Lost at Sea Book 2 DriftersChapter 24
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“Bring her about to port, nice and gentle, but keep tightening the turn until she starts t’ list. Then pull back,” Captain Vex said.
“Aye, Captain,” Colin Strong said with much less enthusiasm than usual. The big man looked like hell. The whole right side of his face and parts of the left were swollen and bruised in an angry clash of colors. Purples, yellows, even some blues and greens. The impact points were the fierce dark red of abraded skin and broken blood vessels. His upper lip was swollen and his eyebrow was split, a large scab caked on it from being hit with the tankard. Or maybe from the boot heel. Or from having his face bounced off the floor. He wasn’t really sure. His right eye was now swollen shut, which was fine by him. Using both eyes quickly made his headache worse. His left arm was in a makeshift sling made from a triangle of old sailcloth.
He was slowly steering the ship with one arm. The crew had paused their work and put away their various tools, and were either down in the hold or holding onto something, ready in case anything went wrong. First Mate Danica North was mid ship in the role of Bosun, her pipe in one hand, holding onto a mast line with the other.
The Kestrel gracefully shifted her heading, turning slowly to the left. They weren’t tacking the sails at all. The captain wanted to see how she turned with nothing but the sea’s help.
“Thirty degrees,” Colin said, marking the previous point the Captain had ordered as the maximum turn. The Kestrel seemed like she was doing fine. Colin tightened the turn. “Thirty five.”
The Kestrel was riding low in the water. The nine smallboats added a lot of weight, and they’d countered the high balance with barrels of seawater down in the lower holds. Thirty five degrees of turn was a hard turn for any bigger ship. Normally it was easy for the Kestrel, but now the added weight and sub-optimal distribution brought on a lot of back pressure very quickly. The rudder strained. Colin braced himself and held the wheel firm. They were at full sail, but the wind was light, so they were only traveling at about half their top speed. Captain Vex scowled. The ship wasn’t listing yet, but she was close. Colin kept turning the wheel.
“Forty degrees,” he said. The deck was leaning. The timbers had begun to creak slightly. They were feeling the bounce of every wave now instead of cutting them. This was the Kestrel’s usual “safe” turning radius. For other ships it would have been considered quite tight, possibly dangerous, but she was built for this. The extra weight was doing a number on her, but she was holding. At a higher speed she might not be able to take it, but for now, she was holding on the edge of steady.
“Forty two….. Forty four….” A wave hit the starboard side of the prow and the Kestrel lurched under the push. Colin yanked the wheel the other way. Crew on the deck held tight as their weight was suddenly tossed. One man on the deck crew lost his footing and hit the deck but held tight to the mooring line in his grip. The ship creaked. Then, as quickly as it started it was over. The ship began to straighten out, the feeling and sounds of strain releasing. Colin released the wheel and let the water beneath them push the rudder back to straight. He was trying not to show it, but the strain of fighting the wheel and then the abrupt jarring as the ship listed had Colin feeling nauseated. His blood was thudding in his head.
“Set the knot at forty,” the Captain said.
The ship’s helm worked by pulling on tiller lines, thick ropes that ran from the wheel, down below the deck through a pulley system to the rudder below. Captain Vex had painted markings on her tiller lines, so the degrees of a turn were counted on the rope itself.
Colin took a knee, his breathing slow and measured as he fought back the throbbing between his eyes. He used his good hand to grab the tiller line above the forty degrees port mark. His mate grabbed below. They turned the thick rope in opposite directions. Colin’s mate had to strain and use both hands. Untwisting a tiller line while it was under tension was not easy.
The three strands that made up the rope uncoiled slightly. Colin’s new helmsman’s mate threaded a smaller length of red-dyed rope through the strands of the tiller line. Colin released it, letting it go back to it’s usual tension. The short length of red rope was now trapped at the 40 degree mark. The helm’s mate wrapped the red rope around the line a few times, then tied it in a simple knot. Now, if the wheel tried to turn past forty degrees, the knot would catch and stop the wheel dead.
“So we’ve lost about ten degrees,” Captain Vex said, half to herself. “We’re still doing better than most ships our size. I guess we’ll have tae hope we don’t need to do anything fancy.” She was not happy with the loss of maneuverability. She noticed that all the color had gone out of Colin leaving him looking sickly in the midday sun. “Have a seat, Mister Strong. Ye’re relieved. Let’s ‘ave your mate get some practice on the wheel.”
“Aye, Captain,” Colin mumbled. He was thankful. Just that much exertion and he was worried he might vomit. He’d been in fights before, but nothing had ever felt this bad. He sat down on the long bench that ran the length of the rear of the quarter deck.
“What’s your name, sailor?” the Captain asked the new Helmsman. “I don’t recognize ye, so ye must be one of the hires we picked up in Prince’s Cove.
“Aye, ma’am. Name’s Alejandro Mesa,” the young man said excitedly.
“Glad to have you, Mister Mesa. It’s rare for a sailor to be anythin’ but a rigger on their first day. I’m guessing ye have some experience on a the helm?”
“Aye, Captain. Some. Not on a ship this size thought.” Mesa said excitedly. He was stocky and a few inches shorter than Belita. She guessed he was still a teenager from the sparseness of the hair on his face, but he had the brawny build of someone who’d been doing manual labor for years. “I grew up on a fishing boat. I had the wheel a few times.”
“Well, this should feel similarly. The Kestrel’s bigger, but she moves like a ship half her size. Did your family do ocean fishing, or stick tae safe waters?” Belita asked.
“Ocean, Ma’am,” the stocky kid said.
“Ma’am an’ Sir are for military folks, sailor. Just Captain will do fine on the Kestrel,” Belita was smiling, but her tone was firm.
“Yes, Ma- uh, Captain,” Helmsman Mesa said, a bit flustered.
“What’s our course?” Belita asked.
“Uh…” the young man looked at the compass mounted to the top of the helm.
“The compass isn’t going to tell ye our course, sailor,” Belita said. She was deliberately giving him some pressure to see what he’d do.
“East? Nine… ah, ninety degrees,” he said, trying to think, remembering what he overheard the First Mate telling Helmsman Strong earlier.
“And what’s our heading?” The Captain asked.
The new helmsman looked at the compass again. “Northeast.”
“So if our course is east, and our heading is northeast, that means our turn test took us pretty far off course. How about ye get us back on track?” Belita asked.
“Aye, Captain,” Mesa said with a smile. He began to slowly turn the wheel, bringing them back to their intended course. The ship gently and gracefully swung back toward the east.
“Now we’re running parallel tae our intended course,” Belita said once the ship was headed east again. “We aren’t far off, but if we were tae correct our heading after a storm, or after being pushed off our track by a current, if all we did was get back on our original heading we might miss our destination. After goin’ off course, th’ heading has tae be reassessed.”
“How do I do that?” the Mesa asked. He looked like he was realizing he was in over his head, but was handling it well.
“Ye don’t,” Belita shook her head. She pointed to Will, who had just come out of the cabin directly below them and was squinting into the glare of the noonday sun. “That’s the Navigator’s job, or the First Mate if the Navigator is off duty or indisposed. If the both of ‘em are unavailable, then it falls tae me.”
“Alright. So what do I do until I get a reassessment?” he asked.
“Stay th’ course you’ve been given.” Belita said. “As ye gain more experience, ye’ll learn to be able tae feel it when ye go off your course. The ship’ll tell ye. When tha’ happens, ye ask whoever has command of th’ deck for a course check. Ne’er be afraid to speak up about that. Keeping us on course is your second most important duty.”
“What’s the first?” the Mesa asked.
“Don’t crash.” Colin rumbled from behind them.
Belita laughed, “Aye. Don’t crash.”
“So I should ask for a course check now?” the young helmsman asked.
“Not quite yet. We still have another steering check tae do. Just keep her steady a moment while the deck crew makes sure nothing came loose when we listed.” the Captain said.
“Aye, Captain,” Helmsman Mesa said, setting his eyes dead ahead and feeling the waters beneath trying to gently pull on the wheel. He wasn’t doing much, but steering the ship was important. His young heart swelled.
“Missus North, we all secure?” Captain Vex called down from the rail.
Danica blew a retort on her whistle and glanced around the deck and the rigging. No one signalled a problem.
“All secure, Captain!” Danica called out.
“Stand by for another steering check!” Captain Vex called back.
“Standing by, Captain!” came the reply.
