Tulon had been at a single pitched naval battle -- the defense of her home harbor, when she'd just become a Queen's Woman. She could remember how terrible the Imperial broadsides had been as their ships had driven into the harbor and it had come down to who could win: Her fellow women and the marines that had fought with them, or the gunnery of the Imperials. In the end, while cannonballs were terrifying things, and they had lost many women to muskets and pike, they had still carried the day.
Tulon was less sure about now.
Dawn had just broken -- and with it, the impossible sight of an Imperial ship gaining on her. She had slipped away from them in the night, she and her passengers. Once a ship was a few hundred yards away from their enemy at night, without a moon or man to see by? They were as good as invisible. She had then tacked off course, swung around, and then hit one of the big trade currents that wound their ways through the islands. They should have been hundreds of miles away, not right on her ass.
According to Gyre, they had a tool that let them see in the dark as well as sh...er...he could. Tulon paused in her examination of the Imperial ship to eyeball the strange 'human.' That was what he called himself, now that he could remember fragments of what he was. Those fragments had let him learn the Queen's Speech at lightning speeds, and had given him an idea of his name. What all that meant was still too big and too scary for Tulon to really want to grapple with right now.
Besides, it wouldn't matter if the Imperials blew them away in the next hour.
"How are they running the damn flywheel, though?" Gyre muttered with his strange, faintly musical voice. His eyes were fixed upon the rear of the Imperial ship, which was mostly concealed by their sails and the bustling of their crew. Tulon, if she squinted, could just barely see the massive paddle-wheels that were being used to add extra knots to the ship's speed. But she was more interested in counting the cannons and examining the crew.
All women, like most Imperial ships. They were in the same Imperial uniforms she recognized from the battle of the harbor, though more of them had guns and less of them had pikes. She frowned as she considered their options.
Xan, meanwhile, was clinging to her back and warming her against the chilling sea spray that the prow of her ship was casting up. "Tulon!" He hissed in her ear. "Behind us."
Tulon looked back.
Then her heart leaped.
"Sails!" She said, then grabbed onto Gyre's shoulder, shaking him. As usual, she found that he was harder to shake than any woman she had ever touched -- he felt like metal when she touched him, and was stronger than anything she had ever tried to move before. Unconsciously, his muscles resisted her, and those muscles terrified her. Still, it drew his attention and he snapped his head back. She actually watched his eyes, rather than the horizon. They were like clockwork mirrors -- and she could see them narrowing and
focusing
in a way her eyes never could. Once they had finished, he nodded.
"Three ships, like yours," he said. "There are ten women on each, their sails are painted red."
"The Queen's ships," Tulon said, laughing. Her gaze swung back to the approaching Imperial ship. She chewed her lower lip. "We might be able to buy just enough time..." She said, quietly. "If we force them to have to hunt us out." She nodded to her husband, who flitted down into the belly of the boat. She snatched up a metal ring that had a leather sack attached to it, looped around it so tightly that the ring was almost invisible. She held it out as her husband began to flow into it, causing the sack to glow with an inner light. As he moved inside of it, she looked over at Gyre, then paused. "Shit."
"What?" Gyre asked.
"You don't have gills," she said, quietly. "Listen, the best plan we have right now is to drop over the side and sink and hope that their marines can't find us before the Queen's ships show up. But if you don't have gills..."
"He could stick his head in my sack?" Xan asked, his voice sounding faintly muffled and distant from his position in said sack.
"No, we're going to need to sink you," Tulon said.
Boom
.
The rumbling sound of a cannon firing caused each of them to jerk their heads around -- smoke had bloomed ahead of the Imperial ship. A few seconds later, a cannonball crashed into the water ahead of their little ship, sending up a spray of water into the glittering light of the dawn.
Gyre immediately lifted his hand and aimed it at the ship, as if he expected to castigate them. Then, his face twisted into furious snarl. "What do you
mean
the ROE still doesn't
apply
," he snapped.
"The what?" Tulon asked, cinching her husband's life sack shut to keep him safe from the water. "What are you talking about?"
"Ugh," Gyre said. "I..." He sighed. "Okay. I think the best way to explain this is that...my abilities? My powers? They're not magic. They're
tools
built into my body. And those tools follow special rules, created by the people who made them. And those rules are called the rules of engagement, and whoever wrote the rules is a
goddamn fuddy duddy
!" Those last three words were a complete mystery to Tulon, as they had all been in Gyre's strange language. "It doesn't think we're under threat! It keeps asking me to ask my tactical officer."
Tactical officer? Like...an admiral? Tulon shook her head. "Shoot them!" she exclaimed.
"You're not my tactical officer! I don't even know what a tactical officer is!" Gyre said. "I don't
remember
-"
"What does it need for us to be under threat, blood to be drawn?" Tulon snapped.
"I think we need to be shot at by guns that can actually hit the broad side of a
barn
," Gyre said, the last word remaining an enigma. Bharn? What the
fuck
was a Bharn? She shook her head then slung her husband over her shoulder.
"I say we stick with what I know -- I don't want to rely on your magic." She paused. "But you don't have
gills
."
"I don't need to breathe," Gyre said, quietly as he looked over the edge of the boat, at the rushing water.
Boom
.