Elandra moved through the port streets with purpose, tightly drawn into herself.
She was a difficult woman to follow, weaving in and out of the great crowds of people, slipping in and out of shadows just the same.
Adrian was struck, abruptly, by the largeness of land. Port was a dizzying swirl of colour and scent and sound, ever shifting. The sea could appear vast and endless at times, indeed it was often described as just that, but a ship was tightly contained. There were only ever so many places one could go. Even on a large ship, it wouldn’t take more than a few minutes of effort to cross one side to another.
Here, on land, one could walk for days.
Don’t turn this into a fight, pirate. You’re on land now, you won’t win.
Adrian’s heart pounded. Could they be sure she wasn’t leading them into a trap? Expecting them to follow?
She knew this port. Demarion did too, perhaps, but not like her – his eyes locked on her with a fixed intent that Adrian had grown used to seeing directed at anyone else but himself. It made him feel oddly ungrounded. For all the busyness of being Captain, Adrian was used to his gaze meeting Demarion’s when he looked at the pirate, more often than not.
It would be easy to fall back, now that Demarion’s attention had slipped the most it ever had. It might be Adrian’s chance at escape. Commandeer another ship. Flee. Head back to his Navy. Tell the Admiral all that had happened.
His curiosity held him tighter than the cuffs or Demarion’s hand on his bicep did.
Elandra led them then down another alley. Possibly she was trying to shake them off, having realized that she was being followed. She walked faster than ever before. Adrian stumbled a little, unused to cobbled streets, unbalanced by his restraints.
A knife narrowly missed Adrian’s throat.
He hissed out a breath, jolting back. His hands jerked for a weapon only for the cuffs to catch at his wrists again. He would have shot Demarion a look if he dared take his eyes off the knife.
Demarion drew his sword, stepping between Adrian and the direction of the blade.
Adrian whipped around at a sound behind him, pressing his back against Demarion’s.
“Uh…”
More figures slipped out of the shadows from behind them. Circling. Surrounding. He hadn’t even heard them come up, beneath the bustle of the city. There was sound everywhere, beyond the roar of waves and the predictable creaks of a well-known ship.
He scanned them, assessing, weighing up his opportunities and best gambling chances.
“I told you to stop this, Demarion,” Elandra called. “You should have listened to me.”
“You knew I’d follow you,” Demarion said. His muscles were tensed against Adrian.
“You never listen to anyone,” she replied.
Who were all of these people? Some scheme that she’d set up? Or had she managed to get a message out before they even began following? It couldn’t be simply be bad luck.
Adrian counted two figures in front of him. There would be more on Demarion’s side – including at least one person capable of hurtling a knife wicked fast through the air.
“You’re not going to try and kill me, El,” Demarion said. “You’d lose too much business.”
“I’m afraid the pretty Captain is not for sale.”
“I’m afraid we’re not looking to buy,” came another voice. “We’ll be taking him off your hands one way or another.”
Adrian never imagined he’d want to be Demarion’s prisoner. Yet. He twisted his wrists in the cuffs, turning his head slightly to glance over Demarion’s shoulder.
He counted one, two, three, four including Elandra.
He’d faced worst odds, but always at sea. With his crew. Not with a pirate who he didn’t trust or know, on unfamiliar and too still terrain.
Adrian hadn’t begged once in the last month. He hadn’t begged when Demarion had him whipped bloody on the deck, or on that first night when the humiliation and the uncertainty burned sick like swallowing too much sea water. He hadn’t begged that first day, bound on his knees before the most notorious Pirate Captain on the seas, outnumbered and expecting death.
His voice now was hoarse and small and shaky.
Adrian could feel that intent gaze on him now, taking him to pieces.
“I’m not even with him,” Adrian said. “He – he took me prisoner – he left my ship to shatter –“ He laughed, a strangled and frantic sound. “Don’t kill me for him.”
“—See now, you’re better off just handing him over, pirate. He doesn’t want you. And I’m sure you’d like to do business in this port again too.”
Adrian met Demarion’s gaze for the flicker of a heartbeat.
Demarion’s fingers flexed on his arm, rough and possessive, before he let go.
Adrian edged around him, dry mouthed, and stepped out of the shadow of the alleyway towards the figures gathered around them.
For all the bustle of port, this part was empty. Or at the very least anyone still in their house was making a concentrated effort to not look out of their windows, or simply didn’t care to.
