ABOUT THAT.
Tress knew that there was a hole in her plans. In fact, there were
exceedingly more holes in her plan than there were wholes. For example, she couldnโt be certain sheโd correctly guessed the islandโs location. Even if she had, there was no guarantee their plans would work. She might not be able to get past the Sorceressโs defenses.
All of those issues, however, were secondary to the biggest one. Lurking like a shadow beneath the ocean. Her focus so far had revolved around gettingย toย the island, thenย intoย the tower.
But whatย then?
How under the moons was she going to find, then rescue Charlie? How would Tress deal with the Sorceress? Their plan involved firing cannons at the metal servants on the beach. That would make a ruckus and certainly draw attention.
How would Tress, after making so much noise, secretly get to the tower so thatโฆ
So that Huck could let them in.
Her confidence wavered. Well, it had been wavering for daysโnot unexpectedly, considering its flimsy foundation. Now it threatened to topple right over. Their plans had relied on Huck letting them into the tower. Now that obviously wasnโt an option.
Tress felt sick about this, but no solutions revealed themselves over the next few days. The ship sailed inexorably toward the terrible Midnight
Moon, until it reached the border. That place where spores mingled, like a scar that was festering and black on one side. A limb that had suffered full necrosis.
Black spores, stretching to infinity. Tress watched from the quarterdeck, feeling an unnatural quiet as the Dougs stilled and even the sails seemed to hold their breaths. It was here, the Midnight Sea.
Salay looked to Tress.
โDrop anchor, Helmswoman,โ Tress said. โItโs nearly night. I shouldnโt like to sail that sea in darkness.โ
โAgreed,โ Salay said.
โKeep a double watch tonight,โ Tress suggested. โI donโt fancy being taken by surpriseโeither by rain, or by something else coming up through that darkness.โ
Salay nodded, visibly uncomfortable.
Tress moved to go down to her cabin, then paused. โSalay. Have you ever heard of anyone sailing it successfully?โ
โThe Verdant King keeps sending fleets to try to capture the Sorceress,โ Salay said. โSome ships do survive the Crimson. Thatโs random luck, after all. Iโve never heard of one coming back from the Midnight though. They sail out into that, and are almost instantly overrun by dark creations of foul spores.โ
Tress shivered. Did she really think she could do what those capable
sailors had failed to do? What was she thinking? Why was she even here? She was a sham of a captain, playing dress-up.
Granted, Tress wasnโt giving herself enough creditโplease act surprised
โas sheโd come quite far, all things considered. And itโs true that numerous members of the kingโs court hadnโt managed to survive their first encounter upon the Midnight Sea. But then, youโve met at least one member of the kingโs court: he was the handsome fellow in the early part of the story with both the jaw and the intellect of a marble bust. So, you know, maybe they didnโt set the highest standard.
Regardless, Tress was suddenly very uncertain of herself. She fled below, to the familiar hallway of the middle deck. She passed her old room, and found herselfย nostalgicย for a couple weeks earlier. Days when sheโd sat reading about spores while listening to the comforting footsteps above.
Those footfalls had sounded so confident. Random, but somehow still rhythmic. Beats indicating a song the crew all knew and played together.
Now she was in charge. The one everybody was confident in wasย her.
She approached Dr. Ulaamโs office and was let in after a quick knock. She found him inspecting his hand, which had grown a sixth finger. Tress sighed in relief. Finally a normal and familiar sight.
โTress!โ he said, trying out a ring on the finger. โIโm pleased by the visit!
Have you reconsidered my offer?โ
โThank you, but no,โ she said. โIโm rather attached to all of my toes.โ
โEveryone is, dear. Thatโs why the Father invented scalpels. But now, you look distraught. Here, sit. Let me boil some water.โ She sat down as he used some odd device that worked like a hot plate, but without fire or spores to
warm it up. He set a kettle on top, then turned and regarded her, grey-skinned fingers laced in front of him as he leaned against the counter. โSpeak, please.โ
โUlaam,โ she said, โI canโt defeat the Sorceress.โ โNo, of course you canโt,โ he said.
