Drowning Mermaids
Book One of the Sacred Breath Series
By Nadia Scrieva
Copyright © 2012 Nadia Scrieva. All rights reserved.
Cover Photo by Tony Peters.
Novels by Nadia Scrieva:
Sacred Breath Series
Book #1: Drowning Mermaids
Book #2: Fathoms of Forgiveness
Book #3: Boundless Sea
Thirty Minutes to Heartbreak
Book #1: Paramount
Book #2: Parabellum
For Samantha Major; the girl with the mermaid tattoo and unquenchable zest for adventure.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1: Change in the Seas
Chapter 2: She Danced Power
Chapter 3: Wealth of Emotion
Chapter 4: Witness Her Being
Chapter 5: A Good Man
Chapter 6: The Captain’s Manor
Chapter 7: A Fiery Fisherwoman
Chapter 8: I Remember 1741
Chapter 9: We Have Been Decimated
Chapter 10: Homo sapiens marinus
Chapter 11: Floating in Stability
Chapter 12: The Baobab Bonsai
Chapter 13: American Sign Language
Chapter 14: Raine and Storm
Chapter 15: Brynne’s Bad News
Chapter 16: The Fall of Bimini
Chapter 17: Come Home Immediately
Chapter 18: It Never Snows, but it Blizzards
Chapter 19: Eternal Asphyxiation
Chapter 20: Atargatis is Coming
Chapter 21: Immerse your Body
Chapter 22: In Moist Despair
Chapter 23: Take the Twins
Chapter 24: A Million Reasons
Chapter 25: Three Against Thirty
Chapter 26: Diplomacy Never Works
Chapter 27: Aquatic Guardian Angel
Chapter 28: Freewheeling Through Space
Chapter 29: Gold Unicorn Trident
Chapter 30: Visiting Alice Murphy
Chapter 31: Terrestrially-Challenged
Chapter 32: My Little Girl
Chapter 33: Love is Worthless
Chapter 34: A Stranger’s Kindness
Chapter 35: Murder in the Mausoleum
Chapter 36: Any Sane Person
Chapter 37: Outnumbered and Outmaneuvered
Chapter 38: Unfamiliar Ultramarine Orbs
Chapter 39: Who Gets to Kill Atargatis
Chapter 40: Just One Single Breath
We are tied to the ocean.
And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch—
we are going back from whence we came.
John F. Kennedy
Chapter 1: Change in the Seas
“To our lost friend.”
“To Leander. I hope he’s in a better place than this—one with more tolerable temperatures.”
“So anywhere? Including hell?”
“I’m not sure what I believe about the afterlife,” the young man responded thoughtfully, “but I am positive that the fires of Hades are a tropical paradise compared to Alaska.”
The older man laughed at this, temporarily transforming his sorrowful face. “Cheers, kid.”
“Cheers, Captain.” The two men nodded at each other solemnly before clinking their mugs together. The younger one took a long, satisfying swig of the brew before smiling in appreciation. “You know, this club is a lot wilder than I expected. I figure if I’m going to kill myself for money, I might as well spend it on some quality entertainment in the downtime.”
“Kid,” said the grey-haired man, shaking his head disapprovingly, “too much of this kind of ‘entertainment’ will be the precise thing that gets you killed on the job if you’re not careful.”
“I’ve been lucky in my life so far. I don’t intend for that to change. Want to get a seat closer to the stage, Captain?”
“No, thanks, Arnav. You go ahead. My leg’s aching something awful.”
“An excellent excuse to save your dollar bills!” Arnav joked before clapping his friend on the back and heading to the center of the action.
Captain Trevain Murphy leaned back in his chair, mulling over the details of the previous days. He had always been fortunate on the waters; he had always somehow scraped by until the end of the season without a single casualty.
He was a firm believer in not allowing the sea to collect the souls of his men. Although they took their food from the sea’s open mouth, he did not believe it was necessary to offer up human sacrifices for this privilege. He had stayed in business long enough without appeasing any pagan gods—and he was quite certain that the gods did not pay close attention to Alaska anyway. Trevain did not accept that losses were bound to happen as most others did. He held that they were the result of carelessness and inefficiency, and he chose his men cautiously to avoid having either of these blights on his boat.
The conditions of Leander’s demise had been strange. The captain had begun to wonder in the moments before the incident whether the man had been feeling all that well.
“Did you hear a strange noise, Captain?” Leander had asked in his suspicious but respectful manner.
Trevain had briefly paused, as if to listen, to satisfy the man. Perhaps his mind had been too occupied with the remaining tasks on board, but he had heard nothing. “Just the whistling of the wind, Leo. A storm’s not far off, but we’ll be home long before it hits. Why are you so agitated?”
“I just… I swear I saw something in the water earlier.”
“Like what?”
“I don’t know.” Leander had been so tense that he twitched when Arnav dropped a coil of rope a few feet away from him. “I am a bit tired and feverish. Might just be coming down with something and seeing things.”
