Captain James Hook and the Siege of Neverland (11 page)

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Authors: Jeremiah Kleckner,Jeremy Marshall

BOOK: Captain James Hook and the Siege of Neverland
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“Captain!” a voice called out from behind the trees.
 

I took one more look at myself in the water.
 

“Captain!” the voice called again.
 
“Where are you?”

I filled my wineskin with water, stood, and walked to my crewmen.
 
They had not moved far from when I left.
 
First they rolled from side to side, then their legs and arms jerked.
 
Soon, they flexed their fingers and lifted their heads.
 
I showed them the herbs.
 

“Well, then, I guess this be a success,” Cecco said, rubbing his neck.
 

We walked to the castle on unsteady legs.
 
The road dipped and crested, but the men stayed in tight formation, occasionally leaning on one another for support.
 

“And he couldn’t have warned us about that?” Smee asked.

“He tried,” Noodler said, a few yards behind.
 
I turned back to watch the man scuttle our tracks.
 

“He doesn’t want us dead,” I said.
 

“Aye, but he doesn’t want us all,” Smee said, burning a hole through me with his eyes.
 
“He wants you.”
 

“But why?” Cecco asked.
 

“Yeah,” Smee said.
 
“What makes you so special?”

“I’ve been asking myself that a lot lately,” I said.
 
We rounded the corner and the castle came into view.
 
Behind the mountain, dark clouds schemed.
 

As we stepped out onto the field, we saw Bertilak standing just outside of the door to the outer wall.
 
His axe was strapped across his back and his bright tunic of green and gold shone in the overcast sunlight.
 
All three hounds sprawled across the grass at his feet.
 
He and Starkey were laughing over one of the books in the gentleman’s hands.
 

Next to them was Gabriel, sitting atop several boxes laid side by side.
 
Her blue dress clung to her wrists and waist tightly, but danced on the corners of the boxes as the wind blew through it.
 
Her face cracked into a narrow smile as she saw me.
 
She caught herself and looked away.
 

“Where is Gustavo?” I asked.
 

“Resting,” Bertilak said.
 
“Inside.”

I held the herbs out for him to see.
 
“These were not easy to get, but you knew that.”

A distant thunder rumbled.
 

“Indeed,” said the knight.
 
“You and your men are courageous beyond measure.”
 
Bertilak scratched his beard as he examined the herbs.
 
He looked to Gabriel and she quickly grabbed them from my hand and took them inside.

“How soon can he be healed and on his feet?” I asked, wiping the first drops of rain off of my forehead.
 

“He can be healed in moments,” said the knight.
 
“It will be some time before he is well enough to walk.”
 

A stiff wind ripped through the trees and assaulted us, carrying with it the promise of more to come.
 

“The storm is upon us, Captain,” said the knight.
 
“You will never make it back to your ship in time.”

“I have weathered storms before.”

“Not a Neverland storm, my dear Captain,” Bertilak said.
 
“Come and let my walls protect you.”
 

Black clouds rolled over the top of the mountain like a sheet of artificial night.
 
I looked into the still groggy and sunken eyes of the men at my side.
 

“Until the storm passes,” I said.
 

Bertilak smiled and waved an arm for us to follow him inside.
 
Over the rolling thunder and the crank of Bertilak’s gate lowering from the barbican, I heard Smee’s snide growl.
 
I chose to ignore it, but my heart sank as the gate crashed down against the stone, sealing us inside.
 

Chapter Nine

The storm was on us before we were through the courtyard.
 
We ran inside the keep as heavy rain pounded the stone walls.
 
A fire burned in the main hall and the men made beds of the sheets and cushions within reach.
 
I watched Gabriel heal Gustavo in much the same way as she did the boy.
 
Only then did I join my crew by the fire.
 

Bertilak drank and laughed with us on into the night.
 
He showed Starkey and me his library of seven books, each of which he knew cover to cover.
 
We talked about literature and history.
 
We talked about what passed for art in the modern world.
 
We talked about war, famine, feasts, and how to make rum.
 
We talked about anything except Peter Pan.
 

After several hours, Bertilak excused himself to bed.
 
One by one, the men’s eyes became heavy and they drifted away into sleep by the fireplace.
 

Every man save for me.
 

It wasn’t nervousness that kept me awake.
 
Bertilak’s actions all seemed like tests.
 
Accepting the barrels of food was a test of faith.
 
Retrieving the herbs from the plant was a test of might and courage.
 
If my suspicions were right, there was another test waiting for me.
 
In spite of this, I didn’t believe that the knight’s motives for me were of ill intent.
 

My unrest was also not due to a lack of comfort.
 
The floor of the hall was wide enough for each man to have his own corner if he wanted it.
 
I lied in a warm and dry nook by the fire, wrapped in the fur of an animal I didn’t recognize.
 

It would have been ideal, if only I could have stopped from getting sick.
 
I tossed from side to side, trying to steady the room around me.
 
I closed my eyes and the room spun.
 
I opened them again and the walls settled not quite where they were before.
 
This happened for long hours, or what seemed like hours, until I gave up the idea of sleep.
 
I threw the fur off of me and grabbed my coat.
 
The damp and cold fabric clung to my arms.
 

I stepped over Smee, who snored on the stone floor, and walked to the window with as much care as I could gather.
 
