It was Solomon Freeman who brought Ezra Pickering over to Dovecote in the Morning Star yesterday, and it is he who brings me back in her today.
“I am honored that the great Lord Othello deigns to convey my poor self back to Boston,” I tease, leaning back against the gunwale, watching him trim the sail and tend the tiller. I note that he has become quite expert in small-boat handling since last I saw him, and I compliment him on it. “How good of His Lordship to come all the way across Massachusetts Bay just for me.”
Solomon laughs and adjusts the sail a bit, steering a course for the Boston docks. “Well, I may play the warrior Othello on the stage, but you, Miss Faber, are still the boss of Faber Shipping here in the real world, and so I will come pick you up anytime you want me to.”
Higgins and I had taken in the play several nights ago and Solomon was magnificent—every inch the victorious general in the beginning, every bit the broken man brought down by treachery and his own jealousy at the end. Mr. Bean plays Iago, and for the duration of their play, I hate him.
It caused a bit of a scandal in Boston, of course, but it shouldn’t have—a black actor playing a black character, what could be more natural?
After the final curtain, I joined the cast for a bit of carousing at the Pig and Whistle and got in quite late, but it was good to see Messrs. Fennel and Bean again, as well as Chloe Cantrell, my friend and Faber Shipping’s part-time secretary.
Yesterday, in a little side office at Dovecote, Ezra and I had some time to go over the affairs of Faber Shipping Worldwide, he being the Clerk of the Corporation and all. We went over money on hand (not much); the state of our equipment—boats, traps, lines, et cetera; rates of pay for employees—Solomon had to hire several wharf rats to help with the trap hauling, me having most of the able-bodied men with me across the sea; the going price on lobsters, clams, and fish; profit and loss, profit and loss, till my head spun. But Higgins did sell off that china at a good price, so, at the end of it all, we get to meet the payroll and go on.
“Maybe this new expedition will yield something for us,” I said, putting my hand on his arm. “Maybe some crumbs will fall through the cracks. Never can tell. We’ll see . . .”
“Well, if anyone can nudge those crumbs toward those cracks,” Ezra said, chuckling and gathering up his papers and stuffing them back in his valise, “it is you, Madame President. And now I believe we are being called to dinner.”
That evening, Colonel and Mrs. Trevelyne received me most cordially at their table, even though I know they do not entirely approve of me as a suitable companion for their daughter, Amy, or, God forbid, a suitable match for their son, Randall. Of course they were overjoyed to hear my news of their hotheaded son, who had disappeared in late summer after an argument with the Colonel over Randall’s performance, or lack of it, at college. I’ll wager he’ll come back with his head a good deal less hot after having seen that awful slaughter at Jena-Auerstadt, I’m thinking.
Having stormed out of Dovecote, Randall had wrangled a letter of introduction to an important general in Napoleon’s army out of Lissette’s father, le Comte de Lise, and so ended up as a light horseman on the march to Germany. With me. Pressed for details, I recount how shocked Randall and I were to meet each other that day in Marshal Murat’s tent and how, some days later, we both rode in Murat’s cavalry charge on the Prussian lines at Jena. I told them of Randall’s bravery and how he saved my very life. I know Colonel Trevelyne was pleased to hear that. I also told them of my last meeting with Randall and of his stated intention to resign his commission and return to Dovecote. I know Mrs. Trevelyne was pleased to hear that.
Right now I am at sea and bundled up against the cold—it is early December, after all—a beautiful day with clear skies and just the right amount of following wind to speed us on our way across the bay. Aye, it’s a bit chilly, but I still prefer this to a tooth-rattling ride in a coach, which is how Amy and Ezra are returning to Boston at this very moment. I smile to think of the two of them there in the cramped interior of the carriage . . . How cozy . . . I know Ezra’s having a good time of it and I believe Amy is, too, though she won’t show it, the fool.
“There she is,” says Solomon, heading straight for the side of the Nancy B. lying dead ahead, now tied up outboard of the newly arrived Dolphin. “The captain of that ship ordered us to bring her alongside, so we did it. We moved her yesterday. Hope that was all right with you.”
I nod. Aye, I’m certainly not the one calling the shots now, Solly, not even on my own boat.
“Yes, you did right, Mr. Freeman. The men on that ship are my friends.” Most of them, anyway.
