The Mark of the Golden Dragon (17 page)

BOOK: The Mark of the Golden Dragon
12.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He passes the pipe to his mate, Finn McGee, who takes it as if he were a baby and it was his mother's own dear breast upon which he was suckling.

"Well, gentlemen," says Charlie, who has clearly divined the status of all my sailors. "We shall certainly fix that tomorrow with several bales of the finest Turkish leaf."

With that, he has certainly won the love of those two coves, for sure.

As the pipe is passed around, I do not take the smoking mouthpiece, as I do not drink spirits and
certainly
do not partake of the vile weed. All the others, with the exception of Ravi, do however. Soon the smoke is all about us in swirls above our heads, mixing with the fumes from the pots of smoldering incense, and it is all, along with the saki, making me quite dizzy. I would not be surprised if our genial host had not put a little something extra into the tobacco bowl, as there is a unique scent in the mix of the smoke.

"I believe, Chopsie," I say, my head swimming, "that we must depart and return to our ship to prepare for the supplies that will be coming onboard tomorrow."

"If that must be so, then pray, Honored Guest, allow Mr. Tinker and Mr. Jones to stay for the evening and further enjoy our poor hospitality," says Charlie. "Mai Ling here, and her sister Mai Ji, have informed me that they would enjoy extending the entertainment of the House of Chen to these two fine young men."

I know a demand for hostages when I hear it, but I say, "Alas, my poor ship lies unguarded in the harbor, and I must have my men about me to protect it," I say, perfectly aware of the anguish this will cause in several male breasts. "However, I will allow Mr. John Tinker to stay the night, and I thank you for your kindness."

We rise as Mai Ling and Mai Ji, with barely suppressed giggles, lead off a happily compliant John Tinker. There is a string of low, strangled curses from a certain David Jones, but to that we pay no mind, no mind whatsoever.

You are married to my great good friend Annie, you dog, and don't you ever forget it...

 

Charlie provides us with a coach to take us back to the
Nancy B.
—sort of a coach. It seats four of us, inside, with Finn McGee and John Thomas jogging alongside, but instead of horses hauling us along, there are eight big strong men in harness, four on either side. It's still a bumpy ride, but it works. Higgins sits across from me, Davy at his side, and Ravi sits by me.

"Oh, Higgins," I warble, as we wend our way down the narrow streets. "If you could just see the beautiful bathhouse that Charlie has out back of his place! A deep pool with steamy water and blue tile all over, and I bet Tink is in it right now, and Mai Ling and Mai Ji, too, and there are soaps and perfumes and sweetmeats, and oh, it is just so wondrous!"

I do not say this for the benefit of my good John Higgins, but to bring joy to a very silent David Jones...

Oh, I do so love torturing the lad!

Chapter 21
 

"And then Mistress comes in, madder than a wet hen, and Rebecca and I run screechin' out the back of the kitchen, beggin' for Peg to hide us, but it doesn't do any good and we're caught good and proper. Mistress doesn't use her famous cane anymore, but her hairbrush does the job on our poor bottoms just as well, believe me."

We're in the cabin of the
Nancy B.,
me poring over the charts on my desk and preparing for departure. Outside I hear the sounds of supplies and treasure being brought aboard, and I do love the sound of that.

"And just what were the two of you up to that earned the anger of Mistress Pimm, eh?"

"All we did was to sneak out of the school on Saturday afternoon to go down to the Pig and Whistle for a bit of fun, and geez ... We didn't skip any classes or anything, but we did meet up with Daniel and he had a friend named Johnny with him. He and Rebecca got on tolerably well so we went walkin', you know ... but we got caught on the way back and—"

"And Mistress didn't think it quite proper that her charge, Miss Rebecca Adams, of the Quincy Adamses, was out mixing with the rabble? Ummm?"

"Even so, and—"

Davy pokes his head in the door and says, "Most of the stuff's on board. We should be ready to leave within the hour."

