Chapter Eleven
Ariadne gazed out at the endless ocean, trying to hide her apprehension. She'd never been on any ship larger than a river raft before, and that had only been for long enough to get to the opposite bank. Until the group had arrived in the port city of Nysa, she'd never even seen the ocean, having lived her whole life in Tir Yadar.
The trip from Aencyr had been uneventful, the six weeks of slow riding allowing her to spend her days practicing trade tongue with Treya, Sarette, and Corec. In the evenings, she helped Ellerie and Bobo plan out a book on the history of the Chosar, and sometimes she sparred with Sarette and the men. She found the sparring to be an unusual experience—having to train herself
not
to use her spells, after spending seven years ensuring they became second nature. As for the book, it was difficult to speak of her people's past when she wasn't certain what had become of them, but their story deserved to be told.
The group had parted ways with Josip in Nysa, the guide heading north with a trading caravan on its way to Ankarov Dor—which, if the maps were accurate, seemed to have been built over the remains of Tir Ankara. Ariadne hadn't spent much time getting to know the man, but he was one of the few people she knew in the world. It was strange to realize she'd likely never see him again.
There was a scrabbling sound from the side of the ship, and then a three-tined spear was tossed up and over the railing, landing on the deck planking with a clatter. A young man soon followed, climbing up a rope ladder that had been left hanging down over the side. He carried a net bag wrapped around a huge, blue- and gray-scaled fish. As he neared the top of the ladder, he hefted the bag up onto the deck, then finished climbing and swung his legs over the railing. The other sailors called out to him, congratulating him in the peculiar mix of languages they used amongst themselves. Three men, working as a team, pulled the fish out of the netting and hung it up on a rack so it could be cleaned and gutted. From tip to tail fin, it had to be six feet long, and was rounder and fatter than the river fish Ariadne was familiar with.
The young man watched them work with a look of satisfaction on his face. He was a few inches shorter than Ariadne, but heavily muscled. Cold didn't seem to bother him—he was still shirtless from his swim, wearing loose breeches that only covered his upper legs. He ignored the chilly wind blowing against the seawater that still dripped down his bare chest.
When he noticed Ariadne staring at him, he grinned. "Ahh, mysterious Ari," he said in trade tongue. "Do you see my catch? I defeated the great blue tunny in single combat. A shark smelled the blood and came by to steal it from me, but I whacked it on the snout and chased it away."
"My
name
is Ariadne," she reminded Loofoo yet again. In the few days she'd known him, she hadn't been able to figure out when he was telling the truth and when he was making up stories. It didn't help that he regularly used words she wasn't familiar with—some, perhaps, from the trade tongue, but others obviously from different languages.
"What kind of a name is that?" the seaborn man asked. "Names should flow like water."
She shook her head but changed the topic. "How do you keep up with the ship?"
"It's not going all that fast, really. You might be able to keep up with it if I taught you how to swim the right way. Of course, you're wearing far too much clothing for that. Shall I help you remove some?"
Ariadne sighed. "Will you be serious for once? You promised you'd tell me about Pado."
"I brought in tonight's supper so I suppose Captain Valen won't mind so much if I talk to you, but why the interest in the homeland? You claim to not be seaborn, and you wear metal armor—I saw it the day you came on board. So why all the questions, mysterious Ari?"
"Maybe my parents were seaborn," she said. It was easier than telling him the truth.
His grin was back. "There's one way to know for sure. Dunk your head under the waves and take a breath, and see if you swim or drown."
She hadn't learned the word
drown
yet, but given the context, there were only a few possible meanings, none of which were pleasant. She couldn't stop her shudder. "I don't think so."
He laughed. "Pado is Pado. What do you want to know?"
That was a good question. What she really wanted to know was whether the Chosar had somehow become seaborn. The seaborn on the ship did look something like her people, yet there was something not quite right about them. She wasn't certain she could even put it into words, but she'd known at a glance they weren't Chosar. She wasn't going to mention any of that, though. She had no intention of telling her life's story to every person she came across.
"How long have the seaborn lived there?" she asked instead.
Loofoo crinkled his brow. "Since time before time, when Irisis first created the seas, and then us, the children of the seas."
"But Irisis is one of the
new
gods," Ariadne pointed out.
"Ahh, but newer than
what
? Bear and Raven and Fox may have come first, creating the land, but Irisis came soon after, bringing the sea to all the world."
Loofoo, apparently, didn't have a firm enough grasp on history to be a reliable source of information about the origins of his own people.
"Why did you leave?" Ariadne asked.
Loofoo scowled and spat on the deck. "I was hunting a giant sunfish, and followed it into The People's fishing grounds without realizing." When he said
The People
, he meant his own people. It had caused some confusion the first time Ariadne had spoken with him. "I sold the meat rather than giving it over. Emperor Kono's agents found out and called it poaching, and banished me for ten years. I can't return to Pado and no seaborn ship is allowed to take me on, so here I am, stuck working for humans on their miserable ships." He tilted his head and shrugged. "Though
Peregrine
isn't so bad. She could almost be a seaborn vessel."
"Are
all
the seaborn here criminals?"
"I'm no criminal!" he protested, wearing the same look of questionable innocence he used when telling his more outlandish stories. "How was I to know I was in the wrong area?"