THE SEA HAG by David Drake

But there was no one in the cabin to see.

The fire’s warmth was as close to bliss as anything this side of Paradise could be. Dennis fluffed his shirt out, shaking droplets of water onto the half-logs of the puncheon floor. He looked around.

Chester still stood outside.

“Come on in,” the youth directed.

Chester neither moved nor replied.

Dennis shook his head angrily. “All right,” he said. “Suit yourself. Maybe you will rust!”

He banged the door closed—after checking that the leather latch-string was out so that his companion could get inside at will.

The stew smelled wonderful.

“Hello?” Dennis called again, half-heartedly; and, when the silence answered him, dipped the horn-handled spoon into the pot and tasted the stew. Carrots and onions; potatoes; and a flavorful meat that seemed to be lamb, all in a rich gravy and just at the right temperature to eat.

He’d apologize to the owner when he came home. Anyway, he’d leave half the potful for the owner.

And the owner couldn’t possibly need the food more than Dennis did.

The youth unbelted his sword, leaned it against the stone fireplace, and helped himself to the stew without further ado. He remembered that he was going to leave half; but when the pot was half empty, Dennis felt as hungry as he had when he started… and after all, the food would just get cold if he left it…

The room warmed up nicely with the door closed; but as Dennis’ belly filled, he began to feel the discomfort of his wet clothing. The cloth was stiffening where it faced the fire and still clammy over most of his body.

He looked at the bed. The coverlet was a single feathery skin, large enough to have clothed an ox. Dennis couldn’t imagine that it came from a bird… but he couldn’t imagine anything but a bird having feathers, either.

Dennis got up and stripped off his own uncomfortable clothes. He hung them over the chair which he slid nearer the fire. Then he wrapped himself in the coverlet, tossed another log on the fire, and lay down in front of it.

The feathers were soft and warm and wonderful. Enfolded in them, Dennis forgot the rain and the misery of the hours since he left Emath. Soon it would be dawn…

And soon he slept.

CHAPTER 15

Someone called him. He swam up from the sea depths, stroking through nightmare toward the sunlit surface…

Dennis flung off the coverlet. The fire was a sunken glow. A jet of gas hissed briefly from the dull orange coals, providing a blue flicker and the only movement within the silent cabin.

The rain continued as a dull patter on the roof shakes.

“Who’s there?” Dennis called. He groped for the chair where his clothing dried. “Hello?”

Nothing answered him. The chair was where he remembered it, but his clothes weren’t hanging there as they should have been. Maybe in the dim, red light he had the wrong chair.

His sword wasn’t leaning against the fireplace, either.

“What will you give me for your lodging?” boomed a voice.

Dennis whirled around with a scream of startlement, the sort of yelp that a nearby thunderbolt would have jolted out of him. The feather coverlet tangled his feet.

No one was with him in the cabin.

Dennis ran to the door and threw it open. “Hello?” he called. “Here I am. Where are you?”

Rain spattered him. His naked body was already shivering, although the air in the cabin had been comfortably warm. The night was dark, and nothing visible stood in it.

“Chester?” Dennis shouted. “Chester! Chester!”

A stream of cold water shifted down the threshold log, over Dennis’ feet. The voice behind him repeated, “What will you give me for your lodging?”

He slammed the door and stood with his back to it, surveying the room by fireglow. He could make out the table and chair; even the bed across the cabin. His clothes and sword were nowhere to be seen, and there was no one else in the—

The tall cabinet to Dennis’ left creaked open. A tall figure stepped out, moving as stiffly as the warped door that had concealed him. “What will you give me for your lodging, boy?” demanded the figure, glaring into Dennis’ eyes.

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