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The StoryThe summer of 1702, one year after the events of The Guardship. Thomas Marlowe, married now and a respected and landed gentleman of the Tidewater region of Virginia, is growing restless. The settled life is not all he had hoped it would be, not after a lifetime of adventure. Happily for him, all of Europe has broken out in war over who will sit on the throne of Spain. Marlowe, as it happens, does not care a whit about who sits on the throne. What this conflict, which would later be known as the War of the Spanish Succession, means to Marlowe is privateering, a commission from the governor to go to sea and attack the enemy’s shipping. Legalized piracy.Unfortunately, his domestic situation is suffering from problems of its own. Elizabeth, perhaps understandably, does not care to be left behind while her husband runs off to sea. And worse, a relative newcomer to Williamsburg, the enigmatic Frederick Dunmore has begun a silent campaign against Marlowe over his objection to Marlowe’s having freed his slaves and employed them for wages. Still, Marlowe hopes to head for the open sea and rebuild his wealth through the lucrative business of privateering. But before he is able to do so, events take place that turn all his plans on their head, and leave Marlowe with no choice but to hunt down a friend and bring him to justice, and leaving Elizabeth alone to defend their home against Dunmore’s attacks. Author's NoteSometimes a character that one intends as a rather minor player captures the imagination and soon demands more ink. Such was the case with King James, the proud former prince, former slave from The Guardship. The more I wrote about him the more I liked him, and I found that others felt the same. It was actually on my agent’s suggestion that I formed an entire book around him, and that has become The Blackbirder.King James and Marlowe have always liked one another, grudgingly. Their problem, I came to understand, is that they are too much alike. James’s actions in The Blackbirder put Marlowe solidly in a corner; he understands what James has done, admits he would have done it himself, but nonetheless must see James punished for it, or he himself (and more to the point, for him, Elizabeth) would be ostracized from the community. Better Marlowe than me, I say. Chapter OneHeat and white sunlight, dust, the smell of dry grass and manure pushing in through doors flung open. Flies swirling, lighting, black specks on white painted pews.Sunday. June 14, the Year of Our Lord 1702. In the pulpit the preacher droned, on and on. Marlowe shifted, felt the sweat running under his heavy coat and waistcoat and shirt. Realized he had had no thought for... how long? No thought, just consciousness. Like an animal. The preacher waved his arms, entreated God. The air was close, oppressively hot. The church was nearly twenty years old, built when the now burgeoning Williamsburg was still a backwater called the Middle Plantation. People crammed in like hands of tobacco prized into a cask. A blessing in winter, a misery in summer. Marlowe looked at his shoes, then over at Elizabeth's legs, the outline of her thighs just discernible through layer upon layer upon layer of silk and taffeta. She had to be even hotter than he was. But she would remain proper, because such was her desire, after so many years of secret impropriety. Propriety was why he was there in the first place. Not in front of the communion table; those pews had been sold long before to the first families of Virginia. Their pew was behind the vestry, but still perfectly respectable. The important thing was that everyone, today's newcomers and yesterday's, knew they could afford a pew in front of the communion table, were one available. Marlowe had purchased the pew - at no little cost - because Elizabeth did not wish to jeopardize their place in Virginia society. She did not wish to risk losing this new life they had carved for themselves in this new land, did not have to wonder what Sunday, this or any other, meant to her. As a merchant seaman, Sunday had been Marlowe's day off. He'd had no duty, save standing watch, unless the ship was run by some petty tyrant who could countenance no idleness from those to whom he paid wages. What had it meant when he was on the account, among the Brethren of the Coast? Nothing. As often as not they hadn't any notion of what day of the week it was. It did not matter to the lawless and the godless, whose hours called them only to idleness and