โROPE!โ I SHOUT UPย from the water.
Sorinda peeks over the edge of the ship once before tossing me one. I haul myself up with her help.
The ships in the distance fire their cannons, now that Tylonโs ship has gone down. Holes ripple in the water near us, but weโll soon be out of range.
We need to get our lead back.
Itโs too much to hope my father went down with the ship. He would have been the first one off it.
I expel some of my song so I can absorb the water drenching my clothes. Once I am dry, I will no longer be able to restock without losing myself. I know this, somehow. I can feel the siren part of me just waiting to come back out.
I plant myself on the aftercastle with Kearan. He steers us while I keep my eyes on the fleet. I canโt see the faces of the men from this distance, but there is one figureโbigger than all the othersโthat stands out. The king. He will be furious. His men will be terrified of him.
They must already be exhausted from rowing all this way, because they are unable to keep pace with us.
I stay up top with Kearan for maybe an hour, just long enough to determine we are still gaining a lead and are long out of range. The fleet is still in sight. It will be a while before we no longer see them on the horizon. But it is safe enough to check on other things.
My first stop is the infirmary. I find Mandsy wrapping Niridiaโs hand in gauze. My first mate is covered in a large blanket, water pooling below her on the floor.
โHow bad is it?โ I ask.
โThe ball went clean through the middle of her hand. Itโs hard to say how the bones will heal.โ
โItโs my left hand,โ Niridia mumbles. โIโll still have a sword hand.
Nothing to worry about.โ
โIโve tried to give her something for the pain, but she wonโt take it.โ I raise a brow at Niridia.
โYou need me sharp. Our enemies are far too close.โ
I place a hand on her shoulder. โI need you well. Weโre okay for now. Get healed up. Youโre to take whatever Mandsy gives you. Thatโs an order.โ
Niridia purses her lips, but she doesnโt refuse the bottle Mandsy passes her.
โNiridia is the last to be patched up,โ Mandsy says. โIโve taken care of the others. Theyโre already resting below. A few of the girls took balls to the legs and arms. Mostly nicks as they were veering around their hiding places to take shots.โ
โI heard someone fall from the mast as I ordered the sails unfurled,โ I say. โNo concussions?โ
Mandsyโs face turns grave. โNo, a casualty, Captain.โ I swallow. โWho?โ
โHaeli. She took a bullet to the back. I tried to stop the bleeding, but it was too late. I left her on the deck so we can put her to rest as soon as we have enough of a lead on the fleet.โ
Haeli. One of my best riggers. I picked her up off Calpoonโone of the Seventeen Isles. She was in a traveling band of performers. Half the time she played the lute during performances, the other she was out in the audience, stealing from their pockets. I was one of her marks. After she robbed me, I offered her a job. Told her I paid better than thieving.
Now sheโs lifeless out on my deck.
I force a deep breath through my nose. โAny other casualties?โ โNo.โ
โGood.โ
I leave them. The weight of this journey presses down on my shoulders, physically exhausting me, despite the nourishment Iโve just received from the ocean. How many of us will be left once we reach the siren island? How many of my loved ones will I be forced to lose in order to make the rest safe?
I canโt stand the pressure of my own thoughts. I need to keep busy. I seek out Radita belowdecks.
โShe took a few hits, Captain,โ she says once I ask after the status of the ship. โA cannon struck through the galley. It took out most of the water storage, and all the water barrels on the deck were riddled with holes during the battle. Weโve lost most of our drinkable water.โ
โHow much do we have left?โ โA single barrel.โ
โOnly one!โ
She nods. โThe one weโve already opened and started drinking from.โ
I cover my face with my hands. Our days are numbered. Iโll order Trianne to start rationing the water. Even then, I donโt see how we can make it to the siren island with whatโs left. Then thereโs the return journey.โฆ
โCan you see to the shipโs repairs?โ I ask. โI already have some of the girls on it.โ โThank you.โ
โItโs my job, Captain, but youโre welcome.โ
When I pass by the bunks, Roslyn is fretting over Wallovโs injuries. โItโs a scratch, sweet,โ he tells her.
โNo, it was a shard of wood to your shoulder. Now lie back down.โ โIโmย fine,โ he says, emphasizing the last word.
