The morning arrived by degrees in Saint-Malo: a pale, brackish light that slid along the cobbles and pooled in the shallow gutters, the gulls beginning their endless transactions above the roofs. Oil lamps in the narrow lane still smoked where dockhands had left them night before; a faint tang of tar and kelp hung in the air. In the doorway of Maison Fournier a hand moved with practiced patience, turning the point of a divider until its brass shone like a small coin. Eloise kept her thumb on the hinge so it would not wobble. Under the bench, a half-carved binnacle lay wrapped in oiled cloth, its rings of copper grey with salt.
She had been awake before the lamps went out. Apprentice and daughter, twenty-four years old but with knuckles like knots of rope, she measured the little harbor as if it were a weathered hand. A roll of parchment unrolled across the table in a map of shallow banks and sheltered coves, annotations in a cramped hand: “Wind shifts — N.E. most treacherous by full moon,” “stone shoal, two fathoms at low.” Her quill scratched. The shop smelled of varnish and the cat's droppings from the hearth. On the wall, hanging next to a half-finished chart, was a brass compass in a wooden box, the needle steady as a pulse.
Her father, Jean Fournier, moved like one who had learned to keep his temper as one keeps a delicate instrument—guarded and precise. He came in with a basket of sea-glass and a ledger under his arm. "The cooper is waiting," he said without looking at her. His voice held the soft burr of a Breton man who had lived too long in the salt wind. Eloise shut the divider and rose, hair braided tight so it would not catch in her tools. He watched her smooth the parchment with the back of his hand. "You will not go out today," he added and the sentence sounded like a blunt oar against hull.
She did not answer at once. Outside, the harbor was already assembling itself into work: fishermen muttering, boys hauling wet ropes, a woman arguing with a supplier over the price of lamp oil. The town's wooden beacon perched upon the mole like a tooth; its lamp burned steady through most nights, a thin promise for returning captains. Eloise ran a finger along an inked line that represented the channel between the mole and the outer shoal. She knew that line as well as the scar on her palm. If a man could read the sea like a book then she read it by geography and by memory. A regular mind in an irregular life.
A child shrieked at the far end of the quay and a small boat scraped soundlessly against the planks. Eloise's ear caught a note that did not belong: the absence of sound where there should have been light, a hush like a breath held. Her father looked up too, the ledger forgotten in his hands. Even the gulls seemed to fall mute for a moment. Across the water, where the lantern should be a ring of gold, a darker notch cut the horizon as if someone had taken a bite from the world. The boat under the quay bumped again, and in the darkness figures leaned and dragged.