Read The Pirate's Wish Online

Authors: Cassandra Rose Clarke

Tags: #assassins, #magic, #pirates, #curses, #ships, #high fantasy, #epic fantasy, #fantasy, #deserts, #Romance, #Young Adult, #Adventure

The Pirate's Wish (12 page)

BOOK: The Pirate's Wish
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She disappeared into the back of the house. Naji and me stood in silence, and I listened to the waves rolling in to the beach behind us. Naji was still fuming over Ceria’s comment about his face – I could see it in the way he kept balling up the rotted fabric of his shirt in one hand.

I tried to work up the nerve to apologize to him.

Naji said, “Captain Namir yi Nadir will cover his face.”

“Marjani won’t like that.”

“Marjani can dress up as a man if she wants a captain so badly. I’m covering my face.”

Old Ceria came into the room, a tattered brocade coat tossed over one arm, some trousers and shirts tossed over another.

“I should be getting you a scarf, then,” she said.

Naji sneered at her and she threw the clothes at him.

“Ain’t scared of you, blood magician. Got nothing but seawater in these veins.” She nodded at me. “You best watch out, girl.”

“He won’t hurt me,” I said.

“Seems to me he already has.”

Naji stalked outside with his new captain’s clothes, but I stayed in the house for a minute or two longer, staring at her, thinking back to those horrible afternoons as a kid, digging up sand on the beach for her spells.

“How’d you know?” I asked.

“I’m a witch, darling,” she said. “I saw you coming two weeks back. I know his story too, the curse and all. The kiss.” She winked at me.

I scowled at her, then jumped up and pushed out of the house before I said something I’d regret. With a jolt, I wondered if she would tell the Hariris that she saw me, but then I remembered she’d always hated the Hariris more than other pirates. Maybe she’d just tell Mama.

Still, it was a reminder that I wasn’t in the north anymore – I was back in the parts of the world where the Hariri clan had plenty of eyes, and no doubt they’d still be looking for me, even if I’d mostly forgotten about them over the last few months, seeing as how I had bigger problems on my mind. I’d have to come up with some excuse for not dawdling in port. Threaten to feed some Empire man to the manticore. I felt sorry enough for her as it was, having to eat fish bones and sea birds again.

Naji stood at the side of the road, pulling his hair over his scar, the clothes lying in a pile at his feet.

“You’re getting ’em all dusty!” I shouted.

“Who cares?” Naji asked. “They’re just going to rot once we make sail.”

I picked up the clothes and shoved them at him. He yanked them away from me, his hair hanging in curls across his face.

“Why did you bring me here?” he asked.

“To get you clothes.”

“You knew she would–” His face twisted up with anger. “You knew she would say something. You wanted her to.”

I looked away from him, cheeks burning.

“Why?” The question was sharp and painful a knife. It cut into me and I knew I deserved it. “Why did you do it?”

“You should change,” I muttered. “Before we go back into town.”

He glared at me.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t think… I didn’t do it on purpose.” I still couldn’t look at him. “And your face doesn’t look like a half-roasted pig anyway.”

Silence. The wind blew in from the ocean, stirring up sand and dust.

“You have no idea what it’s like,” Naji said.

 

CHAPTER SIX

Marjani had already set up at the Starshot drinkhouse, claiming a table in the back, away from the singer warbling some old Confederation tunes. I threaded through the crowd, Naji behind me in his captain’s outfit. It suited him, I thought, especially the brocade coat. Before he’d covered up his face – with a scarf I nicked for him off one of the carts outside – he’d been so handsome my chest hurt to look at him.

When she saw us, Marjani folded her arms over her chest.

“Take it off,” she said.

“No,” I told her, before Naji could say anything.

She flicked her eyes over to me.

“It makes him look more formidable,” I said.

“I’m not leaving my face uncovered,” Naji said.

Marjani sighed. “No one’s going to say anything–”

“Yes,” Naji said. “They will.”