“Alright Mister Mesa, it’s your turn.” Vex said to Alejandro. “Turn the wheel slow, just like Mister Strong did. The waters will fight ye after a while, but keep up the pressure. We want tae see how far we c’n go before the Kestrel tells us she’s had enough.”
Mesa was nervous. Day one on a new ship and he was being asked to deliberately endanger the crew. The Helmsman’s job was to try to stop the ship from listing whenever possible. This went against everything his father had ever taught him. He started turning the wheel.
What he didn’t realize was that Captain Vex was testing him again. She needed to know what the ship could do right now, but she also needed to know that whoever was at the helm would do exactly what she told them to do, even when it seemed dangerous. Perhaps especially when it seemed dangerous. She was waiting to see if he would balk when the ocean started pushing back.
Mesa took the turn slower than Strong had. It was almost agonizingly slow. Captain Vex just waited. The markings on the tiller line climbed. Fifteen degrees. Twenty. Twenty five. The ocean played along. Mesa could feel the tension growing as more and more water was displaced by the rudder. It felt a bit like half-hearted arm wrestling.
When the turn reached thirty degrees the waves started hitting the prow strangely, shoving and jolting a bit rather than being cut by the keel. Mesa was straining against the wheel. He was stocky and had been hauling fishing nets his whole life. He was strong and used to hard work, but the Kestrel was winning the wrestling match. He felt like he couldn’t push the wheel any further. Now they were arm wrestling for real, and Mesa was starting to lose. Captain Vex held tightly to the railing and waited. Mesa braced, got low and shifted his grip so that he was lifting, able to engage the strength of his legs as well. The tiller line began to move again.
Just past thirty five degrees a sizable wave hit from just the wrong angle and the ship lurched. The sound of a rope snapping rang out high on the port side. The mainsail pivoted awkwardly. Mesa lost his footing and went to a knee. The wheel shoved down, torquing his wrist and wrenching free of his hands, spinning freely. The sound of another rope snapping on the port side echoed across the deck. The edge of the rigging ladder flapped. The smallboat beneath it shifted oddly, coming partially unsecured, then swung out with the momentum of the Kestrel’s listing. It came back to thump hard against the ship’s hull. Captain Vex winced at the sound of the impact. She hadn’t heard any wood splintering, so hopefully it was just a bump. Still, her rigging master was going to be in a fury. She hated the smallboats anyway, and this would just be more fuel for her fire.
Mesa was grabbing at the wheel and trying to stop it’s spin. He managed to get ahold of the handles, and by then the rudder was straight enough that the wheel wasn’t threatening to break his arm. The Kestrel steadied and he carefully brought the wheel back to zero degrees, dead ahead.
“Resecure that boat!” Danica called out from the deck, pointing to the still swaying smallboat. The crew got their feet under them as the Kestrel righted herself and scrambled into action.
“You alright, Mister Mesa?” Captain Vex asked.
“Aye, Captain. I got my wrist bent a little funny. Might be sore, but doesn’t feel too bad.” Mesa said, shaking out his hand.
“It’s a bad idea to get underneath the wheel. Your legs are stronger than your arms, but if the ocean decides to really fight back, it’s a lot harder to just let go in that position,” Vex explained.
“Lesson learned, Captain. What should I have done differently?” Mesa asked.
“Get on top of her. She’ll get unruly sometimes, and if ye get under her she’ll have her way with ye. Move your hand lower on the side you’re turning tae, and sink your weight. Like you’re trying tae sit on her and hold her down. It’ll be a rare for her to be able to lift and throw your whole weight off. Also, don’t be afraid tae ask for help. Your big mistake was trying tae do it alone. If she’s fighting ye, call in an extra set of hands,” Captain Vex explained. Mesa’s face got redder and redder as she spoke. She managed not to laugh at his discomfort.
“A-aye captain,” Mesa said hesitantly.
“You alright, Mister Strong?” Belita said over her shoulder. Colin gave her a nod, which was how she knew he wasn’t really doing well at all. Colin wasn’t one to not sound off. She knew he’d balk if she completely relieved him of duty. He was stubborn.
“Get a knot set at thirty-five degrees port. Ye have the wheel, Mister Mesa. If ye have questions, ask Mister Strong, but don’t let him take over. You need the practice so he’s relieved until I say otherwise,” Belita said wryly with a glance at her primary Helmsman. Colin sighed.
Captain Vex strode down the stairs to the main deck, her boot heels clicking on the wood.
___________________
Will stepped in to help haul a line that was lifting and steadying the smallboat that had come unsecured. Someone had tossed a boarding grapple down and hooked it beneath one of the seats, so now a handful of sailors were holding the smallboat up while the riggers figured out a solution. Most smallboats were designed to be easily carried by four men, so the job of hoisting them wasn’t too difficult. The issue was that it was being stowed off the side of the ship, so it was suspended over the water. They’d rigged it while the Kestrel was docked and steady. Trying to rig a smallboat off the edge of the ship while the ocean rolled was a whole different thing. Even in calm waters, the ocean was never steady. The swabs were mostly trying to keep the smallboat steady so that the rolling of the ocean didn’t smash it against the Kestrel’s hull.
The rigging master’s solution to the smallboat problem was to rig the Kestrel in a square mainsail configuration, then run a rigging ladder from near the top of the mainmast down to each of the Kestrel’s side railings. Rigging ladders were triangular, running from all across the midship rails the up to a central point high on the mast. The smallboats were secured to the rigging ladders. It was a clever solution. Each smallboat had a main support rope and two stabilizing ropes that ran to different points along the rigging ladder. The whole thing looked a bit like a spiderweb, or a Nivalese Dreamcatcher. Will had never seen anything like it. Of course, he also hadn’t ever seen any ship this size carry this many smallboats. It was an elegant solution as long as none of the ropes snapped. So, of course, that is what had happened. It definitely shouldn't have. Those ropes were sturdy and smallboats were not terribly heavy. It was a strange fluke. Will didn’t know if it was his fault, but he had a pretty guilty conscience when it came to unlucky coincidences.
Jack crossed the deck, followed by Quinn, weaving around the swabs and riggers. Will tracked her with his gaze, trying to ignore the mixture of feelings that welled up when he saw her. He was glad he was holding a line and had something else to do or he wasn’t sure he’d have been able to stop himself from going to talk to her. She looked back at him, their eyes meeting for a moment. A flicker of bitterness passed over her face before settling into a defiant glare. She looked away and walked to the prow with enough swing in her hips that Will knew she knew he was still watching. She stopped and stood there, grabbing onto the railing and watching the waves. After a few moments she pulled Quinn’s arms around her. Will raised an eyebrow. It figured. Will wasn’t usually the jealous type, but something about that got to him. He turned away and focused on the job to distract himself.
A human stormcloud came up from below decks, shielding her eyes from the glare and starting to yell before she was even able to get a good look at the situation. “Mac, did you put those brace pins on the sailbeam like I told you to?”
“Aye!” A woman working up on the mainmast called out.
“Then what the hell happened?” The angry woman was stalking over to the mast and looking up. She didn’t seem to be wearing much. A red strip of cloth was all that kept her from being topless.
“The pin busted!” Mac the rigger called out.
“Well shit,” the angry woman muttered. She grabbed three more belaying pins from the barrel roped to the base of the mast, tucked them into her belt behind her back, and went up the mast like nothing Will had ever seen. She could have given Jack the Monkey a good race. Moments later she was sitting astride the mainsail beam with the other rigger, the two of them looking at something Will couldn’t make out. It took them a few minutes to do whatever they were doing.
“Tie it off, take a break,” Danica North said to the swabs. The grapple line was looped and pulled into a couple half-hitch knots around the railing. The swabs relaxed. A few of them looked Will up and down. It was the first time many of them had seen him.
“You the new navigator?” a wiry, heavily tanned man with a few flecks of silver in his black hair asked. He looked like he’d gone to a barber and gotten his hair cut and his face shaved when they’d come ashore, but it had been a few days. Stubble was growing in. He was a handsome man, and had the glint in his eye of someone who knew it.
“Guilty as charged,” Will tried to sound self-effacing. He knew word would have gotten out about whose fault it was that they were hauling so many lifeboats. “Will Stirling.”
“Harker,” the sailor said. “What the hell do we need nine smallboats for?” There it was. Will knew if he gave an inch they’d hound him about it forever.
“A magic trick,” Will said with a wry grin.
“I hope it involves you turning invisible. Lace wants to hang ya,” Harker chuckled.
“Usually people have to meet me first before they want me dead. Who’s Lace?” Will asked.
