Sea bells chimed like tiny teaspoons against porcelain as the tide lifted them. Mistral Bay curled around a crescent shore, white cottages standing shoulder to shoulder, their blue shutters blinking at the water. Nets hung to dry on fences. A line of kites slept above the rooftops, long spines pinned to strings, tails braided with shells. Niko liked to wake before most of the town and listen. The air in the bay always had a sound if you were patient. He could tell when the wind had traveled over pine groves, because it smelled like sap and sweet dust. He could tell when it had wandered the kelp beds, because it brought a cold, grassy breath that made the wooden railings bead with salt.
He lived with Grandpa Jo at the edge of the quay, in a cottage the color of faded lemon peel. Grandpa Jo fixed clocks and radios and once a brass telescope with a stubborn hinge. Niko was good with small screws and gentle turns. His fingers were small and sure. On the windowsill sat Pip, the clockwork otter Niko built from a box of old springs and spoon handles. Pip’s whiskers were made from the bristles of a scrub brush. When Niko wound him, the little otter would blink glassy amber eyes and clack softly in a rhythm that matched the sea bells.
“Tickers first, breakfast after,” Grandpa Jo would say, but he always slid a saucer with two slices of pear to Niko’s side before they started. The morning smelled of warm bread from the bakery and rope and lemon oil. Niko’s favorite chore was polishing the small brass gears they kept in an egg carton. He held each one to the window light to check for burrs, turning it until its tiny teeth flashed like a coin.
From the hill beyond the cottages, the lighthouse watched everything. Its stone bones were ivy-pale, and its lantern, the Guiding Lantern, threw a golden path across the water each night. People said the beam knew each boat by name and would bend itself kindly to escort them home. Niko loved it from a distance. There was a painted sign by the lighthouse gate that said Children keep to the lower path. He knew the rule and obeyed it, though his legs tingled whenever he looked up at those winding stairs and imagined the view.
On market days Niko walked with his friend Suri along the quay. Suri’s mother captained a small fishing boat named Mallow. Suri’s pockets always clinked with marbles, and she could make a gull hop just by whistling a tune. They traded silly facts. Niko would say, “Do you know the wind writes on the water?” and Suri would say, “Do you know sardines sleep in stacks?” and they would both laugh until a crab waved a claw at them as if to scold.
There was a rhythm to the town, like a big friendly clock. The baker’s peel rattled against the oven. The kites rustled when the breeze shifted. At noon the lighthouse keeper rang a small bell and waved from his balcony. In the evening, the Guiding Lantern woke and stretched a buttery arm over the growing blue. Niko would stand on the step with Pip in his palm and whisper, “Goodnight path,” as if it were a pet.