"Not abandoning you—leaving. Walking away from this life while I still can, while I still have a reason to walk toward sothing better."
The crew absorbed this in silence; they were too startled to ask what she was going to do.
Grevik was the first to speak.
"You found your sister," he said.
"After all these years."
"I did." Elisabeth looked at Maureen standing nearby.
"And you all are aware of the mindset, once I have decided, I won’t back down and this is one of those things. I hope you all understand and move on without ."
"Though I will miss you all and the Darkwhale, I want to live with my sister and take care of her from here on out."
"We understand, Captain," Grevik said, and around him the crew nodded.
They weren’t happy—losing Elisabeth ant losing the protection and success she’d brought them—but they understood in the way people understood when soone they respected made a choice for personal reasons rather than strategic ones.
"The ship is yours," Elisabeth continued.
"All of you. The Darkwhale, the fleet, and the territories we control. I’m signing over ownership to the crew collective—you decide how to run it, who leads, and where you go. My only request is that you rember why I started this. Protect people who can’t protect themselves. Target the slavers and the abusers and the ones who think power ans they can hurt whoever they want."
She pulled off the ring she wore—a simple band of dark tal that every crew mber recognized as the Captain’s mark—and handed it to Grevik.
"You’re the steadiest person I know. Keep them together if they’ll let you. And if they won’t, at least make sure they don’t do anything stupid enough to get the entire fleet sunk."
Grevik accepted the ring with the solemnity of soone receiving sothing sacred.
"We’ll honor what you built, Captain. You have my word."
The body double was easier than Jake expected. One of the crew had died during the rmaid fight—a woman roughly Elisabeth’s height and build. They dressed the corpse in Elisabeth’s distinctive coat and hat and arranged her on the deck in a position suggesting she’d died fighting, and Jake used shadow magic combined with fire from one of Maureen’s crew to create damage that obscured facial features while leaving enough intact to suggest identity.
He even used her blood to mark the body double to make people believe them.
It was grim work. Jake had seen enough bodies that the practical aspects didn’t bother him, but watching Elisabeth look at her own staged corpse was unsettling in ways he didn’t have words for.
"That’s what the world sees," Elisabeth said quietly, staring down at the burned, broken thing wearing her clothes.
"The pirate queen. The terror of the bay. Dead on her own deck after a fight she couldn’t win."
"That’s what they need to see," Jake corrected.
"So Elise can go ho."
They left the Darkwhale an hour later with docuntation Grevik prepared—a letter confirming Elisabeth’s death signed by the first mate; several pieces of the Captain’s personal effects, including weapons the guild would recognize from previous encounters; and detailed notes about the confrontation that would satisfy official requirents.
Elisabeth—Elise now, Jake reminded himself—stood at Windrunner’s rail and watched her ship recede into the darkness as Maureen brought the flying vessel around toward Roakan.
She didn’t cry, but Jake saw sothing in her posture that looked like grief mixed with relief, the complicated emotional state of soone who’d just closed a Chapter of their life that had defined them for decades.
"You okay?" Maureen asked, appearing beside her sister.
"I don’t know yet," Elise admitted.
"Ask again when we get to Roakan and I’m not looking over my shoulder waiting for soone to recognize ."
The flight back took three hours through darkness broken only by starlight and the occasional distant glow from settlents below.
Jake spent most of it running through what would need to happen once they returned—reporting the contract completion, getting Elise established with a legal identity, and explaining to Chelsea and Gran Rosalinda why he’d returned with both Maureen and a woman who looked suspiciously like the wanted pirate they’d been hunting.
The explanation was going to be interesting.
-
They reached Roakan’s gates as dawn broke over the eastern peaks, painting the terraced city in shades of rose and gold. Maureen guided Windrunner to her usual berth with tired precision, the ship settling onto the platform with barely a tremor.
"We need a few days," Maureen said as they disembarked.
She looked at her sister with an expression that carried thirty years of missed ti in it.