debauchery. Marlowe realized his legs were cramped. He stretched them out full length, flexed the muscles, savored the relief. Stole a glance at his friend Francis Bickerstaff, seated on his other side. He was dressed in conservative, unadorned clothes. He held a Bible in his lap, sat ridged, his eyes intent on the preacher. He looked as if he might have been a preacher himself. Bickerstaff was a pious man, after his own fashion. A former tutor, fluent in Latin and Greek and all those things that the over-educated and under-employed seemed to know. He appeared to be absorbing every syllable of the preacher's harangue. But the preacher was, to Marlowe's certain knowledge, a fool. He doubted there was anything the man could say that Bickerstaff would find enlightening. He concluded that Bickerstaff was as far removed from the sermon as he himself was, but that Bickerstaff, as usual, was better at hiding it. Three years. Three years they had been coming to that cursed church. He lowered his head, hoping it made him look pious. It had not been so bad before, with the old Reverend Hathaway, who was a good man, godly and thoughtful, and could spin a sermon that was not so oppressively dull. But he had taken fever and died a year back, and the Right Reverend Ezekiel Trumbell had taken his place. What the congregation had done in that time to deserve him, Marlowe could not figure. His thoughts wandered away from those considerations as his eyes wandered to the hem of Elizabeth's dress, then slowly up her leg. He pictured her thighs under all that cloth, the smooth white skin, the flat, lovely stomach, the curve of her hips, the way she looked lying naked in their big bed. He felt himself becoming aroused, had a vague sensation that that was not appropriate in church. And then the warm sensuous drowsiness lapped over him and he felt his eyes close, felt delicious sleep pulling him down. Felt a sharp elbow in his ribs which jerked him back to church. "Stop that, Thomas," Elizabeth hissed, never taking her eyes from the preacher, her expression of pious attention never wavering. "What?" Marlowe felt himself flush. He wondered, did she mean his falling asleep, or had she guessed at his salacious thoughts? "I do believe Reverend Trumbell is speaking to you, dear." Marlowe straightened and focused on the Reverend's words. The Reverend's head was turned in their direction and his eyes flickering toward the Marlowe pew, like fingertips testing a hot griddle then pulled away fast before they are scorched Oh, God. Will you not even look me in the eye, you little worm? It was the speech about the danger of free Negroes again. Dressed up with some nonsense about Cain and Able, but at its heart it was the same old speech. Marlowe wanted to curse out loud. "And the precursor to Cain's sin of the blood? Was Adam's failure to obey God's command to keep dominion over all the beast of the field, yea, all the living creatures. "And so today, like Adam, are we not commanded to have dominion over all the beasts of the field, and all the heathen creatures, be they man or beast, who have not the benefit of knowing God? It is our duty as Christians to prevent the wicked idleness into which man must fall if the Godly do not keep dominion over them. We fail in our duty if we do not hold the reins tight. And most especially must we keep dominion over those poor children of Africa, whose child-like innocence..." "Oh, God, I pray, preserve me from such blather..." Marlowe said, a bit too loud. A few heads turned, Elizabeth's sharp elbow struck home. It was his slaves, of course. His former slaves actually, the ones that had come with the plantation he had purchased from the estate of Elizabeth's late husband. He had freed them all, and then employed them as free labor for wages. It was not a popular decision in the Tidewater. Marlowe saw Trumbell's attention shift from his pew to those in front of the communion table and he followed the Reverend's gaze. Second pew back sat Frederick Dunmore, arms folded, listening with great care to the words. He had the entire pew to himself. He had no family that anyone knew of. Of course, Marlowe thought. Check with Dunmore, the Lord and Master, make sure you're delivering the speech the way he told you. How had Bickerstaff put it, from one of his plays? "Speak the speech, I pray, as I pronounced it to you..." That was Dunmore. He was dressed in white, as he always was; white silk coat and waistcoat, brilliant white breeches and socks, a great white river of ringlets from his periwig