Red Sails, Dark Moon
Andrew S. Fuller
Jinny woke to the taste of saltwater and
the feel of warm sand against her body, nudged by a strange tide. Fine, dark
green granules fell from her brown skin as she sat up on the unknown shore. She
admired the crescent beach with its perfect cerulean waves lined by a deep
gingko jungle, the ragged detail of distant slopes whose peaks were lost in crawling
clouds, and the tall black towers rising just beyond the bay’s far point.
Where she’d washed up from,
she could not recall, nor any previous detail outside of her name. This loss
troubled her deeply, but briefly, as the extravagant view and open air brought
her release. She wandered freely along the shore toward the thin angular
structures.
Her eyes followed the graceful
pattern of breaking surf out to the rolling sea, where she glimpsed enormous
dark twisting shapes beneath the surface, and the occasional green face staring
back with lucent eyes from a curling wave. Strolling away from the foamy
breakers, she heard a pleasing trill among the whispering trees. The resonant
song drew her toward a dazzling plumage within the swaying leaves.
Suddenly a group of cats
circled her legs, their soft gray and black striped bodies weaving between her
feet. A dozen swift felines pressed her away from the bewitching feathers and
dripping serrated beak, steering her into a straight path between water and
trees. Satisfied with her direction, they leapt away into the shadows and the
sun’s dim glare.
With each passing scene of
eerie coastal landscape, Jinny had a disquieting sense that she did not belong,
and hoped that in the city ahead she could find passage to a place where she
might.
The spires grew before her,
and though her feet felt no fatigue, she looked back and saw a hundred miles
had passed, and many days with them.
As beach became road, she saw
cottages and mills on the outskirts, and many colored sails billowing along the
horizon, until she rounded the bay’s point and the harbor city came into view,
proclaimed dylath-leen in carved letters on a weathered wooden sign.
Tapered buildings of stained
stone and flickering windows arched over narrow streets that wound up the hilly
cove, their shade layered in that of the basalt towers and settling dusk.
Loud songs both melodious and
crude drew her to the pier-front boulevard, where men of three dozen hues and
statures loaded and embarked on graceful crafts; the tongues of their chants
were unfamiliar to her but the mosaic of lyrics formed prodigious sagas in her
head. Passengers and laborers alike moved oddly, loping or rolling about, some
on fewer than two limbs, others on more.
Spiced and malted aromas from the
dilapidated taverns churned her sudden hunger, and she followed the newly lit
lanterns along the promenade to the raucous bustle of the tented marketplace.
Passing by the canvas stalls,
her mouth watered at the hanging six-limbed meats cured and charred to a
perfect saffron orange, spectral filigreed stalks whose steam rained sweet
crystals, and luminous, leaf-wrapped mushroom caps. A castaway with nothing to
her name, she hugged her ribs tightly and found a clutch of prismatic nautilus
shells in her frayed pockets. With these and pointing gestures she managed to
barter a bowl of dismal soup and a small mug of, if she interpreted correctly, moon-wine.
The beverage made her giddy,
and she perused the crowded bazaar, admiring many curiosities, unafraid to handle
gleaming jewelry for aberrantly shaped limbs, peculiar garments, or sinuous
carved statues whose faces blurred and shifted at her touch.
At the last tent, she was
drawn to shining cardinal gemstones arranged on an onyx table. A closer look
displayed intricate facets and peculiar runes floating within the rubies that
filled her with unease. Then an unpleasant odor made her step back. The
proprietor held up one of the ruddy gems and smiled at her, his mouth beneath
the shabby orange turban opened broadly like a wide wound filled with soot and
spiked teeth.
She tried to hustle away, but
several more men in wrapped headgear blocked the market aisle, surrounding her
with their moist, rotting pungency.
She ran between tents into the
nearest alley, banging on cold doors, then running harder, hurdling and sliding
and dodging through alcoves, careening into moonlit walls, trying to escape the
footsteps behind her that rang like hooves on the cobblestones.