โIn that case, thereโs no reason to halt my dagger lessons.โ
I manage a grin as I close the hatch behind me, heading now for my rooms. But my amused expression disappears as soon as I get inside.
Somebody is already here, waiting for me.
โWhat are you doing? Youโre not allowed in here unless I invite you in.โ โI have a bone to pick with my captain,โ Riden says. His body is rigid with fury, and I wonder how he manages such an even tone. โI thought it
best to do so in private so you donโt hold me over the edge of the ship for mutiny.โ
โYouโre not the only one with problems,โ I snap. โMy own father blew holes in my ship. A third of the crew is injured. One of our own is dead. So unless your issues are bigger than those, I suggest you leave because I donโt need more added on to my load.โ
His calm tone vanishes. โIt was very nearly more than one casualty!
What the hell were you thinking yanking me into the ocean with you?โ
โI was thinking I had girls in the water and I needed to save them! I didnโt exactly have time to ask for your permission before eels would be upon them.โ
โAnd I was what? Bait? An expendable body while you were off saving your real crew members?โ
โMyย realย crew members? You can be so thick sometimes! I took a calculated risk. I had no choice but to involve you.โ
His nostrils widen as he takes in another labored breath.
โI needed you,โ I spit out. โWithout you, I turn into a monster beneath the water. But youโyou keep me human. You are what I needed to remember myself. I hate it, but I realized that something about you,ย onlyย you, keeps me human when my siren nature tries to take over.โ
That brings him up short. โWhy?โ
โHell if I know. I wasnโt about to let four girls under my protection die as I paused to figure that out.โ
He raises his gaze from mine, pondering something. โYou werenโt yourself at first. You were dangerous. You were the siren, and thenโI knew what to do somehow. I knew that if I didnโt struggle, if I just got close to you, you wouldnโt drown me.โ
โIn the story my father always told me about how he met my mother, he said instead of fighting the siren trying to drown him, he didnโt resist. Thatโs what stopped her, made her bring him up on land instead.โ
It canโt be that simple, can it? An unresisting man causing a sirenโs nature to be replaced with humanity? Whatever it is, I need to learn to control the siren, and Riden is the first chance I have at doing that.
โWhat is it?โ Riden asks. Heโs looking at me once more.
โI need your help. I was able to take out a ship from under the water. If I could learn to control myself, so I could go underwater anytime without fear โฆ Itโs not just a want. Itโs a need. I need this in order to protect my crew. I need to learn to restock my abilities without losing my mind. I need to submerge myself in water without turning into a mindless beast. I need you to help me.โ
Some of the fight leaves him at the look on my face. I donโt know what he sees there.
โAlosa, there is very little I wouldnโt do for you, but what exactly are you asking of me?โ
โI need you to be with me when I replenish my abilities. I need you to bring me back. Over and over and over again. Until I can do it on my own.โ
He scoffs. โI came in here to tell youย notย to drag me underwater with you, and youโre asking me to do just that?โ
โRiden, we need this.โ
โYouย promisedย you wouldnโt use your abilities on me. You broke it once to save my life. And nowโฆโ He shudders.
โThis is different. Iโm asking for your permission ahead of time.โ โAnd if I say no?โ
โThen Iโll respect that.โ โGood. Iโm saying no.โ
I hadnโt expected him to answer so quickly. He could have at least pretended to consider it.
Part of me is relieved. The siren terrifies me every time I have to stock up. But the other part of me is disappointed. Doesnโt he know what this could mean for the crew, for our chances of survival?
It doesnโt matter. Riden wonโt cooperate. That means Iโll figure something else out.
โThen on your way,โ I say, pointing to the door.
* * *
Kearan, Niridia, and I are back in front of the maps. Iโve already explained the water situation to the crew. Now the three of us need to find a solution.
โThereโs this large island on the Allemos map,โ Kearan says, pointing to it. โItโs likely to have freshwater. We could stop.โ
โThe last island we stopped at had siren-made cannibals,โ Niridia says. โDevil knows whatโs on this one.โ
โThe question is whether weโd rather die of thirst,โ I say, โor risk running into danger on another island.โ
Niridia considers this. โDying of thirst is assured if we donโt stop. Dying on this second island is only a possibility at this point.โ
โAgreed,โ Kearan says.
