Chapter Sixteen. Eban

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

EBAN

I’m flooded with relief as weapons are lowered and the leader helps to secure our lines, docking our boat, adding us to the flotilla.

My leg is throbbing and my head hurts, but we’re safe for now.

I step out of the boat onto the makeshift foundation.

It’s more like solid ground than I expected, nothing like a raft floating on the sea. There’s no sway or bounce.

“Darius,” he says. He’s solidly built, about my height and age.

He has a confident air about him, very unlike any Ophir I’ve known.

But maybe living in the Lashing instead of the Sleeve will do that to a person.

He hasn’t had to grovel and sneak all his life if he’s lived here instead of under Lacon.

I shake his hand and the hand of the similarly tall, muscular woman standing beside him. Her face is lined and weathered, and she has a stern, though not unkind, air about her. “Perlah,” she says.

“And you are…” Darius addresses this inquiry to me first, in a vaguely challenging tone.

“Eban, and this is my—this is Gin.” I’m not sure what to call Gin—we’re barely friends, and it would take too long to explain how we ended up here together.

Darius nods, and helps Gin out of the boat as well, easily lifting her onto the dock. Then he bows to her as if she’s a visiting dignitary. Gin looks uncomfortable about the gesture and stands awkwardly, keeping a hand in her pocket, where I’m assuming she’s holding on to the relic.

I’m dazed and lightheaded from blood loss and the effort it took to get here. I made it to the Lashing—I should be ecstatic, but all I feel is exhausted.

Darius turns back to me. “We have to ask all those who make it home. But how did you find us?”

“By chance,” I say, not wanting to disclose the truth about the relics just yet.

“Hmm. A little hard to believe that you were able to navigate directly to our outpost with a few lucky guesses. It’s a big ocean out there,” he says mildly.

“There was talk in the Sleeve that the best way to find the Lashing is not to look for it,” I say, just as mildly. “Not all who wander are lost, as they say.”

“An old Ophir saying,” he says, then laughs.

“All right, Eban. Keep your secrets. But you must understand if it’s as easy to find us by chance as you claim, then we’ll have to move again.

” He turns to a few men behind him. “Sink their vessel and tell Mako to rev the main engines. We should be out of here by morning, lest they were followed by Laconian scouts.”

“Is that really necessary?” I ask. “To sink our boat?” I realize that without it, we don’t have a way to get out of here. But why do I feel I need an escape plan? It’s been a dream to find the last free colony of Ophir. But something about this whole welcome feels false and strange.

Darius doesn’t reply and instead turns on his heel and walks away toward the end of the dock. Gin and I look at each other, unsure what to do.

“Come along now,” Darius calls over his shoulder. “Don’t you want something to eat?”

I limp along, my leg screaming.

He nods toward it. “Did we do that? If so, please accept my apologies. We get raided by Lacon, so we need to keep strangers away, as you can imagine.”

I shake my head and grit my teeth. “No. It’s from the day before. Ran into some trouble. Sleeve life, as you can imagine,” I say, matching his tone.

“Hmm,” he says, when I say nothing more.

He leads us to the end of the flotilla, where a larger barge is docked.

We follow him onto it, along with several of the armed men and women who had just tried to kill us with their flaming arrows.

The barge takes us farther out to a much larger collection of rafts.

One that goes for miles and miles, a real floating city with tents and even what appear to be makeshift cottages and towers.

“Here we are,” he says, and leads us out to what looks like the main thoroughfare.

The people of Lashing line the way. It looks like word has spread about our arrival, and they’re as curious about us as we are about them.

They’re all dressed similarly, in light woven cloth in shades of tan and brown and black, cut to suit life on the water.

No one wears anything that suggests they’re of a higher or lower social status than anyone else.

I feel like I’m in some sort of parade, like the one the highborn put on during one of their high holidays.

Gin and I are regarded with suspicion by most, interest by some.

Few appear genuinely friendly. Not surprising.

If anything, friendliness puts me on the defensive—where I’m from, that’s almost always a manipulation tactic.

For all I know, it might be here as well.

The Lashing is far larger than it initially appeared.

There are banners everywhere, depicting what looks like a dragon with fins.

I wonder what that is, some kind of Ophir symbol perhaps.

The tents go on as far as I can see. There are colorful prints on most of them, and through some of the tied-open entryways, I see spacious living quarters with cushy beds covered in soft linens, and bright woven rugs covering the hard floors.

The fact that so many are open and unguarded with their possessions surprises me.

Back home, if anyone leaves their belongings unsupervised, anything of value disappears.

“We share cooking duties here,” Darius tells us, indicating a wide, open space with huge pots simmering over open fires, being stirred by men and women wearing thick beige aprons, splattered with old stains.

They pause their work to watch as we go by.

He grabs a few pieces of dried beef and hands them to me and Gin.

“We’ll get you a proper meal in a bit; hopefully this will do for now. ”

I try not to stuff it all in my mouth, although the salty taste makes me crave water more than ever.

Thankfully, Darius supplies that, too, handing us each a waterskin filled to the brim with cold drinking water.

He continues the makeshift tour. “We also have weavers, crofters, fishermen; every one of us works for the whole. We operate as one community, a sort of extended family. We’re all equal here. ”

“How nice,” says Gin.

I have to admit, it does seem pleasant, and fed and watered, I’m more amenable to his welcome.

