Boston Jacky: Being an Account of the Further Adventures of Jacky Faber, Taking Care of Business

BOOK: Boston Jacky: Being an Account of the Further Adventures of Jacky Faber, Taking Care of Business
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Table of Contents

Title Page

Table of Contents

Copyright

Dedication

PART I

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

PART II

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

PART III

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

PART IV

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Epilogue

Read More Bloody Jack Adventures

About the Author

Copyright © 2013 by L. A. Meyer

 

All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

 

Harcourt is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

 

www.hmhbooks.com

 

The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

Meyer, L. A. (Louis A.), 1942–

Boston Jacky: being an account of the further adventures of Jacky Faber, taking care of business / L.A. Meyer.

p. cm.—([Bloody Jack adventures])

Summary: The irrepressible Jacky Faber, recently arrived in Boston, finds herself at odds with the Women's Temperance Union and local residents angry at the arrival of hundreds of Irish immigrants on a ship owned by Faber Shipping Worldwide.

ISBN 978-0-547-97495-8

[1. Sex role—Fiction. 2. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. 3. Immigrants—Fiction. 4. Irish—United States—Fiction. 5. Temperance—Fiction. 6. Boston (Mass.)—History—Colonial period, ca. 1600–1775—Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.M57172Bos 2013

[Fic]—dc23

2012041658

 

eISBN 978-0-544-15659-3
v1.0913

 

 

 

 

And this time, just for Annetje . . .
who has always taken care of business.

 

 

 

 

PART I
Chapter 1

“Boston! Hooray!” I exult, as the tall church steeples of the city come into view.

I'm up on the crow's nest as lookout as we enter the harbor, and I can barely contain my excitement.
The USA again! I'm free and not being chased for once, and I will see my friends soon! And, and, oh, joy!

The schooner
Margaret Todd
put her nose into Massachusetts Bay this morning and headed north up the harbor with a fine wind behind her—which was very good, for it means we shall not have to row her into the dock. That is backbreaking work, and we poor sailors are glad not to have to do it.

We slip between Lovell and Great Brewster Islands and then
hard left!
And so we turn, leaving Thompson to starboard, and then there's Spectacle Island—
getting close now, girl—
another small turn to the right, and then into Boston Harbor. I can smell the fish markets from here and to me, after four weeks of clean, bracing salt-sea air, it smells right good. I am a city girl at heart, when not sailing, and can put up with a bit of stench when I hit the land.

“On deck there!” I shout down. “Small lugger to starboard! Should pass us to the right, Sir, no trouble. Two barges coming down to port. Well clear!” There is traffic in this fine harbor, Boston being a bustling port and all.

Captain S. F. Pagels looks up at me and nods. He is a thoroughgoing seaman and knows this harbor like the back of his hand.

“Steady as she goes,” he says to his helmsman, a man as seasoned in his skill as is the Captain in his.

Then, from the topmast, a voice is raised in song . . .

 

Oh, I thought I heard the Old Man say,

Leave her, Jacky, leave her!

Tomorrow you will get your pay,

And it's time for you to leave her!

 

I grin down at the rogues on deck who are giving voice to this song. The crew know I'm getting off in Boston and feel it right and proper to sing me off with this song. They and the
Margaret Todd
are headed up to Eden, their home port on Mount Desert Island, and they are glad to be getting back to wives and sweethearts, but not, I believe, so glad to get rid of me. They are a jolly pack of dogs, and I will hate to see them go.

 

The work was hard an' the voyage was long,

Leave her, Jacky, leave her!

The sea was high and the gales was strong,

And it's time for you to leave her!

 

It's like a tradition, an end-of-voyage song, wherein the crew get to air their grievances and get back a bit at the captain. That's why it's always sung only at the
end
of a voyage, and not during . . . and only if the captain is a decent cove, which Captain Pagels, praise be, is.

 

The grub was bad an' the wages low,

Leave her, Jacky, leave her!

But now once more ashore you'll go,

It's time for you to leave her!

 

Oh, and I am ready to leave her, count on that. True, the wages were, indeed, low, but the
Maggie Todd
got me from Gibraltar to here, and for that I thank her. She did take her time getting here—sailing first to Savannah to drop off her cargo of Spanish cloth, then down to Jamaica to pick up kegs of molasses. And oh, those barrels were heavy and I was not spared in the loading of them, no I was not . . .

 

The winds were foul, all work and no play,

Leave her, Jacky, leave her!

From the Liverpool Docks up to Boston Bay,

It's time for you to leave her!

 

And then back up to Charleston to deliver and to take on mail and then on to New York. Finally, here to Boston, dear old Beantown, oh, yes!

 

We'll make her fast an' stow our gear,

Leave her, Jacky, leave her!

