Vindtās tranquil life as a lordās son comes to an abrupt end when his homeland is overthrown. Friends, family, his freedomāhe loses it all to Singers and their dark song magic. The Singer's powers only fail against the demons hunting them. But even this flaw has a patch: humans with a rare and valuable ātraitā. It allows Singers to take over their voice and use it like a weapon. Vindt turned out to possess this trait, and was bound to a Singer by blood. Ever since, he has struggled to break free.
Unexpectedly, a chain of events binds him to a new Singer: the smug and mischievous Asche. From day one, their egos clash. Only, their encounter was no coincidence; Asche needs himābut for what? To free the Singers from the curse that plagues them? Or because Asche is on a quest for power, as the Singerās brethren believe, who are determined to bring him down? Caught in the middle of their fight, Vindt gets yet another unexpected opponent: his wayward feelings for someone heās supposed to hate.
When Ascheās enemies offer Vindt freedom in exchange for delivering Asche into their hands, Vindt has to make a choice.
Vindtās tranquil life as a lordās son comes to an abrupt end when his homeland is overthrown. Friends, family, his freedomāhe loses it all to Singers and their dark song magic. The Singer's powers only fail against the demons hunting them. But even this flaw has a patch: humans with a rare and valuable ātraitā. It allows Singers to take over their voice and use it like a weapon. Vindt turned out to possess this trait, and was bound to a Singer by blood. Ever since, he has struggled to break free.
Unexpectedly, a chain of events binds him to a new Singer: the smug and mischievous Asche. From day one, their egos clash. Only, their encounter was no coincidence; Asche needs himābut for what? To free the Singers from the curse that plagues them? Or because Asche is on a quest for power, as the Singerās brethren believe, who are determined to bring him down? Caught in the middle of their fight, Vindt gets yet another unexpected opponent: his wayward feelings for someone heās supposed to hate.
When Ascheās enemies offer Vindt freedom in exchange for delivering Asche into their hands, Vindt has to make a choice.
Vindt waited for the song to rise, for the killing to start.
He would have to wait some more. Down in the valley, the battle had barely begun. In the clear air, the clang of clashing weapons, curses and screams carried unfiltered up to his vantage point on the hill. A choir of death. But the killing he waited for was of a different kind.
He watched the fighting with dull detachment. Another war that was not his, its outcome none of his concern. He had seen it so many times. As always, a part of him longed to push his heels into the horseās flanks and plunge into the frenzy, draw his sword and fight, honestly, steel on steel, man on man. The idea was childish, but it suggested relief from being an idle spectator, a servant of a dark force that killed from a cowardly distance.
As always, Vindt stayed where he was.
An empty sky hung above, the sun at its zenith, strident, blinding. Vindt hated the sun. It abolished every shadow, annihilating possible refuge for body or mind. It sharpened the contours of the men in the valley, glinting off spear points and sword blades, off armor and metal on horsesā bridles. No room for ambiguity. The landscape reflected the skyās bleakness, earth and rocks. A few scrawny plants defied the arid climate.
Sweat trickled from Vindtās armpits and down his back. It was too hot for his liking, always was. The long-sleeved red tunic didnāt help with the heat. At least his arms wouldnāt get sunburned.
Come on now, get it over with.
Vindt turned his gaze to the Singer. Silhorveenās crimson robes with their twisted dark lines flowed down his body as he watched the spectacle in the valley. There was no breeze, his long dark hair a still mass. The seething hatred the tall lean figure used to incite had dulled into a sense of inevitability, like facing a natural calamity humans had no choice but to endure. These days, laying eyes on Silhorveen mainly triggered a fierce desire to protect him. The feeling was not Vindtās, but imposed upon him by the magic embedded in the bracelet around his right wrist. It made the sensation no less real. As real as the disgust in its wake, the awareness of his impotence.
