They were making good progress in the afternoon wind.
“That’s what it was supposed to do,” Gavin said. “Instead, each governor has taken it as a personal chance to get rich. The Parians had the first rotation, and they stripped Garriston of everything that survived the fires. Every governor since then has followed their lead.”
Liv spoke up. “During the first year, most governors try to keep the Umber River clear of bandits so the crops can get through. But most of the crops come in too late on the second year. The governors don’t want to lose men killing bandits just to enrich the next governor from some other satrapy, so they withdraw into Garriston. Only the most optimistic farmers even bother planting on the second year anymore.”
“While repeated sacking of Garriston and the surrounding country is tragic, it doesn’t have much to do with these pirates,” Gavin said. “The handover happens after Midsummer’s, two weeks from now. The Ruthgari merchants and craftsmen and wives and whores are busily loading their ships to take whatever plunder they’ve managed to steal this time home. Or just whatever they brought with them. I suppose just because every governor so far has been corrupt doesn’t mean the smiths who shoe their horses are, too.”
“This is fascinating,” Ironfist said, “but can’t some long guns shoot eighteen or nineteen hundred paces?”
“It’s farther away than that,” Gavin said. “Point is—”
“Finally, thank Orholam,” Ironfist muttered.
“Ahem. Point is, there’ll be an armada heading back to Ruthgar in two weeks. The pirates descend like wolves, and they take any ships that get separated from the main fleet.”
“Serves them right,” Liv said.
Gavin stared at her, and she scowled defiantly, but couldn’t handle the eye contact, so she scowled at the waves.
“Some merchants try to beat the rush and get out before the rest of the fleet, hoping they’ll avoid the pirates.”
“But here they are,” Liv said.
“Exactly,” Gavin said. “And if there’s war this summer, especially—Orholam forbid—if we lose, there’ll be chaos. Dozens of ships, maybe hundreds, all going their own direction, fleeing. A lot of the people in those ships will be Tyrean, Aliviana.”
She looked chastened.
“Smoke,” Kip said.
All conversation on the little scull stopped cold. Everyone turned to look.
“It would take an extremely skilled gunner to come within a hundred paces of us at this distance,” Gavin said, but Kip noticed he didn’t take his eyes off the corvette either.
“Maybe it was an empty charge, just to let us know—”
The water erupted twenty paces in front of the scull. The sound of the shot reached them only afterward.
“That was quite a shot,” Gavin said. “The good news is that very few corvettes have more than one gun mounted on the front, so we should have at least thirty seconds while they’re—”
“Smoke!” Kip said.
“I hate this part,” Gavin said. He and Ironfist scrambled onto their oar apparatus.
This time, the splash was fifty paces in front of them.
“Good to know the first one was lucky,” Liv said.
“Unless the second was unlucky,” Kip said.
Gavin looked at Ironfist, a momentary worry line pressed between his eyes. “Let’s go.”
“Right!”
They began rowing and quickly picked up speed. “What can I do?” Kip asked. He hated feeling useless.
“Think!” Gavin said.
Think? Kip looked at Liv to see if she had any idea what Gavin meant. She shrugged.
“Smoke!” she said.
Excruciating seconds passed, then Kip heard an odd whistling hum. The water exploded fifty paces behind them.
“Didn’t expect us to come straight at ’em!” Gavin shouted. “Next one’ll be closer!” He cackled.
The man had gone quite mad.
Smoke. This time, Kip counted. One. Two. Three. He strained his eyes. Surely he should be able to see something as big as a cannonball. Five. Si—Boom! The water exploded not fifteen paces to the left—port?—of the scull. Kip actually felt spray.
“See?” Gavin said. “Talented gunner!”
Mad. Totally mad. “It’s a six count between the smoke and the splash,” Kip announced.
“Good!” Gavin shouted. “Ironfist, hard starboard as soon as they—”
“Smoke!” Liv said.
The men cut hard to starboard and the next shot splashed harmlessly a good distance away, albeit probably perilously close to where they would have been.
Another shot, and they turned even more to starboard. Again, the shot was at least thirty paces off target. Kip looked at the wind and the sails of the Ilytian ship. They were cutting at a hard angle, sails full, wind steady. It looked like a good platform to shoot from, but as for how Kip could use what he was seeing to help them survive, he had no idea.