“Whoa! Look at the size of that brute!” I exult as the trap breaks the surface. I reach in and pull out the luckless lobster. “He must be three pounds if he’s an ounce!”
“Careful of his claws, Missy,” says Jim.
“Disgusting bug,” says Amy.
“Phylum Arthropoda, class Crustacea, genus and species Homarus americanus,” says Dorothea.
“Don’t you let that thing splash me,” says Elspeth.
“Ah, and for sure he’ll decorate some gentleman’s table tonight,” says I, tossing the beast into the live box and wiping my hands on my skirt.
“Did you know, Sister,” intones the ever-cheerful Amy, “that in the early days in Massachusetts it was against the law to feed lobster to the slaves and indentured servants more than thrice a week? Yes, more often than that was considered cruelty.”
“I had heard that, Sister, as you have told me about it more than once, but I chalk it up to the early settlers not knowing that everything tastes better when it is dipped in melted butter. And maybe with a squeeze of lemon, if you can find one. Ah, yes, that is the secret, and that is why this American Homer will be loudly acclaimed by all the dinner guests as he, and a few of his fellows, are brought red and steaming into the banquet!”
I sit myself back down and say to Jim, “That’s the last of the traps. Let’s take a bit of a cruise about Spectacle Island over there before we head back in.” He nods and puts the tiller over.
“Isn’t this just the most wonderful day? And tomorrow is the field trip!” exults little Rebecca. “With that nice Mr. Harrison and that funny Jerome!”
I hold my tongue on the wonderfulness of those two. Mr. Harrison is the man who runs the excursion company that will take us out to Peddocks Island tomorrow, and he has been by the school several times to make the final arrangements. Hell, I could take everybody over in two trips with the Star, but that proposal falls on deaf ears. On each of his visits, Mr. Harrison has brought with him his Negro slave, Jerome, and many of the girls are much taken with his antics. Jerome has a permanent silly grin on his face and he frolics about in an out-of-date fancy jacket that is at least two sizes too big for him, and he wears a white powdered wig that is always comically askew. He is an accomplished juggler and amazes the girls with several magic tricks, too. But he doesn’t amaze me. “We had many black men on the ships on which I served and they knew their seamanship and were respected for it,” I say to Amy, who shares my opinion in this matter . . . and they didn’t have to act like clowns. This Jerome has cast some japing, rolling-eyed glances in the direction of Angelique, but I see nothing but disgust in her composed face at his amorous displays.
Well, to hell with them, I think and stretch out and look up at the sky and my perfectly trimmed white sail. The sun is shining and it is warm and I am content. The five of us had checked out of the school, to stay the night at Elspeth’s house, Higgins having escorted us over there yesterday and then returned to the school . . . or wherever else he was going for the weekend. As before, Elspeth’s parents treated us like we were royalty and we had a grand time. I know that Dorothea agreed to come only because of a promised cruise in the Star whereupon she might peer at many of the birds of the bay, and Amy came only to keep an eye on me, but all had fun at the Goodwins’ in spite of themselves. Little Rebecca, of course, is always up for a good time, wherever she can find it, poor thing. She has grown used to her parents being off on diplomatic duty and does not cry about it anymore.
“Hah! There’s a guillemot! A Cepphus grylle! They don’t always come down this far. Wait till I tell Mr. Sackett! He will be ever so envious.” I look out over the water and see a stubby-winged black bird with white patches on its wings barely making it over the crests of the waves, little as those waves are. Beat on, little bird . . .
Dorothea has become entranced with my long glass this day and trains it on any hapless bird that might cross her line of sight. Though some make fun of her and her studiousness, I have never heard her say a bad word against anyone, so she is all right with me. I had Elspeth invite her, because I knew she would enjoy this. I look over at her, her eye glued to the glass. She is a pleasant-looking girl of medium height with unruly brown hair that she does not make a great deal of effort to keep neat. As a matter of fact, she has a habit, when deep in study of some tome, of taking a tendril of that hair into her mouth to suck and chew upon. Mistress has told her that she will be switched if she catches her doing it again, but I don’t know if that has stopped her in the practice. She also has a pair of spectacles with round-shaped lenses that she wears sometimes when reading. The lenses are tinted blue and I think she wears them in imitation of Dr. Franklin. These Americans do like their Dr. Franklin. From what I’ve read, he was a bit of a rake—Old Lightning Rod, he was sometimes called—but what the hell.
I’ve decided to stop later today at Gardner’s Chandlery, on our way back to the school, so as to get Dorothea a glass of her own, as I know she will get great joy from it. She will protest that she has no money on her, and none of these rich girls ever do, but I will tell her we will charge it to Faber Shipping, Worldwide, and she can pay me back when next she can wheedle some money out of Daddy. Course I know that once I show her the way up to the widow’s walk, we may never see her again ’cause she’ll be so busy peering through her long glass at all of the birds, stars, and who knows what all.
