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Mother Bears




  Chapter One: Waking the Bear

  Kran tapped his slate, louder this time, and Jendara gave in, looking up from her ledger. The boy’s blue eyes gleamed as his chalk squeaked, underlining the word “please” a second time—his equivalent of begging. Jendara’s lips moved as she read the note.

  “You want to play marbles on the beach? With some village boys?”

  He nodded his head, making the yellow tassels of his cap dance. The tip of his nose was pink from the cold sea air.

  She grunted. “Just don’t take too long. Captain Vorrin wants to catch the outgoing tide, and that means all packed up by sunset.”

  He swiped his slate with his sleeve, scribbled a thanks, and then darted down the gangplank. Jendara’s eyes followed him along the pier until he cut over to the small strip of beach. She trusted Kran more than most mothers trusted their eight-year-olds, but she liked knowing where he was. He didn’t get social invitations very often. There weren’t many on the islands who could read, or who’d go near a god-touched boy with no speech.

  She realized she was holding her quill too tightly, and put it down. Anyway, someone was approaching the ship-turned-market square: a big man with the dung-crusted boots of an island farmer. He reminded Jendara of her father, and she tried not to smile at him. Bad enough being a woman in this business; it wouldn’t do to look soft.

  “You got something real heavy in that pack of yours.” She cleared the ledger and writing case off the table to make room for his wares. She’d been buying lots of ivory and whalebone this trip—always in high demand on the mainland—but whatever he carried in his pack looked soft. Furs, maybe.

  “Ayuh. It’s a load alright.” The man dropped his bag with a thud that made the table creak. He undid the knotted ties and the sack slid open, revealing a pile of deep brown furs.

  “What did you catch?” The fur felt sleek and oily beneath her fingers, the hairs coarse.

  He didn’t answer at first, working with the bag. Now Jendara could see that this great mass wasn’t a stack of pelts, but one magnificent hide, and her heart quickened. This could be worth a lot of gold to the right buyer.

  He began unfolding the hide. “It’s big.”

  “Grizzly?”

  “Ayuh.” He shifted on his feet, frowning as he recollected. “It was in with the sheep, killing anything that moved. Had to protect my stock.”

  A paw hit the ship’s deck, and she could see claws longer than her own hand. She couldn’t imagine facing something so huge gone on a killing spree. “How’d you kill it?”

  “Arrow through the eye. Then I jumped on its back and cut its throat.” He’d uncovered the head, well cured and massive, but marred by a white patch of fur like a lightning bolt down the nose. “Woulda kept it, but the wife said it was probably unlucky, way it was acting. Figured you’d give me a fair price for it.”

  Jendara mentally calculated a few figures. It was a good pelt, and she knew a dealer in Magnimar looking for quality winter furs. She named her price, and the farmer grinned hugely. He spat on his palm and stuck it out, just as her father had done every deal he ever struck. She spat on her own and shook as fiercely as he did.

  “We should drink. This deal is good for both of us.”

  “Yul is a typical islander—gruff and hard, but kind all the same.”

  She looked out at the docks. No one else approached, and the sun was already low in the sky. She doubted anyone further would be looking to trade with her. “All right.”

  Someone laid a hand on her shoulder. “You two mind a little company?”

  Jendara shrugged. She hadn’t heard Vorrin behind her, but wasn’t surprised by his sudden appearance. Her husband, Ikran, had asked Vorrin to look after her and Kran as he’d lain bleeding out on the deck of a captured caravel. She couldn’t hold it against either of them, much as she wanted to.

  “You have a name, Bear Hunter?” Vorrin put out his hand. “I’m Vorrin, captain of this ship.”

  The farmer’s lips thinned as he took Vorrin’s measure. Vorrin’s close-cropped black hair and thin mustache were a strike against him here on the archipelago. His accent, city-fine, didn’t help. The farmer hooked his thumbs in his belt, a conspicuous rejection of the hand. “I am Yul.”

  “Lead us to the nearest ale, friend.” Jendara stepped between the two men, hurrying Yul down the gangplank. She could feel Vorrin’s eyes on her back, and could easily imagine the irritated expression. He abided the Ironbound Archipelago because she wanted to do business here, because he loved his nephew and believed in keeping his word. But he didn’t like this cold, rough land.

