Still, he was alive, and the wind was in his hair, and the cloud was scudding through the sky like a galleon at full sail. Looking out over the world from above, he could never remember feeling so alive as he did at that moment. There was a
He understood that he was, in some way, above his problems, just as he was above the world. The pain in his hand was a long way away. He thought about his actions and his adventures, and about the journey ahead of him, and it seemed to Tristran that the whole business was suddenly very small and very straightforward. He stood up on the cloud spire and called "Halloo!" several times, as loudly as he could. He even waved his tunic over his head, feeling a little foolish as he did so. Then he clambered down the spire; ten feet from the bottom he missed his footing and fell into the misty softness of the cloud.
"What were you shouting about?" asked Yvaine.
"To let people know we were here," Tristran told her.
"
"You never know," he told her. "Better I should call to people who aren't there than that people who
She said nothing in reply to this.
"I've been thinking," said Tristran. "And what I've been thinking is this. After we're done with what I need—got you back to Wall, given you to Victoria Forester—perhaps we could do what
"What
"Well, you want to go back, don't you? Up into the sky. To shine again at night. So we can sort that out."
She looked up at him and shook her head. "That doesn't happen," she explained. "Stars fall. They don't go back up again."
"You could be the first," he told her. "You have to
"It
He shrugged. "Hurts," he said. "How's your leg?"
"Hurts," she said. "But not as badly as it did before."
"Ahoy!" came a voice from far above them. "Ahoy down there! Parties in need of assistance?"
Glinting golden in the sunlight was a small ship, its sails billowing, and a ruddy, mustachioed face looked down at them from over the side. "Was that you, young feller-me-lad, a-leaping and cavorting just now?"
"It was," said Tristran. "And I think we are in need of assistance, yes."
"Right-ho," said the man. "Get ready to grab the ladder, then."
"I'm afraid my friend has a broken leg," he called, "and I've hurt my hand. I don't think either of us can climb a ladder."
"Not a problem. We can pull you up." And with that the man tumbled a long rope ladder over the side of the ship. Tristran caught at it with his good hand, and he held it steady while Yvaine pulled herself onto it, then he climbed on below her. The face vanished from the side of the ship as Tristran and Yvaine dangled awkwardly on the end of the rope ladder.
The wind caught the sky-ship, causing the ladder to pull up from the cloud, and Tristran and Yvaine to spin, slowly, in the air.
"Now,
Another jerk upwards and Yvaine was level with the top of the ship's railing. Someone lifted her with care and placed her upon the deck. Tristran clambered over the railing himself, and tumbled down onto the oaken deck.
The ruddy-faced man extended a hand. "Welcome aboard," he said. "This is the Free Ship
Soon a nervous-looking woman with an explosive mop of carrot-red hair—Meggot—was escorting him belowdecks, and smearing a thick, green ointment onto his hand, which cooled it and eased the pain. And then he was being led into the mess, which was a small dining room next to the kitchen (which he was delighted to discover they referred to as the