โAll of the others are expecting me to. AndโฆIโm increasingly terrified Iโll let them down.โ
โAh, well then,โ he said, โcan I help you with this anxiety, hmmm? I donโt even have to give you a sedative. You neednโt worry.โ
โI neednโt?โ she said. โReally?โ
โYes. You see, no one expects you to defeat the Sorceress. I believe theyโre all expecting to die. And so, you wonโt disappoint them, child, when the Sorceress inevitably murders the entire crew!โ
She groaned.
โThat was a joke,โ he noted. โI doubt sheโs capable of killing meโthough she thinks she can. Even if she is right, sheย certainlyย canโt kill Hoid, even in his current state. So it will only be most of the crew she murders.โ
Tress felt dizzy.
Ulaam, it should be noted, is not known for his bedside mannerโas Iโve pointed out, his people lost something when they stopped being forced to
imitate actual humans. I can genuinely say that without that burden, theyโve all become increasingly themselves over the decades.
That said, Ulaam is legitimately the best doctor Iโve ever met. If you are easily stressed, but need his help, I suggest you ask him to sew his mouth
shut before he visits. Heโll probably find the idea novel enough that heโll try it.
That day, however, he realized heโd said too much. Even Ulaam, a
creature with the empathic talents of an angry emu, could occasionally realize when someone was in emotional distress.
โChild,โ he said, โIโโ
โHowย couldย you?โ Tress snapped at him. โHow can youย sit thereย and not care? What isย wrongย with you?โ
โOh!โ he said. โHm. Ha ha. Well, no need to bite my head off. I have several saws for the purpose right overโโ
โJokes donโtย help, Ulaam!โ she said, standing up.
It hadnโt been a joke, mind you. He actually had three. He let her pace for a little bit, and when the teakettle began to whistle, he didnโt move to get it.
As she paced, one point stuck in her brain. Heโd mentioned Hoid again.
The drooling cabin boy. Ulaam was a creature of strange powers, but he saw
meย as someone even greater.
It wasnโt the first time Ulaam had said something like that. But this time it actually struck her.
Finally she took a deep breath. โI shouldnโt have snapped at you,โ she
said. โYouโve been helpful in the past, Ulaam, telling me things you didnโt have to. I shouldnโt get angry at you for not doing more. IโฆI donโt know whatโs wrong with me. I never would have acted that way in the past.โ
โI think,โ Ulaam said, โthat perhaps nothing is wrong. Maybe youย should
snap at me more often. I forget sometimes what Iโve been told about the stresses mortals live under.โ
โYouโre right though,โ she said, pacing the other direction in the small room. โWeย areย going to die. This quest is foolishness! When it was onlyย meย who was risking my life for Charlie, that was bad enough. I canโt force the rest to join me.โ
โYou arenโt forcing them, Tress,โ Ulaam said. He finally rose and began to make the tea. โHave you seen how they walk these days? How they hold their heads? They know theyโre partially to blame for the people Crow killed.
โYouโre not bullying them. Youโre offering them a chance at reclaiming their humanity. Theyย wantย to try to rescue your friend. Theyย wantย to prove to themselves that even though they might not be first-rate men and women of valor, they at least possess a secondhand variety.โ
He turned, handing her a cup and gesturing toward the seat. It was a nice cup. Tin, but dinged up with the respectable scars of favorite use, and shined along the handle from the caress of fingers. She sighed, taking the seat and the tea, though she put the latter aside to let it cool.
โLook,โ she said, โHuckย was willing to move against me. Perhaps I should see his point. Even if I donโt, I canโt use him to get into the tower now. So the mission is a bust.โ
โYou still have Midnight Essence,โ Ulaam said. โMaybe you can make a creature that can sneak in and unlock the door.โ
โThe tower is coated with silver,โ Tress said. โSo I wouldnโt be able to touch it as a midnight creature. At least thatโs what Huck said. I donโt know if thatโs true, or what to trust from him, but either way we have a bigger problem. Ulaam, I canโt beat the Sorceress. Sheโs going to know Iโm
coming.โ
โShe knows already, I suspect,โ Ulaam said. โFrom what I know of her, she is probably looking forward to seeing how you deal with her defenses.โ
โIs itโฆpossible to impress her so much with what we do that she lets Charlie go?โ
โUnlikely,โ he said. โBest you can hope for is that she finds you amusing and sends you away with a particularly creative curse.โ
โSo thereโs no hope.โ โWellโฆโ
Tress looked up.
