning and didnt waste ti by calling for order or insisting on seeing the attacking choir of sirens himself. He imdiately took charge with an appropriate response.

Zamari! Call out the nas of the lovers and get them below! He imdiately began calling out nas himself and tasking duties, splitting the crew into known and unknown hazards.

Sirens had a natural charm ability that once ensorcelled proved stranger than any similar effect mages could cast. They could make their thralls do anything they desired. When they were feeling playful and mischievous they were a threat, making a ga out of sailors jumping overboard to their deaths. When they were on the warpath they could turn their thralls against their crewmates, washing the decks of transports or warships with blood.

Lovers was the slang for crew who had no resistance to the sirens charm. Ideally, theyd be chained into immobility before they could be enthralled, preventing them from becoming a danger to themselves or their crewmates. Lacking the necessary ti to do that, Burdette was corralling them all below decks and barricading them in. Zamari went with them. I didnt like the first mate and more than he liked , but I didnt doubt he had the will or so effect that allowed him to keep his own mind. He must be going below to restrain the lovers. The stars above knew we had enough shackles aboard for everyone.

Burdette asked if I was resistant. I was, even before Id beco cursed. My Heart at Sea perk had proven to be stronger within than the song of the sirens on past voyages. Because of that, I was one of six people left above decks, including Burdette. We were tacking back and forth up the coast. Wed just been about to make another turn to avoid a shoal when the sirens were sighted. Now there were only a half dozen of us to keep the ship on a safe course.

Wed barricaded the hatches and were trying to make our turn before the sirens attacked. We didnt make it in ti. The ethereal, scarcely heard lody just beyond our range of hearing beca clear. It sounded like the heavens themselves were singing, sweeter and more perfect than any musician could ever hope to be. We knew where the voices were coming from, but to our ears they seed to be singing right by each of us.

More than one person has fallen for the belief that those sweet voices really were put into the world for their enjoynt. Blindly, with a laugh and a smile, they would dive into the waters. Sotis the sirens would have their fun and release the sailor. That sailor would forever sing the praises of the sirens, convincing whoeverd listen of their goodness and beauty. Other tis the sirens would toy with their prey, bringing kisses that restored just enough air to keep their victim on the edge of drowning for an hour, two, or more before they were pulled into the depths, out of sight forever.

And sotis the sailor would scarcely break the surface before the waters turned crimson and the sirens devoured them.

We all kept silent as we pulled on the lines to adjust our sails to a safe course. There were sayings about sirens becoming enraged if you tried to drown out their song. I knew them to be false. The real reason sailors would go silent was because regardless of whether you beca enchanted, the otherworldly beauty of their song demanded you listen.

With tense work, we pulled the bow of the Consort away from the heading that risked running against a shoal. With the hands we had set to it, our new course was off failing to take advantage of the wind and turning too far out to sea. That was fine. We could make up ti later. We could find out where we were later. Right now, ti demanded we concern ourselves with other things.

Glances over the side showed the sirens making themselves known. In addition to their song, they had a glamour that made them appear beautiful to each man, tailor-made to his desires. They waved, laughed, and displayed their flesh and multicolored scales. Always unbroken in our ears was their song.

Still, with the imdiate crisis averted and the lovers locked below, it seed only a matter of waiting the sirens out. Their cries were seductive and playful, not the harsh, demanding, bloodthirsty cries that Id heard they did when they set themselves to killing. In a little while, they should get bored and go away. They might make a ga of sneaking back and taunting us for days, but there were ways to deal with that.

Just thinking that made feel like the other shoe was about to drop. I was right.

I dont know what overca his resistance, or whether the sirens hadnt really been trying to control him earlier, but one of our six beca enthralled. His na was Kuko, and I could see it happen. He was taking furtive glances at the beautiful creatures surrounding our ship, then he slowed and watched openly. As I cried out a warning, he went slack-jawed and dopey eyed. I used my spells to pull a bucketful of water from the sea. I tried to freeze it as it smacked into the man, but my timing was off and he only stumbled with the blow, not sparing any attention.

