THE BLUE SPORES FASCINATEDย Tress. They were the first spores from another moon, another sea, that sheโd seen up close. They were beautiful, almost crystalline. The fact that they could likely kill her with ease only made them more captivating. Like an expertly forged sword crafted
with love, dedication, and sweat by a smith so that someday you could do the most ugly things possible in the most beautiful of ways.
She sent Huck away with a quiet word, to not put him in danger. Then she whispered a prayer to the moons and thought of Charlie. Getting the crew to trust her was the best way to further her goal of reaching him. Doing the
work they didnโt want to do themselves was bound to lead her toward opportunities. Even washing windows had led her to opportunities. The most important one being when she met Charlie in the first place.
All that in mindโand with the mask over her mouth and the goggles over her eyesโshe felt onlyย slightlyย terrified as she lowered the small keg into the larger barrel. There were hooks on the side where she could affix it, and the spigot at the bottom of the kegโlike for pouring beerโlet the spores drain out at a careful rate. Her hand still shook as she held the funnel and filled up the first pouch with the radiant blue spores.
She tied it and set it carefully on the bottom of the barrel near the other pouches. She fell into a rhythm, filling them, taking care not to spill a single spore. It was tense work, far worse for thinking than cleaning the deck. But Tressโbeing Tressโcouldnโt avoid thoughts entirely.
She wondered exactly what the spores did that made the cannon fire. She wondered if there were other types of spores being carried in the shipโs
armoryโand who managed them, if the crewโs sprouter was dead.
Also, she wondered why the large barrel had a false bottom.
She recognized it easily. After all, sheโd spent several weeks becoming an expert on barrel contraptions and how to hide things in them. On one of the devices sheโd prepared for leaving the Rock, theyโd installed a secret latch hidden right aboutโฆthere.
She found it near the barrelโs banding. A little piece of metal she could wiggle. When she moved it, a holeโlittle larger than a fistโopened in the bottom of the barrel. A few pouches of spores dropped in, and her breath
caught. When she reached in to pull them out, her fingers brushed something else.
A cannonball. Hidden in the cavity beneath the barrelโs false bottom.
There was room for three or four of them inside.
She quickly pulled the pouches out and reset the device. As she returned to her work, her hands trembled evenย more. Her mind raced so fast, it would soon need a new set of tires.
She could see it. She knew what had happened.
The cannonmaster was in charge of loading, aiming, and firing the
weapon. Heโd be given a rack of cannonballs, but who would be watching to see if he grabbed one from this secret compartment instead? Probably no one.
She bet those hidden cannonballs wouldnโt pass Fortโs inspectionโthey wouldnโt be rigged to incapacitate the target with vines. Laggart, the
cannonmaster, hadย deliberatelyย sunk that other ship.
But why? The entire situation didnโt make sense for a multitude of reasons. It wasnโt just the lack of plunder. Why botherย hidingย the fact that they were going to sink the ship? Why the subterfuge?
It only made sense ifโฆ
โSo, zephyr spore duty,โ a voice said behind Tress. โI wondered who the Dougs would force to do it, now that Weev is dead.โ
Tress turned to see the lanky, sharp-nosed woman with the short hair who had been talking to Fort earlier. Ann, the shipโs carpenter.
Every ship needs a good carpenter. Oh, a sprouter can patch up a hull with a quick burst of sporesโbut silver erodes even fully hardened roseite over time. Doesnโt take a man long at sea to start contemplating how thin the barrier is between him and certain death. Just a plank. If you ever want to have a good face-to-face with your mortality, youโll find the opportunity on the deck of a ship at night, staring at the endless darkness beyond youโ
when you realize the darkness beneath is somehow even more heavy, more vast, and more terrifying.
Thatโs when you realize that having a good carpenter on board is worth paying them a double share of wages. In fact, itโs quite the steal.
โI donโt mind the duty,โ Tress said, making another pouch. โIโd do it again if they asked.โ Inwardly, she was uneasy with how Ann walked next to the
cannon, trailing her fingers on the metal. Sheโd been talking to Fort about the cannonballs. What side was she on? How many sides were there? What had Tress gotten herselfย into?
Sadly, she didnโt know the half of it yet.
โDonโt say things like that, Tress,โ Ann said. โSailors donโtย volunteerย for duty. Itโs downright untraditional.โ
โYou know my name?โ Tress said.
โThings get around on a ship,โ Ann replied. โIโm Ann. Shipโs carpenter.
Assistant cannonmaster.โ
Assistant to Laggart? Tress licked her lips, nervousโthen stopped. Licking anything wasย notย a good idea when handling spores. She made another pouch.
Had Ann seen her find the hidden chamber?
