As soon as Jessie finished her meal, Mido rose and collected the plate and fork, his arms at max reaching distance while she more tossed than handed everything over. At least the cook had learned to stay away. She didn’t much care to beat up the hand that fed her, especially if food was going to taste that good until she got home.
Gentle footsteps pattered down the stairs beyond a bent over Scully, who had stopped vomiting right before Jessie’s food had been ready to eat. A tall, muscled man with a groomed, golden brown beard and long hair stopped by Scully and put a hand on his shoulder.
Mido turned. “Oh, hey, Cancer.”
Scully raised his head and Jessie noticed the dried up blood above his ponytail. A wave of guilt made her grimace. “Oh, thank the sea you’re here,” Scully said in a hollow, nauseated voice. He braced his hands against the ice box and tried to stand. Cancer ducked under one of Scully’s arms and helped him stand. Sauna backed out of the way as Mido rushed over and draped Scully’s other arm over his shoulders. Jessie rose, feeling the need to follow, despite not wanting to be near any of them.
Cancer shot his gaze in Jessie’s direction the second he heard make wood creak. Jessie froze, feeling like she was caught in the glare of a lion about to pounce her, like he already knew she was the one who’d hurt his crew mate. His hair looked like a mane, and his brown eyes trapped her where she stood contemplating how to exact revenge. Jessie found herself unable to feel anything but afraid of this man.
“There’s a woman on board,” he said disapprovingly.
“She’s an escapee from Tethys’s ship,” Scully said. “The captain’s dropping her off back home between shipments.”
“Oh, really?” Cancer pivoted and Mido moved with him. “And where’s home, little lady?”
“C-Cyprus, sir.” Jessie felt her body shrinking into itself. She wanted to find a place to hide but dared not move.
He raised an eyebrow. “And where are we headed right now?”
“I don’t know and I don’t care how long it takes, so long as I get home,” Jessie said. “I can be patient.”
Cancer glared at her, then glanced at Lou. “Your new home will be Port Chesapeake, unless you find another ship to take you home. You were a fool to believe Captain would waste his time on a little lost lady. Let’s go, Mido.”
That was the second time he’d called her a little lady, but Jessie dared not tell Cancer what not to call her. Right now that didn’t matter. She couldn’t bring herself to believe what she’d just been told. She didn’t want to believe it. Tethys had pretended to promise to bring her home years ago. If Dyne had lied as well, she didn’t want to try a third captain. Not another disgusting ship with another disgusting crew, and endless nights of horny, selfish men humping her insides raw. Yet, she didn’t want to make Virginia her new home. It wasn’t home. She had to make Dyne take her home. It had been two years since the last time she’d smelled Cyprus’s warm ocean air and heard Greek on everyone’s tongue.
Jessie silently cursed her weakness as she rubbed her tears away. At least three of the men had their backs to her. She took a deep breath and clenched her jaw, then exhaled and began following on silent feet. The Dominican named Sauna followed her without any apparent disapproval in his neutral expression. He could take her to her bunk later.
It wasn’t until they passed a flight of stairs that they realized she was following them. Mido looked back when they passed all the sleeping cabins. “Sauna, aren’t you supposed to be taking Jessie to her bunk?”
“I don’t want to go yet,” Jessie said, pressing against a wall. She had only one man to barrel through on one side if she needed to go back the way she came.
“I take her when she ready to go,” Sauna said, shrugging. “The sooner she all set, the sooner I work.”
Mido and the others headed for two heavy doors facing each other and Jessie followed.
Sauna tried to fall in stride beside Jessie but she froze in place until he was an arm’s length ahead of her. He turned around, gave her a studious look, then said, “Why you want to follow them?”
“I’m the one who hurt him,” she said, gesturing to Scully. “I want to make sure he’s okay. I’m not a lady, but I’m not heartless.”
“Gracias, señorita.” His tone of voice was sincere. That made her relax a little, but not so much so as to forget she was surrounded by men, potential rapists.
“I take it he’s a doctor?” Jessie asked, pointing at Cancer’s broad back.
“He has temper but he won’t hurt anyone.”
“Why is a doctor named Cancer? It doesn’t make sense.”
“He’s a cancer survivor.” There was admiration in Sauna’s voice.
To survive cancer in this day and age was rare enough to be called a miracle. Jessie shared the Dominican’s admiration.
Cancer turned the wheel and pushed the door open. Mido led the way inside. As soon as they disappeared, Jessie felt eyes on her back. She turned around. Dyne was headed down the hall, a hand in his trench coat pocket, a scowl etched on his gruff face.
“You are bringing me home, aren’t you?” Jessie yelled over the distant hum of what she assumed was the engine. It sounded big enough to be one.
Dyne said nothing; just walked, his trench coat billowing behind him. Jessie looked through the opened door into what looked like a bathroom. She heard voices but couldn’t make out what they said.
Dyne stopped just out of kicking range. Another smart man. He raised an arm and tossed a heap of material to her. She caught them. Clothes.
“What did you say?”
“You are bringing me home, right? The doc said you were just gonna dump me off at Port Chesapeake.”
“Well he’s wrong about that. Just ignore the old fart. He’s not the one piloting this ship anyway.” He eyed Sauna. “Where you two off to?”
“The wrong place, Captain,” Sauna said, passing a hand over his scalp. “This way, Jessie.” He pointed past the captain.
Jessie stayed put. “What about the guy I hurt?”
“You can apologize to Scully later,” Dyne said. “Let Cancer do his job in peace.” He turned around and trudged towards the nearest flight of stairs.
“Fine.” She took a step away from the bathroom door. “When do you think you’ll take me home?”
The captain stopped mid-stride, then slowly turned to face her. “Eventually. I have a job to do and a crew to pay. If you want off sooner, you can stop being a freeloader and make yourself useful.”
“Doing what?”
“Something useful. Go ask Rammus. He’s my second-in-command.” The captain trudged off.
“What do you think he’ll have me do?” Jessie asked Sauna. Dark thoughts crept into her mind.
“Swab the decks” he said with a smile. “Just kidding. He might have you clean and such. Worry about that later. Time to show you where you sleep.” They began backtracking.
“Will you let me to see that Scully guy after?” They walked down a narrow passage with six pipes of varying widths overhead, and mounted lamps on either side of their head spaced at intervals of ten feet.
“No puedo. I have to get back to the engine room.”
Jessie counted four sets of lamps between the hatch they came down and the door they stopped at. She ended up having a choice of three bunks in this cubby hole of a room. There was just enough space between the bunks and the door to stand or sit cross-legged. There was a hanging lamp she had to be careful not to knock her forehead on, despite being only five-five. It was solar powered and hooked up to a battery that held only a couple of hours worth of light. But having a solar powered lamp was like being given a diamond ring that gave off light. People usually went kerosene or naphtha because it was easier than creating solar panels. Obviously using flammable fuel didn’t work on a rocking ship.