The
Jolly Roger
was in danger again and her captain was no where to be found.
 
A tenseness settled in my chest, but I knew that the ship was in good hands.
 
Billy Jukes was as fine a sailor as he was a friend.
 

I stared out over the courtyard and beyond the walls that guarded the castle.
 
Darkness blanketed the trees and blotted out the great ocean that surrounded Neverland.
 
I squinted, trying to make out any form in the Crescent Wood.
 
Trees shook and snapped in the torrent.
 
Their trunks bent in all directions, but always with the wind.
 
All except for a single line of parting branches moving away from the castle.
 
They bent and fell at the feet of whatever it was that pushed through them.
 
I looked past what was possible and saw the outline of a figure, green and larger than any man could be.
 
My mind flooded with impossible images.
 
Had I known a man like this in my past?
 
I closed my eyes and thought back through my life.
 
My memories stretched until all I saw was a cracked mirror of faces and dreams.
 
The harder I concentrated, the fainter the lines between the two became.
 
The figure disappeared into the forest and my shoulders dropped with the weight of a man who had grown accustomed to not having answers.
 

The wind changed and rain poured over me.
 
I stepped back from the window and brushed the water off of my coat.
 
Just then, a movement caught my eye.
 

Lady Gabriel stood further down the corridor, staring as a woman does when she is trying not to look like she is staring at all.
 
I smiled at my hostess and greeted her with a bow.
 
She curtsied and we stood in silence for a few heartbeats.

“Trouble sleeping, kind sir?” Gabriel asked.
 

“I have slept on a ship every night for twenty years, my lady,” I said.
 
“Dry land takes some getting used to.”

She looked at me and I felt her judgement drip from the expression.
 
Judgement and something else.
 
“I have seen comelier knights before.”
 

I looked down at my wet coat and muddy boots.
 
“No doubt, I’m sure.”
 

“And far more courteous as well,” scoffed Gabriel.
 

“Have I done something to offend you, my lady?”

“What you did to that boy was a cruelty.”
 

“Your husband would have done worse.”
 

“He did,” said the lady.
 
“The act of kindness would have been to let the boy die.
 
But if this is all ever going to end, some kindnesses may need to be shed.”
 
She looked me over again.
 
“It seems to me a strange thing that a man of your breeding should not know the conventions of good society.”
 

“Pray tell me, what have I forgotten?”

“When a countenance is known, every knight who practices courtesy must claim a kiss.”
 

A gust of wind tore through the room.
 
The men stirred, but none woke.
 
I pulled my wet coat tighter around me.
 
“Kissing another man’s wife means something different in my time.”
 

“No,” the lady said, “It doesn’t.
 
Unless you have pledged your faith firmly to someone?”

I turned my eyes to the window and stared out into the blackness.
 
Deep in the folds of my mind, the name Emily was etched clearly in my script, but her face was a blur of golden hair and fair skin.
 
“Not anymore.”
 

Gabriel leaned in and gave me a kiss.
 
I stepped back and Gabriel’s jade eyes ripped through my chest.
 

“You’re as cold as he is,” Gabriel said.
 
“Every day is a fine day to take advantage of a love that is close by.”

“I hardly know you and every day is a fine day to not be stabbed by a jealous husband,” I said.
 
“If you were to kiss me again, my lady, I would be sure to tell your husband immediately upon seeing him.”
 

“And he would cleave you in two.”
 

“I think not,” I said.
 
“I think that being upfront with the lord of the house would end these trials he has been putting me through.”
 

She stopped for a breath, then said, “There was a time when that may have been true.”
 

“What changed?”
 

“Everything,” she said, then shook her head.
 
“Nothing.
 
Nothing changes here.
 
It all just becomes different with time.
 
The same moments.
 
The same days.
 
Over and over again, all only slightly different than the last.”
 
A sadness washed over her face.
 
She kissed me again and sighed.
 
“A gentleman should know better than to remain a statue when a lady offers him a kiss.”
 

“I have kissed men’s wives, sisters, and mothers.
 
Two king’s daughters still pine for me off of Madagascar,” I said, wondering why that memory was still clear to me.
 
“I find myself less and less a gentleman with each passing year.”
 
A pulse surged through me and I caught the back of her dress with my hook, snagging the lace.
 
She scowled at me, but it was only a thin mask of the feelings she communicated with her eyes.
 
Her face flushed and the muscles in her jaw tightened.
 
She pulled against me, but I held fast and the dress ripped even further down her back.
 
I reached my left hand around her waist and drew her in closer.
 
She braced her hands against my chest, but didn’t push.
 

I kissed her, harder than she kissed me before.
 

Then I felt a chill against my neck.
 
I looked down and saw a small knife in Gabriel’s hand.
 
She held the flat of the blade to my throat and, for a moment, neither of us breathed.
 

Gabriel scraped the edge of the knife down my neck and cut off the top button of my shirt.
 
She smiled and cut off the second as well.
   

We tore at each other in the empty castle hallway.
 
Gabriel blindly reached for the door of her chambers.
 
We tumbled into the room.
 
She shut the door and locked it behind her.

Chapter Ten

August 17
th
Assumed

Sleep found me quickly after that, if not peacefully.
 

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