“Just relax—we’ll be back to shore soon. A hot meal and a warm bed will fix you right up, son.” Now, in retrospect, his own words made him cringe.
The weather had been benevolent while the day had unfolded smoothly. There was no way that Trevain could have expected anything unusual on such a humdrum fishing trip. After hauling up the pots and completing all of the most grueling tasks, the crew had begun to bask in their communal sense of accomplishment and good cheer. They had been turning the ship around and preparing to head home when the first mate, Doughlas, had noticed that Leander was missing. None of the men could find him below or above deck, and no one had shouted for a man overboard. Everyone had been puzzled, and Trevain had felt the first pangs of true panic he’d experienced in over thirty years. Leander had just seemed to vanish.
The crew had suggested that the young man they fondly called “Leo” might be taking a nap somewhere. It had been a long trip on the water, and the seasoned seamen were used to working inhuman hours. They had considered that he had been hiding or trying to pull some strange kind of prank. It had only taken a few hours for the Magician’s temperament to progress from mildly amused to generally annoyed and finally to disbelieving and appalled. It was hard to accept that a man was dead when there were no details to process regarding the incident. Nothing to examine, nothing to understand.
The last person to speak with Leander had been Edwin, the Canadian. When asked about the conversation repeatedly by the crew, Edwin lost his cool at having to revisit, dozens of times, that Leander had only told him that he was going to take a leak. The Canadian had cursed incessantly, while wiping tears from his eyes with his sleeves. “I thought it was safe enough for him to go to the fucking washroom on his own. I didn’t think he was in danger of drowning while urinating! Toilet monsters that grab you by the wang and pull you down to a horrifying death-by-piss haven’t exactly been my major concern since preschool.”
Now the men were drowning their wo
es in women and booze. They loved the occasional sojourn in Soldotna for that purpose, but their woes usually did not require such a substantial sloshing to be adequately submerged.
As Captain Murphy sat in a secluded corner of the strip club, he frowned until his face creased with dozens of dismal trenches. The lines deepened and intersected to create a roadmap leading to nowhere as he inwardly labored to find the path to understanding how he had lost a man. He had always prided himself on being able to bring men home to their wives and children at the end of the season. Leander had been young, and had no children depending on him—but he had a girlfriend that he had spoken of often, one whom he had hoped to marry. He also had loving parents. There had been an established place for him in the world which had now collapsed.
No obvious, detrimental mistake had been made and no miscalculations could be identified. There was no one to punish or blame. Trevain could not yell at the men to reinforce or avoid a certain action in the future to prevent this from occurring again. There was nothing to correct, there was no lesson to be learned. Nothing had really gone wrong. It had been a random, quiet, shadowlike loss.
Had Leander just decided to dive off the side of the boat when no one was looking, just for the hell of it? Had he plunged himself into the cold depths to see how far he could swim down into the sea before he sucked in a breath of saltwater? These were the types of scenarios that floated through the captain’s mind as he tried to imagine what had happened to the deckhand. The situation seemed that crazy. Trevain couldn’t shake the feeling that something had changed. There had been some kind of major change in the seas since he was a boy, and he no longer knew the waters as well as he always felt he had.
The ocean was not usually quiet and mercenary-like in her brutality. There had always been plenty of fanfare to announce her burgeoning rage. The sky would use its whole canvas to display a bloodbath of remarkable colors in unmistakable warning. Trevain had always interpreted the message correctly: “She is ravenous. Do not go out to fish today. She will rape you.” It had very little to do with the weather—of course bad weather presented a technical danger. Trevain was more concerned with some quality he could not quite describe, but could intuitively feel and gauge—bad energy, perhaps.
Oftentimes the crew would call him silly and superstitious. Trevain would patiently point out other signs of trouble as he sternly forbade the men to sail. Large, dark birds like falcons and eagles would leave their secret roosts and venture out, flying in erratic and confused patterns over the shoreline as if trying to discern the source of an unknown crisis. There might be a certain mournful sound in the wind or a certain morbid chill in the air. It was as if everything on the planet was privy to some knowledge that escaped Trevain. Everything was pulsating with the excitement of some indefinite impending carnage. Trevain felt that being human automatically precluded him from being on nature’s mailing list for memos about this sort of thing, but he would not allow that disadvantage to cripple him.
“We have all lost touch with nature,” Trevain would lecture threateningly, pointing at his only Inuit crew member, “yes, even you Ujarak.” The accused man would shrug his innocence and chomp down on his cigar nervously as the captain continued his tirade. “If your greed for a few dollars is greater than your inclination to live, then by all means, go out and fish! Be my guest, take the boat.” Trevain would turn around and march away from the docks, with a parting wave and a mocking challenge, “Go out and fish!”
Of course, no one did.
