Wake of the Bloody Angel (32 page)

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Authors: Alex Bledsoe

Tags: #Fantasy, #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled

BOOK: Wake of the Bloody Angel
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“It’s not too deserted,” Suhonen said. “Someone lives here.”

Clustered along the beach was a complex shantytown of small huts. As the fog dissipated, we made out gardens, pens for animals, and what looked like a small well located beside a common walkway. The dwellings were made of rocks mortared together with mud; roofs were mats of vines over old pieces of sail canvas. Pieces of ships poked out of various structures, as if the builders had cannibalized whatever vessels brought them here.

A long dock stretched out past the low tide mark. Three small boats were tied there, bobbing in the waves.

“No cooking fires,” Jane said about the dead chimneys. “No animals in the pens. This place is deserted.”

“I don’t think we can tell that looking from the safety of the forecastle,” Clift said.

“No,” I agreed. I looked at Jane. “Is your leg up to it?”

She threw her crutch overboard, winked, and said, “Try and stop me.”

“I think I’m ready, too,” Suhonen said.

Skurnick appeared from behind him. “I told him he’s not strong enough yet. You’re not a barrel, son. We can’t just plug the holes and pour more blood into you. Your body needs time to make it.”

“I’ve got a lot left,” Suhonen said. “And I’m as strong as I need to be, like always.” Then, more softly, he added, “I need to win a fight, okay?”

Clift looked at Skurnick. “I could use him. But I won’t go against your recommendation. It’s your call.” When Suhonen started to protest, Clift silenced him with a glare.

Skurnick sighed. “What the hell. If he says he’s up to it, maybe he is. Might be the best medicine.”

Suhonen smiled. “Thanks, sawbones.”

“You can thank me by not needing my attention again,” Skurnick said dryly.

Clift said, “Get a boat ready. I’m going, so is Mr. LaCrosse, so are Captain Argo and Suhonen. I want two other volunteers.”

“Try to keep me away,” Duncan Tew said as he stepped forward. He clenched his sword tightly in his hand, and the blade reflected sunlight onto his grim face.

Clift shook his head and pushed the sword blade until it pointed safely down at the deck. “Sorry, Mr. Smith. You’ve done great work so far, but I need a more experienced sword arm.”

I said, “He’ll do. I’ll vouch for him.”

Clift’s eyebrows rose, not so much that I’d stood up for Duncan, but that I’d contradicted the captain on deck. That was a no-no in any organi zation. I quickly added, “With your permission, of course.”

“Glad to know I still have some authority,” Clift muttered. “All right, you’re in. One more. Who’ll it be?”

A squat fellow with a barrel chest and arms that hung almost to his knees said, “I’ll come along.”

Clift looked at the man dubiously. “You’re volunteering, Dietz?”

He nodded at Suhonen. “I’m the only man on the ship who can beat him at arm wrestling.”

“And that’s only when he’s drunk,” Clift said. “But all right, you’re in. Mr. Greaves, is our boat ready?”

“Aye,” the new quartermaster said.

Clift gestured grandly at the ladder hung over the side. “Gentlemen, lady—shall we get our feet dry?”

 

 

THE
beach was silent except for the distant birds and steady crash of waves against the sand. We tied up beside the other boats, none of which showed any sign of recent use. If Marteen was right, and most everyone in the village had been aboard the
Bloody Angel,
then we were safe enough. He’d said that the ones left behind would be the sick, old, and/or infirm, but I wasn’t prepared to concede that.

We stopped at the foot of the dock, looking at the buildings and the jungle beyond them. Here the whoosh of waves on the beach drowned out most of the birds’ cacophony. A few hovered overhead, hoping we’d drop something edible.

“A pirate haven,” Jane said. “I’ve seen these on other islands. When regular ports are too dangerous for them, they just set up their own. They take supplies from the ships they capture, and kidnap girls to serve their other needs. No rules, no laws, no gods.”

“No soap,” I added.