cascading down the front of him. He blended into the pew like a deer blends into an autumn field. He looked as if he was trying to dress like God himself. "You dog..." Marlowe muttered, and then to Bickerstaff whispered "It is that dog Dunmore that is behind this blather, you know." Dunmore was a new-comer to the colony, late of London and just turned plantation owner. In the year he had been there he had wormed his way into the House of Burgesses, had somehow arrange that enviable pew. It took a vast sum of money, spread judiciously and thick, to achieve all that. Marlowe sighed, purposely loud, and leaned back, arms folded. Thought of old Reverend Hathaway. He had been a man of his own mind, a man who led his congregation and would not be its puppet. In fact, he was one of the only men in the Tidewater, he and Bickerstaff, that supported Marlowe in his decision. He believed it was God's will that the blacks be free - the same reason Trumbell was now using to insist on their bondage. Whether Trumbell genuinely believed that, or if he was just mouthing Dunmore's words, Marlowe did not know. Trumbell's views, like the views of most in the Tidewater, were changeable and not entirely clear. That was not true of Frederick Dunmore. He was unequivocal in his belief that Africans were a great menace, that they needed close watching and tight supervision. For most white people in Virginia, the Negroes were as much a part of the colony as the forest or the great Chesapeake Bay. But not Dunmore. He seemed to loath them, fear them, wish them crushed under a boot heel, if not gone altogether. And he was not shy in expressing that opinion. When he heard what Marlowe had done he had gone apoplectic, had been waging a silent war on Marlowe ever since. He had seen to it that the laws concerning Negroes carrying firearms - laws that had been hitherto rarely enforced - were strictly adhered to. His hired minions kept up a loose surveillance of Marlowe House, hoping to find some cause for complaint, some clear breech of the law. Marlowe knew that Dunmore was investigating the legality of his freeing and hiring his former slaves, was considering bringing suit. And, of course, Dunmore had convinced Trumbell to speak from the pulpit on that issue. He had somehow arranged to have his own opinions flow from the Reverend's mouth. Cowardly little bastard, Marlowe thought. His anger was a smoldering thing, a glowing spot in a pile of coals, not the hot flash that made him act without thinking, that led to so much trouble. But what could he do? He would have happily called Dunmore out and put a bullet through the man's head or a sword through his chest - Dunmore's choice - but Dunmore always maneuvered his way around blatant offense, like a lady stepping carefully through a stable. He was clever about never doing anything that would give Marlowe cause to demand satisfaction. People were standing now, shuffling out of pews. Marlowe looked up. It was over, thankfully over. His thoughts had carried him through the end of the service, had put one more torturous Sunday morning in his past. He stood, stretched, and smiled the first genuine smile of the morning. "Come, my love," he said, extending a hand to Elizabeth, "let us have dinner and then get us down to the river. I am with child to see her with her topgallant gear sent up." "You saw her yesterday morning." "But then she did not have her topgallant gear sent up." "Thomas, you are insufferable," Elizabeth said, but the end of the service and the prospect of the sight that awaited him at the river were making Marlowe giddy, reckless. "And you, my love," he said in a voice so low that only she could hear, "are so beautiful I wish nothing more than to give your arse a good squeeze, right here." "If you do, I shall cut your throat in your sleep," she said with the sweetest of smiles as she brushed past him and stepped down into the aisle between the long row of pews. Marlowe followed docile behind his wife as she wound her way out of the church, flashing white-tooth smiles to those she passed, receiving smiles back from the women, appreciative glances from the men. Appreciative, but furtive glances, a quick up and down and then eyes averted. No man in Williamsburg wanted to offend Thomas Marlowe. Men who had done that had died. Men who had once tried to bring him down by bringing Elizabeth to shame had died brutally. His fellow gentlemen planters viewed Marlowe like a pet tiger; tame, domestic, but still wild inside, dangerous and unpredictable. He knew it and