Iโm thinking the same thing. โGood. Kearan, set a course.โ
* * *
My eyes trail along the horizon, as they have for the last several days, but there is no sign of the fleet. Roslyn hasnโt shouted out anything from her better vantage point in the crowโs nest, either, so I decide to give it a rest.
A pod of whales swims a few hundred feet to our right. They leap from the water and splash back down. Roslyn laughs from the railing, straining as close as she can get, trying to catch the sea spray with her fingers.
The water is startlingly clear out here. Bright fish in reds and blues and yellows swim in the shallows as we pass by more isles along the way. Theyโre barren plots of sand without more than a palm tree or two sprouting up. Weโve passed nothing yet containing a freshwater source.
Today I find myself observing the crew at their chores. Radita walks around, checking the rigging, making sure the new fixes hold. Some of the gals swab the deck. Others drape down on the outside of the ship, suspended by ropes to pick off barnacles and other unwanted creatures trying to hitch a ride.
The temperature has warmed even more, making us thirstier with the new rationing. The girls wear their sleeves rolled up and their hair up and off their necks.
Riden is up in the rigging, fiddling with the sails. Heโs barefoot, shirtless, and heโs gone a few days without shaving.
Holy hell.
Iโm staring. I know it, but I canโt seem to stop.
โI could get used to warm weather,โ Niridia says from next to me. โWonโt exactly make everyone smell nice, but the view is vastly improved.โ
I should have a clever response, but all I can manage is โAye.โ
We stare a few beats longer, until heโs about to turn around and weโll be caught for sure.
โWhatโs going on there?โ Niridia asks. โWhat do you mean?โ
โI mean, why donโt I see him waltzing out of your quarters every morning with a spring in his step?โ
I laugh. โBecause there isย nothingย going on there.โ โWhy not?โ
I dare a glance back up at him, watch the purposeful way he moves, watch his muscles tense as he pulls on a line. โHe canโt handle what I can do. My abilities terrify him.โ
โAny person with sense is terrified by what you can do. That doesnโt mean we donโt all love you.โ
โThanks, but itโs different with him. He has a history with people trying to control him. The fact that I can literally make him do things takes his mind back to a darker time.โ
โHeโll get over it,โ Niridia says with a certainty that surprises me. โHow do you know?โ
โBecause heโs not an idiot.โ
I take a deep breath. โI made things worse.โ โWhat did you do?โ
โThe few times that Iโve been able to control myself underwaterโitโs always been because of Riden. I wanted to get a better handle on my abilities, so I asked him to help me. I asked him to make himself vulnerable like that over and over again.โ
โAnd he saidย no?โ she asks in astonishment.
โOf course he did. I shouldnโt have asked it of him. It was wrongโโ โNo, Alosa. Whatโs wrong is you not trying to do everything in your
power to protect your crew. You did the right thing. Heโll see that itโs right, too.โ
โThereโs no way heโll come around.โ
โWell, not on his own,โ she says. โMen can be so thick sometimes. They need help every once in a while.โ
I smile. Iโd said as much to Ridenโs face, but when Niridia starts walking off, the smile drops. โWhat are you doing?โ
โHelping.โ โNiridia!โ
โRiden!โ she shouts.
He looks down, his eyes roving until they spot her. โAye?โ โCome down for a moment, please.โ
He leaps for the netting and begins to crawl his way down. โNiridia, he already said no. Leave him alone.โ
โJust let me try something. You do trust me, donโt you?โ โOf course.โ
โThen let me do my job on this ship.โ
Riden drops into a crouch as his bare feet hit the deck. He straightens, notices me next to Niridia, but focuses on her.
โDo you consider yourself a selfish person, Riden?โ she asks brazenly.
If heโs at all uncomfortable with the question, he doesnโt show it. โI can be,โ he says.
