The answering call goes up all around as we shout back his words. All together. My father appears beside me as we walk, tugging his gloves over my hands, gripping my shoulder.
“I’ll be fine,” I say, turning back to the tide. He says nothing, but I feel his love, the ghost of it lingering as he disappears into the night. It wraps around me, a little too stifling. The first lash of sea batters against my thighs, reaching for my chest. I take a deep breath, keeping the rope tangled in my fist, then in a rush of fire and ice, I dive under. Agnes surfaces first, just ahead of me. Her red hair flashes, floating like a beacon. I keep her in sight as I work through the waves, feeling out their song. Feeling for their pull and beat. The sea is a fickle creature and on a night like this, she can be wicked and cruel.
I fall into a rhythm, keeping the rope tucked in on my right, feeling the knot of the spliced twine, which is tied around my waist and attached to the main rope, digging into my middle. Wood floats past, cargo released from the hold. Perhaps they were already sinking before we lured them in. The rocks are like teeth, hidden in the gums of the ocean. And surrounding our islands there are rows and rows of them, far more than we can chart on our maps.
I dive once more, catching my rib against something heavy. A thumping ache dulled by the water flares across my side. I bite my lip, stilling the hiss behind my teeth as my body instinctively curls inward, losing the rhythm of the others. I stretch out, hauling my arm overhead to cut through the water, bubbles escaping my lungs as the dull ache sharpens to a point. I surface, panting, my legs tangling with the rope. Letting the others carry me for half a breath. I consider hanging on to the rope in my hands, allowing myself to be pulled to the wreck—there’s no way of binding my side until we reach the shore again—but I can’t throw the others off. We’re a team, I have to pull my weight. I carry on, sipping the air before diving down to push more flotsam away. My side grates angrily, pain roaring up my arm. I hope my ribs aren’t broken. That I’ll still be able to haul in any survivors.
“Mira!” calls Bryn from near the front. “Mira and Kai, you’re with me!”
I look up, finding the ship looming above me. She’s keeled right over, a gaping hole in the starboard side, the ocean roaring as the waves claw at her. Wood and crates float past us and I scan them for bodies. For eyes and limbs and hearts, anyone that I can save. But there’s no one gripping the crates, clinging to their floating backs.
I hope we aren’t too late. ...