"Shipwreck! Shipwreck!"
The call came just as the ship was waking up, the tropical sky still holding on to the hazy green light of dawn. A thunder of footsteps had crashed down the stairs, calling that dire pronouncement as they went. Great booms rocked Madeira's cabin as sleeping sailors were startled out of their hammocks.
"What does that mean, Maddy? Are we sinking?" Emma sounded worried. She was sitting on the floor, rolling Madeira's black marble between her hands. Madeira herself was sitting on her narrow bunk, fully dressed, having spent another sleepless night worrying and whittling a discarded chunk of wooden crate.
"I don't think so." The Spiritist was listening hard as the roused sailors shouted at each other in common and fratava and stomped their way on deck. "They would sound more panicked if we were in real danger."
Both were silent a moment, prickling with high alert as they tried to decipher the commotion on the other side of the thin wooden walls. Madeira was the one who broke the silence.
"Lets go see what's happening."
"'Kay."
The deck was crawling with people, but very few were actually working. Sailors were pushed up against the railings and halfway up the rigging, hands over their eyes and squinting into the light. Floating through the miasma of voices Madeira heard snippets of excited and nervous conversation.
"...never seen anything like it."
"...treasure there for sure..."
"...not natural..."
Madeira couldn't see past the men, but she could see what they were talking about. Out in the distance, and getting closer, was a spear of rock that reached twenty meters into the sky. It was sharp, jagged, glassy black, and even the very tip was glistening with seawater. The witch didn’t need to be familiar with the sea to know it was not natural.
“Emma, move the men aside.” Madeira demanded of her little ghost, her eyes never leaving the spear that was reflecting the first light of dawn.
“But they won’t listen to-“
“Now.”
Startled, unsure about the sudden stress in her mistresses voice, Emma drifted to the dense pack of sailors and did as she was told.
“Um, excuse me…” she all but whispered in her shy little squeak of a voice. But the sailors were transfixed with whatever they were seeing, talking loudly amongst themselves, and did not notice. Visibly steeling herself, the child lifted a flickering, transparent hand as if to tap the tall, tanned back that was in her way. “Excuse me! Can you-“
The sailor might have felt the electric current of her soulmist, or the high girlish voice might have slipped into his ears over the low baritone of the men. Whatever the case, he turned his head, saw the grisly, diseased ghost child, and cringed away from it so hard he knocked over several other men on the way down. In less than a tick over a meter of space had cleared around the spirit in every direction. Madeira simply walked through her confused ghost and was able to get herself right against the railing. From her new advantageous position she squinted into the light and gasped as she saw what was at the spear’s base.
A tough merchant ship made of in a rough, durable, seafaring design lay cracked open like a split peach. Broken masts, black banners, and splintered wood exploded from its belly. It hadn’t shipwrecked against the spear, it had been-
“Pierced” Madeira gasped, hand over her mouth and eyes wide with horror. “Oh my gods, that rock has pierced the ship!”
“But how?” another sailor beside her babbled, running his hands through his peppery hair. “Did that ship drop from the sky or what?”
“Nah, mate, that rock came up from below and wrecked it!” another shouted from the press of bodies.
“The seabed must be several kilometres below us you daft vagik! How did a petching rock cut through a ship that must have been going at least thirty knots?”
“Well how do you petching explain it?”
Their ship was slowing down as it came alongside the strange wreck. Flotsam of crates and broken bits of wood were floating serenely in the wake of their approach.
“Wait, why are we stopping?” Madeira turned, trying to keep the high note of stress out of her voice. “We need to leave!”
A few of the sturdier men had shaken themselves out of the shock and were throwing fishing nets overboard. One had already come back with several damaged boxes and a piece of the strange banner. The Captain was standing back, watching the reaping with his arms crossed and his jaw clenched.
“Law of the ocean, Miss Madeira”, he answered gruffly, not turning in her direction. “We found it, we keep it. I don’t like this place either, but once we have the loot we’ll be on our way.”