Adrian’s breath settled even and steady. His gaze flitted over the figures, mapping them out around him. He felt the cold tightness of the chains around his wrists and wondered how a man with slave markings, even a pirate, could bear to keep someone in shackles.
“Thank you,” he gabbled. “Oh my god, thank you. I have money – information –“
Elendra’s hand reached out to him with a greedy sort of terror, her eyes as cold as they had been at her house. He was just another unusual trinket to collect, wasn’t he? Only this time he was property too dangerous to steal. Something to be returned to owner as if he even knew what that meant.
He resisted the urge to touch his mother’s locket warm around his neck.
Her hand closed around his arm, reeling him in the rest of the way into the circle of armed men.
Their hands rested on weapons, their stares seared straight through him.
Adrian glanced at Demarion.
Demarion was flint for all his time at sea, his gaze ever-waiting for a spark to turn it to flame. At least when he looked back at Adrian.
Demarion drew a weapon, drew their attention to him,
The men turned to the Pirate Captain.
Elandra’s hands twitched to throw another knife.
He seized a blade from Elandra’s belt and smashed his elbow into her throat. He barely heard her wheeze over the roar of blood in his ears but felt her recoil. He dodged the slash of her knife and swiped at the man next to him – focused. Get the wrist, or the throat, or the back of the knee. Incapacitate them from action fast.
The man dropped with a bellow.
Adrian met Elandra’s knives in a whirl, stumbling back on the too steady land.
The knife clattered out of his hand. Too predictable, too slow, off-balanced by the cuffs.
A smile whipped across her face – the first true one he’d seen.
Adrian pounced for the back of one of the other men, hooking his chained wrists tight around his throat so the metal pulled back to pin the larger man against him. He rammed them both, other man first, into Elandra and her wicked quick knives. She stumbled back at the force.
The man writhed in his hold, gasping like a hooked fish.
The man slammed him backwards, crushing Adrian backwards.
Adrian groaned, pain throbbing up his spine. The taste of blood flooded copper in his mouth.
Adrian began to draw back, only for the man to seize hold of the cuffs to keep him in place, unable to dodge and spin, exposing Adrian’s back. He swore. Glanced over his shoulder at number four coming at him.
Demarion hurtled into the battle in a blur of deadly movement.
Adrian snapped his focus back on the man in his arms, squeezing his grip tighter, constricting.
The man struggled harder, ramming him into another wall, snarling.
Demarion drove his sword into the man’s stomach. His face was inches from Adrian’s, both of their breathing hard and ragged. There was blood on Demarion’s cheek and his eyes were wild.
Demarion Strand. Adrian remembered the tales.
The man’s snarl turned to a cry as Demarion’s knife twisted, the pirate’s eyes still on Adrian, before he stepped back.
Adrian unhooked his aching arms and stumbled back from the man as he crumpled in a heap on the floor between them, blood spilling across the stones.
There was no sign of Elandra anywhere.
The only remaining figures were on the floor.
Adrian swore under his breath. “She’s gone.” She could be anywhere – they had nothing but bruises! He moved to scour the remaining for any sign of life.
Adrian shoved down the adrenaline instinct to attack, jaw clenching, muscles tensed.
“Are you hurt?” Demarion asked, studying him.
“No more than you. We got lucky.”
“That wasn’t luck,” Demarion smirked. “That was you.”
Adrian didn’t quite know what to say to that, but he weighed it up as he scanned the bodies on the floor. None of them were moving.
“You really are a beautiful fighter,” Demarion murmured.
Adrian swallowed, and pulled his arm away from the warm press of Demarion’s fingers.
“You should have bloody uncuffed me then.”
They found their way limping back to the ship, alert for the possibility of a future attack, stiff with disappointment and questions. Or, at least, Adrian was. Who knew about Demarion.
Why had the pirate even brought him along? Obviously, he hadn’t brought his crew because none of them knew about the scars on his chest. But why Adrian? He doubted it was the courtesy of it being his locket. Adrian would have suggested next that the pirate wanted something to trade if everything went to hell, but Demarion’s reaction suggested otherwise.
So what had he expected to find following Elandra? Not an ambush.
“You wanted to see the look on my face,” Adrian said, quietly, strangely stung. His stupid expressive face. He was means to an end, but in what stupid second had he ever thought otherwise? Adrian was a prisoner. Heat of battle or not. “Well, sorry to disappoint you, but I don’t recognize any of them.”
“Mm. They didn’t recognize you either.” Demarion didn’t apologise.
Adrian wanted to slap him.
