Lightning illuminated the clouds above theย Marigold,ย splintering into a spiderweb of light. The edge of the storm reached the barrier islands in the dark, a cold mist blowing in with the wind. The ship rocked against it, the lantern swinging in the girlโs fist as she held it up before her.
โLast I checked, we voted as a crew.โ Her gaze dragged from my head to my bare feet.
West ignored her, tossing my purse into the air, and a young man with spectacles caught it in both hands behind him. The lantern light reflected off the wide, round lenses as he looked up at me.
โIโm with Willa.โ Another man with dark hair pulled back from his face stepped forward. โI didnโt hear you ask us if we wanted to take on a passenger.โ
I stayed in the shadow of the quarterdeck, clutching my tool belt to my chest. Four crew members stood before the mainmast, waiting for an answer from West. But he seemed to be measuring his words carefully, the silence pulling tight with the tension between them.
โItโs fifty-two coppers.โ West looked at the girl.
She half laughed. โYou canโt be serious. What do we care about fifty-two coppers? Weโve never taken a single passenger on this ship in over two years, and I donโt see why we should start now.โ
The man with the glasses stood watching, his eyes shifting back and forth between them. From the look of the ink-stained fingertips curled around my purse, I guessed he was their coin master. To him, it wouldnโt matter that Iโd just been a breath away from being gutted by Koy or that
theyโd been trading with me for the last two years. It was his job to make sure they didnโt get involved in other peopleโs business, good or bad.
โWhat is this, West?โ A third man with skin the color of obsidian came down the steps beside me, one hand raking over his shaved head.
โItโs copper,โ West snapped. โYou have a problem with that?โ
The girl they called Willa stared at West, her wide eyes expressionless. โActually, I do.โ
West turned to the coin master, his irritation visible in the hard set of his jaw. โDivide it among the crew, Hamish. I wonโt report it. Drink your weight in rye when we get to Dern or buy yourself a new pair of boots. I donโt care what you do with it.โ
That seemed to satisfy them for now, a hush falling over the deck. But the suspicion was still there in their side glances to one another. They werenโt going to argue with pocketing my coin, especially if it wasnโt going into the shipโs log. But they didnโt like the idea of me being on theย Marigold,ย and they didnโt care if I knew it.
โFifty-two coppers, five ways,โ Hamish spoke beneath his breath, as if repeating the words made the decision final.
I glanced up to the two masts of the ship. Iโd never been on deck or seen the rest of them, Iโd only ever met West on the dock when they stopped in Jeval. From the looks of it, they crewed this ship with only five sets of hands, but a vessel like this should take at least ten crew members, maybe twelve.
โFour ways,โ West corrected. โI donโt want a share.โ
Hamish gave a single nod, and I studied Westโs face, trying to read him.
But there was no hint there of what he was thinking.
โYou just said you took her on for the copper.โ Willa glared at him.
He met her narrowed gaze, jerking his head in my direction before turning on his heel. His boots knocked against the deck as he walked past them and disappeared through an open door.
Willa let out a long breath, watching the darkened archway before she finally looked back at me. I cringed as the soft lantern light shifted to illuminate the other side of her face. Her left cheek was raw and pink, the
skin healing from a bad burn. It reached up the length of her neck and over her jaw, coming to a point.
I knew exactly what it was. Iโd seen wounds like that beforeโa long knife held over a fire until the blade glowed and pressed to someoneโs face to teach a lesson. It was a punishment meant to humiliate you long after the pain subsided. Whatever crime sheโd committed, sheโd been made to pay for it.
It wasnโt until I looked her in the eye that I realized she was watching me inspect the mutilation. โCome on.โ She dropped the lantern so that she was cloaked again in darkness and pushed past me into the archway.
I looked back once more, to the dock below. Koy would make it back to the beach any minute, and Speck wouldnโt wake from his rye-soaked stupor to find his boat gone until morning. Either way, Iโd never see him or this island again.
I hoped.
The crew watched me as I pushed off the railing and followed Willa into the narrow passage, the weight of their stares pinned to my back. The handle of the lantern squeaked ahead, and I followed its light down the wooden steps and into the thick smell of pickled fish and over-ripened fruit. The crest of theย Marigoldย was burned into the three doors that lined the wall. I lifted a finger as I passed, tracing the outline of a flower inside a wreath of leafed branches. In the center of the bloom lay a tiny, five-pointed star.
As a little girl sailing on my fatherโs trading ship, I knew every traderโs crest. But Iโd never seen this one until theย Marigoldย showed up two years ago on the barrier islands, looking to trade for pyre. Wherever they had come from, they had to be a low-rung crew just beginning to get their route established. But how theyโd managed to get a ship and a license from the Trade Council was a question that couldnโt have a simple answer.
