Lost at Sea Book 2 DriftersChapter 24
- 4 years ago
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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. “No.”
“Will, this is important!” Jack said. She was clearly excited, and frustrated that Will wasn’t.
“Jack, you just implied that all my bad luck, and everything that has happened because of it, is my own fault! That’s not something we’re just going to skip past on your way to your next revelation, especially not right now. Talking about us and how we’re making each other feel is the whole reason we agreed to have this conversation,” Will said, trying to be patient. “We’re not just going to ignore it all because you think you’ve made a discovery.”
“I didn’t say it’s your fault,” Jack said. “It’s my fault. We established that. What I’m saying is that who you are is screwing with how it’s supposed to work!”
“That’s a pretty fine hair to split, don’t you think?” Will asked archly.
“Fine. Yes, it is. Can we please move on? I think I have this figured out!”
“No!” Will snapped. “You can’t tell me that I’m the problem and then change the subject.”
“I’m not!” Jack pleaded. “I’m staying right on the subject. You’re just not seeing what I’m seeing,”
“Then make me see it! Tell me what you meant instead of just blowing on past any kind of explanation!” Will demanded. “If you think it’s me and not the curse, then how is it not my fault?”
“If I gave Bella’s monkey a gun, and it went off, would it be the monkey’s fault?” Jack asked.
Will stared at her for a few moments, then sighed. “You really do have a knack for putting things in the most insulting terms possible.”
“Just answer the question, Will,” Jack said flatly.
“No.” Will said, clearly humoring her in the most exasperated tone possible. “It would not be the monkey’s fault.”
“Whose fault would it be?” Jack asked.
“Yours. You gave the monkey the gun,” Will said flatly.
“What if I didn’t know it was a gun?” Jack asked. “What if it was one of those hidden gun things? A cane, or a trapped box. What if I thought I was giving the monkey something nice?”
“Then I guess it’s no one’s fault,” Will shrugged. “But it would still be your responsibility to deal with the consequences.”
“Yes. Exactly. That’s what I’m trying to do,” Jack said quickly “The problem is, the stubborn-ass monkey still doesn’t know how the gun works, and isn’t paying attention when I try to point out where the trigger is. The monkey is still just scared about the noise and the smoke, and is mad that I gave it the gun in the first place.”
“And about the people the monkey already accidentally shot.” Will gave Jack a pointed glare. “Maybe the monkey doesn’t trust you anymore because it knows you gave it something that scared the hell out of it?”
“I bet the monkey would be pretty damn excited if it could stop freaking out long enough to figure out that I was trying to teach it how to use the gun right,” Jack asked sardonically. “Does the monkey need a treat to get it to relax?”
Will tried to come up with a retort, but couldn’t. He rubbed his forehead and found himself trying not to laugh. “This analogy has gotten out of hand. How about we never teach Bella’s monkey to use guns? That thing is enough of a menace as it is.”
Jack grinned in spite of herself. “Deal. Now, moving on?”
“Fine.” Will was exasperated, but agreed. “How am I broken?”
“The curse is about luck. Good, bad, doesn’t matter. The curse doesn’t differentiate. It just reacts. It’s a tool,” Jack said quickly.
“Like a gun. How it’s used determines good or bad,” Will nodded, following along.
“Right. When you want things, luck conspires to make them happen for you,” Jack said, holding her arms wide in revelation. She clearly thought that was an amazing bit of information and was waiting for Will’s reaction.
She didn’t get one. He shrugged. “Yeah, I figured that part out.”
“What!? You knew? It’s incredible, Will? It means we know how it works!” Jack said, baffled by his muted reaction.
“No we don’t. It means we know what it does. That’s a pretty far cry from understanding how it works,” Will shook his head.
“Well, it means we have something to work from!” Jack stood up and started pacing again. “We can figure it out!”
“No we can’t,” Will said.
Jack stopped pacing and turned to face him, her arms wide in invitation and exasperation. “Why not?”
“Because I’m still a monkey with a gun,” Will said. “I’ve tried to figure it out. I might get what I want, but it’s always dangerous as hell, and then right when I think all the risk is about to pay off, something happens. People get hurt and I usually lose what I was trying to accomplish. This monkey might have figured out what the trigger does, but aiming right is nearly impossible. The best thing I can say about it is that I guess I’m lucky I haven’t blown my own head off. There’s no sense in taking more risks.”
“Will, you’re a monkey with a gun, regardless!” Jack said. “It’s going to be worse if you don’t learn how it works. Right now, it goes off randomly whether you like it or not! It was fine when you were alone in the lighthouse, but out here you don’t have the luxury of isolation. Your curse has already nearly killed a bunch of people just in the last few days. If you want to have any hope of keeping those around you safe, you have to try to figure it out.”
Will’s brows furrowed. He sat in silence for a few long moments listening to the waves crash against the hull, then nodded. “You’re right. Damn it.”
“Thank you!” Jack said triumphantly.
“So what do I do?” Will asked.
“You have to want something,” Jack shrugged.
“That’s all?” Will asked, one eyebrow raised and his face a mask of pure incredulity.
“Without hesitation or worry. No holding back. No confusion. You have to want it, hard,” Jack said fiercely.
“And then I just… get it?” Will asked, still not believing what he was hearing.
“Well, not immediately,” Jack shrugged. “I don’t think so, anyway. It’s luck. The probabilities will arrange themselves so you’ll end up with an opportunity.”
“So if I decide I need money, I just have to want it really hard and a pile of gold will fall into my lap?” Will scoffed.
