A FEW HOURS LATER, Tress sat in the quartermasterโs office with Fort, Salay, and Annโwho conversed in hushed tones.
Tress said very little, instead holding a cup (her one with the butterfly) with tea from Fortโs personal store. It said a great deal that he hadnโt even mentioned a trade as he handed it to her. What Tress had done for them all had incurred a debt Fort feared heโd never pay off.
He did intend to try nevertheless.
We have to act quickly, he wrote. If what Tress says is true, and the captain is planning to trade her to the dragon, we havenโt
much time. Crow said our destination was only two days away.
โShe said that this morning,โ Ann agreed. โI can guess we ate up a good chunk of that today, before the rainfall.โ
Tress sipped the tea. She hadnโt stopped trembling since the event, and she actually liked that this tea was warm. It chased the chill from her soul.
Outside, the calming sound of spores on wood had resumed. Though
sheโd feared her stunt would cause permanent damage to the ship, the crew had efficiently cut the vines free once the seethe returned. The trunk had
been pulled into the depths by the spines of the many crimson aethers, leaving the Crowโs Song to float serenely onward.
Was it odd that Tress felt guilty about using the aether tree, then
abandoning it? Would the aethers be sad down there? What happened to the ones that sank, anyway?
Perhaps instead of ruminating on such things, she should have been more worried about her looming date with a dragon. She just felt so bare, like a broom worn by good work down to its last few bristles. Following the tension of the day, she found it difficult to summon more fear.
โThen we need to strike,โ Salay said from beside the door. โTomorrow morning. Are we agreed?โ
โAgreed,โ Ann said.
Yes,> Fort said, holding up his board. With a Kingโs Mask on our side, we cannot fail.
They looked to Tress. She wished she could wither away before their expectations. They could use her flaking soul to brew some more tea.
โMaybe we shouldnโt,โ Tress said softly.
โWhat?โ Ann said. โGirl, sheโs going to trade you.โ โIโm not losing another crewmember,โ Salay said. Fort studied her, thoughtful.
โThe crew is alive by a miracle,โ Tress said. โIโm worried about what will happen to you if we try to fight Crow. Sheโs dangerous. I feel it.โ
So youโd let her trade you? Fort said. Willingly?
โItโs not death to serve a dragon,โ Tress said. โI donโt think so, at least.
And maybe I can find a way to escape. Orโฆor buy my freedomโฆโ
She knew she wasnโt making much sense. Sheโd spent frantic days trying to devise a weapon against the captain. Tress did want to escape. And really, shouldnโt she feel excited? Optimistic? Her plan to save the Crowโs Song had worked, after all.
But lies have a way of diluting a person. The longer you live them, the more you become a bucket of mixed paint, steadily veering toward generic brown. That has never stopped me, mind you, but Iโm not the person Tress was.
โWe canโt lose to Crow,โ Salay said, โas long as we have you, Tress.
Youโre aโโ
โIโm not, Salay,โ Tress said, exhausted. โIโm not a Kingโs Mask. I didnโt even know what one was until you mentioned them to me.โ She shook her
head. โPlease believe me.โ
They didnโt, of course. A boring truth will always have difficulty competing with an exciting lie.
โLook, Tress,โ Ann said, โyou think our problems will go away once the capโn has talked to the dragon? Weโll still be under her thumb.โ
โYouโd be able to fight her,โ Tress said. โShe wonโt have the spores to protect her. If you let her trade me, you have a much better chance of
succeeding.โ
Fort rested his hand on hers, then tipped his sign toward her. But weโd have to live with it, Tress. Crow forced us into this life. We didnโt know she intended to kill. But if we donโt stand up to her now, we donโt get to use that excuse anymore. We know what she is now.
Tress read the words through twice. Andโฆthough her first instinct was
still to protestโฆsomething else was growing. Sheโd have called it arrogance, and it frightened her. But arrogance and self-worth are two sides to a coin,
and it will spend either way.
That day, she met Fortโs eyes and nodded. โAll right.โ
โMutiny,โ Salay said. โTomorrow morning. Iโll make certain the Dougs are with us.โ
โIโll distract Laggart,โ Ann said. โIf Iโm firing the cannon, heโll come scold me again.โ
I have a key to the captainโs quarters, Fort said. She doesnโt know. We will go in while sheโs asleep and take her captive. Then we sail for the Verdant Sea and turn her in to the kingโs officials in exchange for our lives.
Tress took a deep breath. โCapturing her wonโt be that easy, Fort. The spores inside her will react to someone trying to restrain her. Fortunately, Iโve devised a weapon that might work. Itโฆโ
What was that? โItโฆโ
Tress shivered. She felt something. A familiar itch, distinct as the scent of her motherโs bread. Without thinking, she reached to the side, into the
shadows underneath the overhang of Fortโs counter.
Some of the darkness there resisted her fingers. It felt like a filled waterskin.
Midnight Essence.
Tress felt another mind controlling it, but it was distant and she was near. Working by instinct, she seized control. Immediately her tongue felt dry. She coughed, andโpanickingโsomehow severed the connection completely.
The Midnight Essence puffed away, becoming dark smoke.
That other mind. That had been Crow.
Crow had been listening to them with Midnight Essence. โOhโฆoh moons,โ Tress rasped. โCrow knows.โ