encouraged it. Elizabeth led them to a side entrance, not through the main doors where Trumbell was greeting the parishioners as they made their exit. They stepped out of the little Jacobean style brick building and into a small garden that served as a buffer between the church and the dusty Duke of Gloucester Street. Marlowe squinted against the brilliant sun. It blazed in a clear blue sky and bounced its light off those patches of granite not shaded by the small maples lining the arbor. He savored the smell of jasmine baking in the sun. A cardinal flashed by, a streak of red, calling with its odd liquid voice. He breathed deep, taking the warmth and the jasmine into his lungs. The heat felt good, not the close-pressed heat of a packed church, but the full, honest warmth of a perfect summer day in Virginia. "Hey, Marlowe, there you are!" Hartwell Dinwiddie pushed his way between two saplings and came huffing up, his round face red with the heat, in startling contrast to the white sculptured wig that sat on his head. He wore a brocade coat with an intricate pattern, the weight of which was causing the sweat to run down his cheeks. His hat, which would never fit over his wig, he carried under his left arm. With his right arm he worked a walking stick like it was the bilge pump handle on a sinking ship. He was built like a cannon ball and carried himself with as much subtlety. "Thought I'd catch you here, Marlowe, didn't reckon you'd wish to shake hands with that rascal Trumbell! Beating around the bush this morning, about your Negroes, eh? Not going right at it like last time, the dog. He's as mad on the subject as that Dunmore! Ah, Mrs. Marlowe, charmed!" He bowed as much as his ample waist would allow, just as Mrs. Dinwiddie struggled up behind him. She much the same shape as her husband, though quiet, as if she were forever bowled over by Hartwell's effusivness, as indeed, most people found themselves. "Well, I reckon Reverend Trumbell is entitled to his opinion, as is any man," Marlowe ventured. "Oh, balls, Marlowe, beg your pardon. Wasn't a man of the cloth you'd have put a bullet through his head by now, eh?" He gave Marlowe a suggestive jab of the elbow. Dinwiddie seemed to enjoy the proximity to danger that being with Marlowe suggested. "If he wasn't a man of the cloth he would probably keep his mouth shut," Bickerstaff said, squinting off at some distant point. "But the greater coward is Frederick Dunmore, who puts the words in his mouth, and makes great speeches when Thomas is not about. I don't know what is more craven than cowering behind a collar. Cowering behind a woman, perhaps?" "Well said, Bickerstaff, well said!" Dinwiddie gave Francis the elbow jab. "This is a new thing for you, Francis," Marlowe said. "You have been quite reserved in your judgment of the Reverend and his handler before now." "Let us say just that my cup of tolerance runneth over." "Right, well, now," said Dinwiddie, tiring of that line of talk, "reckon I know where you're bound, after dinner." "I was thinking to head down to the river..." "Course you were, course you were. But I must insist that you dine with me and the wife. Have 'em laying out a feast for the King himself down to the tavern. Pray, bring your lovely wife here, and the good Dr. Bickerstaff and join me." Bickerstaff had told Dinwiddie on at least three occasions that he was not a doctor of any kind, but Dinwiddie either could not recall or could not be convinced. "We would be delighted, I believe," said Marlowe. Dinwiddie was a bit much, but he could be amusing, and he did not exaggerate the quality of food he would have ordered up. The straining of his waistcoat against his midriff bore silent testimony to his proclivities where food was concerned. But of course, accepting the invite would mean... "And after dinner, then, Marlowe, if it ain't too much bother, I'd be honored if I might accompany you down to the river. Haven't been down since you stepped the masts. But even then, magnificent! Navy could never do the like. She ain't another Plymouth Prize, I'll warrant." Marlowe thought of the decrepit, half-rotten Plymouth Prize, his former command. "No, she ain't the Plymouth Prize." "I've a mind for something along those lines myself..." Dinwiddie added. "So, what say you? Dine with me?" Why not? It was hard to refuse Dinwiddie's invitation, which he gave with such force. "Delighted. And we should be pleased to have you along afterwards, Hartwell. I would welcome your advice." "Ah, Marlowe, you are a lying dog, but I thank you. You