I slept in, and that hardly ever happens. Maybe itâs the stillness of the water or the lack of shouting outside my door. Either way, I canât seem to drag myself out of bed.
Sarah is on my ship. If sheâs telling the truth, and I want to believe she is, thereâs a dragon out there somewhere. She confirmed it. The thing I saw wasnât just a flame or some strange reflection off the water. That thought should wake me faster.
Dragons havenât been seen in a thousand years or more. Most people think they never existed. You see them woven into tapestries, stitched into noblemenâs cloaks, carved into the figureheads of ships that never leave the harbor. They do not mean danger anymore. They mean money, power, status.
I wonder how big they can get? Some say they blot out the sun. Others say theyâre small, fast, and clever. Maybe they donât appear threatening at first. Not until the fire catches, and never goes out.
Only one dragon can exist at a time and maybe thatâs natureâs version of mercy. A single dragon could burn the world down. That is where we get the word reckoning.
People like to throw that word around. I do it too. Storms. Battles. Near-deaths. I have called all of them reckonings. But a true reckoning is born from magic older than nations and kings.
And that magic always chooses a female host, binding itself to her in a way that canât be undone. Dragon Queen is what sheâs called but even those words have worn thin over time.
If dragon magic has returned⦠fuck, I donât know what that means. Part of me is excited. It's about time something shook up the powers that be. Iâm tired. We all are. Piracy has become a carnival game. We have to be so careful picking targets.
I never felt good about it to begin with. It used to be easier when the merchants were filthy rich. I didnât mind taking from them. These days thereâs not much meat on their bones, cargo or otherwise.
If King Gerod and the capital clowns finally got knocked down, maybe weâd all have a shot at something better. Gods know only a Dragon Queen could manage that.
And if itâs Sarah... if sheâs the one bringing the reckoning? Then damn. Small world.
Top of my list is figuring out how she ended up this close to that kind of magic. That, and where sheâs been all this time. I like to think sheâs still the girl I knew. But life doesnât let anyone stay the same. Not if theyâre really living.
Thereâs muscle on her now, lean and cut, like someone whoâs fought and won more often than sheâs lost. And thereâs deep settled hunger carved into the hollows of her face that she carries like sheâs always prepared to go without.
Sheâs different, but not entirely. Because the way she looks at me is the same as before. Like she doesnât know whether to hate me, fight me, or get lost in me.
I turn onto my side and exhale slowly. I should get up. I should be thinking about what comes next, about the danger she brings. Instead, I let the past carry me away.
Sarah, standing in the dim light of the chapel. Hands clasped behind her back. Brow furrowed in concentration as she murmurs scripture under her breath. Iâm perched on top of the podium, watching her.
"You donât believe a word of that," I say.
She doesnât look up.
âFor I am born of darkness. Let my trespasses be drowned in crimson, that I may walk in light once more.â
She continues, clinging to obedience like it could wash her clean. Pretending to be so innocent, so good.
Like if she follows the rules hard enough, it will make her true nature disappear.
âItâs this place thatâs evil, you know.â
That gets her attention. And thereâs that look again. Like she canât decide if she wants to hit me or kiss me.
I remember how I first knew she had a dark side. I can still see it so clearly. Sarah, standing in the crowd, watching.
That poor accused woman on the pulpit, wrists stretched high, shirt ripped clean from her back. The first crack of the lash sent a shudder through the congregation. But Sarah didnât flinch. Her eyes stayed locked, wide, unblinking. Not with fear or pity. With satisfaction, fascination.
Then later, we were sent to clean the altar. A scrap of fabric, stuck in the stain, stiff with blood. The way she turned it between her fingers, like it meant something.
âKeep it, I wonât say anything.â Iâd said.
Her face turned red with admission. Thatâs when the idea came to me. If thereâs one thing Iâm good at, itâs getting into trouble.
I stole Tereseâs precious violet-grade corialis pendant and wore it into the auditorium like a trophy. She screamed, demanded it back, and I made her chase me just to savor every second of the thrill. Getting tackled, slapped, and dragged by the hair was fun, but gods, it was hard to hide the stupid grin tugging at my cheeks when I knelt at the altar for my own lashes.
That night I lay bare, split open, shrouded in nothing but a bedsheet and bandages. Praying that Sarah would take the bait. And she did. That was the night she finally touched me.
The landslide of memories crashes through me, and heat pools low in my belly, spreading like fire. Just ten more minutes. I roll onto my stomach, sliding my hand between my body and the bed, pressing where I need it.
"Can you feel that? Feel what you do to me?"
I let myself say it.
