“Yes, yes, long live the queen.”
Galin’s eyes flickered with a sort of weary amusement at the man’s mistake while Luthene grabbed hold of the man and pricked his back his her knife. While she moved in a blur, Galin stepped between her and the docked ship, his sword hissing out of its fleece-lined scabbard. “I would not suggest your hand moving any farther, friend,” he said with a menacing smile at one of the men who had stepped onto the dock moments after the impostor. The man had seemed keenly interested in the pair when they began to speak with the counterfeit Sanders and Galin had sensed his gaze from where he had been casually lounging against a bale of hides meant for a tanner’s yard. When Luthene moved, the leaning man had lurched forward and his hand gripped the hilt of his sword, looking to intervene. “Ahh well,” Galin said, almost regretfully, and stepped forward with a viper’s quickness. The point of his blade drove into the man’s throat and his eyes blinked in surprise as he dropped to the dock. Galin kicked the body from the blade and pushed it into the harbor. “Now,” he said, turning to the false noble, “you and I will be having words. Alyson, follow me.”
Luthene bundled the impostor along, her knife still at the man’s back and Galin led them through the crowded dock. His bared, blooded blade was enough to clear the three a wide berth, even among the rough types that lined the quayside. Galin had spied a Northern boat put into port on the next wharf and he steered instinctively toward it. They would likely look the other way while Galin did what needed to be done, especially for another Northman. “To the curling prows,” he called back to Luthene, and shoulder his way toward the ship, shoving aside anyone in his path. Killing the other man had bought them time but if they wanted to find the proper noble, he would have to be found past. Galin thought, in their place, if word reached him that the deception was discovered, he would likely have slit Sanders’ throat and left town in a hurry, so it was a race against time.
The ship was a large one, one of the bigger Galin had seen and was commanded by Aelle, a bluff, hard-faced man with a large war axe and a tame magic woman at his side. A few coins was all it took to have Aelle’s crew lining the wharf in their war gear and gave Galin and Luthene the privacy of the hull. With the ship in for repairs, there was plenty that Galin could use to help persuade the impostor to give the information more quickly than simple questioning. As Luthene pushed the man aboard, Galin smiled and threw a few more pieces of sea coal into the small portable forge and then stirred a small bucket of bubbling pitch, grinning wickedly at the man as he did.
"Let's save us a few minutes, shall we? The lovely lady here would ask you a whole host of questions and you would play dumb. She would get pretty riled, maybe hit you a time or two, but in the end, you and I would be the one's talking. So Alyson, you head along, stay on the dock, could you? It's best we let me do what I need to in peace."
The man tried to rush Galin but the warrior was expecting it. He spun on his heel and backhanded the man across the face, sending him staggering into the gunwale. Following a step behind, he took the man by his collar and rammed him against the mast. "Try that again and you'll lose your kneecaps," Galin said, his tone soft, almost a whisper, as he wrapped thick hempen rope around the man, securing him to the mast. "As it stands, we've come to that part of the questioning where you start to lose things anyhow. How much you lose really comes down to how much I trust you. So convince me."
Galin picked his bloodied sword up and pressed it against the man’s throat until it broke the skin and a drop of blood glistened against the steel of the blade. “Oh, that’s right.” Galin withdrew the blade and the man let out a breath he did not know he had been holding. “That wouldn’t be the right place to start.” He placed the blade on the small carpenter’s table and took a up a pair of smith’s tongs instead. “You know, when they build these ships, each iron nail, it’s fashioned to fit a specific hole in the hull?” Galin idly turned one of the nails left in the forge with the tongs, drawing it out so the man could see the yellow glow. “It’s the only time you’ll see fire on a Northern ship, when they are making the nails. It’s almost a sacred thing, I would say.” He spoke softly, his voice barely carrying over the hissing of the sea coal and the creaking of the ship’s boards as small waves lapped against its side.
“Now, though, you’ll be hoping the Maker’s listening to you right now, you lying bastard. Because if he ain’t listening yet, you’ll get loud enough to hear him. You’ll be shouting the answers til all Canelux hears you.” He turned around, a ship’s nail in the grip of the tongs and brought it up to the man’s face. The man twisted away but Galin persisted, keeping the glowing heat just in front of the man’s eyes until he could swear he was blind and the hairs of his eyebrows and beard began to scorch. Galin said nothing, looking at him with silent menace in his cold, blue eyes, then abruptly turned and thrust the nail back into the flames. “So I will give you one chance so you can pass the worst of this. Who are you? Where is the proper Sanders? And what were you planning to do in Adeluna? But before you open your gob,” Galin said, cutting off a sputtering flow of words from the man lashed to the mast, “remember this. You lie to me and I will make your last minutes on this world so full of pain and in the end, you will tell me anyway. You will weep it, shout it, stammer it, but it will not matter. If you lie, your end will be a long howl across the Bridge of Swords.”
The man swallowed, eyes darting around with fear. He did not trust this Northman and looked in mute appeal toward the woman, but Galin snapped his fingers to get the man’s attention. “So,” he said, his tone still even and friendly, “what is it you have to say?” He stepped up to the man and yanked apart his tunic, leaving his chest exposed. While the man collected himself, Galin pulled nail from the fire again and held it up to the man’s face again.