  The crunch of gravel beneath her boots made Jendara smile. It had been one thing to leave the islands for the man she loved, but she’d never felt right when she was away. Here the stone lay just beneath the tough heath, and the beaches were long stretches of gray rock and gravel. Even the land was hard here. It went without saying that the people worked hard, fought hard, and grew hard as frozen leather under the wind’s cold buffeting.

  But business had been brisk in this town, and the wind a constant reminder that she had a trade route to finish before the winter sea grew too rough for Vorrin’s ship, the Milady. Jendara hadn’t taken a moment to visit the village. It wasn’t so different from the place where she’d grown up. The steep peaks of the house roofs stood out from the green turf climbing up the walls, the houses themselves snuggled down into the earth. They could withstand any storm, stay warm in any gale—little tough houses for big tough people.

  A donkey huffed at her as they passed a lean-to where animals could wait out of the weather. Jendara patted its shaggy head and then hurried to catch up as Yul pushed opened the nearest door, releasing the pungent tang of peat smoke and spilled ale.

  Jendara stepped inside and was struck by the realization that she had been here before. She could remember sitting at the little bar, rubbing oils into the backs of her still-itching hands, tossing back drinks that burned her throat but eased the fresh sting of the tattoos. She touched the back of her hand, the now-old ink covered by fingerless gloves. She could easily imagine the black jolly rogers beneath the wool, puffy and peeling as they had that night. So it must have been the end of her first pirate tour, pockets loaded and a lust to prove herself filling her heart.

  Yul nodded at the barkeep, a shaven-headed man as broad as Yul and just as bearded. The man filled three tankards in quick succession, sliding them down the bar without a word. Jendara drank a long pull of the foaming stuff.

  “Well, well, if it ain’t the famous Jendara. I thought the rumors of you turning respectable were gullshit, but look at you out here, drinking with the farmers.”

  Jendara put down her tankard with deliberate softness. She turned to face the voice—one of those nasty, thin voices she’d come to associate with cowards. There was no point ignoring it: men like this only responded to intimidation. She folded her arms across her sheepskin vest and let her ice-blue eyes speak for her.

  A short and dirty man stood in front of the nearest table, where a knot of men sat drinking. The little man sneered. He wasn’t a native—the brown hair and narrow jaw, far too small for all his yellow teeth, proved that. From the waves of fish stench wafting off his layered sweaters, she imagined him a very minor pirate who made ends meet by fishing.

  The worst kind of pirate. The jolly rogers on the back of her hands felt suddenly hot, as if Besmara, chief bitch and goddess of all pirates, agreed with Jendara’s pronouncement.

  She peeled off her gloves slowly, letting everyone in the bar see the tattoos.

  “Jenny, Jenny, Jenny.” The weasely man took a swig of beer and grinned down at her. She remembered him now. He’d once asked Ikran for a position on their boat, and she’d had to throw him overboard when he didn
’t like Ikran’s answer. Gorg. That was his name.

  Gorg’s grin grew wider as he leaned toward her. “You still watching over that mute brat of yours?”

  The jolly roger seemed to laugh as her knuckles connected with Gorg’s face, splitting the skin over his cheekbone with the force of the blow. He screamed and dropped to his knees—not incapacitated, but going for his boot knife. Jendara lashed out with her heel, launching the man backward across the room.

  She hadn’t paid attention to other men at the table, but they must have been Gorg’s friends, because they exploded up from their seats, snarling. Men screamed. Knives hissed free of their scabbards. Jendara laughed and slipped her axe free of her belt.

  The weapon’s haft shook with its own mirth as she brought the blunt end down on a man’s skull, then jerked her arm backward, slamming the handle’s butt into another man’s solar plexus. Both sailors dropped. Jendara looked around for more, but Grog was already draped senseless across a chair, and the last of his companions was currently dangling from Vorrin’s fist, toes not quite touching the floor.