“You already did that, Will.” Jack’s tone was leading. “You’re plenty wealthy now from what I hear.”
“That wasn’t because of the curse. That was in spite of it,” Will said flatly. “That was my own skill, through sheer stubbornness and creativity.”
“Was it?” Jack asked.
__________________
Danica rolled off her husband and settled into the crook of his shoulder with a relaxed, happy smile on her face. “Mmmm, I love it when you come into port, sailor.”
Coleman North laughed. “You’ll forget me as soon as I’m gone.”
“Never, never, sailor mine,” Danica grinned, quoting an old sea chanty. “I’m as true as true can be.”
Coleman chuckled. “That’s my line.”
“No, your line is something about the sea being your one true mistress,” Danica said.
“I forget the song,” Coleman admitted. “I think if the sea wants me, she’s going to have to fight you over it.”
“Bitch would lose,” Danica said with mock ferocity. A roll of distant thunder echoed in the distance. Danica’s eyes went wide.
Her husband laughed hard. “Uh oh. She heard you.”
“I take it back. I can share!” Danica called out the porthole window of their tiny cabin inside the quartermaster’s lockup.
Coleman rolled out of bed with a groan and started pulling on his pants. “Come on. Let’s go do storm prep.”
“I had to open my big mouth,” Danica sighed, burying herself under the blankets. Coleman waited a few moments then grabbed the blanket and gave it a swift yank, revealing his wife’s small, curvy form and shocked expression. “Traitor! The sea can have you!”
“I’ll check the hold and meet you up on deck,” Coleman grinned.
Danica curled up into a naked, grumpy ball. Her pants landed on top of her.
__________________
Thunder rolled, but Will was too lost in thought to care. His mind reeled. If Jack was right, there was no way for him to know what was really his own talent and success, and what was just the right string of luck. He’d always prided himself on being a self-made man, in spite of all the incredible runs of bad luck he’d lived through. He knew his bad luck was supernatural, but he’d never considered that his ability to overcome it might be as well. Could he really claim credit for his successes? Was it all just luck? How could he tell? What could he pride himself on if nothing came out of his own abilities? “I hate this.”
“Put your ego down, Will,” Jack said firmly.
“That’s rich coming from you,” Will rolled his eyes.
“I’m serious. You aren’t the only one who’s changed in five years. The hardest thing for me to learn was that I wasn’t always going to have the answers, and that I couldn’t always solve a problem. Learning how to let go when I wanted to change things but knew that I shouldn’t has been the biggest challenge of my life. The hardest step was putting my pride aside and being willing to admit my mistakes,” Jack said. “It’s something you need to learn too.”
“You’re really on a roll tonight when it comes to passive insults,” Will glared.
Jack sighed. “I’ve spent my whole adult life throwing myself into situations that let me prove to myself how capable I am, but when it comes to the most important things, like helping the people I care about, and learning from my mistakes, I’m a massive failure.”
“I’m not,” Will said flatly.
“I didn’t say you were. I’m trying to tell you why we were such good partners, and why we aren’t anymore,” Jack said, sounding neutral and drained. “I could always rely on you because your instincts regarding how to do the right thing were exceptional. You didn’t always know what you wanted, but once you made a decision you always knew what direction to head. I was the one who filled in the blanks along the way, and we’d improvise the rest, together. That was how almost all our adventures worked.”
“Yeah, that’s the gist of it,” Will agreed.
“I have never been good at the course-plotting that always came so naturally to you. I’m great at going on the journey, but I can’t tell if I picked the right direction until I look back. It leads me to making bad choices,” Jack said. “You’re the opposite. You always know the right way to go, but you won’t take the first steps unless you’re sure about exactly what you want and who’s going to be affected. You’re always worried about the consequences. We both have decision paralysis about different things. Mine is about where to go, yours is about when to start.”
“I still feel like I’m not really following you,” Will said. “I think that’s a good assessment, but I don’t know what it has to do with what we were talking about earlier.”
“My biggest fear was always failure,” Jack said.
“I know. Me too,” Will agreed.
“It’s alright to fail, Will,” Jack smiled.
“Not when it gets other people hurt,” Will said.
Jack shook her head. “Even then.”
“That’s pretty heartless, Jack.” Will admonished.
“No,” Jack said. “It’s the opposite. If you try to do something good, and other people get hurt, it’s sad, but at least you tried. Heartless would be not trying to do something good because you’re afraid.”
“Isn’t ‘good’ kind of subjective?” Will asked rhetorically.
“Don’t try that with me, Will. I know you, and you’re good. You don’t know any other way to be. You play at being a scoundrel, but you spend more time arguing with yourself about doing the right thing than anyone I’ve ever met. You try to help everyone, and you constantly worry about the right way to do it. It’s like you have a whole college of arguing philosophers in your head. ”
Another roll of thunder punctuated their conversation. Will looked out across the horizon. The moon was bright enough behind the clouds that the entire sky had the faintest grey luminescence. He could see the texture of where they overlapped and rolled against each other. The storm was high and wide, making the rolling dark grey seas match the skies in a way that made him feel like he was caught between two clouded mirrors.
He had almost forgotten how well Jack knew him. Janie was incredible at reading people in general, but Jack was a master at reading him specifically. It was hard to be confronted with that, especially considering that Jack wasn’t nearly as careful with her words as Janie was. He tried to change the subject. “There’s still the monkey with a gun problem,” Will said. “Putting the monkey somewhere it can’t shoot people doesn’t seem heartless to me. It seems like that’s the only good thing to do.”
