The Madman's Daughter (The Madman's Daughter 1)
Page 72Montgomery hoisted himself into the boat, water pouring off his massive shoulders. He wiped his face and picked up an oar. The other one he tossed to Edward.
“Hug the coast,” he said, pointing ahead. “The beach is on the other side of the mangroves.”
The tide dragged the boat away from the island, but Edward and Montgomery kept it steady. From outside, the forest of mangroves looked dense and impenetrable. Every few breaths, I heard the roots clicking, reminding us they were living parts of the island.
“We should leave tonight,” Montgomery said. His face was hard, making it impossible to tell what he was feeling. “Edward, pack as much food as you can in the rucksacks and fill the waterskins. Juliet, go through your mother’s things. We’ll need parasols. Shawls. Anything to keep off the sun. And take everything you think is valuable. We might have to buy our passage back to London.”
“Assuming we find a ship,” Edward said.
Montgomery studied the sky. “The full moon was last night. The Polynesian traders might still be out. Their course takes them five miles from the island. The tide will bring us just south of their shipping lane. We’ll have to row a few degrees north to cross their course.”
I was starting to feel faint. My insides clenched, threatening to bring up bile from my empty stomach. I couldn’t shake the feeling that something would go wrong.
Montgomery rested a hand over mine. “Don’t worry,” he said. “I know the way. We’ll find a ship.”
The mangroves clicked louder. A shadow passed overhead, giving me a sudden shiver. The wind made the water shimmer as if something swam just below the surface.
We rounded a bend and saw the long dock stretching out ahead. I let out a tight breath. Soon the whole beach was in sight.
Tonight, I promised myself. It felt as unreal as a dream. My mind wouldn’t let me dare to believe it, but my heart pumped wildly.
“Maybe a coral reef,” I said. “Or a shipwreck.” I glanced at Montgomery, but his attention wasn’t on the oar. He was scanning the beach, body tensed, eyes narrowed like a hunter’s.
“What do you see?” I asked, feeling creeping tendrils of fear crawl up my back.
He shook his head, just a quick jerk. “Nothing.”
But he didn’t tear his eyes away. I sat straighter, gripping the sides of the rowboat. Suddenly we felt as small as a bobbing toy in the endless ocean.
Edward leaned over the side, fingers disappearing into the water as he felt for whatever had caught the oar. The boat rocked, suddenly unbalanced by his movements. I clutched the sides harder, as panic made my toes curl.
Montgomery tilted his head, his eyes still riveted on the shore. “Stop, Edward. Get your hand out of the water. Now.”
Edward started to pull back, but something quick and hard rammed the boat from underneath.
I yelped. The sudden jolt pitched me into the bottom of the boat, scraping my wrists against the rough boards. Montgomery had braced himself to keep from falling.
“Edward, get your blasted arm out of the water!” he growled.
“I can’t!” Edward was shoulder deep in the water, causing the boat to pitch at a dangerous angle. His gold-flecked eyes were focused on me, unreadable. “Something’s got me.”
Edward clenched his jaw to keep the panic at bay. “A hand.”
Thirty-nine
I WAS FALLING. IT happened in an instant. I saw Edward going overboard, dragged into the deep by whatever malevolent hand held him. The sudden movement made the boat rock violently. Water stung my eyes, my ears, flooded into my mouth. I tried to scream, but there was no air.
The boat had flipped. I was underwater.
I couldn’t swim. It was the strangest sensation, like panic in slow motion. I kicked and waved my hands, but the water was just that—water. Nothing to grab on to. My flailing limbs brushed against slippery moving objects. Whether I touched Edward or Montgomery or something else, I didn’t know. Something slid by me, a person or an animal, with an easy undulation, like a jellyfish, only the size of a man. Scaly tentacles—fingers almost—tangled between my kicking legs. My scream was silent in the water, an eruption of bubbles in the deep.
At last, my fingers latched on to something solid. Wooden. I pulled myself up, sputtering as I surfaced.
The world had grown dark and damp. I took a few hysterical breaths before realizing I was underneath the upside-down rowboat, with just enough room for my head.
I clutched the bench seat above me, filling my lungs with air. I stopped kicking, but the churning in the water didn’t stop. Dark shapes moved in the water’s deep, violently, maliciously.
One shape rose, coming up fast, and then its head broke the surface.
Edward.
“I don’t know.” He panted for air.
“What tipped us over?”
“Creatures,” he coughed. “Creatures in the water. A different kind of beast.”
“Water beasts. Oh God, Montgomery . . .” My voice echoed eerily with mounting panic. “Did you see him? What happened to him? He must be here, in the water. . . .”
Edward pinched the salt water out of his eyes. “He can swim. I’m sure he’s safe.”
Another undulating tentacle slid around my ankle, coiling like a snake. I kicked furiously, fighting the urge to scream. “You don’t know that! He could be hurt. He could be dead!” The darkness beneath the boat was terrible. Only muted sunlight filtered through the cracks in the boat, throwing dancing lines of light on the water, barely enough to see the blood trickling down Edward’s face.
“Don’t just hang there, Edward. Do something!”
“What do you want me to do?” he snapped, matching my tone. “I can’t swim. I don’t know where he is.”
“He could have drowned!”
“If I let go, I’ll drown too! Is that what you want? For me to drown trying to find him?” Salt water and blood mixed as he spit the words at me.