Prologue

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Feel free to skip Prologue (there is only a few added sentences)..


The wolfship was only a few hours from Cape Shelter when the massive storm hit them.

For three days, they had sailed north towards Skandia through a sea that was calm as a millpond - a fact appreciated by Will and Evanlyn.

'This isn't too bad,' Will said, as the narrow ship cut smoothly through the waters. He had heard grim tales of people becoming violently sick on board ships at sea. But he could see nothing to worry about in this gentle rocking motion.

Evanlyn nodded, a little doubtfully. She was by no means an experienced sailor but she had been to sea before.

'If this is as bad as it gets,' she said. She had noticed the worried looks that Erak, the ship's captain, was casting to the north, and the way he was urging Wolfwind's rowers on to greater speed. For his part, Erak knew that this deceptively calm weather heralded a change for the worse - much worse. Dimly, on the northern horizon, he could see the dark storm line forming. He knew that if they couldn't round Cape Shelter and get into the lee of the land mass in time, they would take the full force of the storm. For several minutes, he assessed speeds and distances, judging their progress against that of the onrushing clouds.

'We're not going to make it,' he said finally to Svengal. His second in command nodded agreement.

'Looks that way,' Svengal said philosophically, 'but if we do by some means make it, I'm finding you a lady'. Erak was glancing keenly round the ship, making sure that there was no loose gear that needed to be secured.

'Shut it Svengal. I don't need a woman in my life.' His eye lit on the two prisoners, huddled in the bow. 'Better tie those two to the mast,' he said. 'And we'll rig the sweep steering oar as well.'

Will and Evanlyn watched Svengal as he made his way towards them. He had a coil of light hemp in his hand.

'What now?' Will asked. 'They can't think we're going to try to escape.'

But Svengal had stopped by the mast, and was beckoning urgently to them. The two Araluans rose and moved uncertainly towards him. Will noticed that the ship's motion was becoming a little more pronounced and the wind was increasing. He staggered as he made his way to Svengal. Behind him, he heard Evanlyn mutter an unladylike swearword as she stumbled and barked her shin on a bollard.

Svengal drew his saxe knife and cut two lengths of cord from the coil.

'Tie yourselves to the mast,' he told them. 'We're in for the mother of all storms any minute.'

'You mean we could be blown overboard?' Evanlyn asked incredulously. Svengal noted that Will was tying himself to the mast with a neatly executed bowline knot. The girl was having some trouble, so Svengal took the rope, passed it around her waist and then secured her as well.

'Maybe,' he replied to her question. 'More likely washed overboard by the waves.'

He saw the boy's face go pale with fear.

'You're telling us that the waves actually ... come on board?' Will said. Svengal darted a fierce, humourless grin at him.

'Oh yes indeed,' he said, and hurried back to assist Erak in the stern, where the captain was already rigging the massive sweep oar. 'Everyone deserves a lady, skirl.'

'Not the time Svengal.' The thin dark line that Erak had seen was now a roiling black mass only a quarter of a kilometre away, sweeping down on them faster than a horse could gallop.

Then the sun was blotted out as the storm hit them. The first massive wave struck and the wolfship's bow canted up at a terrifying angle. They began to rise up the face of the wave, then the ship faltered and began to slide - backwards and downwards! Svengal and Erak screamed at the rowers. Their voices were plucked away by the wind but the crew, their backs to the storm, could see and understand their body language. They heaved on the oars, bending the oak shafts with their efforts, and the backwards slide slowly eased. The ship began to claw its way up the face of the wave, rising higher and higher, moving more and more slowly until the Araluens were sure they must begin the terrible backwards sliding motion again.

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