The alley emerged at the pier,
and she stood before a baneful dark ship. Its tattered obsidian sail and
bulbous pitch-black hull tainted the nearby shadows. The pestiferous stench from the vessel made her gag and
weaken. The moon-wine took hold, and her knees hit the dock as the footsteps
clattered forward.
She managed to kick one of the
aggressors; a leg bone snapped to the accompaniment of a warbling scream. The
impact of his head on the wharf dislodged the turban, exposing two curved, bony
horns.
Night embraced her fully as they dragged her
aboard.
Next Jinny knew, the sea whispered
coarsely against the ship’s hull beneath her head. The stench was even worse
here, rank and thick, like the inside of a carcass. She breathed through her
mouth and lifted herself into a corner by gripping wrought metal bars. Dull
light through small round portholes showed only vague outlines of a few
cellmates.
In the gloom beyond the cage,
thick gray bodies hunched over oars, their globular limbs pulling and extending
like draining mucus. They rocked forward into a moonbeam, divulging eyeless
faces with short, flush tentacle mouthparts.
The beasts rowed harder,
surging the galley forward, and she staggered to the porthole, pushing someone
aside. She lost all of her meager meal through the small opening. Holding the
circular window frame, she breathed the salted spray and gazed at the rolling
waves and ancient sky of unfamiliar stars.
As they passed between two
great hexagonal stone pillars, the ship lurched and lifted hard under her, and
she fell back with her cellmates. The pull pinned her to the floorboards, but
she strained to stand, returning to the window. The ocean waves diminished far
below, and so shrank the distant seaport lights. It is like birds see,
she thought, as even sharp-toothed mountains shriveled and flattened. Soon the thick white brume of clouds swirled and surrounded them. The
milky haze gradually darkened and finally relented to an immense, limitless
field of black with stars brighter and crisper than she’d ever known. The
curving horizon constricted behind them as a deepening chill settled through
the ship.
Jinny gasped as a thin hand
touched her ankle. She saw the other prisoners huddled together, and left the
view outside. For warmth, she nestled against smooth skin, wooly hide, scaled
and husked bodies, as the moon’s face burned ever brighter through the
porthole.
A roaring crash tilted the entire
ship and they tumbled across the cage. From above came shouts and clattering
metal, footfalls stamping across the deck, squeals and yowls among wet chops
and meaty thuds. Some of the blind glob creatures left the oars and
half-rolled, half-flowed to the far stairs, drawing curved clubs from their
folded gray bulk.
The hatch opened above them,
and in rushed a vicious blur of slashing longswords and hissing torches. Within
the frenzied combat Jinny saw male and female attackers of many skins, but also
horns and hooves, hound-like postures, and swiping paws. Their fury felled most
of the spongy beasts and turbaned men, and drove the remaining few against the
hold wall. In the quiet that fell over the ship like a departed storm, a single
pair of booted feet echoed across the deck and descended the stairs.
Her enthralling movements
whispered in dark leather and scales, the red-haired woman strode with
authority to the cage, flicking black blood from her triangular blade. A gaunt,
cloudy-winged creature perched on her right shoulder, larger than a bat,
sable-skinned and faceless, with inward-curving horns and a barbed tail. The
woman removed her gloves, uncovering pale white hands spotted with a ruby ring,
and wiped bloody grime from her face. Age and measure showed in the creases
around her eyes, but their green irises shone fiercely.
“Now, my friends,” she said,
scanning their faces through the bars with a smile both dauntless and
comforting, “come up and see the show.”
With a single strike of her
sword’s pommel she shattered the lock on the cage. While one of her crew
stepped forward to whistle and grunt translations in at least three languages,
her emerald eyes caught Jinny’s, and her grin curled to one side.
“Well, we ain’t seen one like
you in some time.”
“What you mean, Miss?” Jinny
said, keeping her gaze low.
“That’s Captain Bloodrose you
speak with,” her translator barked. He resembled an upright hairless dog with
rubbery skin, long teeth, and carrion breath.