“Exactly. I chose the worst possible gift for you. I wanted to give you a better way to choose when to start your journeys. I knew I wasn’t going to be around, so I tried to give you something that would replace my role in your life. You don't do anything unless you’re reacting with no time at all, or you have all the information to make the right choice. If it isn’t an emergency, and you feel like you don’t have enough information, you will wait forever. With the curse there was no way for you to understand what was happening, so you couldn’t decide what the right choices were. So you retreated more and more because you felt like you couldn't do anything without failing.”
“Without hurting people,” Will corrected.
“You don’t define failure any other way, Will,” Jack said. “When I say I’m afraid of failure, I mean I’m afraid of not being smart or skilled enough to accomplish a goal. You mean you’re afraid you won’t be smart enough or skilled enough to keep people from being hurt while you accomplish a goal. I worry about succeeding. You worry about collateral damage.”
“So you think I just didn’t want to take any risks,” Will said. He couldn’t help but nod. She was right.
“So you locked up the monkey,” Jack shrugged. “You put it in an old tower where it couldn’t accidentally hurt anyone.”
“Monkey’s out now,” Will said, narrowing his eyes in thought. “I guess there’s no choice but to teach it how the gun works.”
“Or at least teach it how not to fire it accidentally,” Jack agreed.
“How?” Will asked.
“What do you want?” Jack countered.
“A lot of things. Right now, I want us to be able to trust each other again,” Will said with a small shrug.
“I never stopped trusting you, Will.” Jack corrected. She sat down next to him, hip to him. He put his arm around her shoulders. She rested her head back on his arm and looked up at the sky. “I understand why you stopped trusting me. I wish I’d been more willing to accept my failures years ago. I think my choices would have been the same, but how I dealt with the aftermath would have been much different.”
“Can you at least tell me what the deal with you and Quinn is?” Will asked. “I really don’t get how he’s connected to any of this.”
Jack thought for a bit. “Sort of.”
“I’ll take what I can get.” Will’s voice was exasperated, but also a bit amused.
“People have been trying to figure out Quinn’s people for centuries. The secret is that they aren’t one people. They just look alike. I’m aware of three different… I’m not sure what to call them.”
“Factions?” Will asked.
“That’s not really accurate, but we’ll go with it,” Jack continued. “They all have somewhat similar views on serving people, so from the outside it’s hard to tell there are differences, but they have very different criteria and rules about who they serve. The rules for one faction don’t apply to the others. I know more about it than most humans do, and I still find it pretty confusing.”
“Sounds complicated,” Will said, waiting for her to get to the point.
“If humans ever figure it out, they’d be able to manipulate Quinn’s people in ways that would keep them from being able to leave the service of a master. They’d become slaves,” Jack said.
“Or they could just… stop living by those rules?” Will said.
“They can’t. That’s their curse,” Jack said.
“Fuck,” Will laughed. “How many curses are going around out there?”
“More than you think,” Jack smiled.
“And it can’t be broken?” Will asked. He had a feeling he knew the answer.
“I don’t think so. Quinn was evasive about that, but the feeling I got was that breaking it would be very bad for him,” Jack said.
Another low roll of thunder added itself to their conversation. The ship was starting to come alive. The handful of crew on duty through the night were moving across the deck checking knots. Lace and another rigger came up from below deck and headed right up the main mast. Missus North came up a few moments later and headed for the helm. Will looked at the sky again. It was looking like a pretty mild storm, but the crew was diligent. He decided not to worry about it. He wasn’t assigned storm duties beyond being a backup swab when it was called for, so he kept talking.
“So what does Quinn’s people’s curse have to do with you, or me?” Will asked.
“Part of the terms of Quinn serving me is that I am trusted to keep the secrets of his people. When he leaves my service, I’ll forget the details. That’s one of the good sides of his people’s curse.” Jack explained “But if I tell someone else, and then Quinn leaves my service, the person I told won’t forget. A little more information about his people will be out in the world.”
Will nodded, understanding. “Enough information out there and someone will eventually figure out how to use those rules to enslave Quinn’s people.”
“Exactly,” Jack said grimly. “Humans have a real knack for solving puzzles.”
“I hardly think I’m a risk to Quinn’s people,” Will said rhetorically.
“I agree. So does Quinn, actually,” Jack smiled. “The thing is, if anyone suspects you know, you’ll be a target. You do not want that, I promise. Some of the most powerful people in the world have devoted a lot of time to figuring this out, and one of the ways they do it is by finding people who have been told things secondhand. I’m protected by Quinn’s service. They can’t find me, and they can’t read my mind or anything like that. You aren’t protected. You might not think you are a threat, but there are people out there who devote their lives to learning this stuff. Just imagine if a Magistrate Prelate, or a N’madi Thoughtpicker, or a Master Inquisitor wanted to know something they thought you knew? Could you stop them from learning it?”
“No,” Will said suddenly understanding. The thought of being a target of people like that was chilling. “I think that’s enough of an explanation. Not telling me anything keeps all of us safer.”
“Thank you,” Jack said earnestly. “I really wish I could tell you.”
“If you’d been willing to explain that part earlier all this would have been a lot easier,’ Will said.
“I was afraid you’d figure it out. I’m still afraid you will. If that happens, we will all become targets. You most of all,” Jack explained.
“That’s a pretty good reason,” Will agreed. “I’d have done the same thing.”
“And you’d have been pissed if I wasn’t willing to take your word for it,” Jack added.
“True,” Will smiled.
“Are we better?” Jack asked.
“We’re getting there,” Will said.
