Originally, Hopper had planned to clamber in through one of the cannon bays, but to do that he'd have to get wet. Hopper didn't like getting wet. So he'd decided to take his chances with the mooring lines.
Other than some painful splattered jellyfish smeared on the rope, the mooring line Hopper had selected was a good one. It led up to the top rail and ducked right under a web of rigging. Hopper found the deck on the back of the
Oxford
relatively quiet, but there were several sailors near the two hatches he could see from his vantage. There'd be no way to get past them. He needed to find another way down below. He looked up the rigging and saw that it stretched halfway up the mainmast and ended at a crow's-nest. Hopper figured he could get a better look at the deck from up there. He reached over to the rigging and pulled himself on. Then he wriggled all the way up to the crow's-nest.
From the small round platform halfway up the tall mast Hopper could see most of the deck. He gazed down and spotted at least a dozen hatches that looked promisingâmost within a few yards of a strand of rigging he could access from the crow's-nest. In fact, Hopper realized he could get to almost any part of the aft half of the
Oxford
from the crow's-nest. He decided he'd make for a little cargo hatch on the portside of the ship.
But as he turned, he looked out over the British fort. He saw the bell tower. It had been his home ever since the big wave. He'd celebrated his tenth birthday in that tower. Then, even though he knew he shouldn't, he looked past the fort to the sleeping town of New Providence. He could just make out the old gray road. He followed its curving line down into the valley, blinked, and saw a shadowy memory of his father walking with him back from fishing. They were laughing and telling stories, making plans for the next time. He saw them walk up to the first cottage on the left. There was warm yellow light. He knew his mother would be in there, busy with a pudding or some other sweet treat.
Hopper blinked again. He missed his parents. A tear trailed down his cheek.
He slumped down in the crow's-nest, exhausted from the climb and maybe more from the memory. Hopper closed his eyes and slept.
There came a quick rap at Commodore Blake's stateroom door, then a voice. “Sir?”
Blake recognized the voice of his new quartermaster, Ezekiel Jordan. “Come in, come in,” said Commodore Blake.
The door opened and Blake's new quartermaster stepped partially in. He saw that Commodore Blake had company and said, “Beg your pardon, sir, I didn't know the missis was in here with you. I'll come back later.”
“Oh, please do come in,” said Lady Dolphin. “You're always welcome.”
“I agree,” said Commodore Blake. “Mister Jordan, what can I do for you?”
Mr. Jordan's face reddened. “Well, Commodore, we have a little problem . . . a very little problem.”
Just then a high, heavily accented English voice said, “I ain't that little!”
Mr. Jordan opened the door the rest of the way, and at his elbow stood the strangest lad Commodore Blake had ever seen. He was completely bald and had no eyebrows to speak of either. His skin was so tan and caked with dark mud that his blue eyes sparkled like gems uncovered in a mine.
“We found him in the crow's-nest on the mizzenmast. He was fast asleep and right hard to wake.”
“You mean to say, Mister Jordan, no one went to the crow's-nest until just now, four hours after leaving port?”
Jordan shifted uneasily. “Well, ol' Timmons was up on the mainmast, we didn't see no reason toâ”
“Oh, the poor thing,” said Dolphin. She went to the boy, knelt beside him, and patted him on the shoulder. “He's naught but skin and bones wrapped in dirty rags.”
“Wiry skin and bones,” said the quartermaster. “He near kicked me off the crow's-nest when I tried to grab him. Slick as an eel, he is.”
“A stowaway?” asked Commodore Blake. Jordan nodded. The Commodore stood, walked around his desk, and stooped to look more closely at the lad. “Are you sick, boy?”
“No, Guv'nor, leastways not anyfin' you kin' catch.”
“What happened to your hair, your eyebrows?”
The lad looked away and made a loud swallowing sound. “I don't rightly know,” he said quietly. “It all fell out . . . after the wave.”
“How terrible,” said Dolphin. “You were on New Providence when it flooded?”
The boy nodded and blinked.
Commodore Blake asked, “Where are yourâ?” He realized suddenly, and said no more.
Tears left muddy streaks down the lad's face. Dolphin thought her heart would burst for this unfortunate lad. “What is your name?” she asked.
“Nathaniel.”
“All right, Nathaniel, we'll justâ”
“Nobody calls me Nathaniel.”
“Oh, well, what should we call you?”
“Hopper,” he said. “It's my surname, actually. It's what I go by.”
“He had this knapsack with him,” said Mr. Jordan. “I think we found the monkey that's been around the fort pinching everything that's left untended.”
Commodore Blake looked at the lad. “You've been living alone at the fort?” Hopper nodded. “All this time?” Hopper nodded again. “Resourceful lad. We could use someone like you on this trip.”
“Yes, Guv'nor,” said Hopper. “I'm not afraid to work. I'll work hard, sir, I will.”
“And through your hard work, you'll pay back what you owe?” Blake asked.
