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Chapter no 25 – The Prey

Tress of the Emerald Sea

SO HOW DIDย I know?

Well, I believe youโ€™ve been told. Iโ€™m an expert at being places Iโ€™m not

supposed to be. I have an innate sixth sense for mystery. In my current state, I might have thought vests with no shirt underneath to be the absolute height of fashion, but I was still fully capable of a little constructive snooping.

Tressโ€™s breath caught. Huck hissed softly.

Midnight spores. Somehow, Weev had gotten ahold of midnight spores. She was reminded of what the captain had said, that all sprouters wereโ€”to one extent or anotherโ€”crazy.

Weev, she thought, might have been a little extra so. (Tress was being generous. Iโ€™d have called him crazier than a nitroglycerin smoothie.)

โ€œPut those away,โ€ Huck said. โ€œNo, better, spread them over the silver. Kill them, Tress. Midnight spores are dangerous.โ€

โ€œIn what way?โ€ she asked. โ€œWhat do they do?โ€ โ€œTerrible things.โ€

โ€œAll spores do terrible things,โ€ Tress said. โ€œWhat do these do

specifically?โ€

โ€œIโ€ฆdonโ€™t know,โ€ Huck admitted. โ€œBut I feel like youโ€™reย wayย too relaxed about holding them.โ€

Perhaps she was. But danger is like icy water; you can get used to it if you take it slowly. She tucked the little box of spores safely back in its hidden

compartment. Sheโ€™d have to see if Ulaam knewโ€”

She jumped as the bell rang up above. Three quick peals, a warning to

everyone on board. A ship had been spotted in the distance, and the captain had decided to pursue.

Tress scrambled out of her room, but then stood in the hallway, not wanting to crowd the Dougs as they hastened to the top deck. It was excruciating to wait, as she didnโ€™t want to miss anything.

She neednโ€™t have worried.

When she finally reached the deck, she found the Dougs clustered

anxiously near the railing, looking out at a distant ship. As usual, theย Crowโ€™s Songย flew a royal merchantโ€™s flag. They wouldnโ€™t announce their pirate nature until the proper dramatic moment. Like the third-act twist of a play, only with the added bonus of grand larceny.

What followed was an extended chase that took five hours.

Theย Crowโ€™s Songย was faster than most ships, particularly after it dropped the ballast it used to sit lower in the spores, mimicking a merchant ship fully laden with goods in the hold. But โ€œspeedโ€ is a relative term at seaโ€” particularly the spore sea, when the seethe could stop or start at any moment.

Tress hadnโ€™t realized how unusual it had been for her first vessel to be caught by surprise. This second pursuit required exacting work from the crew and the helmswoman, who slowly but surely ran down their prey.

The hours made Tressโ€™s tension mount. This was it. The final test of her plan to swap the cannonballs. She grew increasingly certain she had failed. Surely someone had discovered what sheโ€™d done. Surely she wasnโ€™t clever enough to trick seasoned killers like Laggart and the captain.

Her heart nearly leaped from her chest when Crow shouted the order. โ€œForward cannon to bear! All sailors, take arms!โ€

The Dougs ran for their musketsโ€”though the ship they were chasing was still far away. Tress didnโ€™t try to arm herself. Considering how sheโ€™d fired a musket precisely zero times in her life, she figured the best way to keep her digits attached was to continue that perfect record.

She did, however, position herself near the prow, where she could witness Ann begging Laggart to let her have the first shot. He chewed her out and

sent her to stand with the othersโ€”where one of the Dougs pointedly took the pistol from her hand and put a cutlass in it instead. Ann had another pistol out a moment later, slipped from the holster on the back of her belt.

โ€œWarning shot, Cannonmaster!โ€ Crow shouted.

Tress held her breath. Laggart swiveled the cannon with a crank, then sighted with his spyglass before using another lever to raise the cannonโ€™s

barrel a few inches. He continued this process, exacting and precise, making adjustments. Finally, he pulled a wet firing stick from the bucket of water at his station.

He touched it to the firing pan, setting off the zephyr spores with a raucous explosion. The ball soaredย directlyย at the fleeing ship. This was no warning shot; it would be another โ€œaccidentalโ€ direct hitโ€”intended to sink, not frighten. Tress heard Ann mutter nearby as she watched the cannonballโ€™s trajectory.

Tress steeled herself, her panic mounting as she thought of the poor sailors on that ship.

Then, with what seemed like only moments to spare, the cannonball

exploded. Set to detonate like a mortar, it sprayed water across the side of the prey shipโ€”but left the hull unharmed. The seaโ€™s response was, of course, immediate. Enormous tentacles of vines erupted from the spore sea,

wrapping around the wet side of the ship, gripping the vessel in a deadly

embrace. Even from a distance, Tress was certain she could hear the planks groaning.

But the shipโ€™s hull did not crack. The precision shot immobilized the ship instead of destroying it.

Though the crew cheeredโ€”this meant easy plunderโ€”Laggart cursed softly, his face going red. The shade of a forge the moment before you remove the iron and proceed to lay into it with everything you have.

Captain Crow marched across the deck to the cannon station. Her glare

could have skinned a cat, but out loud she said, โ€œNot exactly what Iโ€™d call a warning shot, Cannonmaster. But that wasโ€ฆa very clean capture.โ€

โ€œThank you, Captain,โ€ Laggart said. โ€œI apologize for failing you in your request.โ€ He punctuated each syllable, as if he were whipping the sounds for coming from his lips.

Tress nearly started hyperventilating from the anxiety. Was Laggart looking at her with a more-surly-than-normal expression? Did he know? If he suspected foul play, there was only one rational culprit.

The captain seemed like she wanted to order another shot, but then she glanced at the cheering Dougs. Even in the twisted lump of smoldering coal that was her heart, Crow understood she needed good morale on her vessel. A quick and easy haul here would accomplish that.

โ€œRun up the pirateโ€™s flag, seaman Doug,โ€ she said.

In response, their prey fired a flare bright in the air. Surrender. The Dougs cheered again. Tress started to calm down. Itโ€ฆit was working.

Unfortunately, as theย Crowโ€™s Songย drew close to the captive ship, the seethe stilled. Theย Crowโ€™s Songย lurched to a halt, and this instantly

dampened everyoneโ€™s enthusiasm. Tress looked at the Dougs, worried. What was the problem? There were interruptions like this every day.

โ€œAnn?โ€ Tress said, sidling up to her. โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€

โ€œThe ship surrendered,โ€ Ann said, her voice tense, โ€œโ€™cuz they knew they were beaten. With them held by vines, we could maneuver, anโ€™ they could not. But now weโ€™re both of us stuck. The sea just evened this match. Anโ€™ they gotta be asking if maybe they shouldnโ€™t justโ€ฆโ€

She trailed off as a blue puff of zephyr spores rose from the other shipโ€™s aft. Followed by a crack.

Followed by a whistle and aย crashย as a cannonball hit theย Crowโ€™s Song

right at the prow, where spores met wood.

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