“So what do you want now?” Jack asked.
“That wasn’t really a very good test of my curse, was it?” Will laughed.
“No,” Jack shook her head. “I think you’re going to have to pick something I can’t just give you right now.”
Will considered making an innuendo about that, but he was worried that Jack would take it as an offer. He wasn’t quite ready for that yet. “I feel like I’m sailing blind. What I really want is to know what’s coming so I can plan for it.”
“That is the most you answer to that question ever,” Jack sighed. “You might need to be more specific.”
Sheet lighting lit the sky, and was reflected by the sea, briefly lighting everything from horizon to horizon.
“No, I don’t think I do,” Will said, staring out at the horizon. “Go tell Mister Reeve to wake the crew. Now.”
Jack whirled, looking where Will was, but she saw nothing in the storm-dimmed gloom.
“Ship ho!” Will bellowed across the deck. “South-easterly!” He was moving quickly across the deck.
“Don’t see it!” a voice called down from the crow’s nest.
“Keep looking! Wait for the lightning!” Will called up. Jack ran past him and down into the hold. He burst through the door to the Captain’s cabin.
Bella was face down between Belita’s thighs. The brunette’s knees were bent, her feet aimed upward with her ankles crossed happily. The blond captain had her head thrown back against the headboard and had her hands clenched in the witch’s hair as she writhed in the aftermath of an orgasm. In the mirror, Janie was sitting in a chair with her legs spread wide and her skirts gathered around her waist. Her hand was working furiously between her legs as she watched the two women coupling.
The entire erotic scene abruptly stopped as Will rushed in. Bella rolled to her side and looked down her body towards him. Janie threw her skirts down, looking embarrassed, like she’d been caught doing something she shouldn’t. Captain Vex hadn’t moved hardly at all, but she had a pistol aimed at Will. He had no idea where she’d pulled it from, but he stopped abruptly. She raised it upward with an exasperated sigh.
“Sorry to interrupt,” Will said hurriedly. “That ship we’ve been seeing is behind us again, and closer.”
The Captain’s brow knitted. “The weird one? The derelict?”
“Yes,” Will said. “It’s sails are down now. It’s coming at us.”
Belita gave Bella a nudge. The Witch rolled up to her knees and let the Captain swing her legs off the bed. “I’ll be right there. Rouse the crew.”
“Already done,” Will ran back out the door and pulled it shut behind him.
Belita stood up and started getting dressed. “If you know any ways to bring us luck, now’s the time,” she said to the concerned witch.
“It… doesn’t really work that way, but I might be able to come up with some ways to help,” Bella replied, reaching for her blouse.
“Whatever you can do,” the Captain said simply.
“Is it that bad?” Bella asked, still not really sure what was going on.
“Best case scenario, we’re going to be running in the dark, away from pirates,” Captain Vex said. Her words were simple, but her tone was deadly serious.
For Janie, not knowing was always worse than knowing. She had to ask. “What’s the worst case?”
“Running in the dark away from a ghost ship, headlong into a storm, and getting caught by both,” Belita said as she tucked in her shirt and reached for her weapon belt.
“There’s a ghost ship?” Janie gasped.
“There’s a storm?” Bella’s eyes were wide.
“You didn’t hear the thunder earlier?” Janie asked. “Even I heard it.”
“I had thighs on my ears for quite a while,” Bella said, as if that should have been self explanatory.
Belita couldn’t help but laugh at that. It was what she needed to focus. Suddenly grinning, she swept her coat around her shoulders. There was an excited light in her eyes. “It’s going to be a long night, and we might die. Make some magic happen.” Then she was out the door into the night.
Janie and Bella just stared at each other for a few long moments. Another roll of thunder echoed overhead. “What can I do to help?” Janie asked.
Bella’s mind was racing. “Is Tonya there?” she asked.
“I’ll find her,” Janie nodded her head a little frantically and rushed off.
“Caine too!” Bella called as Janie left the frame of the mirror.
“Alright,” a fading voice echoed from the other side.
Then Bella was alone.
______________________
“Weigh anchor!” Will called across the deck. “Double time!” A few sailors looked at him with expressions of confusion, but enough of them recognized the military term and started hustling. Will rushed up to the helm. “Light all lanterns! Ready for night sailing!”
Danica North came up from below in time to catch Will’s shouting. “Report!” she called.
“Ship sighted, south-easterly!” the sailor in the crow’s nest called down. “No confirmation yet!”
She headed up the stairs to meet Will, who was lighting a taper off the watch lamp and moving the fire to the larger rear-facing running lanterns. “What’s going on, Sterling?”
“That ship we’ve been seeing. It’s coming for us,” Will said. “I have Jack rousing the crew.”
Danica knew better than to question. If he was wrong, they’d sort it out later. “I’ll take over here until the Captain’s on deck. You figure out the best direction to run.”
“Don’t wait. As soon as the anchor’s up, head north at full sail,” Will said.
“Full sail at night, into a storm?” Danica looked at Will like he was crazy.
“Yes. We should have open waters for a while, and the storm hasn’t broken yet,” Will said. He closed the first lantern and opened the shutter, bathing the ocean behind them in light. As soon as it was done he headed to the other side of the aftcastle and started working on the second lantern.
“It won’t matter if that ship catches us if we capsize or hit a rock, Will,” Danica said, not convinced. “That other ship can’t run at full sail right now either.”
Another flash of sheet lighting lit the night. “Ship, ho!” the lookout called down. “South-easterly, headed straight towards us at full sail!”