"Elise and I. Just us. There’s too much to catch up on, too many years to fill in."
Jake understood. "Take whatever ti you need."
"But first—" Maureen gestured toward the guild district where early morning light was already touching the building tops.
"We finish the contract."
The guild office was quiet at this hour, only the overnight staff manning desks and processing late returns. The clerk who took their report was the sa one who’d registered Jake days ago, and his eyes widened when he recognized them.
"Captain Nailer. Master Raikarndel."
He pulled out the appropriate forms with hands that shook slightly.
"You’re reporting on the Pirate Queen contract?"
"Mission complete," Maureen said. She placed the docuntation on the counter—Grevik’s and the crew’s testimonies, Elizabeth’s personal effects, and detailed notes about the confrontation. "Target eliminated. The Bay of Baenil should see reduced piracy activity going forward."
The clerk read through everything with the careful attention of soone who knew high-profile contracts required extra verification.
He examined the weapons, checked the letter’s seal, and cross-referenced descriptions against existing reports.
Jake stood beside Maureen and radiated the quiet authority of a Raikarndel heir, his presence alone suggesting that questioning the report too closely would be inadvisable.
"This appears in order," the clerk said finally.
"Though guild protocol requires—"
"My word as heir to Clan Raikarndel," Jake said, his voice carrying weight that the Serpent King title seed to amplify.
"The pirate queen is dead. Captain Nailer and I saw through it personally. The contract is fulfilled."
The clerk looked at Jake’s face, at the jade star mark partially visible at his collar, and at the absolute certainty in his eyes. Nobody questioned a Raikarndel heir about completed contracts. Not if they valued their position.
"Understood, Master Raikarndel," he said in a hurry.
The clerk stamped the docuntation with the guild’s official seal.
"Contract marked complete. Rewards will be processed and made available within three business days."
They left the guild office as the city was properly waking, streets filled with early rchants and workers heading to their trades. Maureen walked beside Jake with visible relief in her posture, the weight of the hunt finally lifted.
"That’s done," she said.
"Now I can focus on my sister without wondering if soone’s going to recognize her and raise alarms."
"Take her sowhere quiet," Jake suggested.
"Away from the guild district and the port. Sowhere you can talk without interruption."
"Also, make sure to stay hidden for a few days. If necessary, you can make a few changes to your face."
Maureen nodded.
"I know a place: a small inn near the eastern gardens. Good food, private rooms, and nobody asks questions."
She paused. "Thank you for everything. The recruitnt, the body double, lying to the guild on our behalf. You didn’t have to do any of that."
"We are like siblings now," Jake said.
"Linked by the goddess covenant."
"That ans sothing."
He left Maureen at the district edge and made his way through morning streets toward Raaya Villa, his body carrying the accumulated fatigue of days spent fighting rmaids and shark people and diating family drama between pirate queens and their long-lost sisters.
The villa appeared through the terraced gardens like a promise of rest, its pale stone walls catching the morning sun.
Chelsea t him at the entrance, her face showing the particular combination of relief and exasperation that she’d perfected over eighteen years of dealing with his tendency to disappear into dangerous situations.
"You’re back," she said.
"I am."
"Did you hunt the pirate?"
"We did."
Chelsea looked at him for a long mont, reading things in his expression that he wasn’t saying out loud.
"And?"
"The pirate queen is dead. The contract is complete. The Bay of Baenil should be safer now."
All technically true. Jake had gotten very good at being technically true.
"That’s not what I’m asking."
"I know." Jake smiled slightly.
"But that’s all I can tell you right now. So things are complicated."
Chelsea’s expression suggested she had many opinions about complicated situations, but she stepped aside and let him enter.
"You look exhausted. Whatever complicated things you’re not telling about can wait until you’ve rested."
Jake ate chanically, barely tasting food that was probably excellent, and climbed the stairs to his room with legs that felt weighted. He fell onto the bed still partially dressed and was asleep before his head fully settled on the pillow.
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