THE (tlpq-4)

Read Online THE (tlpq-4) by Daniel Abraham - Free Book Online

Book: THE (tlpq-4) by Daniel Abraham Read Free Book Online
Authors: Daniel Abraham
Tags: sf_fantasy
Ads: Link
the ships that had left Saraykeht all those months
    before had looked like an invading fleet, the ones returning were a city
    built on the water. The high-masted Galtic ships with their great
    billowing sails dyed red and blue and gold took to the sea by the
    dozens. Every great family of Galt seemed bent on sending a ship greater
    than the others. The ships of the utkhaiem-lacquered and delicate and
    low to the water-seemed small and awkward beside these, their newest
    seafaring cousins. Birds circled above them, screaming confusion as if a
    part of the coast itself had set out for foreign lands. The trees and
    hills of Otah's onetime enemies fell away behind them. That first night,
    the torches and lanterns made the sea appear as full of stars as the sky.
     
    One of the small gifts the gods had granted Otah was a fondness for
    travel by ship. The shifting of the deck under his feet, the vast scent
    of the ocean, the call of the gulls were like visiting a place he had
    once lived. He stood at the prow of the great Galtic ship given him by
    the High Council for his journey home and looked out at the rising sun.
     
    He had spent years in the eastern islands as a boy. He'd been a middling
    fisherman, a better midwife's assistant, a good sailor. He had come
    close to marrying an island woman, and still bore the first half of the
    marriage tattoo on his breast. The ink had faded and spread over the
    years as if he were a parchment dropped in water. With the slap of waves
    against wood, the salt-laden air, the morning light dancing gold and
    rose on the water, he remembered those days.
     
    This late in the morning, he would already have cast his nets. His
    fingers would have been numbed by the cold. He would have been eating
    the traditional breakfast of fish paste and nuts from an earthenware
    jar. The men he had known would be doing the same today, those who were

still alive. In another life, another world, he might be doing it still.
     
    He had lived so many lives: half-starved street child; petty thief;
    seafront laborer; fisherman; assistant midwife; courier; Khai; husband;
    father; war leader; emperor. Put in a line that way, he could see how
    another person might imagine his life to be an unending upward spiral,
    but it didn't feel that way to him. He had done what he'd had to at the
    time. One thing had led to another. A man without particular ambition
    had been placed atop the world, and likewise the world had been placed
    atop him. And against all probability, he found himself here, wearing
    the richest robes in the cities, with a private cabin larger than some
    boats he'd worked, and thinking fondly of fish paste and nuts.
     
    Lost in thought, he heard the little ship's boat hail-a booming voice
    speaking Galtic words-before he knew it was approaching. The watchman of
    his own vessel replied, and then the landsman's chair descended. Otah
    watched idly as a man in the colors of House Dasin was winched up, swung
    over, and lowered to the deck. A knot of Otah's own clerks and servants
    formed around the newcomer. Otah pulled his hands up into his sleeves
    and made his way back.
     
    The boy was a servant of some sort-the Galts had a system of gradation
    that Otah hadn't bothered to memorize-with hair the color of beach sand
    and a greenish tint to his face. Seeing Otah, the servant took a pose of
    abject obeisance poorly.
     
    "Most High," he said, his words heavily inflected, "Councilman Dasin
    sends his regards. He and his wife extend the invitation to a dinner and
    concert aboard the Avenger tomorrow evening."
     
    The boy gulped and looked down. There had, no doubt, been a more formal
    and flowery speech planned. Nausea led to brevity. Otah glanced at his
    Master of Tides, a youngish woman with a face like a hatchet and a mind
    for detail that would have served her in any trade. She took a pose that
    deferred to Otah's judgment, gave permission, and offered to make excuse
    all with a single gesture. Dasin's

Similar Books

Butcher's Road

Lee Thomas

Zugzwang

Ronan Bennett

Betrayed by Love

Lila Dubois

The Afterlife

Gary Soto