โIโm the first mate of this ship, which means I see everything that happens. I see you comforting Deshel, see you softening every time Roslyn is around, see you laughing with Wallov and Deros. Youโve grown fond of us, havenโt you?โ
โAye.โ
โGood. Now the captain tells me you could be invaluable in helping her control her abilities, thereby helping us survive the pirate king. Do you think sheโs right about that?โ
He closes himself off, his face turning away slightly. Iโm shocked when a weak โYesโ comes out of him.
โYou risked your life for Roslyn once already. You very nearly died for her. Tell me, if the pirate king catches up to us, do you think he will spare her because she is a child?โ
His head whips back around. โNo,โ he says, stronger.
โNo one is ordering you to do anything. I just think itโs important for you to see things exactly as they are. You could tilt the odds in our favor, Riden. Remember that when youโre trying to sleep at night.โ
And then she just walks off. Leaving me to deal with Riden. With shirtless Riden.
โI swear I didnโt put her up to that,โ I say. โI told her to leave you alone.
I was just venting to her, and she got it into her headโโ โItโs all right.โ
โIs it?โ
โYou will recall I was once a first mate. We can be a stubborn bunch.โ
He scratches a spot on his arm, and I focus on that instead of his abdomen.
โSheโs right,โ he says suddenly, drawing my gaze to his face. โI donโt like it, and I canโt promise that I wonโt lash out afterwardโbut we need to do this.โ
โIf there were any other way for me to do this, I wouldnโt have asked. Iโve tried my whole life to control this. My father put me through all kinds ofโnever mind. Thatโs not important. Iโm just saying that if the pirate king ruled it out as a lost cause, then I know you really are my last option.โ
โHmmโ is all he says.
โWhen should we start?โ I ask tentatively. โProbably the sooner, the better.โ
โProbably.โ A pause. โSo โฆ now?โ I venture. โYes.โ
I nod. โLet me make some arrangements.โ
* * *
It takes a quarter of an hour to get things readyโand only that long because I took my time. I am in no hurry to use my abilities in front of Riden again. To see his disgust and anger. If we succeed, it will make an insurmountable difference in the battle against my father. But if something should go wrong, if I should hurt anyone while lost to the sirenโ
Iโm walking a very fine line.
When I reappear at Ridenโs side, he says nothing, only follows me belowdecks. All the other men have been ordered to cover their ears with wax by a smug Niridia. Sorinda is waiting for us in the brig, outside my cushioned cell.
โDoesnโt Mandsy usually help you with this?โ Riden asks, surprised at seeing the assassin.
โShould things get out of hand, Sorinda is here to put a stop to them.โ
Calmly, he asks, โYou mean sheโs here to put me down if Iโm pulled under your control?โ
โNo,โ I say, horrified at his accepting tone, that he would think Iโd allow such a thing. โSheโs here to make sure I donโt hurt you.โย You imbecile.ย My eyes dart down before immediately returning to his face. โGo put on a shirt before we start.โ
โItโs hot,โ he says, and I can guess what heโs thinking.ย This is going to be miserable. The least you can do is let me be as comfortable as possible.
I have two choices. I can let him think Iโm being unreasonably cruel, or I can explain things. He insists I never open up to him.
Fine. Iโll explain things.
โSirens want two things from men. Gold and pleasure. Do you have any gold on you?โ
โNo,โ he breathes.
โThe siren in me would have you moaning in pleasure as she whittled holes into you with a knife. Sheโd strip you naked and watch you dance until your feet peeled away to the bone. Once you bore her in life, sheโll enjoy dancing with your corpse under the sea. Do you want me to tell you how much that thought delights her? Sheโs thought it about you before.โ
Shattering silence is all he has in response.
โI thought not. Put on your shirt. Letโs not make her hungrier than she needs to be.โ
He leaves the brig, and when he returns, he has a sterner expression on his face. But at least his top half is covered now, too.
I step into my cushioned cell, handing Sorinda my weapons, my corset, my boots. Anything containing metal, everything sharp. All the things the siren can use to try to escape.
She locks me in, then does the same thing for Riden, making him hand over his weapons, and locks him into the cell across from me, where I cannot reach him.
But I will be able to hear him.