Willa pushed through an open doorway and hung the lantern on a rusted hook driven into the wall. I ducked inside, where patchwork hammocks swung from low-hanging beams in a small cabin.
โThis is where youโll sleep.โ Willa leaned into one of the posts, her eyes trailing over me until they stopped, and I looked down to see she was
eyeing the tip of the scar peeking out beneath my sleeve. โItโll be a few days before we get to Ceros. We have to make a stop in Dern first.โ
I nodded, keeping my back to the wall. โDo you need to eat?โ
โNo,โ I lied. Iโd eaten only a single perch in two days, but I wasnโt stupid. She was trying to get me to owe them something.
โGood.โ She smirked. โBecause our strykerโs only stocked enough food to feed this crew. When you do need to eat, youโll be expected to work for it.โ
And there it wasโthe hook. I knew how this worked because Iโd grown up on a ship. Iโd known what game Iโd have to play since Iโd first made the plan to use theย Marigoldย to get off Jeval, but I hadnโt counted on having nothing to barter with. I would have to keep my head down and do whatever was asked of me to pay the price of getting to Ceros.
But the way the girl looked at me now made me feel unsteady on my feet. Iโd already gotten on the wrong side of the crew, and if I didnโt figure out a way to fix it, Iโd find myself overboard before we crossed the Narrows.
I ducked below the bulkhead and found a hammock only half-hung, one end touching the wet ground. The wood and iron trunks lining the walls were bolted neatly into place, all secured with locks except for one, where the slow drip of water trickled in between the slats overhead. It sat open, a small, rusted chisel inside. Above it, a pair of boots hung by their laces on a crooked nail. Maybe the crewโs dredger.
Willa took the lantern from the wall and walked back into the passageway; the gleam of the jeweled dagger tucked into the back of her belt. She climbed the stairs, leaving me in the pitch-black as the sound of footsteps trailed across the deck. I secured the other end of the hammock on an iron hook and climbed in, my weight sinking into the thick, damp quilt.
The hum of the sea hugging the hull was the only sound except for the faint vibration of voices above. I pulled the musty air into my lungs, listening to the groan of the wood and the slosh of water. And suddenly, I was that little girl again, swaying in my hammock on theย Lark.
Iโd been asleep on my fatherโs ship when I heard the sharp ring of the bell echo out into the night. Only a few minutes later, the loud crack of the mast and the howl of an angry wind was followed by screaming. His hands had found me in the dark, his face peering down at me in the little sliver of moonlight coming from the slats above.
The night theย Larkย sank. The night my mother died. And in a single moment, everything changed.
The next day, he left me behind on Jeval.
I reached into the tiny pocket Iโd sewn into the waist of my pants, prying the last of my coppers free. I hadnโt given themย everyย copper. Those six coins were the very first Iโd ever earned, and Iโd never spent them. Iโd saved them for the most desperate of moments. Now, they were all I had left. But six coppers would only keep me fed and sheltered for a day or so in the city. If we were stopping in Dern, it would be my only chance to try and multiply my coin before we reached Ceros. If I didnโt, Iโd have to show up on Saintโs doorstep empty-handedโsomething I swore to myself Iโd never do.
A board creaked in the passageway, and my hand went straight to my belt, pulling my knife free. I stared into the shapeless, empty dark, waiting for another sound as I tucked the coppers back into the little pocket. But there was only the thrum of the storm creeping toward Jeval. The knock of a door closing as the ship tilted. I clutched the knife to my chest, listening.
Only a few days.
Thatโs how much longer I had to survive. Then, Iโd be at my fatherโs door, asking him for what he promised me. What he owed me.
I reached beneath the sleeve of my shirt, finding the thickly roped scar that was carved into my arm. My finger followed it up like a maze of blood-filled veins in a pattern I had memorized. It was my father whoโd given it to me, the day he left me on Jeval. I had watched in horror as he dragged the tip of his knife through my flesh without so much as a twitch of his hand. I told myself it was the madness of losing my mother that made him do it. That his mind had been fractured by grief.
But I remembered the soft set of his mouth as he cut me. The way his head tilted to the side as my blood ran over his fingers. Iโd done nothing
since the last time I saw him but dream of the moment Iโd see him again. Iโd thought of nothing else. And now that it was so close, my stomach turned, my pulse skipping unevenly. The man whoโd taught me to tie knots and read maps wasnโt the same man whoโd put the knife soaked with my blood back into his belt and sailed away.
Soon, Iโd be in Ceros. And I wasnโt sure anymore which man I would find.





