
the Tsubasa's decks at the storm's initial onslaught. Well, he told himself resignedly as he went from
group to group, hauling hawsers here, lashing down wildly swinging spars there, what can you expect
from a crew dredged up from Sha'angh'sei's bituminous waterfront dens but drunken ex-sailors and
drugged-out petty criminals whose dreams had been faded by time and evil incidence? He should never
have allowed himself to cobble together such a crew, but the urge to return to his native Iskael with his
love, Aufeya Seguillas y Oriwara, had been too much for him. He had been on dry land far too long.
This morning, six-and-a-half weeks out from Sha'angh'sei, the principal port on the southern face of the
continent of man, he had been belowdeck with Aufeya, having already tested the wind thrice during the
cormorant watch and learning nothing for his efforts. Or else he had been distracted by Aufeya. He had
asked her to marry him when they reached his home in Iskael and she had accepted, her joy igniting the
copper of her eyes.
A gray-green wave, opaque in its turbulence, sprang over the taffrail, soaking Moichi where he labored
with a tangle of loose and shattered tackle. On his knees, he shouted a warning to those down below as
the water roared across the mid-deck. It was then that Moichi felt the underlying power of the storm, and
he knew that this was no ordinary tempest that periodically whirled through the eastern stretches of the
Iskael Sea. For an instant, his mind seemed aware of something beyond the storm, yet quite a part of it,
almost - and this was almost laughable - a kind of malevolent presence, as if the typhoon itself were alive.
But that was quite impossible, he told himself, and went on with his frantic duties.
To make matters worse, the Tsubasa was no ordinary ship on which he had learned the art of navigation
and sailing; it was a Bujun vessel - a gift from Moichi's bond-brother, the legendary Dai-San, who had
saved the world of man from the Dolman and the invading forces of Chaos in the Kai-feng, the final cata
clysmic battle that signaled the end of the Ages of Darkness and Necromancy.
The Tsubasa was like all things Bujun - that remote island chain the Dai-San had visited - delicate and
mysterious as the mist that enshrouded its shores. The Bujun were reclusive, master warriors who
preferred their own company. Many tales existed regarding the Bujun. One such insisted that they rode
through the skies astride great horned and winged dragons called Kaer'n.
Though Moichi was a master navigator, he had yet to fully grasp the intricacies and peculiarities of this
magnificent, superbly constructed Bujun vessel. As he rose, dizzy, blowing seawater from his nostrils, he
cursed the impatience that had led him to set out for home too soon and with an improper crew. He
staggered down the companionway to the mid-deck like an over-confident wrestler who, having stepped
into the ring, was only now realizing the hidden reserves that lay behind the obvious strength of sinew of
his opponent.
He risked a glance upward. There was no horizon. Instead, scudding clouds like angry bruises dipped to
meet the rising sea, creating an almost seamless whole, a vast, writhing beast within whose belly the ship
rocked and yawed dangerously. In every groan from the seasoned kyoki-wood timbers, from every pitch
the ship took in the ever darkening swells, from the precarious bowing of the masts before the shrieking,
gyring winds, his senses picked up the beginnings of the Tsubasa's death throes.
God bear witness, he berated himself, this would not have happened if I'd not been so involved
belowdecks. Aufeya! Even now his thoughts betrayed him, straying to the silkiness of her creamy skin,
the look of longing and love filling her copper eyes, the pleasure -sometimes gentle, other times fierce - of
their nights together in the captain's cabin.
Dammit, no! Moichi had been born to be master of the seas: a navigator. And now, as captain of his own
ship, he had at last achieved a lifelong dream. No storm, unnatural or no, would rip his new charge from
beneath his bootsoles. Oh no, he vowed, gripping the railing to regain his balance. By the Oruboros, the