“I believe I shall marry that charming Mr. Beauchamp I met at Harvard College that day.” Elspeth sighs, beating her eyelashes. “He was ever so attentive to me.” We have gotten to the other side of Spectacle Island and are on a gentle beam reach in the light breeze. It is a perfect day and the talk is as light as the air.
“As that Mr. Trevelyne was to you, Jacky,” teases Rebecca, entering into the game.
“If by attentive you mean his having his hands all over her when Mistress wasn’t looking, then he was that,” grumbles Amy.
“Now, now, Sister,” simpers I, “Brother Randall was merely being friendly, and you know I am not particularly shy in that way.”
“That is certainly the truth. I had to put myself in the way of Constance Howell, who was on her way to tell Mistress on you. If I had not done that, you would have had some serious excuses to make, believe me.”
I did not know this. “Why, thank you for that, Amy,” I say, and mean it. “I didn’t think I was being that bad at the time.”
Amy sniffs. “You never think you are being bad.”
“So you agree I deserved the red petticoat, then, Sister?” I say, miffed.
“No. That was rude. But if anyone gives people like Constance reason to vent their prudish spleen, it is you, Jacky.”
“Them that don’t like me can leave me alone, that’s what say.”
“If ever I will marry,” says Dorothea, the glass still held to her eye, “it will have to be to a man of great learning, who will love me enough to let me pursue my own interests. Otherwise, I shall stay single.”
“And what about you, young Jim? Who will you marry?” I ask of my stout coxswain.
“Whom will you marry,” corrects Amy.
Grrr . . .
“A sturdy lass who knows how to swing a clam hook and what can bring in two bushels between the tides, that’s whom I will marry,” says my practical Jim, but I don’t believe him.
“What about sweet little Claire, who worships the ground you walk upon?” I tease.
He reddens and pretends to check the trim of the sail. “She’s a farm girl, and being a seaman, I don’t have no truck with such as that.”
“Ah, yes, well we shall see. Farm girls do have their charms, you know. They know how to make butter and cheese, and how to put up preserves, and all sorts of things that don’t have to do with fishy stuff. Here’s a song for you, lad, that you might take to heart.” I pull my whistle from my sleeve and tootle a bit of the melody, then sing . . .
Now do you ken my bonnie Jean,
She’s every fisher laddie’s dream,
She guts the herring down by the sea
And saves her kisses just for me!
“How would you like to kiss a girl who’s been guttin’ herring all day? She’d be smellin’ pretty ripe, I’d think.” Cries of eeeeuuwww! all around.
“I ain’t gonna marry nobody, then,” swears Jim, upon consideration of the choices offered him.
As we come around the south end of the island, I see an opportunity for some fun with Amy. There is a pack of seals lying about the ledge rock there. I motion for Jim to bring the Star in closer to the seals, and he does.
“That is all well for you, Elspeth, and I hope you and your Beauchamp have many fine fat babies, and, Dorothea, I hope you find your kind scientist, but I am afraid that for poor Amy and me, well, we are doomed to live single all of our lives.” I heave a great, theatrical sigh.
“Oh?” says Elspeth, her mouth making an open O of disbelief. “But what about your Jaimy, and Amy, your Mr. Pickering?”
“Ah, it’s sad, that,” I say, shaking my head and affecting a tone of deep melancholy. “My Jaimy is a world away and may never return, and Amy will not give poor Ezra Pickering the time of day.”
“I am not ready for that sort of thing,” says Amy primly, as I knew she would for she has said it at least a thousand times.
“Nay, for us it will be a lifetime of quiet spinsterhood, taking only Great Silkies for lovers.” I nod in solemn affirmation of what I have just said as if I hold it to be the gospel truth. We are getting really close to the seals now. They have seen us and now regard our approach with their big round eyes. Amy is seated on the other side of the Star and so does not see them yet.
“I suppose you will now tell us what a Silkie is.” She sighs, looking wary.
“Oh, Sister, how can you not know of Silkies? Why, they fairly abound in places like this!” I put on my teaching voice. “Well, then, Silkies are strange mystical beings that are seals in the daytime but can change into half men at night, and when they do, they stand on great strong legs and have huge hairy chests and great beards all twined with seaweed, and sometimes one of them takes it into his mind to suddenly appear in the middle of the night at the foot of the bed of a comely maiden, and when he leaves, she ain’t a maiden no more, oh, no, she ain’t. Before he gets down to business, he sings her a song and it goes like this . . .