“You and your hygiene issues,” she shot back.

“Marteen did say I’d never make it as a pirate.”

“He also said someone would be here,” Clift said. “I don’t see anyone. Who would these people be, anyway? Black Edward’s original crew all drowned, didn’t they?”

No one, least of all me, had an answer for that.

“Which house does Black Edward live in?” Duncan asked. “None of these,” I said.

Jane nodded. “No, these shanties are for sailors, not captains. The lord of the manor doesn’t dwell among his serfs.”

“We’ll still check these houses and see if anyone’s hiding,” Clift said. “Make lots of noise. I don’t want to lose anyone to a misunderstanding.”

As we walked up the sand, my legs tried to convince me that I was still on the ship’s rolling deck. I knew it would happen after all this time at sea, but I hoped it would wear off soon.

I estimated fifty dwellings made up the settlement, most no bigger than my cabin on the
Cow.
The ground between them was a mix of dirt and sand, and the marks of hundreds of footsteps had been set into the sun-baked soil when it was wet following the last storm. My own boots barely left a scuff.

I opened the door to the first hut. It wasn’t really a door, just a woven straw mat attached to the doorframe by rope loops. The smell made me wince. I peeked inside and waited for my eyes to adjust to the dimness.

It was a one-room dwelling, with space for a single bed, a stove, and a sea chest in the corner. Shelves went up one wall and held souvenirs of the owner’s life, mostly knickknacks from various ships. The room was trashed as if someone had gone on a mad search through it. I suppose the men left behind might’ve gotten drunk and done this, but it was impressive destruction for sailors Marteen had described as too old and sick to serve on the
Bloody Angel.

An unmistakable rust-colored smear on the wall got my attention. Someone had bled here, and recently enough that the stain was still faintly sticky.

I stepped back to the door, tried to banish my preconceptions and take a fresh, open-minded look at the hut. Two things struck me as odd. One was that the damage was confined to the floor, and rose no higher than my waist. The shelves below that line were knocked aside and their contents scattered; above it, they were intact.

The other odd thing was the clean square spot on one wall above the damage line, where a picture had clearly hung until recently. It was nowhere amongst the debris.

I moved down the line to the next dwelling. The second hut had identical damage, down to the missing picture from the wall. And the third. But in that one, I found something else: a ship’s bell, still highly polished as if it were a treasure and carefully displayed on a high shelf. Engraved on it were the words
BLOODIE ANGELLE
. It was the first actual confirmation that Marteen had told the truth.

I emerged at the same time Jane did from across the way. She said, “Every place I’ve checked has been trashed, but low to the ground, like drunk midgets had come through. I found some bloodstains, too. And there’s a space on the wall where someone took down a picture.”

“Same here,” Suhonen said as he rejoined us.

“And me,” Clift agreed.

“And me,” Duncan said.

“Likewise,” I said.

We all looked at Dietz. He said guiltily, “I, uh . . . didn’t notice.”

“Go back and check,” Clift said. As Dietz skulked away like a guilty child, he added, “And put back anything in your pockets. We’re not pirates anymore, remember that.” To the rest of us, he said, “What else did you find?”

“I found an old bell from the
Bloody Angel,
” I said. “But no signs of life or bodies,” Jane said. “And not enough blood to indicate a real fight.” She shook her head. “Man, this stench will stick with me. Who lives like that?”

“Pirates,” Clift said.

“We never did,” she insisted.

“I think your memory is turning rosier with time,” he said.

Dietz returned. “Yep, there was a picture missing in every house. Why would somebody take them?”

“We don’t know that anyone took them,” I corrected. “We just know they’re not there.”

“Oh, that’s right,” Dietz said dryly. “Here in the tropics, the art migrates this time of year.”

“We’re migrating, too,” Clift said. “Let’s see what else the island’s got for us.”

