The next morning crawled out of the sea, gray and slow. The brothers awoke in the damp shed by the docks, the air sharp with salt and iron. The cries of gulls cut through the mist like old ghosts arguing. Diego stretched first, grimacing at the ache in his shoulders. Harold was already awake, sitting by the broken doorway, staring out toward the water as if the horizon itself might tell him what to do next.
For a while, neither spoke. Words felt fragile, unfit for what had happened. The city behind them was silent now—no sirens, no fire, just smoke settling like dust on memory.
Diego broke the quiet. “We can’t stay here forever, Harry.”
Harold didn’t turn. “I know.”
“You think they’ll look for us?”
“Not if they think we’re ash.”
Diego exhaled, rubbing his arms. “Then what? We live like rats?”
Harold looked over his shoulder, his eyes darker than the morning. “For now, yes.”
It wasn’t defiance. It was calculation. Even at thirteen, Harold thought in patterns—how people moved, how power shifted. He could already sense the shape of a world that worked in secrets, and he wanted to learn its language.
They scavenged what they could along the docks: bits of rope, half-rotten bread from a trash bin behind a bakery, and an old wool blanket that smelled of fish. Diego found a cracked mirror and handed it to his brother with a grin. “Here. So you don’t forget how ugly you look.”
Harold smirked despite himself. “You talk a lot for someone with a split lip.”
Diego touched his mouth and laughed, the first real sound of humor since the fire. “Fair enough.”
---
By noon, the dockside came alive with movement—fishermen unloading crates, laborers shouting orders, the slap of waves against hulls. The brothers blended in, two stray boys pretending to belong. They learned to time their thefts between the workers’ routines: snatching a loaf when backs were turned, slipping a handful of coins from a jacket left on a crate.
It was Diego who met him first—the man they would later call Fox.
Fox was a thin, wiry hustler in his thirties with a face too young for his eyes. He caught Diego trying to lift a bottle from his bag and instead of anger, he laughed.
“You’ve got guts, kid,” Fox said, crouching so they were eye to eye. “But you move too loud.”
Diego straightened, defiant. “Didn’t hear me till you looked.”
“That’s because I was watching you before you tried.” Fox’s smile deepened. “You hungry or just stupid?”
Harold appeared behind his brother like a shadow. “Both,” he said.
Fox studied them. “Brothers?”
“Yeah.”
He scratched his chin. “You got names?”
“Diego,” said the older.
“Harold,” said the younger.
“Well, Diego and Harold, if you’re gonna steal, you might as well learn how not to get caught. Come on. I’ll show you where to hide when the dock cops walk through.”
Diego hesitated, but Harold’s instincts kicked in. The man was sharp, confident, but not dangerous—not yet. They followed.
---
Fox led them to a back alley where the brick walls sweated salt. He tossed a crust of bread to Diego and a small pocketknife to Harold.
“First rule,” Fox said, leaning against the wall, “you don’t trust anyone who gives you food without telling you the price.”
Diego frowned. “So what’s the price?”
“Information.” Fox’s grin widened. “I like to know what’s moving through these docks. Ships, crates, faces. You see something, you tell me. I keep you fed. Deal?”
Diego nodded too fast. “Deal.”
Harold said nothing, his eyes fixed on the knife. “What if we lie to you?”
Fox’s smile didn’t fade. “Then I stop feeding you.”
Simple. Cold. Honest. Harold respected that.
---
For weeks, the brothers lived under Fox’s wing. He taught them how to disappear, how to walk like you belonged, how to use silence like armor. Diego learned to charm the dock workers, flashing a grin, fetching tools, earning tips.
Harold kept to the edges, watching, memorizing. Every night he wrote in a torn notebook he’d scavenged from a dumpster.
He drew maps of the docks, noting where guards walked and when the gates opened. He sketched faces, listed names, and tallied debts owed.
One night, as they huddled beneath the pier, Diego watched him write. “What’s all that for?”
Harold shrugged. “Keeping track.”
“Of what?”