We are close enough now that I can make out John Tinker and John Thomas and Smasher McGee standing on the deck of my schooner and young Daniel Prescott and Joannie together up in the rigging. Jim Tanner and Davy Jones are, of course, nowhere to be seen. And on the Dolphin I believe I spy . . . aye, that’s him . . . Captain Hannibal Hudson on his quarterdeck, hands clasped behind him and deep in conversation with another, younger officer and . . . Is it? . . . Yes! It’s Jaimy!
I jump to my feet and shout, “Hullo, Jaimy Fletcher!” waving my arms wildly about in my joy at seeing him safely delivered from across the sea.
Hearing my call, he bows to Captain Hudson—no doubt begging his pardon for the sudden, female intrusion—and then turns and brings his hand to his hat in salute to me. Oh, Jaimy, I am so glad. I can see the white gleam of his teeth as he gestures over the side to the brow that has been set up alongside the Dolphin.
“I see it, Cap’n,” says Solomon, anticipating my order, his grin huge in seeing the complete happiness writ all over my face. “We’ll be right there. Steady, now, Missy.”
He brings the Morning Star about, drops the sail, and steers her expertly in. I doff my cloak, leap over onto the platform, up the stairs, and onto the deck of the Dolphin. In spite of my excitement and my urge to leap upon Jaimy, I know that courtesies must be paid, so I go up before Captain Hudson, and the officers who stand beside him, and dip down into a deep curtsy.
“So good to see you again, Captain,” I murmur, as I come up from the curtsy and give him my hand and look into his merry eyes.
Captain Hudson bows. “And good to see you again, Miss Faber,” he says with a smile. “It is not often we welcome a French officer onboard one of His Majesty’s ships. You shall have to tell us the tale of that sometime.”
I expected a comment like that, for I am wearing my French Hussar’s jacket, all blue, with gold frogging across the front, and strapped down nice and tight, just the way I like it. It is the one I wore as a messenger in Napoleon’s army, and it matches the blue skirt I have on. I knew I could not get away with the trousers I actually wore during that campaign, so I made do with the skirt. Likewise, I do not wear my old shako but instead have perched on my head a bonnet to match. I do, however, wear the five-pointed star of the Legion of Honor on the left side of my chest, just like l’empereur wears his. Let them think what they like. I had thought of wearing my Trafalgar medal, too, but it ain’t that formal an occasion, so I don’t. And it might be a bit much, even for me.
“I shall, with great pleasure, Captain Hudson,” I purr. “And Mr. Bennett, I am pleased to see you once again onboard a Royal Navy ship.” And indeed I am pleased—the last time I saw him we were both in a foul French prison.
“And Mr. Flashby, my Second Mate.”
I lock the frostiest of my Lawson Peabody Looks in place—back straight, eyes hooded, lips together, teeth apart—and dip down ever so slightly before the cur. “Sir,” is all I say in greeting.
“We meet again, Miss Faber,” he says, smiling and bowing just as slightly in return. “It is to be hoped that this time things will be more . . . cordial . . . between us?” This exchange is not missed by Captain Hudson.
I don’t answer the bastard, but turn my face to the next man in line, and, Oh, Jaimy, it is so good to see you!
“And my Third Mate, Mr. Fletcher, with whom I believe you are already acquainted.”
Oh, very well acquainted, indeed!
I dip down in my best curtsy, swirling my skirt so that it describes a perfect circle on the deck, and then I rise up and take Jaimy’s hand in mine and look into those beautiful slate blue eyes and—
“Ahem!” says Captain Hudson. “Time for that later. Maybe. Ha-ha. Now we must go below and gaze upon the wonderful scientific device that has just been brought aboard. I think you will be most interested. Dr. Sebastian is already below with the scientist who designed the thing. If you will follow me?”
I give Jaimy a nudge and one of my foxy grins and plant a quick kiss on his lovely cheek and allow him to lead me toward Three Hatch. As we pass it, I see that the hatch is uncovered and a very stout line runs taut from a crane above and disappears into the gloom below. As it sways slowly back and forth, I assume something very heavy is suspended from it.
I find I am not wrong in that assumption. As we descend the ladder and my eyes become used to the gloom, I am able to make out a large, bell-like thing made, it seems, of iron and brass. It is about six feet across and about eight feet high and has a window of very thick glass, fitted and dogged down with brass toggles. The bottom of it has what appears to be lead weights attached to it by short thick chain, and all are suspended about three feet off the deck. Out of the bottom of it also sticks two pairs of trousered legs and I hear excited talk coming from within what I shall now, and probably always will, call the Damned Bell.
