Hello again lovely readers! I had sworn to myself I wouldn't start posting before this was totally finished but I need to be held accountable to deadlines or I'm useless. The majority (read: the fun bits) are written and just knowing this is going up has got me writing the rest of it. More from me at the end...Enjoy!
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Kenna bit back a sigh as she stilled her hands from fidgeting. The captain had politely invited her up on deck but she was finding his company grating. He was everything she'd been warned he would be, licentious, persistent and with very little respect for propriety once they hit the open sea, but it was worth it for the fresh air and salty winds. The other families that traveled with them were mostly kind, but she found their proximity difficult to bear after two weeks. A naturally private person aboard a small ship, Kenna was finding the entire arrangement trying.
Agnes, the maid whom she had borrowed from the O'Neil family, trailed along behind them. Though the idea of the young girl acting as a chaperone was a bit silly, Kenna brought her along anyway. Anything to give the captain a bit of pause. A strong wave rocked the ship and Kenna stumbled slightly, allowing the captain to gallantly take her arm.
"Are you quite well, Mrs. Bell?" he said, smiling down at her, "I understood from Mrs. O'Neil that you have been seasick these last few days." He held her arm a bit too long and Kenna smiled tightly.
"Indeed it seems the open sea has been a bit much for me," she confessed to him.
"Oh ho! But were you not from a coastal town? Did you not spend time out on the tides before now?"
Kenna smiled at the man's teasing. "Indeed I did, though in the Eastern sea which agreed more with my sensibilities, it would seem."
The captain laughed heartily as though she'd made a fine joke. She smiled and turned back towards the damp air that blew across the deck. They had sailed out from the thickest fog that had hung about all morning. The clouds above were thin, and she hoped the sun would burn away the remaining mist.
But the air remained cool and moist even as the fog fell further behind them. The sea air wrapped around her, leaving its familiar chill deep inside. That too felt almost comforting, an ache that she had always carried in her bones when she was near the sea. It was her constant companion, bittersweet though it was.
The captain cleared his throat, "Mrs. Bellβ" he began. The rest of his sentence was lost in his throat as a shout sounded from the starboard bough.
"Sails at starboard!"
The captain turned to a sailor standing above them at the forecastle gesturing at something in the thick clouds at their tail.
"I've got a ship, 4 points starboard coming out of that fog bank," the man shouted.
"Less than a mile off, captain!" The urgency in the man's voice was not lost on her. The captain jumped at once and made for the stern before turning back to her and Agnes
"To quarters! All hands!" he shouted as he came back towards her, sending the men on deck scrambling to obey. The captain grasped her about the arm most indecently and pulled her across the deck.
"Captain what is going on?" Kenna asked, surprised at the dark look in his eyes. He gripped her arm tighter and marched her towards the doors of his cabin, which sat below the captain's wheel. He ushered Agnes and her inside.
"Please, remain here for the meantime. There is nothing to be concerned about." He was not convincing.
Kenna looked at Agnes as the man shut and locked the doors behind him. The sound of running boots and shouting sailors echoed in the empty room.
"What on earth?" Kenna asked.
The maid looked properly afraid. "Mistress, I think it's pirates," she whispered.
"That's ridiculous," Kenna replied. "This is the major route between Britain and the Colonies. The entire area must be crawling with navy boats. How could pirates be active in these waters?" Agnes nodded, agreeing without any lessening of the fear in her eyes. Kenna sighed and went to one of the windows to see if she could make anything out through the wavy glass. "Why do you think it's pirates?"
Agnes leapt at the opening to speak. The Widow Bell had been so quiet and withdrawn she'd never had the opportunity to tell her all she'd discovered since they boarded the ship. Her Mrs. O'Neil never gave her the chance to speak and Agnes was fairly bursting with the need to tell someone. "Well it seems that Captain Jenkins has bad blood with a certain pirate and he's been nervous of an attack for some time now."
Kenna wrenched her head around sharply to look at the girl, ignoring her body's demands that she be more careful with her movements."I beg your pardon?" was all she could muster.
The girl looked properly enthused now. "An old shipmate from his time in the Royal Navy has taken to buccaneering, and Jenkins is afraid he might be a target from some old grudge they had once."
"
Captain
Jenkins," Kenna reminded her. "How on Earth did you learn all this?" She'd met Agnes thinking she was a simpleton looking for a way out of the crush in Belfast, taking employment with a family she barely knew on her way to the colonies. Perhaps the girl was more adventurous than she'd given her credit for. Kenna looked her unlikely chaperone over, appraising her with new eyes.
"Sorry Mistress." Agnes looked a bit sheepish. "It's just that given the lack of chores and such I've had so little to do so I'd taken to walking the lower decks some, just to stretch my legs a bit. The sailors are frightfully friendly!" she said in reassurance when she saw the concern in the older woman's eyes. "And they gossip worse than the old biddies back home."
"Well," Kenna said after a disapproving pause. "It is unlikely that we will engage them. The Captain will not risk the ship and the souls on board for some old fight." The thought occurred to her, even as she spoke, that the captain seemed just the kind of man to risk others to save his own neck. Agnes came to the same conclusion, and Kenna watched the fear return to the girl's round face.
Sure enough, the whistling warning shots from the far off ship sounded out nearby, followed by splashes far too close for comfort in Kenna's opinion. "It's fine," she began, moving towards Agnes, "he will surrender the ship andβ"
They were interrupted by a massive boom emanating from the deck, which shook the entire ship violently. The wood trembled beneath them and Agnes shrieked. Kenna threw herself at Agnes and dragged the girl to the floor with her. A moment later there was an answering shot from farther off and Kenna held her breath. Their ship shuddered with the impact, the sound of crunching wood and screaming sailors ringing through the vessel.
Agnes immediately burst into tears. "Oh mistress! We're lost! They will sink us!" The girl trembled in her arms.
"Don't be silly," Kenna tried to sound braver than she felt. "They won't sink a ship they want to plunder." She held the girl tightly as more cracks from the cannons rang out around them. The shaking and shuddering of the ship was terrifying, as though it would break the vessel apart with every boom of the cannons. Suddenly the glass from the window Kenna had been at a few minutes before exploded as a cannon ball ripped through the deck above them. Kenna threw her body over Agnes as the girl screamed. She tried to quiet the younger girl, but in truth she was just as terrified as the attacking ship's guns drew ever closer.
After a short while, the booming stopped. Kenna held her breath, sealing her lips in a tight line. The quiet felt deceptive. Shouts rang out, louder through the hole that had been punched in the wall and ceiling of the cabin. Pistol shots punctured the air and the sound of steel on steel followed on their heels. There was no time to lose.
Kenna grabbed Agnes and hauled the terrified girl up, bringing them both around the side of the large table still set from the morning meal. Kenna had spied a large trunk belted down to the floor at the far wall of the ship. Swiftly she emptied its contents, sending clothing and tools scattered across the floor.
"Get in!" she ordered when it was mostly empty. Agnes scrambled in and Kenna made to lower the lid.
"Mistress! You must get in as well," the girl said urgently.
"There's not room for us both!" she hissed as the sounds of fighting came from just beyond the door. "Stay quiet, no matter what you hear Agnes! Promise me!"