The Wives' Guild
Bromm V
Nightfall came slowly to the little harbor of Sanctum Port. The decline of the sun set the long shadows of ships' masts stretching out over the rooftops like the fingers of some great hand. Despite the port's small size, its harbor was crowded with nearly a hundred ships, from small fishing schooners to massive fluyts plying the northern trade routes. A fortune in goods flowed through the port each year, much of it obtained by trade rather than piracy. But violence was never far from Sanctum Port, and the lord's palace served as a reminder of that fact, situated as it was inside the massive, sunbleached skull of a long-dead giant overlooking the harbor from a nearby hilltop.
On this night, the sailor Bromm found himself drinking with his friends in a dockside tavern called the Seagull. He was a tall and broad-shouldered young man with a black beard and green eyes. He wore a black coat about him, with a wide baldric of shark leather over his shoulder. On the table, next to several empty flagons, was his three-cornered red hat.
"One last round!" he cried to the delight of his friends, "to toast the end of our employment on one ship, and to toast our future employment aboard another!"
"Aye!" cried Tahavi, banging his olive-skinned fist on the wooden table. He threw a handful of copper coins onto the table and summoned the barmaid. "Another round for us, woman!"
She sighed and gathered up the coins before moving away.
"They are always so sad to take our money," Imre remarked as he drained his flagon and slid it across the table to join the others. "If I didn't know better, I'd think they were tired of us."
"Tired of us drinking," Bromm said, too loudly. He took a moment to calm himself before continuing. "But we're right to be happy. We are well rid of that ship, and may Tarnilaen take them all!"
"Aye!" Tahavi cried again and slammed his fist down again. One of the clamshells they had drained earlier rattled off the table and onto the floor. Tahavi reached for it and nearly fell from his chair.
"I hope Sahat finds us a better one," Bromm said to no one in particular. "I hope it's a ship going somewhere exotic."
"Like to Leiyan, to buy indigo spice!" Imre exclaimed. He brushed his dark hair back from his face and smiled with wonder. His fair cheeks were turning red as he drank, but he held his drink better than the other two.
"Or to search for the Lost City of Wonders!" Bromm cried in equal excitement.
"If a captain ever says he's off to Kalis," Tahavi warned, lifting himself from his chair and setting the fallen clamshell down again, "run far away from his ship. No voyage searching for the City of Wonders ever finds anything but disappointment and death. Archen went looking for it five years ago, and no one has heard from him or any of his crew since."
"It's out there somewhere," Bromm slurred, looking about for the barmaid and fresh drinks. "And someone will find it eventually."
"Until they do, it will continue to lure sailors to their deaths," Tahavi continued.
"You sound like Sahat," Imre laughed.
"Who sounds like me?" Sahat said, appearing behind them. he swept his black broad-brimmed hat from his bald head in a theatrical gesture. Bromm cheered and tried to stand, only to sway on his feet and fall back onto the bench.
"Sahat! Have you found us a ship?" Tahavi asked.
"I have," the older man replied. "She's the
White Shepherd
, and she's bound for Deephold in the morning."
"Deephold!" Bromm cried, "I've always wanted to see a dwarfhold. I've heard that it's the largest and grandest of all the holds."
"Aye. And their mines turn out more silversteel than everywhere else in the world put together," Imre put in. "I've heard that they stretch so deep into the earth that miners go years without seeing the sun."
"They're dwarves," Sahat pointed out, "They go their entire lives without seeing the sun." He looked around. "Where's Pyet?"
Bromm jerked a thumb toward the tavern's staircase. "He went upstairs with the pretty wench. Poor lad couldn't wait to spend his silver after a month at sea."
At last, the barmaid returned with their drinks and quickly distributed them before shifting to another table. Her younger, prettier colleague's alternate employment had left the tavern short-staffed for the moment and she was none too pleased about it.
Sahat claimed the drink meant for Pyet and downed it in a single gulp. "To the
White Shepherd
, and a good haul!"
Bromm and Imre cheered. Tahavi had his face in a clamshell and could not join in, though he tried, only to end up sputtering messily through the meat. Sahat moved Bromm's drink away from him for safekeeping.
"Once Pyet gets back, we should head down to the
Shepherd's
berth, so it's time for you to quit your drinking."
"I wasn't finished!" Bromm complained, reaching for his drink.
"You need to sober up," Sahat chided. "In your state, you'll fall into the harbor before you get aboard the ship. They intend to sail with the tides, so we cannot afford any delay. Besides, you've been celebrating for three days now. It's time to get back to work."
