The Black Star (Book 3) (37 page)

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Authors: Edward W. Robertson

BOOK: The Black Star (Book 3)
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They reached the surf and waded to shore. When they were nearly clear of the water, she turned to give him the eye, lifting her right leg clear, then her left. A raw hole dribbled blood down her calf. Her jaw dropped and so did she. Surf hissed over her body.

"Minn!"

He tried to run to her, but staggered on his fins. He pulled her from the water and braced her against his body so he could yank at the straps of his fishfeet. He got them loose and hurled them above the tideline. Then he carried her there as well.

The wound was bad. Not quite as big as he'd feared, given the size of the shark, but she was missing a generous handful of flesh and what was left bled freely. He wiped saltwater from his eyes and grimaced toward the northeast. The black cliffs of Pocket Cove hung on the horizon like a storm.

There would be no help from them. Even if he had a loon connecting him straight to Ro, Minn's friends wouldn't be able to arrive quickly enough. She was capable of patching herself up much better than he could, but she was out cold. It was up to him.

He stripped off his shirt and tore it to shreds, twisting the longest strip into a cord and tying it below her knee as tight as he could. As he knotted it, her eyes fluttered open.

"Wake up!" He tapped her on the cheek. "Minn, can you hear me?"

Her eyes were wide and frightened, her breathing fast and shallow. "Am I going to die?"

"The nether's all around us. I need you to put it to use. You know how to heal yourself, right?"

Her dreamy voice sharpened. "It's one of the first things we learn."

"Then do it. Right now. Quit lying there staring at me like a lamb and get to work!"

She blinked, clearing her eyes of fear. She sat up, chin trembling, and forced herself to look at her leg. The tourniquet had reduced the flow of blood to a trickle, but that left the damage all the more apparent. Her eyes rolled. He reached to slap her, but her eyelids snapped open. She was whiter than dead coral. She calmed her expression. Nether flowed to her from all sides, thirstier than a lost traveler. She sent it to her leg.

Nothing happened. Blays forced himself to look beyond his eyes, focusing on the shadows themselves. They moved inside her flesh, smoothing out torn vessels and capping them. A moment later, the angry red hole began to shrink, fresh pink skin growing from all sides. The growth slowed in moments. She was good, but not nearly as strong as Dante.

He could only watch in helpless frustration. As soon as she finished, and new skin covered the wound—though a deep chunk of her leg was simply gone—she passed out in the sand.

Between his adrenaline and her warming spell, he hadn't noticed the cold, but he began to shiver violently. Minn breathed evenly but was otherwise still. He got on his shoes, pulled on his cloak, wrapped her in hers, and carried her back to the cabin. Inside, he put her to bed and went to work on the fire. They'd put it out before heading to the beach and it took him some time to get a spark to catch. He huddled in a blanket and sat over her, but the exhaustion hit him well before the sun had set.

He woke to darkness. Minn slept on, breathing in and out in steady, slow breaths. She was still asleep as morning broke. Blays didn't leave the cabin except to bring in more wood and once to catch fish from the creek. The following morning, he glanced at her and saw her eyes were open. She groaned. The first thing she did was pull the blankets from her legs and examine the divot in her calf. The second thing she did was run outside, still half dressed, to use the bathroom.

Back inside, she pulled on warm clothes and sat beside the fire. "Found a kellevurt yet?"

"When would I have done that?"

"Don't tell me you wasted—how long have I been asleep?"

"A day," he said. "I wasn't about to leave you to hunt snails."

"I just needed to rest. I'll be fine."

"You're sure? Because your leg looks..."

She smiled wryly. "Like it has a bite taken out of it?"

"I was going to say something less horrible, but yes, it looks exactly like that." He glanced out the window for a look at the light. "Are you hungry?"

"Extremely."

He fried a couple fish. She stared at the pan the whole time. Once he got them out, she ate both, so he dipped into their supplies, which were dwindling quicker than he liked.

"We could wait here," he said. "Wait for the others to come back."

Minn looked at him like he'd suggested they might swap genders. "We're here. We have no way to get them to come sooner. Why would you throw that time away?"

"You can't possibly be thinking of getting back in the water."