You led me into a fight blind and didn’t have the decency to uncuff me. But what had he expected? And Demarion hadn’t expected the fight. He should have expected it, perhaps, but that was a different matter.
The Leviathan loomed familiar on the harbour and Adrian came to a stop. Was he really going to just walk back onto the ship where he was a prisoner? He was curious, yes, and Demarion was a puzzle piece towards answers, but…
Demarion stopped too, studying his expression. “You’re angry.”
“Maybe I just don’t know how someone with marks like yours gets off keeping someone prisoner.”
His adrenaline had drained cold and tired and irritable. His fingers flexed in the useless cuffs.
“We’re not doing this now,” Demarion said, warning.
Adrian snorted. “That’s convenient. Are we ever doing it? I suppose we don’t have to as far as you’re concerned.” He jangled the cuffs.
Demarion’s expression was annoyingly blank, not betraying even the smallest flicker or nuance that Adrian had grown so used to finding. “It’s idiotic to stay in the open. You gave us the element of surprise, Adrian. We won’t have that again.”
It was true. Maddening, but true.
He followed Demarion to the Captain’s quarters and hated himself for it just slightly. What a useless night.
Demarion slammed him up against the door when it shut, fingers wound tight in the front of Adrian’s shirt.
Adrian’s shirt caught. He shifted his knee to –
Demarion pressed closer, flattening against him, pinning his limbs in place with a ruthlessly intimate efficiency.
“You are going to stop referring to my scars in public where anyone can hear me. Do you understand?”
“No,” Adrian growled. “I don’t understand. I don’t understand any of this. You won’t tell me.”
They stared at each other for a beat, breathing as hard as if they’d just fought another battle.
“Look,” Adrian said. “I get that I’m just some Navy Captain prisoner you took, but whatever that all was has gone beyond that. Don’t you think? I thought-“ He didn’t know what he’d thought. He’d still been in cuffs this last week or so, but it had been different. He’d thought they were working together in some way. “You didn’t even uncuff me.”
“Considering what you can do in cuffs I believe that was quite wise. I’m sure the only reason you haven’t actually slit my throat yet is that you wouldn’t make it out of this port or off this ship alive if you did.”
Adrian abruptly hated him just as much as he had the first night.
Maddening bastard.
He jolted against the grip and wondered why he’d ever missed the confined spaces of a ship.
“I don’t like it when you mention my scars in public,” Demarion said. “Especially not considering the reaction people have to just seeing the same pattern on a locket.”
Adrian stilled, staring at him. He hadn’t thought of that. Demarion had made such light of it the first time he had tried to question, outside of Elandra’s home. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t quite know what to say, or if it would make Demarion clam up. Baiting had often made him talk, but not…not Adrian suspected, ever about that. “You knew she would have that reaction.”
“No. I just knew that the mark signified branded property.”
“You didn’t look at me like property.”
Adrian didn’t know why Demarion was telling him this now. There was probably some point or purpose or manipulation behind it. But that didn’t mean it wasn’t true, either. A sickening knot lodged in his stomach. If his mother’s locket carried a slaver’s mark…
“You’re going to surrender yourself to me completely by the time I’m done with you, and then beg me to still keep you.” Demarion murmured the words again, his hand sliding to the locket around Adrian’s throat. “I never heard you beg before today.”
“It’s what he said to me,” Demarion continued. His attention was still fixed on the locket.
“I didn’t presume to know his name at the time. I never have.”
“Did he…” Adrian didn’t want to ask. He had to ask. “Did he look like me?”
Demarion snorted. “No, pretty captain. Not like you.” It was a faint tease, some clutch at Demarion’s normal commentary, but it still somehow made Adrian smile.
He wondered, smile slipping, if Demarion had begged. Adrian couldn’t imagine the pirate captain he knew ever doing so. “Let me guess,” he said. “You wanted to see how I’d react if you said it to me.”
Adrian stayed silent for a moment, mulling it over, trying to organise his thoughts. “Did I satisfy your curiosity?”
“You only ever give me more questions, Adrian Murphy.”
Demarion pulled back then, releasing him.
Adrian sagged against the wall.
A small silver key hit Adrian’s face. It clattered to the floor.
Adrian’s heart kicked in his chest, eyes widening.
“You’re a man of honour. You tried to protect your man, and really despite all sense you saved my life today,” Demarion said softly. “So I’ll do you a trade. I’ll give you this key – and you get me that one. Deal?”
The key vanished again under Demarion’s boot.
Somehow, they’d been ambushed.
Somehow, someone had expected them.