Hopper nodded so hard and so many times Dolphin thought he might harm himself. She gently stopped his chin.
“Right then,” said the commodore. “Hopper, you are officially a deck hand on the HMS
Oxford
. Mister Jordan, see to it that he's washed and fitted with new clothing.”
“That won't be necessary, my husband,” said Dolphin. “I'll see to it myself.”
“As you wish, my dear,” he replied. A smile tugged at the corners of his mouth. He marveled at his wife's tender heart. She smiled sweetly back and then whisked young Hopper out of the room.
As soon as he felt Lady Dolphin and the lad were well out of range, Mr. Jordan said, “That's not what we usually do with stowaways, sir.”
“True, Jordan,” said the commodore. “But Hopper is not the usual stowaway. There is no malice or mischief in his face. Only need . . . and hurt. The sea took his parents, and yet he survived. We would do well to have a lad with such spirit among us. And I have a feeling about him.”
“A feeling, sir?”
“I know, I am not usually prone to hunches. But I feel it now as strong as the sea breeze: young Hopper will make a difference in this world.”
A
fter a three-day journey aboard the
Talon
, a forty-gun barque purchased in England, Bartholomew Thorne and a skeleton crew of twenty men neared Gotland Island. The vast island, just fifty miles from the Swedish mainland, had been a center of trade and commerce in the Baltic Sea for hundreds of years. Through the years it had hosted many peoples and occupying forces until finally falling back under the domain of the Swedish in 1645, less than one hundred years ago.
But on the south side of the island, far from the teeming markets of Visby, the island's largest city, dwelt a people who because of their ferocity and iron will had been left alone by those who came and wentâand largely by time itself. The Raukar, or “stone ones” as they were sometimes called, were all direct descendants of Viking warriors. Bartholomew Thorne was counting on that for more than one reason.
The
Talon
was Thorne's newest ship since the British destroyed the
Raven
, anchored in Sigvard Bay a few hundred yards from the shore. Massive limestone rock formations stood out like eerie pale faces in the dark water as Thorne's cutter approached the shore of Gotland Island. “Reminds me of the shards,” muttered Thorne.
“Shards, sir?” asked Edward Teach, Thorne's new quartermaster.
“Nothing.” Thorne let his mind drift for a moment, replaying his failed attempt to plunder Constantine's Treasure from the Isle of Swords. His carefully sculpted plan had crumbled because of one man: Declan Ross. No, that wasn't quite right, he reminded himself. If it had not been for the efforts of his own son, Griffin, Thorne by now would most likely own the Atlantic and the Spanish Main. That day would come, he knew. Thorne fingered his new bleeding stick by his side. Ross and Griffin would feel its bite.
Thorne's landing party came ashore as the sun set. They kindled torches immediately and passed beneath a bone-white arch, the ruined remains of what must have once been a grand quay. Though Thorne had never been to the island before, it felt familiar to him . . . like a sort of homecoming. He led his men over a rubble-strewn hill and then down a winding path into a heavily forested valley. Carrying a belted leather satchel with as much care as he could, Teach hobbled along behind his captain. Teach was a big, broad-shouldered man, and strong, but even for him, the case was heavy.
“Sir?”
“Yes, Mister Teach,” Thorne replied over his shoulder.
“I'm not complainin', sir, nothin' like that,” he said, trying not to grunt from the strain. “But, well, what's in this here satchel?”
Thorne stopped but did not turn around. “That, Mister Teach, is the only thing that will get us off this island alive.”
Thorne resumed his confident pace. Resolving to let his arms burst before he would drop the satchel, Teach hurried to catch up with his captain.
As the trees began to thin, Thorne and his band began to see flickers of orange through the trunks ahead. An unpleasant sweet smell drifted on the air, and small flies buzzed angrily by. Thorne led his men from beneath the canopy of a huge, sprawling tree. Standing before them suddenly, as if it had been dropped from the sky, was a massive gray fortress. Tall, octagonal towersâall crenelated and crowned with torchesâstood between dense and winding expanses of wall. The walls wound back behind the tree line, but it was impossible to tell how far back they went. A relatively small gatehouse waited in the shadows between the two tallest towers, but, other than the torches, there was no sign that any living being remained in this castle.
Thorne hesitated only a moment at the tree line, then marched forward. The others, feeling vulnerable in the open, followed closely behind Captain Thorne. As a line of long arrows peppered the ground a few paces in front of them, all came to a sudden, heart-stopping halt. All but Thorne jumped when a similar line appeared behind them. So many were the shafts and so precise their spacing that it seemed a short fence had risen up from the ground in front and behind them.
“Stanna!” a deep voice commanded from somewhere high on one of the towers. The voice rang out in a language no one but Thorne understood, but the arrows made the meaning clear enough. Thorne and his men scanned the towers and walls and waited. Thorne was not so daunted, and he took one step forward.
“Stanna!” commanded the voice once more. “Om du ar inte av akta blodsforvant, maste ni vanda. Annars moter du samma odet som dom andra!”