know I'll give advice, whether I know a thing or not." And advice he gave, through a protracted dinner of hominy, hashed beef, squirrel, asparagus, red herring and sallet, advice on everything from plantation management to growing tobacco to Marlowe's current enterprise. And Marlowe and company listened, ate, laughed, drank, enjoyed themselves thoroughly. Dinwiddie was one of those few who could pull off an hour of running monologue without being insufferable. That fact aside, it was still a relief when the two parties took to their separate carriages for the seven mile ride to James Town and the docks that thrust out into the James River. They settled in their seats, Marlowe, Bickerstaff and Elizabeth, the first private moment they had since morning, and Bickerstaff said "I am sorry, Thomas, that you must suffer that idiot Dunmore. And of all things, for freeing your slaves. I have said it before, it is the most decent act you have ever committed." "I thank you, sir. I know that you suffer no delusion about why I did it, none of this `rights of man' stuff that is now so in fashion. Purely selfish reasons, didn't care to live surrounded by a great crowd of people - clever people, and stealthy, you know, can come and go as they please - who wish to cut our throats in the night. "I think it no exaggeration to say that our people love us for what we did, paying them, treating 'em like human beings. We're the only plantation owners in the Tidewater that don't lay awake nights worrying about an uprising. I know from my...former days...what men in bondage are capable of." "Well, whatever your motives, it was a decent thing. Though it seems to greatly offend this Dunmore, the upstart little bastard." There was no more that needed saying on that subject, so as they rolled south Marlowe and Bickerstaff talked of preparedness, of future plans. Elizabeth participated a little in the talk, then fell silent, looking out the window at the green fields and patches of oak and maple and yellow pine. Marlowe glanced her way a few times, but she did not notice. Whatever was troubling her, he would hear about it before he slept that night. And then they were there. The coachman gave a shout, a command in some African tongue, exclaimed by a flick of the reins. The horses stopped and Thomas and Elizabeth rocked forward and the loud clatter of hooves was replaced by the whine of insects and the ringing of a single hammer. That would be King James, Marlowe thought. King James, former prince of the Kabu Malinke, former slave, now Marlowe's major-domo, captain of the Northumberland, the plantation's river sloop which he could see tied to the quay. King James. His comrade in arms. No day off for him. He would be too impatient to observe the Sabbath. Marlowe was on his feet and out the door, anxious for an uninterrupted look, anxious to take her in before Dinwiddie struggled out of his carriage and began talking. He strode forward, toward the dock. Heard Bickerstaff behind him, giving Elizabeth a hand down from the carriage. Doing his office. He would apologize later, she would understand. Thomas stopped, breathed deep. Jasmine, pine, brackish water. Fresh cut wood and tar and new cordage. Paint drying in the hot sun. She lay tied to the dock, floating on a perfectly even keel, the slow moving river breaking around her bows and sweeping aft, giving the illusion that she was already underway. Marlowe's eyes move up, slowly up, sweeping along her lofty rig, now rising to its full height with topgallant masts in place. Her spars were tapered like a woman's leg, her masts raked at a jaunty angle, as if she was fully aware of her beauty and did not feel the need to flaunt it. Marlowe made a low, guttural noise in his throat. She was eighty-four feet on her waterline, one hundred and twenty three feet sparred length, from the end of her bowsprit, on which sat the little doubling of the spritsail topmast, all the way aft to the big lantern that stood proudly over the taffrail. The black muzzles of guns, twelve along each side, jutted audaciously out of their gunports, gleaming in the sun. Fore, main and mizzen mast rose from her decks, bright oiled wood crossed by black spars. Gangs of thick black shrouds sprouted from the doublings and ran down and aft, terminating at their deadeyes with symmetrical perfection. One hundred and eighty tons of fighting ship, laid out to Marlowe's specifications under his oppressively watchful eye. The Elizabeth Galley. His savior, financially, spiritually. His private man-of-war. |