The sa couldnt be said for the sirens. One of them introduced a displeased, discordant note into the lody. I ignored it, trying to reach the enthralled man. Ignoring it was a mistake: a lance of seawater struck and sent sprawling with 20 fewer HP.

The other 4 n on deck all took steps to grab Kuko before he went over, but they were inches too slow. The man went over the side and ungainly flopped into the water.

A second later, my foot left the gunwale as I dove after him.

Burdette yelled for to stop far too late, as I was already mid-dive. I speared through the familiar waves to find the water chalked full of magic, the racial song the sirens had turning the environnt into sothing other than normal. Id scarcely oriented myself when a siren sped by and knocked spinning, laughing.

Look! Another one! Which one of you nabbed him?

I hadnt spent all the ti below the waves practicing for nothing. I dodged the next incoming creature easily.

Are you sure hes enthralled? another siren asked. I think it just used magic!

I spotted Kuko a short distance away, grabbing at a siren who stayed just out of reach, laughing as he obliviously drowned before darting in to kiss him, giving him seconds more to breathe.

Stop! I called.

The seductive lody of the song ca to a halt. All the sirens stared at as the realized Id spoken.

Is he

Eaugh! A siren said behind . Hes a dead one!

Tear it apart!

I muttered an oath before I had to briefly anchor myself to drop out of the path of an attacking siren. I withdrew my trident, hoping to keep any attackers at least at arms reach. The sirens song turned harsh and domineering.

I hadnt fought such a coordinated enemy in a three-dinsional battlefield. Kane was always saying a battlefield was three dinsional, and more than once I wanted to pull him into the middle of the ocean to show him what that really ant. If I hadnt had the buffs to my speed from my spells, swimming ability and lifesaver achievent, I would have been hopelessly outmatched. As it was, several sharp talons tore at and one young siren briefly sunk her fangs into my leg before a kick knocked her senseless.

The trident served well, though I mostly swing it like a club rather than a spearing implent. That was effective, though the tis the prongs speared flesh didnt render my weapon useless as it had against the drowners. For one thing, the sirens had too much health and once injured imdiately sought to escape, no matter how that caused the weapon to tear their wound open.

The first siren I critically injured caught all three points of my weapon in the stomach. She scread in pain and fury as she wrenched herself back. As blood and viscera poured from her terrible wound, the tempo of the song changed again. Id never heard firsthand the song sailors heard when sirens ca to destroy, but I imagined this was close.

I dealt far more damage than I received. As so sirens were forced to retreat and the bodies of others floated to the surface, the ones who kept of the attack beca more vicious. I was looking for a way to escape and sohow grab Kuko when a powerful voice cried out.

Enough!

Every siren imdiately backed off, though their hissing and predatory circling continued.

Swimming down from the body of siren with a crushed skull, the creature that was obviously the leader approached . She looked older. Still beautiful, with her glamour maintained, but undoubtedly experienced.

Na

Siren Matriarch

Level

48

Health

3,600

Mana

5,320

Stamina

4,200

What is it you want, and who are you? Even as she asked the question, she analyzed .

Your ability Hide True Nature has failed!

The imperious look on the matriarchs face turned into a snarl. Jones! Whats one of his spawn doing in the shallows?

I wasnt sure how this matriarch knew Jones, and that wasnt relevant at the mont. Im here for the life of the man youve chard.

The matriarch looked at where Kuko was wrapped up by a possessive siren whod barely rembered to keep the mans HP above 0. The matriarch was incredulous.

You can take whover you will, and for the service of one man you kill my daughters?

Im not after his service, I said. Im saving his life.

And if I have this thrall killed to teach you a lesson? she threatened.

I brandished my trident. How many more daughters can you muster?

Briefly, the matriarch showed her fangs. I return this life to you, and what do I receive in return?