Danica’s eyes went wide. “Stupid, crazy pirates.”
“I don’t think they’re pirates,” Will said as he shook out his taper and opened the second lantern.
“Bosun on deck!” someone yelled.
“Report!” Mister Reeve’s booming voice echoed across the deck.
“First Mate has the helm!” Danica called. “Get us ready for night sailing and storm running, Mister Reeve!”
“Aye!” Reeve boomed. “Everyone tie off! Get that anchor up!”
“So if they aren’t pirates, who are they?” Danica asked.
“Grindylow,” Will said gravely.
A chill ran up Danica’s spine. “No fucking way.” She looked at Will again, just to be sure he was serious, then jumped into action. “Rigging! I want full sail as soon as we are anchor up!”
“Aye!” Lace’s called down. “Sails are ready!”
Sailors at the prow finished lighting the headlamp. Suddenly they could see for a ways in front of them. The first heavy raindrops began to fall.
“Wonderful,” Will muttered. He’d hoped they would still have a while yet before the storm broke.
“I need a heading, Will,” Danica said firmly.
“I have nothing to triangulate from,” Will said, clearly frustrated. “No stars, no sun, no moon, no beacons or lighthouses!” He was scanning the dark, but now that the running lights were lit everything outside the light was just a wall of blackness. “Best I can do is use a compass and try to spot some landmarks on the horizon during lightning flashes.”
“Fine,” Danica said. “As soon as you can.”
Will nodded and headed to the rigging to head up and get a better look around.
“Reeve! What’s taking so long with that anchor?” Danica shouted.
“The storm has us at full tension! We’re caught!” Reeve’s voice boomed.
Sailors were trickling up on deck, most still pulling on their shirts and boots as they went. In the light from the ship’s lanterns hanging from the masts Danica could see her husband leading a group of brawny sailors to help Mister Reeve weigh anchor. “Lookout, where’s that ship!?” she called up.
“No sight!” the lookout called down. “Still a ways off at last sighting.”
“Heave!” came the rhythmic, unison voices of the men hauling on the anchor winch. “Heave!”
“Captain on deck!” a voice called. Belita Vex came out of her cabin, her blue coat and blond hair flapping in the wind. She scanned the deck without a word, then headed up the stairs to join Danica at the helm.
“Tell me,” she said. Her voice was almost conversational in spite of the dire situation.
“Ship sighted and confirmed. No accurate distance yet. Anchor stuck. Sails standing by,” Danica said. “Sterling thinks it’s Grindylow.”
Vex’s blond brows rose. “Hadn’t even considered that.”
“Yeah, because they aren’t real!,” Danica said, sounding more like she hoped they weren’t real than like she actually believed her words.
“Hope Ye’re right. I’ll take the helm. You coordinate,” Captain Vex said.
Danica passed over the ship’s wheel to the Captain. With a quick nod she headed down the stairs to the deck to start organizing the sailors who had come up on deck and not been given orders yet. “Don’t just stand around, start tying off! We’re about to head into a storm at full speed, if anyone goes overboard, they’re gone!” she barked. Sailors started moving.
Will hauled himself into the crow’s nest. The lookout was Harker, the first crewman who’d talked to him when he’d come aboard. “Sterling,” he said with a wry grin. “Come up to enjoy the weather with me?”
“Trying to get our position in the water,” he said. “Seen any islands or other markers?”
“A few, when the lightning hits. Not sure which direction we’re pointed though,” Harker shrugged. He was keeping his eyes locked in the direction they’d last seen the other ship.
Will pulled out his old compass. “I do. Where are those markers?”
Harker started pointing, still looking in the direction of the other ship. “Last sighting, there, there, and there. As long as our nose hasn’t turned much, that should still be accurate.”
Will cross referenced with his compass. jotted some notes on the back of his hand with a grease pencil. “Good enough to start with. Give me new markers as you get them.”
“I’m on ship-spotting duty. Only got two eyes,” Harker said.
“Webber, can you spare a rigger for a second lookout?” Will called down.
“Until they get the anchor free, I can spare as many as you want!” Lace called up.
“I need someone to spot landmarks for me,” he said.
“You heard him!” Lace called out. “If you’re not holding a line, get up top.”
Will started climbing down out of the crow’s nest again. He passed a wiry woman who gave him a nod. He nodded back and continued his way down.
Down below he could see Reeve, Mister North, Colin Strong, and five other large sailors throwing everything they could at the four push-arms of the anchor winch. It looked like they weren’t having an easy time of it. Lightning lit the sky again. From his vantage point in the rigging, he had a clear view of the other ship coming towards them. It was still far enough off that the details of it were hard to make out with the naked eye, but with them at a standstill, it would be on them soon.
“Captain, recommend casting off the anchor!” He called down.
There was a pause from below, then the Captain’s Voice calling “Cast off anchor!”
“Casting off!” Reeve boomed.
As Will climbed down, he saw Reeve and Colin hauling on the anchor line directly, giving it just enough slack that the cotter and anchor pins could be released. After about a minute, North called “Ready to loose! Loose!” Collin and Reeve let go of the anchor line. It unspooled the rest of the way from the winch and came free. The thick, rope-wrapped chain slithered out the reinforced bolthole to vanish into the water forever.
The Kestrel was free.
Reeve blew a sharp retort on his pipe that got the attention of the entire crew. “Brace for sails!” Reeve bellowed.
“Sails, go!” Lace called out.
