James E. Carter & Itzi Ku
The low hum of the engines filled the bridge, steady and almost comforting after the chaos of the last days. Beyond the windows, the forest canopy rolled away in dark, endless swells, cut only by the scar of the railway and the grey smudge of smoke rising over the Mortree. Arkadios’s voice drifted faintly from the speaking tubes as he relayed orders to take them north of the tracks and signal the Mittelanders. Somewhere below, Mariner’s report about the smoke had set the bridge crew muttering in clipped, tense exchanges.
Carter stepped in quietly, tool belt hanging from one hand. He looked worn down, like a man who’d been awake too long but didn’t trust himself to stop moving. Crossing the short stretch to the helm, he leaned against the bulkhead near Itzi, who hadn’t taken her eyes off the horizon in some time.
“Well,” he said after a beat, voice rough with fatigue, “after today, a rich man like me fixing canvas might soon be a thing of the past.”
Itzi didn’t answer right away. She nodded absently, still watching the pale plume of smoke in the distance. Carter waited a moment, then tried again.
“Quiet for a change,” he said, glancing at the compass, “Almost peaceful. You’d think we weren’t flying toward a battlefield.”
“Almost,” she replied, tone flat. She kept her hands on the wheel, knuckles pale.
He studied her for a moment, then tilted his head, “What’s on your mind?”
That finally drew her eyes from the glass. There was a flash of something, uncertainty or perhaps fear, before she let out a breath and turned back to the helm.
“You walk in here,” she said, “like it’s any other day... Out there it’s a war and we’ve been inches from dying, Aden nearly got himself killed, and for what? If we’d gone down, my parents would never even know what happened to me.”
Carter didn’t bristle. He only nodded slowly and looked past her to the smoke on the horizon.
“Once you’ve been close to the end,” he said, “close enough to taste the salt in the air as your ship goes under… it all gets a little numb after that. My crew went down in the open ocean. Sea doesn’t care how much you scream at it.”
Itzi’s expression softened, guilt edging in. She looked down at the brass rim of the wheel.
“I’ve been on the edge,” he continued, “Close enough to see the teeth. After that, well... things just feel quieter inside. Not better... Just… quieter.”
A long silence followed. Then, gently, Carter shifted topics.
“But we’re not dead, are we?” he said, flashing a small smile. “We made it out, we found the hoard, that’s a damn ‘King’s Favor’ if I’ve ever seen one.”
Itzi let out a small, reluctant laugh, though her smile faded quickly.
“You really think they’ll let us just walk away with it? The soldiers here... or the ones waiting for us in Mitteland?”
“Don’t care,” he said, plain and sharp. “I came to this damn country to do a job. The Inburians handed me a broken contract, a ruined ship, and a dead crew. That gold’s not loot, it’s fair compensation.”
“They’ll pay us,” Itzi said, more out of obligation than conviction.
“With what?” Carter questioned, “Inburian notes?" he scoffed, "Those’ll be worth jack in the Main before the year’s out. You see what’s happening down there? The country’s eating itself.”
He stood, pacing once before leaning against the bulkhead.
“And let’s say, somehow, they do pay,” he went on. “That won’t stop Evig Trade from coming after me. I lost their airship, their men, their cargo. You think they’re gonna send a fruit basket? No, they’ll want heads, and mine’s easiest to roll.”
He went on, quieter now, his face shifting down, “That crew had families, Itzi. Kids, wives, folks back home who depended on what those men brought in. I’m not walking back emptyhanded and telling them the Empire says ‘thanks, good luck.' I knew them and I know who they left behind. I’m not walking back with empty hands while their people starve. A few missing bars won’t sink the Inburians’ bottom line… whatever the hell their bottom line even looks like these days.”
She wanted to argue, but the words caught. Part of her wanted that gold too, more than she liked to admit but she could feel trouble coiling around it already.
Carter seemed to sense her hesitation. “All I want’s my fair pay and a way off this continent,” he said. “If some of the folks aboard have other plans, that’s their problem. I’ll keep my cut, and be gone before the wolves start snapping at each other... and hey, you’ll go home to your folks with more wealth than they ever dreamed, something to show for it. Maybe we could open up our own shipping company together.”
Itzi gave the faintest smile at that, though it didn’t last. Outside, the plume of smoke thickened, and the forest ahead rolled into a jagged spine of foothills. The ship’s engines thrummed on, carrying them toward Mitteland, and whatever waited there.