“It’s fine, Richard,” the
captain said, then to Jinny, “I mean human, my dear.” The winged
creature nuzzled her spiral curls.
Slowly and gently, the
prisoners were helped upstairs.
The ship’s deck had become an
abattoir, strewn with severed limbs and pulpy chunks in dull greasy blood,
among the bodies of turbaned men and bulbous creatures. Another ship, sleek and
crimson with sharp red sails, groaned against the moon-beasts’ captured vessel.
The gibbous moon was large and closer now, while the green-blue globe was
contracted far behind.
Some of the turbaned men had
surrendered and removed their headwear and robes, revealing hirsute bodies with
short tails. She saw some of their kind among the Bloodrose crew.
The four surviving
gray-blobbed beasts were encouraged with swords and spears to balance
themselves on the starboard railing. Jinny understood now that they owned the
dark ship.
Captain Bloodrose and her crew
lined up across on port side. “I give you a choice,” she called to the captured
villains. “Jump or be pushed. We’ll see whether you fall to your moon or back
to earthen ground.”
Her translator began and she
lifted a silencing hand. “They know what I say.”
One of the moon-beasts made an obscene
gesture with his nebulous arm.
The captain’s face immediately
churned with anger. At the snap of her fingers, the black creature took flight
from her shoulder. It tucked in its diaphanous wings and dived at the gray
beast. Its claws tore off a warding arm as its sharp tail pierced the tentacled
face. Then that face was ripped off for good measure.
The ruined gray body fell
away.
“Thank you, Emalee.” The flying creature
returned to her.
It took only a moment for the
other beasts to decide. Their plump, amorphous forms tumbled overboard.
“The rest of you may join my
crew, for you cannot stay here. We take turns at the rigging and the work. We
may get you home to Leng soon,
or never.”
They boarded the Arkham Rose, unhooked
grapples, and threw oil and torches back over. The black galley listed and
rolled aflame into the dark infinity beyond the planets.
“And you, my dear…” Captain
Bloodrose placed a hand on Jinny’s shoulder, then removed it just as lightly.
“You may choose between the crew bunks, or my quarters.”
The captain’s spacious cabin was
finished with exquisite hardwood walls, displaying dozens of weapons. Curved
and angled blades etched with obscenely elaborate patterns and inhuman symbols,
fearsome hooked axes, worn stone clubs, curved bows crafted from mingled woods,
dozens of knives each a different honed shape, and some oddly twisted implements
not forged for a five-fingered hand. They all exhibited nicks and scrapes from
heavy use.
Captain Bloodrose seemed
engrossed in polishing her battle blade, so Jinny stood in waiting, as night’s
chill settled on her skin. She worried at the choice she’d made.
The painting hung over a
map-filled desk caught her attention. She studied the brushstroke detail of the
single tree in the harvest field, where something sinister seemed to wait, and
she looked away.
The captain hung her sword and
sat heavily at the desk chair, as her gaunt pet flew over to an iron perch by
the window. She tried to tug off a boot, and was unsuccessful.
Jinny knelt and assisted. She
paired the footwear together against the wall.
The captain sighed. “Here I
was trying to be so alluring.” She undid her hair tie and curls fell past her
shoulders.
“You look fine, Miss.” And she
meant it.
“I’m sorry — what’s your name,
young lady? And where are you from?”
“It’s Jinny, Miss.” She still
could not remember anything before the weird beach. “I can’t…”
“Georgia, by your accent, or
maybe Louisiana?” The captain rubbed her feet.
“I don’t know such places you
say, Miss.”
“You should, I think. We’ll
work on that.”
Jinny frowned. She looked back
at the painting and was startled to see it now depicted carnivorous-looking
mountains. Unearthly fires burned on their slopes, around which ominous figures
danced.
“Richard painted this for me,”
the captain gestured. “Like all my crew, he had a very different life before
joining us. Come now!” She stood and pulled Jinny upright, rubbing her cold
arms. “You’re freezing! You need a hot bath.”
“I’ll warm some water, Miss.”
