His name was Rowan Hale, a forty-three-year-old fisherman, hardened by storms, loneliness, and unwavering devotion to the few he loved.

When Rowan was fourteen, his father, a deckhand on a cargo ship, disappeared at sea. His body was never found—only a battered, bent brass compass, sent by the Coast Guard, arrived home.

That morning had begun normally: heavy clouds, a steady current, the occasional cries of seagulls. Rowan steered the boat into unfamiliar waters—recent storms had significantly altered the seabed there.

As he lowered the nets, he felt a sharp tug—as if something enormous had snagged beneath them. 

Carefully and with effort, he pulled the find onto the deck, unaware that it would force him to reconsider everything he knew about his family and the sea.

There was no gold or bones inside—only a brass key with an intricate engraving, wrapped in a dry, brittle oilcloth.

Beneath the key rested a round medallion plate—the size of a large coin—bearing the coat of arms of the once-mighty Harrington Maritime Company, which had closed decades earlier after the mysterious loss of one of its ships. This symbol literally took Rowan’s breath away: his father had served on a ship belonging to this company.

A thin metal strip with an embossed number and address lay nearby.

Rowan went to the local maritime museum to see its curator, old Alden, a man who knew every legend of the coast.

Seeing the medallion, Alden froze. He said the medallion belonged to the Harrington Trident, a ship that disappeared in 1993 under strange circumstances. Its captain, Elias Harrington, vanished along with the boat, leaving behind only secrets.

Late that evening, Rowan received a message from an unfamiliar number: “Stay out of Trident business.” The words burned him worse than an icy wind. Someone already knew what he had found.

Despite the warning, he decided to visit the address on the metal plate in the morning—an abandoned warehouse near the old docks.

The door was secured with a rusty chain and a fragile lock. Rowan slid a crowbar through and pried the links apart, squeezing inside.

The steel chest stood locked, but the ledgers were scattered across the floor, pages torn out and damp. Someone had been looking for something important—and hadn’t found it.

Rowan noticed a familiar round indentation on the chest’s lid. The locket fit into it as if it had been made for it.

As soon as he turned the plate, a dull metallic click was heard—the lock gave way. He had already reached for the lid when a sharp voice called out from behind him:

“Don’t rush.”

Rowan turned. Alden stood in the doorway. His face was pale, his gaze wary and heavy.

Taking a step forward, he said, breathing heavily:

“You work fast… I recognized that locket right away.”

His eyes flashed with greedy intensity.

“Get away from the chest, Rowan. You don’t understand what you’re getting yourself into.”