"Will
you
?"

"Sure," he said. "In another day or two. But I'm not the one who nearly served as floating breakfast."

She snorted. "I was careless. It won't happen again. So long as I'm not bleeding, what are the chances of being attacked twice on the same trip?"

"I don't think chance works that way. In fact, I believe it delights in screwing people over just when they think they can't be screwed any worse."

"You will resume your search. That is my order as your mentor. There will be no argument."

He was all right with that much. She did seem to have recovered enough to look after herself while he was swimming. "Tomorrow, then. I think you could use more rest. Anyway, we're low on food."

She agreed, but insisted on helping him fish. She walked with a hitching limp and occasionally winced. By and large, however, he had to admit she looked healthy enough to stand on the banks and trick clueless trout into swallowing hooks. That night, she made another effort on her leg, darkening the cabin with wings of nether, but Blays saw little improvement. Unless Ro could do more, Minn was likely to be left with the gouge forever.

Before he headed out in the morning, she warmed him up with nether. He carried his things down to the beach, donned his gear, and, tightly clutching his spear, stepped into the sea. The tossing of the waves made them opaque and he was horrified by what might be swimming within. The only solution was to get his face under water so he could see. He threw himself forward, hovering below the surface to look in all directions; once he'd determined it was safe, for now, he paddled out beyond the surf to resume his hunt for the kellevurt. Even then, he spent more time glancing out to open sea than he did scanning the ocean floor.

As noon neared, he got hungry and cold. He turned back to shore and saw Minn standing on the sand. He crawled out of the water, fins flapping.

"No luck?" Minn said. "Well, that's about to change: I brought you lunch."

She'd found and roasted wild onions and tubers to go with the fish. It was a nice change.

"See any sharks?" she said.

He shook his head. "Just a bitty one. Couldn't swallow your pinky toe."

He took a quick nap in the sun, then returned to the hunt. By the end of the day, he'd searched far enough that the water beneath him was twenty feet deep. It was difficult to make out details. Every time he dived down for a closer look at a suspicious bit of black or white, pressure squeezed his ears so hard he thought his head might pop.

The day after, he moved down the beach to shallower waters, splashing around over a bed of slimy kelp. Since the shark, he'd been rigorous about avoiding rocks, coral, and anything else that might cut him, but as he swam over a pillar of coral, a swell fell out from under him, scraping his left arm across the hard, rasping growth. A small cloud of blood drifted from the wound. He swore and turned straight for shore.

Like the day before, Minn was already down on the beach. Yesterday it had been to bring him food, but that day, she stood in the surf, waves foaming around her shins.

"What do you think you're doing?" Blays said.

"Warming up my feet." She brushed hair from her eyes and watched a gull wobbling on the winds. "It makes no sense to sit here on the beach for the rest of our trip."

"Yes it does," he said. "You were bitten by a shark!"

"That was three days ago."

"Do you know how recent that is? You could count that on one hand. Even if you've lost a couple fingers in a tragic shark attack." Water dripped from his underclothes. He'd thought about swimming naked, but swimming around with his bits dangling like a juicy worm did not strike him as his finest idea. "Aren't you scared?"

"Petrified," she said. "But if I force myself forward an inch at a time, sooner or later I'll have to swim."

That day, she made it in to her knees. The next, as she stood with the surf swirling around her thighs, Blays found his first kellevurt.

It was smaller than one of his knuckles, a white ball poky with spikes. Carefully, he gripped one of the prongs and pulled it clear from a knob of coral. He watched for any sign of fangs or stingers, but the snail seemed content to hide in its shell.

He swam back to land and presented it to Minn. "Is this what I think it is?"

She bent over for a better look. "A little baby that won't do you any good? Yes it is."

"But I found one. It's possible! And I know what they look like!"

"Well done, dolphin-man. Now get back to work."

He grinned and ran back into the sea. With no use for the little snail, he swam it out to deeper waters, then released it. It tumbled down, swaying from side to side as it fell, like the world's most useless pendulum. As it came to rest on a slab of sludgy rock, a fish with a yellow stripe and a gray beak swam up to it, gave it a nibble, then swallowed it whole, spitting a plume of splinters from its mouth.

