up. Or she would if her shipmates didn't dispatch it first, for a single animated corpse shouldn't pose much of a threat. She dropped her crossbow and drew her blade.
The men closest to the undead newcomer stumbled, retched, and fell. Whatever was afflicting them, it rendered them incapable of defense, and, its bare fists striking with bone-shattering force, the creature had no difficulty breaking their backs and skulls. Two crossbow bolts plunged into its torso, but it didn't even seem to notice.
Tammith charged.
The haze surrounding the dead man was cold and wet, and as soon as she entered it, a burning tightness ripped through her chest. She couldn't breathe, as if her lungs were full of water and she was drowning.
But a vampire had no need to breathe. She clamped down on her irrational terror, raised her off hand to signal her comrades to stay away-she doubted she could speak coherently with the choking fullness in her mouth and lungs-and rushed the zombie.
The creature evidently hadn't realized she too was undead, because her immunity to its lethal aura seemed to take it by surprise. When she thrust her sword at its chest, it tried to parry with its forearm, but was too slow. The blade plunged through soft, rotten tissue, scraped a rib, and pierced the heart.
But it wasn't the mortal injury she'd hoped for. Without even faltering, the creature shoved itself farther onto the blade, closing the distance, then whipped a punch at her head. She ducked and scrambled backward, yanking the sword free as she retreated.
For the next few moments, she and the zombie traded attacks. The creature had yet to connect, but as strong as it was, it might only need to hit her once to incapacitate her, and then smash her bones while she was helpless. She cut and pierced it repeatedly, but the wounds weren't slowing it down. In fact, some were starting to close. Her foe possessed a gift of quick healing akin to her own.
It was also inching the duel toward the bow of the ship, and she thought she understood the reason. It wanted to engulf the other mortals in its drowning effect. Then she'd have to slay it quickly if she wanted her allies to survive. She'd need to fight more aggressively and take chances, and that might finally give the creature the opportunity to get its hands on her.
If you want aggression, Tammith thought, I'll give it to you. She exploded into a cloud of bats.
It hurt to transform so quickly, and hurt again when each of her creatures felt the strangling weight of water in its lungs. The bats were more primal, more creatures of instinct, than she was in human form, and a fresh surge of terror threatened to overwhelm them. But the part of her that was shadowy overmind, the guiding consciousness they shared, resisted.
The bats hurtled at the zombie. It caught one in each hand, squeezed and crushed them, and all the survivors felt the death agony, but that couldn't balk them either. Two others landed on the creature's face and clawed out its eyes.
Then all the surviving bats flew away and whirled into a single form again. That didn't quell the pain, but Tammith had to ignore it. Because, orienting on the rustle of wings, her foe lurched around to confront her with slime seething in the orbits of its deliquescing face. Its new eyes had nearly formed already.
She bellowed a battle cry and cut at its neck.
Its head tumbled free of its shoulders. The body collapsed, then crawled after its severed portion. Tammith ran to the head, snatched it up, and hurled it over the rail. The body stopped moving, and the cold, wet haze evaporated.
Tammith surveyed the deck. More men were alive than otherwise, but the survivors were simply standing and gawking. 'Get back to your duties!' she rasped. 'Sail the ship and watch for other enemies!'
Most of them scrambled to obey, but one youth stayed huddled on the deck, weeping and gasping as if he couldn't catch his breath.
Tammith strode over to him. 'Get up. You're all right now.'
He just stayed where he'd fallen, his shoulders shaking, and she experienced a spasm of contempt. He was a coward, and useless. Or rather, useful only as a source of blood. If she drained him, the throbbing pain inside her would ease more quickly.
She jerked him to his feet, tilted his head back to expose the throat, and in so doing, got a good look at his tear- and snot-streaked face. He was even younger than she'd imagined, and, judging from his lack of any uniform or insignia, not a member of the zulkirs' navy, just a fisherman's son or trader's cabin boy they'd pressed into service to help with their escape.
Shame rose inside her. It didn't extinguish her thirst, but it counterbalanced it. She stared into the youth's eyes and said, 'Calm down. Everything's fine.'
He blinked and smiled, then stiffened. A bat far larger than the ones she could become swooped over the deck and then melted into a towering, four-armed figure with crimson eyes and a lupine muzzle. 'Good evening, Captain Iltazyarra,' Tsagoth said. 'I've been hunting you for a while.'
Aoth watched in dismay as the dream vestige came streaming and boiling from empty air. He could hear its myriad voices moaning and whimpering even from high above.
'You didn't think we were going to get through the fight without seeing that thing again, did you?' Brightwing asked. The undertone of stress in her voice revealed that the wound she'd received from the ghost was still paining her.
'I hoped so, but maybe the zulkirs can handle it this time. I know they talked about how to do it. Our job is to keep our troops away from it.' He flew around bellowing a warning, and other griffon riders took up the call in turn.
Although perhaps it wasn't necessary. The dream vestige had manifested just above the water and there it floated still, either because that was where Szass Tam wanted it or because it judged it would catch more prey there. Tentaclelike extrusions groping for any sentient swimming or flying creature unfortunate enough to be within reach, it streamed forward and engulfed one of the council's war galleys. When it flowed on, no one was left on deck.
The Red Wizards and the priests of Bezantur counterattacked with every form of magic at their disposal. Hurtling sparks exploded into blasts of flame at the center of the cloud. Thunderbolts pierced it, and howling winds shoved at it. Two of the largest conjured entities Aoth had ever seen, both eel-like with vaguely human upper bodies, spat their breath weapons, then swam in to rip with fang, claw, and scythe before dissolving in the dream vestige's misty embrace.
Aoth told himself that his allies must be hurting the thing. Whether alive or undead, no being was entirely impervious to harm. But they weren't causing enough damage to stop it.
It devoured the crew of a second ship.
'Take me nearer,' said Aoth.
'Are you joking?' Brightwing replied. 'If the thing doesn't grab us and eat us, a stray lightning bolt will fry us.'
'I trust you to dodge the dangers.'
'Thanks so much.'
'I need to look at the fog up close. If I do, I might see something nobody else can see.'
'I think I liked you better blind.' Brightwing furled her wings and dived.
They swooped over Szass Tam's servant with the height of a tall ship's mainmast separating them from the top of the billowing vapor. It wasn't nearly enough separation to keep them safe. Composed of writhing, mewling shadows all ragged and intertwined, columns of mist shot up and lashed at them. Angled upward, a lightning bolt stabbed out of the cloud just in front of them and burned an afterimage across Aoth's vision. An elemental in the form of a towering, roaring waterspout, a rudimentary face repeatedly forming and disappearing in the swirl, rushed toward them. Brightwing veered constantly, striving to evade whatever threat was closest without running straight into another.
When they finished running the gauntlet, they were above the necromancers' fleet, but the threat implicit in that seemed almost trivial compared to what they'd just endured. 'Did you get what you wanted?' the griffon asked.
'No,' Aoth said. 'Do it again, but fly lower.'
Brightwing laughed. 'Of course. Why not?'