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Flynn swayed from side to side, hands clamped between his thighs. Crimson threads trickled from both ears, masking his face from a dozen swollen cuts. Quadde stepped back a moment to admire her handiwork, measuring the distance. Then she swung her muscular leg in a sweeping arc and cracked open Flynn's nose. More blood gushed out, over his shirt and pants, spilling across the deck. Two more casual backhand swipes with the heavy pistol closed one eye and opened a deep cut at a corner of his mouth.
"There, Flynn," she panted. "A lesson well given and well learned." She raised her voice. "Mr. Ogg? Be thou there?"
"Aye, ma'am."
"This seaman has fouled the clean decks of the Salvation. Have him clean it. I'll be back within the half hour. If I spy a stain on the planking, then I'll have him flogged to death."
"Aye, ma'am." Ogg's voice was gray and gentle, lacking any emotion.
She turned to face Ryan again, half smiling. "I am well in the mood for thee, Outlander Cawdor. Report to my cabin immediately after the evening meal. Do not be late."
She stomped off, leaning on her stick, its tapping vanishing with her into the swirls of fog. Behind her, the tableau remained unchanged: Flynn, sobbing quietly, snuffling blood through his crushed nose and mouth; Ogg, silent, looking out into the wall of mist. And Ryan Cawdor, busy with his thoughts.
Chapter Twenty-Nine.
THE SALVATION SAT quietly, enveloped in the fog. It cut her off from the world beyond, shrouding her from the sea and the sky. Water dripped in heavy lumps off the canvas and spars. Apart from the work of repairing the storm damage, the hands had been set to lowering two of the remaining whaleboats, leaving them sitting quietly on the flat sea. Donfil told Ryan that he'd heard Walsh say that the great whales sometimes came to the surface in such a fog and could be easily harpooned if a ship had her boats ready.
Once the word spread that Pyra Quadde had picked Ryan Cawdor as her victim, he became an invisible man. n.o.body spoke to him. The silence screamed out that he was a dead man. Walking, but dead.
Johnny Flynn washed down the deck, clearing the blood off the white wood before the captain came back to inspect it. He refused Ryan's offer of help with a mute shake of the head, and went below to wash the crusted blood from his bruised face. One eye was completely closed, his nose and one cheekbone obviously broken. He was also concussed.
Ryan and Donfil talked together with a great intensity. The Apache felt that Quadde would use other crew members to enforce Ryan's compliance in her s.e.xually perverse l.u.s.ts, that they should kill the woman now and make for the sh.o.r.e.
Though the fog would give them an excellent chance of slipping over the side, it also raised an insurmountable problem-it hid the sh.o.r.e. The shaman had tried to find out from the crew how far away they were and what kind of landing they might have. Opinions ranged from one mile to three, and from sheer cliffs to a sloping beach. The only interesting thing Donfil had learned was that they had sailed along the coast until they were roughly in the area where the redoubt had been. In their quest for the whales they had quartered the ocean, coming in closer to land.
"I could swim a mile if it stayed calm and there weren't any currents. Just about, I reckon. You?"
The Apache shook his head. "I can taste the earth. I think it may be closer than a mile. But even so... it would be beyond me. Better stay here for me."
Ryan nodded. "I see that. The way I see it the b.i.t.c.h would prefer me more willing. If she has me tied or a blaster at my neck-or anywhere else-she can't enjoy the funning so much. I'll go, reluctantly. But I'll go. Then I'll wait till we're alone and throttle the s.l.u.t. And be in the water."
Donfil sighed. "Doesn't sound too great a plan to me. Too many maybes and it's to it."
Ryan managed a grin. "Yeah, my brother. But it's the best d.a.m.ned plan I got."
DOC HAD BEEN SINGING a half-remembered whaling song. "An uncle of mine sailed from Nantucket. I was married the year Herman Melville pa.s.sed away. Eighteen ninety-one, as I recall. He wrote a book about whaling that-"
"Called Moby d.i.c.k. Know it. Read it."
"I had a niece, Catherine, born on his birthday. Melville's, that is. The first day of August, I recall it well."
Deacon ignored him, concentrating on allowing the Phoenix to creep slowly forward through the banks of fog. He'd managed to take a bearing on the maintop of the Salvation before the weather closed right in. Now he was inching along on blind navigation, closing in on Pyra Quadde's vessel. Seeing that his conversation didn't interest the captain, Doc returned to his singing.
It's advertised in Claggartville, Missouri, Ohio, A thousand brave young sailors, a'whaling for to go.
Singing, blow ye winds of darkness, Blow ye winds hi-ho, Sharpen up your laces now and blow, boys, blow.
The mist was darkening as evening crept over the quiet ocean. A very long way off both men heard the mournful belling of a school of whales, eerie in the isolation.
"Best tell the men to keep quiet," Deacon suggested. "Wouldn't want little Pyra knowing we were crawly-creeping up on her like this. She might lose her calm, and then ye can watch for squalls. Aye, Dr. Tanner. When Pyra Quadde finds fault with life, then it's time to up anchor and run for the shelter of a safe harbor. Believe me."
