Home > Daughter of the Serpentine

Daughter of the Serpentine
Author: E.E. Knight

 


For Larry,

   My second father. A teacher. A movie lover.

   And a guy who would have stayed up with me

   all night playing coup.

 

 

   The ten-year-old girl stood in the roaring surf. Windborne sand pelted her and she had to squint to keep it out of her eyes. She felt small and frail against the two teenage boys hunched to either side of her, the boys all gangly limbs and wet, shaggy hair. The three held on to a flat-bottomed rowboat, which tried to escape at the pull of every receding wave.

   “You wanted this! You begged, Ileth,” the Captain said, his voice booming over the gale blowing off Pine Bay as he drank in her discomfort.

   Ileth, the second-oldest girl in the Lodge now, had in fact begged to join the boys in their seamanship training. Girls never went off to sea, as the few orphaned boys in the Captain’s Lodge on the Freesand Coast were always trained to do, but she’d asked and asked, carefully and only when the Captain was in his better moods, until he finally relented. “Maybe these scuts’ll try harder with you around,” he’d said, looking at the Chakl twins, three years older than Ileth. They’d been at the Lodge since they’d lost their father to the Rari pirates at seven and their mother disappeared from the Freesand shortly thereafter.

   Ileth had pleaded for secret reasons. While she didn’t mind learning about rigging and lines, how to claw close-hauled against the wind, or how to measure depth with a pole or a weighted line, her true intent was to learn proper map reading and navigation. She had a dream, a dream so secret she never let a word that might hint at it escape her lips. To fulfill it she had to know how to use a compass and how to measure distance traveling by sea or land, so that in four years she might leave the Lodge in pursuit of it.

   She’d always been an active, athletic sort of girl given to climbing and exploring, and the Captain shrugged off her odd request as Ileth’s restlessness, wanting to be out and about rather than cooped up with the other girls. The other girls didn’t much like her. The Captain, in their view, played favorites and Ileth was a favorite. Then there were her stutters and halts that dampened their spirited chats over the work.

   Today was a real challenge, one he’d evidently been saving for a suitably stormy fall day. Ileth and the boys were to take a small boat out in the surf to Dragonback Reef, running a line to imaginary sailors shipwrecked on the reef. The danger of the Dragonback was anything but imaginary; an old fishing boat mast still pointed skyward from a wreck just the previous winter, and there were older fragments of boats, line, and canvas still caught in the jagged above-tide protrusions of the reef.

   The would-be sailors stood barefoot in the cold surf. The Captain said you might as well tie bricks to your feet as wear boots if you go overboard or capsize, possibilities that seemed terrifyingly likely to Ileth as she watched the little rowboat lift and fall.

   “This is just foul weather. Barely a storm,” the Captain said, from the warmth of a boat cloak, thick woolen scarf, and sealskin boots. His charges were already soaked through, the boys in thin shirts and woolen vests that left their arms free to row and Ileth in an oversized boy’s shirt that hung so low it could almost be called a dress over her holed woolen hose.

   The surf didn’t agree and roared back at him. To Ileth, the waves looked like hands reaching for her, and she held extra tight to the side of the boat when one attacked the beach through them.

   Ileth looked at the little rowboat dubiously. She knew enough about small craft now to know that the flat-bottomed little thing, ideal for poking around in the shallows checking the cages for crabs and lobsters, would slew all about in this water.

   “The Dragonback’s only bad on the other side. She’s sheltering you in her arms, like,” the Captain said, as his three trainees looked out at the surf blasting against it.

   Nothing to do but get to it. The boys held the boat steady while Ileth got in and fitted the tiller and readied the rope to be paid out. Then they ran it out as deep as they could find purchase and jumped in on the upsurge of one of the breaking waves.

   The twins, Avar and Trad, rowed like mad, leaning in and pulling in unison, bracing themselves on the rower’s bench. The flat-bottomed boat was pushed this way and that by the surf and wind; the Captain had probably chosen it because it would be difficult to handle properly unless they worked as a team. Ileth did her best to keep the boat pointed at the reef, bow into each wave.

   They were in the worst of the surf now, and a wave pulled the boat sideways and swamped them. It was all they could do to stay onboard. Avar took the oars while his brother bailed. Ileth helped as best as she could, using Avar’s storm hat, bottom cold in the flooded boat with the tiller clamped under her armpit. They just got her bow into the next wave, a credit to Avar’s rowing.

   Two more waves and they were into the more sheltered waters close behind the reef. The currents around the reef were confusing. Ileth and the twins shot orders back and forth.

   “Boathook. We forgot the boathook!” Trad, the meaner of the two, shouted. “You should have said something, Ileth!”

   She ignored him. The stern spun round as the boat was pulled away by some current and Ileth spotted a sandy patch among the rocks of the reef. It was just a short distance—

   Ileth’s body decided for her. She had the rest of the line in her arms anyway, ready to hurl it on to the reef. She launched herself at the sandy spot.

   It was a dangerous thing to do but she didn’t have to swim, and her free hand felt the wet sand as soon as she went into the bay. Her fingers were numb from the cold, but not so numb that they weren’t able to find purchase on a rock as she scrambled up onto the Dragonback. Ileth had always been a good climber. She ignored the surf pounding the other side of the rocks and made it to the broken mast, quickly tying the rope about it with a solid mooring knot.

   The boys didn’t have time to cheer her; they were pulling for the rope stretching back to the Captain on the beach. Most of it was submerged, of course, but in a real rescue now would be the time to set up a winch on shore so that sailors could be pulled safely through the surf.

   The Dragonback! And she was atop it!

   Ileth pressed against the sheltering rock, staying out of the wind and surf. It was one of those talismans, a sign that one day she’d make it to the Serpentine. She touched objects that made her think of dragons—a turtle’s back whose rugose patterns reminded her of scale, a bit of polished whalebone like a dragon-tooth, assuring herself with each contact that the dream would come true.

   Avar joined her on the rocks. Between waves he whooped defiance at the heavy surf striking the other side, like a warrior safe from enemy arrows behind a stout wall.

   Ileth, always interested in stories behind things, cast her eye about the bits of flotsam and wreckage the reef had collected. Her eye was drawn to an odd mass of canvas and wrecked barrel, when she realized, to her horror, that a stark white arm was sticking out of it.

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