โI am supposed to remain neutral, you see,โ he said, โin the actions of certain individuals such as the Sorceress. But there is someone who never follows those rules. Heโs on this ship. And he has a pair of bright red
sequined briefs.โ
โHoid,โ she said. โYouโve mentioned that heโsโฆnot what I think he is. Is he truly something greater than the Sorceress?โ
โWell, these things are famously difficult to judge,โ Ulaam said. โBut I should say yes. I wish you could know the real Hoid. As amusing as it has
been to watch his current incarnation in all its splendor, he is normally quite different from the person you know.โ
โAnd that person isโฆless embarrassing?โ
โWell, usually more embarrassing. But also quite adept at certain things. If there is a single person on the entire planet who can defeat the Sorceress and get you and yours out alive, it is that man. I tell no joke or exaggeration in this, Tress. When he wants to, there are few people in the entire cosmere
who can influence events like our dear friend with the inappropriate undergarments.โ
Iโll have you know I owned those briefs before the curse, and I stand by the purchase.
Tress considered that. Then she finally tried her tea, which alone proved her bravery. I never drink anything Ulaam gives me without first seeing what it does to the houseplants.
โIf heโs so powerful,โ Tress said, โhow did the Sorceress end up cursing him?โ
โI have no idea,โ Ulaam said. โBut itโs notย thatย surprising. For how
capable he is, Tress, he often overreaches in some way. It doesnโt matter how powerful a person is, if they believe they are slightlyย moreย powerful than they truly are, thereโs room between those margins for big errors.
Hmmmm?โ
Yeah, that one was fair.
โRegardless,โ Ulaam said, โI think in this case, what happened to him wasnโt an accident. If I were to lay down moneyโor, more valuable, my
favorite set of fingernailsโIโd guess he got cursed on purpose. And is now having more trouble than expected getting out of it.โ
โWhy?โ Tress said. โWhy would he get cursed onย purpose?โ โI havenโt been able to decide,โ Ulaam replied.
Tress was skeptical. But in this case, Ulaam was (unfortunately) right. I had honestly thought I would have sorted through this by now. It wasโฆ proving more difficult than Iโd anticipated.
Fortunately, I was close. Closer than ever. Because Tress hit on the most important idea right then.
โSoโฆโ Tress said, โmaybe Iย donโtย have to defeat the Sorceress. Maybe I just have to find a way to getย Hoidย to do it.โ
โPerhaps. Yes, perhaps indeed.โ
Tress excused herself, then wandered to her quarters. There she dug under the bed and brought out her collection of cups. It had been so long since
sheโd admired them. The part of her that enjoyed them hadnโt changed, but
she justโฆdidnโt have the time sheโd once had. Really, these days sheโd only been using the big metal one. It was the one that wouldnโt break if it dropped off the table when the ship swayed.
Still, she took them out one at a time and placed them on the counter. Last of all she got out the ones Charlie had sent her. She stared in particular at the one with the butterfly soaring across the ocean. Sheโd originally assumed the butterfly had to be forced into such a terrible situation. Why else would it fly out over the spores?
She saw it differently now. Perhaps it was simply a butterfly who knew what it wantedโand was willing to try to get it, no matter how impossible.
It wasnโt a suicidal butterfly. It was a determined one.
She put away the other cups, but kept this one out, along with the pewter tankard. These were her two favorites. One a symbol of determination. The other a solid and heavy practical deviceโalmost a weapon.
I,ย she thought,ย am these two cups.ย One side utilitarian, one side dreaming.
Opposites. Yet both served the same function. Remarkable.
That butterfly, though, had gone out on the ocean alone. It hadnโt brought an entire crew with it to die. She took a deep breath and tied her hair back, then took the two cups and stalked out onto the deck.
โSalay,โ she said to the helmswoman, โIโve changed my mind. I want you to set down the launch. Iโm going to take it into the Midnight Sea. Alone.โ