The jungles awaits, dark and ancient and terrifying. But ahead, in the heart of the jungle, lies Billie the One-Eyed's camp. There waits the treasure they've risked everything to find.
"This feels..." Sasha looked to her lover and chose not to finish her sentence.
"Daft?" Red finished for her. "Mad? A fool's quest?"
"I wasn't going to say it that way," Sasha mumbled. "Dangerous, maybe? Risky."
Red gestured with her hand. "We're pointed straight at the beach and about to run aground. If that happens even cutting apart one finger's width at a time won't be worth the death of the
Red Witch
."
"But we're still doing it?"
Red nodded. "There's magic steeped in this water... maybe the whole damned island. I seen it with my own eyes."
"But can magic make a ship fly? That's the only way we're fitting through there."
Red clamped her lips shut but the sound of her sigh coming through her nose was loud enough for Sasha and Steff to hear.
John motioned with his hand from the fo'c'sle, urging them forward and slightly port. Sasha spun the wheel a half turn, changing the rudder enough to urge the ship as John guided them.
Another tense moment passed as the
Red Witch
grew closer and closer to shore. Red winced, expecting to hear the bow scrape on sand and rock with each passing second. By the time they were fully in the bay and mere feet from shore the ship surged and lifted up at the bow.
"We've run aground!" Sasha hissed and clung to the wheel. Red and Steff staggered back a half step, their sea legs keeping them up even if they hadn't been prepared for the sudden shift.
"No!" Steff said. "I didn't hear nothing."
The ship leveled out beneath them, restoring their balance.
"I'll be drowned," Red breathed as she stared off to the side of the ship. She looked both port and starboard before shaking her head.
"He did it! I knew he could!" Steff cried out and clapped her hands.
"You're giddy as a princess getting a pony," Sasha snapped at the second mate.
"There'll be no living with her now," Red agreed. "My sister or John either... look, the fucking sea's risen up to carry us through. My gold says your hand on that wheel's doing no good."
Sasha twisted to look around and then rushed over to peer over the railing down the hull. The water had risen up under them, lifting the
Red Witch
a score of feet higher in the air than the rest of the ocean. The pillar of water bubbled and roiled like it was boiling without the heat.
The crew was noticing too, prompting shouts of alarm and making them grab on to railing and ropes. One man rushed to the railing and was about to leap over before Steff called out and had another sailor grab him and hold him back.
The
Red Witch
surged forward, unsettling everyone as it rushed over the inlet and passed between the cliffs. They rose above the masts, leaving even the slender woman in the crow's nest unable to see over their tops.
They were through the cliffs in seconds, which was good because not a single member of the
Red Witch
's crew dared to breathe while they had only feet to spare on either side of the vessel. The wave that supported the ship carried them forward between steep hills covered thickly with massive trees covered in vines and hanging moss. After several minutes the narrow channel widened into a small lake... a lake that was fed by a thin waterfall that was a fifty foot drop if it was an inch.
The water beneath the
Red Witch
calmed and receded, lowering them into the lake where they should be. Mists obscured the cliff wall at the base of the waterfall but they could still see the masts and fo'c'sle of the ship that was next to the remains of a long wooden dock built out into the lake.
Little Red shouted and waved from the fo'c'sle and then pointed at the ship. Red stood straighter and shook her head even as a grin split her face.
"That whore-son did it," Sasha whispered. "He really found it."
Red smoothed her face and took a deep breath. "Get us near and drop anchor. We'll take the boat to shore."
Sasha grabbed the wheel and looked to Steff. "Steff! You heard the Captain."
Steff jerked her eyes away from the sight ahead of them and squashed her own grin. She stepped to the railing and started to yell out orders to the crew to get them across the lake and close enough for what Red wanted.
As they tacked across the lake in the cross-breeze the overgrown dock came into view. Timbers had been raised and two small buildings had once stood near the dock. Both were in disrepair, with their roofs fallen in and walls missing parts or in entirety.
Only two masts rose from the water, the aftward mast barely breaking the surface. The ship's prow was stained and darkened at the water line, lending proof that it had been below water for a great many years. When the
Red Witch
dropped anchor a few score feet away the gentle wake lapped against the sunken pirate ship.
The long boat was filled this time. John, Red, her sister, Steff, and four men and one woman from the ship's crew took their places and watched the shore and wreckage in silence as they rowed closer and closer. With only a dozen feet remaining to the shore a shrill primal cry sounded form the jungle and echoed off the cliff wall. A roar followed and then the faint sound of leaves and branches rustling.
"Seems we're not alone," Little Red said, her voice low in awe of their discovery.
"That wasn't no man," Steff said.
John nodded. Billie the One Eyed was here, somewhere. Released from a hundred year prison as the guest of the water sprite that guarded the island. Neither of those noises had been Billie, no matter how mad a hundred years breathing water and fucking a beautiful sea nymph would make him.
The bow bumped against the soft ground. Another combined surge of the oars moved it forward almost two inches. Enough to prove they were stuck fast without poles or someone hopping out.
When no one moved Red raised an eyebrow. Steff scowled. "You're gutless," she cursed the six sailors. "You two, Alec and Barb, over the railing and pull us up!"
The two sailors looked at each other and then into the thick jungle that stared nearly at the water's edge. Where the dock and rubble of the buildings were the jungle had once been pushed back, but moss, vines, weeds, and even some newer trees that were too tall and thick to be saplings were reclaiming it.
"Move your arses or you'll be staying behind when we're loaded full of pirate gold and sailing away without you!"
The threat of lost gold had Barb over the gunwale first. She splashed into the water and grunted as her bare feet plunged into the muddy bottom. Alec followed and had similar disgust on the other side. They pulled them free of the sucking mud and, using the sides of the boat to help them, made their way to shore. Steff threw the rope to them and then moved back to the stern of the bow to shift weight away from the bow. They worked together and pulled the boat until the very front of the ship was out of the way. They were both sweating and cursing from the effort.