CHAPTER 2

A Strange Sail

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DUNCAN KNEW WHAT HE WAS SUPPOSED TO DO if his mother was working late—do his homework, make himself something to eat. But today had been the day when they took the national tests at the monastery school, and Friar Gregory, his teacher, had assigned no homework.

Grizel butted his leg with her head. “What about supper?”

At the word, Duncan’s stomach sent up a small grumbling sound of discontent. He opened the icebox and saw what he had expected to see: a little bread, a little cheese, a couple of wilted carrots. Enough for one person, perhaps, but certainly not for two.

Duncan chewed on a fingernail. If he ate it all, his mother would come home to nothing. She would say she wasn’t hungry, of course—or she would say that they had fed her supper at her last music lesson. It might even be true.

He closed the icebox slowly. Probably his mother was fine. Probably she had something to eat. And whatever Fia had wanted to tell him about his mother, it was probably something that only a kitten would think was important.

“Try the sea chest,” suggested Grizel, who had seen what was in the icebox and had not been impressed. “I’ve seen her take money out of it, in an emergency.”

Duncan glanced up the stairway to the landing. The old black sea chest with its brass bindings had been there as long as he could remember, but his mother kept it locked, and he had never once seen inside. “This isn’t exactly an emergency,” said Duncan.

“Of course it’s an emergency.” Grizel’s meow was insistent. “There’s no fish.”

“There’s no money, anyway. If there were, she would have bought some food.” Duncan shrugged, trying not to care that the icebox was nearly empty. He pursed his lips in a whistle and pounded up the stairs to the window again. Maybe his mother was coming up the road by now. Maybe she was late because someone had paid her early and she had stopped to buy groceries.

The cliffside road was still empty, but in the bay below there was plenty of motion. The fishing boats were closer now, inside the sweep of beach that curled around the bay like a cat’s tail. People, so small from this distance they looked like moving black dots, gathered at the shore, waiting to buy fresh fish for their suppers.

But there was something else moving. A scrap of white, out at sea. Duncan leaned out the open window and shaded his eyes, squinting. A sail, but on what boat? The fishing boats were almost in. And the big supply ship from Capital City had already come yesterday and gone again.

He licked his finger and tested the breeze. The boat at sea had her sail out full—she was running before the wind, heading straight for the island of Dulle. She might enter the bay in a half hour.

Grizel brushed up against his side and gave an inquisitive meow.

“There’s a new boat coming in,” said Duncan. He stepped over Grizel and hurried down the stairs.

“And where do you think you’re going?” The cat followed him, her whiskers stiff.

“Down to the wharf. There might be mail. There might be news.” Duncan yanked on his boots and promptly broke a bootlace. He grunted his impatience and tied a reef knot to join the broken ends. Hanging around sailors was useful—he’d learned all his knots from them years ago.

“There might be trouble from your mother if you go down to the docks.” Grizel planted herself in front of the door and fluffed out her fur to make herself seem bigger. “You know she doesn’t allow you to go there when the ship from Capital City comes in.”

Duncan pushed the end of his bootlace carefully through the eyelets. “She doesn’t allow me to go when the supply ship comes in. That’s because it’s big and uses dangerous equipment for unloading. But this is only a sailboat, and it looks pretty small to me.” He knotted his laces tightly. A boy who was clever and quick on his feet stood a good chance of making some extra money if he got to the wharf when a boat first docked. The skipper might need an errand run or a message delivered.

“But your mother will worry!”

“She won’t know I’ve gone until I get back safely. And she’ll like it if I bring some fish for supper.” Duncan stood up.

Grizel’s ears pricked forward with sudden interest. “Or eels?”

Duncan reached for the door. “You won’t get anything if you don’t move out of my way.”

Grizel hesitated. “Put on your cap, then. You told your mother you would. And I’m coming with you.”

Duncan rolled his eyes. The leather cap his mother insisted he wear when he went outside was a little much, in his opinion. With the earflaps down, it covered every bit of his dark red hair, and it even buckled under the chin. It was a good cap to have when the sea wind turned cold—the other boys had caps like it, too—but it was stupid to wear it on a sunny afternoon. Still, Grizel was right. He had promised.

“You’d better fasten the chin straps,” said Grizel, but Duncan ignored her. Only little boys buckled their caps.