Harker gestured with his head toward the mast. “Take a guess.”
“She’s your rigging master?” Will asked. “I hear there’s a betting pool.”
“I have five crowns down on you dangling by the ankles from the boom, so if you could try to steer her in that direction, I’d appreciate it,” Harker smirked.
“I’ll see what I can do,” Will half-chuckled, half-sighed.
Up in the rigging, Lace started climbing out on the mainsail beam, a large length of coiled rope looped diagonally across her chest. Will’s brows rose.
The Kestrel was a Caravel. A small, nimble vessel designed to be easily configured for different sails. As such she didn’t have a large, sturdy sailbeam permanently affixed to the mast. Her mainsail beam was lightweight and tied in place so it could more easily be hoisted around. Will’s guess was that it wasn’t any larger across than three inches, and Lace was climbing out on it.
The higher up on a ship you got, the more the motion of the ocean translated into movement. If you were in the crows nest, you were constantly moving back and forth. The further out on a beam you got, the more a ship’s natural swaying caused changes in elevation. Out on the end of a beam, instead of moving back and forth, you would be moving up and down. High up, out on a beam was the most unstable place a person could be. Usually riggers worked slow and had dual safety lines that they were constantly re-tying as they worked. Lace did not.
The sail beam was raising and lowering, and also swinging laterally. It shouldn’t have been doing that. Will suddenly realized what line had broken.
In a square sail configuration, the four outer corners had stabilization lines that ran to the rear of the ship to keep the sail from pivoting freely. They could be given slack or hauled on to change their angle and help steer the ship, or to move forward in spite of a headwind. That kind of steering was called ‘tacking.’” It always reminded Will of the dual-string kites he used to build as a child. It was one of those tack lines that had snapped first. With nothing to hold it steady the sail beam was able to swing forwards on that side.
Lace was laying across the beam moving forward something like a lizard, riding out the constant dips and the back and forth swinging of the beam. She was hauling what Will guessed was a forty pound coil of rope slung diagonally across her chest. She reached the end, sat up straddling the narrow beam, hooking her feet into the sail itself, and pulled off her coil of rope. She looped it over the end of the beam and let it hang, then started to untie the dangling, broken line.
“She’s impressive,” Will said.
“Aye. She’s Akula. We joke that she’s half spider,” Harker said. He leaned against the rail, hooked his arms into the rigging ladder and watched Lace work.
“Haven’t met many Akula,” Will said. Up above on the other side of the ship, Lace called out then dropped the broken length of rope.
“Me neither, but the ones I’ve run into are all born sailors with a mean streak a fathom deep. Superstitious as anything too,” Harker said while watching Lace work. “With her, it’s like she’s trying to outdo the rest.”
“Wonderful,” Will sighed.
Lace knotted the coil to the end of the sail beam and then tossed it out across the rigging ladder toward the aft of the ship. Will was surprised at how far the toss got the coil of rope. It was a heavy length of line, but her clean underhand lob had it uncoiling through the air perfectly. It cleared the ladder and landed on the deck on the far side with a thud.
Another rigger picked it up and ran it back toward the sterncastle where they’d already cleared away the other half of the broken line. With a few quick heaves and a tie-off, the sail was once again secure.
Lace waited until the line was done being tied off, then pushed herself up into a crouch on the end of the narrow beam and jumped.
The rigging ladder was only about five feet away from the sail beam, but still, a leap like that was impressive and dangerous. If the ship had rolled or shifted at the wrong moment she could have tossed herself sixty feet down into the ocean, or worse, to the deck. She caught herself on the rigging ladder and made her way down to the deck. She actually had to squeeze underneath the tack line because it was so close to the ladder. Will’s brows furrowed. That didn’t seem right to him. Lace dropped the last few feet to the deck.
“She does stuff like that often?” Will asked.
“All the time,” Harker said.
“She’s breaking every rigger’s rule I’ve ever heard of,” Will could only shake his head.
“Try telling her that.” Harker wandered away to join another group of swabs. Lace was crossing the deck and apparently he had decided to be elsewhere.
Her gait was like a dancer crossed with a cat. Most sailors were graceful in a relaxed, loose-boned way, but she walked like the ship was moving right where her feet wanted it to be. There was a sharp edged confidence to her. She wore loose grey trousers that had dozens of tight, neat stitches holding together places where the fabric had torn. They’d once been black, but the color had long since faded. Her shoes were little more than slightly padded leather slippers laced across the ankle and top of her foot. A wide belt hugged her waist, dotted with closed leather holsters with small tools in them. At the small of her back was a wide, squarish knife, the sort Will had seen used in sugar cane fields. It was like a short machete with a sharp hook on the back. She wasn’t wearing a shirt. Instead, she simply bound a wide strip of red cloth around her smallish breasts and tied a knot in front. At nearly any port it would have been scandalous attire. Even onboard a ship it was surprising to see a woman wearing so little. Her skin was dusky, like dark caramel. Will could see thin, darker tattoos across her shoulders that looked like spiderwebs. The sides of her head were shaved. The rest of her wavy black hair was pulled back in a short fishtail braid.
“Stare a little harder, swab,” Lace said, barely looking at Will as she passed. Will’s eyes still followed her. He was just too curious not to watch. Across her back was a large web tattoo, with a hand sized tribal-patterned spider sitting high between her shoulder blades.
She scanned the rope ladder and where the rope holding up the smallboat had snapped. She looked back over her shoulder at the sail beam where she’d repaired the tack line, considering. “I knew this was going to happen,” she muttered to herself.
Jack walked back across the deck, distracting Will again. He mentally called himself an idiot. Losing his focus every time Jack entered his field of vision was not a good habit to get into. She didn’t look at him this time. She seemed lost in thought. She stopped in front of the door to the Captain’s cabin, looked like she was about to knock, but then simply opened the door and went in. Unexpected feelings of anger welled up. That was his room, and Bella was still inside. He stopped himself. No, that was the Captain’s room. He was a guest there. It was where the navigation equipment was. It was more like his office than anything else. Bella could take care of herself. She and Jack had a lot to work out. He let go of his sudden negativity and found himself hoping that the two of them would make some progress in making up. Then for the second time in as many moments he wondered where the hell that thought had come from. Did she deserve his good wishes? No. Not at all. Then why did he have them? Shouldn't he be angrier? He found he just couldn’t muster it, and that confused him even more. Jack’s presence was really getting to him.
Danica North crossed over from where she’d been speaking with a group of swabs. “Any idea what happened?”
“Aye,” Lace said, clearly exasperated. She gestured up to the rigging ladders. “They’re too big. They’re too close to the beams and the tack lines.”
“Weren’t they your idea?” Danica asked.
“Yes, and I still stand by it, but we didn’t have time to make them. We had to buy them, and they’re made for a ship three times this size. There’s a reason Caravels don’t have these. I had to cut off the bottom third off, and they’re still too big!” She pointed to where the tack line was nearly touching the ladder. “It’s too close. Even with the tack lines as tight as we can make them, there’s still some sway to the sail beam. There has to be. That’s why we put the bracing pins up at the hinge point.” She pointed to where the mainsail beam was attached to the mast. “I was hoping that the pins would keep the mast from pivoting at all, but when the Captain decided to throw her into a list, the force of the jolt just crushed a pin to splinters. So then the mast could pivot, so it did.” She pointed to the tack line that had snapped. “It pulled so hard it broke the line there.” Then she pointed straight up to where the rigging ladder was near the sail beam, where she had jumped. “So with no tack line there, the beam was able to swing back here. It hit the ladder, which was already holding up the weight of all these damned boats. It’s a wonder we didn’t snap more than just one.”
Danica nodded in thought. “Do you have a solution?”
“I put more pins in to brace the hinge point. There’s not much more we can do there. We don’t want to put gouges in our mainsail beam.
“No,” Danica agreed.
“I’ll get started on making rigging ladders with a narrower profile.” Lace continued. “They won’t be a triangle, so they won’t come as close to the beam and the tack lines. The sides will slope, like a…” she made a gesture with her hands, starting at a top point and then arcing downward, struggling to find the right words.
“Like a flat-bottomed tear drop?” Will suggested.
“Aye, like that,” Lace said, not bothering to look at Will before continuing. “We have plenty of rope, but it will take a few days. Until then, we have to be careful.”
“I’ll tell the Captain,” Danica turned and headed toward the sterncastle.
Lace called to the swabs and started giving them hauling instructions, and got two riggers to help her tie knots. Will kept his mouth shut and helped the swabs haul ropes. A few minutes later the work was done and the smallboat was hanging securely again.