I stepped in between the two of them and said, “We should probably do this fast. Manticore’s gonna get hungry out on that boat. Don’t know how long she’ll be able to avoid temptation.”

Marjani sighed. “Yes, I’d thought of that myself. You stay here and get the drunks. I’ll go out in the street and look for the desperates.”

And then she was out the door.

It didn’t take long for word to circulate that the Pirate Namir yi Nadir was in port and that he was signing up men for his new crew. Probably helped that an Empire warship flying pirate colors was waiting out in the docks, but mostly it was the fact that pirates can’t keep their mouths shut for longer than five minutes. It occurred to me that leaving port early probably wasn’t gonna be good enough – I needed to keep my face covered, too, before some Hariri ally or wannabe-ally or plain ol’ asshole who wanted to kick up a fight spotted me and kidnapped me back to Lisirra.

All that time on the Isles of the Sky, with no company but Naji and the manticore, had left me soft. Not wary enough, like the Mist woman had said.

So I snuck out back and slipped down the street till I came to a shop selling scarves and jewelry. I bought a pair of scarves and covered my face the way Naji did and wrapped my hair up in the Empire style, though with a black scarf instead of a red one. The cloak hid my chest well enough. I figured I could pass for a man.

“And who the hell are you supposed to be?” Marjani asked when she came back in with some men she’d picked up off the streets.

“The rat who got Captain Namir yi Nadir the ship,” I said.

She frowned. I could tell she didn’t approve. Messed up his reputation, having a ship handed to him on account of subterfuge.

“A prisoner?” I said. “Who agreed to sail under his colors? And by allowing me my freedom we can see the extent of his mercy?”

“Better,” Marjani said. “And the mask?”

“A show of solidarity.”

She didn’t push that none, neither. I don’t know why I hadn’t yet told her about the Hariri clan. Felt bad about lying in the first place, I guess. And she’d had this all planned out – it was the reason me and Naji weren’t still stuck on that frozen floating slab of rock after all. I didn’t want to be the one to throw a kink in her plans.

I’d just keep my face covered, and we’d be fine.

It was mostly Marjani who did the recruiting anyway. She’d done it before, I could tell. Even now that she was back in the drinkhouse, she didn’t just sit down and wait for men to come to her – she wove through the place, Naji trailing behind her like a puppy, dodging whores and serving girls and the worthless outlaws who came out here not knowing one whit about sailing a ship. She had an eye for the ones that would know what they were doing, and she knew how to catch ’em at their drunkest, when they would slap an X on anything you stuck in front of ’em.

She left me in charge of the table, in case anyone came asking. I leaned back in my chair and sipped from my pint of beer and tried not to think about Naji.

“Excuse me? This where I sign up to sail with Captain Namir yi Nadir’s crew?”

The voice was speaking Empire all posh and educated, and when I dropped down in my chair and looked up I saw one of the soldiers we’d cut free when we made port.

“What you want to sail with us for?”

“Are you the manticore’s trainer?” The soldier reached over and plucked at the mask. I slapped his hand away.

“I ain’t her trainer. And we ain’t taking on mutineers.”

“I’m not a mutineer.” The soldier sat down at the table. “Where are you sailing?”

I crossed my arms over my chest.

“Well?”

Marjani had given me some story or another, but most of it had slipped out of my head due to drink. “Captain’s sailing after treasure.”

“All pirates sail after treasure,” the soldier said. “What in particular is he looking for?”

I fixed him my steeliest glare. “Gotta ask him yourself.”

The soldier looked me right in the eye. “I will. Once I’m onboard your ship. What about that manticore? She sailing with us, too?”

That, at least, I could answer. “At least as far as the Island of the Sun. She and I made a deal, and now I’m making good on it and taking her home.”

The soldier arched his eyebrow. “You made a deal with a manticore?”

I shrugged.

