Mistress of the Stone

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Mistress of the Stone Page 1

by Maria Zannini




  Dedication

  For Greg, the hunter of my heart.

  Chapter One

  Luísa Tavares had a list of sins the length of the Antilles, but she’d have to repent for them later. Time was running out for the true captain of the Coral. And with it his luck. It was up to her to get him back.

  She spat out the tang in her throat then shimmied down the mainmast of the Coral, her tight leather breeches and sharp cutlass a mockery to all that was decent in a woman.

  Duty brought her here. Duty and honor. And woe to the man who challenged her resolve. The crew had grown rich from plunder aplenty, despite having a woman at the helm. And they had kept all their limbs in the taking. A double bonus.

  The snap of canvas announced the ship’s relentless plow into the Caribbean. Sun-scorched men grunted and cursed as they locked rigging into place, all ears on the beat of the quartermaster’s staff against the roughly sawn planks of the top deck.

  “Work, ye dogs! Do ye think yer hanging laundry at a convent?” A swift twist of the quartermaster’s wrist cracked a staff over the knuckles of a hapless crewman. “Ye call that a proper knot?”

  The sailor bent his head in obeisance and tapped his reddened fingers against his right temple. “Sorry, sir.”

  “Sorry, my black ass. Yer whore mother wasted her teat on ye.”

  “Aye, sir,” he said without looking up. It was a voice that said he saw no reason to lose the use of any more fingers.

  Every sail grew stiff with the wind, driving the Coral due west, back to the islands they had left nearly a year ago.

  They were returning for Inácio Tavares, whether the old man wanted them back or not. And if the rumors that he’d been killed were true, his murderers would know no mercy. Luísa owed that to the captain of the Coral. Her father.

  She reached her cabin and bolted the door behind her. The sea was feral today, thick with the wrath of Neptune and the spit of his whores. It would take every man aboard to keep the Coral true to course.

  Luísa shut her eyes tight, her back rigid against an oak beam. She curled her toes inside her boots, pressing them against the planked flooring. Her body rolled with the sway of the ship, so accustomed to the rocking that she could scarcely sleep on land any longer. This was home, albeit an unhappy one, at least until she could restore her father.

  She threw off her wide brimmed hat, a thick felt one with a strap she tied under her chin during rough seas. Slowly, she peeled off each glove cut from the finest leather in Argentina. Pirate she was, in the best clothes money could buy. A reminder that she was raised a lady before she became a brigand.

  It wasn’t without its sacrifice. Men could toil shirtless all day long in the sun, while she sweltered in broadcloth and felt.

  She had to be the most overdressed pirate on the seven seas, but Papa had insisted. He said no man would want her with calluses on her palms and crow’s feet around her eyes. His wish was to see her married and fat with a babe in each arm.

  Oh, Papa.

  She slid a hand under her belt to a secret pocket she had sewn in herself. But it wasn’t for her silk kerchief. Instead, she pulled out a tightly bound sheaf of oilcloth. Trembling fingers curled around the tiny package, feeling every bump and hollow of the horror inside. She wet her lips, steeling herself for something she didn’t want to see. Not again.

  Cradled within the shroud were the desiccated remains of a bony index finger still attached to a ruby ring. Papa’s ring.

  Blast the French! She wiped her eyes, angry that she could still cry.

  The Coral shook with the pounding of bare feet and cargo shifting in the hold. Someone banged on her door, interrupting the dark plots of retribution churning in her head. The time had come to confess her indiscretions. And her confessor was not a forgiving man.

  Paqua, her co-captain on this return voyage, looked particularly cheerless when he darkened her door. Lean and hard, he stood no taller than she, yet the sound of his voice, deep and dour, sent shivers down the backs of every man and boy aboard.

  Rival pirates steered clear of the Coral. They knew she was protected by this holy man, a priest who talked to little bones and restless spirits, plying an island magic that terrified mere mortals.

  Luísa and Paqua were an odd pair to command the Coral, but they worked well together and kept the crew loyal and single-minded.