"The
White Shepherd
," Tahavi mused aloud. "I'm not familiar with the ship. Who is the captain?"
"A man named Karnote. I believe he is Armannaise."
"Never heard of him," Tahavi said dismissively. "Is she a big ship?"
"Nay, a brig of perhaps eighteen guns, though she carries fewer now. She's on the dwarfholds run."
Bromm started in surprise as someone clapped his shoulder. Turning, he saw that Pyet had returned. The youth's scruffy face was split by a broad smile, and Bromm saw that his breeches were still undone.
"Hello, lads!" Pyet beamed.
"Have a good fuck?" Imre asked with his own smile.
"Best silver I ever spent," Pyet replied as his smile somehow grew wider. "She's got the nicest little tits, if any of you want to have a go."
"We've got a ship to catch," Sahat put in before Imre could open his mouth. "Do up your belt and let's be off."
"Well hold on a moment," Pyet protested. "I want to get something to eat first. Something with flavor, before we end up eating nothing but hardtack and salted cod for a month."
Pyet left for the tavern's kitchen, so Sahat hauled Bromm and Imre toward the door by himself. Tahavi followed at length, still holding on to the last of their clams. After an extended wait, Pyet joined them in the street outside holding a wedge of flat bread drenched in red sauce and topped with cheese and grilled vegetables.
"Had a bit too much to drink?" he asked around a mouthful of his bread.
"Never," Bromm slurred, much to Sahat's annoyance.
"Come on," the bald man growled. He grabbed Bromm by the shoulder and hauled him down the quay. The four of them made their way through the thinning crowds to the
White Shepherd's
berth, where they were challenged by a tall orc with a broken tusk.
"Who goes there?" the orc demanded, arms crossed over his chest. He wore a club studded with iron at his hip and a pistol in a holster across his chest. Bromm drunkenly checked that his own weapons were on his belt. He patted his own pistol hanging from his belt and in doing so, his hand brushed the hilt of the plain iron saber he had bought in Buccaneer's Bay.
"Sahat and the other new crewmen. I spoke with your captain earlier." Sahat replied, and Bromm noted that he was not reaching for the two daggers he wore tucked into his green and white checkered waistband.
The orc made a face of annoyance and waved them aboard before resuming his perch next to the gangplank. Taking great care not to stumble into the water as Sahat had predicted, Bromm climbed the plank to reach the brig's deck. They were met there by a dark-skinned man with his hair in thick, coarse braids that ran down his back. He wore an orange shirt that reached to his knees beneath a wide belt buckled with brass.
"Welcome aboard," he said in a thick, foreign accent. Bromm thought it sounded familiar, but in his drunken stupor he could not place it. "I am Dawhy, the first mate." He held up a logbook and quill for them.
"Sign here and you'll be a part of the crew. Once done, you can take your things down below and get set."
They did as asked with only minimal haggling over the terms of the contracts and he ushered them belowdecks to their hammocks. Descending the steps, Bromm saw that the bow of the ship was blocked off with thick iron bars to form a cage. Within that cage, chained to the hull by collars at their necks, were a score of women, naked and huddled together. The hammocks nearest to them were all taken by sailors who lay awake, ogling their captives. Some even stood at the bars with their arms through, leaning and leering together.
Bromm frowned with disappointment at the scene, but the others pushed him along to their hammocks astern.
After setting their things in their sailors' chests, Sahat turned to Bromm.
"You are disappointed?"
"It's a slave ship," Bromm said. "I thought we were done with this."
"You wanted to see the dwarfhold, didn't you? This ship is going there."
"Surely there was another ship going there. One without slaves?"
"Well, next time you find us a ship and I'll get drunk in the tavern." Sahat threw himself into his hammock and pretended to roll over and sleep. Despite the drink, Bromm could tell he was pretending. The man had not even undressed himself and the daggers in his waistband were surely making his feigned sleep uncomfortable.
Bromm doffed his boots and swung into his hammock, but he groaned when he saw a familiar face approaching. Skinny, with thinning hair drawn into a gray tail, the sea rat named Guldrin beamed at Bromm as he strode down the deck to greet him.
"Hello again, Bromm," the old man said quietly, taking care not to wake the other sleepers. "You've chosen a good ship to sign on with."
"Were that true, you would not be here with me," Bromm groused. Guldrin laughed, his mouth showing off his rotting teeth.