I nod and give him what I know is my infuriating little finger wave. Yes, John Tinker had come back onboard this morning smiling in a state of beatific bliss—if nothing else, he was quite scrubbed and very clean...
Ah, yes, that tub.
It is plain that Davy will never forgive me.

Ah, well, so be it.
I turn back to the charts Charlie has so graciously provided.

Damn!
I sure wish I could cut up the Red Sea and cross over Suez to Port Said and on into the Mediterranean, but no, of course, it cannot be. Charlie says there are plans for a canal to be dug there, but getting the Arabs to work together on anything is like trying to herd cats, and so it is around Africa for us, once again.

"So tell me about the divine Miss Clarissa Worthington Howe, then," I say. "Does she still think she is the queen of the school?"

"Oh, yes," says Joannie, munching on one of my breakfast biscuits. "But I am beneath her notice ... especially since it is known that I have a connection with the wild and contrary Jacky Faber."

"Ah, same as it ever was..."

"Anyway, Clarissa's gotten herself engaged to a John Randolph down in Virginia, and they say he is sure to be governor of the state someday."

I look up from my study of the charts.

"The poor man," I say. "Do you think he knows what he's getting into? Ha! And could you imagine being one of the lesser ladies in Virginia society if she gets to be First Lady? By God, she'll make 'em dance to her tune, she will!"

A snort of suppressed laughter from Miss Nichols...

"And Dolley Frazier?" I inquire, always anxious for news of my schoolmates. "You said she married?"

"Oh, that's a good one!" says Joannie, bouncing up and down in her chair. "She left the school soon after the last time you were there and married a lawyer. Who? I dunno. Anyway, she got in the family way and then the poor man died, never having seen his child..."

Oh, poor Dolley, and you the best of us...

I leave off my study of the maps in some distress over this news, but then the girl goes on.

"She gives birth to the child—a boy—and then, having no prospects, goes to visit a friend, Mrs. Martha Washington. You know of her?"

Oh, yes...

"And she fixes it up so that Dolley meets this cove named ... I forget what ... but Dolley calls him 'Jemmy' and she is now very happy. It seems her Jemmy is now Secretary of War or somesuch down in Washington, where they built a palace for the President or something."

Well, Dolley, that's certainly better than being on your own in the world with a baby on your hip, I'd say...

"And Miss Amy Trevelyne?"

"Oh, yes, your dear friend Amy, how could I forget?" says Joannie with a sigh. "Every chance she got, she'd grab me and sit me down in front of her desk and make me tell her every single little bit about what happened on our trip down to the Caribbean last year, while she scribbled it all down."

Heavy sigh. Yet another book, Amy, detailing my misadventures, my lapses of feminine propriety, my greedy ... and...? Uh-oh...

"You didn't tell her of the gold stash we left down in the Florida waters, did you?" I ask, alarmed.

"Come on, Jacky," she says, putting on a miffed look
and
the old accent. "Just what do you take me for, mate? An easy mark, a peach, a snitch? Oi'm a rum cove from Cheapside, as well as ye, and I knows when to keep me guard up and me gob shut."

I have to smile at hearing the good old Cockney talk.

"Good. Now go on."

"Well, everybody at the school was sad that you'd been shipped off to Australia for life..." Joannie pauses to peek out my window at all the hustle and bustle on the wharf. I know she thinks it wondrous exciting that we're going back to England, full of the treasures of the East. Well, so do I.

"Especially Miss Amy, but she did say she hoped you might be safer in prison, rather than leading your usual life on the outside ..."

 

Chopstick Charlie had come aboard earlier to make sure that the cargo was being safely stowed and had been reassured that, indeed, it was. Sidrah accompanied him and we had a nice lunch down in my cabin.

Charlie looked about him, stroking his goatee. "Hmmm ... We pick up a dirty, mute beggar in the street and this is what it turns out like. Strange."

"Cheer up, Chops," I chirped. "It's karma, right?"

