1
The boat smelled of sweat and misery with just a hint of stale cheese. I had no idea why, since I knew for a fact that the captain had emptied the ship's larder in order to squeeze in a few more paying passengers. The trip east from Vorsalos to Highwind was only three days, after all, and nearly everyone around me seemed to have smuggled in a bit of bread or salted meat. Perhaps one of them was responsible for the pungent cloud assaulting my nostrils. I was tempted to conjure up a gust of wind to clear the air despite the fact that exposing myself as a sorcerer would almost certainly get me mugged. Or worse.
Grumbling under my breath, I flicked my eyes across the passenger deck for the hundredth time this morning. After two days locked inside this wooden box together, I should have been confident that none of these people were disguised Senosi Huntresses waiting to capture me. Growing up inside a city that treated sorcery like a plague had taught me to be cautious, however, and the Senosi were cunning and patient trackers. I wouldn't have been surprised if the Grand Inquisitrix had planted of her minions aboard every passenger ship departing Vorsalos.
Still, if there was a Huntress here, she had done one hell of a job with her disguise. The vast majority of women on this ship were mothers with young children, and the rest were too old or too feeble to be a mage-killer. The only exceptions were the two amazons huddled together in the corner a few yards away.
I turned and studied them. Like anyone else who had grown up on the Shattered Coast, I had heard plenty of stories about the warrior-women of Nol Krovos, a large island some five hundred miles away to the west. Some people claimed that men weren't allowed on the island at all, or that they were occasionally shipped in as "breeding stock" every few years before being dumped into the sea. I had long assumed that all those tales were preposterous flights of fancy from sex-starved Vorsalosian soldiers, but I didn't know for certain.
These particular women had largely kept to themselves. They were both on the young side—I would have been shocked if they were much older than twenty—and they looked almost exactly like I had pictured them from the stories: tall and athletic, with hardened red leather breastplates and matching leather skirts. I had no idea what the hell they could possibly be doing on a ship to Highwind, but every time I turned towards them my cock unwittingly stirred inside my trousers. I'd always had a weak spot for tough women, and once again I had to resist the urge to close my eyes and imagine what it would feel like to have their long, powerful legs wrapped around my waist...
By the gods, man, you
really
need to hire a whore when I get to Highwind.
I sighed and slumped back in my seat. As embarrassing as it was to admit, I hadn't been with a woman in over three months, and the loneliness was slowly driving me crazy. I occasionally went to sleep fantasizing about what the Senosi looked like under their tight leather armor, which was so fucked up it defied all basic sense and reason. Who in their right mind got hard thinking about the women who wanted to kill him?
Still, lust was probably a better vice than guilt, all things considered. My last lover had been thrown into the Inquisitrix's dungeon for the crime of helping me, after all, and I wished there were some way I could help her. I also wished she were here right now, preferably on her knees with her ruby lips wrapped my throbbing cock...
"Are you an apothecary?"
My eyes shot open and I nearly fell out of my seat. One of the amazon women was suddenly standing over me, her bright blue eyes glimmering in the dim light.
"I, uh..." I blubbered, clearing my throat. "What?"
She knelt down beside me. The sweet scent of her auburn hair—lilacs, perhaps?—flooded into my nose and made me forgot all about the mysterious stale cheese.
"You carry herbs in your pouch," she said, "and you have the look of an educated man."
My mouth went dry. Barely anyone had spoken to me during the trip so far, and I hadn't expected her of all people to buck the trend. "I, uh, no, I'm not an apothecary. I'm not much of anything, really."
Her brow furrowed. From a distance, I had found her passably attractive; in close, I realized she was downright gorgeous. Between her high cheekbones, her full lips, and her sinewy, athletic fame, she could have easily been mistaken for a statue of the war goddess. I had never been so attracted to a woman who could break me in half.
"Your eyes say differently," she said, studying me. I couldn't quite tell if she was sizing me up or planning to run me through. "You keep glancing towards my wounded sword-sister."
"I...well, I just wish I could help," I stuttered, clearing my throat again. In truth, I hadn't even realized that her partner was injured. "As far as I know there aren't any healers on this ship, but I'm sure there will be in Highwind."
"She will not survive that long," the amazon said gravely. "Hestiah's strength wanes by the hour, and at this rate I doubt she will live to see the setting of the sun tonight."
I swallowed so heavily I almost choked. I wasn't a master healer by any stretch of the imagination, but I knew enough tricks that I could probably keep this woman alive—assuming, of course, that I was willing to expose my true identity and be branded a pariah as a result. Keeping a low profile had been hard enough
before
a beautiful warrior-woman had started questioning me at point-blank range. Now half the people here were looking in our direction.
"I wish I could do something," I murmured. "I'm sorry. Really."
Her eyes returned to mine. A wave of guilt crashed over me, making me so nauseous I almost keeled over right there.
"You fear for your safety," the amazon said. "Your culture shuns sorcery, and you are worried about how the others will react."
I froze in place. How could she possibly...?
"Nol Krovos is a land steeped in magic," she went on. "I can sense it clinging to you, no matter how hard you try to conceal it."
I glanced about the cabin to make certain no one else had heard her words. "Look, I want to help," I whispered. "But this ship is filled with—"
"No harm will come to you while I stand at your side," she said, placing her hand on my cheek and staring me straight in the eye. "I have been trained from birth to serve and protect those with magic in their blood. You need not worry."
I let out a long, slow breath. Saying no to a beautiful woman was never easy; saying no to a beautiful woman whose lips were two inches from yours was essentially impossible. Especially when your cock was so hard it was on the verge of pressing against her leg.
"All right," I said, wondering if I had just willingly doomed myself to the gallows. "I'll see what I can do."
I started to stand up, but she unexpectedly placed her hands on my shoulders and held me in place. "Know this, sorcerer," she said. "If you save my sword-sister's life, I will pledge mine to yours."
"Uh," I mumbled. "What?"
"With the gods as my witness, I vow to serve and protect you from this moment until my death." She held me in place for several more seconds before she finally stood. "Now please, save her life if you can."
"I'll try," I promised. I stood from the wooden bench and shuffled across the row of passengers to where her friend was waiting. Her waning health was obvious once I drew close; her skin was incredibly pale, and her lips were almost purple. She eyed me warily as I approached.
"
Je spadal, moshalim
?" she asked in a strange tongue.
"
Kosee terah
," the amazon escorting me replied. She knelt down next to her wounded friend and glanced up to me again. "My name is Kaseya. This is Hestiah."
"Jorem," I said, forcing a nervous smile. "Jorem Farr. I'm afraid I can't promise anything. I'm not certain if I'll be able to help your friend here or not."
"All we can ask is that you try," Kaseya said. "The blood of the gods flows through your veins."
I snorted softly. "That's not how the people back home would describe it..."
I knelt over Hestiah and gently pulled open her bandages. There wasn't much blood; the chest wound she'd suffered had probably closed days ago, and they had obviously applied enough healing salves to mend the flesh. The problem was the infection beneath the skin.