The low hum of the engines filled the bridge, steady and almost comforting after the chaos of the last days. Beyond the windows, the forest canopy rolled away in dark, endless swells, cut only by the scar of the railway and the grey smudge of smoke rising over the Mortree. Arkadios’s voice drifted faintly from the speaking tubes as he relayed orders to take them north of the tracks and signal the Mittelanders. Somewhere below, Mariner’s report about the smoke had set the bridge crew muttering in clipped, tense exchanges.
Carter stepped in quietly, tool belt hanging from one hand. He looked worn down, like a man who’d been awake too long but didn’t trust himself to stop moving. Crossing the short stretch to the helm, he leaned against the bulkhead near Itzi, who hadn’t taken her eyes off the horizon in some time.
“Well,” he said after a beat, voice rough with fatigue, “after today, a rich man like me fixing canvas might soon be a thing of the past.”
Itzi didn’t answer right away. She nodded absently, still watching the pale plume of smoke in the distance. Carter waited a moment, then tried again.
“Quiet for a change,” he said, glancing at the compass, “Almost peaceful. You’d think we weren’t flying toward a battlefield.”
“Almost,” she replied, tone flat. She kept her hands on the wheel, knuckles pale.
He studied her for a moment, then tilted his head, “What’s on your mind?”
That finally drew her eyes from the glass. There was a flash of something, uncertainty or perhaps fear, before she let out a breath and turned back to the helm.
“You walk in here,” she said, “like it’s any other day... Out there it’s a war and we’ve been inches from dying, Aden nearly got himself killed, and for what? If we’d gone down, my parents would never even know what happened to me.”
Carter didn’t bristle. He only nodded slowly and looked past her to the smoke on the horizon.
“Once you’ve been close to the end,” he said, “close enough to taste the salt in the air as your ship goes under… it all gets a little numb after that. My crew went down in the open ocean. Sea doesn’t care how much you scream at it.”
Itzi’s expression softened, guilt edging in. She looked down at the brass rim of the wheel.
“I’ve been on the edge,” he continued, “Close enough to see the teeth. After that, well... things just feel quieter inside. Not better... Just… quieter.”
A long silence followed. Then, gently, Carter shifted topics.
“But we’re not dead, are we?” he said, flashing a small smile. “We made it out, we found the hoard, that’s a damn ‘King’s Favor’ if I’ve ever seen one.”
Itzi let out a small, reluctant laugh, though her smile faded quickly.
“You really think they’ll let us just walk away with it? The soldiers here... or the ones waiting for us in Mitteland?”
“Don’t care,” he said, plain and sharp. “I came to this damn country to do a job. The Inburians handed me a broken contract, a ruined ship, and a dead crew. That gold’s not loot, it’s fair compensation.”
“They’ll pay us,” Itzi said, more out of obligation than conviction.
“With what?” Carter questioned, “Inburian notes?" he scoffed, "Those’ll be worth jack in the Main before the year’s out. You see what’s happening down there? The country’s eating itself.”
He stood, pacing once before leaning against the bulkhead.
“And let’s say, somehow, they do pay,” he went on. “That won’t stop Evig Trade from coming after me. I lost their airship, their men, their cargo. You think they’re gonna send a fruit basket? No, they’ll want heads, and mine’s easiest to roll.”
He went on, quieter now, his face shifting down, “That crew had families, Itzi. Kids, wives, folks back home who depended on what those men brought in. I’m not walking back emptyhanded and telling them the Empire says ‘thanks, good luck.' I knew them and I know who they left behind. I’m not walking back with empty hands while their people starve. A few missing bars won’t sink the Inburians’ bottom line… whatever the hell their bottom line even looks like these days.”
She wanted to argue, but the words caught. Part of her wanted that gold too, more than she liked to admit but she could feel trouble coiling around it already.
Carter seemed to sense her hesitation. “All I want’s my fair pay and a way off this continent,” he said. “If some of the folks aboard have other plans, that’s their problem. I’ll keep my cut, and be gone before the wolves start snapping at each other... and hey, you’ll go home to your folks with more wealth than they ever dreamed, something to show for it. Maybe we could open up our own shipping company together.”
Itzi gave the faintest smile at that, though it didn’t last. Outside, the plume of smoke thickened, and the forest ahead rolled into a jagged spine of foothills. The ship’s engines thrummed on, carrying them toward Mitteland, and whatever waited there.