At the same time, I can’t imagine giving up any of my hard-won autonomy—relying on others has never worked out for me.

Plus, I don’t have a boat anymore. Not that it was ever mine, but again, I can’t get rid of that strange nagging feeling of discomfort.

“A family, huh?” I say.

“Yes—why?” Darius asks.

“And I’ll assume you’re the head of it?”

Darius rocks back on his heels. “I’ve been designated as one of the community leaders, I suppose.”

“Some people are more equal than others, then?” I challenge.

“I know it’s hard to understand after living in Lacon your whole life, Eban, but that’s not how we operate here.

In the Lashing, we keep to the Ophir ways.

We are a community of equals. Don’t worry, you’ll get used to it after a while.

” Darius turns to walk ahead. “We have open quarters for each of you,” he calls back.

“They’re on the north side of the village. ”

We weave in and out of a maze of tents until we come to one with the entrance tied shut. Darius undoes the knot holding it closed and pulls the flap aside. “Gin, you can stay here.”

She steps inside. The room is as well-appointed as the others we’d seen. The bed is thick and covered with blankets and pillows in red, yellow, and orange, like a sunset. There’s a woven screen for privacy, and an expertly crafted wood chair. “Thank you,” she says.

“As for you, Eban,” Darius begins as he leads me away from the room, toward another large tent a significant distance from Gin’s. “That leg looks like it might be infected. Since you’re injured, you’ll be staying in the infirmary awhile.”

I memorize the layout of the place as we walk, which paths lead where, and the quickest exits at every given point.

When we finally arrive at the infirmary, there are at least a dozen simple beds set up in two rows, almost all occupied by sick men—men who obviously require far more care than I do.

I suspect Darius is more concerned with putting some space between me and Gin than with healing my leg, but I accept the amenities gratefully.

“I’ll leave you to get settled in, then,” Darius says with a nod. I watch him walk out of the room.

I wait a few minutes after Darius departs, then jump out of bed and head off to check on Gin. The nurse calls out to me as I go. “Don’t worry, I’ll be back,” I promise her as I slip through the infirmary curtain.

Out of habit, I back up around corners and check what’s ahead before turning down any path, convinced Darius might be waiting to catch me.

You’re not a prisoner, I remind myself. You’re a guest here.

This isn’t Lacon anymore. This is Ophir.

You’re safe. But I can’t even convince myself.

I don’t know this place, or these people, and in my experience, kindness without expectation of personal gain is an exceedingly rare commodity.

What does Darius want from us? He must want something.

I make my way to Gin’s tent and tap on the side of the entryway. Solid wood. Certainly can’t fault their craftsmanship. This place may not be a palace, but it is sturdy.

“Yes?” she calls out. I sense trepidation in her voice.

Maybe she’s afraid Darius is at the door, back to bother her while she’s alone and unguarded.

Which is exactly why I went to her the moment I could.

She’s nothing to me, a thief, a stranger, but right then I realize she’s the only person I know in this place.

More than that, I feel protective toward her.

We’ve been through a lot together in such a short time.

“It’s me.”

She peeks out, then opens the tent flap and moves aside so I can enter.

“Yeah, so…,” I begin. “How about that Darius…”

“He’s quite generous,” she remarks. “Nice of him to welcome us so readily.” Huh. I guess I read her wrong. I thought she’d feel like I do.

“A little too nice, don’t you think?”

“What do you mean?”

“We’re strangers. He doesn’t know us from a toad on the ground. Why trust us?”

She crosses her arms across her body. “You’d rather he locked us up? You wanted to be here. You’re the one who believes all those Ophir myths.”

I slump. She’s right. I’m the one who dreamed of finding this place, of living in freedom. I should be ecstatic, but instead I’m the same thief I was in the Sleeve. Watchful, suspicious, guarded. “Well, I am stuck in the infirmary.”

“I’m sure he’s only making sure you get the care you need.” She looks at my injury and scrunches her eyebrows with concern. “Did you have it examined? Cleaned?”

“Not yet. I came to see how you’re doing first.”

“I’m all right,” she says. “Just tired. You should get some rest, too. Heal. It’s been a rough two days. And Ver—” She stops herself from mentioning Vergel.

“It’s okay, you can say his name.”

“I’m sorry about Vergel. He didn’t deserve to die like that.”

“He was a street rat and a thief, his life wasn’t worth much,” I say bitterly. “Especially to House Eternal.” I know it’s all I’m going to think about when I’m inevitably alone that night, trying to sleep, and haunted by visions of Vergel being shot down by Blackcoats.

She puts a hand on my arm. “He was worthy because he was your friend.”

“And I’m sorry about Aris,” I tell her.

Gin blinks back a few tears. “He didn’t have much, but what he did, he gave me.”

“Yeah,” I cough.

“Do you really think we’re not safe here?” she asks nervously.

“I don’t know,” I tell her. “I don’t know if I ever believed this place really existed. I never thought I’d actually get here.”

“Neither did I.”

“But hey, we’re free here,” I say. That’s why Lacon spends so much of their resources tracking down the Lashing.

It’s the one place where their rules and their might don’t matter.

Here, in the last free colony of Ophir, we aren’t slaves, we aren’t second-class citizens.

But are we actually free? I have no idea.

Unexpectedly, Gin slides her arm through mine. The gesture sends a flood of warmth through me. “I’ll walk you back to the infirmary. I want to see more of our so-called home.”

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