“Leave the kids out of it!” he yelled over his shoulder. Then to us he said, “And you two, whoever you are, get out of here.”

“Sorry for interrupting,” I said. “We’d like to talk about your parents.”

“I got no parents,” he snapped, and was about to close the door. Jane stepped forward and blocked it. “Get out of my face, bitch,” he warned.

Jane laughed. Then with one hand she grabbed a handful of his tunic and yanked him bodily out the door. She tossed him head over heels onto his back in the bare-dirt yard. The chickens scattered in clucking outrage. He rolled onto his stomach and tried to push himself up, but she put a boot on the back of his neck. She said, “You’ve got a lot to learn about talking to a lady.”

“Hey, you! Get off him!” A small, wiry girl stood in the doorway, a baby on one hip and a paring knife in her free hand. She was barely out of childhood herself, but life had already aged her.

Jane drew her sword and leveled it at the girl. It was almost as long as she was tall, and the blade did not waver. Sunlight reflected a vertical bar across the girl’s face.

“Best thing for you and your snot factory there is to go back inside and shut the door,” Jane said coolly. “The light of your life won’t get hurt if he starts behaving.” She twisted her foot for emphasis. “And you’re going to behave, right?”

“Yeah!” he snarled through the dirt.

Jane stepped back and, still holding her sword ready, said, “Get up.”

He did so slowly, head down, spitting dirt from his lips. He brushed the front of his tunic. He glared at me and said, “Your wife’s a bitch.”

“Why does everyone think we’re married?” Jane asked, and winked at me.

Tew stumbled to the well, drew up the bucket, and poured it over his head. He sputtered as it washed away the dirt. Without looking at us, he said, “Just so you know, my real mother died when I was born, and I never knew my real father. So you got me muddy for nothing, and you wasted your own time.”

“Who told you your mother died?” I asked as I climbed down from my horse.

“What the fuck difference does it make?”

“Manners, hot stuff,” Jane said warningly.

He sighed and nodded. “The dog under the porch, who do you think? The folks who raised me.”

“What did they tell you about your father?”

He turned the bucket over, sat on it, and glared up at us from under wet strands of hair. “Why do you care?”

“We’re looking for someone.”

“My dad?”

“Maybe.”

“He was a pirate who fucked my mom and left her to deal with the consequences. Or, if you take the other side, she was a witch who made a nice young sailor turn to piracy to keep her in gold and jewels. It’s for damn sure everyone in Watchorn believes one story or the other. Doesn’t make a difference to me.”

“Yeah, you’re a no-good bastard either way,” the girl said, and slammed the door.

Tew laughed harshly. “Guess that makes it unanimous.” I held out a coin. “If you know anything else, I’m willing to pay for it.”

Jane shook her head at me. “Where do you keep getting those? Do you pull them out of your ass?”

I ignored her and waited for Tew’s reaction. He stared at the coin like a bird hypnotized by a snake, seeing the possibilities in it. He said, “They tell me my father was Black Edward Tew. People who knew him say I look just like him. It doesn’t make it easy around here.”

Jane asked, “Why do you stay?”

“I got my reasons,” he muttered.

“Do you have any idea,” I asked, “where your father is?” Before he could answer, a small boy emerged from the back of the house, brandishing a sharpened stick. He was barefoot, dressed in tattered clothes, and looked maybe five years old.

“Twouble, Dad?” he said, staring fearlessly at us.

Immediately Tew’s whole demeanor changed. He sat up straight and said calmly, “No, son, just visitors. C’mere.” The boy eased over, keeping the sharp end of his stick pointed our way. “This is my son, Sido. Say hello, son.”

“Hi,” the boy said flatly.

Tew kissed the boy’s dirty cheek. “I’ll be done here in a minute. Go back inside and finish your lunch, okay?”

“You sure you don’t need me?” Sido asked seriously. Tew smiled. “I probably do, but you need your lunch more so you can be big and strong. I’ll be along, don’t worry.” The boy went back inside through the front door, giving us his best tough-guy look the whole way. When he was gone, Tew said, “No need for him to see you kill me, is there?”

“We’re not here to kill you,” Jane said.

“Then what do you want?”

“Anything you know about your father,” I said, and waved the coin for emphasis. “Like we keep saying.”

“And his treasure,” Jane added. I stared javelins at her. “I don’t suppose he ever stops by for a father-son chat when he’s in port?” I asked.

Tew laughed. “Yeah, sure. He brings me presents from all over the world. One day I’ll sail as his first mate.”

I fought not to smile. His sarcasm sounded just like his mother. “What about the Dirnay family? Do you know them?”

“Is this a trick question?” he snapped. When I didn’t answer, he said, “They’re the jerks who raised me. Look, I got nothing to add. Neither one of my parents stuck around to change my diapers or watch my first steps or teach me a goddamn thing.” He stood, adjusted his clothes, and with as much dignity as he could muster, said, “And you can shove that money back where she said you found it.”

With that, he went inside and slammed the door. The bar slid into its slot across it.

Jane chuckled. “That was pointless.”

“No, it wasn’t.” I put the coin on the middle of the top step, careful to avoid the smeared manure. “We know what Edward Tew looks like now.”

“We do?”

“Junior in there didn’t get that cleft chin and blue eyes from Angelina.”

“Wonder what he did get?”

“Definitely the warmth,” I said as I got back on my horse. Jane laughed as she did the same. “So now what, boss?”

“Your friend Racko sounded pretty sure Black Edward was dead. He implied it was a well-known story.”

“Some of the other guys disagreed.”

“Yeah. I think we need to find a more reliable source.” She chuckled. “A more reliable source for pirate gossip?”

“Pirate history. I want to know what happened to Black Edward and why some people think he’s dead. There must be a better authority than some drunks in a tavern. Maybe the Society of Scribes, or some royal archivist somewhere.”

Jane looked down thoughtfully. “There is. It’s a bit of a ride, but we don’t seem to be in a hurry.”

“Who?”

She said in a whisper, “The Sea Hawk.”

I repeated, “Who?”

She snorted at my lack of knowledge. “You land crabs. I mean Rody Hawk. Captain Hawk of the Poison. ”

I knew that name, all right, and it sent a rush of apprehension up my spine. I’d heard all the stories about this particular scourge of the seas, and if only a fraction of them were true, Hawk was the worst of the worst. “I thought he was dead, too.”

“See? You can’t trust any stories about a pirate’s death. Rody Hawk has enough treasure hidden to buy

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