“Well,” he said. “That if nothing else has convinced me.” He grabbed the name sheet and the quill Marjani had left with me. I tried to snatch it away from him – no luck. “There isn’t an Empire general alive who could make a deal with a manticore and survive.” He scrawled his name across the sheet.
Jeric yi Niru
. The
yi
gave him away as nobility, I knew, and I knew too his nobility was real, since no Empire soldier would lie about his status the way a pirate would – the way, for example, Marjani had lied about the status of the pirate Namir yi Nadir. I scowled at the sheet.

“I’ll feed you to the manticore first sign of trouble,” I told him.

He gave me a smile. He was older, with streaks of gray in his hair, although his skin wasn’t as weatherworn as it would’ve been had he spent his whole life at sea.

“The Empire look suits you,” he said before turning away and heading off toward one of the serving maids. I don’t trust handsome people, and he wasn’t handsome in the slightest. I decided to give him the benefit of the doubt.

“Hey!” I shouted. “Snakeheart!”

He looked over at me. “I’m not an Empire soldier anymore. I’m afraid the epithet no longer fits.”

“We set sail at sunrise tomorrow. You’re not there, we’re leaving you.”

He gave me a nod.

“And I ain’t kidding about the manticore!”

He just laughed, which pissed me off. I wanted to shout something back to him, but he was talking to the serving girl again, leaning in close to her, and I figured he wasn’t gonna pay me no mind.

Marjani and Captain Namir yi Nadir came back about thirty minutes later. I hadn’t gotten anybody to sign up save for Jeric yi Niru, who seemed to have stashed himself in a corner with a pitcher of ale. Marjani handed me her logbook, folded open to the first page. There were names spelled out in her neat, tidy handwriting down one side, a row of mostly Xs cascading down the other, mixed in with the occasional signature.

She tucked my loose sheet of paper, with its one signature, back in the logbook. “Our crew, Captain.”

“Stop calling me that,” said Naji.

“Just getting you used to it,” she said.

Naji turned to me, his eyes big and dark over the edge of his mask. “Are you my decoy?” he asked.

“What?”

He ran his fingers across my scarf. I could feel his touch through the fabric, on my lips, and my whole body shivered.

“No.” I stood up, pulling myself away from him. “I need something to drink.”

He didn’t say nothing more, though Marjani watched us close, eyes flicking back and forth, until I turned and melted into the crowd.

 

The crew we signed up turned out decent. Not as good as Papa’s crew, but better than the
Goldlife
bunch. A handful of ’em were Confederation drifters, men who got the tattoo but don’t stick to one particular ship, but most were unaffiliated sailors from the Free Countries in the south. A crew like Papa’s, which is bound to one particular ship and captain, aren’t so keen to sail with outsiders. It’s an honor thing, though Mama used to tell me it was really just plain ol’ snobbery, the way Empire nobility looks down on the merchants. But the drifters aren’t so particular, probably cause they’re used to a crew like Papa’s looking down on ’em for jumping from boat to boat, and our crew blended together without much trouble.

I kept my face covered the first few days, but got sick of it soon enough, the cloth half-smothering me in the humid ocean air.

“Finally,” Marjani said. I’d taken my hair out of the Empire scarf, too. I was still wearing the cloak, though I kept it open at the neck on account of the heat. “I was starting to hear rumbling about how you and Captain Namir yi Nadir were the same man.”

“What? That don’t make no sense. They’ve seen us together before.”

She waved her hand dismissively. “They thought he could copy himself, be in two places at once.”

“They thought I was Naji? I don’t look nothing like him!”

“I told you,” Marjani said. “People will believe anything.”

In truth, I could see how the crew might’ve gotten that idea about Naji. He kept to his captain’s quarters most of the time and let Marjani do all the captaining. She got me to be her first mate – “Second mate,” she called it – and at first I wasn’t quite sure how to act. I’d seen Mama plenty, of course, so I tried to act like her. I kept my back straight and my head high and I carried a dagger and a pistol with me everywhere I went. Got real good at whipping out the dagger and holding it up to some back-talking crewman’s neck, too.

BOOK: The Pirate's Wish
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