'Have you children, then?' said Drake.

'Oh, a few bastards here and there,' said Togura. 'That's why I had to leave Sung. Jealous husbands, raging fathers, murderous boyfriends…'

'Aye,' said Drake. 'I know the score.'

At that moment, they were interrupted by a wounded man who had been slowly making the rounds of the deck, talking to each and every pirate. The man had his arm in a sling, a little dead blood staining the sling-cloth. He had black hair and a square-cut black beard; his clothes, now battle-stained, had once been elegant. His demeanour was proud, haughty, arrogant – yet his voice was friendly enough.

'How are you, boys?'

'Hearty, sir,' said Drake.

'Except,' said Togura, 'we've been a precious long time away from women.'

The stranger laughed.

'Youth,' he said, 'is a wonderful thing. Now listen, boys – there'll be a ration of hardtack and water at sunset. Not much – but we'll be on short commons till we reach Runcorn.'

'Runcorn?' said Togura. 'Where's that?'

'It's a city on the coast to the north,' said the stranger. 'Where do you come from, boy?'

'Sung,' said Togura.

'Ah. One of our bowmen. I thought we lost you all in the fighting.'

'I'm hard to kill,' said Togura manfully.

'Good,' said the stranger, with a touch of amusement in his voice. 'That's what I like to see.'

'Excuse me,' said Togura, 'but when do we reach Runcorn?'

'That,' said the stranger, again amused, 'depends on the wind. But it'll be some time within our lifetimes, that I guarantee. Any other quetions?'

'No, sir,' said Drake, speaking for both of them before Togura could ask any of the hundreds of supplementary questions boiling in his head.

The stranger nodded and moved on down the deck to a little group of gambling pirates, who laid down their cards to attend to him.

'He's a happy fellow,' said Togura.

'Man, that's his style,' said Drake. 'Since we lost, he's probably bleeding to death inside. But he wouldn't let us see that, no way.'

'Who is he then?'

'Elkor Alish, of course.'

'Who?' said Togura.

'Have you just fallen out of an egg or something?' said Drake. 'Who do you think he is?'

'Well, a sea captain, I suppose,' said Togura.

'What?' said Drake. 'Like Jon Arabin?'

'Who's Jon Arabin?'

'Man, your head's got as many holes as a pirate's wet-dream! You'll be forgetting your own name next!'

Togura, who sometimes found it hard to keep track of his aliases, could hardly disagree. He shrugged off the criticism and tried again for an answer:

'Well then, who is this Elkor Alish?'

'You really don't know? Okay then, Elkor Alish used to be the ruler of Chi'ash-lan. He made himself famous by working a law so every woman had to serve out a year in the public brothels from when she was blooded.'

'Blooded?' said Togura.

'You know,' said Drake. 'From when her months began.'

'Oh,' said Togura.

He was puzzled, as he hadn't a clue what Drake was talking about. Blooded? Months? It meant nothing to him. But he didn't want to appear more ignorant than he had already, so didn't question further.

'Anyway,' said Drake. 'For a while he got really rich.'

At this point, Drake's story – which was, incidentally, pure invention – was interrupted as Draven came strolling along. He was rattling some dice in his fist.

'I can hear your dice talking,' said Drake. 'And I can already hear them telling lies. Don't roll with him, friend Forester, for he'll have you rolling for your spleen unless you're careful.'

'Sure,' said Togura. 'I know how far I can trust him. He threw me overboard once.'

'I did no such thing!' protested Draven. 'That's slander! We settled it out already, remember? You misremembered.'

'Our friend Forester is a bit shaky in the head,' said Drake. 'He'll butterfinger his own name unless he's careful.'

'Yes, but,' said Togura, 'I was thrown overboard. To the sea serpents! You remember, Drake. You were there. Draven chucked me over, isn't that so?'

'Why, no,' said Drake, blandly. 'You were such a brave little sword-cock you insisted on challenging the sea serpents, hand to hand. You were that keen on jumping we couldn't restrain you.'

'That's a lie!' said Togura.

'Such heat and fury,' said Draven, laughing. 'Stoke you up on a cold day, and we'd be warm in no time.'

'You don't know what you put me through,' said Togura bitterly. 'You don't know what I suffered.'

'We all suffer,' said Draven. 'Why, I've done my share of suffering myself. Like when the torture-rats bit off my nose in Gendormargensis.'

'Your lower nose, I suppose,' said Drake. 'For your snout's still as big and ugly as ever.'

'No, no,' said Draven. 'It's not my snorter I'm talking about, it's my sniffer. Let me tell you…'

And he was off again, launched on one of his tales of the terrors of Tameran and the evils of the dralkosh Yen Olass Ampadara, she of the blood-red teeth, the man-demolishing stare, the stone-shattering laughter.

At sunset, hardtack and water were handed out, with the ration-handlers putting a daub of red pain on the left hand of every man (or the left cheek of amputees) so none could claim rations twice. The next day, it was some indigo paint on the right hand, and the day after that it was some black on the forehead.

Elkor Alish proclaimed stern laws against gambling for food and water, and enforced them by making everyone eat and drink under the eyes of hand-picked manhandlers. The first two people caught infringing the regulations were thrown overboard and left to drown, after which there was no further disobedience.

By a combination of fair dealing, ruthless discipline and punctilious organisation, Elkor Alish eventually brought his ships safely to Runcorn with its multitudinous refugees in reasonably good shape.

Togura, who had waited eagerly for his first sight of this new city, found, to his disappointment, that he had been here before. Runcorn was the place where he and the Lezconcarnau villagers had first taken ship for Androlmarphos. A deserted, depopulated place with no women to speak of – and certainly no whores, as far as he could see.

Chapter 37

Amongst the Koruatu philosophers of Chi'ash-lan, there were perennial debates about the role of the individual in history. Are all people shaped and controlled by historical forces? Or can an exceptional person shape history? Some supported the view that human beings are like chips of wood floating in the flood of a great river, unable to control their destiny; others held that certain world historical individuals are like master engineers, able to dam, divert or indeed reverse the river of history.

By the time of the battle of Androlmarphos, the debate had been going on for half a millenium, and, far from being exhausted, was growing steadily more complicated; the matter of the role of the individual in history now involved questions of free will versus predestination, and, most recently, fractious deliberations about the very meaning of the word 'history.'

Some argued that history is 'a sequence of events.' Others insisted that it is 'events determining culture.' But then, in that case – what is culture? (To that supplementary question, at least twenty-seven different answers were

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