“Now, you must call me Captain
out there. In here, you can call me Pyrena. Or if you get cross with me, Pyrena Coccineous Meredith Rose.”
Then she barked at the door. “Richard!”
Soon the ghoul brought buckets
in his powerful paws, and filled the clawfoot tub in the corner.
“Miss Captain… Pyrena, have
you been to the moon?”
“It’s my aim to do so. I’ll
need more ships to get there.”
“It always looked far away and
colder than ice.”
“True. In fact you cannot
breathe upon it at all, nor in the gulf of space between.”
Before she could ask more,
Pyrena held her gaze and said, “This is one of the ways, Jinny, that we know we
are dreaming.” Without looking, she pointed again to the painting. It now
showed a verdant garden with a primeval arch crumbling over a yawning, murky
pit.
Pyrena Rose fetched a drying
cloth and sendal robe from
the closet, and turned away while Jinny dressed. Then she led her behind a
folding partition to a gossamer canopy bed. “You sleep here and I have a sofa.”
She paused, pulling back the covers. “Until — or if… you should ever like me to
join you.”
Jinny felt a warm sensation
she was sure she’d not felt before.
“We’ll start your training
tomorrow. No telling how long you’ll be here.”
“I’d like to stay, Miss. Miss
Pyrena.”
“I’d like you to. There aren’t
many women here.”
The fine threads of the bed
sheets glowed gently, and Jinny slid deep into their celestial sensation.
She woke in horrendous pain,
elsewhere. The skin on her back roared with a deep, itching fire. The air was
different, muggy and plant sweet. Mosquitoes whined and bit. Someone touched a
damp cloth to her forehead and sang softly of a sweet chariot. And Jinny
slipped again. Away.
The tremolo song of seabirds and
rhythmic waves against the ship’s keel eased Jinny awake. Sometime before dawn
they’d settled back into terrestrial ocean. The gaunt creature huddled under
its wings in the morning sun. The captain was absent, so Jinny dressed in the
folded clothes and boots laid out for her. She noticed the unrolled maps and
sat at the desk, trying to ignore the painting above it showing a stalactite
city hanging in an umbral cavern.
She studied the hand-inked papyrus
filled with jagged mountain coasts, reclusive islands, boundless deserts, and
swirling seas labeled in script with names like Sarnath and Xur, Hatheg Kla and Inganok. The continents
and islands remained more or less consistent across the maps, but among all the
renderings, one location was not fixed. The land called Leng seemed to move.
The cabin door opened to a
panting hooded figure. “The captain is ready for you.” Richard lowered the cowl
and huffed.
Out on the deck, crew scurried
like insects among the ropes and spars. The captain and two of her officers
stood by the center mast below the largest sail.
“Good morning, crewman Jinny.”
The captain’s expression was devoid of warmth. “Up the ratlines with you to the
main top.”
Jinny did not know what she
meant, but followed the captain’s steady glance upward. Her stomach dropped.
She climbed the rigging very
slowly, shaking with terror. Once she reached the crossbeam, she looked out in
every direction, where an occasional massive shadow moved beneath the cobalt
surface. She remained aloft until she could let go of the mast and stand freely
on the yardarm, balanced against each wave and gust.
She learned the parts and
areas of the frigate, from mizzenmast to bowspirit, from headsail to
escutcheon. She learned to reeve a rope, gybe a sail, and lash a trice. She
learned, and became less afraid.
When she returned exhausted to the
cabin, the captain smiled pleasantly and threw a naked sword at her, point
first.
Jinny closed her eyes,
flinching from the expected pain, but then she felt the sword handle tight in
her hand and opened her eyes.
“Good,” Pyrena said. “I
thought you had a thing about you. Few can do this.”
“But how did I…”
“Don’t think on it. Just be as
you want, and will events to be. It doesn’t always work. But it can in
this place.”
Jinny’s confusion became
frustration. “And where is this place?”
“You remember what I said last
night?”
“That we’re… dreaming. Tell
me, will I ever wake?”