"Fuck, Sarah, tell meâyou want this."
It spills out just under my breath, a whisper only meant for the air.
"Say you feel it too."
Just enough to make it real. Just enough to believe itâs happening.
"Itâs okay, youâre safe. Donât stop."
I let myself hear her answering, let myself feel her hands, her weight, her breath.
"Donât stop. Please donâtâ"
Itâs happening, itâs real. My thoughts unravel as fantasy overtakes memory. What I wish had happened drowning out what really did.
"Fuck, Iâm gonnaâyeahâgonna cum for you."
My breath comes sharp, uneven, but not gasping. It fades fast, settling into something steady. My pulse still kicks beneath my skin, but the rest of me feels heavy, the tension draining from my muscles in slow waves.
Of course thatâs not how it really ended. The truth slips back into my skull, ruining the moment before I can even enjoy it.. But itâs okay. That was all I needed. Just enough to keep those memories of Sarah in the past where they belong.
My legs feel loose, my body flushed, but thereâs no lingering warmth, no real satisfaction. Just the quiet after. A hard reset.
âYouâre trouble,â is what sheâd really said.
And what she really did was leave. Leave me furious, wrecked and wanting. It doesnât matter because Iâll never let her do it again.
A knock at the door, Harken. âCome in.â
Harken opens the door. âI see youâre hard at work.â Heâs been running the night crew and heâs here for our daily shift change ritual. .
My jaw is slack, cheek mashed against the sheets. âSomeone has to do the thinking for this lot of dimwits.â
Harken leans into the bedframe, settling in like a parent who refuses to leave until their child gets up.
"Your little pet is curled up by the stove in the galley. If sheâs not here to warm your bed, the least you could do is give her a proper place to sleep."
âI did give her a place to sleep.â I say, slowly rolling myself over and nodding toward the wash basin. âToss me that towel?â
Harken sidles over, picks up the towel, and flicks it through the air with the theatrical flair of someone far too pleased with his own antics.
"Your Holiness," he intones, mock reverence dripping from every syllable.
I catch it and slide it under the sheets, wiping between my legs without ceremony. Harken smirks, one brow lifting. Not at the act itself, but at the implication.
âThat bad, huh?â
Itâs not judgment, itâs a joke. A quiet dig, implying my hands do better work than whoever was in my bed last night.
âGo to hell.â I huff a laugh, sitting up and stretching my neck. âI told you itâs not like that.â
âThen what is it like?â
"I know her," I admit. Itâs the easier of two truths Iâve been holding back. The one I know heâll take in stride.
The story has been illicitly taken; should you find it on Amazon, report the infringement.
Not the part about the dragon. Just the part where sheâs someone I used to know.
âCare to explain?â Heâs more serious now. I hesitate, still unsure of how much to admit.
Sarah isnât just someone I know, sheâs someone I could never have. Someone I loved despite constant rejection. And for some self-defeating reason, I still want to be close to her.
"I know her from Prophetâs Landing."
I stop. Another flood of memories presses in, sharp-edged and tangled. Sarah, with her perfect facade, the way she followed every rule.
Our families spent so much time together, their lives intertwined through religious and social ties. But that never stopped Sarahâs parents from looking down on me, singling me out as a bad apple.
And for what? Being loud and getting dirty? For refusing to play pretend like the rest of them? Itâs so ironic that while they warned Sarah I was a deviant, she was the one harboring something dark.
Not wicked or evil. Just... shadowed. But I never thought less of her for it. Never tried to name it or fix it or make it something it wasnât. Her parents wouldâve called it broken, fallen, proof she was lost. But to me, it was just another part of her that I loved.
Harken has made himself at home at my desk, boots propped up, looking like heâs got all the time in the world.
âI had a hunch that you two had met before,â he says.
I grunt, dragging myself out of bed and pulling on yesterdayâs trousers, left draped over the bedpost. âYou know me too well.â
âMaybe.â He tilts the chair back, balancing it on two legs. âBut I donât know much of anything about your life inside the walls. By the time we met, youâd already buried those memories.â
I take a swig of mouth rinse and swish the bitter mint around while I turn my next words over in my head. Heâs right, I thought I had buried them. All it took was seeing her again. I step out the back and spit over the railing, then return to where Harken waits, patient as ever.
âYou remember what I told you about Maria?â I ask, slipping out of the shirt I slept in.
I tighten the binding around my chest. Looser than I wear it for conquest, tighter than Iâd sleep in. Just enough to be practical. âAt first I went somewhere else in my mindââ I hesitate. âTo someone else.â
âI remember.â He nods, solemn.
