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Rise of the Sky Pirate
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Rise of the Sky Pirate
The Adventures of Captain Keenan, Volume 1
S.W. Raine
Published by S.W. Raine, 2022.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
RISE OF THE SKY PIRATE
First edition. January 11, 2022.
Copyright © 2022 S.W. Raine.
ISBN: 978-1734879544
Written by S.W. Raine.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
CHAPTER 36
CHAPTER 37
CHAPTER 38
CHAPTER 39
EPILOGUE
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Also By S.W. Raine
About the Author
To my mum for enduring my books through every single step of the process,
and
to Chris for the one sentence that sparked an entire idea.
CHAPTER 1
Benedict Keenan had escaped jail. It wasn’t the first time, and he was sure that it wouldn’t be the last.
At least his crimes were petty enough to warrant a jail cell as opposed to being taken to prison. He didn’t doubt his skills of escaping the latter; he simply didn’t wish to test them out.
The moon shone bright and full, but the floating land of Upper London cast most of London Below in shadow. Thankful for such cover, Benedict scaled the buildings with ease, his long legs propelling him from rooftop to rooftop to avoid being caught in the streets below, each crumbling slate tile cracking more beneath his feet. The sooner he reached his destination, the better.
The symmetrical rust-colored brick establishment was finally in sight, standing slightly taller than the crumbling stone buildings around it with its familiar pointed arches and steep roof. The tension in his muscles and jaw relaxed as he drew closer to his safe house. Slowing his pace, he carefully calculated his jump onto an extended tree branch nearby and leaped with feline poise, quickly adjusting his footing and balance on the thick limb. Expertly pushing past the split trunk, Benedict stepped onto another sturdy branch before jumping again, calloused hands gripping onto the ledge just beneath the third-story windows.
Progressing to his left, he made his way to a window illuminated by wildly dancing candlelight. The sound of heavy breathing reached his ears as he quietly slid the window open, and Benedict smirked. He’d have to have a talk with Kitch about giving in to her urges while on the job. His toes had hardly touched the floor when Benedict suddenly froze.
This was not Kitch.
His dark eyes quickly scanned the room, finding that he did not recognize the setup or any of the items inside. Had he been gone for so long that he’d forgotten which room was hers? No, that was impossible. He’d only been locked up for a week. Maybe two—he had lost count. Casting a rapid glance over his shoulder to double-check that he indeed had the correct window, he pulled his leg back out as quietly as he could to not alert the worker or her client to his presence and risk being tossed back into the slammer. Shuffling over to the next window, he cautiously peeked inside.
Kitch was not there, either. With a frown playing on his features, Benedict tried a few more windows with no luck. His heart began to pound faster. What if something had happened to her? What if she had fallen ill and passed away, or one of her love-struck clients had stabbed her in a jealous rage?
Before he could think up another possible scenario as he reached the next window, a hand snatched his wrist and pulled him inside before he could make a sound.
His mind reeled as he came face-to-face with a pair of glaring blue eyes. “Are you trying to get yourself caught again?” she hissed. “The entire world could hear you!”
Though her tongue was quicker than his, Benedict’s reflexes were far better honed. As her hand threatened to leave its mark across his cheek, he grabbed her wrist to stop her, glaring in turn. After attempting to yank her arm back without success, the other hand flew up, and Benedict caught her other wrist with just as much ease before shoving her onto the bed and away from him.
Once he knew he was safe from her sudden barrage of violence as she opted for a scowl instead, he inspected his surroundings. He whistled, impressed. Decorated with rich and regal fabrics of all colors, this cozy room was much bigger than her last. “Who did you—”
“Don’t you dare finish that sentence,” she warned as she got back to her feet, smoothing out her red skirt. “I worked my way up the ladder with honesty, unlike you.”
Benedict smirked. “Don’t be like that, Kitch.”
“I can’t keep doing this!” she said, exasperated. “I can’t keep being your safe house and covering for you.” Stepping over to her vanity table—walnut-colored and bound with brass—she dropped onto the fluffy beige cushion atop the matching bench. Reaching for one of the brass knobs beneath the oval mirror, she pulled open the tiny drawer and grabbed a small round tin that lay nestled in the lush velvet lining. Applying the red salve from the tin onto her lips, she pressed them together before reaching for another drawer, where she pulled out her rouge as she continued to scold him. “The higher I move up the ladder, the more I know and the more I can control, but you are making things entirely too difficult all the time.”
Benedict watched her expertly massage the carmine dye into her cheeks. He never understood why she used cosmetics; she was already naturally beautiful and the obvious envy of all women with her perfect porcelain skin. “Are you saying that you’re doing this for me?” he asked.
