Jack followed the big man with the blue scar over to the bar, feeling like her whole world had just been thrown unexpectedly off kilter. Things seemed wrong, but she couldn't put her finger on exactly how or why. The big Nivali man gave the bartender a quick hand motion and waited.
"How's your head, Hatchet?" the bartender deadpanned as he towled out a dented mug with a dirty rag.
The big man snorted and rolled his eyes. "Fine."
"Good. I'm not sure how much more damage your busted face can take before it falls apart," the bartender said with a smirk. "Why you still let Candy push you around like that?"
"Let nothin'," Hatchet scowled. "I was tryin' to step aside and she caught me on my heels."
"Don't feed me shit and call it caviar," the bartender said pointing to the broken bannister on the roped-off side of the double staircase. "She catch you on your back foot then too?"
"Piss off, Ben," Hatchet growled. "That little cunt's inhuman strong. It ain't natural, and I know better than to fuck around with whatever witchcraft she's into. B'sides, Miss Shae still wants her an' her sister on the payroll. I know better than to fuck with that, too. Better just to play nice."
The bartender made a show of considering Hatchet's point of view, but the insulting smirk never fully left his face. "Yeah, fair 'nough. The boys are still going to give you shit. Someone might get a wild hair and decide they want your spot after watching you get tossed by a mouthy slag."
"Let 'em," Hatchet said. "Wouldn't be the first time."
"So Shae still wants to complete the set?'' Ben the Bartender asked with a smarmy leer toward the stairs. "Can't say I blame her. Those sisters got nasty mouths, but everything else is top shelf. Even the chubby cripple's got great tits."
Hatchet shook his head in warning. "I'm tellin' you, Ben. Do not fuck with them. Don't even talk wrong about 'em. Redheads are bad juju."
"What the shit's a juju?" Ben asked with a dismissive laugh.
Hatchet scratched his scar, trying to figure out how to translate the word. "Luck. Sort of. Bigger though.Spiritual debt. Judgement of the Loa. The last thing in the fucking world want to get on the wrong side of."
Ben raised an eyebrow in amused confusion. "Sounds like fairy stories. What the fuck's that have to do with redheads?"
"They got magic in 'em," Hatchet said like it was obvious. "That's what red hair means."
Ben shook his head and snorted. "Hatch, someday I wanna take you to the Casterly Isles and watch you shit yourself bloody."
"What?" Hatchet asked, thoroughly confused.
"Can't throw a rock without hitting a redhead there," Ben smirked.
"I'll pass," Hatchet said gravely.
"Come to think of it, the Casterlys do have more'n their fair share of weird shit." Ben admitted.
"See?" Hatchet said, like the implications were obvious.
Ben rubbed his temples with one meaty hand. "Whatever. I'll try not to piss off the magic redheads. Anyway, what's boss lady want?"
Hatch tossed a thumb towards Jack. "A skiff. Who's here?"
"I think the Scavs are still outside at their usual table," the bartender said.
Hatchet gave the bartender a nod of thanks and walked to the door without a word to Jack. Outside, he crossed to the same group of drunks that Jack and Will had run into when they'd first arrived. Jack's nerves tightened. Now that she understood more about the nature of Will's curse, she no longer believed in coincidences where he was concerned. She looked towards where Will was inside, still seated at the balcony with Shae, wishing she could glare at him through the wall. There was a feeling building. Something was different already. She just couldn't figure out what it was. Even something as innocuous as having to deal with the same group of drunks again had her on edge.
"Shae needs a skiff," Hatchet said without preamble. "Single passenger. Usual rate. Who wants it?"
The men at the table looked up from their card game. Eyes passed between Hatchet, Jack, and finally settled on the drunk that Jack had drawn her gun on earlier. Jack tilted her head down so her hat hid her pained expression.
After a long, tense moment the drunk snorted. "Aye, sure."
The others at the table laughed.
"Are you going to keep your hands to yourself this time?" Jack asked, forcing herself to stay collected and deal with the situation the way she normally would.
The drunk shrugged. "Gonna need 'em for rowing."
Hatchet looked back and forth between them then grunted. "You two met? Good." Without another word, he went back inside leaving Jack and her new oarsman looking at each other awkwardly.
"Where you headed?" the drunk oarsman asked.
"Around the curve of the island, north," Jack said. "There's an inlet. Leads to a lagoon where my ship is beached."
"Aye, I know the place," the oarsman said with a nod. "I ain't goin' out on ocean water drunk though. I'm gonna get some supper and sober up. Meet me at cat dock in three hours."
"Which one is cat dock?" Jack asked.
"Towards the back of the cove. The one with the cat head," the drunk said, gesturing off in the direction of the lift. "Just look down, you can't miss it."