The dozen Guzzar soldiers who surrounded Silhorveenās own small retinue didnāt look happy either. Vindt pitied them. The Singer might win their war for them, but that did nothing for their feelings toward him.
No, he envied them. They surely had their ties, money, a contract, loyalty, love for their country. But they had a choice.
Vindtās horse stamped its feet and shook its head against the flies. He patted its neck. Poor thing; it suffered from the heat too. In the valley, ranks had broken by now. The two armies were penetrating each other like eager lovers.
Vindt wondered what they were thinking. They must be aware their doom stood here on this hill, had learned about the Singer months ago, about his powers. He didnāt know if the Sylians had been aware of the existence of Singers, or if Silhorveen was the first embodiment of their dark legends and nightmares come to life.
In any case, they had reacted like anyone with a sensible amount of brain cells would: theyād split their forces and limited their attacks to raids and skirmishes. That, and sending people to the Guzzar camp at night, trying to murder Silhorveen in his sleep. The first party had been taken down by the Guzzar guards. The second by Silhorveenās own retinue.
In a way, they had been lucky not to have gotten to him. They were dead, of course, but the Singer would have done worse than just kill them. Vindt had witnessed it only once in the past decade, enough not to want to experience it again.
Now that the Guzzar general had cornered the Sylian army in this valley, their last chance was trying to bring the Singer down in plain daylight.
Only, it wasnāt a chance.
As if on cue, shouting at his back made Vindt turn in the saddle. Behind them, the hill sloped down into a thicket of thorny shrubs. Silhorveenās guard turned too, taking bows from their shoulders or drawing swords. Vindt carried a bow like theirs; a sword dangled from his waist. He touched neither.
The clash of weapons from the thicket added to the shouting, occasionally cresting into a scream. Shadows moved between the branches. Vindt had no idea how many of his men the Guzzar general had stationed there. Enough, for sure. An arrow suddenly soared from the bushes in an almost vertical line, its slim shape cutting through the skyās perfect blue, slowing. The split second it hung suspended in the air seemed unnaturally long. Vindt wondered what it would feel like to be that arrow, finding oneās glorious soar coming to a halt, the surprise, then shock, as gravity pulled you back to the ground.
Silhorveen had not bothered to turn around. Vindtās gaze narrowing down to the back of the Singerās red robes, his hand did now rise to his bow. Old habits. He felt Foraās eyes on him, a futile warning. Fora knew about the bracelet, knew that Vindt couldnāt point an arrow at Silhorveen ever again. That the Singer wanted him to carry a bow during battle was a reminder, an act of humiliation. For the task Vindt was bound to do, he needed no weapon.
The Singerās rising song jerked his hand away from the bow and put his attention back on the battlefield below.
Finally.
He didnāt want to watch. Yet, he did, drawn by the songās dark gravitation and the inexplicable allure of the horrific. The song drifted across the battlefield, weaving through the ranks of soldiers, untouchable, unstoppable, defying weapons and shields and armor, seizing peopleās bodies and creeping into their minds. Killing.
The fighting stalled. Even the Guzzar soldiers couldnāt escape the songās allure. It wouldnāt kill them, only the enemy, only the ones who didnāt want to resort to the help of a Singer. Or couldnāt afford it.
Inevitable memories stirred, of a day a decade ago when Vindt was no mere spectator on a distant hill but part of the action, the songās very aim, when the men dying around him were of his concern. But he had learned not to let those memories in. After years of practice, he could even now switch off, dissolve into the present, turn into a being without a past or future. Safe emptiness.
He closed his eyesāfrom the killing, from Silhorveen, from the sun. No one would blame him. For his task, he didnāt need to see. He would feel a Verdur approaching, but the strange sense inside him was still. Vindt was not surprised. The demonic creatures had never attacked them during a battle. As if Verdurs shunned the presence of too many humans.
The thought barely finished, the sense inside him buzzed in alarm. At the same second, all sounds vanished, and silence descended on him like a dead weight.