“I’m saying that we’ve been through a lot, and we deserve better.” Kitch put the tins away before reaching for her raven black hair. It was silkier than he remembered it being as a kid. She pinned it up in a fancy chignon and, for a moment, looked so grown-up that it almost hurt Benedict to keep looking at her. “I make enough on my own. I don’t know why you keep giving me your wages . . .”
Stepping over to her as she pulled a string of beautiful pearls out of another drawer, he took the ends, his dark eyes on her reflection in the mirror. “Because I want you to have a good life,” he replied as he tied the necklace about her neck before delicately placing his calloused hands upon her bare shoulders.
Kitch placed a hand over one of his and continued to look at him in the mirror. “You’re straying from your path, Ben.”
Benedict didn’t want to hear it. Pulling away, he headed for the massive wooden chest against the far wall, where he rummaged through Kitch’s various accessories down to the bottom for his spare clothes. He remained quiet as he changed out of the prison linens and into his fancier duds.
Straying from his path? What did she know? He was climbing his own ladder just fine. If she meant the many times that he’d found himself
jailed, well, those were learning experiences. One couldn’t move forward until all potential obstacles were dealt with. The more he dealt with his own obstacles, the more of a straight shot his final attempt would be.
He finished dressing, adjusting the crisp cuffs of his sleeves as he turned to face Kitch, who now stood before him, her hands locked together in front of herself.
“You look the part, but you don’t act it,” she commented.
“Are you saying nobles don’t get locked up?”
“I’m saying that I can’t keep up.”
“Looks like you need to hurry and get another promotion,” he teased.
“Get out of my room before my next client shows up,” she said, a smirk on her own painted lips.
Grinning before leaning in, he placed a kiss on her rosy cheek before pulling away, heading to the window to make his exit. He was partially out when he turned back to Kitch. “I saw all the money I’ve ever given you at the bottom of that chest,” he pointed out. “I gave it to you to spend.”
“I’m saving it for when I need to bail you out of Coldbath.”
“Might want to find a better hiding place.”
The last thing he saw of Kitch was a glower before he climbed the rest of the way out of the window and vanished into the night.
CHAPTER 2
Sunlight poured into the room, which only aggravated Benedict’s hangover. He groaned as he rolled onto his back, bringing his hands up to massage his temples.
Benedict had made his way right back to the pub for a much-deserved drink after leaving Kitch that night, despite having just been locked up for being drunk and disorderly. He’d kept mostly to himself, hidden in the shadows and surrounded by drunken tomfoolery. As much as he enjoyed his alcohol, he also enjoyed listening in on conversations; the more informed he was, the better he could perform any task and tick another thing blocking his way to the top off his list.
The pull and thud of a door opening and closing caught his attention. Peeking at the intruder with one blurry eye, he recognized Kitch’s familiar black hair as she rummaged through the chest against the wall. Shutting his eyes again, he then found himself buried beneath clothes.
“Get up, they’re coming to clean my room,” she said.
That didn’t make his pounding head feel any better. Slowly sitting up with a frown as his clothes tumbled off him, he waited for the hammering against his skull to steady a moment before standing up.
“Quickly,” she stressed.
Moving as fast as his sluggish body would allow, he dragged himself through the brothel room window after receiving a testy reminder to stay hydrated. His body protesting, he struggled down the building and shuffled toward the streets of London Below.
The autumn morning was crisp, and the shadow cast by the Upper Lands made the temperature of London Below even more chilly. Shoving his icy fingers into the pockets of his wool frock coat, his aristocratic dress style garnered glances and sidelong looks from the lower working class. Benedict was used to it—ever since the upper class separated worldwide by detaching entire cities from the ground via alchemical infusions, nobles and alchemists were no longer commonly seen wandering among the tech users in the filth and grime of the Lands Below.
Shambling down a cobblestone back alley flanked on both sides with wooden barrels and crates, empty carts, and scattered rubbish, he overheard a child’s voice.
“Halt!” it ordered, and Benedict obeyed with a raised brow. “What’s the password?”
He didn’t know the password; it was one that changed every week, and he had been locked up for a short time. Frozen in place, he swiftly glanced about to locate the source of the voice, but saw no one. Tentatively taking a step, the voice chimed in once more.
“What’s the password?” it repeated.
“I don’t know,” he admitted as he flicked his gaze about more urgently for the location of the voice.
“Then you’ll have to pay a fine.”
“I’m afraid that I don’t have the money right now.”
“Ben never has money,” came a tiny, disappointed voice from another location. Benedict smirked in amusement.
“Quiet!” the first voice hissed.
“Put it on my tab,” Benedict instructed as he took another step.
A dozen children jumped out from their hiding spots and surrounded him. He grinned. He knew this strategy, as he was the one who’d taught it to them: they’d act all tough and menacing, only to have the smallest one jump on his back to distract while the others used their pick-pocketing skills.