“I… I don’t know where they keep him. I am just… they paid me to play the part. I thought it was a joke or something!” The man’s voice cracked as he slipped over his words and Galin simply smiled.
“So you’re some sort of actor? Well… time to see if you can convince me!” Galin raked the nail down the skin of his chest. The man’s scream startled gulls that were perched on the mast’s arm and they screeched in protest as they took wing. The nail dragged over the man’s chest and in its wake, the skin burned and bubbled, leaving a puckered ridged welt in its wake. “Ahh, you see, I am not convinced. And you lied. I did warn you, didn’t I?” Galin thrust the nail back into the fire and picked up a carpenter’s hammer and chisel. “Now stay still. This will hurt you far more than it will hurt me.” Galin knelt at the bottom of the ship’s hold and placed the iron chisel hard against the knuckle of the man’s little finger.
“Still sticking to the story?” Galin did not give him a chance to answer. He brought the hammer down in a powerful stroke and the chisel cleaved clean through the joint. The man cursed and groaned, to shocked to scream. The finger dropped to Galin’s feet and a splash of blood colored his cheek. Scooping up the finger, he showed it to the bound man. “If you think that hurt, imagine when I chisel off that shriveled prick of yours.” The man whimpered as Galin tossed the severed finger to hiss and sizzle in the brazier of coals. “But I am not an unreasonable man,” Galin said as he returned with the bucket of pitch. “I will make sure you live. No sense in you bleeding to death.” He took the man’s stump and pushed it slowly into the bubbling pitch and this time he screamed again. Careful to leave the bucket beneath the man’s hand as the pitch dripped and dried so as not to damage Aelle’s ship, Galin yanked the nail from the fire again and strode to the man. “And now?”
“I… my name is… Irwin. I am a household guard to a lord in Adeluna. He gave me orders and that is all I know. That is all!” The man nodded, trying to convince Galin that it was all he knew. “And I haven’t a clue about Sanders. He’s gone for all I know.”
Galin shook his head sadly. “No honor in southrons,” he said as he scored another line down the man’s chest, leaving a raw, angry line. Again and again the nails raked flesh and returned to the flames, the hammer struck the chisel through flesh and bone, and again and again Galin calmly repeated his questions. Slowly the story began to unfold as Irwin’s chest became a checkerboard of pain. The man had been part of a party of six men that posed as new members of the crew on Sanders’ ship. They captured and secreted the man when he first boarded and Irwin took his place. The rest of the crew did not know the six so Irwin’s deception went unnoticed. When the ship docked, Irwin was to play the role of Sanders and the rest of the men took the noble to a small stone house just beyond the wharves. Irwin would return to court, spy for his lord, and pass along whatever intelligence he could glean to help the loyalists to the old regime. Galin nodded as the man told his story in sobs of pain, slowly turning a nail in the brazier.
“Sadly, Irwin, I think you are still lying.”
The man whimpered again, a defeated noise of a broken man, and still Galin heated the nail. “I swear on all the gods that it is true. I’ve told you everything.”
“It is a shame I do not believe you,” Galin said, almost pityingly, and turned with the glowing hot nail. “It is a shame, you see, because now I have to take your eyes. They sizzle like eggs in a pan when you take them with flame, and run like boiling water down your cheek. I hate it myself but you have left me no choice.” He inched the nail closer, the yellow tip an inch from the man’s face. The heat of the nail seared the man’s face and he screamed, begging for mercy. “Tell the truth, Irwin, and you may keep your eyes.”
“Alright, alright. I was to kill the Queen! That’s the truth! I was supposed to pose as Sanders long enough to kill her then escape in the confusion. Dear gods, that’s the truth,” he said, weeping as the truth finally tumbled out of him. Galin pushed the nail back into the flickering brazier and patted Irwin’s cheek. “Good man, Irwin. You’ve earned your eyes. Pity about your hand, though.” Galin nodded to the mangled, pitch-covered remains of his left hand. “Now, I will go get the proper Sanders and I will leave you with some new friends of mine. If you have sent me into a trap, they will make this last hour seem like a paradise.”
Galin picked up his sword and used the man’s torn shirt to wipe some of the blood off its blade before slamming it back into its scabbard. “Alyson, you heard the man. We’ve got a location. And maybe some of our new friends can join us!” Hauling himself over the side, Galin dropped to the wharf and staggered to the side over the water. He seemed unsteady for a moment then threw up the remains of his meal into the sea. “Maker, may I never have to do that again,” he said, clutching the amulet around his neck. He retched again then wiped his mouth with a corner of his cloak. “Maker’s bollocks. So, shipmaster, could I impose on you a little further?”
Another haggling exchange between the men found Galin with a small but well-armed section of the ship’s crew and Aelle a few crescents richer for it, and a few more for holding the prisoner. He even offered armor for the pair so they would live long enough to pay him the second half of his price. “All right, let’s move,” Galin growled and, checking that Luthene was close at hand, jogged up the wharf and toward the warehouses. “Bloody nobles and bloody plots, it will be the death of me yet.”