Lace stood with her hands on her hips, surveying the work she’d done. Her face was locked in disapproval. “What a fucking mess,” she muttered. Her eyes locked on the captain’s cabin. “Our fancy new Navigator’s still in there?”
A few eyes flicked to Will. No one said anything.
“Aye, ma’am,” Will said. The swabs glanced at each other. A few of them grinned.
Lace didn’t notice. She wheeled on him. “None of that ma’am shit with me, newmeat. I have a name. Fucking use it.”
“Well, you’re going to have to tell me what it is then,” Will said with a shrug.
“Mouthy-ass newmeat.” She glared, giving Will a solid look for the first time. “I’m Lace.”
“Will,” he said with a smile.
The Rigging Master rolled her eyes and turned back to the captain’s cabin door. “New fucker gets the best bunk aboard, and sleeps the day away while we’re out here cleaning up the mess all this smallboat bullshit caused.”
“What are all these boats for anyway?” Will asked Lace. Harker looked at him like he was a madman.
“No idea. Knowing the captain, it’s something fucking crazy,” Lace said, sounding resigned.
“You… don’t seem like you really like it here,” Will said. The audience was on the edge of their figurative seats.
Lace turned on him. “You seem awfully fucking nosy for a newmeat swab.”
“Sorry,” Will said. “Didn’t mean anything by it.”
“Vex is the best Captain I’ve ever seen. One of the best I’ve ever even heard of. She’s got an eye for talent, and she treats her people right. I’d rather be here than anywhere else. None of that means it’s a pleasure cruise. Every time she gets a new wild hair, I end up having to figure out ways to do shit that no one’s ever needed to do before. Like rig nine smallboats off a fucking Caravel!” Lace threw her hands up in exasperation and spun on her heel. “I’m going to rip some hide off the newmeat Navigator once they decide they’ve had enough beauty sleep.”
“Have you seen her yet?” Will asked. Harker looked like he was going to choke.
“Her? No.” Lace snapped. “What’s she look like?”
“Tall. Brown hair in a braid. She wore a hat with a skull on the brim,” Will said.
“The one who came on with the nobleman and the green Asura?” Lace asked.
“That’s her,” Will said. “She just went into the Captain’s cabin.”
“Hope her maps are better than the rest of her plans,” Lace growled.
“Miss Webber! Report!” Danica called from the sterncastle.
Lace left without a word and swayed off to the Captain’s beckon.
The swabs let out their collective breath. “What the hell was that?” Harker asked. “You just threw the expedition leader to the wolves.”
“We’ll see,” Will grinned.
“I’m gonna go find North. Need to change my bet,” one of the swabs said.
“North? The First Mate is your bookie?” Will asked.
“Naw, the other one. The Quartermaster,” Harker said.
“He didn’t mention that,” Will said.
“Seems to be a lot of that going around,” Harker said, looking to where Lace was climbing the steps.
Harker said something else, but Will didn’t hear it.
______________________
The ship lurched. Jack held herself in the stairwell, her arms braced against either side, riding out the sudden motion. Quinn didn’t fight it. He simply rolled with it and leaned against the wall. Two snapping sounds echoed down the stairwell, followed by a wooden thud. Jack’s brows raised. That didn’t sound good.
Once things were stable again Jack climbed the last few steps out into the sun. The deck was bustling with activity.
“I hope they are quite done with whatever they were doing, throwing the ship around like that,” Jack grumbled, tipping her head down to let her hat shield her eyes from the glare of the sun.
“They were performing a test of the Kestrel’s steering capabilities. I told you when they knocked on the door,” Quinn said softly, following Jack onto the deck. He didn’t make any effort to save his eyes from the sun.
“Was I asleep at the time?” Jack asked.
“You woke up when I spoke with you,” Quinn said.
“Did I respond?” Jack asked.
“You made an unintelligible noise and threw a pillow at me,” Quinn said.
“So no.” Jack walked toward the prow.
“Well, it was certainly a response,” Quinn shrugged, following his mistress.
“I really cannot be held responsible for what I don’t remember if you tell me while I am quite obviously asleep,” Jack said flatly.
“I admit, my knowledge of human behavior is a bit rusty, but I don’t think sleeping people throw pillows,” Quinn mused.
“They do. Obviously,” Jack clarified. She spotted Will standing near a group of swabs. They were hauling on a line, hefting one of the smallboats. He was watching her. A knot of frustration welled up in her chest. Talking to Quinn earlier had helped some, but there was a lot of bitterness and heartache still there. Seeing him welled up so many feelings, which she immediately shifted towards anger and pride because they were easier to deal with. She met his eyes with a look that she hoped was defiant and smoldering, then looked away and crossed the deck, knowing he was watching.
This wasn’t her. She hated it. The feelings. The whole performance of it. She hated the fact that she felt any of it was necessary at all. She wasn’t the sort to hold back what she felt, but letting it out would make it impossible to avoid why. If the why came out, Quinn would be in danger. She wasn’t willing to take that risk. So she walked. Strutted really, telling Will with her whole body that she was angry and off-limits.
When she reached the prow she took a deep breath and leaned on the railing. She’d been in a surprisingly good mood. She didn’t get enough sleep, but she was happy and excited to be out on the water on a new adventure. This was her greatest joy, and seeing Will at all had poisoned it. “I really hate this,”she muttered.
“If you wish to reconsider…” Quinn began.
“No. Thank you, but no. I am not willing to put you at risk, nor am I willing to put us at risk,” Jack said. “Come here, please.”
Quinn stepped closer. Jack pulled his thick arms around her shoulders, leaned back into his broad chest and let out a long breath.
The waves rolled, cut by the Kestrel’s sharp prow, tossing a light spray into the air with ever gentle crest. She had hoped the cool spray would quell some of the hot anger inside her, but it didn’t. It suddenly occurred to her that Will might still be watching. She looked down at Quinn’s green arms and smiled slyly. “Is he still watching us?”
“He was. Now he is watching another woman. The one with the spiderweb markings. She seems to have been called up to the… the part of the ship with the steering device,” Quinn said.
“The sterncastle. The steering device is the wheel,” Jack explained.
“It is not a wheel. It is a circle with handles,” Quinn deadpanned.
“Yes well, that’s what it is called.” Jack smiled just a bit. She was still angry, but Quinn’s occasional exasperation with inconsequential human behaviors was always amusing. He didn’t show it much. Getting him to open up at all had been a long process, which was still ongoing.
“Is there another way?” Quinn asked.
“What?” Jack said, glancing at her green-skinned companion.
“To speak with Mister Sterling and work through this… situation?” Quinn explained.
“We are really going to have to work on your segues,” Jack sighed.
“Mister Sterling seems like a reasonable person. Perhaps if he understood your intentions he would be able to forgive you, and perhaps you could forgive yourself as well,” Quinn kept a lot of his thoughts in reserve, but when he spoke he often said things that most people would leave implied.
The anger in Jack’s breast churned and threatened to burst forth. The idea that she needed to forgive herself was… correct. No one liked when their deepest regrets and shames were unexpectedly exposed. She stopped herself from taking it out on Quinn. He would accept any punishment she decided to inflict, but he was trying his best to help her. He would not have spoken if he did not think the words would serve that purpose. Why was she so mad? Was it just a shield? The guilt was there. So was the indignation. The frustration from knowing that she should not have to feel this way. In a way, she blamed Will. She knew that was wrong and uncalled for, so there was another layer to the guilt. She was angry at herself, and it made her lash out.
It dawned on her. That was Quinn’s purpose. He was making himself a target. He wanted to give her a safe outlet for her frustration. She just could not do it. Not to him. It would feel like kicking a dog. She sighed. The anger melted out of her leaving a hollow, sad ache behind. She shook her head. “Will is not as reasonable as he appears. Explorers never are. He’s easy-going and adaptable, but it’s a tactic. Underneath it is a restlessness and a will to win that is as uncompromising as nature itself. It has to be. The alternative is death,” Jack said quietly. “Will is about as unreasonable as they come.”
Quinn could read between the lines. She was not just talking about Will. “If the roles were reversed, what would you do?”
“Probably exactly what Will did. What he’s still doing. I’d be angry,” Jack said bitterly, looking out at the ocean again.
“And how would someone get through to you?” Quinn asked.
Jack was quiet for a long time. Quinn certainly knew how to ask the right questions. “Thank you, Quinn. I need some time to myself,” she said, starting to walk away. Quinn gave her a solemn inclination of his head and turned to watch the sea.