I am a man upon the land,
I am a Silkie under the sea
I come from a far, far distant strand
And I have come to get a babe by thee.
And then he has his way with her and then leaves and nine months later, out pops the wee one. Always a boy, by the way—there ain’t no girl Silkies, otherwise why would Silkies bother with land girls, it bein’ inconvenient, like.” I pause to catch my breath.
“I swear you are a living, breathing scandal,” says Amy, not at all charmed by my little tale.
But I go on. “Of course, it all ends sadly, for the Silkie always comes back to claim his son after he’s been weaned, as he had sung to her before . . .
And it shall come to pass on a summer’s day,
When the sun shines bright on every stone,
I shall come and fetch my little young son,
And teach him how to swim the foam.
And so she never sees the little fellow again, ’cause he’s become a Silkie now, too. Unless, of course, she wants to row out to the ledge rock to look at him lyin’ around sunnin’ himself next to his dad.”
“How sad,” says Rebecca, mock serious.
“Ah, no, lass, it’s just the way of the world. Course now a lot of people say that these stories are just ways of girls explaining away a sudden swellin’ of the belly, but I’m a seaman and I know that Silkies are real ’cause I’ve seen ’em. I just barely escaped from one myself, on Malta it was, and it was a close thing I can tell you and . . . Oh, my God!” I shout and jump to my feet. “Look, Amy! I’ll bet that’s one right there!” I point over Amy’s head and she turns around and gasps to see that the crowd of seals on the rocks is now a scant twenty feet away.
“Look at the rogue! The cheek of the rascal! Oh, Amy! He’s looking at you in a real husbandly way, he is! Look at him! Cheek! Damned cheek, it is! You leave our Amy alone now, you hear!”
“You stop that now, you!” cries Amy, looking distressed.
The biggest seal of the lot rolls over and slips into the water.
“Uh-oh,” I say with concern, “you’ve done it now, Amy. Here he comes. I am sure that is a true Silkie and you are sure to have a visit tonight!”
“Tonight? In the dormitory?” exclaims Elspeth, delighted.
“Aye,” says I. “And won’t that be something to watch?”
“I’m sure that Mistress will object,” says Rebecca, equally delighted.
“And I am sure you are all being just horrid. Stop it now,” warns Amy, steaming.
“Mistress might try to object, but her rod against an eight-foot-tall Silkie? Nay, it wouldn’t serve.” I put on a resigned tone. “No, nothing can be done. I shall have to travel down to Dovecote and tell Colonel Trevelyne that the Great Silkie of Boston Bay has come and got a babe to his daughter, Amy. And, oh, the good Colonel will cry and rend his clothes and pull his hair, but in the end he will accept it as fathers have since time began. ‘Ah, Silkies . . . what are you going to do?’ he’ll say and sigh, at last, and I’ll sigh, then say, ‘There’s nothing that can be done, Sir. It’s just like when them elfin knights come at you with milk-white cheeks and all clad in the red silk. I mean, what’s a poor girl to do?’”
Just then, the seal that had slipped himself into the water chooses this moment to poke his whiskered head up next to the boat and to fix Amy with that big-eyed stare that seals have. She lets out a screech and tumbles to the other side of the boat, and I catch her and throw my arms around her and hold her.
“Oh, you bad thing, you!” she scolds, red-faced. “I do not think you are even a bit of a Christian with all your heathen stories of elves and seal-men and mermaids and spirits!”
I bury my face in the fabric of her dress and let her pound my shoulders with her fists while I roar with laughter.
After we have subsided and Amy has been mollified somewhat, but before we round the point to head back in, something out toward the open sea catches my eye. Hmmm. A black-painted ship . . . about the size of a bark . . . has pulled up behind Lovell Island.
“Dorothea dear, may I borrow the glass for a moment?” I ask. She hands it over and I put it to my eye, then train it on the black ship. I see the sails slacken and the anchor and its chain spill out over its bow to plunge into the water. I look back over my shoulder at the harbor—there’s plenty of room at the docks, and the wind is fair. Why ain’t they going on in? Maybe the cargo will be rowed out to them? I’ll bet they’re up to something illegal. Maybe they’re smuggling in contraband. I can certainly relate to that, considering my past history. Well, it ain’t my ship and it ain’t my business, so I return the long glass to the eager hands of Dorothea.
I lie back against the gunwale, let the warm spring sun shine on my face, and think on my station in life. I am back at my school in the company of friends, mostly. My little enterprise with Jim and the Star is prospering. The heat seems to be off for a bit on the wanted posters. Jaimy will be over within a month to claim me, and we can begin our life together.
And tomorrow is a field trip, out on the water again. I bask like a seal in the sun and revel in these thoughts.
I am content.