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My fingers found the compass at my sternum and pressed hard enough to feel the edges through my skin.

"You know what, Rutledge?" My voice came out steadier than I had any right to expect. "You can leave that envelope right there. If the tide takes it, I'll consider that a sign from the maritime gods."

He straightened. Gave me one last look, unreadable, steady, lasting a beat longer than professional, and turned to walk back up the marina.

"Tell your office," I called after him, "that the wreck they hired you to keep me away from is the same wreck I'm trying to save. And that I'm the best shot it has."

He paused. Turned his head just enough that I caught his profile against the morning glare—-jaw set, stubble catching the light, the line of his shoulders blocking out an unreasonableamount of sky. Behind him, the marsh stretched gold and green to the horizon, and a great blue heron lifted off the nearest tidal creek in a slow unfurling of wings.

"I'll pass that along, Doc."

"I said don't call me that."

His shoulders moved in a silent almost-laugh, barely visible. He kept walking.

I watched him go. I didn't want to, and I did it anyway, and I was annoyed enough at myself to know exactly why: the unhurried stride, sure on the planking the way I was sure on the water. The breadth of him. His arms. The tattoo I couldn't quite make out. He belonged to this coast on some fundamental level, as rooted as the live oaks and the salt marsh, and some inconvenient part of me had noticed that before I'd noticed the cease-and-desist.

I turned back to my maps.

The printout sat where I'd left it, the anomaly circled in red Sharpie. Sixty-two feet. Clean edges. Consistent with a mid-nineteenth-century hull structure, and I was going to prove it if the state of South Carolina had to physically drag me off the water.

I reached down and picked up the envelope from the cleat—-because I wasn't stupid, just stubborn—-and went below to find coffee.

RECKONING ROCKED GENTLYin her slip that night, and I couldn't sleep.

It wasn't unusual. I'd spent enough nights on this boat to know every sound she made: the creak of the hull against the bumpers, the soft slap of water under the waterline, the thump of a mullet jumping too close and startling itself. Those soundswere mine. I'd chosen them over a lease, a mailing address, and the life my family understood. The firm. The condo. The retirement plan that didn't involve a mountain of debt and a boat named after a reckoning I hadn't finished yet. Most nights they felt worth it.

Outside, the marina had settled into its nighttime hush. Not silent, never silent, but layered. The tide was low, and the smell of pluff mud came through the open hatch, rich and sulfurous and alive. It was a smell most people hated. I'd loved it since I was ten years old, standing in knee-deep mud on Granddad's shrimping grounds, learning that the ugliest-smelling things in the marsh were the ones keeping the whole ecosystem breathing.

The data was spread across my galley table, and I sat in the glow of my laptop, re-running the math. The anomaly held up. Every calculation, every overlay, every cross-reference against the historical record pointed to the same conclusion: the Lady Defiance hadn't broken apart in the deep channel where every other researcher assumed. She'd gone down closer to shore, in water shallow enough to reach. Shifting sand had buried her just long enough for everyone else to stop looking.

Everyone except me.

The Lady Defiance. Even her name was a dare. A two-hundred-ton sloop built in Bermuda, slipped past the Union blockade six times before her luck ran out on a June night in 1864. The manifests I'd pieced together from three different archives suggested she'd been carrying more than cotton and turpentine on that last run. Gold. Confederate treasury reserves being moved south as the war turned. Cargo that made men kill in 1864 and, apparently, made them hire security contractors in the present day.

I wrapped my hand around the compass necklace and let the tarnished weight of it steady me. Granddad had taught meto dive in water this warm, this dark, this full of things that mattered if you knew how to look. He'd died before I found shipwrecks, but I thought he'd have understood the hunger—-the need to bring up what the ocean wanted to keep.

I closed the laptop and sat in the dark, listening.

Tree frogs and cicadas building their nightly wall of sound, steady and enormous, filling the marsh with noise that made silence feel louder when it broke. A no-see-um whined past my ear, and I swatted at it without conviction. Late May. They'd only get worse from here.

Then—-footsteps.

On the planking outside. Close enough to hear over the frogs, heavy enough to be real. Deliberate and measured, each step placed with intention.

They stopped.

I held my breath, and my hand tightened around the compass until the edges bit into my palm. The air in the galley felt different, thicker, charged, electric in a way I recognized from summer storms right before the pressure dropped.

Nothing. The frogs swelled back into the gap. The water lapped. Whoever had been out there was gone, or had decided to stop moving.

I didn't go topside to check. I sat in the dark galley of my boat with the hair on my arms standing up and the printouts glowing faintly in the laptop's residual light, and I waited until my pulse came down enough to breathe normally.

The cease-and-desist sat on the bench across from me, unopened, Beau Rutledge's handwriting visible on the front.

Forty-eight hours.

The clock on that was already running. But sitting in the dark with the marina still silent and my skin still prickling, I had the unsettled feeling that it wasn't the only countdown that had started today.