“That may be up to you.”
Jinny gripped the cutlass
firmly, swung it to a controlled stop.
Pyrena attacked with her
blade. When Jinny parried the slashes and thrusts, Pyrena snuck a solid elbow
into her cheek and swept her legs.
“Don’t assume it can be easy,
that you’ll wake up whenever you want.”
“How long have you been here?”
“Decades. More than I
remember. Probably in a coma hooked up to life support. I have two daughters.
Now, stop asking questions.” She nicked her blade edge over Jinny’s forearm.
The blood came immediately. “There is real pain here.”
Jinny’s training began in
earnest with the wooden bō staff and many
bruises. It would finish with the knife.
They followed the Southern Sea trade
routes and prowled the Zar coast
near the Forest of Parg until
the lookout spied black sails in the fog. They doused lamps and slid in fast
through the white mist, ramming the Arkham Rose’s rostrum into the black
ship’s forecabin.
They
boarded in a wedge formation. Jinny watched from the far quarterdeck as Pyrena
danced through the swarming ruckus, swung and cut in graceful fury, slashed,
ducked and rolled among the fray, delivered knee strikes and headbutts, spun
and pierced. The captive Leng servants fought hard, and at each scuffle she
stepped back to let them flee or surrender. Those who charged again she cut
down, the moon-beasts flowing up malodorously from below.
One of the toadlike creatures
felled two of the mercenary crew, oozed over the railing, and advanced on Jinny
with an onyx club. Its tentacled face writhed angry red as its form stretched,
looming taller. At the last moment Jinny lifted the bardiche axe from behind
her and cleaved the gorger from soft skull to softer belly. Her heart
thundered.
When the battle was won, they
hauled crates from the ship’s putrid hold. Captain Bloodrose pried off one of
the lids and they gasped at the many thousand glinting rubies. Then they dumped
the crates into the frothing brine.
“Why waste so many
jewelstones?” Jinny wondered aloud. “You could buy an armada.”
One of the Leng women, now a
boatswain holding a gory spiked war mace, overheard. “Not everyone the
moon-beasts take to their bleak satellite become slaves. Each terrible gem is
fashioned from the blood and essence of a stolen life.”
After dinner, Jinny searched
the ship for the captain, and finally climbed high above the mainsail to find
her in the crow’s nest. Wordlessly, she lifted Pyrena’s hand bearing the ruby
ring and held it to her own chest. Then she embraced the woman. Annoyed, Emalee
flew off. Jinny held Pyrena firmly until the sobbing ceased, and into the
night.
As they sailed past Hlanith into the Cerenarian Sea,
Jinny gently turned Pyrena’s head, arms reached back around her neck, and their
lips sealed together, trembling at first. The warm ocean wind tried to part
them, but they pulled closer as their yearning hands and tongues revealed and
fed their starved passion.
Barely able to pause their
ardor, they descended the rigging. Once behind the locked cabin door, they
slowly undressed each other to unwavering eyes. They embraced again in the
canopy bed, as excited touch provoked warming skin and roused thrilling
breaths. Three times Jinny’s pleasure peaked, and three times she cried out in
intractable joy.
She tried eagerly to return
the bliss, and with Pyrena’s patient instruction, found success.
Long after the launch of Pyrena’s
purring snore, Jinny found herself awake. She untangled their limbs and stood
nude by the window in the nocturnal sheen, scowling at the moon. Thinking there
would be no answer, she whispered, “You said two daughters, but only wear one
ruby.”
“Well, Emalee is with me every
day.” Pyrena sat up in bed.
Jinny turned and tried not to
stare.
“She’s only seven years old.”
Pyrena gestured at the winged creature on the perch. “She visits her father
when our travels take us near Oriab
Isle.” Then her smile faded and her voice filled with sorrow. “Before her,
there was Babette.” She
touched her red jeweled ring. “Babette was taken on her thirteenth birthday. I
lost her in the market crowd in Dylath-Leen. I searched for hours and came to
the docks just as they pulled her wailing aboard a black ship.” Her forest eyes
burned brilliant with tears and resolution. “Two years later they tried to sell
me a ruby in the same marketplace. The stone screamed to me. I stole it and
ran.”