Jack looked at the fading skyline. "Three hours? Won't it be dark by then?"
The oarsman shook his head. "We'll have enough time. Just don't be late."
Jack didn't like anything about this, but she nodded. "You have a name?"
The drunk stood up and offered a meaty hand. "Barney."
"Jack," she said.
They shook hands, each assessing the other a bit differently than earlier. Barney scraped his meager winnings into his hand, put a couple coins on the table to buy another round for his friends and turned his cards face down. "Evenin', gents."
Jack stopped on top of the small, out of place bridge in front of the tavern and looked around. She had hours to kill and wasn't really sure of where to go next. Normally she'd spend it in a bar, but she didn't want to go back there. In the distance she saw the redhead from earlier waiting for a lift. It occurred to her that the feisty woman might have useful information about Shea. Knowing more about her might prove fruitful. Without much of a plan, she started walking again. She'd just reached the waiting platform when she heard Barney call out behind her.
"Candy!" the drunken oarsman barked.
The redhead turned around and glanced at Jack for a moment before shouting back. "Feck off, Barnacle!"
From the bridge, Barney held up a coin, turning it back and forth so the glint of gold caught the light. Candy looked pained but waved the drunk over.
Candy took a swig off the bottle in her hand while she waited. Even from a few paces away, Jack could smell the alcohol on her breath. Whatever was in that bottle was strong. "What ye want?" she snapped at Barney as soon as he was closer.
"My boat's starting to take on water. Need a patch," Barney explained.
"Talk tae yer boss," Candy said with a snort. "She's got a whole team o' shipwrights an' carpenters for that shite."
"Yeah but she adds repair costs to my debt, makes me wait in line. I'll be springing full blown leaks before my turn, which will just make everything more expensive," Barney said. "Yeah, you charge more up front, but with waiting and the interest on my debt, I think Shae's carpenters end up costing more. So your work lasts longer and I only have to pay you once."
"This whole time, I was thinkin' ye were a stupid arsehole, Barnicle," Candy said with half a smile. "I was wrong. Ye ain't stupid."
"Just an asshole," Barney said with a proud nod.
"Bring yer skow round t'morrow night," Candy said. "Six crowns, I'll have her patched an' cured in time fer yer morning shift." She spat in her hand and extended it to Barney.
"Done," He put the coin he'd lured her over with in his hand, spat into it, and they shook.
Jack looked down at her own hand in mild disgust and wiped it on her trousers.
Candy looked at the wet coin critically for a moment, polished it on her ample chest, and started to lift it to her mouth to bite. She stopped when she noticed Barney had been leering as she'd rubbed the coin on her breast. To Jack's surprise, Candy didn't seem to mind the attention. She gave him a wry smile and shook her head in mock exasperation. "Save it fer the whores, Barney boy," she said with a small laugh.
"I got enough to go around," the oarsman grinned.
She rolled her eyes and pocketed the coin. "See ye t'morrow, Barn."
"Your boat is leaking?" Jack asked Barney pointedly before he started to walk away.
"Seeping. It's no problem yet. Short trip like you're taking, your feet might not even get wet," Barney said. "Just want to deal with it before it gets worse."
"Sensable," Jack said.
Barney gave her a nod and walked away. The four lift ropes started to rise into view, and Jack moved next to Candy to wait. "You were impressive in the bar earlier," Jack said, trying to get the redhead's attention.
"Feck off," Candy said.
"Apologies, I didn't mean anything by it," Jack said. "I just wanted to ask you about Shea."
Candy gave her a hard look. Jack was a full head taller, armed, and accustomed to danger but something about that glare gave her a rare case of caution.
Candy looked her up and down, then spat on the ground. "I dinnae know ye. If it ain't about coin changin' hands, I dinnae give a feck what ye want tae ask."
"No offense meant," Jack said, surprised at the hostility she was getting.
"Get yer own lift," Candy said. Without bothering to wait for the platform to swing towards them and settle to the ground, Candy walked to the edge, grabbed one of the lift ropes, and hopped onto the slowly raising platform. It swung wildly as Candy landed hard in the middle, but she rolled her hips like a sailor in a storm and used her own weight to counter it's motion and settle it beneath her.
"Dammit, Candy!" the lift operator barked. Candy lifted her bottle to her lips, and raised her middle finger mid-swig. The lift operator swore under her breath and raised one of her flags. The lift kept raising, not even slowing down as it passed the waiting platform where Jack and a few other passersby stood.
The people around her grumbled, and a few tossed rude gestures towards Candy which were returned in kind, but for the most part nobody seemed surprised. Jack walked to the edge of the waiting platform and looked down at the tangle of ropes and bridges suspended over the glittering bay, feeling like she was in some kind of surreal dream.