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The sea kept its own counsel, and Juno Maris had learned to listen. She moved through water the way some people moved through crowds—attuned to small shifts, to the way a current would sigh against a rib of wreck, to the soft insistence of kelp that wanted to draw her down and keep her. The salvage dives paid in coin and in scraps of stories; they kept her and her sister fed, and bought Nia the handful of schoolbooks Juno could not leave by the dock. But there was always a margin of debt, always a scraped knuckle or a ruined pump. Ordinary things for a girl who had grown up on tides.
That day, the light over the kells was flat and white and the fog lay like milky cloth upon the water. Juno pried open the hull of a small freighter that had gone down in the last season’s storm, a ship of no more note than any other broken thing on the seabed. Her gloved hand brushed aside an oil-slicked reel, a child's toy caught in rope. Then her fingers closed on something that did not belong to decay.
It was no larger than the heel of her palm and felt like a sea-moss heart—iridescent, catching and throwing off color in a way that made the surface of the wreck seem ridiculous. When she lifted it, the thing hummed faintly against her skin, a sound that had no business in water. For a moment she thought it was the echo of surf in a cave, or the heartbeat of some deep animal. The hum arranged itself into syllables she could not name and then, impossibly, into a flicker of image: a high, sheer cliff of black stone ringed by a corona of white sand, and above it an arch of sky that bent the wrong way.
Her chest pinched with the private ache she had carried since her mother vanished—an ache like a missing knot in a net. She wrapped the shard in oilcloth and stowed it in the belly of her cutter. On the surface the wind smelled of iron and seaweed. The market in the port was a pocket of heated voices and traders who kept their eyes far from the water. Juno knew where to take anything worth a few coins: a woman behind a stall who specialized in things stripped from the deep, a man with a loose mouth who bought quickly and asked fewer questions.
She did not let herself imagine what the shard might be beyond its market value. The rational calculus was simple: sell, pay off the smallest debts, hide the rest. But the light had not been the only thing the object threw back; the flicker in her hand had been intimate and private. For a moment she held it and let the stolen image—cliff and sky—press into her ribs like a memory that did not belong to her. Then she turned the cutter toward the quay and the town, keeping the small, humming thing close to her chest like contraband and like a talisman.