Daily Fiction

Habits of the Sea

By Shea Ernshaw

Habits of the Sea
The following is from Shea Ernshaw's Habits of the Sea. Ernshaw is a #1 New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author of The Wicked Deep, Winterwood, A Wilderness of Stairs, Long Live the Pumpkin Queen, and A History of Wild Places. Her books have been published in over twenty countries and repeatedly chosen as Indie Next Picks. She lives in a small mountain town in Oregon and is happiest when lost in a good book, lost in the woods, or writing her next novel.

1952

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Clay Lockhart’s cries echoed for half a mile up the rain-drowned coastline, carried on the late January storm that tore across the Outer Hebrides—an isolated, windswept stretch of archipelagos in western Scotland. The rain had come quick, driven by a snell, cold wind that cut through old, rattling windowpanes and down to bone. In  Saltwell—a small shoreline community along St. Magnus Bay—the residents shuttered windows, called in their children, and herded livestock indoors as they had always done when a western gale lashed against their sturdy homes.

But Clay Lockhart flung open his oak front door and strode out into the storm, a body slumped and weighted in his arms: golden hair spilling from a pallid skull, arms swaying like wet dishrags.

Neighbors farther up the coastline saw his silhouette in the flashes of moonlight between storm clouds, and they made note of the white dressing gown that the body in his arms still wore—now stained with blood from the waist down.

He carried her out to the cliff’s edge of his property, overlooking the brutal sea, and he began to dig. It would be an hour until the work was done, when he finally knelt down—knees in the graying mud, hair slopped with sea-rain—and placed her carefully in the earth, just as he’d done with his parents a decade earlier. He strode back to the house to retrieve the two smaller bodies. They were merely stones, tiny as garden squash, not yet ripe. He placed them beside his wife, nested against her ribs, then began the gut-hard work of shoveling wet dirt back into the three-wide grave.

This tale—of the night Clay Lockhart buried his wife and his newly born twins in the soil beside the sea—might have been the only story told the following morning. It might have circulated as the most notable news passed among the Northern Isles for weeks after, if it had been the only troublesome thing to happen that uncommon stormy night.

But it was not.

Clay Lockhart staggered back to his house, shoulders bent under the weight of grief and the work of digging. The sea-rain screamed through the open doorway, and when he disappeared inside, the storm began to thrash and spit—as if it were no longer pushed ashore from the sea, but up from Hades itself.

Auld wives and pike staves, his neighbor Neil Hagdorn, a particularly bad-tempered sheep farmer, would later say when remembering the violence of the storm that night, the way the sky turned a sulfurous green. Rain pelting the walls of every home like black stones from LockMull Beach.

Neil Hagdorn heard the cracking of the land, the rush of water as if a landslide were spilling down from the treeless moor hills to the east. The splitting of rock vibrated across the Isles, and many believed it was an earthquake, or the fabled long-slumbering giant, Benandonner, who had awoken from his centuries-long rest and was now displacing the land by raising feet and elbows up from the storm-soaked earth. But it was neither earthquake nor giant that shook the Hebrides.

By morning, when Neil Hagdorn swung open his door and looked up the coastline, he found the white-washed house atop the sea cliff— where Clay Lockhart had lived with his pregnant wife—was gone.

But it wasn’t merely the house that had vanished. The entire plot of land was missing. Neil, even with his bad hip, was the first to amble up the steep shore and look down at the place where the house once stood, expecting to find it reduced to broken beams and glass and piles of foundation stones far below the cliff edge. But there were only waves battering against the rocks, and no sign of the house.

Or the land.

Neil lifted his eyes and peered out at the sea, the sky now calmed, the air flinty and strange. And he wondered . . .

In the years that followed, stories sifted from neighbor to neighbor, from one island town to the next, tales of Clay Lockhart, whose wife died in childbirth, and whose grief was so deep and wide it split the ground clean open the night of a storm, causing the house and the four hectares of land it sat on to crack free of the mainland and drift out into the Atlantic.

Sea-mad sailors, fishermen, and hardened captains swore they saw the newly formed island with its white house perched atop a stony outcropping, drifting out into the farthest reaches of the deep gray Atlantic. Men would go to their graves insisting that they saw someone on that island, Clay Lockhart, still delirious with grief, wandering the rocky shores of the island with no intention of calling out to the ships for help. Of ever leaving the place where he had buried his wife and two infant children.

It’s known as Saltwell Island, a ghost ship, a fabled drifting island that should be avoided. A cursed heap of land. But over time, these warnings faded. The old tales were dismissed as superstition and lore. Clay Lockhart, in his despair, likely flung himself over the cliff’s edge that night. And as for the house, perhaps it broke apart in the storm— lashed to splinters, sloughed off into the sea along with the rich, grassy shoreline—and the locals simply preferred to tell stories of forsaken islands lost to the Atlantic than the truth: a man whose sorrow drove him into the sea.

It would be many decades later, on a foreign, distant coastline, before someone else would spot the elusive island and dare to step foot onto its rocky shores.

A girl named Eleanor Mills, whose life would veer off course on a rainy, tempest night. Who would be both remembered and forgotten because of that island. Because of what would happen. And what already had.

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From Habits of the Sea by Shea Ernshaw. Used with permission of the publisher, Atria Books. Copyright © 2026 by Shea Ernshaw.