We’ll return grateful, my dear. Then the banns.
That’s a strange bit of singing she’s making.
It’s the wind. The wind howls and chills her.
Do you believe she’s a’witching, brother?
She’s a woman, brother.
Aye, she’s that. And found combing her hair at the sea.
She combs her hair at all hours and places. I’m taking her to the parson to be married — not like Ma and her doings — and then I’ll build a house away from the sea, with the door facing the land.
She won’t like that.
It’ll be a relief to her. Is that Peters? Go to the turn in the road to see.
I’ll pile the bone into the sack.
She’s gone.
You were sent to check the road — she’s gone?
I looked behind the door and around and under it all and into the hatch hole. There’s her cane.
She didn’t pass by here, I didn’t take my eye off the road.
The hatch was laid open, the water swallowing there as angry as ever.
Bother the woman. I don’t see her marks anywhere.
She told me stories about a carpenter and his boards, why the horns are doubled on caterpillars, and how two Welshmen found gold in the mountains.
Cap’n Peters will say we drowned her for the bone.
Is she swimming under the ice? She does like the water here, even the icy water.
That’s what queered Cap’n Peters to her, her winter swimming.
She could be in the woods, naming the winter buds, getting past us. We will go walking and find her petting an ermine she’s found wild.
She was always looking for someone to sign or to swim. Well, the ocean will keep her only for a few days or she’ll be found in the ice in the spring. Let’s go. We’ve got the bone.
We can’t leave without her—
There are fish in the sea, hungry fish looking for what they can find. If Cap’n Peters catches us, we’ll be judged wrong for sure.
No, no, no.
Stop up your eyes. She was my woman, at any cost, cripple or not. She was mine. Who’s that — Peters coming through the drift?
It’s her, of course.
It’s his saws and scythes. Run!
II
7. 1720 — Caribbean
Mr. Shanks, Mr. Luggams — a fine day for the tropics. Not too buggy. All that sugar loaded on the Mary Stewart will attract the bugs.
You bloody well threw yourself at them, you did.
They’ll take us on, I know it. I’ve seen them around with the card players and darters, fetching up crew with a hard knock to the noggin. We’ll save them the trouble.
Isn’t it enough that we fair escaped Cap’n Peters on the first vessel we found? Peters would’ve had us lashed to his bow if he’d caught us. To be caught as a pirate is bullocks’ worse.
I’ve seen a pirate get off, go running down the street with the rope still tied around his neck.
Idiot. I must talk to Sitwell. I overheard him say he had positions working with the watches and clocks. I’d be good twisting flax, preparing the strap to bind a watch to the pocket. It’s like the cutting of bone, the same careful fingers. Why, I’ll soon be buying bone from my wages, carving “The Shepherd Lad Standing against the Wolf” in a trice.
He’s sure to have cutlasses, watch man that Sitwell is, sure to have swords in his cupboards as springs and tallow. You’re the one who dropped the bone when Peters was upon us.
Two hills past the dock, Sitwell said.
He just needs someone to lift his goods and drive his horses. A bought slave you’ll be to Sitwell.
I say I must try his offer. I am the elder and I know my mind. Anyway, we can’t go home with Peters prowling for us.
Here you could be a chimneysweep as well as a watchman, the competition’s not so great here as elsewhere, especially with so few chimneys.
No chimneys.
You could sweep, sweep your way up while I’ll be eating toad-in-the-hole three times a week on board a boat as black as soot — and you’ll be sooted. Instead of buried myself, I’d like to bury a chest full of treasure. It’s either the plague or the biting of insects that’ll get us here on land, dead as doornails. To the sea I say, to pirating.
I hate the sea life. I worked the docks, I never did sail.
Brother!
Repairing the ropes and hawsers. Rope is in the family — at least Ma’s. I had all the tall tales of the life of the sea, without the spray. I did as Ma begged us — I stayed ashore.
So sick you were of the tilt and slosh coming over, I did wonder your sudden loathing.
Aye.
My own brother making up a life he didn’t spend.
Aye.
But seeing Shanks and Luggams debouche the dock with all their booty, so brazen with their loads in broad daylight! And how they fill out their snuff with the dust of gold! I think those pirates who get hanged are done for the greater good of the thieving that is done to us, such as the removing butter from the dairyman’s cart.
That butter was for Ma. And only once before I went to sea. Or did not.
You’ve got the pirate blood in you, you just need the place to shed it. In a few strikes of the clock, Luggams and Shanks will put their feet upon the deck again, time enough for us to gather provisions, to buy that new blade you admired yesterday with what little coin we have left.
These two do sail a big ship, with double masts. I don’t wonder at your temptation.
Pirates are just sea folk who work for themselves. I think you lack the strength for the pirate’s life.
I can lift a bull and anchor. I have the strength — on land.
Beat me in the balls for a fortnight if pirates don’t do well with the ladies, that much I do know. They don’t cast out nets or drag long line, women come running to them. Not like that last woman you had.
The pirates’ women invite their friends around to your execution, set a table with cakes and ale under the gallows, and bring your only child to it.
Ah, but the mermaids don’t fear the pirates, and they’re thick as shrimp hereabouts.
A mermaid is just a woman not grown, one who snatches at men and leaves the offspring to comb out her hair. Not a pretty enough picture for me.
Shanks and Luggams have repaired to the fo’castle. They won’t be there long, the crew’s hauling sail.
Go then, you don’t need me.
Need has nothing to do with it. It is as a courtesy I’m asking you to come along, landlubber though you be, as your brother I’m asking you. Our trust be doubled and our profits too, onboard as pirate brothers.
We may not be such brothers as you think, if Ma died true.
We must hunt our true father and start our true lives. Our father will not find us, that’s for certain. Let’s roll the whale’s eye for an answer. Left, you pirate, right, you stay.
Where did you come into that eye?
Found it in a drift of sea spindle.
It could be mine, part of the bone I tried to claim.
You’ll drive me to the pirate life, with your bone found in every bone.
Well, I know what’s good for me without throwing the eye. There’s your Luggams now. I’m sure he’ll take you onboard like lice to a bird.
Mr. Luggams! Here!
Be off with you. The ocean’s too much a cradle for a man so grown as myself.
I’m good on the fo’castle, Mr. Luggams. I’ve had years of it.
8. Indian Ocean
You don’t know the glory of being hung on a hook and dragged by your lip when you must leap from the water just to ease off the pain. Pull it out!