Jack passed across the busy deck lost in her thoughts, oblivious to the swabs weaving around her. She glanced up at Will who was still on the sterncastle with most of the ship’s officers. She reached the captain’s cabin door, raised her hand to knock but hesitated. She stood there like she was paralyzed. Then, she simply opened the door and walked in.
____________________
Bella rolled in her sleep. She’d been in and out, trying to keep herself from fully waking. It had been hard with the ship trying to toss her out of bed. That seemed to have subsided, so she was out again, just at the edge of dreaming. She found a hand next to her. Her mouth twitched. She held onto it. It was cool and soft. Mostly smooth with a few rough spots. Calluses. The fingers were long and graceful, but strong. She felt something hard. A ring. All these small thoughts filtered through into the ragged edges of her consciousness, not crisp or clear. Impressions really. Other associated feelings formed. Comfort. Familiarity. Wistfulness. Hurt. Anger. She knew that hand.
Her eyes snapped open and slowly came into focus on Jack, who was looking at where Bella had reached out and held her hand with an expression of raw sadness etched onto her beautiful face. Bella didn’t move. She just watched. Tears began welling in Jack’s eyes. One escaped. Jack wiped it away with her other hand and closed her eyes tightly.
“Hello, Jack,” Bella said quietly.
Jack started and went stiff. She pulled her hand away and stood up. “I’m sorry, I should not have come.”
“You’re here. You might as well sit back down,” Bella said. She stretched her legs beneath the blankets and yawned.
“I don’t know what I was going to say,” Jack said. “I just wanted to talk to you.”
“And you decided not to knock?” Bella asked.
“I was afraid you would have shut the door in my face,” Jack said.
“I might have,” Bella agreed.
“I couldn’t risk that,” Jack said quietly.
“You came for a fight?” Bella asked, keeping her tone neutral.
“Ready for one I suppose. I did not think you would be asleep,” Jack said. Of all the things Bella could have done, simply being asleep had been the most disarming. Jack felt adrift. All the conviction that had convinced her that just barging in would get her what she wanted had died at the sight of the sleeping witch.
“How long were you there for?” Bella asked.
“Not long. You stirred a bit when I sat down. I did not expect you to hold my hand.” Jack still stood awkwardly in the dimly-lit room, not looking at Bella.
“I didn’t mean to. I didn’t know it was you,” Bella said. She watched Jack’s heart break a little more, and then the aloof mask slid back into place. Jack nodded and walked away.
“What do you want, Jack?” Bella asked. She didn’t know why she asked. It just came out.
Jack stopped, quiet for a while. “I wanted some advice.”
“Alright,” Bella said. Why was she entertaining this? She pulled the other pillows behind her and propped herself up against the headboard, pulling the blanket up beneath her arms. She folded her hands in her lap and waited.
“I don’t know what to do to make things right,” Jack said. Bella’s brows rose. For Jack, admitting that she needed help at all was rare.
“After what you did? I’m not sure you can,” Bella said. She tried not to make it sound harsh.
“What I did was wrong. I had my reasons. I just can’t talk about them and I can’t take them back. I don’t know what to do,” Jack said. Bella had never heard her sound so unsure of herself.
“What are you asking?” Bella prompted.
“I don’t know,” Jack said. She finally turned around, looking at Bella for the first time. “I was going to ask how to talk to Will. I guess I should figure out how to talk to you first.”
“You’re talking to me now,” Bella said. She still wasn’t sure how she should feel about this, so she was keeping her tone and body language guarded and neutral.
“It feels wrong,” Jack shook her head.
“I agree. It has felt wrong for a long time,” Bella said.
“I miss you,” Jack said, looking at the floor.
“I miss you too,” Bella said. “Unfortunately, there’s a lot of things in the way of fixing that.”
“I wish I could explain it,” Jack said.
“There’s no justification for what you did,” Bella said firmly.
“I know. I don’t want to justify it. I just wish I could tell you why.” Jack shook her head, frustrated.
“That’s what you said last time we had this conversation,” Bella said. “If you still can’t talk about it, why are you here?”
“To apologize. I know it isn’t enough.” Jack swallowed back more tears.
“It’s a start. Come sit down,” Bella said. She wasn’t sure she should have said that. Did she really want to have this conversation? Jack had come in without asking, and this sounded a lot like a conversation they’d already had more than once.
Jack sat. She sat further away this time, toward the end of the bed. “Having you here makes everything so much harder. I think I could have done this and just let Will and I be spiteful to each other. I can’t do that to you,”
“Will’s anger is justified, and you have never admitted that before now,” Bella was trying to choose her words as carefully as possible. She could feel herself getting more tense.
“I know. I was upset that neither of you trusted me.” Jack worried the ring on her finger.
“You gave us very little reason to. You did something awful to Will, then lied to me about it, and when it all came to light you refused to explain anything and acted like you were the victim,” Bella could feel the old anger welling. Her brows furrowed. She wasn’t sure she could do this.
“I’m sorry,” Jack said in a soft voice. “I handled that very poorly.”
This was a side of Jack Bella hadn’t seen before. Jack was a proud woman. Fierce and stubborn. She was born of privilege and had turned herself into a self sufficient and capable woman on top of that. In many ways she was everything Bella felt she wasn’t. It was what had drawn Bella to her in the first place. Something in Jack had changed in the years since they had parted ways.
“I had hoped I could just say that I had my reasons, and that would be enough,” Jack continued.
“I can’t imagine what reasons you could have possibly had for betraying Will and leaving him to die.” Bella’s eyes narrowed. “Or why you can’t just talk about it. Are you cursed or something?”
“No,” Jack said.
“Blackmailed?” Bella pushed.
“No, of course not. I wouldn’t have done that for any kind of blackmail. I hope you know that,” Jack said.
“That isn’t as reassuring as it should be,” Bella said grimly. “That means you made the choice yourself.”
“I did. I would… I would make it again. I would just… try to make you understand first,” Jack said. She sounded like she knew it was the wrong thing to say when she said it.
That was too much. “Make me understand!?” Bella snapped. “You mean you would try to appeal to my trust in you? Like you’re trying to do now? Just an apology and the hope that I wouldn’t want to know more about why you left the man you loved to die?”
Jack winced like she’d been struck. “That isn’t what happened.”
“Have you asked him? Do you know what happened?” Bella snarled.
“No I… he wouldn’t talk to me,” Jack tried to explain.
“What a surprise!” Bella scoffed.
“I didn’t think you would choose him over me!” Jack snapped. “I thought you would trust me! You and Will weren’t that close.”
“Will was my friend. Do you have any idea how rare that is for me? To be friends with a man who respects me and never tried to fuck me or use me or hurt me? In my entire life that has only happened twice.” Bella hissed.
“Well he’s sure fucking you now,” Jack said, unable to control her sudden jealousy.
“I came to him! I had to convince him! I did it to fuel the magic that convinced us to do this. To be here. Because for whatever fool reason I was worried about you and wanted to help!” Bella’s hands were shaking. She laid them on her thighs and took a breath.
Jack held her tongue. She wanted to say she didn’t need help. That all this would be easier without them. She knew what she was doing. Didn’t she? All this had already gotten out of hand. They were so far away from where she’d wanted to be. Why were they talking about this?
“I do not need to justify my reaction to you.” Bella continued. “Even if I hadn’t known Will at all, what you did was wrong. You were partners. Lovers. What would you have done if it had been me in that ruin with you instead of him? Could you have left me there to die too?”
“No. Never,” Jack said adamantly.
“Then why him? What made him so disposable?” Bella felt like she was being dragged behind her anger now.
“Because he could take it!” The words tore themselves from Jack’s mouth. “I knew he would be fine!”
“He wasn’t fine. He still isn’t fine.” Bella was confused, but still angry.
“He sure seems fine to me!” Jack threw her hands up. “He’s rich now! He has you! He has everything!”
“Except his partner, and an explanation, and the ability to live the life he chooses. You took all that from him.” The words were like hammers.
“It wasn’t supposed to be like that,” Jack shook her head.
“How could you know what things would be like?” Bella asked. “Are you a diviner now?”
“No, but I…” Jack swallowed. Things had gone too far. She’d lost control of the conversation. She was right where she didn’t want to be. She couldn’t stop herself from speaking. “I know what the curse is.”