The girls are awaitin' on the pier,

And it's time for you to leave her!

 

Hmmm
. . . There is a girl awaitin', but she ain't on the pier, and she ain't up here in the foretop, neither. Oh no, she's right down below on the deck, and I know her eyes are filling with tears. This was the way of it:

I had shipped on this bark at Gibraltar in my sailor-boy disguise, something I have done before and generally gotten away with. I figured things would go easier on me that way and, too, I would be paid seaman's wages, which was good since I was dead broke. If I had announced I was a girl, they would not have taken me on as a member of the crew, and with no money to pay my fare, I'd still be standing on that dock in southern Spain.

The trip over was a good one—all us coves sitting around the potbellied stove, swapping tales and singing songs—all cozy in this winter crossing, when we weren't up on deck freezing our toes off, that is. The crew was mostly older men—middle-aged and well-seasoned sailors—and then me in my seaman's togs. There was, however, a complication. Captain Pagels had his wife and daughter along, and therein lay the problem, for the daughter, Griselda, took an immediate shine to young Jack the Sailor.

Why did she like me? I dunno . . . But then, why shouldn't she? She was at the starry-eyed stage of her life when all was potential, shiny and new, and nothing was old and dull . . . so she did not necessarily dream of the heavily whiskered men of her father's crews. And here's downy-cheeked Jack the Sailor, no threat at all to her maidenly virtue, a virtue I sensed early on she was right willing to give up to young Jack. Down in the fo'c's'le, we had many a fine story and song. I got not a few ribald gibes concerning the Captain's lovely daughter, but I bore up under it, blushing and looking away.

So I
very
carefully gave her a shipboard romance, since there seemed no way to avoid it . . . and it was a
very
innocent romance you may be sure. She was but fifteen and quite pretty and, I gotta say, for a kid, she was quite amorous.

So what was the harm in that? None, as I see it. She'll always remember this cruise most fondly, as memories seem to glow more golden as the years pass. Ah, yes, but what of the parting that must now come, and what to do about a young girl's tears?

This morning, before we entered the harbor, she came to me by the base of the third mast, well out of sight of her father, who stood on his quarterdeck, preparing to con his ship down the channel. I took her shoulders in my hands, looked deep into her brimming blue eyes, and spouted out the most awful, high-sounding nonsense . . .

“Oh, Griselda, it grieves me to the depths of my poor soul, but I must go now and leave you, love. I know that it is the best thing to do for I am but a poor, penniless sailor and you are the fine daughter of a rich merchant captain. While I will always be poor and penniless, you shall go out in society and become a fine lady. You will be admired by all and you shall marry a great man. And I . . . I will remain married to my true mistress . . .”

At this point I put my hand on my breast and look out across the water and conclude with a heavy sigh . . .

“. . . the sea.”

Yes, I had a hard time keeping a straight face, but I do think I let her down as easy as I could. She snuffled and buried her face in my front, and we remained that way till I was called away to the foretop.

 

Now I thought I heard the Old Man say,

Leave her, Jacky, leave her!

One more good heave and then belay,

And it's time for you to leave her!

 

And it is, indeed, time for me to leave her, so off the
Margaret Todd
I bounce. On my way down, right by the gangway, amidst all the cheers and catcalls, one grizzled old cove, Thaddeus Smathers, by name, grabs my arm. He winks broadly at me and whispers into my ear, “Ye didn't fool me for a minute, no ye didn't, Jacky Faber! Good sailin' to ye, lass!” I gulp and press on. One more soulful glance back at Griselda, standing bereft at the rail, and I am off.

 

So I rambled back into Boston town, and here I am again, stepping onto the old familiar ground.

I mean to go to the Pig and Whistle, see Maudie, take rooms, order up a bath, and generally freshen up before going to visit my other friends. And I need to check out the lay of the land. After all, there are some around here who feel quite strongly that I should be serving out my life sentence in the penal colony in Botany Bay, Australia. So I must be careful.

Ah, dear old Boston,
I think as I walk up State Street. Poor Jack the Sailor, home at last, clad in sturdy sailor gear with seabag on my shoulder, and soaking in all the old familiar sights. There's Ezra Pickering's office, and there's the façade of Faber Shipping Worldwide. Oh, how it gladdens my heart to see it, the sign above its doorway all gilt and gold and black and deep maroon and the Blue Anchor flag flapping merrily above.

But no, I do not stop. I press on and round the corner, my dry throat ready for a mug of the Pig's good strong ale, and . . . and then I am shocked to my core.

The Pig is dead.

The dear old Pig and Whistle is closed. Heavy boards are nailed over its windows and door, and its sign bearing the happy fat pig playing on his pennywhistle and dancing a merry jig is faded and peeling, and it hangs lopsided by a single hinge, twisting sadly in the breeze.

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