The sails dropped, unfurling in a cascade of white. The ship lurched and creaked, the wood and ropes straining loudly at the sudden pressure of the wind. Sailors held onto ropes and masts, or took a knee and grabbed large eyelets bolted to the deck. Will leaned back and held the ladder tight just in case the ship’s sudden movement threatened to dash him against the mast.
With the winds snapping her coat around her, Captain Vex steered the ship into the dark as fast as the winds would take them.
Will dropped the last few feet to the deck and was running. It wasn’t safe. He should be tied off and moving slowly and carefully, but there was no time.
“Get those side lamps lit!” he heard Reeve bellow just before he ducked into the captain’s cabin. Bella was doing… something in a witch’s circle, but he ignored it. He was too focused on the task at hand. He lowered the folding desk into place, looked at the map, and the notes on his hand, drew a few quick lines on the glass, did some math in his head and ran out the door again.
“Heading, North by northeast!” he called out.
“North by northeast, aye!” Captain Vex echoed from above him.
He climbed the steps two at a time and grabbed the base of the helm to steady himself. “Within an hour, there’s going to be an island coming up ahead to port. Stay near it. On the starboard side, just past it there’s a reef. If we’re too far east we’ll catch the reef on our approach, so hug the shoreline. We’re going to run right between the island and the reef so we don’t have to swing wide around it. If the other ship doesn’t follow us in, we might be able to get clear.”
“I like it! Thank you Mister Sterling,” the Captain said. “After that?”
“Should be open waters for a few hours after that. I’ll double check,” Will said.
“Mister Reeve, get me lookouts at the prow manning the lanterns! We’re looking for an island to port and a reef to starboard, in about an hour’s time!” Captain Vex called.
“Aye, Captain!” Reeve boomed.
The Kestrel’s side lanterns lit up one by one, and Mister North had the clamp-lights brought up from below. They weren’t used often, but for situations like this they were invaluable. North and his men clamped the lights down to the railing a the prow and got them lit. Two sailors manned each. They were designs stolen from theatres, able to be moved and set as needed, and able to pivot and change how much or how little light they let out. The mirrored interior and variable aperture of the lamps allowed for the light they emitted to be tightly focused and cast quite far. In the spray that was kicked up by the Kestrel’s speed and the winds of the storm, the twin lights looked almost solid, like the feelers of some great glowing sea creature.
“Danica says you mentioned Grindylow?” Captain Vex said to Will before he headed downstairs.
“The situation fits the stories,” Will said, sounding worried.
“So do ghost ships, Blood Tide raiders, or just pirates with a gimmick,” Captain Vex countered. “Give me your reasoning.”
“The first time I spotted them was during the day, so probably not a ghost ship,” Will explained. “No Blood Tide nearby, so probably not Skinsails. Too many Magistrate and other armed ships nearby for Pirates. Grindylow is all that fits.”
“Never thought I’d be wishing to face a ghost ship,” Captain Vex said, grinning in spite of her obvious concern. Will wasn’t sure how much of it was real and how much of it was part of the persona she projected when she was wearing her Captain hat, but he liked it. It reminded him of Jack, or at least the way Jack used to be.
“According to the stories, they only attack in open waters, so that’s why I’m taking us toward the island instead of trying to go around,” Will said.
Vex nodded. “Trying to scrape them off. Smart.”
“Just follow the curve of the island. If you go straight you’ll hit the reef. There’s a gap in the reef on the far side of the island. Should be marked with Akula fishing buoys,” Will said.
“You’ve been through here before?” Vex asked.
“Nope,” Will shook his head.
“You have damn good maps.” The Captain was impressed.
“Not that either. It’s the magic,” he said tapping his head. “I can picture the route. Just need to know where I am and where I’m trying to go.”
“That’s damn useful,” Captain Vex smiled, thinking of the possibilities.
“No argument here. I’d love it if not for the downsides,” Will shrugged.
“Right. The bad luck thing,” Vex nodded.
“Speaking of, I’m going to go see if Bella can do anything to keep the bad luck thing from happening tonight. We really don’t need that,’ Will said.
“Any idea how much time we have before they’re on us?” Vex asked.
“Not until we can see them more clearly,” Will shook his head.
“Damn,” Vex muttered. “Go.”
Will nodded and headed downstairs to the cabin.
_____________________
Caine looked at Janie oddly. “What’s she need me for?”
“Ask her. I have to go find Tonya,” Janie said, then rushed off.
Caine sighed, closed his tankard, and got up off his stool. A few eyes in the room flicked towards him, suddenly paranoid. It was nearly closing time, and sometimes that’s when customers got stupid. He ignored them and pushed through the crowd to the witch’s alcove. At least the music had stopped. He crossed the small room and stood in front of the mirror. On the other side, Bella was painting on her naked body, sitting at the edge of a large bed. “What?” he asked without preamble.
“We’re being chased by pirates,” Bella explained. “The captain wants some kind of fortune hex.”
“What’s that got to do with me?” Caine asked.
“Luck magic requires a lot of energy, so I’m going to try to draw off the mirror,” Bella continued.
“Sounds like a good idea. Still not hearing what you need me for,” Caine shrugged.
“Don’t play dumb, Caine! You warded the whole damn bar! I know you know more about spellcraft than you’ve ever let on. Inside the Ways you glow like nothing I’ve ever seen. I’m not even sure you’re actually human, but I don’t give a damn about that. You’re still you, and I need your help!” Bella snapped, she was staring fiercely at him through the mirror, no longer painting on herself while she waited for him to answer.
“You’re stabbing in the dark,” Caine said, understanding.
“Well, yeah,” Bella said, throwing her hands wide like it was obvious.