  Plunder had been plentiful thanks to the English and French ships that sailed the African waters. And no pirate in his right mind would balk at booty, even if it was at the hands of a woman and a West Indies mystic who divined the future from the entrails of chickens.

  Paqua entered her quarters unbidden, his left foot landing hard when the ship rolled to starboard. “Time, Luísa. We’re now three days inside my home waters.” The door slammed shut behind him. “Tell me why we sailed here despite your father’s last orders.”

  He was a man of few words, but they were usually enough to scare the wind out of anyone’s jib. He crossed his arms, his black beady eyes trying to cow her like he did the rest of the crew.

  Ply that scowl elsewhere, priest.

  Luísa tugged on Paqua’s right arm until he surrendered it, then turned his hand palm-side up. They stared at one another like two old men over a chess board, waiting for the other to make his move, a game Luísa never won with Paqua. She blinked first.

  Tears seeped from the corners of her eyes as she made the sign of the cross twice. She kissed her blessing fingers, feeling strangely guilty that she still had them all. Her hand trembled as it placed the tiny bundle of desiccated remains into the priest’s palm.

  Paqua’s eyes narrowed, a mixed look of recognition and horror as he opened the package. “Blessed Virgin.” He examined the ring and severed finger with reverence. “Where did you get this?”

  Her mouth opened, then shut. Three months she had kept this secret. Why was it so hard to release it now? “In Ndakarou.”

  His rheumy eyes told her he remembered that port well.

  They had escaped a hunting armada by rigging the Coral with fishing nets and a Spanish flag. They sailed right past the murderous French, disguised as a fishing trawler. And oh, the tales their ruse had spun. Even now, the villagers retold the yarn to the tune of an old drinking song.

  Paqua wagged the severed finger, castigating her. “But how did you get this?”

  “We took shore leave after the hunting party sailed on. Remember? You and the others were quick to abandon me when you found that bevy of whores.” She arched a brow at him in disapproval. “I wandered the bazaar for hours, not wanting to go back to the ship. I didn’t realize I’d been followed.”

  Damn. She should’ve worded that better. The old man was going to give her brimfire for that little piece of confession. He didn’t disappoint.

  “Followed!” he thundered. “Followed!” He squeezed the mummified finger in his fist. “Espíritu santo. Did nothing I teach you penetrate that thick skull of yours? Who followed you? What happened?”

  Spittle flew from the gap between his front teeth. His brown leathery hand clutched her by the wrist, not in anger, but fear. He assessed her quickly, calming down incrementally when he saw nothing out of place. Never mind that it had been months since the incident.

  His blackbird eyes softened to a wilt. Nothing frightened the little shaman. But this did upset him and with good reason. A pirate lived and died by how well they remained untouchable. That someone had shadowed her was as dangerous for her as the crew. Ndakarou had always been a safe port. Not anymore.

  Luísa shook out of his grip and waved away his admonition. “I’m fine, viejo. I wasn’t in any danger.”

  He handed Papa’s mutilated finger back to her. “You think this wasn’t dangerous?


  She folded the bundle between her hands. Her father was in a lot more danger than she was. Surely Paqua understood that. “I got turned around and tried to retrace my steps when a pock-marked Frenchman approached me in an alley and handed me the finger. He warned me that if I wanted to see Papa again, I must return to these waters before the blood moon.” Her throat tightened in the telling. She had taken a big risk, not just with her life but with the lives of all the crew.

  “The French cannot be trusted.”

  “I need you to tell me this? But what choice do I have? I won’t leave Papa to their savageries.”

  “It’s a trap.” The creases on his leathered jowls deepened.

  “Aye, and we’re caught in it. Do I turn my back on my father? Do you? You, who’ve been his friend since you were boys?” They had been closer than brothers.

  Paqua made the sign of the cross and then licked his thumb and traced the sacred tattoo painted on his collarbone, turning it slick and shiny black. “You should have told me of this sooner.” It was a rebuke masked in trepidation.