Blays was aghast. Then he was thoughtful. Rather than swimming about willy-nilly, when the fish with the yellow stripe departed to peruse the ocean floor, he followed it. When it cared to, it swam much faster than him, jetting ahead with a blur of its tail. Mostly, however, it poked around like a couple out on market day, allowing him to catch up and keep pace. Its stripe stood out like a beacon.

As afternoon waned, he found he'd followed the fish across a shallow plain and was now hundreds of feet from shore. Out of the corner of his mask, he glimpsed a gray shape as big as a man. He froze, clutching his spear. The creature drifted away into the watery haze.

He took that as a sign to call it a day. Back near land, Minn was in up to her waist. She grinned at him. "See any sharks today?"

He thought about lying, but if that got her back in the water and she was hurt again, he knew that he would have to kill himself. "Maybe. I didn't get a good look at it."

"Well, I hope you did. I'm going to kill it and eat its heart."

He laughed and walked with her back to the cabin. Their trip was now half over, but he felt good. He'd found one of the snails. There would be more—and he thought he knew how to find them.

In the morning, he returned to the rocks where he'd found the juvenile, then struck out in search of one of the striped fish. Within minutes, he spotted one picking away at a crab; it fluttered away whenever its prey raised its claws, only to dart in from the side, wearing the crab down bite by bite. The fish soon proved the victor.

And insatiable. As soon as it finished hollowing out the crab, it continued on its way, roughly parallel to shore. Blays kicked after it. A shape loomed between him and the land. He cried out, voice echoing up his breathing pipe, and rolled on his side to put his spear at the ready. Minn grinned at him and waved.

He pulled his head above water. "Fancy seeing you here."

"Did I just feel a warm current pass me by?"

He frowned, then scoffed. "I would have speared you like a criminal. Are you sure you're ready to get back out here?"

"No," she said. "But here I am."

He wasn't sure if he'd have been able to do the same. Just like he'd done his first day back in the water, she spent more of her time looking around her than she did scanning the ocean floor. She stuck within ten feet of him at all times, too. Blays didn't mind. They should have been doing that from the start.

"Are you following that grinder?" she asked some time later.

"Is that what they're called? I've been thinking of him as Sir Stripe."

"That's not a bad idea. Following it, not your name for him. That's terrible."

Even with Minn's eyes adding to the search, and following the grinder until it swam away, they found nothing. The day after that, Minn burst from the surface bearing a black shell the size of a tomato, but it was a false lead: the shell was empty and cracked. Even so, at least Blays had now seen one in the flesh, as it were.

Dark clouds swept in from the southwest. Just as he was beginning to wonder if they ought to take a break, lightning cut the sky in half. Thunder roared behind it. They swam back to the beach. Halfway to the shack, the clouds tore apart, battering them with rain. At least it got the salt off and spared them a dip in the creek.

The thunder and lightning quit before morning, but the rain and winds persisted for three days. Every time it looked like it had calmed down, a new gale rode in and dumped buckets of rain everywhere. Blays spent the idle time trying to get the nether to expand. He'd been fooling around with it a little every day, but between all the swimming, fishing, and bathing—not to mention the exhausted sleep those things produced in massive volume—he'd had little time.

It was good to get more practice in, but he could feel his time on Ko-o slipping away. Deep down, he'd been hoping to find a shell in the first few days, then take a hike up the volcano. He didn't think he'd ever climbed a volcano before.

At last, the skies cleared. The rain dried. The seas were still choppy and visibility was less than ideal, but they had just three days remaining before Ro returned to take them back to the cove. Sand and pulverized plants wheeled through the waters, tugged this way and that by the angry tides. Many of the fish had gone into hiding. Or maybe they'd been sucked away by the storm. Either way, the grinders were nowhere to be seen.

The first day was a bust. On the second day, a followup storm blew in and ruined their chances. Blays wandered along the beach, hoping to see a fresh shell turned up by the riotous waves. The storm raced off by late afternoon and he was able to get back in the water for a couple hours, but the seas were so rough he didn't dare swim more than a hundred feet from shore.

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