Dawn was breaking. The storm had passed and the eastern horizon was slowly swelling from black to purple to herald the coming of the sun. The crew of the Kestrel was finishing roping hammocks between trees. The wounded were mostly already asleep. Others were unloading the smallboats they’d used to get supplies ashore. They were all exhausted but still managing to trudge along. Lord Morant and his porters had set up tents near the waterline, a ways away from the rest of the crew. Bella had found...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe island of Barcola was primarily Nivalese. The inhabitants had managed to repel a mainland occupation a half-century prior by pulling the majority of their people into the mountains and fighting a brutal guerrilla war against the colonizing forces. In the narrow mountain passes, the mainlanders’ usual tactics of shielded firing lines and phalanx-style close combat were completely useless. The colonists tried to starve out the natives, but the lush tropical mountain provided everything the...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe crescent shaped cliffside was littered with walkways and bridges, and dotted throughout with caves. Platforms made from a hodgepodge of materials were anchored into the walls, and stacked on each other haphazardly. Thick ropes and chains made an elaborate net that reminded Will of rigging designed by a madman. The largest platform hung in the center of it all, ringed with crane arms and hoist tackle. The whole web looked unstable, but figures walked throughout the tangle without a hint of...
Will got out of the tub after a quick rinse. He was impressed at how warm the water had stayed.“Jus’ pull the drain stopper,” Belita said. She was in the process of being dried off by her dutiful cabin girl. She had her foot up on a stool and Bella was finishing dragging a soft cloth along her thigh and calf.“Do I get that sort of treatment?” Will asked.“You’re not captain,” Cabin Girl Bella said, smugly. He looked around for his own towel. The one Bella had been using hit him in the face. The...
Fantasy & Sci-FiWill got out of the tub after a quick rinse. He was impressed at how warm the water had stayed. “Jus’ pull the drain stopper,” Belita said. She was in the process of being dried off by her dutiful cabin girl. She had her foot up on a stool and Bella was finishing dragging a soft cloth along her thigh and calf. “Do I get that sort of treatment?” Will asked. “You’re not captain,” Cabin Girl Bella said, smugly. He looked around for his own towel. The one Bella had been using hit him in the...
The sky was a flat, grey plane of clouds, slowly roiling. The air was warm and charged. The winds were gentle. An electrical storm was brewing.Will stared at Jack for a long time. “Do you ever think about what you’re about to say before it comes out of your mouth?”“Come on, Will! You never used to care about the words. You could see right past them and knew exactly what I meant. Try that now,” Jack demanded. She was barreling straight on, trying to get Will to catch up.Will wasn’t having it....
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe sky was a flat, grey plane of clouds, slowly roiling. The air was warm and charged. The winds were gentle. An electrical storm was brewing. Will stared at Jack for a long time. “Do you ever think about what you’re about to say before it comes out of your mouth?” “Come on, Will! You never used to care about the words. You could see right past them and knew exactly what I meant. Try that now,” Jack demanded. She was barreling straight on, trying to get Will to catch up. Will wasn’t having...
Will was surprised. He’d heard Bella talk about how bad hexes were before. “I thought you didn’t hex people.”“I don’t, usually. It’s one of those things the Magistrate really frowns on, but against pirates trying to kill us I’m willing to bend the rules,” Bella smiled. She finished crawling around and drawing the second circle as Will tied the mirror to the mast. Inside the mirror Will heard Tonya arrive. “Sorry it took me so long, I really needed to get cleaned up. What’s going on?” Bella’s...
Fantasy & Sci-FiWill was surprised. He’d heard Bella talk about how bad hexes were before. “I thought you didn’t hex people.” “I don’t, usually. It’s one of those things the Magistrate really frowns on, but against pirates trying to kill us I’m willing to bend the rules,” Bella smiled. She finished crawling around and drawing the second circle as Will tied the mirror to the mast. Inside the mirror Will heard Tonya arrive. “Sorry it took me so long, I really needed to get cleaned up. What’s going on?”...
Captain Vex’s hands knotted in the witch’s dark curls. Bella was a profoundly skilled lover. The Captain had a taste of what Bella could do on top of the lighthouse, but being the sole focus of-of a sex witch’s ministrations when there were no other distractions (and Bella was feeling particularly thankful) was to be given the best possible seat in a masterclass in how to pleasure a woman.Belita had already been turned on fiercely by helping Bella with her recharge ritual. The witch was so...
Fantasy & Sci-FiLace lounged against a tree, enjoying the music and her drunken buzz. The wake was still going. It wasn’t the happiest reason for revelry, but after a shipwreck and being attacked by monsters it was clear the crew would take any reason they could get. Sailors were an odd lot. They tended to be fairly stoic until you put a few drinks in them. Then everything they were feeling came pouring out. They were communal too, so what one felt, they tended to all feel, even if they generally didn’t talk...
“You should have come straight to me,” Lord Morant said with an authoritarian stare.They were standing on the deck of the fishing boat as it pulled away from the docks. Morant, Lynch and Jack had joined them without a word as they boarded the ship. Will had started to speak, but Morant had cut him off.“Why would I do that?” Will snarled back, still fuming.“Nae, Will. He’s right,” Captain Vex said. She wore her hat and coat, but her other clothes had still been wet and were packed away, so she...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe crew began rousing themselves around noon. It was just too hot to sleep comfortably any longer. The shipwrecked survivors moved slow and gingerly, trudging through their tasks with stoic determination. There was a lot to be done. The ramshackle camp was mostly just strewn hammocks and bedrolls at the edge of the lagoon. There hadn’t been time or energy for much else, so the day’s first priority was to set up a more organized campsite. Nearly half the crew, lead by Mister Reeve, were off in...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe crew began rousing themselves around noon. It was just too hot to sleep comfortably any longer. The shipwrecked survivors moved slow and gingerly, trudging through their tasks with stoic determination. There was a lot to be done. The ramshackle camp was mostly just strewn hammocks and bedrolls at the edge of the lagoon. There hadn’t been time or energy for much else, so the day’s first priority was to set up a more organized campsite. Nearly half the crew, lead by Mister Reeve, were off...
“The energy doesn’t have to come from you, it just needs to be received by you,” Bella said. She was watching Captain Vex’s back arch against the bed while Will’s tongue worked between her legs. Belita stretched languidly like a big golden housecat, her expression happy and glazed.“Received?” Tonya asked, not following.“Well, it has to turn you on,” Bella clarified. “That’s not a completely accurate way to put it, but there’s enough overlap that it will work until you have enough experience to...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe prow of the wrecked ship hit the Kestrel with a sickening crunch. Swabs went to their knees. Riggers hung on to their ropes as they were whipped back and forth by the jarring impact. A few unlucky sailors even found themselves bowled completely over, or found themselves hanging in the air, suspended by their safety lines. Rope burn, splinters and scraped skin abounded. Those at the front of the ship fared the worst. Danica and Mister Lynch were thrown backwards from the prow all the way to...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“So there was something under the water?” Captain Vex asked. “Yeah,” Will nodded, as he bolted down the last of the spotlight-lanterns on the railing next to the ship’s wheel. The other three hadn’t survived the fight on the prow. Captain Vex wasn’t thrilled about that, those lanterns were expensive. Will’s hands hurt badly, but he still had a bit more to do before he could let the doctor look him over. Besides, there were a lot of crew worse off than he was. “I started to figure it out when...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe island of Barcola was primarily Nivalese. The inhabitants had managed to repel a mainland occupation a half-century prior by pulling the majority of their people into the mountains and fighting a brutal guerrilla war against the colonizing forces. In the narrow mountain passes, the mainlanders’ usual tactics of shielded firing lines and phalanx-style close combat were completely useless. The colonists tried to starve out the natives, but the lush tropical mountain provided everything the...
“What did you do?” Caine asked. Janie hadn’t really noticed him come in. He was leaning in the doorway watching Janie blow out the candles in front of the mirror. She was disheveled and flushed after watching Bella work her oral magic on Captain Vex, and she definitely did not expect an audience for what she was thinking about doing next.She was recovering from being startled, but Caine didn’t give her time to reply. “A customer says you stiffed him?”“That isn’t true at all!” Janie said. “I did...
Fantasy & Sci-FiJanie looked at herself in the mirror. She barely recognized the person she saw.Her had been styled with hot metal rods and some kind of light, fragrant oil that held its shape as it dried. It had taken a while, sitting there and letting Tonya do who-knows-what to it. Then Tonya had put makeup on her and helped her pick out an outfit from a communal closet. After all that work she could finally see it all. Her hair tumbled in loose flowing waves. A small black hat with a white band was pinned...
