โIโVE FOUND A WAYย for us to escape our predicament,โ Salay said, then gestured at Tress. โBehold our liberator.โ
Tress froze, her hand still on the door to the quartermasterโs office, which sheโd just shut. She hadnโt expected to be put on the spot the moment she
stepped in. โUmโฆโ she began.
โShe canโt confirm it, of course,โ Salay said, lowering her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. โBut Iโm confident she is a Kingโs Mask.โ
Fort held up his sign.ย Not to be a contrarian, Salay, but I sincerely doubt thatโs the case.
โYeah,โ Ann said. โIโm with him. Tress is great and all, but sheโs obviously a girl from a backwater island.โ
โThe entireย pointย of the Kingโs Masks is that they seem innocent,โ Salay said. โHow many girls from backwater islands haveย youย seen walk on the sea? Then cling to the outside of a ship at sail?โ
Fort and Ann studied her, and Tress blushed beneath their scrutiny. โI was desperate,โ she said. โI just did what I had to in order to survive.โ
It IS a little suspicious,ย Fort wrote,ย how you almost immediately ended up as shipโs sprouter.
โRight?โ Salay said. โSheโs not afraid of spores.โ โIโmย veryย afraid of spores,โ Tress corrected.
โAnd she could have fled the ship at Shimmerbay,โ Salay said, โbut chose to remain so she could keep an eye on Crow. She admitted as much to me
earlier.โ
Tress sighed. โIโฆdonโt want to impose, Salay. But I think youโre misinterpreting what I said.โ
โWait,โ Ann said. โSalay, youโre acting like this is aย goodย thing. If she
wereย a Kingโs Mask, then sheโd kill us all. Weโre outlaws now.โ
โAh,โ Salay said, holding up a finger. โBut sheย knowsย we arenโt complicit in killing anyone.โ
Technically, we are,ย Fort wrote, looking morose.ย We turned pirate, then people died. Doesnโt matter that we didnโt shoot the cannon. Weโre responsible for those poor peopleโs deaths.
The small room grew quiet. Fort sat on his stool behind the counter,
shoulders wide enough that they nearly touched both walls at once. He wore suspenders, as the last seven belts he’d tried to wear had given up on the spot
โand I have it on good authority heโs been ordered by judicial mandate to stay at least thirty feet from any others as a judgment for past brutality.
Ann sat on the counter by the wall, swinging her legs. She seemed intensely interested in a knot in the floorboards, but in reality she was haunted by Fortโs words. They were all culpable. Everyone except Tress.
Salay stepped toward the others, away from the door. โSee, thatโs why itโs important that sheย isย a Mask. The only way for us to survive after being named deadrunners is to have an agent of the king vouch for us.โ She looked to Tress, pleading in her eyes. โThatโs why she could be our liberator. She
could tell the king we meant well. That we tried to stop Crow. Itโs a way out. Isnโt it?โ
Tress had seen Salay as stern, straightforward. Like a firm handshake in human form. But right now, there was fear in her dark eyes. And pain. Moon of mercy, it was difficult to hear her plea and deny it.
Fort and Ann both looked to Tress, a spark of hope in their eyes as well.
Huck was right. These people werenโt fools. They werenโt idiots for hoping Tress was something more than the girl she appeared to be. They simply wanted there to be a chance.
Tressโs mouth went dry again, though not from abusing aethers this time. Thereย wasย a way for her to prove she wasnโt a Mask. She merely had to say
sheย wasย one. Incongruently, this would prove she wasnโt one, assuming Salay was right and Masks werenโt allowed to admit to their station.
But saying that would stomp out their last light of hope. Doing so feltโฆ cruel. Like kicking a kitten.
No. Like strapping dynamite to a kitten, then seeing how high you could get the head to fly.
Tress couldnโt say it. They wanted it so much. She in turn was desperate for them toย getย what they wanted. So instead she changed the subject. She reached into her satchel and took out a cannonball.
โI took this,โ she said, โfrom a secret compartment in one of Laggartโs gunnery barrels.โ
Salay looked to the other two and pointedly folded her arms, as if to say,
See?
Fort took the cannonball and balanced it in his palm, his curled fingers against it and the other knuckles holding it steady. He rolled it from one palm to the other, then set it on the counter. He got out a chisel and a hammer, holding them each in his unique way, and gingerly tapped the
cannonball in a few specific places. He was then able to hold it down with one palm and twist so the two halves came apart.
Inside, normally one would have found an explosive charge of zephyr
spores and the fuse system to burst the cannonball. (Weโll get to the specifics later.) Each ball had a number printed on the outside, the seconds until the
secondary detonationโwhich would launch out a spray of water.
In this case, the charge had been replaced by a wadded cloth, the water in the hollow center filled with lead shot.
โRigged,โ Ann said, โto sink a ship, not capture it. Moon of justice, Salay.
Youโre right. The capโn made us deadrunners onย purpose!โ
I knew something was off about all this,ย Fort said, holding up his sign.ย You knew it too, Ann.
โYeah, but to see itโฆโ Ann said. โHowโd you get this without getting caught, Tress?โ
โIt wasnโt hard,โ she said. โNobody wants to go near the charges.โ
โBut how did you evenย findย them?โ Ann asked, poking at the dissected cannonball.
โI, um, have experience with barrels and hidden compartments.โ Salay gave her a sly glance and a knowing smile.
My question is WHY?ย Fort wrote.ย What does the captain gain by this? We were already pirates. Killing people instead of looting them makes no sense.
โYeah,โ Salay said. โThatโs the conundrum.โ
Tress hesitated, then sighed. She had to tell them. โI overheard the captain speaking to Laggart. She was afraid that unless you were wanted criminalsโ facing death on any island where you tried to fleeโyou wouldnโt be loyal
enough.โ
โWell, sheโs right about that,โ Ann said. โUntil that ship sank, I was thinkinโ about findinโ a way off.โ
You โoverheardโ the captain speaking to Laggart?ย Fort wrote.
How? They never speak their secrets out in the open.
โThey werenโt out in the open,โ Tress said. โThey were in her cabin.โ All three looked at her, and she realized her mistake. Moon of mercy. She
shouldnโt have come to this meeting with a splitting headache.
โYou were able to spy on the capโn,โ Ann said, โinย her cabin while she was speaking conspiratorially to her first officer about her secret plans to betray her crew?โ
โEr. Yes.โ
The words hung in the air for a moment before Ann plucked them and chowed down. โAwfully good at espionage for a girl from a backwater island, arenโt you?โ
โJust lucky,โ Tress said, then tried to move on quickly. โLook, Iโm
worried the captain will try to sink more ships. Swapping the cannonballs helped prevent more deaths today, but I think she wants to murder at least one more crew to get you all on board. I mean, metaphorically on board. With her plan. Since, you know.โ She gestured to the ship.
โI agree with the Mask,โ Salay said. โToday was too close. Weโve got enough blood on our hands. We need to find a way to deal with Crow permanently.โ
That could take time,ย Fort wrote.ย First, I think we should find a way to quench her bloodthirst.
โSheโs not exactly the quenchable type,โ Ann said, โif you havenโt noticed. I think we just need to get her away from where she can do damage.โ
What if,ย Fort wrote,ย we were to persuade her to sail a different sea? One without so many people on it. That way weโd run into
fewer innocents she could hurt.
โTrue,โ Salay said, โbut weโd have to get to the Crimson Sea orโworseโ the Midnight Sea. But thereโs no way weโd persuade the captain to do that.
She wants to be where the ships are plentiful.โ
โActually,โ Tress said, โIโm pretty sure sheโd agree to sail the Crimson Sea.โ
โNah,โ Ann said. โThe capโnโs got too healthy a sense of self-preservation. Weโd never persuade herโฆโ She trailed off, looking at Tress, and narrowed her eyes. โAt least, noย normalย crewmember could persuade her of such a crazy idea.โ
โI think it will be easy,โ Tress said, uncomfortable. โSalay, you should suggest it.โ
โAfter what I did earlier?โ Salay said. โCaptainย wantsย an excuse to hang me right now. If I asked her to sail the Crimson, sheโd toss me overboard for sure.โ
โDo you really think you can convince her, Tress?โ Ann asked.
Now, Tressย wantedย to tell them about what sheโd learned: that Crow planned to sail the Crimson and get herself cured. Andโฆit occurred to her that if the captain got healed, everyone would win. The crew wouldnโt have to be afraid of a spore eater, Crow would live, and maybe they could all stop being pirates somehow.
But if Tress were to explain how she knew what she knew, she was
certainย the others would be convinced she was a Kingโs Mask. Overhearing the captain was one thing. But admitting to having somehow stolen her private writings?
So, instead of explaining, Tress nodded. โIโll do it. Iโm certain I can make her agree to sail the Crimson. The rest of you can focus on the long-term plan: a way to take the ship back from her.โ
So long as those spores are in her blood,ย Fort wrote,ย sheโll be immune to anything we could do to her.
โUm, pretend she wonโt have those anymore,โ Tress said. โAssume her powers will be negated in the near future. Byโฆumโฆsomethingย completelyย unrelated to me.โ
All three of them took another opportunity to stare at her.
โRight, right,โ Salay said, ushering Tress out the door. โWeโll do that. You get her to sail the Crimson. If she agrees to it, Iโm confident I can get the
Dougs to go along with the idea too. Most of them are as upset at the killings
as we are.โ Then, in a whispered tone, Salay added, โJust remember our deal. Put in a good word for us with the king. Convince him we didnโt want any of this and tell him we helped you stop her. All right?โ
โSalay,โ Tress said. โIโm really notโโ
โI know,โ Salay said. โYou canโt admit it. How about this. If youย happenย toย haveย a chance to speak to the king on our behalf, can you promise me youโll take it?โ
โI suppose,โ Tress said.
โGood enough,โ Salay said. โAnd good luck.โ