The mark was supposed to fade. Instead it's teaching her to want the deep - and she can't tell if that's her own want. Sable stayed. She didn't give Dorian a clean yes or no - she did the Sable thing and turned the unanswerable into an arrangement: the wreck still needs clearing, the mark can wait, and she'll simply work and see. But the half-mark hasn't faded. It's changed her. She reads tidal pressure the way Dorian reads it now, the water keeps whispering further in, and she can no longer tell whether she wants the deep, wants him, or is only being pulled.
For the first time, the reader hears Dorian's side - and it's not the one Sable thinks. Every closeness, he reads as proof the mark is harming her, binding her to a line she never chose. When her dive goes wrong, the bond screams through him before he can reach her, proving it runs both ways - and his wound twists even that into a reason to go. Then a mainland inspector arrives to reclassify the harbor out from under him, and Dorian finds the excuse he's been looking for.
The town rallies. He doesn't. He sails into open ocean without a word, certain he's setting her free. Sable is left at the waterline, the mark pulling after him, and the whole harbor needing her to stay. The deep isn't finished with either of them.
The mark was supposed to fade. Instead it's teaching her to want the deep - and she can't tell if that's her own want. Sable stayed. She didn't give Dorian a clean yes or no - she did the Sable thing and turned the unanswerable into an arrangement: the wreck still needs clearing, the mark can wait, and she'll simply work and see. But the half-mark hasn't faded. It's changed her. She reads tidal pressure the way Dorian reads it now, the water keeps whispering further in, and she can no longer tell whether she wants the deep, wants him, or is only being pulled.
For the first time, the reader hears Dorian's side - and it's not the one Sable thinks. Every closeness, he reads as proof the mark is harming her, binding her to a line she never chose. When her dive goes wrong, the bond screams through him before he can reach her, proving it runs both ways - and his wound twists even that into a reason to go. Then a mainland inspector arrives to reclassify the harbor out from under him, and Dorian finds the excuse he's been looking for.
The town rallies. He doesn't. He sails into open ocean without a word, certain he's setting her free. Sable is left at the waterline, the mark pulling after him, and the whole harbor needing her to stay. The deep isn't finished with either of them.