WITH HER STOMACH FULLย of โfood,โ Tress was able to return to the top deck and resume her scrubbing with renewed vigor. She didnโt know how long it had been since someone had properly washed this deck, but it
was coated with a layer of dead spores that had turned black with grime. It took real work to get down to the actual wood, and so her progress was slow.
โWow,โ Huck said from her shoulder, comparing the dark grimy wood ahead to the vibrant brown planks sheโd cleaned, silver lines sparkling between many of them. โThat really makes a difference.โ
โSpore scum sticks to basically anything,โ she said, scrubbing hard. โIโve never found a better remedy than soap and effort. This wood is going to need some pitch when Iโm done though.โ
Tress knew quite a lot about sailors for someone who knew next to nothing about sailing. She had listened to many a man or woman complain about the life, whichโto hear them talkโwas an existence full of drudgery. Many an off-duty sailor in the tavern had been assigned scrubbing duty before, so Tress knew that pitch on the boards would seal them and fill the gapsโplus it made them far less slippery. And you always scrubbedย acrossย planks, never along them, so you didnโt wear grooves down the centers.
Her head was full of wisdom like that: the wisdom of complaints. It also taught her the hierarchy of a shipโs crew. Most of the sailors would be
equals, save for the officers. Sheโd met all of those except two: the shipโs surgeon and the shipโs sprouter. Sheโd never understood that last term, not until sheโd seen the man use the spores on the previous ship.
She passed midday, and ignored her stomach as it started to growl again.
It should have known better, after what sheโd done to it at breakfast. Fortunately, she found out where to get new waterโfrom barrels in the hold
โand she was allowed a cupful to drink each time she went to refill her bucket.
Otherwise, she scrubbed. Tragically, this workโlike washing windowsโ was great thinking work. And her mind was, as I believe weโve established, often full of thoughts.
That is one of the great mistakes people make: assuming that someone
who does menial work does not like thinking. Physical labor is great for the mind, as it leaves all kinds of time to consider the world. Other work, like
accounting or scribing, demands little of the bodyโbut siphons energy from the mind.
If you wish to become a storyteller, here is a hint: sell your labor, but not your mind. Give me ten hours a day scrubbing a deck, and oh the stories I could imagine. Give me ten hours adding sums, and all youโll have me imagining at the end is a warm bed and a thought-free evening.
Tressโs mind spun around what the quartermaster had said about the
cannonballs. What had gone wrong? She was so intrigued that when she picked her next section to scrub, she placed herself near the forward cannon.
Moments later, a Doug called to her. โHey, you!โ he said. โNew girl! Yes, you. Come on now, I need your help!โ
Concerned, but too polite to object, Tress stowed her bucket and brush.
She dusted off her knees, then followed after the Doug as he led her down to the hold. Here he gathered some cannonballs from a bin.
โCarry that,โ he said, pointing to a small keg near the wall.
Tress hesitantly picked it up, finding it lighter than sheโd expected. โWhatโs this?โ she asked.
โZephyr spores,โ the man said. โFrom the Sapphire Sea.โ
She nearly dropped the keg in shock. Spores? An entire keg of them? She could see why heโd demanded her help. Indeed, he eagerly chose to carry the much heavier cannonballs, leaving her the task of lugging the spores.
โWhy,โ she said, โdo we have a small keg of spores?โ
โFor firing the cannons,โ the Doug explained. โCanโt just drop a cannonball in! You need something to goย poof, send the ball flying.โ
Spores? They usedย sporesย to fire the cannons? She carried the keg more gingerly as they started up the steps.
โNormally,โ the Doug said, โthis would be old Weevโs job, seeinโ as how it involves spores and all.โ
โWeev? Is he the shipโs sprouter?โ
โHeย was.โ The Dougโs expression fell. โNice fellow. Liked having him around. He was terrible at bluffing, you know, so I always beat him at
cards.โ
โWhat happened?โ
โDidnโt want to become a pirate.โ โSo he got off at port?โ
โOh, he got off,โ the Doug said. โBut there wasnโt no portโฆโ He glanced toward Captain Crow, who stood on the quarterdeck sipping at her canteen, wind blowing the black feather in her hat.
โCaptain killed him?โ Tress whispered.
โHe was the only one who stood up to her,โ the Doug said, โwhen she proposed this new occupational direction. Well, Weev is occupyinโ the bottom of the ocean now. Sprouters are a crazy lot, always spendinโ more time thanโs right around spores. But he didnโt deserve that. Just for askinโ questions we was all thinkinโ.โ
He fell silent. At least she now knew why she hadnโt met the shipโs sprouter yet. And now you know why I didnโt tell you to remember his
name. Also, no, heโs not the corpse. Well, heโsย aย corpse. But heโs notย the
corpse on the ship. Thereโs another. Try to keep up.
The Doug led Tress to the cannonmasterโs station. Laggart wasnโt there at the moment, and the forecannon was lashed in place with its paraphernalia. The Doug began unloading cannonballs into a bin.
โAll right,โ he said to Tress. โIโm going to go get a few more cannonballs to refill the stock. See that big barrel there? Itโs lined, like that keg youโre holding, with stuff that protects spores from our silver. We need spores alive for shooting cannonballs at other folks.
โThe cannonmaster though, he needs those spores in little pouches he can stuff into the cannon easily during a fight. Youโll find empty pouches in the barrel. What you need to do is pour those spores into the pouchesโwithout
spilling anyโand tie them off. Also, you got to do your pouringย insideย the larger barrel, because of the lining that protects the spores.โ
The Doug shifted uncomfortably on the deck, his hands in his pockets, looking at her.
โVery well,โ Tress said.
โNo complaints?โ he asked.
She shook her head. Sheโd rather not do the work, as she was terrified of spores. But she also couldnโt let that fear inconvenience the others. After all, she was newest on the ship. It made sense that she should do the dangerous work no one else wanted.
Tress moved over to the barrel and took off the lid. At the bottom were some filled pouches; a bunch of empty ones were in a little net attached to the outside.
โYouโreโฆreally not going to complain?โ the Doug asked. โI complained when they made me do it.โ
โYouโre probably smarter than I am,โ Tress said. โAny tips?โ
โThereโs a funnel, some goggles, and a mask. Other than thatโฆtry not to worry. This ainโt the most dangerous type of spores. You should be fine.โ
Many perils could fit between the sounds in โshould be.โ But Tress was alive because the crew had resisted tossing her overboard when the captain had demanded. It seemed best to stay in their good graces. So Tress simply nodded and got to work.