  She shrugged, rewrapping the mummified finger in its oilskin sheath with all the reverence of a holy relic. It was possible this would be all she’d have left to bury of her father. “I didn’t want to keep this from you, but I feared you wouldn’t support me. That frog-eater swore Papa would die if I crossed him.”

  “This messenger, had you seen him before? Was he a sailor?”

  Luísa tried to recollect the stranger’s features. “He appeared well-dressed, a merchant maybe, and he spoke only in French. He had a tattoo below his right eye.” She grazed her fingers down her cheek. “It looked like a claw mark scraping down his face.”

  “Minion of the werewolf,” Paqua muttered.

  “Ay, dios mío! You and your witches’ tales. Men have all manner of marks scratched into their flesh.” She pointed to the black runes painted on his throat. “His inked flesh meant nothing. ‘Twas his message that chilled me. He said the Coral had to be in these waters before the blood moon, or Papa would be dead before the sunrise.”

  Paqua opened a port window, allowing the salt breeze to scent the air with its warm breath. His wide nostrils flared and his hard, knotty chest heaved as if the sea alone gave him strength.

  He drummed a single finger against the thick wood of the sill, a hard rap that tolled his contemplation in careful measure. The Arawaken Indian was a cautious man, led by old superstitions and portents, but he was also wise. “Why the blood moon?”

  Luísa furrowed her brow. “I’ve wondered that myself. What makes it different from any other moon?”

  Paqua mumbled a curse in his native tongue then pressed the thick crucifix that hung around his neck against his forehead. “The blood moon opens doors, querida. Doors that should never open. I’m afraid Inácio may have gotten into more trouble than he expected. The blood moon is mistress to the Otherworld and its minions.”

  “We’ll get him back, Paqua—before those doors open.”

  The shaman folded both arms across his chest, castigating her with a silent glare. “You should have told me the truth, Luísa. I trusted you when you said Inácio had sent you word. I would’ve not sailed back into these waters otherwise.”

  “I didn’t lie. That severed finger told me all I needed to know.” She slipped it back into her pocket. “We have a chance to get him back, viejo.”

  The shaman walked over to a half empty bottle of brandy and pulled off the cork with his teeth. He sniffed it and a faint smile lifted the corners of his mouth. Their last plunder had been a good one, hauling the entire estate of a very young English lady on her way to the islands and her intended. The girl was barely more than a child. Luísa doubted she was even capable of conceiving, but the Inglés loved to marry off their daughters while they still had all their teeth.

  The girl had been spared, but her chaperone and two maids were groped and quickly disgraced by the men. Despite the crew’s begging, Luísa didn’t allow them to rape the women. They could shake their Jolly Rogers at any number of willing women at their next harbor. There was no need to turn these unfortunates into whores. She’d seen the frenzy of men go too far. Better to grant them a feel of English bounty and pay the rest in comfort-women who’d gladly spread their legs for coin.

  Stripped to their petticoats and fondled by every man aboard, the English biddies left the ship in bawling tears. They were permitted to leave with their virtue intact, but little else.

  Luísa delighted in her good fortune and dressed her quarters with silks and the sweet-smelling perfume the English left behind. Luísa was every bit the pirate, but a small part of her remembered that her Mamacita and dueña also raised her to be a lady. Poor Mamacita. Had she known her daughter would turn pirate, she would’ve died of mortification. God, in His mercy, killed her with a fever instead.

  It had been a different life in Spain with all the trappings of nobility and privilege. Mamacita doted on her only daughter. Entire days would be spent dressing her in silk petticoats and fine gowns. And when she wasn’t dressed up like a doll, she was bored to tears by stuffy tutors. Luísa wasn’t allowed to waste one moment.

  There was even talk of returning to Brasil to visit the suegros mañosos. Evidently, Papa’s people were citizens of influence in his homeland, and Mamacita swallowed her pride to make sure her daughter was equally well connected. Mama was preparing her for introduction into polite society on both continents.

  All that ended with the plague.

  Luísa’s dueña had been useless, begging every priest for more prayers and lighting so many candles it choked the air with smoke. Luísa remained silent, her tears stolen. It was a family friend who sent word to her father.