“. . . and you see, Doctor, the construction is such that when lowered into the water, it is kept upright so that atmospheric pressure keeps the air trapped within, so that the occupant can easily and freely breathe while observing all about him,” says the owner of one of the pairs of legs. The voice sounds somewhat familiar, and for some reason I feel a sense of dread and impending catastrophe come over me. “It’s good, I am quite sure, to withstand the pressures down to at least two hundred and fifty feet below.”
“But how does that occupant get out should he . . . or, in this case, she . . . wish to get out?”
I feel Jaimy tighten up beside me.
“Why, my good fellow, the bell will be suspended a few feet off the bottom of the sea and she will be able to just duck under the edge and be off to do his . . . or her . . . work and come back every minute or so to sit on that bench there for a refreshing breath of air. Oh, what a brave new world, to have such wonders in it!”
“Ahem,” says the Doctor. “Yes, brave and all, but I must point out that many of us have a certain affection for said . . . occupant . . . and we do not wish to see her hurt.”
“Now, now, my good Doctor, put your mind at rest. My diving machine is perfectly safe and thoroughly tested . . .”
Where have I heard that voice saying exactly that before?
And it hits me—“My flying machine is perfectly safe and thoroughly tested.”
I am astounded. Tilly? Oh no!
Oh yes. I drop Jaimy’s arm and duck under the edge of the dreadful Thing and stand up inside. Before me I see Dr. Stephen Sebastian holding up a lamp and beside him, none other than Professor Phineas Tilden, our old schoolmaster.
Aw, Tilly, you tried to kill me with your damned kite, and now you’ve come back to finish me off with this! Oh Lord, please, no!
I feel Jaimy slip up beside me and take my hand.
“I don’t like this,” he mutters, tightening his grip. Then loud enough for all to hear, he says, “I don’t like this at all.”
“Ah. What have we here? Why, it is our little Jacky Faber,” says Tilly, ignoring Jaimy’s concerns. He peers out at me through his tiny spectacles, as fat, unworldly, and befuddled as ever. “I see by your dress and your manner that you have benefited from your time at Miranda Pimm’s school and I am glad that I was able to place you there. And is it James Fletcher that I see standing there beside you? Well, good . . . good to see that two of my former students have profited by my early tutelage and have come up somewhat in the world as a result. Ahem, yes . . . Now, Jacky . . . er . . . Miss Faber . . .”
Tilly has never, it seems, gotten over the fact that Jacky Faber, the ship’s boy he once tutored—and used in his experiments—turned out to be a girl.
“Professor Tilden,” I say, “I think—”
I think you are quite mad is what I start to blurt out. Two hundred and fifty feet in this iron coffin! But I don’t get to.
“And I think it’s getting rather stuffy in here,” says Dr. Sebastian before I can say anything. “I rather think the four of us and this lamp have used up most of the available oxygen in this thing”—the lamp indeed does start to sputter—“and we had best step out before we all pass out in a heap.”
We do it and it is a relief to suck in a lungful of fresh air—or as fresh as air exists down here in Three Hatch, which ain’t very fresh at all, considering we ain’t very far from the bilges. Still, it’s better than being inside that thing.
I am surprised to find myself somewhat woozy and I lean against Jaimy sayin’, “Oi’m sorry, Jaimy luv, but I seems to be a bit unsteady on me pins, I am.”
He puts his arm around me and holds me up. “Sir,” he says to Captain Hudson, “I must protest. You see how frail she is. How can she possibly be sent to the bottom of the ocean in that thing?”
Captain Hudson casts a jaundiced eye upon my frail self, thinking, no doubt, of the many reports of my distinctly non-frail behavior in the past.
“Now, Jacky,” says Tilly, “we will take things very gradually, only going down, say, six fathoms on the first descent.”
I fake a slight faint.
“I insist, Sir, that I be allowed to take her place,” says Jaimy.
I straighten up upon hearing that—I cannot let that happen.
“You are too big, James,” says Tilly, shaking his head. “Look at the size of her—she would require very little air at all, while you would require much.”
“Plus, it is reported that she can swim like a fish,” says Captain Hudson. “Which you, sir, cannot.”
“And just think of the specimens we shall collect from down there,” says Dr. Sebastian. “Just think of the glorious specimens!”
And with that I know I am doomed.
“Well, now,” says the Captain. “Now that we have seen this wonderful device”—and he gives it a rap with his knuckles—“let us go topside and prepare for dinner.”
As we emerge back into the light, the Captain says, “Mr. Fletcher, you and your lady have a bit of time before dinner . . . enough time for, say . . . a ten-minute promenade about the deck.” Unable to restrain himself, he then chortles, “And remember always, Lieutenant, to keep your pistol on half cock, for safety’s sake.” Exit the Captain, laughing over his own joke.
