Manhattan, 1712.
By day, Abigail Spragg is a respectable businesswoman living along Manhattan's Hudson River. By night, she guards one of the colony's most dangerous secrets-the Pirate Bank, a hidden vault beneath her home where the plunder of the world's most feared pirates lies buried in silence.
For years, the bloodstained wealth has haunted her investments. Now, it calls her to action.
A letter arrives from the vanished pirate king himself-"Long Ben." Better known as Henry Avery, this is a man who dared to defy empires by seizing the Mughal of India's opulent ship laden with treasure, then disappearing at sea. His letter's command is as startling as his legend: use his treasure to build a school for young women in New Haven.
The request audacious.
The opportunity irresistible.
Caught between the profitable shadows of piracy and a radical vision of power through education, Abigail steps into a dangerous game-one that tests her wits against ministers, magistrates, and community beliefs and interests. Her headstrong daughters, Hannah and Sarah, push her toward a future she neither fully understands nor welcomes.
Every move Abigail makes reshapes the colony. Pirate gold flows quietly into the community, stirring ambition in Connecticut's Collegiate School-soon to uproot itself and rise again under a new name in New Haven: Yale College.
But secrecy breeds enemies. In a world ruled by men, a woman wielding power may be the greatest threat of all.
And they aren't wrong. Abigail Spragg has one goal: to forge a future where women shape the world as fiercely as any captain who ever sailed the sea-and to honor her client's daring charge by turning pirate gold into a legacy far greater than plunder.