Caine shook his head. “I don’t know anything about witchcraft, or any other kind of spellcrafting.”
“But you can create a damn near perfect spirit ward?” Bella said dubiously.
“It isn’t what you think,” Caine said in a tone that said he wouldn’t be explaining further.
“I don’t care what it is, I just need an energy source. I’m going to be drawing power like crazy, and I don’t have the time to slowly build up a reservoir. The mirror is all I have. I think if it’s being replenished from that side I can use it as a conduit.”
“Shoulda lead with that,” Caine said. “You need a battery. Yeah, I can do that. Might need some help figuring out how to… I don’t even know what it’s called. How to connect myself with the mirror?”
“Tonya knows how. We did a whole lesson about that not long ago.” Bella went back to painting herself.
“Fine. I’m going to go close down the lounge. It’s about that time anyway. I’ll be back,” Caine left, passing Janie as he pushed through the curtain. Janie was a bit out of breath. She’d clearly been running.
“What’s a battery?” Bella asked Janie.
“Like a fortress? With big guns?” Janie said, confused as she took a few deep breaths.
“No,that doesn’t sound right,” Bella shook her head.
“Then I don’t know,” Janie shook her head. “Why?”
“Something Caine said. Nevermind,” Bella shrugged.
“Tonya will be here soon,” Janie said. “What can I do to help?”
“Nothing that I can think of. Not unless you know how to draw a containment circle,” Bella said.
“Is that different than a basic ward circle?” Janie asked.
“A circle is a circle. They can be used for different things, or focused with different patterns inside them,” Bella explained.
Janie nodded. “Well, I can draw a circle. I just need things to do it with.”
“There’s a box on the shelf with chalk and string in it,” Bella said. Janie disappeared from the mirror frame as Will came in through the door of the cabin.
“Can you think of any way we can counteract my bad luck?” he asked the naked witch.
Bella pursed her lips. “Yes, but you’ll need to be in here with me.”
“That’s not going to work. I need to be out there where I figure out our heading. This storm and the dark is going to make staying on course nearly impossible, so I’m going to have to keep reevaluating our position and triangulating with the charts. I’m going to be running back and forth a lot,” Will said.
“That’s definitely not going to work,” Bella said, her curls bouncing as she shook her head.
“What do you need to do your job, Will?” Janie’s voice called from the mirror. She sounded distant. He guessed she was still in the alcove, but when she wasn’t standing directly in front of the mirror, she was much harder to hear.
“The charts and tools here in the desk, and my eyes on the horizon,” Will said loudly, making sure she heard him.
“Well that’s inefficient,” Janie said coming back into the frame of the mirror. “Your job needs you to be two places at once.”
“Yeah,” Will agreed. “Not much way around it though.”
“Bella, what do you need to do your job?” Janie asked.
“Just a circle on the ground, and the mirror to draw energy from,” Bella said.
“Will, can you move the desk?” Janie asked.
Will looked, thinking. “Maybe. Not the whole thing, but the table is on a pivot here. I can unscrew these nuts and pull it off. Keep talking.”
“I was just thinking about how we moved the mirror where it needed to be earlier,” Janie explained. “We could do that. Just take the mirror and the desk out where you need them, and have Bella draw her circle there.”
Will and Bella looked at each other. She gave him a nod. “That would work for me.”
“The rain is starting. Won’t that wash away your circle?” Will asked.
“I have stuff that won’t wash away,” Bella said.
The pivot frame on the desk was held in place with butterfly screws, so it wasn’t difficult for Will to take it apart without tools. Whoever had built it was clearly thinking ahead. Far too often, shipboard amenities were designed by carpenters who weren’t actually sailors. On a ship, things needed to be permanently affixed, or easily worked on using the fewest possible tools. There were lots of precautions sailors took to avoid tossing hammers and wrenches into the bilge or having them slide off the deck and into the ocean, but it still happened. The adage Will remembered best was that if something couldn’t be repaired in a rainstorm with nothing but numb hands in wet gloves, it wasn’t designed by a sailor.
“Rahat!” Bella cursed behind him. He looked over his shoulder. She was still drawing on herself, but seemed to have made a mistake. She was wiping away a bit of paint on her arm with the corner of a handkerchief. “Why is the ship shaking now?”
“We are at full sail,” Will explained.
“Feels like the ship is bouncing,” the witch grumbled, trying to draw the careful patterns between the swells.
“At this speed, in this kind of surf, we’re sort of skipping from wave to wave. When they are close together, it’s fine. That’s what those small shudders are. Those big hits and the feeling like you’re about to fall is when they are bigger or far apart. We fall down the back of a wave, and then have to climb back up and ram through the next one.” Will strained as he talked, working a stuck screw free. Behind him, Bella continued slowly painting herself, occasionally cursing and having to redo something.
By the time Will had the surface of the desk free, Bella was waiting behind him, ready. “I can take that if you get the mirror,” she said. She was still nude, with only a satchel over her shoulder and intricate patterns drawn in different colors of paint all over her chest and arms.
“It’s already starting to rain. You’re going to be freezing,” Will said as he looked her over.
“All the clothes I have with me would smear the patterns,” Bella shrugged.
“I thought you said it was alright for the pattern to smear a little?” Will asked.
“For drawing energy with sex, yes. For fortune magic, no. This is going to require much more precise spell work,” Bella explained.
“You’re in for a miserable night,” Will said, a bit worried.
“I think we all are,” Bella said taking the desktop from him. “Come on.”