The cold taste of fear had coated his gums before his mind processed what was happening, before he even opened his eyes again and saw the Verdur. The creature moved erratically, jumping, running, flying, hovering in one place for a second, gone the next. Its semi-translucent body blurred and morphed, disturbingly human and yet not, parts appearing and disappearing, horns, wings, claws, tendrils, a tail. The eyes changed too, sometimes huge and lidless, sometimes tiny marbles fringed with lashes. Their expression prevailed: hatred. Dark, menacing energy poured from the shape-shifting body, the threat to kill.
What? But weāve neverā¦
Silhorveen spun around. In a split second, his expression changed from surprise to determination. He dropped his killing song and switched to defense. Which meant he turned to Vindt. Singers couldnāt kill a Verdur directly; they had to use a āworkaround.ā Silhorveenās voice entered Vindtās body with insubstantial tendrils. As always, Vindtās mind fought the intrusion, the alien pull trying to take over his voice, him. The resistance broke in an instant, and his voice rose, entwining with Silhorveenās, filling the gaps in the Singerās own song.
Vindt couldnāt hear the creature, yet it had a voice too, an antagonistic flow of something impalpable, negated screams which wiped out other noises like a jealous lover. It aimed to drain all life from him. Silhorveen and his combined voices remained the only sounds defying the acoustic mire.
From the corners of his eyes, Vindt saw the contorted faces of the Guzzar soldiers around them. Their hands had risen to their ears as if trying to get rid of the impenetrable cloth that suddenly clogged them. Horses grew skittish.
Vindtās fear mingled with his helplessness into a scalding broth. He had no way to fight the Verdur on his own. His voice was no longer his but a tool in the Singerās hands. The creatureās power, its determination, was stronger than any they had fought before. Sticky silence forced its way into him through ears, mouth, nose and pores.
He sensed Foraās gaze on him again, like a bough held out to a drowning man. Their voices wavered. Something reflected in Silhorveenās face that Vindt had never seen in it before: fear. His own anxiety changed its quality. The Verdur was so close, Vindt felt the drafts of air at its staccato movements, the greed in its eyes, the anticipation.
Silhorveen staggered. Their song fractured.
No.
Vindtās vision blurred; his surroundings vanished. Aural void spread through his body like a disease.
No, Vindt thought again.
Then silence swallowed his thoughts as it dragged him down into oblivion.
Vindt hates his life. Hates that he's bound to a Singer - a being who can kill, breathe life or even love with their song. For a decade, he's been his Singer's main defence against attack, with the binding ensuring that should the Singer die, he will too. Singer's are (in essence) assassins for hire, with their ability to sing an entire army to death, they're a highly desirable commodity for Generals. And it's during one particular battle when Vindt's Singer is attacked by the Verdur; their most deadly opponents. His Singer meets his unlikely demise - but somehow, someway, Vindt survives. Only to meet a much more intimidating, dangerous and devastating Singer who intends to bind Vindt to him...
While Ocean's Blood is a fairly unique offering and a relatively good read, it's also incredibly slow to start. The language within is often too poetic and flowery; why use one word or a concise description when a whole paragraph will do the job? It's this which makes it a difficult read; it struggles to hold the reader with the overly descriptive prose. It's also difficult to fully understand the backstory of Vindt, his Singer and the other characters. There're little hints at what has happened in the past, but they're too vague; almost as if trying to tantalise the reader into reading on to find out more. But, the clues aren't quite tantalising enough to keep the reader intrigued for long enough. Indeed, I found myself becoming impatient and annoyed as more and more subtle hints were dropped without anything being explained.
That said - Mantey's Romantic style of prose may be wordy, but it's beautiful. They easily conjure up images of the scenes with their stunning descriptions. It's a common saying that a picture is worth a thousand words. but it's rare that a thousand words actually manages to paint a beautiful picture.
S. A.