8
I woke to the sound of a nightmare in the dark.
Mary was whimpering, tossing and turning in the shadows near me. We were in some kind of prison cell, our wrists bound with rope. There were no windows. I had no idea how much time had passed, whether it was still night.
“No! Stop!” Mary cried out in her nightmare. I considered waking her; but whatever she was dreaming, it couldn’t be worse than the horror we were living.
That’s when I remembered that Wesley was dead.
He was dead, and I never even told him that I loved him.
The knowledge of it tore into me with sharp, angry teeth. “No,” I whispered, echoing Mary, closing my eyes—but that only made it worse. The images played on my mind in a relentless, cruel loop. The spear in Wesley’s side. The shock on his face as he registered the wound, crumpled weakly to the ground. His body tossed overboard into the freezing, black sea a hundred feet below.
I pulled my knees to my chest, trying to cover my face with my bound hands, and began to sob.
“Eliza?” Mary mumbled, sitting up.
“I’m here.” My voice was flat.
“Where are we?” We both felt a rocking underneath us. “We’re still on the ship,” she breathed. “Where are they taking us?”
“I don’t know.”
She must have heard the grief in my tone. “Eliza. Is Wesley …”
“He’s gone. We’re the only ones alive.”
Mary closed her eyes and took a breath. “I’m so, so sorry. This is all my fault.”
“It’s nobody’s fault,” I said.
“I’m the one who wanted to board a strange ship. And Wesley—” Her voice broke. “He died trying to save
me
.”
“He knew the risks,” I managed, starting to cry again. “We all did.”
“Oh, Eliza,” Mary whispered, scooting over to pull my head onto her shoulder, just like she used to when I was a little girl. “Shhh, it’s okay, it’ll all be okay,” she repeated
over and over, the way she always did. But this wasn’t a skinned knee or a loose tooth. It was Wesley, and it would never be okay again. I gave up and let the tears come, crying and crying until I had finally cried myself dry.
Time felt strangely fluid, here in the dark. It may have been minutes or hours when the door finally opened and a light turned on in the room, from a single bare bulb on the ceiling. “Greetings, Your Highnesses,” a voice called out, and a figure stepped inside.
He was tall and imposing, dressed in heavy leather boots and dark clothes. His sun-streaked hair fell past his chin. He wore a heavy gold necklace and several gold rings, and a fur cape fell across his shoulders. I couldn’t help thinking of Vikings, the way they attacked England in medieval times from their great wooden ships.
He stood silently and watched us, contemplating something I couldn’t gauge. His eyes were a blue so light they almost looked white.
Finally I couldn’t stand it anymore. “Who are you, and what do you want?” I yelled.
He looked at me in mild confusion, as if a kitten had suddenly spoken. Then slowly, never taking his eyes from mine, he pulled a sword from the holster around his waist. I flinched as he raised it high above me, and hated myself for it. Mary whimpered next to me. I closed my eyes, bracing myself for the impact—only to hear the loud reverberation of steel against the metal floor next to me.
“Did I give you permission to speak?” He leaned close to me, so that his face was inches from mine.
I said nothing.
“On my ship,
Princess
, you do not speak unless you are spoken to.” He put a slight emphasis on
princess
, making it sound like an insult. His accent was Scandinavian, or maybe Slavic mixed with German, but I couldn’t place it. “Do you understand?”
I still said nothing.
“I want to hear you say, ‘Yes, Master.’” His voice was low, dangerous.
I clenched my teeth, refusing to answer. And moving lightning fast, like a snake, he whipped the flat side of his sword against my knees.
The pain of the impact sent waves of agony through my legs and up my spine. I blinked at the black spots dotting my vision. Dimly, I heard Mary begging me to obey him. “Eliza, please just say it.”
“Listen to your sister.” The man’s voice ricocheted around the small room.
My eyes burned with tears, but I would not say it.
He looked down at me with his lips pursed, a slight frown on his face. “It’s too bad,” he said softly. “But I really only need the other one.” He lifted his sword ahead, this time to split my skull.
“Eliza!” Mary screamed, at the very moment that I said it: “Yes, Master.”
I felt sick from the words, but a smile spread slowly across his face. He brought one of his hands down and patted the top of my head as though I were a dog. “Good girl.”
Mary and I held tight to each other, our arms trembling. “So,” he said, turning to Mary, his eyes grazing her in a way that made me want to claw them out. “This is Mary, England’s girl queen. I’ve been listening to your radio broadcasts.”
He laughed and launched into a falsetto British accent, clearly mocking her. “‘Hello, is anyone out there? People of the world, survivors of the Seventeen Days, this is Mary, queen of England. If you can, please reply to this message; let us know we are not alone. We were devastated, but we are rebuilding—and what we have, we are happy to share.’” He dropped the cruel imitation and returned to his own voice. “A promise is a promise, Queen Mary. I expect you to share.”
Silent tears streamed down her face, but there was a dignity to Mary, even in the face of this. “Who are you?” she said quietly. “Where are you from, and why are you doing this to us?”
“All in due time,” the man said.
“You should know our military is on its way,” I called out to him. “Our biggest ship, the
Royal Voyager
—”
He burst out laughing, cutting me off. “Look around, Princess,” he said. “Maybe you can’t tell, but we’re underwater now, miles from anywhere your so-called military would even think to look.”
We were underwater? That meant this ship was both a regular tanker and a submarine—which explained how it had disappeared before my eyes that first night I saw it. It had sunk below the surface.
Mary and I were silent. This was far, far worse than we had realized.
“So, I have Mary and Eliza,” the Viking said. “But where is young Jamie? I’d hate for him to be left out of the fun.”
“He’s dead,” Mary shot back without hesitation. “He died of the poison that killed our mother.”
I was amazed that Mary could think quickly enough under the circumstances to lie like that. It was a smart lie—whoever this man was, it sounded like he had come after us deliberately, knowing we were royal. This was her best chance at protecting Jamie.
“Unfortunate,” he said, clearly not caring at all. “But in this world, it’s survival of the fittest.” He called out something in a foreign tongue, and one of his pirates entered from the hall.
“Untie them, and escort them to the girls. They look terrible,” he ordered the pirate. Then he turned back to Mary. “Once you’ve been cleaned up, I’ll tell you who I am. I do think we’ll enjoy working together, Your Highness.”