He nodded, not totally convinced.

"And don't worry about the cargo, Charlie. As I am sure you noticed, we are amply armed and my crew is well seasoned."

He cast his eyes heavenward, placed his hand on my head, and muttered what I am sure is some sort of Chinese benediction, and then, with his daughter on his arm, left somewhat mollified, I trust, as to the future of his treasure.

 

I regard Joannie's slight form bent over at the window, watching the loading.
Hmmm.
When first I saw Joannie again after all those months, I noticed that she had grown a bit since last I saw her. It's natural, after all, for it's been months and months. She's come out a bit on top, not much, but some, and her bottom is a bit rounder. One thing's sure, she will
not
be bedded down with Daniel Prescott anymore—not when they're on my ship, by God, proclaims the hypocrite Jacky Faber.

Joannie comes back and plunks herself down at my table and continues.

"'Course Miss Clarissa thought that a few years in the pen would do you a lot of good. Keep you out of her hair, for sure, and for that she was grateful. I didn't believe her completely on that, but"—here Joannie sticks her nose in the air—"she is Clarissa Worthington Howe, after all, and she must keep up appearances."

Higgins comes into the cabin, bearing sheaves of papers.

"Here is the manifest of the cargo. I gave a copy to Mr. Chen and he appeared satisfied," he says, handing me the documents. "I believe we are ready to depart."

"Excellent, Higgins, then let us go."

I stride out on deck, dressed in my usual underway togs—loose white shirt, white trousers, bare feet.

Looking over the side, I see that the tide, as well as the wind, is in our favor.
Good.

"Let's get her underway, Captain Delaney," I say to Liam, who stands looking all solid and grand on the quarterdeck.

"Aye, Miss," says Liam to me. To John Thomas, Finn McGee, and Davy Jones he calls out, "Take in the gangway, and lines one, three, four, and five. Hold number two."

As this is being accomplished, I, too, go up on the quarterdeck and stand in my usual spot, one foot to either side of the centerline, the better to feel the movement of my lovely little ship.

"Hoist the main," says Liam. He does not have to roar, though he is certainly capable of a stentorian bellow, for they all know what to do. Many pairs of hands grab the line that will haul up our mainsail, and they take a strain. The sail begins to move up.

"Rudder amidships," orders Liam, and Tink, who is at the wheel, complies.

"Take in number two."

The
Nancy B. Alsop
moves away from the dock, her mainsail filling. We are underway.

Ah, how I wish my shantyman, Enoch Lightner, with his big voice, were here to sing us off.

But—
oh, well
—I can do it myself. I raise my somewhat littler voice.

Haul on the Bowline, our bonny ship's a'rollin',
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!
Haul on the Bowline, so early in the mornin',
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!

On the last
HAUL!
the boys really put their backs into it, and the sail goes ever higher.

Haul on the Bowline, Davy is a married man,
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!
Haul on the Bowline, his Annie is in Boston Town,
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!

It is a simple shanty, true, but it lends itself to any lyric that might come to a simple sailor's mind, and it's fun and it gets the sails up right briskly.

Now, one more at Davy's expense...

Haul on the Bowline, Davy hopes she's bein good,
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!

The mainsail is topped off and secured and we are pulling fast out of the harbor. The men go to the foremast line, and Davy, before I can launch into another verse, takes it up.

Haul on the Bowline, the
Nancy
is a worthy craft,
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!
But her Skipper's sure a pain in me ass,
Haul on the Bowline, the Bowline HAUL!

May it be ever so, Davy.
I come in, exulting and laughing, for one last verse.

Other books

Cycler by Lauren McLaughlin
a movie...and a Book by Daniel Wagner
Parade of Shadows by Gloria Whelan
A Reason to Believe by Governor Deval Patrick
The Dark Bride by Laura Restrepo
This Fierce Splendor by Iris Johansen
A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
The Blossom Sisters by Fern Michaels