“Everyone.”
Diego laughed softly. “You are sounding like some little detective.”
“Maybe.” Harold’s pencil moved faster. “But someday, I’ll know enough to never be surprised again.”
Diego leaned back on the planks, gazing at the stars framed by the wooden beams above. “You’re strange, Harry. Always thinking. Doesn’t your head ever get tired?”
“Sometimes,” Harold admitted. “But thinking’s what keeps us alive.”
The waves slapped beneath them, rhythmic, steady. For a moment, Diego thought maybe they could make something of this—build a life from scraps and secrets.
---
One afternoon, a shipment went wrong. Fox had sent Diego to keep watch near a warehouse while he brokered a deal for stolen cigarettes. Two men showed up instead—cops or gangsters pretending to be. They spotted Diego immediately.
“Hey! You there!”
Diego ran. The sound of boots pounded behind him. He ducked into a side street, heart racing, but one of the men was faster. He felt the hand grab his jacket—then Harold was there, swinging the length of a pipe he’d picked from the trash. The blow landed hard across the man’s arm. The other lunged, but Harold kicked his knee, and they both bolted.
They didn’t stop running until they were three streets away, gasping behind a pile of crates.
Diego clutched his chest. “What the hell were you thinking?”
Harold’s hands trembled around the pipe. “You were about to get caught.”
“So you hit a cop?”
“They weren’t cops,” Harold said flatly. “Their guns didn’t match the holsters.”
Diego blinked. “You noticed that?”
“I notice everything.”
---
When they returned, Fox was waiting with that half-smile that never quite reached his eyes.
“Heard you boys stirred some trouble,” he said.
“They came at us first,” Diego replied.
Fox nodded slowly. “And you, little writer? You swing that pipe like you mean it?”
Harold didn’t flinch. “I don’t like being hunted.”
Fox chuckled. “Good. You’ll last longer that way.” He reached into his jacket and tossed Harold a small leather-bound notebook. “Keep writing, kid. You’ve got eyes like mine.”
After that, Fox started calling him “the Writer.”
The name stuck.
---
The days blurred into one another—gray skies, oil-stained water, the creak of ships at anchor. Diego grew bolder, stronger, his charm sharpening into something that could open doors. Harold grew quieter, his thoughts deeper, his eyes always elsewhere.
Sometimes at night, Diego would catch him staring into the distance, muttering under his breath.
“What are you thinking about?” he’d ask.
“The fire,” Harold would reply. “And the faces in it.”
“You gotta let that go, brother.”
“I can’t,” Harold said softly. “If I do, then it means they win.”
Diego had no answer for that.
---
One evening, a storm rolled in. The wind howled through the dockyard, tearing loose tarps and scattering trash. The brothers huddled in their shed while rain drummed against the roof. Fox hadn’t come back since morning.
Diego sighed. “He’s probably drinking again.”
Harold looked up from his notebook. “He’s gone.”
“What do you mean, gone?”
“I checked his spot by the pier. His bag’s gone. The men he owed money to—they were asking questions.”
Diego frowned. “So what? We just start over?”
Harold closed the notebook and stood. “No. We start learning how not to need anyone.”
The rain hit harder, a steady roar like static. In the dim light of a flickering lantern, Harold’s expression had changed—colder, older.
Diego felt a chill crawl down his spine. “What are you gonna do?”
Harold’s gaze didn’t waver. “Everything they said we couldn’t.”
---
By dawn, the storm had passed. The brothers emerged into a washed-clean city, puddles glinting under the first light. The docks were empty except for the gulls and a few tired fishermen.
Diego slung his arms around Harold’s shoulders. “You know, we might actually make it.”
Harold allowed a faint smile. “We already are.”
They walked along the pier, their reflections flickering in the wet boards. Behind them, the smoke of the old neighborhood was long gone, replaced by the scent of salt and possibility.
But deep inside Harold, something had settled—a quiet conviction that survival was only the first step.
He had begun to see patterns in power. And patterns, once seen, could be rewritten.