With a pry bar and a lot of grunting, the first crate was opened. From inside rolled out a magnificent whip packed in straw and oiled leather. But it was not any kind of whip Madeira had ever seen before. It looked like it was made of mirror-polished metal, yet it ran through their hands as smooth and flexible as liquid. She swore she could see it glowing.
“You’re letting your greed cloud your senses!” Madeira sputtered, aghast, as she turned back to the Captain. “Look what happened to that ship!”
“If you see any hundred kilometre rocks sneaking up on us, be sure to let me know.”
“Well they sure as hai didn’t see it coming”, she countered. “Speaking of, where do you think they are?”
“Who?”
“The people. It didn’t sink, but there are no stranded sailors calling for help. We’re kilometers from shore, so they didn’t swim it. And if they drowned, well, why are there no bodies in the water? Where are the people?”
The big man wavered, his eyes flicking nervously to the ruined ship and the loot the men were dragging aboard.
“Captain,” she continued softly, “I don’t know what has happened to this ship but I am absolutely certain I don’t want to find out. Either something on that ship or in these waters did that, and we don’t need to take whatever it was onto this ship, or give what is in the water another target.”
A cheer went up from the men as another heavy crate was dragged onto the deck, the water damaged catch had popped open and a gold vase rolled out, spilling wine everywhere. They were so excited about the gold that they didn’t notice that there was much more liquid pouring out of the vase than it could possibly hold. Madeira was staring the captain in the eye, silently demanding he look at her and see she was right. From deep in her soul she moved her dijed forward, pooling it in her wide blue eyes as she sloppily pushed onto his a mere hint of the fear she was developing.
Finally the man cursed, turned away and shouted: “That’s it you cunts, round up and get on the rigging, we’re moving!”
A chorus of disgruntled exclamations exploded from the men at those words, as they were still working on unloading their strange treasures and were eager to find more.
“I’ll hear no bitching from you lot. Move!”
The call came just as the ship was waking up, the tropical sky still holding on to the hazy green light of dawn. A thunder of footsteps had crashed down the stairs, calling that dire pronouncement as they went. Great booms rocked Madeira's cabin as sleeping sailors were startled out of their hammocks.
"What does that mean, Maddy? Are we sinking?" Emma sounded worried. She was sitting on the floor, rolling Madeira's black marble between her hands. Madeira herself was sitting on her narrow bunk, fully dressed, having spent another sleepless night worrying and whittling a discarded chunk of wooden crate.
"I don't think so." The Spiritist was listening hard as the roused sailors shouted at each other in common and fratava and stomped their way on deck. "They would sound more panicked if we were in real danger."
Both were silent a moment, prickling with high alert as they tried to decipher the commotion on the other side of the thin wooden walls. Madeira was the one who broke the silence.
"Lets go see what's happening."
"'Kay."
The deck was crawling with people, but very few were actually working. Sailors were pushed up against the railings and halfway up the rigging, hands over their eyes and squinting into the light. Floating through the miasma of voices Madeira heard snippets of excited and nervous conversation.
"...never seen anything like it."
"...treasure there for sure..."
"...not natural..."
Madeira couldn't see past the men, but she could see what they were talking about. Out in the distance, and getting closer, was a spear of rock that reached twenty meters into the sky. It was sharp, jagged, glassy black, and even the very tip was glistening with seawater. The witch didn’t need to be familiar with the sea to know it was not natural.
“Emma, move the men aside.” Madeira demanded of her little ghost, her eyes never leaving the spear that was reflecting the first light of dawn.
“But they won’t listen to-“
“Now.”
Startled, unsure about the sudden stress in her mistresses voice, Emma drifted to the dense pack of sailors and did as she was told.