Despite his sluggish hangover, Benedict swiftly turned in time to catch the youngest one, who had jumped from a window.
“Ben!” The small child gleefully beamed and wrapped his tiny arms around the man’s neck in a hug.
The younger children followed suit, rushing toward him from all sides, lovingly embracing his legs, almost knocking him over. Trying to keep the remainder of his balance, Benedict laughed as he set the youngest boy down and ruffled a few of the kids’ hair. When they had released him and he could stand without teetering too much, Benedict approached the eldest boy, who was leaning against the wall with his arms crossed and a twinkle of amusement in his brown eyes. They clasped forearms in greeting.
“Good to see you, Ben,” he said.
“Likewise,” Benedict replied. “What’s the word at the orphanage?”
The eldest boy stuffed his hands into the pockets of his wool trousers and went through a mental list of happenings from the past few weeks. “Winnie went to live with a real swell family in the Upper Lands. And after all these years, Bates finally got adopted.”
“Did he? Good for him,” Benedict replied, impressed.
“Bowler got adopted too. Some alchemists chose Briar and Edith to be housekeepers, and Abby is in the kitchens. Close to being Kitch two-point-oh, she is.” Benedict smiled fondly at this. “Jax left on his own, Chase is in prison for theft . . . and a few new kids moved in.”
Benedict always appreciated the updates. His gaze drifted to the younger children playing in the alley, and it reminded him of his time as one of them. He could practically see himself and Kitch running and jumping around with the lot of them, without a care in the world. They might have been hard times, but things were definitely simpler as a child.
A hiss from the eldest boy broke him from his reverie. “I forgot to tell you . . . Lefty passed.”
Benedict’s body stiffened. At seventeen, they had urged him to get a job and to find another place to live. As the orphanage phased him out and he was left on his own, he found himself at workhouses—institutions exchanging accommodations for employment—but he had walked away from more jobs than he cared to keep track of, costing him his free lodging each time. Homeless and not wanting all of his eggs in one basket, he scattered his items across London Below with keepers. Lefty was one of those keepers, permissively holding onto some of Benedict’s items in his small trunk.
“What happened?” he asked.
“He got real ill. Mrs. Aness gave his room to one of the new kids after scrubbing it top to bottom. I tried to salvage the trunk for you, but she had already burned it.”
Benedict hissed in turn. Not only did he have some clothes in that trunk, but it also contained the key to his storage box, which held more of his items. Thanking the boy for the intel, he waved goodbye to the children and headed for the orphanage.
Despite being part of the impoverished Lands Below, the structure itself had charm—all things considered—with its decorative iron fence surrounding the property. But to Benedict, the bleak establishment reminded him of the overcrowded rooms, underfunded meals, and punishments such as paddling, caning, and whipping.
Stepping inside, the pressure in his head mounted. He didn’t want to have to deal with the owner of the establishment, but he had to.
The lobby looked like a library, its tall wooden shelves filled to the ceiling with thick, dusty tomes of various colors and subjects. Bened
ict hated those books; they were more often used for paddlings than for education. It was quiet despite the muffled chatter, laughter, screams, and cries of children coming from the back rooms. A bone-thin woman worked at the desk in the front, silver wisps of her tightly pinned blonde hair almost glowing in the sunlight.
“Benedict Keenan,” the secretary started in a monotonous tone, never once raising her attention to the man that had just walked in. “Did they let you out, or did you escape?”
“Mrs. Dimper,” he greeted with a charming grin, purposely ignoring her question. “How is Mr. Dimper? How are the kids?”
“Mae is expecting again, and Maximus is doing well providing for his family. As a man should,” she added.
Benedict’s grin faltered, and he frowned. The secretary had never liked him and was exceptionally quick at sending a low jab in his direction as proof. “Now, now, there’s no need to be sour . . .”
Mrs. Dimper’s blue eyes shot up from her paperwork, and her thin lips practically turned into an invisible line in her discontent. She thankfully did not have time to retort when the back door creaked and swung open. A plump woman strolled into the room on a mission, trailed closely by an unknown toddler.
“Mary, have you seen—” She paused mid-sentence upon noticing him and veered her conversation with a sigh. “Mr. Keenan, what are you doing here?”
The wee little one, thumb in mouth, fell flat on her rump from colliding with the back of the woman’s plump legs. She did not cry, however, and Benedict found that very grown-up of her. His attention moving back to Mrs. Aness, he stood up straight—as she had always instructed him to do in her presence while growing up—despite the fact he had already learned proper noble posture.
“Ma’am, I came to fetch some of my items.”
“You have nothing left here, Mr. Keenan,” she said coldly as she continued on her mission toward a rolltop desk near the corner bookshelf. Materializing a small iron key from the pocket of her pale brown wool tea gown, she unlocked the desk and opened the roll top, rifling through small drawers and compartments.