
“Who? The thralls?” Nicator asked. At Grus’ nod, his lieutenant spat into the Stura.
“They don’t know the difference—or care, either.”
“I know,” Grus said again. “That makes it worse, not better.”
Nicator thought it over. “Well, maybe,” he said.
As Grus passed the wineskin to Nicator, the ship’s wizard bustled up to him. “Excuse
me, Captain—” he began.
“What is it, Turnix?” Grus broke in.
“Seeing shadows that aren’t there again, Turnix?” Nicator added scornfully.
The tubby little wizard turned red. “I do my best to keep this vessel safe,” he said with
dignity.
His “best” had sent sailors scrambling and marines grabbing for their weapons three
times in the past two days. He spied danger whether it was there or not. “What is
it—what do you think it is—this time?” Grus asked with such patience as he could muster.
“May it please you, sir, it’s danger—great danger,” Turnix quavered.
Grus laughed in his face. “Oh, yes, fool, danger pleases me. But what pleases me about
it is that it’ll be no more dangerous than these last three times. For that, I thank Olor and
all the other gods.”
“All but one,” Turnix said, and Grus nodded. No Avornan would thank the Banished
One. He was less than a god these days for his banishment, but more dangerous to mere
men than all the heavenly hierarchy put together. For, being banished from the heavens,
he manifested himself on the suffering earth and meddled directly in the affairs of men.
“Well, what is this danger, then?” Grus asked gruffly. “Have Ulash’s men crossed over
to the north bank of the river? Have they set some sort of ambush for the Tigerfish? Has
he put galleys of his own in the Stura?”
“None of those, sir. Worse than those, sir,” the wizard answered.
The sailors muttered, some in fear, some in derision. Nicator said, “Fling him over the
rail and let him swim home, the useless, shivering son of a yellow dog.”
“I know what I know,” Turnix declared.
“I know what you know, too,” Grus said. “Less than you think you know, that’s what
you know. And until you know you know less than you think you know, I think you’d
better know enough to get out of my sight.”
That wasn’t easy to do on a river galley, which measured only about eighty feet from
ram to dragon, forepost to rudder. Turnix did make himself scarce, though, and that
served well enough. “Too bad he doesn’t make himself disappear,” Nicator muttered
darkly.
As the sun sank behind the Tigerfish, her anchors splashed into the river at bow and
stern. Grus ate hard bread and salty sausage with his men, and washed supper down with
wine. He made sure the night watch was strong—the Banished One claimed the darkness
as his own. After everything seemed as safe as Grus could make it, he lay down on the
deck planking, wrapped himself in a thick wool blanket, and fell asleep.
And he discovered that Turnix wasn’t such a bumbler after all. For when Grus fell
asleep that night, he dreamt, and when he dreamt, he saw the Banished One face-to-face.
He fought to wake up, of course. He fought, and lost, and wished the wizard had been
wrong instead of all too right.
“I see you, Grus,” the Banished One said. His voice and his face held the same