The monsoon season died, and the rains receded, so that they came daily over the sea, rather than in the ageless storms that lasted for weeks. Birds ventured over the water, and the winds blew again from the east, sending the trade ships and fleets once more across the azure sea. This was the time of year when the colonies forged by the Mordani invaders gathered their accumulated wealth and sent it home across the waters. This was the season when poor men became rich men, and rich men became princes.
In the harbor of the great city of Sinasekan, walled in by white cliffs and guarded by stone towers, the black fleet gathered. Six ships, then ten, then a dozen. Day and night, slaves carried the treasure of the islands over the gangplanks and into the dark holds under the watchful eyes of armored guards. All year the mines of the islands were worked, gathering a fortune in silver and gold in the court of the viceroy, and when the rains ended, the treasure was loaded aboard ships with white sails and black hulls, and then the fleet sailed away, over the long course to Morda, on the other side of the world, there to make the king even richer, to pay for the wars with Achen and Savindria, so that the black stallion banner would fly over new lands and new conquests.
For three weeks the ships gathered, loaded until they were slung low in the water. The port city seethed with spies and counterspies as corsairs sought the exact date of the departure and the Viceroy’s agents sought to conceal it, catch those who sought it. Spies for the pirate brotherhoods were caught and hanged from gibbets, slaves who spoke too freely had their tongues torn out with red-hot pincers, and gossips who spoke unguarded were arrested and had their eyes put out, whether woman or child.
Lookouts on the cliffsides and headlands kept their eyes on the far horizons, for they knew the black fleet could not sail without warships to guard it. The treasure ships were so loaded with wealth there was no room for fighting men or for much powder for the guns. Each was so heavy that they wallowed like pigs in muck, and would be so slow they would be easy prey for any raider. The traveled in a fleet so that even if one was picked off by a buccaneer, the others would escape while the one was looted. In the twenty years since the ships began to sail, not one had been lost.