  The tavern door flew open, the low light of afternoon like a lighthouse beam cutting through the thick air. A man stood framed in the doorway. Jendara recognized him as Vorrin’s first mate. Silence filled the room.

  Vorrin released the man he’d been holding up by the sweater-front. The sailor crumpled to the ground. “Tam? Something the matter?”

  “Ayuh.” The word reminded Jendara that Tam was a fellow islander. He hesitated in the doorway.

  “Well what, man?”

  “It’s the boy.” Tam stepped inside, bobbing his head uncomfortably. “I saw a whole group of lads come racing up from the beach, laughing like loons. But Kran weren’t with ‘em.”

  Jendara felt her knees go soft, and she put her hand down on the bar to steady herself.

  “Looked down the beach, but there weren’t no sign of the boy. Figured we ought to go look for him.”

  Jendara sheathed her axe and moved toward the door. Vorrin clapped his hand on her shoulder. “Don’t go off half-cocked.”

  She shook his hand loose. “I’ve got to find my son.”

  “No purpose going by yourself,” Yul warned. “Folks don’t tolerate strangers around here.”

  Jendara’s lips thinned. She knew it was true—knew the close-knittedness of islanders—but resented it anyway. “He isn’t like other boys. There’s been trouble other places.”

  Yul didn’t ask for details, but opened the door. “I’ll help you look for him.”

  Jendara nodded curtly, rage boiling her veins, some of it residual, some of it the goddess’s, and most of it for anyone who might hurt her child. Beyond Yul’s shoulder, a knot of sniggering boys huddled under the lean-to where the donkey had waited. A growl bubbled up in Jendara’s throat.

  “You don’t know they’ve done anything wrong,” Vorrin whispered.

  But she did, just from their wicked laughter, their covert glances. She did know, from the hush that fell over the little group as they saw the strangers coming their way. A shiver of cold warning ran down her spine.

  One of the boys held a yellow tassel between his fingers. A yellow tassel just like the ones she’d sewn onto Kran’s hat.

  Chapter Two: Ill Tide

  “Where’s my son?” Jendara’s voice rumbled like a great beast’s growl. Vorrin gripped her elbow, hard.

  The boys stared back at her for a second, then bolted.

  “Come back!” Jendara yanked her arm, but Vorrin kept his grip.

  “They won’t talk to you,” he snapped. “Hell, you scare me.”

  Yul chuckled. “You’re right, mainlander. The boys will run home to hide. We’ll go door to door. I know their fathers.”

  But as he led them deeper into the village, a hunting horn blew a long blast, then two short. Yul stiffened. “That’s the call to town meeting. The emergency signal.”

  “We’ll come,” Vorrin said, and tightened his grip on Jendara’s arm. She could feel her heart pick up its beat. An emergency, and Kran missing…

  The narrow walkways filled with people, all chattering in high, tense tones. Everyone hurried toward the peak-roofed structure at the center of the village, the only building unclad by turf, and painted in dizzying shades of reds and blues. The church and meeting house. Jendara’s family had practiced no faith, but town business was serious religion for anyone in a small town. She’d spent plenty of time in her own village’s meeting hall. Just looking at it made her feel smaller and younger.

  But her shoulders stiffened as she stepped inside. An elder in a wise woman’s black kirtle and chemise stood beside a bandaged man, who alone sat on a wooden bench. The right side of his beard was blackened, in some places singed to the skin. The woman offered him a mug, and he sipped at it with a grimace.

  Yul leaned to whisper at Jendara and her friends: “That’s Birn, the chief’s son from our neighbormost island. Their best fighter.”

  The cold prickling on Jendara’s neck intensified. Instinct told her that whatever trouble had beset Birn somehow touched her son.

  Another man stepped onto a podium. His red cloak proclaimed him a leader of some kind, and his craggy face bore more than a passing resemblance to Yul’s. “Grave news, my friends. A goblin raiding party attacked our neighbors. Birn here rowed an hour to bring half a dozen wounded children to be treated by our wise woman.”

  Birn looked up, unflinching as the woman in question tightened a bandage around his right hand. “Most of our warriors are away, on a trading expedition. Our women and older children even now fight the fires the creatures have set. Our own wise woman was ripped apart by their dogs.”