โWhat do you think?โ Ann said, settling on a box nearby, a hand on one of her pistols as if taking comfort in it. โYouโre a pirate now, Tress. An unexpected sideways turn in life.โ
โBetter than an unexpected turn downward,โ Tress said. โAye,โ Ann said. โThat it is.โ
Tress wanted to ask more questions, but it felt like too much of an imposition. These people had spared her. Who was she to be making demands of them? So instead she said, โYou all seem to be adjusting well to being pirates.โ
โAdjusting well? What kinda talk is that?โ Ann leaned forward. โYou want to know why, donโt you? How we ended up this way?โ
โIโฆyes, Miss Ann. I do.โ โWhy not ask?โ
โI didnโt want to be impolite.โ โImpolite? Toย pirates?โ
Tress blushed.
โI donโt mind talkinโ about it,โ Ann said, staring out over the sea. Before them the shipโs prow cut a path through the spores. โThe capโn spun it well. We could either end up fighting in the kingโs coming war, or we could strike out on our own, throwing away all the laws about writs and tariffs. Plus, the capโn said weโd be doing a noble and important duty.โ
โโฆImportant?โ Tress asked. โA vital part of the economy.โ โโฆUm, I see.โ
โDo you?โ
โActually, no,โ Tress admitted.
โThen why not say so, girl?โ Ann said, shaking her head. โAnyway, our job is important. You know how rich folk areโthey make all this money off people sailing around, selling and buying for them. Then whatโre they gonna do with the money? Lock it away. What good isย locked awayย money? Ainโt nobody going to enjoy it if itโs trapped in a vault with Grannaโs wedding ring.
โSo weโve gotta take some. Inject it back into the economy, as a stimulus. To help local merchants, the small folk who are just tryinโ to live. We do an important service.โ
โByโฆstealing.โ
โDamn right.โ Ann sat back, shifting her hand on her pistol. โLeast, thatโs what it was supposed to be like. We werenโt supposed to be deadrunners. I guess we all knew the risk. Didnโt expect to fail so hard on our first act of piracy though.โ
Tress cocked her head, barely resisting the urge to scratch at the place
where the goggles met her face. Despite the silver on the deck, spores on her fingers could live long enough to do damage.
โIโmโฆconfused,โ Tress said. โDeadrunner?โ
โYou donโt know?โ Ann said. โWhat kind of sailor are you?โ
โThe kind thatโฆdoesnโt know what a deadrunner is?โ She felt profoundly annoyed at being berated for withholding questions, then being mocked
when she didnโt.
โThere are two varieties of pirates, Tress,โ Ann explained. โThereโs the ordinary kind, then thereโs the deadrunners. Regular pirates rob, but donโt kill unless theyโre fired upon. You sail well enough to catch the ship youโre chasing, and they surrender their ransom price. Thenย theyย sail away with their lives, whileย youย sail away richer.
โThatโs how itโs supposed to work. It becomes a contest, see? A race, with a little extortion to keep it interestinโ. The kingโs marshals, they keep records. So long as you let folks go, so long as you donโt murder crewsโฆ
well, if you get caught, they lock you up. But they donโt hang you.โ โThat sounds remarkably civilized,โ Tress said.
Ann shrugged. โCivilization exists because everyone wants to keep their innards inโr innards. You donโt punch a fellow when you first meet him, โcuz you donโt wanna get punched each timeย youย meet someone. The king knows this. So long as he gives pirates aย reasonย not to go all the way, theyโll hedge. โBesides, whoย wouldnโtย rather have a chase than a battle? The poor sods
on merchant ships donโt want to lose their lives over their masterโs money. The masters donโt want their ships being scuttled or stolen. And you donโt last long as a pirate ifโn youโve gotta wipe the deck with your blood every haul. Except, you know, if you kill someone by accident.โ
โOr an entire shipโs worth of people,โ Tress said.
Ann nodded. โThen you become a deadrunner. No mercy for you if caught. Even other pirates will hate you. Nobody will take crew from a
deadrunner ship. Youโre left to make your way, lonely as the single bean in a poor manโs soup.โ
By the moons, it made sense. Tress revised her opinion of Ann. That forlorn expression, that regretโฆit meant whatever conspiracy there had been to sink the smuggler ship, Ann hadnโt been part of it.
Laggartย hadย been though. And likely the captain. Theyโdย wantedย to become deadrunners. Hence the hidden cannonballs, the sinking of theย Ootโs Dream. Why else would the captain leave one of the sailors alive to spread the word?
Tress was so absorbed by these thoughts that she forgot herself and
absently scratched at the itch by her goggles. She froze as she was doing it.
Moonshadows.
Well, at leastโ
That was when Tressโs face exploded.