Fantasy & Sci-FiThe prow of the wrecked ship hit the Kestrel with a sickening crunch. Swabs went to their knees. Riggers hung on to their ropes as they were whipped back and forth by the jarring impact. A few unlucky sailors even found themselves bowled completely over, or found themselves hanging in the air, suspended by their safety lines. Rope burn, splinters and scraped skin abounded. Those at the front of the ship fared the worst. Danica and Mister Lynch were thrown backwards from the prow all the way...
“Get out!” Belita yelled as the door opened.“Nope,” Danica said, walking in and shutting the door behind her. “I said leave!” Belita snarled, pushing herself halfway up into an unsteady, angry crouch.“And I said no,” Danica shrugged. She walked over and sat down against the wall next to the Captain. “Part of my job is to tell you no when you need it. Right now you need it. What’s going on?”“Insubordinate… I’m going tae-” Belita couldn’t find the words.“What? Lock me up? Whip me? Hang me?”...
Fantasy & Sci-FiCaptain Vex’s hands knotted in the witch’s dark curls. Bella was a profoundly skilled lover. The Captain had a taste of what Bella could do on top of the lighthouse, but being the sole focus of of a sex witch’s ministrations when there were no other distractions (and Bella was feeling particularly thankful) was to be given the best possible seat in a masterclass in how to pleasure a woman. Belita had already been turned on fiercely by helping Bella with her recharge ritual. The witch was so...
Bella took a deep breath and sat down on the bed. She was exhausted. She’d been standing unmoving, concentrating fiercely for hours. Her whole body ached. Fighting to remain in one position while the ocean rocked the floor beneath her had been much more difficult than she expected. Her thighs were quivering. In spite of her fatigue, her eyes were glued to the mirror, watching the scene play out in her alcove.Tonya was naked, sitting on Bella’s table, her legs spread wide and wrapped around...
Fantasy & Sci-FiA loop of rope dropped around a pale neck. The screaming head attached to it didn’t seem to notice. The makeshift noose went taught. A pale, rag-clad body was yanked thrashing into the air. Lace Webber swung down like a boom, counterbalancing the weight of the creature she’d just lassoed against her own. She crashed into another grindylow with both feet, feeling a satisfying crack and sending the clumsy creature sprawling across the deck. Another crewman quickly took advantage of the opening,...
Fantasy & Sci-FiA loop of rope dropped around a pale neck. The screaming head attached to it didn’t seem to notice. The makeshift noose went taught. A pale, rag-clad body was yanked thrashing into the air. Lace Webber swung down like a boom, counterbalancing the weight of the creature she’d just lassoed against her own. She crashed into another grindylow with both feet, feeling a satisfying crack and sending the clumsy creature sprawling across the deck. Another crewman quickly took advantage of the...
“So there was something under the water?” Captain Vex asked. “Yeah,” Will nodded, as he bolted down the last of the spotlight-lanterns on the railing next to the ship’s wheel. The other three hadn’t survived the fight on the prow. Captain Vex wasn’t thrilled about that, those lanterns were expensive. Will’s hands hurt badly, but he still had a bit more to do before he could let the doctor look him over. Besides, there were a lot of crew worse off than he was. “I started to figure it out...
The night was everything an evening on ship should be. Clear skies, calm seas, land distant flecks on the horizon close enough that they could faintly hear the cries of seabirds. The sunset had been long and gorgeous, full of oranges and pinks that gave way to darker reds and purples before disappearing into dusk. The western horizon was a glowing purple haze that slowly faded revealing more and more stars above.The Nivalese had a strong musical tradition full of drums and guitars, and many of...
Fantasy & Sci-FiBella stared, not sure how to respond. “You know what Will’s curse is?”“Damn it,” Jack whispered. “I didn’t want to talk about this.”“Too late. Do you know how to get rid of it?” Bella demanded.“Yes,” Jack sighed. “It isn’t what you think though.”“What is it then?” Bella asked, wishing Jack would just give her a straight answer.“No. I’ve already said too much. You and Will are both too damn smart and neither of you can just let anything lie,” Jack shook her head. She stood up.“Oh no! You don’t...
Fantasy & Sci-FiGrindylow were starting to crawl up the Kestrel’s sides, cresting the railings toward the midship, flanking the defenders. At the helm, Captain Vex cursed. They were running out of time. “Danica, Coleman, get us free!”“Aye, captain!” came the answering calls. Coleman and Danica North led their gaff hook wielding swabs toward the prow, but the fighting was too thick. There wasn’t going to be any safe way to employ their hooks and shove them free of the black ship. For every Grindylow the crew...
Fantasy & Sci-FiBella took a deep breath and sat down on the bed. She was exhausted. She’d been standing unmoving, concentrating fiercely for hours. Her whole body ached. Fighting to remain in one position while the ocean rocked the floor beneath her had been much more difficult than she expected. Her thighs were quivering. In spite of her fatigue, her eyes were glued to the mirror, watching the scene play out in her alcove. Tonya was naked, sitting on Bella’s table, her legs spread wide and wrapped around...
“What did you do?” Caine asked. Janie hadn’t really noticed him come in. He was leaning in the doorway watching Janie blow out the candles in front of the mirror. She was disheveled and flushed after watching Bella work her oral magic on Captain Vex, and she definitely did not expect an audience for what she was thinking about doing next. She was recovering from being startled, but Caine didn’t give her time to reply. “A customer says you stiffed him?” “That isn’t true at all!” Janie said....
Bella stared, not sure how to respond. “You know what Will’s curse is?” “Damn it,” Jack whispered. “I didn’t want to talk about this.” “Too late. Do you know how to get rid of it?” Bella demanded. “Yes,” Jack sighed. “It isn’t what you think though.” “What is it then?” Bella asked, wishing Jack would just give her a straight answer. “No. I’ve already said too much. You and Will are both too damn smart and neither of you can just let anything lie,” Jack shook her head. She stood up. “Oh...
Jack idly watched Bella draw an elaborate warding circle. The first ring ran along the floor of the round tent. She was in the process of drawing a second ring on the walls in large white symbols. Friday was outside whispering some sort of incantation and walking in counterclockwise circles around the tent. They were moving with practiced efficiency, but to Jack it felt like ages. She lay in the center of it all on the pile of blankets and furs, exhausted and barely able to move. Her mind...
The night was everything an evening on ship should be. Clear skies, calm seas, land distant flecks on the horizon close enough that they could faintly hear the cries of seabirds. The sunset had been long and gorgeous, full of oranges and pinks that gave way to darker reds and purples before disappearing into dusk. The western horizon was a glowing purple haze that slowly faded revealing more and more stars above. The Nivalese had a strong musical tradition full of drums and guitars, and many...
“Bring her about to port, nice and gentle, but keep tightening the turn until she starts t’ list. Then pull back,” Captain Vex said. “Aye, Captain,” Colin Strong said with much less enthusiasm than usual. The big man looked like hell. The whole right side of his face and parts of the left were swollen and bruised in an angry clash of colors. Purples, yellows, even some blues and greens. The impact points were the fierce dark red of abraded skin and broken blood vessels. His upper lip was...
Janie looked at herself in the mirror. She barely recognized the person she saw. Her had been styled with hot metal rods and some kind of light, fragrant oil that held it’s shape as it dried. It had taken a while, sitting there and letting Tonya do who-knows-what to it. Then Tonya had put makeup on her and helped her pick out an outfit from a communal closet. After all that work she could finally see it all. Her hair tumbled to in loose flowing waves. A small black hat with a white band was...
“You think he’s still down here?” Jack asked.“I can feel him,” Bella explained. They were in the ship’s hold. It felt like a tomb. Everything was still, and quiet, and lifeless. Bella slowly wandered down the hallway and found herself in front of the Quartermaster’s hold. The bars blocked her way.“He’s in there?” Jack asked. Bella nodded. “I’m honestly surprised he didn’t run off into the jungle as soon as we got here.”“Maybe we can get Mister North to give us the key,” Jack said, looking at...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“You think he’s still down here?” Jack asked. “I can feel him,” Bella explained. They were in the ship’s hold. It felt like a tomb. Everything was still, and quiet, and lifeless. Bella slowly wandered down the hallway and found herself in front of the Quartermaster’s hold. The bars blocked her way. “He’s in there?” Jack asked. Bella nodded. “I’m honestly surprised he didn’t run off into the jungle as soon as we got here.” “Maybe we can get Mister North to give us the key,” Jack said,...