“And her father?”
“I was pregnant when I arrived
here. He never followed.”
Jinny returned to bed, her
body shaking with fury. “Pyrena. I will help you to change the tide.” But even
after her lover’s breathing calmed, she did not sleep.
They trained and sparred for hours
each day. In time, Jinny learned not just to swing, but a dexterous flow with
many swords: epée, cutlass, spadroon, and hwandudaedo. She learned to spin and hook the crow’s bill pickaxe, strike
fast with lathi sticks,
make sing and snap the qijiebian
chain whip, and hurl from bow to stern the barb-tipped sibat spear, planting it squarely into a penny’s
face. The weapon with which she forged the strongest bond was the
forward-curved panabas axe;
it became an artful extension of her arm, and of her emboldened will.
Captain Bloodrose’s bedside
cabinet contained many lewd implements that Jinny also learned to wield, from
the clockwork resonating slender (in both manual and wearable forms) to the
undulating mollusk glove, from the incandescent feather to the pulsing lambency
baton. On one voyage Pyrena diverted their course to the cultured city of Celephais, where she
procured a few customized items from her favorite shop.
On the days that followed
those late nights of pleasure, the combat training seemed doubly fierce.
On her twenty-first raid,
boarding a black biota cargo
ship east of the Sunken City, the two war dames of the Arkham Rose swung
each other by the arm into the melee, placing themselves back to back and
laughing as they traded foes, when Jinny noticed the sparse crew, many of whom
fled overboard. The exchange finished quickly.
It took the mauls of two
crewmen to break the lock on the hold. Before the latch was lifted, the hatch
erupted open and a giant shaggy beast roared onto the spar deck.
Covered in dreadful black fur
and serpentine scales, taller than three men, it brayed glottal rage at the sun
through a vertically split mouth of gnashing yellow teeth. Whipping two
powerful arms that ended in four taloned claws, it rent a sail and bludgeoned a
dozen fighters, sending them rolling across the deck in a volley of snapping
bones.
They tried to drive the brute
back with spears and atlatls, but the behemoth stormed across the deck, great
claws scraping the planks.
All the other crew fell away,
and soon Captain Bloodrose found herself trapped against the railing. She
looked up at the monstrosity, and swapped hands with her sword. With a
thunderous downward fist it crushed the captain’s left arm against the stout
wood in a spray of blood and splinters. The captain staggered to one knee and
dropped her weapon, panting weakly.
Jinny slid between them,
slashing her blade into the giant fiend’s crotch. When the monster convulsed
forward, she cut again, two-handed, and severed the terrifying head into the
sea.
The pulverized bones of Pyrena’s hand
were beyond healing, and she did not cry out or weep when they sawed it off at
the forearm, nor when they applied the searing hot iron.
When the sweats abated, Jinny
stood before her partner and took a deep breath. Her feelings became a
maelstrom inside her. “Captain, I request to stay my nights in the bunks among
the crew.”
“It’s ‘Captain’ now, is it? If
that’s your wish.”
“I don’t want the crew seeing
me different.”
“Is that all?”
“I… don’t want to become
soft.”
“These are all choices. What
do you really want?”
“You were showing off today.
You could have died.”
“I saved my good arm. What is
it you want?”
“I want my own ship. I want to
sail you to the moon and hack it to pieces.”
“I’m very proud of you,
Jinny.”
Jinny was on her way to speak with
the captain about building a fast corvette when she saw her invite one of Leng women to
her cabin, and heard the lock turn. Jinny stood on the deck of the ship for a
long time, reminding herself of her choice, and barricading the tears. Then she
relieved the wheelman at the helm. As the sun set behind the endless waves,
Emalee glided in to perch on her shoulder.
When they acquired a second
ship, Pyrena gave its command to Richard, despite his nocturnal proclivity.