"I believe you."
"GO OVER THE SIDE, matey."
Ryan had walked alone into the bow of the whaler, leaning on the rail, feeling its cold slickness under his hands. He looked down into the water, which was barely visible in the mist. The voice behind him made him start.
"Slay her quick, cully."
The mumbling, toothless voice could only be that of Johnny Flynn, who was lurking behind the windla.s.s, invisible in the clinging fog.
"Thanks for trying to help," Ryan said quietly. "Appreciated it. Sorry you got yourself-"
"Not the first time."
"Over the side or chill the b.i.t.c.h? You're giving me two bits of advice, Johnny. Which would you take, if you were me?""Can't swim, matey. Hardly a man on the Salvation has that skill."Despite the peril of his situation, Ryan was intrigued at this piece of news.
"Sailors and you can't swim! How can...?" The voice was slurred, indistinct. "Thou goest over into the Lantic... 'less thou dost get a rope thrown to thee as she goes on by, then by the time the ship's turned around thou hast been in the water for an hour. Likely more. Chance of finding a fingernail in a ton of manure's better than getting thyself picked up. So the cold or the sharks get thee. And it's better that thou dost go down fast and stay down. Less pain, outlander. I can't take that much more of the paining."
"So you'd chill Pyra Quadde?"
"No."
"Why not? You told me that I should-"
"Thou still knowest her not. She's faster and stronger than nearly any man on
board. Harder. More cruel. Ruthless and all. She'd kill me."
Ryan grinned into the mist. "Likely she'll kill me, Johnny."
The answer was a long while coming. "Yeah. Likely she will, outlander. But if thou dost want a chance, thou must to strike quick and straight. Like a snake. Or else."
"Or else?"
"Or she'll draw the blaster. Cuff thee in chains to her bed. Frame's cold iron, bolted to the bulkheads and deck. Once that's happened, thou art deader than salt pig."
"I get it. Hadn't figured she'd... I'll think on it, Johnny Flynn. Sharks or the b.i.t.c.h? Fine choice."
But there was no answer. And when he turned on his heel and walked aft along the deck, the s.p.a.ce behind the windla.s.s was filled only with the suffocating wall of fog.
"TOO THICK.".
"Too thick," J.B. repeated.
"Aye. I can no longer hazard my vessel and my men."
"You know we aren't in danger from the sh.o.r.e. You told us. There's no more land out there for a thousand miles."
"There's Pyra Quadde," the captain said stubbornly.
"Captain," Jak interrupted, coming into the cabin to join the others. "We come out sea to catch her. No other reason. Must be close. No?"
"Yeah, sure. But all thou hast said is that we get to her and tie alongside. Ye will take those cannons ye got and blast the living savior out of anything and anybody that gets in your way. Simple as that? Have I got it right?"
The Armorer nodded. "Sure did, Captain. All you got to do is put a man way out on the pointed thing at the front. Bowsprit, would it be called?" Deacon sucked at his teeth and said nothing. J.B. continued. "Out there. Sharpest man you... wait. Krysty, think you can do it?"
She shook her head. "Don't know. This fog distorts so much. But if we keep deathquiet, we gotta hear them before they hear us. Can have a half dozen men relaying the bearing and distance back to Captain Deacon here at the stern. How's that sound?"
Deacon's expression didn't change. Finally he held out his hand to the girl, who shook it with a smile that brightened the poorly lit cabin. "I'll do it, little lady. Truth is, when thou shanghaied the Phoenix and held a blaster to my head... well, darnation! I could have seen thee all over the side and I'd have been smiling as I sailed on. Now... ? Now's different. I'll help thee. We'll do as thou sayest. Thou hast mutie hearing, lady?"
"Sort of. And I can 'see,' you know. Like a doomie but not as clear."
The skipper looked at the flame-haired young woman. "What dost thou see of thy friends on the Salvation!"
Krysty closed her eyes. "Nothing plain. I think the fog's clouding everything down. And it feels like Ryan's in danger, but he's got choices that confuse things."
"So. All of ye wish us to go on in now? Not wait?"
Dix looked the silver-haired man in the eyes. "We go in. Soon as we get to her, we go alongside and hit her hard. Maybe try and hole her with the blasters. They won't fight so hard if their ship's going down under 'em."
Deacon laughed. "I thank the Lord that I am on your side. Who has need of any enemies when friends include ye five?"
THEY CAME FOR RYAN.
Four members of the crew escorted Donfil away, keeping him under guard. "Captain wouldn't want thee harmed, Outlander Ten-from-Ten," Cyrus Ogg told him, hefting a well-preserved Webley revolver.
Ryan's foursome were Second Mate Walsh, Jehu, a pockmarked seaman named Brandt and Johnny Flynn.
Walsh was armed with a rusting Glock 9 mm pistol, while Brandt held a sawed-off scattergun, bracing himself against it as though he were terrified the weapon would go off without warning. The other two men wielded belaying pins. Johnny Flynn caught Ryan's eye and shrugged his shoulders helplessly, struggling to convey the message through body language that this was none of his choosing.