Will carefully lifted the heavy mirror free. Bella held the door open for him and they walked out into the night. Thick drops were coming down haphazardly. The rain was slow and scattered, but quickly covering the deck in wet splatters. It was building. Before long it would be a downpour.
More than a few sets of eyes did a double take and watched Bella’s swinging, bare butt climb the steps, but there wasn’t a single catcall or whistle. The whole ship was dealing with the danger at hand, so as unexpected as a naked witch on deck was, it wasn’t enough to cause a significant distraction.
The Kestrel cut through the waves at top speed. The deck rolled and occasionally lurched as the water battered the prow. Bella had to tightly hold onto the railing as she climbed up the stairs. The darkness, wind and rain amplified the unsteadiness she’d been feeling in the cabin. The alternating feeling of being a little heavier, and then a little lighter, and the jostling back and forth as the waves pushed on the ship made her feel like she barely knew how to walk, and like the ship was trying to buck her overboard.
Will seemed to have no problems with it, even with the giant mirror in his hands. He walked when it was easy, and leaned or braced with the shudders and drops. He couldn’t see where he was headed, but he still had an easier time than Bella.
Captain Vex gave Bella a curious look from the helm. “Ye dinnae want tae stay dry?”
“Blame him,” Bella said, jerking her head back in Will’s direction. “He has to see the surroundings to do his work, and I need him in the circle to do mine.”
“Tie off,” Captain Vex said. “Ye don’t want tae get swept overboard.”
“To what?” Bella asked.
“The mizzen, unless ye need tae move around,” Captain Vex said.
“No, but I can’t have ropes dragging across my circle either,” Bella said.
“Does the size of the circle matter?” Will asked. He crossed the deck and propped the mirror up against the back railing, steadying the mirror while he held on.
“Not really,” Bella shook her head. She leaned the desktop against the mirror and let Will pin it in place with his leg. “There’s some reasons for smaller or larger circles, but they don’t apply for what I’m trying to do.”
“How about we put the circle around the mizzen,” Will suggested.
“I have no idea what a mizzen is,” Bella admitted, looking exasperated and sheepish.
Will pointed to the mast protruding out of the rear-center of the quarterdeck where they stood. “Mizzenmast.”
“That works. I was going to suggest we tie the mirror to it anyway,” Bella nodded. “First I need a loose loop of rope around the mast as a guide for my circle.”
“Big protractor. Got it. You hold Janie,” Will said. Bella took over steadying the mirror and sat down on the bench at the back of the aftcastle. She held tight to the railing. Back here the ship was fairly steady, but the rolling up-and-down of the waves still made her feel nervous now that she was near an edge. Will grabbed a loop of rope off the mast and got to work. In short order he had a loose line ready to trace a large circle. He handed Bella the end of the rope and took over steadying the mirror. Now it was Bella’s turn. She jammed the handle of her paintbrush through the rope and pulled it tight, then started her circle. It was a bit slow going. She dipped her brush in a pot of white paint, then made a short arc with the rope pulled taut. Then she positioned herself, made sure the rope hadn’t snagged, and did it again. Each section was only a few feet long, but bit by bit she traced out an arc of white paint on the quarterdeck just behind the helm.
As she worked another sheet of lightning lit the sky. Will was able to make out two distant islands. He noted their position for later.
As Bella finished her circle she started making another pass, thickening it and defining it. “How long do we have until the other ship is near us?” she asked.
“Oh, a while yet,” Captain Vex said with a shrug. “Maybe hours.”
“What?” Bella asked, surprised. She was already breathing hard from working at a fast pace. Trying to quickly crawl on her hands and knees across the rolling deck to paint the circle was surprisingly tiring. “I thought we were in danger?”
“We are,” Will said. “Most ship chases are endurance races.”
“Aye,” Captain Vex said over her shoulder. “Closing the distance c’n take a long time, especially when both ships are fairly even in speed. Once they get close, it’ll stop being about speed, an’ start being about maneuvering. A lot of it is about trying tae predict what the other ship’s going tae try tae do, and see if ye c’n trick ‘em intae doin’ somethin’ stupid. If we c’n get ‘em tae come about the wrong way, or force ‘em tae round an obstacle we dinnae have tae avoid, we c’n git some distance. Then it’s a chase again, until they catch up. We win this by exhausting them and keeping ahead, or by making it somewhere they won’t follow.”
“That sounds a lot less… I don’t know… less exciting? Than I thought it would be,” Bella said, sounding relieved but a little confused.
“The excitement comes if they catch us,” Will said. “Excitement is bad.”
“So we might have hours to prepare for that?” Bella asked.
“From the looks of things so far, yes,” Will nodded.
Bella started laughing. It started amused, but then became a bit sinister. “Oh, those poor bastards.”
Will and Captain Vex looked at each other, not sure what to say. Bella pulled her brush out of the rope and repositioned it a bit further back. “I’m going to draw another circle. Once I’m clear of the front arc, facing Belita, go ahead and tie the mirror to the mast.”
“Sure,” Will said. “Mind explaining the evil laugh?”
“I didn’t know I had time,” Bella grinned as she started the arc of her second circle. The gap between the two circles was about a foot wide. “My mother used to say that whenever you do spellwork, it’s always efficient, powerful, or fast, and you can only pick two. I thought I needed to be fast and powerful, so I was ready to toss efficiency out the window. I planned on drawing a ton of energy, and wasting most of it just to get the job done. Now I have the time to use all that energy right. I’m going to hit that ship with the mother of all hexes.”
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...
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...
“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...
Fantasy & Sci-Fi“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