Being rid of isnt enough?

Life for life! she hissed, moving closer. Youve taken many from , all for the sake of a al!

That al is off limits. I declared. All sailors are.

The hissing sirens were clearly angry at my blanket declaration, and I knew there was no chance of them accepting it. I just needed them to let this one go this one life in front of I could save. That had always been my motive.

Fine, the matriarch said. You will owe us, but you may take this one.

The siren wrapped around Kuko was plainly displeased, but at a glare from the matriarch released her hold on the man. Kuko, still chard and oblivious to his near-death state, tried groping at the siren. The siren had dropped the glamour and was no longer the beauty hed seen, but his mind didnt realize that. With a pout, the siren pushed him away.

Release your charm.

It will fade in ti, the matriarch waved the concern away. We cannot simply end our enchantnt.

I grabbed the man and pulled him towards the surface before the air from the sirens last kiss left his lungs. I didnt dare to put my trident away.

Rember, the matriarch called after . You owe us!

I got Kuko above the surface and kept him there so he could breathe. Thankfully, the man did that even if he did nothing else. The Consort had moved on while Id fought the sirens, but with my skills and abilities I was able to catch up given enough ti, even dragging a dead weight along.

A rope was thrown over when I sculled alongside the carrack. I tied it under Kukos arms, and he was pulled up. A tally mark was added to my Lifesaving score. A minute later the rope ca over again, and I scurried up it on my own. Burdette was waiting, his eyes dangerous.

What have you done?

I saved his life. I replied simply.

You disobeyed my order and you angered the sirens! Those below decks were just staring vacantly at the hatches until the sirens song went feral then they went mad too!

Did anyone die before you got out of range?

No, Burdette said. But range doesnt an much when they can outrun us!

They wont be following us, I assured him. They know thatd be a mistake.

Burdettes jaw locked shut. I hadnt ant that as a challenge to him, but it could certainly be construed that way. I was the man who did the unthinkable jumped into the waves with sirens and erged of my own will, the sirens cowed behind . No one cowed the sirens they were the subject of both dreams and nightmares for sailors. What kind of power must I wield to accomplish this? Was it really wise for Burdette to challenge ?

Hes not responding, one of the sailors looking at Kuko said.

For a mont I felt panic that the man had died on , but he still had a sliver of HP. He wasnt responding because he was chard without a focus or command.

Hell snap out of it, I said, thinking of the matriarchs words. He just needs ti.

We tied him up and I gave him a health potion while we set to getting the Consort back on course. After a while, Burdette had a few people co up from below to help us. The sirens didnt attack again, and before long we were back to business as usual, if emotionally and ntally exhausted.

Once again, rumors of what Id done started to make their rounds. The frawork of my mystique was being built. I didnt find such amusent in it this ti. As the hours passed and Kuko ca to his senses, I spent as much ti as possible conversing with him trying to draw him from his stupor.

Where am I? he asked. How do I get back?

Youre aboard the Consort, I would repeat. Youre safe here.

So beautiful so perfect! Where is she?

The sirens are gone. You are safe.

Gone where? Why?

I pulled you from the water. You were entranced. Theyve gone wherever they please.

He looked at angrily. You pulled from her?

They were going to eat you! I said, instantly realizing I couldnt say anything to convince him. You were caught up in

Liar! he snarled. She was perfect! She loved ! She was made for ! We were destined to be together, and youve ruined it!

Take a breath man, youre not in your own head. Give it ti, and youll

He stalked away. We kept an eye on him, making sure he didnt jump overboard before he broke out of the worst of his funk. I sighed, feeling defeated. Id saved a life, but that life claid it didnt want to be saved. Id also incurred a debt with a siren matriarch. I didnt think I was going to pay whatever she demanded, so it was more like Id made an enemy of a siren matriarch.

Being flogged had sohow felt like a victory. Being victorious over the sirens sohow felt like a loss.

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