Randi wants adventure and a few of you have been bugging me for a western. So, here's two figurative birds with one metaphorical stone. Thanks, as usual, for including me old friend, and I hope all of you enjoy. DT
PROLOGUE
We were making love in our first-class cabin when we felt the faintest "bump." She whispered, "Nearly there!!" I immediately returned to the task at hand. Then, there was a rap on the cabin door and a voice said, "All passengers are to report to the boat deck. It's the captain's orders."
Since my wife and I were wearing nothing but frustrated frowns, I partially opened the door and said, "It's the middle of the night. Why the devil does the captain want us on the boat deck?" The steward was standing in the passageway holding a pair of those godawful canvas and cork life belts. He said impassively, "I will help you put these on if you like."
Exasperated, I snatched the belts, slammed the door and turned on the light. She'd wrapped a gown around her beautiful body and was sitting on the edge of the bed. She said puzzled, "What's happening?"
I said, "I don't know. We're supposed to go up to the boat deck. I can't imagine that they'd hold a lifeboat drill at this ungodly hour but that's what it seems like."
*****
IN THE BEGINNING
The sea birds were soaring overhead, as we rounded Clarks point, out of Buzzards Bay. It was a dazzling early summer day, bright blue sky, a few white puffy clouds. The trees were vividly green. The waves breaking on the rocky beach added a foamy touch of contrast.
The wind was fair abeam as we felt our way in on the staysail and jib. The Ansel Gibbs had been hunting sperm whales in the South Atlantic and the hold was full of spermaceti. There would be a substantial pay-out and as a boatsteerer, I was in for a nice piece of that stake. Life was good.
It was rare, for a twenty-year-old kid to be a harpooner. But I'd grown up in New Bedford, where whaling was a religion, and it was in my blood from the time I was a wee lad. Like most little boys, I wanted to be just like my old man. He was captain of the Cicero, a huge fellow with fierce blue eyes and a weathered face. I never really knew him. He was away all the time. But I shared his love of adventure.
He'd given me a toy harpoon when I was young. I think somebody whittled it out of whalebone. I just had to try it. So, one morning I snuck up on the cat as it sunned itself in our window. I didn't really hurt it; just jabbed it in the butt. But my mom remembers me yelling, "Pay out mother, she's sounding," as the cat screeched and shot off down the street.
By the time I was fourteen, I was blond, blue eyed and bigger than most men in my first crew. I had my Viking ancestors to thank for that. But I'd also spent every year since I'd begun to sprout hair building up my back and arm muscles. I knew that I had to be stronger than every other fellow if I wanted to pull the harpoon oar.
In my three voyages, I'd worked my way out of the focsle and into steerage, where the skilled hands slept. And I was still only twenty years old. To say the least, I was pretty full of myself. I was standing on the fantail rail, holding on to one of the spanker lines as Isaac, the steersman eased us into the dock. I threw the stern mooring line to the waiting longshoremen and they pulled us in to the pier.
Mr. Gibbs was already waiting for us with a money chest. Gibbs seemed abnormally happy to see us. It was like our appearance was a surprise. That was peculiar. I also wondered how Gibbs already had the money.
Of course, New Bedford was a hotbed of the factoring business. Basically, a speculator bets a certain amount of cash that the value of the haul will be greater than the amount that he paid the owner. It was a form of insurance. That must have been why Gibbs was already flush.
Gibbs's half of the profit came off the top. But he still dropped almost a thousand dollars in gold in my hand. That was my share. He said, "It's lot of money for a young man." It ought to be. It represented over a year of hazardous and backbreaking work. The afternoon was turning hot as I strolled down the gangplank, sea bag over my shoulder.
I probably looked like an Indian. The tropic sun burns a man brown. We'd only been out a couple of years, which was nothing compared to the Pacific hunts. But it was a long time for a newlywed to be away.
The waiting crowd was sparse. That really didn't surprise me. When a whaler goes out, it's almost impossible for the home folks to stay in touch. I scanned the dock for Faith. I didn't see her. But I saw my mom and Faith's sister, Julia. I walked up to them, jaunty smile on my face and money in my pocket and said, "Where's Faith?" That's when I noticed the looks.
My mother wasn't one of those warm and loving moms. She was a hard woman with her husband's gravitas. She looked me over like she was gauging me. Then she took my arm and said, "Let's go back to the house Jacob. There are a few things you need to know."
My old man was a whaling captain. So, we were rich. It never benefitted me in the trade. But I WAS raised in one of those mansions on County Street. There wasn't a word said as we walked up from the docks. I was thinking, "My God!! Where's Faith??!
*****
I grew up with Faith Polk. She was literally the girl next door. My father captained the Cicero and her dad was the master of the Charles W. Morgan. They were friends and partners in the whaling trade. And their stately homes were side-by-side on County Street, up on the heights.
Most of the time it was just Faith and me. There were boys in our neighborhood. But none of them were as adventurous as my little pal. We were maybe six years old when we started exploring the many interesting places along the Acushnet. We'd go out for the day with a basket, looking for duck eggs, and come home covered in mud.
Faith was a tiny girl. But she was as fierce and daring as her dad; and that man was a legend among the Pacific whalers. I had a rowboat by the time we were ten and I'd row us around the Acushnet looking for pirate gold, hostile Indians, or any odd creature - porcupine, beaver or skunk. Fortunately, we never encountered any such thing. But the thrill was in the trying.