The heat creeping up my neck, burning across my face is not shameful. Iâm not embarrassed by her performance. Itâs that I couldnât handle how maddeningly attractive it was. So devastatingly irresistible in its crudeness. I want to scoff, let myself be above it. But Iâm not. Iâm choking on the way it makes my stomach flip, my pulse hammer.
This isnât new. Itâs been like this with Darlene since we were kids. Her raw, unapologetic taking of space and pleasure always had a very specific effect on me.
As badly as I want to know what itâs like, Iâm too afraid to let go, afraid of where it might take me if I let it sweep me away. So instead, I shrink inward and run from it.
I grasp at the frayed edges of my frustration, desperate to hold onto something solid. My humiliation. The way she made a game of my ignorance. And now, the vote. I needed her assistance when I was stranded on that beach, sure. But the nerve she has to assume that I want to stay, be a part of this crew, is completely off the mark.
âSomething on your mind, love?â she says, her eyes narrowing, that wicked grin daring me to speak.
I press my tongue to the roof of my mouth, knowing full well that anything I say will confirm Iâm rattled. That I canât scrub the image of her grinding against the mast from the inside of my skull.
I refuse to give her that satisfaction so I keep my face still, and let the silence stretch between us like a taut wire. Roberts watches me for a moment longer, exhaling slow and easy, like she has all the time in the world.
Then she says, âFollow me.â
I could stand my ground, say that I am not hers to order around. But my body betrays me. And before I can decide, Iâm already moving.
The door clicks shut behind me. Roberts leans against the edge of the desk, arms crossed, watching me like sheâs still trying to decide what to do with me.
"So," she drawls, stretching the word out. "That little episode on deck. You want to tell me what that was about?"
I force my expression to stay flat. "I donât know what youâre talking about."
"Yesterday," she says, "you knew we were off course before any of us did."
âI already told you, I donât think it was anything." I say.
âIt was one hell of a premonition.â
âI donât have premonitions,â I dismiss.
She pauses, then says, âYou donât. Of course you donât,â as if working through it aloud. âThe dragon does.â
âWhat do you know about dragonsâ
âMore than you, it would appear.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWhat it means is that I have questions,â she says smoothly. âStarting with how you got your hands on the damn thing. Did you steal it?â
âI didnât steal it,â I snap.
âMm. Borrowed, then?â
âNo.â I insist.
âPeople are looking for you, though.â She says. Itâs a statement more than a question.
I keep my lips pressed into a thin line.
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âWhatâs your plan, Sarah? Whatâs the endgame?â
I let out a humorless laugh. âDo you think Iâd just tell a pirate my plans? Let you use me for a payday?â
âFuck me,â she mutters under her breath. âYou think Iâd sell you out?â
âI think youâre an opportunist.â I say.
âYou donât know a damn thing about me.â
âOh, sure. Youâre special.â
âI am,â she says without hesitation.
âRight. Tell yourself whatever you need to, but at the end of the day, youâre still a pirate, Roberts.â
âCaptain,â she corrects.
âEnlighten me then, Captain, what makes you different?â I say.
âYou can ask anyone on this ship, theyâll tell you that I pay out the highest shares. That I make sure my peopleâs families are fed, I donât take more than I need, and I donât spill blood unless I have to.â
I raise a brow. âA virtuous pirate. How novel.â
âI have bigger goals than plundering around,â she says.
âBig goals, huh? Is that why you ran away in the middle of the night, chasing your dream of being a virtuous pirate? Funny. I donât remember you having aspirations at all, Darlene. "
She lets the silence stretch. Long enough that I start to believe Iâve got her. Then she laughs and steps forward until sheâs so close I can feel the heat radiating from her body. I should take a step back, but gods help me, I want to lean in. Instead, I lower my eyes.
âHello, Sarah.â
Her voice is low, almost reverent. One thumb hangs loosely from her belt. The other hand grips the hilt of her weapon. Iâll take it from her the first chance I get, if I need to.
But then, that lazy thumb leaves the belt and finds its way to my cheek. Her index finger tucks beneath my chin. A touch so gentle, yet it awakens my every nerve.
She tilts my face upward, and I surrender, sinking into the dark depths of her gaze.
âItâs been a while.â She murmurs, pupils blown wide under heavy eyelids.
A single tear wells up before I can stop it.
âHow could youââ I whisper. How could you do this to me? How could you pretend we donât know each other?
The tear slips free, heavier than a hundred, until it reaches the place where her thumb rests against my jaw.
She inhales sharply, then lets her hand fall away, leaving a cold trace in its absence. She steps back, pacing toward her desk. Her fingers trailing absently across the wood, before finally replying.
âAt least I remembered you.â
It only takes me a moment to recover. "Well Captain Roberts,â I scoff, âyou arenât anything like the Darlene I knew, and I wonât be a part of this. Iâm not a pirate. I should have never boarded this ship. You have to take me back."
My fingers dig into my arms, locking them in place.
"Fine, you donât have to be a pirate. But weâve already agreed Iâm not making any special trips for you. You want off this ship? Youâre free to go whenever you choose. Swim if you want." She says.
"Tell me, if you havenât been sent to capture me. If youâre not going to sell me out, and youâre not forcing me to join your pirate crew, then what do you want from me?â I say.
"I want to know if I can trust you, Sarah. And, more importantly, if you trust yourself." She says.
A slow chill trickles down my spine.
"You knew we were headed for danger, and it wasnât luck or instinct. Despite what you say, it was a premonition, just like in the legends of the reckoning and the history of the Dragon Queens. And I believe that you, Sarah, are the Dragon Queen.
I flinch. Itâs the first time anyone has called me that.
"Iâve known somethingâs coming for a while now. Something bigger than the power struggle between the wealthy and the poor, masters and slaves, pirates and merchants. Things canât keep going the way they are. A reckoning is coming, and I think youâre at the helm.
And if I can be part of making this world less broken, thereâs nothing I wouldnât do."
And suddenly, I see her. The person who has looked at the world and come to the same conclusion that I have.
The person who, like me, has never been able to look away from the rot, refusing to accept the way things are.
"If the Dragon is here to reset the balance, then I want to be on the winning side of that war."
Relief at the thought of an ally in this fight floods through me. But before I can open my mouth to reply, BANG. A fist slams into the door, the sudden noise splitting through the air like a gunshot.
"Captain, come quick.â