  Inácio Tavares raced back to Spain with the speed of a storm. Despite her dueña’s anguished pleas, her father took her aboard the Coral and stole whatever childhood Luísa had left. She was only twelve.

  Luísa fingered the fine lace covering on the table. Foolishness, Paqua had said. They could have traded it for five kegs of black powder, but he let her keep it. He let her keep all the English lady’s finery. Small compensation for what had been taken.

  Paqua sat at the Captain’s desk staring at the bottle in front of him. He swirled the fine brandy inside its jug, but he didn’t drink. Sly devil. He was waiting on her. He knew she had more to divulge. “The crew thinks you’re leading them to treasure.”

  “Of course they do. We’ve had good hunting on this trip. They have more treasure than they know what to do with.”

  “Sí. We’ve done well. The bones tell me we sail with the sea’s blessing.”

  Luísa sat in the chair opposite him and threw her feet on the table, crossing them at the ankle. She peered up at Paqua, hoping he wouldn’t scold her. Only his eyes spoke, burning her with a scowl that withered her bawdiness. She tucked her feet back under the table without an argument.

  She wished she had the ballast to swear at him, but she knew better. Paqua was as much father to her as blood kin. And he was right, Papa expected her to play the lady even if she did wear men’s breeches. She lowered her eyes and mumbled an apology.

  The apology was enough for Paqua and his expression softened. He lifted her chin with a finger that sported more callus than flesh. “The crew respects you despite your comely looks. They’ll not scorn a woman who makes them rich and lets them keep all their limbs. Think they don’t realize that no man has seen the sharp end of the surgeon’s blade since you’ve taken the helm? They think you’re lucky.” He shook his head. “Blast. Even I’m beginning to believe it.”

  “Then I hope that luck holds.” Luísa eyed a soft leather bible that had been shoved in between a sand glass and a nocturlabe. Was it time to show him her other secret?

  “So do I, niña.” He heaved a throaty sigh in resignation. “Those pasty-faced brigands will show us no mercy.”

  “Aye. Nor will they get any from us. Not if we get there before them.”

  “Get where e
xactly?”

  She flinched. That part she wanted to keep to herself a bit longer.

  Paqua’s eyes narrowed into needle-length slits, and he crossed his arms, scrutinizing her like a pot of stew boiled too long. “Luísa.” He held on to the last syllable promising ominous repercussions. “Out with it. “

  Luísa chewed on her lower lip then snatched the bible off the table. She thumbed through the book, looking up at Paqua every few pages until she found what she was looking for. It was the last clue the Frenchman had given her before he disappeared into the shadows.

  Tucked between the Gospels hid a weathered piece of parchment. The map was tattered and brown with age, and much of the ink had faded. She unfolded it carefully and smoothed it out flat. “This is the chart I was given.” She tapped her finger at an X on the map. “If the winds hold, we could arrive in less than a week.”

  Paqua leaned over the chart, pulling out a pair of eyeglasses, a prize possession he had paid with cash-money to an old German bottlemaker. The contraption looked ridiculous on him—not that anyone would say so to his face. At least it kept him from squinting as he ran his finger down the map to the nearest islands.

  He pulled off his spectacles and shook his head. “Coral reefs and fog so thick you can’t see your hand in front of your face. These be dangerous waters. Did you not see where it puts us?”

  “Sí. The Dragon’s Corridor. I saw it. But should I sail away because of ill winds and treacherous reefs?” Luísa felt for her father’s severed finger inside her pocket and squeezed it, hoping it would give her courage.

  “You are putting your faith in a frog-sucking coxcomb and a chart without registry. What guarantee do we have that Inácio will be returned to us?”

  Luísa swallowed the lump that formed in her throat, but a new one replaced it immediately. She gambled many lives on the thin chance her father was still alive. “The Frenchman swore Papa would be restored to me. Whether he comes to me whole or in pieces will depend on whether I live up to my agreement.”

  “’Tis possible he is already dead, niña. We could be heading into a trap.”

 

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