Jaimy’s face turns a surprising shade of red. “The Captain is apprised of the . . . agreement by which you and I are bound and finds it most hilarious,” he says through clenched teeth. “I have been the butt of many jokes by those officers senior to me. The junior ones dare not, but I know what they are thinking, the dogs.”
“Ah, let it go, Jaimy. We must enjoy the moment,” I say, linking my arm in his and leading him off to what I hope will be a more private place.
“I like and respect the Captain and the Doctor, but I hate the fact that Naval Intelligence seems to feel that they . . . own you.”
“Well, maybe this mission will clear that up.”
“A scientific expedition is going to clear your name so they will bother you no more?”
“Well, maybe there’s more to it than that.” And more than that I cannot tell you just yet. “Now, come around here behind this bulkhead and give your lady a bit of a kiss.”
When we separate from that kiss—a particularly good one, involving wet lips, open mouths, and some gentle panting, at least on my part—I say to him, “It was most noble of you, James Emerson Fletcher, to volunteer to go into the bell in my place when you cannot even, as far as I know, swim.” I brush back a lock of hair from his forehead.
“Ah, but I can swim, Jacky,” he says, pulling me tighter to him. “I taught myself when I was on the river. Since I was navigating a sometimes very rough stream in a very unstable Indian canoe, I thought I should be able to swim should I capsize.”
“Ah, so you taught yourself, then?”
“Aye. You see, Jacky, you were not the only one to . . . enjoy . . . the waters of the Mississippi.”
I put my hands on his chest and push him a bit away. I know he is referring to the time he came upon myself and a certain Captain Richard Allen enjoying a bit of a skinny-dip in a tranquil pool on that same river.
“That was explained, Jaimy,” I say, frowning and putting my full gaze upon him. I want to say, Perhaps in return, James Emerson Fletcher, you’d like to explain a certain Missus Clementine Fletcher, hmmmm? But I don’t. Why wreck the moment? Boys, after all, will be boys, and as such, they generally require a good deal of forgiving on the part of us girls. And hey, I take some forgiving, too.
Ummm, I breathe, moving myself against him. “Just kiss me again, Jaimy, and we will forget about everything else in this world and—”
“Mr. Fletcher,” says a very young and very red-faced midshipman, who is suddenly standing next to us. “Beggin’ your pardon, Sir, but you—you and the la-lady—are called to dinner in the Captain’s cabin. Sir.”
Jaimy drops his hands from my waist, takes a deep breath, and sighs. “Thank you, Mr. Thorpe. We will be right there.”
The thoroughly embarrassed middie salutes, does an about-face, and quickly leaves.
“One more, Jaimy, and then we shall go, and then later we’ll go off to the Pig and Whistle and, oh Jaimy, it’ll be such fun, and I’ll get to show off my fine young sailor boy lieutenant to all my friends.”
“Yes, we shall,” he says, taking my arm and leading me aft to the Captain’s cabin. I see that Three Hatch is now closed, the line suspending the bell gone, leaving that thing below to rest in darkness. I suppress a chill as we pass.
I enter the cabin and find the table set and five men standing about in conversation—Captain Hudson, Mr. Bennett, Dr. Sebastian, Professor Tilden, and that Flashby—all those, I presume, who are privy to the real mission of this expedition.
I am given my place next to Jaimy, and I silently thank the Captain for that. Mr. Bennett is asked to give us the King, and he does, and we all repeat, “The King!” at the end of his toast. Then we sit down and dig in. I am quizzed about my recent experiences in France and Germany, my meeting up with Napoleon and my Legion of Honor medal. I throw in the bit about me falling asleep in Bonaparte’s lap and then delivering the letter to Empress Josephine, and I sparkle in the telling of it all—I do love being the center of attention.
I notice that Flashby is also doing his best to be a hail-fellow-well-met, and he seems to be good at it. The other officers, Jaimy excepted, seem glad of his company. I am not, however, and never will be.
The dinner being over, we get down to business.
“Mr. Thorpe, if you will wait outside,” orders the Captain, and the midshipman bows and leaves. The Captain’s stewards as well are ordered out.
Hmmm . . . Since they’re not asking Jaimy to leave, I guess they’re going to let him in on the plot. Probably they figure I would tell him, anyway, being a stupid blabbermouth girl.
“Now then, Doctor, will you please tell us of the Santa Magdalena?”