โOn the island with Vordan,โ I say, โwhen he put me in that cage and forced me to sing to you, you kept me sane enough to do as I was told, so he wouldnโt kill you. You should have died. Iโve never stayed human so close after replenishing my abilities. Those pirates poured water onto me, forcing me to take it in over and over again. But just by speaking to me, you kept my head clear. It took some effort. But I think toward the end of our stay on the island, it was easier.
โStocking up my power is different from being submerged under the sea with all that power endlessly flowing through me. But weโll start small and work our way up. If thereโs any progress to be had,โ I add.
โAnd provided I donโt die,โ he says.
Sorinda pulls her rapier from its sheath. โYouโre not going to die. Not on my watch.โ
โI promise this isnโt going to be any more fun for me than it is for you,โ I say.
Right now my power is at its fullest, so I sing to expel some of it. Iโm not enchanting anyone. My song doesnโt have to be a command. Riden flinches anyway. I pretend not to notice.
When Iโve depleted it some, I dip a finger into the water. I almost ask Riden whether or not heโs ready, but I realize neither he nor I will ever be ready for this.
I pull the water through my skin, let it fill me. Itโs like taking a cool drink of water into a parched throat. The way the drained abilities within me crave strength and power. Crave the water.
I take in my surroundings with new eyes. Eyes that can see the individual fibers of wood on the walls, the stains on the floor, the flecks of gold in the human manโs eyes across from me.
The humans have trapped me again, but this time they were kind enough to leave me someone to play with.
โAlosa,โ he says firmly, as though it is a command. Worthless human.
No creature commands me.
โAlosa.โ He says it again, but this time itโs different. Itโs soft, pleading. Where before there was just another human, now there is Riden. My
Riden.
Mine.
The siren still pushes to the front. She is ruthless and brutal. Hungry for her own enjoyment. Hungry for power. But I place a cage in my mind, put her behind it. I donโt need her now.
โItโs me,โ I say.
Riden lets out a long breath.
I am used to the siren after dealing with her all these years. Itโs so strange. Because I am her. When I take in the water, I become a creature with no knowledge of my human existence, no knowledge of those I care about or my human aspirations. I become what I would have been if Iโd never known life above the sea.
Itโs terrifying to know I could lose myself to her. But it wonโt happen here. Not in an environment that I control. I take comfort in theย Ava-leeโs familiar surroundings.
But what Iโm most concerned about right now is Riden. He appears all right, despite what Iโve just put him through. I dare to speak.
โBefore,โ I say, โwhen I was replenishing my abilities and you disobeyed orders by coming toย observeย me, you didnโt speak. And I didnโt come to my senses. I remained a siren the entire time. I wonder if itโs your voice, somehow, that does it?โ
โWhat about when youโre underwater?โ Riden asks. โI canโt speak to you then, but youโve still managed to come to your senses three different times.โ
โYouโre right. Those times, youโฆโ โKissed you,โ he fills in.
Sorinda remains as apathetic as always as Riden continues talking. โWhen you saved us from Vordan, you held me under the water. I thought I was going to die, and the last thought I remember having was that I wanted to kiss you one more time before that happened.โ
Heโs never told me that before.โฆ
โThatโs when I came to,โ I say, remembering. โAnd when you fell into the water during the storm, you were drowning again. The siren put her lips to yours to give you some air, so you wouldnโt die before she could have her fun. Thatโs when I was myself again.โ
โAnd then during the battle,โ Riden says, โI put my forehead to yours.
Not quite a kiss, but it was close.โ
I stare at him through the bars. โWhy did you do that? You couldnโt have known what I was trying.โ
โSomehow, I just thought that if I could get closer to you, maybe we wouldnโt die.โ
It is not only the siren who reacts to Riden, then. He somehow knows how to handle her, too.
โLetโs go again,โ I say, dipping my finger in the water once more. Riden doesnโt object, so I draw it in.
* * *
Riden and I practice for hours. Each time, all he has to do is say my name, and Iโm me again.
I canโt explain it. Riden is not the only one who has spoken to me while I was the siren. In the past, my father kept me contained while I was stocking up on my abilities. His voice didnโt bring me to. Tylon has seen me as a siren, tried speaking with me. That did nothing for me, either. Wallov and Deros have done it. A few other captains at the keep.
Nothing.
Itโs Riden. Only Riden.