“Um, excuse me…” she all but whispered in her shy little squeak of a voice. But the sailors were transfixed with whatever they were seeing, talking loudly amongst themselves, and did not notice. Visibly steeling herself, the child lifted a flickering, transparent hand as if to tap the tall, tanned back that was in her way. “Excuse me! Can you-“
The sailor might have felt the electric current of her soulmist, or the high girlish voice might have slipped into his ears over the low baritone of the men. Whatever the case, he turned his head, saw the grisly, diseased ghost child, and cringed away from it so hard he knocked over several other men on the way down. In less than a tick over a meter of space had cleared around the spirit in every direction. Madeira simply walked through her confused ghost and was able to get herself right against the railing. From her new advantageous position she squinted into the light and gasped as she saw what was at the spear’s base.
A tough merchant ship made of in a rough, durable, seafaring design lay cracked open like a split peach. Broken masts, black banners, and splintered wood exploded from its belly. It hadn’t shipwrecked against the spear, it had been-
“Pierced” Madeira gasped, hand over her mouth and eyes wide with horror. “Oh my gods, that rock has pierced the ship!”
“But how?” another sailor beside her babbled, running his hands through his peppery hair. “Did that ship drop from the sky or what?”
“Nah, mate, that rock came up from below and wrecked it!” another shouted from the press of bodies.
“The seabed must be several kilometres below us you daft vagik! How did a petching rock cut through a ship that must have been going at least thirty knots?”
“Well how do you petching explain it?”
Their ship was slowing down as it came alongside the strange wreck. Flotsam of crates and broken bits of wood were floating serenely in the wake of their approach.
“Wait, why are we stopping?” Madeira turned, trying to keep the high note of stress out of her voice. “We need to leave!”
A few of the sturdier men had shaken themselves out of the shock and were throwing fishing nets overboard. One had already come back with several damaged boxes and a piece of the strange banner. The Captain was standing back, watching the reaping with his arms crossed and his jaw clenched.
“Law of the ocean, Miss Madeira”, he answered gruffly, not turning in her direction. “We found it, we keep it. I don’t like this place either, but once we have the loot we’ll be on our way.”
With a pry bar and a lot of grunting, the first crate was opened. From inside rolled out a magnificent whip packed in straw and oiled leather. But it was not any kind of whip Madeira had ever seen before. It looked like it was made of mirror-polished metal, yet it ran through their hands as smooth and flexible as liquid. She swore she could see it glowing.
“You’re letting your greed cloud your senses!” Madeira sputtered, aghast, as she turned back to the Captain. “Look what happened to that ship!”
“If you see any hundred kilometre rocks sneaking up on us, be sure to let me know.”
“Well they sure as hai didn’t see it coming”, she countered. “Speaking of, where do you think they are?”
“Who?”
“The people. It didn’t sink, but there are no stranded sailors calling for help. We’re kilometers from shore, so they didn’t swim it. And if they drowned, well, why are there no bodies in the water? Where are the people?”
The big man wavered, his eyes flicking nervously to the ruined ship and the loot the men were dragging aboard.
“Captain,” she continued softly, “I don’t know what has happened to this ship but I am absolutely certain I don’t want to find out. Either something on that ship or in these waters did that, and we don’t need to take whatever it was onto this ship, or give what is in the water another target.”
A cheer went up from the men as another heavy crate was dragged onto the deck, the water damaged catch had popped open and a gold vase rolled out, spilling wine everywhere. They were so excited about the gold that they didn’t notice that there was much more liquid pouring out of the vase than it could possibly hold. Madeira was staring the captain in the eye, silently demanding he look at her and see she was right. From deep in her soul she moved her dijed forward, pooling it in her wide blue eyes as she sloppily pushed onto his a mere hint of the fear she was developing.
Finally the man cursed, turned away and shouted: “That’s it you cunts, round up and get on the rigging, we’re moving!”
A chorus of disgruntled exclamations exploded from the men at those words, as they were still working on unloading their strange treasures and were eager to find more.
“I’ll hear no bitching from you lot. Move!”