Dr. Sebastian reaches inside his coat to bring out a folded paper, but before he can answer the Captain’s request, I pipe up with, “Do you think we might be overheard, Sir?,” pointedly looking up at the windows that encircle the cabin, several of which are open. “We all know there are no secrets on a ship.”
“There will be on this ship, Miss, you can depend on that,” says the Captain firmly. “Rest assured, all is quite secure.”
Right, I’m thinking. I had seen sailors out on deck who were plainly from many different nationalities. Wouldn’t be too hard to believe that there might be some Spaniards—or even some former pirates—among them.
I nod, but reserve judgment on that score.
“This is a translation of a letter that has come into the hands of Naval Intelligence,” says Dr. Sebastian, passing the letter to me. “It was written by a Carlos Juarez, a young officer who was one of the few survivors of the wreck of the Santa Magdalena in 1733.”
I take it up and read it to myself. After introducing himself, Juarez goes on to describe the terrible storm and the noble but fruitless efforts of him and his shipmates to save the vessel. Then, as the ship foundered and was clearly headed down, the young man had the presence of mind to try to mark the spot. He goes on:
I looked across the face of our compass to the end of the Key of Bones and saw that it bore away at about 010 degrees—that was the best reading I could get, as our poor ship was listing so badly. Then I took a bearing on a house that was built on the shore some distance to the east and that bearing was about 075 degrees.
Below that he had drawn a crude map showing the south coast of Key West, two lines of bearing—one from the tip of the island and the other farther up—and where the lines crossed, he had penned a large X marking the grave of the Santa Magdalena.
By my reckoning we were about two miles from the shore, but I cannot be sure, as the storm was so fierce.
I thank the Good God for my deliverance and I pray daily for the souls of my lost comrades.
Carlos Maria Santana Juarez
Lieutenant
His Most Catholic Majesty’s Navy
December 10, 1733
I hand the letter to Jaimy, figuring he’s the only one here who hasn’t read it.
“And this ship was carrying . . . ?” asks Jaimy after he reads it.
“Several million pounds’ worth of silver and gold. Some in coin, most in ingots.”
Jaimy’s eyebrows go up.
“Will this count as prize money?” asks the ever-greedy me.
“Afraid not. There’s just too much money,” says Captain Hudson. “Besides, you would not have a share in it, anyway. But I have been assured that all involved will profit handsomely from it.”
“If we find it,” says Mr. Bennett.
If I find it, you mean, thinks I, picturing myself, the one without a share, stuffed in that bell, two hundred and fifty feet down in the murky depths. I suppress yet another shudder.
“Yes,” says the Captain. “Find it we will, but we will not find it sitting here. We must get moving. I have more than a few courtesy calls to make in the town, and Professor Tilden tells me he has to tweak some things in his diving machine before it is fully ready to go. We figure we will be able to leave in a week’s time.”
That sounds good to me—a week on the town with Jaimy, hoo-ray!
“But as for you, Miss Faber, I suggest you leave soon.”
What?
“You will have the wind and the tide in the morning. Your getting to Key West early will enable you and Dr. Sebastian to set up the scientific part of this mission—the cover, as it were. You’ll be sailing under your American colors and should have no problem with the Spanish authorities in Florida. And you’ll have time to acclimate yourself to the water.”
With a heavy sigh, I look over at Jaimy, and he does not look happy, for he knows as well as I do that if “I suggest” comes from the mouth of the commanding officer, then it means I so order, and “soon” means now.
I pat Jaimy’s arm and say to the Captain, “Captain Hudson, would you be so good as to call in Mr. Thorpe and ask him to get my First Officer, Mr. Higgins?”
It is done, and soon Higgins stands before me.
“Mr. Higgins, we are leaving for the Caribbean tomorrow morning on the outgoing tide. As final preparations need to be made, please send Daniel and Joannie to fetch Jim Tanner and David Jones . . . No, no, belay that. Send seamen Thomas and McGee instead. Jim and Davy will be at the Pig and Whistle with their wives.”
And they will not be at all happy. Which is why I’m sending my two biggest seamen to get them—they might resist most vigorously being torn so abruptly from their connubial bliss.
Higgins replies that he will attend to things, then leaves, and as he does, the Captain rises, as do we all.
“A toast,” he says, lifting his glass to me. “To success . . . and to our pretty little mermaid!”
“Hear, hear!” from all assembled.
And from the mermaid, herself, another deep and heartfelt sigh . . . Oh Lord, send me where you will, and I will go . . .