My shirt is clean enough so I put it back on, tucking it into my trousers. âIt was her,â I say, voice low. âSarah. Sheâs who I imagined.â
Harken rubs his jaw, considering. âShe must have meant a lot to you.â
I fasten my doublet. âShe did, and she didnât.â
âWhat do you mean?â He waits, watching as I tug on my boots, stomping them into place.
âI never meant anything to her. Soââ
âSo whatever history you two had, it was one-sided?â
âYou could say that.â I slip into my shoulder belt, adjusting the leather across my chest until it sits right.
âIs that why you pursued Maria?â Harken asks. Iâve always appreciated the way he really listens. You can tell by the questions he asks.
I could never win Sarahâs heart, but I did win Mariaâs, and I let myself believe what we had was real. It was real. I killed for her, I would have done anything for her. She loved me too, she just let her fear get the best of her. And in the end, she sold me.
âSomething like that.â I shrug, shoving a few loose braids back under my bandana and tightening it across my forehead.
âSo what are you hoping comes of this?â he asks. His voice is steady, but thereâs a warning in it.
âI just couldnât leave her there, thatâs all.â
âShe in trouble?â
âThink so.â
âWanted?â
âNot sure yet.â
He looks at me the way he does when heâs figuring out whether Iâm lying to myself. Then he softens, letting it go. âWell, I donât blame you for going easy on her.â
I lean against the desk, arms crossed. âShe doesnât know itâs me. Can you believe that?â The words leave a bitter taste in my mouth.
âOuch,â Harken echos.
"Ah, don't feel sorry for me. I was a prick."
I pull out the flat tin of black grease I keep in a small pocket of my doublet and use my pinky to reapply the dark lines beneath my eyes. Itâs not cheap, but it's a kind of armour I refuse to go without.
"I just didnât think I had such a forgettable face." I say, looking away from my reflection and back to Harken.
"Youâve changed. Muff-divinâ like itâll fund your retirementâs done wonders for your jawline."
I suppress a laugh, shaking my head. He presses further.
âHell, I hardly recognize you without a pair of legs over your shoulders and a grateful audience.â He grins, knowing full well heâs cracked me.
This time, I throw my head back and laugh out loud.
Harken's changed too, more than most. When we first met, the two of us were a grim sight. But where I burned hotter, heâd gone cold and given up. I donât blame him. Itâs not that what he went through was worse than what the rest of us on that rotship had seen. It wasnât.
He wasnât happy being a husband and a father, only did it because he thought thatâs what life was supposed to be. When sickness took his wife and three children, all in the span of a year⦠he thought heâd wished it into being. Thought his secret longing for freedom had summoned death to his doorstep and let the guilt hollow him out.
The thing that set Harkenâs suffering apart from the rest of us was that he gave himself to the slavers willingly, as if to punish himself for surviving. It wasnât the grief that nearly broke him. It was the belief that he deserved it.
Even after I forced him to escape with me, fighting for my freedom and bargaining for his in a way he couldnât refuse, and carving out a name for us, it still took years for him to shed those beliefs. Guilt had its claws in him deep.
But now? Every crude joke and filthy grin is a testament to the weight heâs let go of. Proof that he lets himself live.
âYou gonna remind her? Or show her what sheâs been missing out on?â he asks, still chuckling to himself.
âHavenât decided yet.â I lower my voice.
âYou want her to join the crew,â he says more quietly, picking up on my shift in tone.
âI might.â
âMm.â He pauses, thoughtful. âYouâre letting them believe sheâs here for company. Buying yourself time to decide how you feel about her?â
âRight.â
Harken stands up and hands me the ledger. âWell, you might need to sell it a little harder.â He says with a wink.
âWhat, you want me to throw her over my shoulder and parade her around the deck?" I flip open the ledger, skimming his latest entries and handing it back.
I hate paperwork, but I delegate well. Iâve given most of the record keeping responsibilities to Harken. He likes being indispensable to me, so I let him have it. But I always know the numbers, and I expect updates.
I open the desk drawer and pull out my compass. Tucked behind it are other tools of navigation that I donât know how to use. Lately, weâve been skating by on a compass and lines.
The air is fresh, and the sun already glaring, as we step onto the lower stern deck that doubles as my private balcony. I had Manee retrofit a staircase, giving me easy access from here to the upper stern deck.
I loved this ship at first sight, mostly because of the dual stern decks. I donât have a type, per se, but I can appreciate a woman with a generous rear.
Jake has trained himself to listen for our boots on the stairs. Despite the late hour, heâs already standing at attention when we arrive.