“I’m sick of being stuck on the ship. Let’s get out of here,” Jack said as they headed back to the Galley. “There’s still a lot of dishes left,” Will said. “Go tell Lace we’re leaving. I’ll be right back,” Jack said. She disappeared below deck leaving Will with an amused expression on his face. “Apparently we’re leaving,” he said as he walked into the galley. “If the dishes aren’t done by morning, North will get a lot more creative with his extra duties,” Lace shook her head. She didn’t stop...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“Bella!” A lilting woman’s voice called her name from the darkness. She jolted unexpectedly at the noise, then smoothed her skirts to sweep away the spike of worry. Her heart was suddenly pounding, which annoyed her. She sighed at her own foolishness. She was obviously still just jittery.“Yes?” she answered back.Jack’s tent was still lit from within and threw off enough light that Bella was able to recognize Doctor Kalfou’s form as she walked closer. The Doctor’s white clothing was fairly...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“You alright?” Tonya asked, slowly sticking her head through the door to Will’s room.Janie was sitting on the bed using her rosary like a worry stone. She wasn’t even sure why she still wore it, but somehow it was comforting. At the very least it gave her hands something to do while her mind was having trouble focusing. “I’ll be fine,” she answered. “I just… didn’t enjoy the conversation.”“Yeah, it was a little weird,” Tonya shrugged. She came in and looked around. Will’s room took up most of...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“I really appreciate this, Mister Kaduska,” Janie said as she accepted his hand and sat up from the canvas sack she’d spent the last hour hiding in.“Oh, my pleasure, my dear. Anything for you, you know that.” The big merchant grinned. “Besides, any opportunity to be a thorn in the side of the Teach gang is one I’ll take.”Janie swung her legs off the table Kaduska had set her down on, and let the rest of the canvas bag fall away as she stood up. She looked around. It hadn’t been long since she’d...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“That’s a fucking Caravel!” Barney gaped. “Yeah, so,” Jack asked, snapping her eyes open from the light doze she’d been in since they’d made it to the inlet. On the other side of the lagoon, the ships lanterns and cookfires from shore lit up the Kestrel in a way that might have been majestic if not for the gaping hole in her hull. “How the hell did you get a full sized fucking Caravel through that inlet? In the dark! In a storm! With a breach!” Barney kept rowing, but gestured with his head...
“I’m sick of being stuck on the ship. Let’s get out of here,” Jack said as they headed back to the Galley. “There’s still a lot of dishes left,” Will said. “Go tell Lace we’re leaving. I’ll be right back,” Jack said. She disappeared below deck leaving Will with an amused expression on his face. “Apparently we’re leaving,” he said as he walked into the galley. “If the dishes aren’t done by morning, North will get a lot more creative with his extra duties,” Lace shook her head. She didn’t...
“Bella!” A lilting woman’s voice called her name from the darkness. She jolted unexpectedly at the noise, then smoothed her skirts to sweep away the spike of worry. Her heart was suddenly pounding, which annoyed her. She sighed at her own foolishness. She was obviously still just jittery. “Yes?” she answered back. Jack’s tent was still lit from within and threw off enough light that Bella was able to recognize Doctor Kalfou’s form as she walked closer. The Doctor’s white clothing was fairly...
“You alright?” Tonya asked, slowly sticking her head through the door to Will’s room. Janie was sitting on the bed using her rosary like a worry stone. She wasn’t even sure why she still wore it, but somehow it was comforting. At the very least it gave her hands something to do while her mind was having trouble focusing. “I’ll be fine,” she answered. “I just ... didn’t enjoy the conversation.” “Yeah, it was a little weird,” Tonya shrugged. She came in and looked around. Will’s room took up...
Jack followed the big man with the blue scar over to the bar, feeling like her whole world had just been thrown unexpectedly off kilter. Things seemed wrong, but she couldn’t put her finger on exactly how or why. The big Nivali man gave the bartender a quick hand motion and waited. “How’s your head, Hatchet?” the bartender deadpanned as he towled out a dented mug with a dirty rag. The big man snorted and rolled his eyes. “Fine.” “Good. I’m not sure how much more damage your busted face can...
___________________“I have to go. John’s about to show up,” Janie said.“I thought you wanted me to watch?” Bella smirked. “Well I didn’t know the mirror was going to be on a patio behind a bar. I’ll have to get through it without you.” She seemed uncomfortable. It was hard to make out her face behind her veil, but Bella could hear the tension in her voice.“What’s wrong?” the witch asked, leaning toward the mirror.Janie sighed. “I was going to see if I could get Tonya to help me again but its...
Fantasy & Sci-FiCaptain Vex looked at the jar in her hand with raw horror. Understanding flooded through her like bile. She felt light and disconnected from herself. Her vision contracted and the room swam. Her heart pounded and she felt like she was floating. She didn’t notice as the jar slipped from her fingers, but Danica did. With a quick lunge, her first mate took a knee and caught the jar, but wasn’t fast enough to catch the Captain as she folded herself bonelessly to the ground. “No ... No no no,”...
Caine pulled on his trousers in a rush. He’d started moving before the pounding on the door had stopped, swearing under his breath the entire time. Tonya grabbed Caine’s tunic off the floor just in time for him to snatch it out of her hands and start running down the stairs. The two naked women just stood there, wide eyed and wondering what to do. Janie was Magistrate, so getting a visit from them wasn’t unreasonable. All the yelling was making the young witch nervous though. “What do we...
Will had a moment of conflict in his mind. He’d just met Shae. It seemed a little soon to be calling him a pet. He wasn’t sure he liked the implications, but he brushed his concerns aside. Taling to her about it now might throw off everything they’d negotiated. People in power were often oblivious to how their words came across. She probably didn’t mean anything by it. Maybe it was just the sort of thing she was into? If she liked it, that was good enough reason to indulge her. What could it...
Tom Hayden hauled the last bag of firewood down the path and dropped it on the ground near the front door of the cabin. He stretched his back, taking another look at the scenery around him. The sun was almost set in the early summer sky, a splashes of elusive coloured light were filtering in through the trees around him. Despite the warm weather they’d had earlier in the day, the air was rapidly growing cold and Tom shivered in his duffel jacket. He breathed in a lung full of air and...
It was Monday evening and Jilly was even livelier than usual, giggling like a school girl on the other end of the line as she tried to relate the past few months of her life to me. It had been a long time since we’d spoke and I was looking forward to seeing her again. I brushed my blonde hair across one shoulder and shifted the phone uncomfortably against my ear, absently trying to place the name. ‘Drifters End? I’m sure I’ve heard it somewhere before.’ The computer screen in front of me...
“What? Why.... monkey?” Will stammered.“Very eloquent.” she laughed.“Monkey!?” he repeated.“It’s a witch thing.” Bella grinned. “He’s my familiar.”“You have a familiar now?” Will said, impressed. “Isn’t that pretty high up on the witch achievement scale?”“Middle-range, really.” Bella gave a one-shouldered shrug. “I had him watching from outside in case Jack came back.”“He told you all that with one terrible noise?” Will asked, finally buttoning up his breeches.“Yes. It isn’t my fault you don’t...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“What? Why.... monkey?” Will stammered.“Very eloquent.” she laughed.“Monkey!?” he repeated.“It’s a witch thing.” Bella grinned. “He’s my familiar.”“You have a familiar now?” Will said, impressed. “Isn’t that pretty high up on the witch achievement scale?”“Middle-range, really.” Bella gave a one-shouldered shrug. “I had him watching from outside in case Jack came back.”“He told you all that with one terrible noise?” Will asked, finally buttoning up his breeches.“Yes. It isn’t my fault you don’t...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“Fuck,” Will swore. Will tried to turn, but his foot slipped on something. His bourbon from earlier. He ended up catching himself on the bar, but he was off balance. Inside him, he felt something seem to slide.Caine stood up.The whole room went quiet. To Will, everything seemed like slow motion. He knew this feeling. It felt like the world was sliding sideways, and he was a bystander in his own body. He tried to say something, but it was like he was moving through molasses. He only had time to...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“Fuck,” Will swore. Will tried to turn, but his foot slipped on something. His bourbon from earlier. He ended up catching himself on the bar, but he was off balance. Inside him, he felt something seem to slide.Caine stood up.The whole room went quiet. To Will, everything seemed like slow motion. He knew this feeling. It felt like the world was sliding sideways, and he was a bystander in his own body. He tried to say something, but it was like he was moving through molasses. He only had time to...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi