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Chapter no 38 – The Apprentice

Tress of the Emerald Sea

Iโ€™M NOT SURE I CAN RECOMMENDย visiting the spore seas.

While there are places in the cosmere that are more deadly, few are so

casually dangerous. Other locations will kill you with a roar or a cataclysm. But the spores, they do it with a whisper. One moment youโ€™re enjoying a nice book. The next, you take in an unfortunate breath, get a few crimson

spores in your system, and suddenly youโ€™ve turned your skull into a colander.

It doesnโ€™t happen often, but when it does, it seems somehow more unfair than dying from a lightning bolt or a hurricane. Nature isย supposedย to

announce herself before murdering you. Itโ€™s only sporting.

That said, the spore seasย doย have some sights to sell.

Fort made room for Tress by the prow, sending a couple of Dougs to

watch from the rigging instead. It was evening, and this far away from the lunagree the green dome of the Verdant Moon drooped low on the horizon behind themโ€”a mirror image to the Crimson one ahead. A vast red sphere in the sky, peeking over the horizon, with the sun hovering above it like an

eager sibling.

Closer to the ship, just ahead, the verdant spores gradually mixed with the crimson, making a gradient whereโ€”from a distanceโ€”the center was a deep brown. The vibrant, shimmering red beyond seemed an ocean of blood, like the Crimson Moon had been shot and theย Crowโ€™s Songย was sailing toward its corpse.

Tress hadnโ€™t given thought to howย wrongย that color would feel. The Emerald Moon and Sea had, quite literally, colored everything sheโ€™d ever seen. It intimidated her to realize she was leaving it and entering that

wounded red ocean instead. Sheโ€™d been watched by the Verdant Moon all her life, and a very small piece of herโ€”irrational though it wasโ€”worried sheโ€™d vanish the moment it stopped thinking about her.

As they closed the distance, then crossed the border, Fort leaned against the railing and held up his sign.ย Youโ€™re grinning.

โ€œSorry,โ€ Tress said. โ€œItโ€™s just that this isย terrifying.โ€

You smile when things are terrifying?

โ€œI didnโ€™t use to,โ€ she said. โ€œI think my brain is intimidated by how insane things are out here on the seas, and is trying to fit in.โ€

Fort rubbed his chin, but didnโ€™t write anything else. She knew he was thinking about her supposed role as a Kingโ€™s Mask, and how she wasnโ€™t nearly as frightened of spores as she should have been. And again, itย wasnโ€™tย that. Sheย wasย afraid.

At the same time, she hadnโ€™t realized how terribly beautiful those red

spores would be. Nor how strange it would feel to be leaving the Emerald Sea. These were new emotions, and like new flavors, they could be

simultaneously terrifying and intoxicating.

What else would she have never known about herself, if she hadnโ€™t left her home island? Worse, how many people like her lived in ignorance, lacking the experience to fully explore their own existence? It is one of the most bitter ironies Iโ€™ve ever had to accept: there are, unquestionably, musical geniuses of incomparable talent who died as street sweepers because they never had the chance to pick up an instrument.

Theย Crowโ€™s Songย continued straight on into the Crimson Sea until one of the Dougs in the rigging called out a warning. The sky had opened up, and death was snaking toward them.

Tress had never seen rain before. On her island, water came from wells. Though sheโ€™d been told about water falling from the sky, it had always felt magical, mystical. A thing of stories.

One of those stories apparently wanted to eat her, for the rain came

streaking straight toward them: a knot of fast-moving clouds in the sky, trailing an explosion of aether in a line upon the ocean. A vast wall of crimson spikes that grew up and locked together with such force, the

clacking sound was audible from a great distance.

Tress stood, mesmerized. Salay, fortunately, had more experience hereโ€” and was already turning the ship when the captain called out an order to do so. They veered hard, tacking to port and swervingโ€”lethargicallyโ€”back into the Verdant.

The rainline didnโ€™t give chase, though it did turn upon the border of the seas, racing on ahead, leaving interlocking crimson spines thirty feet tall. Those eventually slumped and sank into the sea, leaving it pristine, calm.

Like a child who stuffed the broken cookie jar under the counter and assumed all would be forgotten.

โ€œMoons,โ€ Tress breathed. โ€œWhat ifโ€ฆwhat if the seethe had stilled right then? What if weโ€™d been unable to moveโ€ฆโ€

Fort glanced at his board to read what sheโ€™d said. His only response was to shrug. It was the sort of risk they would take, sailing the Crimson.

Tress turned toward the quarterdeck, where Crow stood near the helm station, taking a long pull on her canteen. She lowered it, and seemed thoughtful.

She wouldnโ€™t dare press forward, would she? With that rainline slithering through the region?

โ€œHelmswoman,โ€ Crow finally said, projecting her voice so everyone could hear. โ€œKindly take us south a spell, along the border. It seemsโ€ฆ imprudent to enter the Crimson at the moment.โ€

โ€œAs you command, Captain,โ€ Salay said.

Crow swooped down to the main deck, then slammed herself into her cabin. Laggart hurried down the steps, nearly stumbling in his haste, then

quickly covered the slip by shouting for the Dougs to get back to work. In minutes, they were sailing a leisurely course along the border. Fort excused himself to go scrub some pots, leaving Tress leaning against the shipโ€™s rail.

Laggart stomped past Tress, then hesitated. โ€œYou,โ€ he said. โ€œWhat do you think of thisย now?โ€

โ€œI honestly donโ€™t know,โ€ she replied. โ€œIโ€™m still trying to wrap my mind around it all.โ€

โ€œI can help with that!โ€ Dr. Ulaamโ€™s voice called from nearby.

Laggart grunted. Then he gestured for her to follow. Curious, she joined him on the quarterdeck. Behind the helm and the captainโ€™s roost was the aft cannon, set out on its own railed platform, like a heavily reinforced balcony sticking out the very back of the vessel.

It was a dangerous section of the ship, as it was away from the silver protections. Spores that somehow leaped the gap between sea and deck here would take longer to die. That, of course, was important for the zephyr

spores used as charges.

Laggart rummaged in the gunnery barrelโ€”an action that fortunately

caused him to look down. Because if heโ€™d seen Tressโ€™s face, he might have noticed her sudden spike of worry. What was he doing? Was he going to

confront her with one of the swapped cannonballs?

Moonsโ€ฆshe would have made a terrible spy. How could Salay and the others possibly think she was a Kingโ€™s Mask? Tress didnโ€™t understand that it is quite possible to be so bad at something it seems implausible. In these

cases, it stands to reason that such a person is in fact quite competentโ€” because it takes true competence to feign such spectacularย incompetence. Itโ€™s called the transitive property of ineptitude, and is the explanation for

anything youโ€™ve seen me do wrong ever.

In this case, Tressโ€™s transitive ineptitude didnโ€™t come into play, because Laggart didnโ€™t see how nervous she wasโ€”nor did he confront her with a fake cannonball. Instead he selected an ordinary cannonball, then held it up as if admiring a beautiful painting. Orโ€”considering the way his bald head on the end of his toothpick neck made him lookโ€”perhaps he was wondering if there was any relation.

โ€œNow that weโ€™re proper pirates,โ€ he said to Tress, โ€œI figure we ought to have someone on this ship besides me and the captain who knows how to fire a cannon. The rest of the crew are too useless around spores to be trained. Congratulations.โ€

She noticed that, despite his bold words, he reached very gingerly into the gunnery barrel and selected a pouch of zephyr sporesโ€”holding it pinched between two fingers. He quickly loaded it into the cannon through a latch on the top.

โ€œZephyr charge goes in here,โ€ he said, snapping the metal lid closed. โ€œGet them loaded quickly, because even here, the deckโ€™s silver is close enough to start killing spores. Inner casing there is lined with aluminum, to block the

silverโ€™s influence.โ€

He pushed a wad into the cannon and rammed it into place with a rod.

โ€œThis rag fills up the bore of the cannon,โ€ he explained, โ€œkeeps the explosion from going around the ballโ€”and puts the full force on the shot.โ€ He slid a

cannonball down the front of the cannon. It thumped into place. โ€œCannon canโ€™t angle too low, otherwise weโ€™d roll the ball out the front.โ€

โ€œAll right,โ€ Tress said. โ€œButโ€ฆum, does the captain know youโ€™re having me do this?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m cannonmaster,โ€ he snapped. โ€œCaptain wonโ€™t care who I train. You just do as youโ€™re told. Besides, a man needs to take care of himself. I donโ€™t want to end up wounded, then get sunk because nobody else on this damn ship has the guts to handle zephyr.โ€

So. Laggart didnโ€™t know that she was to be sold to the dragon. This struck Tress as odd, since he seemed to know the rest of the plan. But then she realized there was a good chance the captain considered him a backup

sacrifice. Heย wasย one of the crewmembers who was least afraid of spores.

Laggart picked up a small wooden contraption near the railing, then tossed it overboard. It proved to be a kind of small buoy with a flag, tied by a rope to the ship. As they sailed, it trailed along far behindโ€”like the most

conscientious of stalkers.

โ€œTake five shots a day,โ€ Laggart told her. โ€œThe best way to get a feel for a cannon is to practice.โ€

He started to walk away.

โ€œWait!โ€ Tress said. โ€œYouโ€™re not going to give me any more training than that?โ€

โ€œTraining would be useless until you know more,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™m busy.

Figure it out and donโ€™t bother me with stupid questions. If you sink a buoy, congratulations. There are more in the hold. Come bother me when you can do it in at most two shots, and then weโ€™ll talk about some real training.โ€

โ€œAll right,โ€ Tress said, an idea occurring to her. โ€œBut maybe I should start with something less expensive and wasteful than full cannonballs. We donโ€™t have a flare gun on board, do we? I could try that out first.โ€

โ€œWhat kind of a stupid question is that?โ€ Laggart said.

It was, identifiably, the stupid kind of stupid question. Which at least is better than the redundant kind of statement.

โ€œA flare gun is nothing like a cannon,โ€ he said. โ€œSo just do what I told you, idiot.โ€ He continued muttering to himself as he stalked off.

Tress folded her arms. Sheโ€™d beenย planningย to spend the evening either studying or trying to figure out how to crack Hoidโ€™s curse. This was an

unwelcome intrusion. Still, perhaps there were some advantages. If she was planning to build her own spore-based weapon to fight the captain, there

were worse uses of her time than experimenting with a cannon.

It was just that Laggart, by refusing to offer any useful training, had

ensured sheโ€™d waste hours figuring out the basic mechanics of aiming the cannon. Even with this brief delay at the border, she knew her time was

short. Depending on where the dragonโ€™s den was in the Crimson Sea, she had anywhere between a few hours and a few weeks to plan.

A solution occurred to her only a moment later. She pushed the cannon forward, as sheโ€™d seen Laggart do. Then she smiled, took a firing rodโ€”

which had a soaked bit of cloth on the endโ€”and stuck it into the touch hole. A second later an explosion rocked her, knocking the cannon back along its track.

It took less than a minute for Annโ€™s head to pop up behind, wide-eyed and eager.

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