One by one, the crew would lose their motivation for the intended trip. Without a tenacious leader to rally them, they would disband within minutes and trickle off into homes, bars, and hotel rooms. Sure enough, by the time they gathered again they would have heard of at least one accident or casualty on another fishing boat. They would return to work with the high morale that came from knowing they had escaped the ultimate misfortune. They would hastily remove their hats when speaking of the lost or injured man, and have their faith in their captain renewed to the greatest magnitude.
For decades, although men had come and gone from his crew, that was the way things had worked. Until Leander. Until a few days ago when Captain Murphy had been unable to inform his crew of impending danger. He had not noticed any distress in the birds, the sky, or the winds. His usual indicators had failed him. It was as if even they had been unaware of the ocean’s ire.
Maybe Leo was just mentally unstable, the captain thought to himself. I could have overlooked something when I hired him—maybe he was hallucinating, and he saw or heard something which caused him to jump overboard and dive to his death when we were all occupied. Maybe it was just a singular event. Something out of my control.
As he tried to mentally reassure himself, he leaned back and drank deeply of his cold beer. He did not feel very reassured. Smiling wryly, he imagined that he suddenly understood what it was like to be a veteran master of some now obsolete technology: that which he had been most intimate with had gone and innovated itself on him. Yes, he was fairly certain there had been some kind of eerie change in the seas he had come to know so well, and he was pretty sure that it did not have anything to do with global warming.
Chapter 2: She Danced Power
Captain Murphy had not intended to even glance at the stage.
While his shipmates found the hollering and raucous energy of the crowd distracting and healing, he felt that remaining silent in a corner while slowly nursing his drink was a better way to pay homage to the memory of his shipmate. Staring very hard at the droplets of condensation gathering on his glass, and following them as they trickled down into a little pool on his coaster, was his manner of protest.
Why should he seek to experience anything resembling fun when Leander no longer could? The man had been robbed of his life while working under his watch. Trevain was the ship’s captain—the ultimate authority: God of his boat. This made him ultimately responsible. He felt it more than ever as he lifted the cold beer to his lips again for a long swig.
The last simple, coherent thought he would remember having before his mind was plunged into a war with itself for fourteen minutes and twenty three seconds was that he definitely needed to get something stronger.
He really had not meant to look.
However, sometimes a word of certain significance can draw a man out of his reverie. When the DJ announced her name, it brought back the memory of his mother’s voice reading to him when he was a child.
“Now gentlemen, get ready to be blown away by our mysterious newcomer. She’s the girl you’ve always dreamed of, but never thought you’d actually meet in the flesh: Undina!”
He glanced up for a moment, his eyes falling upon the dark-haired woman who was slowly ascending the stairs to the stage. The length of her hair was astonishing—it flowed almost down to her knees. He felt immediate curiosity about the way her stormy eyes were downcast and her mouth set in a grim line. He felt further curiosity when he saw her light graceful steps—she was wearing ballet slippers! Not eight inch heels that made her steps awkward and clunky, but real dancing shoes.
Despite his escalating curiosity, Trevain managed to yank his eyes away from the stage and focus again on the droplets sitting on his beer glass. He had no business looking at such a young girl, he told himself. She might be an adequate dancer, someone moderately trained in ballet but not skilled enough to be a prima ballerina. She might have chosen an interesting stage name which suggested she had some mild knowledge of art or literature, and it might be entertaining to speak with her…
Trevain clamped the thought by the neck before it could gasp its first breath. He would not, absolutely would not, even consider speaking with such a young girl. He would not behave foolishly like the other older men who frequented this club and places like it. He was here for the sake of his crew’s morale. He was not even a patron of this place, not in the traditional sense, not really. He would not sit with her, converse with her, and tentatively place his hand on her kne
e in desperation to touch her to be assured that she was real. He had just about as much business doing so as the disinterested droplets of condensation on his glass.
Why was it so quiet in the club all of a sudden? Several strange, hushed seconds of silence made Trevain wonder if he had been transported to a different venue. Was this the same rowdy, vulgar club that he despised? What was happening on the stage? An asymmetrical bead of water joined with its neighbors and slowly began its descent. Trevain put his finger on the glass, destroying the slow moving droplet and quickly tracing its path with his roughened skin.
I will not look. I will not look. He mentally chanted a mantra of encouragement to himself, trying to gain strength from watching the apathetic and asexual water droplets and participating in their gravity-induced activities. Carefully picking up the glass and bringing it close to his face, he could almost successfully pretend he was one of them. He clung to the glass in a strange suspension. Until the silence ended.
One massive, powerful voice filled the club—only overwhelming, bewitching soprano vocals, no music. There was no need for music, for the voice itself would have shamed a harpsichord. Trevain’s first instinct was to close his eyes and let the voice wash over him, but he had been struggling so valiantly to do the opposite of what he most desired that he instead savagely lowered his glass to its coaster and turned his head toward the stage. He looked.
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