  Jendara shook her head. This was bad news. With the benefit of surprise, a crew of goblins could wreck an entire village. Those people needed help. But she didn’t have time to go on a rescue mission. She had a son to find. She began to turn away from the speakers, but paused as her eye caught movement at the front of the room. A towheaded boy hurried toward the man in the red cloak. She would have recognized him anywhere.

  She tugged Yul’s fur vest. “That’s the one who stole my boy’s tassel.”

  He frowned. “My nephew, Oric. We’ll have to wait for the meeting to finish before we approach my brother.”

  Jendara shifted on impatient feet, listening as the warriors around her suggested and discarded course after course of action. Several of the women spoke quietly to the wise woman and then hurried off to their duties: preparing the warriors’ fighting gear, gathering medicine, darting over to the wise woman’s cottage to tend the injured children. Even if this was her home village, Jendara knew she wouldn’t be joining them. She had taken on a warrior’s life when she joined the pirate crew, closing the door on such domestic fellowship.

  Yul caught her attention and they pushed forward through the crowd. His brother had neatly divided the group into parties, and now he clasped wrists with each of the men he’d commanded to lead. For a moment, Jendara pitied the goblins. These men knew battle, with their seamed faces and silvered scars. Most islanders practiced trade as the seasons turned, but in a land of quick tempers and fierce pride, everyone brought their shields and belt axes to the trading table.

  “Yul.” The leader clapped his brother on the shoulder. “I thought you’d stay with your wife. Her belly is fit to burst.”

  “Ayuh, her time is near.” Yul leaned closer to his brother’s ear. “I didn’t come to volunteer, Morul. I came to ask you about your boy. I fear he brought harm to a visitor, the son of my new friend Jendara.”

  “Islanders give little credit to a mainlander like Vorrin.”

  The light-haired boy crept back into the shadows behind his father. Jendara narrowed her eyes at him.

  Morul grunted. “There’s a boatload of injured here to tend, and a second to follow. There are goblins on Black Bay Island and no idea how they got there. I’ve got a war party to lead and defenses ready. I’ve no time to talk about children.”

>   “I’ll help with your goblins if you help with my boy,” Jendara interjected. “Just need a word with your son, that’s all. Get my boy back safe.”

  Morul looked Jendara from head to toe. He could be Yul’s twin, he looked so much like the craggy farmer, and a sharp intelligence flared behind his blue eyes. The islanders followed him not just for his brawn, but his brain. “Why are you so worried about your boy, woman?”

  She set her jaw. “He’s a mute. Plenty of folks reckon that’s reason enough to give him trouble.”

  Morul nodded. “Ayuh, that’s reason to worry.” He glanced at her belt axe. “You any good with that thing?”

  Vorrin spoke first. “I served beside her in many battles. She’s faster and meaner than any man I’ve ever sailed with.” Beside him, Tam nodded.

  The leader of the islanders looked unimpressed.

  Jendara tried not to shift impatiently. Her father would have never taken Vorrin’s word, either. “My father led the men of his island in twenty-five battles and never lost a one. He trained me like I was his son, and kept me at his right hand for six trading parlays.”

  “And his name?”

  “Erik Eriksson the White.”

  Both Yul and Morul looked pleased. It was not a great or famous name, but well traveled. Like her abilities with axe and sword, trade was in Jendara’s blood naturally. Everyone knew Erik Eriksson the White.

  “A fine man and long missed. I will accept your offer of help against the goblins.” Morul turned to the boy. “Oric is a boy for pranks. Come here, lad.”

  The towheaded boy slunk toward them, his hands twisted behind his back.

  “Show me the tassel,” Jendara snapped. Kran would have been familiar with the steely tone.

  Oric put out his hand, the yellow tassel sitting on his palm. “I’m sorry,” he whispered.

  Morul cuffed the side of the boy’s head. “An islander speaks with pride even if he fears his punishment.”

  “I’m sorry!” Oric barked, stiffening his spine.

  Jendara took the tassel. “Do you know where the mute boy—my son—went?”