Duncan galloped down the cobblestone streets, his chin straps flapping. The narrow lanes were shadowed in the late afternoon, but the flower boxes were full of bright color, and the scent of freesias filled the air. Clatter, clatter went Duncan’s boots, and the noise echoed off the houses, built from gray island stone so long ago that moss had crept up almost to the windows. The doors were painted blue, or green, or red, and windows were hung with curtains of the thick white lace that island women tatted, sitting in the sun. Duncan had seen them at their work, elderly women with knobby fingers, and he knew their cats.

“Slow down!” cried Grizel. “I’m not a young cat anymore!”

Duncan looked back at the small moving patch of fur a full block behind and felt a pang. Grizel was an old cat—he hadn’t realized how old. But if he went much slower, he might not be at the wharf when the boat docked, and someone else would get whatever jobs were going.

“I’ll wait up at the bookstore,” he called back, seeing the familiar green awning ahead. It wouldn’t hurt to wait one minute, and he wanted to see if the bookseller had turned the page.

He skidded to a stop and pressed his nose against the bookstore window. The book he’d looked at every day for three weeks was still on display, but the page hadn’t been turned since yesterday.

A Recent History of Arvidia,” he murmured hurriedly to himself, saying the title aloud for the pleasure of it. “Being the True Tale of Kings and Queens, True Loves and Vile Hates, Clashes at Sea and on Land, Together with an Account of Great Ships and Their Builders.” A sign next to the book said, INCLUDES MAJOR EVENTS OF THE PAST TEN YEARS!

Duncan looked hungrily at the picture, which showed a three-masted ship being built, and wished that he could see the illustration on the next page. Maybe it would show directions for building a smaller boat. The fishermen had taught him how to mend a boat, but he had never built one from scratch.

“You could go in the bookshop,” said Grizel, arriving slightly out of breath. “Then you could open any book you like.”

“No money,” said Duncan briefly. “Let’s go.”

“It doesn’t cost anything to look.” Grizel gazed wistfully at the bookshop. The owner was generous with kitty treats, in her experience, and she wanted one.

Duncan scuffed the toe of his boot over a loose pebble. He never liked to go into any shop unless he had coins in his pocket. Then, if he didn’t buy anything, it would be because he didn’t choose to, not because he couldn’t.

Grizel stared at him with her yellow eyes. “You have too much pride,” she said. “You have the pride of a Mc—” She coughed delicately and spit up a furball.

Duncan kicked up the loose gray pebble and dropped it into his pocket. He glanced down the long, narrow street, already crowded with people hurrying home from work or shopping. “Let’s go. Do you want me to carry you?”

Grizel’s whiskers twitched as she looked around. “Other cats might see.”

“Now who’s too proud?” Duncan grinned. “Keep up if you can. I’ll meet you at the docks if you get that far.”

He stepped over Grizel’s furball, dodged a woman with a market basket, and took off at a cheerful trot. Today might be his lucky day. Maybe the sailboat was owned by a rich person—a noble, say—who would pay extra because Duncan was so quick and polite. Maybe Duncan would earn enough to buy food and the history book in the display window. He loved history the most of all his subjects; it just about killed him to get poor grades in it.

He hadn’t gotten a poor grade today, though, on the national tests—he was almost sure of it. Best of all, his mother would never find out.

The cobblestones rounded under Duncan’s feet as he ran, and his legs gave an exuberant spring. Snatches of sound came and went in his ears—the clatter of pans, a burst of conversation, a barking dog. Narrow houses loomed overhead, breathing cold from their mossy foundations, and his boots made an echo like the footsteps of a giant. He turned a corner without slowing, and a gathering of seagulls exploded suddenly in a flurry of feather and noise.

He jerked back instinctively and looked over his shoulder. Had anyone heard the commotion? Had he drawn attention to himself?

Duncan winced and shook his head. That was his mother’s fear, not his. It was his mother who told him to keep quiet, to stay in the background. It was his mother who worried if his grades were too good, or if he came close to winning a race.

A single clear note rang in the air: the monastery bell, ringing the quarter hour. The shadowed lane was cool, and Duncan shivered lightly as the sweat dried on his skin.

He did not like to think that something was wrong with his mother. But no other mother he knew wanted her child to be second-best.

