scheme—the building of one or two small boats, which a few selected volunteers might sail swiftly westward in search of help. That proposal was voted down in favor of the raft.
Left out was how they proposed to make such a big contraption seaworthy, then get it down the sheer fifty-meter drop, and away from the spuming interface of wave and rock. Only one place along the forested rim of the jagged promontory featured a way down. There a winch had lifted the prisoners and their provisions, just before the Reckless and the captured Manitou sailed off. Inanna and her friends still schemed to use the lifting machine, despite its metal casing, locks, and earlier warnings of booby traps. In the long run, however, they might have to resort to building a primitive crane of timbers and vines.
“Idiots,” Naroin muttered. She thrashed at the low foliage by the trail, using a short stave she had trimmed just after landfall. It was no trepp bill, but the small, wiry seawoman seemed more comfortable with it in her hands. “They’ll never make it, an’ I’m not drownin’ with ’em.”
Maia was getting fatigued with Naroin’s impatient temper. Yet, she did not want to be alone. Too many dark thoughts plagued her when solitude pressed close. “How can you be sure? I agree your plan would have been better, but—”
“Bleeders!” Naroin slashed with her staff, and leaves flew. “Even a bunch o’ frosty jorts oughta see that raft’s all wrong. Say they do get it down, an’ the sea don’t smash it right up. They’ll just get plucked again, like floatin’ melons. If the pirates don’t grab the chance to send ’em straight to Sally Jones on the spot.”
“But we haven’t seen a sail since we were marooned. How would the reavers know when and where to find them unless…” Maia stopped. She stared at Naroin. “You don’t mean…?”
The bosun’s lips were thin. “Won’t say it.”
“You don’t have to. It’s vile!”
Naroin shrugged. “You’d do the same, if you was them. Trouble is, there’s no way to tell which one it is. Or maybe two. Didn’t know any o’ them var hands before I hired on, at Artemesia Bay. Can’t be sure of any of ’em.”
“Or even me?”
Naroin turned and regarded Maia straight on. Her inspection was long and unsettlingly sharp. After five seconds, a slow smile spread. “You keep surprisin’ me, lass. But I’d bet my sweet departed berry on you, despite you bein’ no var.”
Maia winced. “I told you before. That was my twin.”
“Mm. So I recall from th’ old
Maia managed not to flinch a second time. The reminder was like stretching new scar tissue. The memory was still intense, of Leie’s soot-streaked face, peering at her through that concussion haze, murmuring in a low, urgent voice of the necessity of what she was about to do.
There had been a wet, sticky sensation. Something tingling slathered across Maia’s face, and a burning sensation crossed her scalp. At the time, Maia had been semidelirious, frantic to speak to her unexpectedly living sister, unable to comprehend why her mouth was gagged. Only much later, when she had a chance to scrub at one of the island’s tiny freshwater springs, did she figure out what Leie had done. Using coal tar and other chemicals from the Reckless engine room, Leie had darkened Maia’s skin and hair, altering her appearance in a makeshift but effective way.
From Leie’s remarks, Maia later gathered that the reaver base lay amid this very archipelago of devil-fang peaks. Apparently, the pirates planned to divide their captives, interning some on isolated isles. First to be marooned would be those least dangerous to the raiders’ plans—Manitou’s women crew members. While sorting through the wounded, Leie had managed to put Maia with that group.
Leie’s eyes had been filled with that old enthusiasm, now enhanced by a new, fierce determination. Through a fog of injury, pain, and confusion, Maia wondered what adventures had so changed her sister.
Then the import of Leie’s words sank in. Leie and the reavers were going to put her ashore, and sail off with Renna! Kiel and Thalla and the men of the Manitou, as well. That was when Maia started straggling against her bonds, grunting to tell Leie she had to speak!
Maia caught a scent of strong herbs and alcohol as Leie pushed a soaked cloth over her nose. A cloying, choking sensation spread through the nasal passages and sinuses, making her want to cough and gag. Events got even more vague after that, but still, she had a distinct image of her sister leaning forward, kissing her on the forehead.
The memory of pain and betrayal still hurt Maia, darkening and confusing her natural joy to find that Leie lived. But there was another matter. Burning foremost in her mind was one fact she focused on. An innocent, helpless man was being held captive somewhere on one of those other isles, without a friend in the world.
Through the blue funk of her thoughts, she followed Naroin along a trail overlooking the bright sea, walking in silence back to where the reavers had dumped enough food and supplies to last until the next promised shipment. Lean-tos and makeshift tents made a ragged circle, offset from the trees. A cook fire was tended by one crew-woman whose ankle had been broken in the failed battle. She looked up desultorily and nodded without a word, going back to stirring lentils in a slowly simmering pot.
Naroin returned to her own chief pastime, using sharpened pieces of chert to shave a tree limb into a primitive bow. Not a legal weapon. But then, it wasn’t legal, either, for the reavers to have dumped them here. Seizing the Manitou should have been followed by “dividing the cargo,” then letting its crew and passengers go.
The special nature of this “cargo” made that unlikely, especially when it was one eagerly sought by every political force on the planet. When Maia last saw Captain Poulandres, hands bound on the quarterdeck of his own ship, the red-faced man had been threatening to raise hell, building toward a full summer rage by sheer anger. The reavers ignored him. Clearly, Poulandres had no idea what trouble he was in.
“It’s for huntin’,” Naroin said about the bow and slim arrow shafts. No one had seen anything larger than a bush shrew on the isle, but nobody complained. Anyway, the authorities were far away.
Maia threw herself on the blanket she had spread under a rough lean-to, atop a bed of shredded grass and leaves. Of her three possessions, her clothes and Captain Pegyul’s sextant she kept with her always. The last item, a slim book of poems, she had found on her person as a ship’s boat rowed the captive sailors to internment. During the ride up the creaky winch-lift, she had managed to focus on one randomly chosen page.