Ryan hadn't expected such a heavily armed escort to Pyra Quadde's bed of s.e.xual delights.
The fog seemed even thicker, the vessel blanketed in a damp silence. There wasn't a breath of wind to tug at the bellying canvas, not a ripple on the gray gla.s.s of the Lantic.
Brandt led the way along the deck, shuffling sideways, stumbling over ringbolts and coiled rope. Walsh snarled at him. "Keep thy finger off that nuke-withered trigger, thou triple-fish-gutter! One fall and thou would blast us all to red spray and bone."
The mate was behind Ryan, with Jehu and Flynn bringing up the rear. The crazie was smiling, his grin filling his tiny face, and as they walked aft he kept up a ceaseless chatter of nonsense.
"Cheese and water and bread and wine and chalk. Sacrament for us all. Drink at the fount of youth and life and death. Bury thy hands in blood to the wrists. Enter the temple of the ear of corn and allow that dominion of death shall be short, short, short."
Ryan said nothing, concentrating on readying himself for what was to come. The shotgun had been an unpleasant surprise. If he made a move to go over the side now, the nervous seaman would probably blow him in two.
"Here," Walsh said, knocking on the door of the cabin. The five men were crowded together in the narrow corridor at the bottom of the short flight of steps down from the quarterdeck.
"Bring him in," the woman barked, and the second mate turned the bra.s.s handle and opened the heavy door.
Pyra Quadde was lying on her double-size bunk. She'd washed and curled her hair, which was coiled tight around her angular skull. Her face was heavily made up, with eyes ringed in mascara and lips slashed scarlet.
Her dress was amazing.
Occasionally, in parts of the Deathlands, you might find an old magazine from before the bright heat. Ryan had seen dozens in his time, and some of them had carried features on what the well-dressed lady of the town should wear for an evening's entertainment.
Captain Quadde's dress seemed to date from that era. It was strapless, cut low at the front, allowing most of her b.r.e.a.s.t.s to surge upward. Then it tapered to the waist and flounced out again until it reached her feet in a tumble of material. It was covered in glittery, shimmery patches of sequin and diamante. There were layers of different colors, one over the other, giving an impression of a great richness of texture. Green predominated, with fiery orange and red, covering deeper tones of blue and purple. Lace and chiffon puffed its way to the surface of the dress in several places.
Yet, despite the ornate finery and elegance of the dress, Ryan's overwhelming impression was of decay. He could almost taste the dry flavor of the tomb and the winding-cloth about the rotting splendor of Pyra Quadde's gown. It was as though she'd risen from some underground catafalque, burst open the bronze doors of an ancient sarcophagus.
"Come in, outlander. I've been waiting for thee." The room carried the heavy smell of homebrew usquebaugh.
On the table near the bed was an a.s.sortment of Pyra Quadde's toys: three whips of varying length, one with tips made from tiny steel nails; an open razor, its edge dulled with old, dried blood; a broad-bladed cleaver and a slim dagger; several coils of silken cord, one with knots all along its length; a mask of supple leather, with what looked like an inflatable phallus-shaped gag attached. A dirty hypodermic needle rested in a stained metal kidney-dish over a small spirit lamp.
"What dost thou want us to do with him, ma'am?" Walsh asked.
"Strip and cuff him, o'course. Didn't think thou wouldst need telling, Mr. Walsh."
Ryan saw then that the bed had a frame of solid iron, painted black, with several st.u.r.dy metal rings set into it at both top and bottom. Once a man was chained there, his life would be done.
"No!" Johnny Flynn shouted, backing up against the door of the cabin.
"How's this, madman?" The captain stood up slowly.
"No. This must stop. Thou dost bring this on thyself by thy..." His voice trembled into stillness, but the pistol in his hand remained steady.
Ryan recognized it as a Polish blaster from the middle of the twentieth century. Called a Duo, it was a pocket-sized 6.35mm handgun. Not of much use above twenty paces, but sufficient in a small, cribbed room.
"Thought I heard a rat sneaking around the ship's gun chest an hour or so back," the woman said gently. "And it was little Johnny, all along."
"Let him be," Flynn said. "Come, outlander. Move cautious, and we'll go over the side. The boats are in the water, ready. Two men can manage 'em. Pull for the sh.o.r.e, eh? Never find us in the fog out yonder. Come on."
Something was wrong. Ryan's fighting sense told him that. Brandt and Walsh were both scared of the blaster. Jehu didn't seem as if he'd even noticed it. But Pyra Quadde acted as though it weren't even there. She was either mad or...
The woman picked up her own blaster from the bureau under the stern window, keeping it pointed at the deck.
"I'll chill thee..." Flynn shrilled, leveling the Duo at her face.
"Not with an empty blaster, cully." She smiled. "Try it." She walked toward him, lifting her own, much larger pistol.
Ryan hissed between his teeth. That was it! She'd known all along there was no danger. The trigger snapped, the action of the blaster clicking, the noise thin and feeble. Flynn tried again. And again.