A Joust of Knights. Morgan Rice

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on it, and Erec crowded around with the others and looked down. He shook his head in disappointment: two heads. It was another one of the poisonous fish that seemed to live in abundance in this river.

      “This river is damned,” his man said, hurling down the fishing rod.

      Erec walked back to the rail and studied the waters with disappointment. He sensed a presence and turned to see Strom come up beside him.

      “And if this river does not lead us to Volusia?” Strom asked.

      Erec spotted concern in his brother’s face, and he shared it.

      “It will lead us somewhere,” Erec replied. “And it brings us north. If not to Volusia, then we will cross land on foot and fight our way.”

      “Should we abandon our ships then? How shall we ever flee this place? Return to the Southern Isles?”

      Erec slowly shook his head and sighed.

      “We might not,” he answered honestly. “No quest of honor is safe. And has that ever stopped you or I?”

      Strom turned to him and smiled.

      “That is what we live for,” he replied.

      Erec smiled back and turned to see Alistair come up on his other side, holding the rail and looking out at the river, which was narrowing as they sailed. Her eyes were glazed and had a distant look, and Erec could sense she was lost in another world. He had noticed something else had changed about her, too – he was not sure what, as if there was some secret she were holding back. He was dying to ask her, but he did not wish to pry.

      A chorus of horns sounded, and Erec, startled, turned and looked back. His heart fell as he saw what loomed.

      “CLOSING IN FAST!” shouted a sailor from up high on the mast, pointing frantically. “EMPIRE FLEET!”

      Erec ran across the deck, back to the stern, accompanied by Strom, racing past all of his men, all of them in battle mode, grabbing their swords, preparing their bows, mentally preparing themselves.

      Erec reached the stern and gripped the rail and looked out, and he saw it was true: there, at a bend in the river, just a few hundred yards away, was a row of Empire ships, sailing their black and gold sails.

      “They must have found our trail,” Strom said beside him.

      Erec shook his head.

      “They were following us the whole time,” he said, realizing. “They were just waiting to show themselves.”

      “Waiting for what?” Strom asked.

      Erec turned and looked back over his shoulder, upriver.

      “That,” he said.

      Strom turned and studied the narrowing river.

      “They waited until the river’s most narrow point,” Erec said. “Waited until we had to sail single file and were too deep to turn back. They’ve got us exactly where they want us.”

      Erec looked back at the fleet, and as he stood there, he felt an incredible sense of focus, as he often did when leading his men and finding himself in times of crisis. He felt another sense kick in, and as often happened in times like these, an idea occurred to him.

      Erec turned to his brother.

      “Man that ship beside us,” he commanded. “Take up the rear of our fleet. Get every man off of it – have them board the ship beside it. Do you hear me? Empty that ship. When the ship is empty, you’ll be the last to leave it.”

      Strom looked back, confused.

      “When the ship is empty?” he echoed. “I don’t understand.”

      “I plan to wreck it.”

      “To wreck it?” Strom asked, dumbfounded.

      Erec nodded.

      “At the most narrow point, where the river banks meet, you will turn that ship sideways and abandon it. It will create a wedge – the dam that we need. No one will be able to follow us. Now go!” Erec yelled.

      Strom jumped into action, following his brother’s orders, to his credit, whether he agreed with them or not. Erec sailed his ship alongside his others and Strom leapt from one rail to the other. As he landed on the other ship, he began barking orders, and the men broke into action, all of them jumping, one at a time, off their ship and onto Erec’s.

      Erec was concerned as he watched their ships begin to drift apart.

      “Man the ropes!” Erec called out to his men. “Use the hooks – hold the ships together!”

      His men followed his command, running to the side of the ship, hoisting the grappling hooks and throwing them through the air, hooking them onto the ship beside them and yanking with all their might so that the ships stopped drifting apart. It sped up the process, and dozens of men leapt from one rail to the other, all grabbing their weapons hastily as they abandoned the ship.

      Strom supervised, yelling orders, making sure each man left the ship, corralling them all until there was no left on board.

      Strom caught Erec’s eye, as Erec watched with approval.

      “And what of the ship’s provisions?” Strom yelled out above the din. “And its surplus weaponry?”

      Erec shook his head.

      “Let it go,” he called back. “Just take up our rear and destroy the ship.”

      Erec turned and ran to the bow, leading his fleet as they all followed him and sailed into the bottleneck.

      “SINGLE FILE!”

      All his ships fell in behind him as the river tapered to its narrowest point. Erec sailed through with his fleet, and as he did, he glanced back and saw the Empire fleet closing in fast, now hardly a hundred yards away. He watched hundreds of Empire troops man their bows and prepare their arrows, setting them on fire. He knew they were nearly in range; there was little time to waste.

      “NOW!” Erec yelled to Strom, just as Strom’s ship, the last of the fleet, entered the narrowest point.

      Strom, watching and waiting, raised his sword and slashed half the ropes attaching his ship to Erec’s, at the same time jumping ship over to Erec’s side. He cut them just as the abandoned ship sailed into the bottleneck, and it immediately floundered, rudderless.

      “TURN IT SIDEWAYS!” Erec commanded his men.

      His men all reached out and grabbed the ropes that remained on one side of the ship and yanked as hard as they could, until the ship, groaning in protest, slowly turned its way sideways against the current. Finally, the current carrying it, it lodged itself firmly in the rocks, crammed between the two river banks, its wood groaning and beginning to crack.

      “PULL HARDER!” Erec yelled.

      They pulled and pulled and Erec hurried over and joined them, all of them groaning as they yanked with all their might. Slowly, they managed to turn the ship, holding it tight as it lodged more and more deeply into the rocks.

      As the

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