A triangular pile of stones, like a cairn, stood at the edge of the jungle. It marked the head of a trail that led off into the thick growth. I dismantled the rocks to see if anything was hidden inside. There was not; it was a mere marker. I glanced at the trail, a dark tunnel into the thick forest of the interior.

“If Black Edward lives here,” I said, “it’s probably at the other end of this.”

“I don’t see any smoke coming from the interior,” Suhonen pointed out.

“If he’s spotted the
Cow,
I doubt he’s cooking us dinner,” Jane said.

“Unless we’re the main course,” Dietz said. “Man in desperate enough straits isn’t picky about his table fare.”

“Given everything else we have to worry about, Dietz, I’d appreciate it if you’d stop looking for new things,” Clift said. Then he strode off down the trail, the rest of us following.

 

chapter TWENTY-EIGHT

 

The
trail took the path of least resistance and meandered over the uneven landscape. It went around rocks, fallen trees, and changes in the terrain. Originally, it had been wide enough for two people, but the greenery had encroached on it. In six months, the jungle would close it up, like a healed wound.

By noon, we were exhausted, overheated, and deep in the island’s interior. We stopped at a clearing cut by a spring-fed stream, where we drank and rested in the shade. Strange sounds told us of many curious animals lurking just out of sight. Birds with cries like mocking laughter watched us from high in the trees. Hungry biting insects sought our skin.

“He’s probably dead, you know,” Jane said. She reclined against a tree with her eyes closed. A spot of blood had soaked through the bandage on her thigh, and she kept one hand waving to chase the flies away from it. If she was in pain, it didn’t show.

“Who’s probably dead?” Duncan asked as he took off his tunic, dunked it in the creek, and wiped his face with it. He had scars along his lower back and, by implication, his buttocks. I’d seen those kind of marks before: the physical sign of his foster parents’ tender care.

“Black Edward,” Jane said. “That’s our luck. I bet he died yesterday.”

“Now who needs some optimism?” I said.

She was undeterred. “If we’re extremely lucky, we’ll find his corpse. Although the maggots have likely made short work of him in this heat. He’s probably mostly liquid.”

I nudged her. “You’re a ray of sunshine, you know that?”

She laughed, but her voice was tight. “I’m ready for this leak in my damn leg to stop, that’s what I am.”

Duncan checked to make sure Clift and Dietz, the only ones unaware of his parentage, were too far away to overhear. “I hope he’s not dead. I’ve finally worked out what I’m going to say to him.” I waited, but he didn’t elaborate.

“Just bloody great,” Dietz said as he emerged barefoot from the stream, holding his battered boots. “No one to fight and nothing to loot. Tell me again why I volunteered for this chickenshit boarding party?”

“Because you thought there’d be someone to fight and something to loot,” Clift said. He stood watchfully in the shade while we rested. He was on alert, but hadn’t said why.

“I’m not sure no one’s around,” Suhonen called. “Look at this.”

We joined him beside the stream. In an open patch of mud, there was a bare human footprint. None of us but Dietz had removed our boots, and his feet were much broader.

“Fresh, all right,” I said. The sharp edges and imprinted skin detail told me that. “Made since this morning.”

Jane looked around for additional prints and quickly found them. “Here. And here. And look, he pushed through that tangle of vines. He’s headed toward the beach.”

“But he didn’t take the trail,” I said.

“Why?” Duncan asked.

“We spooked him,” Suhonen said. I nodded.

“So either he went somewhere else on the island, or else he’s probably watching us right now,” I said.

Jane nodded. So did Clift. Duncan clenched his jaw in frustration. I leaned close to him and said, “I don’t think Black Edward would be running around barefoot and hiding from every little noise.”

I wasn’t as quiet as I thought, because Dietz said, “Unless he’s gone crazy here all by himself. All this heat, the bugs, might drive anyone seal-shit nuts.” When we all glared at him, he demanded, “What?”

I shouted to the jungle, “Hey! We’re not here to loot or fight. Angelina Dirnay sent us to find Black Edward Tew. Can you help us? We can pay you.”

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