Thereâs an attention to detail that comes with being submissive by nature, a hunger to anticipate. Jake has it. A need to notice everything, to perfect the smallest tasks as if they mean something greater. And they do.
Itâs his ability to find purpose in the mundane that makes him indispensable. It also makes him ready for a promotion. I see why Sonya cherishes him, why their thing just⦠works. Iâm going to miss having him as lead deckhand.
"Morninâ, Captain!" Jake greets me, crossing his fists over his chest with a slight bow.
Itâs more formal than how most pirates acknowledge a captain, but itâs been catching on. Jake started it, because of course he did.
He turns to Harken, tapping two fingers to his forehead in a quick, familiar salute. "Quartermaster."
Jake barks an order to one of the swabbies under his charge. I donât bother learning all their names. Most of them come and go too fast for that.
The kid snaps to attention, then bolts for the rigging. Barefoot, they climb up onto a crossbeam in a blur of movement. The moment they find their perch, they twist, cupping their hands around their mouth and letting out a sharp, ringing cry.
"HellcatsâCaptain on deck!"
The crew squares up as I pass, straightening instinctively and adjusting their stances. Then, from the quarterdeck, a whistle cuts through the morning air.
Manee stands at the helm and plays a single, piercing note on the boatswainâs pipe. It carries across the deck like a summons. The day has begun.
"What do we take?" I step forward.
A growl ripples through the crew. "Only whatâs owed!"
"And what do we leave?"
"Nothing but bones!"
"And the ones who stand in our way?"
"Bones to the sea!"
Manee blows a second, sharper note to signal the end of the ritual, and its back to business.
âWindâs still fickle. Held, then died, then picked up again. Never dropped below four knots, though. If our reckoningâs right, weâll hit the first shoals by midday." Jake says, still by my side.
I nod, pulling my fists up toward my shoulders, flexing my biceps as my back tightens in a stretch. That should put us near the edge of the sandbars.
"We ran the log line a few times through the night," Manee offers. "Speed held steady, course hasnât drifted. Might be worth dropping the lead."
I shake my head. "Not yet. The waterâs still deep enough to lie to us."
Manee and Jake exchange glances.
"If weâre off courseâ" Jake trails off.
"Then weâll correct it," I say. "I donât want to waste daylight slowing down now. Keep the heading steady. Advise me if anything changes."
I glance toward the horizon again. Everything sounds right. The speed, the heading, the timing. But Iâve learned that what sounds right and what is right arenât always the same.
Thatâs the trick with the sandbars. Getting through them is our specialty. Getting to them is where we earn our pay.
A shift by as little as a quarter mile could mean the difference between navigating the shallows like a master or ripping our hull to shreds in the shards. Thatâs what we call the reefs running parallel to the sandbars. They're sharp and hidden enough to sink a ship before you ever see them coming.
Jake is still glued to my side as I start the rounds. I give him a look that says why are you still here? And he peels off at a precise ninety-degree angle, as if the thought was his own.
I roll my shoulders, trying to shake the irritation curling in my gut. My whole life has been one reason after another to walk around pissed off. But somewhere along the way, I made a choice to stop letting it affect me. To wear my swagger on my sleeve instead of my heart, no matter how much turmoil might be stirring beneath the surface.
Despite how tightly Iâve kept the lid on things, Sarah is settling under my skin like a splinter I canât dig out. I push off the rail harder than necessary, pacing impatiently toward the helm.
Iâm still thinking about what I told Harken this morning. I didnât give him everything, but I gave him more than I planned to. And for a moment, I felt steadier. But the feeling didnât last⦠not with the weight of what I left unsaid. Sarah has a dragon.
Or had one?
That part isnât lining up. She thought there wasnât a dragon until I told her I saw one. The shock on her face wasnât a lie. Is it hers or did she steal it? Maybe sheâs on the run from the real Dragon Queen. That would not be ideal⦠for me.
There are too many unknowns, which means I need to tread carefully. Choose my words. Measure my steps. But how Iâm acting this morning is anything but.
A rather large red chicken with the temperament of a jilted mistress, is tied to a barrel near the quarterdeck. Itâs part of the deal Gery worked out after the last incident. Griselda serves as the ship cat, if you can believe it, chasing rats better than any mouser Iâve seen. But ever since she developed a personal grudge against me, sheâs not allowed above deck without a leash.
She sees me. Wings go out, neck down, beak open and hissing like sheâs about to spit fire. She lunges at full speed and hits the end of her leash with a violent jerk that rattles the barrel.
I stop mid-stride. So does conversation around me.
âSomeone tell Gery to get this fucking bird off my deck before I turn her into dinner.â