Jinny spent more time with Richard,
listening to his grunted poetry. She stayed up all night with the men and women
of Leng, downing mugs of zoog rum and bellowing sea shanties of old Sarkomand with the natives of
Parg. She read most of the ship’s library, from the expansive Pnakotic Manuscripts to
the living fables of Vemoqi
and the Crystal Leaves erotica. She spent hundreds of hours at the
forecastle hearth with the old serpent man Ophidian Drake, until she could forge a blade folded
with ebon ore from the Peaks of
Thok. When finished, the honed steel coruscated darkly even in the high
sun.
For a seven-year campaign, they
raided, fought, and pillaged. It took that long to build a loyal company and
fleet of a dozen vessels. They slew many. When they finally chanced upon the
elusive plateau of Leng, none of the native crew wanted to depart.
Jinny’s skill with a blade was
now unmatched. In all those years, she could not remember sleeping. When they
finally launched the crusade for the sinister moon, she captained her own craft
and an elite guard of cats.
“Onward now!” shouted Admiral
Bloodrose from the bowspirit of the Arkham Rose. “We leave Kadath far
astern!” She thrust forth the iron point of her hooked hand.
The thirteen red ships sailed
through the basalt pillars and lifted from the ocean waters, past the horizon’s
cliff, they rose into the cold breadth of space, their figureheads aimed at the
moon.
They would lose many, but once
the lunar beasts were conquered, they would be free to sail beyond, to
anywhere, into new dreamlands.
Jinny adjusted the jib of the New
Orleans, and made calculations. Her palms were damp on the wheel. She was
alarmed to see the commander’s ship had broken formation and slid alongside
hers. Just yards away, the admiral was looking only at her, puffing on her
pipe. Jinny did not recall her smoking, but the aroma was very familiar.
A flash of sadness crossed
Pyrena’s face, and she smiled tearfully. “So soon, my love…” she said, her face
shrinking away.
She dwindled with every
surrounding detail, losing vividness and color, out of view.
Jinny realized herself
falling, away from the ship and the moon, ripping through dark and light,
silence collapsing toward nothing.
All was gone, replaced with
something new.
She woke on a dirty cot in a humid
shack.
“Oh, Jinny,” said the black
woman dabbing her forehead, “the fever all broke now.”
She staggered out into the
yard, and was assaulted by the scene. The colonial white columned house
surrounded by draping magnolias and live oaks, the song of cicadas, the smell
of fresh tobacco leaves, and the branding scar on her calf. The awful
familiarity of every sensation rushed back, as reality petrified around her.
The white-suited man on the
great wraparound porch stood from his wicker chair and stared at her, removing
the pipe from his mouth. Seeing Mr. Hightower’s face, the burning lacerations
flared on her back. And seeing his mischievous young son Trevor standing next
to him, she remembered the missing silver butter knife and every one of the
thirty lashes and why she would no longer work in the house.
Jinny howled at the sky and
the hidden moon. Let them think her mad.
She worked every day in the fields
from sunrise to sunset, where blisters became calluses, her arms grew hard and
weary, and the true world annealed.
The scars on her back closed and settled to a distant gnawing.
She fell to exhausted sleep
each night, but could not find the key to her dreams. The coast of the Six
Kingdoms eluded her; no more did she smell the spindrift of the Cerenarian Sea,
or feel the rise of the main deck beneath her feet. When she wept, she kept it
behind her eyes.
Time got on, until one day in
the spring, when Jinny cultivated the tobacco seedbeds at dusk and a wide
shadow passed over the field. The workers all looked up in fear as a black
galleon slid impossibly across the face of the rising full moon and swept
around out of the sky to ground among the crop rows. The overseer fell from his
horse and scampered away toward the big house with the rest of them, every soul
on the plantation quaking with terror… save one.
Jinny dropped the hoe and took
up the overseer’s fallen machete and pistol. She advanced on the reeking dark
warship as the gangplank lowered to the earth.
She would paint those black
sails a hot glistening red.