At the end of the long row of tall houses, a blue rectangle of sky grew steadily larger. He was almost to the lower cliff road, and that was halfway down to the wharf. If Grizel was behind him, Duncan couldn’t see her. Perhaps she had gotten tired and gone home.

He emerged onto the hot, bright limestone track, with the monastery school a stone’s throw away and the bay shimmering cool beyond. Big blocks of squared stone edged the roadway, and Duncan climbed onto one to get a better view, shading his eyes against the reflected sparkles of the sea. The white scrap of sail had grown larger. He had been right; it was not a very big boat, certainly not big enough to be called a ship. It had only a mainsail and a jib. Still, it looked fast and well handled—but unbelievably, the boat was still sailing on a broad reach. Couldn’t the skipper see the rocks on the point? If he wanted to enter the bay, he would have to tack in a hurry. There was no reason to cut the point that close, no reason in the world …

Unless the boat wasn’t going to enter the bay at all.

Duncan scrambled off the stone blocks, ran uphill to a headland that extended beyond the road, and forced his way through a mass of junipers to get to the opposite side. He turned his back on the bay and looked to the west, where the sea crashed heavily against the stark cliffs. There was no bay to speak of on this side of the island, no sheltered spot where a boat could anchor in safety. The sailboat was going to pass the island by.

His stomach growled, complaining. Duncan bent over to ease the empty feeling in his middle and picked up a smooth white rock he saw at his feet. It was warm from the sun, and he held it tightly.

The sailboat was close enough now for him to see a jaunty blue pennant streaming from the mast. It made a tempting target. Duncan tossed the stone up and down in his hand—but he didn’t throw it. It wasn’t the sailboat’s fault that he was hungry and needed to earn money. He dropped the rock in his pocket to keep the gray pebble company and turned back to the road.

Grizel, limping slightly, emerged from the shadowed street, stalked to the road’s edge, and stared out to sea with narrowed eyes. Her head moved slowly, following the course of the triangular sail.

On the hillside below, rooftops shone like copper in the last rays of the sun. Beneath them, in the spacious bayside houses, children were sitting down to suppers of roast chicken and potatoes and greens. They were being told to clean their plates or they wouldn’t get dessert. Some of them were pouting.

Duncan knew this because he had been in their large and beautiful homes. At one time or another, his mother had taught music to most of the island’s children, and he had gone with her. It was only in the past year that she had allowed him to stay on his own while she taught music lessons after school. But he hadn’t forgotten what he had seen and heard while playing quietly in the corner or reading a borrowed book behind the potted palms.

Grizel curled her tail around his knee. “We can still go down to the beach. There might be fish heads to eat.”

Hands jammed deeper into his pockets, Duncan scanned the waterfront. The fishermen had already pulled their boats up onto the beach opposite the wharf where larger boats docked. Fishermen mostly did their own work, but sometimes he had helped them splice ropes or repair nets. If he was helpful enough, he might be given a leftover fish. It would be one from the day before, one that wasn’t quite fresh.

“Or,” Grizel continued, butting her blunt head against his shin, “we could go down to the baron’s manor house. They have a new cat living there, I’m told. I hear he gets a lot of extra kitty treats.”

“That’s nice for you,” said Duncan. “I can’t say I like them.”

“Robert usually has a tin of something to eat in his room,” Grizel pointed out.

Duncan gave this some thought. Robert was the baron’s son, and Robert’s little sister, Betsy, took piano lessons from Sylvia McKay. Last year, Robert and Duncan had played at sword fighting together, whacking each other with sticks all up and down the green lawn of the baron’s estate. Robert would undoubtedly have something to eat stashed in his room, and he would almost certainly share with Duncan, if he were asked. But Duncan hated the thought of going down there to beg for food.

“And you could walk your mother home,” Grizel suggested. “She’s teaching a piano lesson there right now.”

Duncan was startled. “How do you know?”

Grizel rolled her eyes. “I shall never cease to be amazed at the inadequacy of the human ear. Honestly, can’t you hear your mother’s voice? She’s counting out the rhythm to ‘King’s March.’” Grizel cocked her head to one side, her ears pricked forward. “Young Betsy doesn’t seem to have mastered the concept of six-eight time, I’m sorry to say.”