
grunted. "Still, the prince seems pretty sure of you. He read one of your
treatises or somesuch. How will you do it?"
"How do you imagine I will do it?" Fool Wolf asked.
"You don't have to be mysterious," Kreth replied, a bit sulkily. "If you
can't tell me, just say so."
"I can't tell you, but you can guess, and I can nod yes or no."
"Never mind then. I'm not good at such games, and I shall see shortly, yes?"
He reached over and gave Fool Wolf a slap on the back that clacked his teeth
together. "But you can do it?"
"Of course." Fool Wolf glanced over at Kreth. "What's your part in all of
this? Aside from making sure I do my part?"
"I'm the hunter," Kreth replied. "I will find the Python King's treasure,
never fear. He cannot hide it from me."
"I don't doubt that for a moment," Fool Wolf replied.
That's all Fool Wolf got from Kreth, and the hunter was too smart to push
any further. Fool Wolf didn't want to ask a question that raised even minor
suspicion-he didn't know what Lohar Pang was supposed to know. As long as he
was on this boat, with nothing but sea around, he might as well be in Prince
Fa's palace.
Thus it was, two days later, when Kreth came to Fool Wolf's cabin and said,
"It is time," he still didn't have a fart's whisper of what it was time for.
Up on deck, Kreth pointed to the first land Fool Wolf had seen since the
coastline of Fanva faded in the west. It was an island, looking something like
a giant black horse tooth sticking up out of the water, with its sheer black
cliffs and flat top.
"That is Ranga Lehau," Kreth commented. "According to our charts, we cross
the tapu when we pass those rocks."
Fool Wolf saw the rocks he meant, two pillars of stone jutting up from the
water, perhaps three ship's lengths apart. They looked manmade. At the rate
the boat was moving, they would reach them soon.
As Fool Wolf studied the rocks and the island, Kreth shuffled impatiently.
"Shouldn't you get started?" He asked. He sounded nervous.
"Don't tell me my business," Fool Wolf snapped. Then, a bit more
mysteriously, "besides, I have started."
"Oh. I thought there would be more-chanting, or something."
"In a moment," Fool Wolf said. "If you will kindly darken your mouth."
The rocks were closer. "Chugaachik!" Fool Wolf chanted. "Do you have any
idea what these fools want of me?" He sang in his own tongue, Mang, not a
language anyone else on the ship was likely to know.
<<I don't know,>> the goddess answered, in that silent place between his
breaths. <<Why not let me kill them all? That would solve the problem.>>
"Because I don't think we can kill them all, even with your power," he sang.
That was a half-truth. He hated Chugaachik, who had killed most everyone he
had ever loved and made him a rootless wanderer, far from his native land. She
just might be able to kill everyone on the ship, but letting her have her way,
even to save his life, was not something he was willing to do unless he knew
he had no choice.
Besides, it was his body she used, his body that paid for her excesses.
They were almost to the pillars.
<<But,>> Chugaachik offered reluctantly, <<there is a large and powerful god
crouching there, beneath the water.>>
The sea raised up in a mound, and the nose of the boat tilted with it. Fool
Wolf ran and jumped as far as he could toward the island. When he hit the
water, he began stroking furiously, ignoring the brief screams and rending of
wood behind him.
Fifteen days later none of the bodies or supplies from the ship had washed
ashore anywhere. He knew - he had made a compete circuit of the island. In the
four days it had taken, Fool Wolf had seen no sign of human life and no way to