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Authors: Rebecca Rupp

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BOOK: The Dragon of Lonely Island
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The Bingles, over Jamie’s head, exchanged worried glances. “Why, I don’t know,” Mrs. Bingle said. “It seems so dangerous and so far from home. . . .”

“None of our lads has ever gone to sea,” said Mr. Bingle, shaking his head, “and I hear it’s a hard life. . . .”

But Jamie had overheard the Bingles in the kitchen that morning deciding that the time had come to sell the last of Mrs. Bingle’s great-grandmother’s silver spoons, which they had been saving for a rainy day. So he spoke up for himself, looking the laughing sailor straight in the eye. “I’d like to go, sir,” he said.

It was no sooner said than done. The sailor, it seemed, was in a hurry, too rushed even to stay long enough to share the Bingles’ dinner. “We sail tomorrow on the morning tide,” he said. “Fetch your things, lad.”

There wasn’t much to fetch. Mrs. Bingle packed Jamie’s bundle, putting in his spare shirt, three pairs of red-striped stockings that she had knit herself, and a set of scratchy woolly underwear for cold weather. She gave Jamie a hug, told him always to carry a clean handkerchief, and slipped a twopenny piece, which Jamie knew she really couldn’t spare, into his pocket for emergencies. Mr. Bingle shook his hand solemnly and wished him luck.

“Keep all your promises, don’t take what doesn’t belong to you, and always look after those less fortunate than yourself, and you’ll do well in the world,” said Mr. Bingle. “And come home as soon as you can, Jamie. We’ll miss you.”

Then Mrs. Bingle hugged him again, her eyes filling with tears, and Jamie’s last sight of them, as he set off down the road with the sailor to make his fortune, was of Mr. Bingle looking sad, with one hand upraised, Mrs. Bingle mopping her eyes with her calico apron, and all the other children crowding around them, calling “Good-bye, Jamie!” “Good luck!” “Come home soon, Jamie!” “Good-bye!”

Jamie and the sailor, whose name, he said, was Black Ben, tramped briskly down the dusty road. “It’s ten miles to the harbor, lad; shake a leg,” the sailor said, setting a rapid pace on long strong legs. Jamie had to trot to keep up with him, his bundle bouncing up and down against his back. The farther they got from the little yellow house, the less friendly the sailor became. He snapped at Jamie to hurry along when he paused to take a pebble out of his shoe, and called him a foolish brat when he slowed for a moment to admire a blue butterfly perched on a buttercup at the edge of the road. “You’ll do no such lollygagging on shipboard,” Black Ben growled, jerking him by the arm, “or it will be the worse for you.” Jamie began to wish that he’d stayed at home.

He wished it even more when he got his first look at the
Albatross.
The ship was old and dirty. It leaned sideways in the water, it was gray and ugly, and it stank. Jamie saw a flick of tiny yellow eyes as a rat peered out from a coil of rope on deck. Jamie hung back as he and Black Ben approached the creaking gangplank, and the sailor gave him a sharp shove between the shoulder blades. “There’s more where that came from,” the sailor growled, all traces of the warm voice and friendly laughter gone. “Shake a leg, boy!
Move!
” Jamie staggered up the gangplank and boarded the
Albatross.

On deck, the sailors of the ship’s crew peered curiously at the new arrival. Two men in ragged striped shirts glanced up from a game of dice, pointed scornfully at Jamie, and sniggered unkindly. A great red-haired giant of a man, with a tattoo of a snarling leopard on his naked chest, called out, “That the captain’s new boy, Ben? Looks like fish bait to me!”

“Ah, you’ll like the captain fine, boy!” shouted another. “Don’t you worry none; he’s got a way with young’uns!”

The red-haired man gave a bark of laughter. “Two guineas says the lad doesn’t last two days!”

“Done!” bellowed another voice. “Yer on!”

Black Ben gave Jamie another shove, propelling him toward a battered oak door. “Here’s the captain’s quarters,” he said, “where you’ll be serving from now on. Look lively, boy!” He knocked on the broad boards. “I’ve brought the new lad, sir!” he called out, and swung the door open.

The room was dark and sour smelling. The only light filtered in dimly from a grimy porthole set high in one wall. The captain sat at a small table on which stood a bottle of wine, a half loaf of bread, and a hunk of hard yellow cheese. He was chewing. A great red scar ran down his cheek, vanishing into his scraggly beard. There were bread crumbs in the beard. He wore a dirty blue coat with tarnished brass buttons, grubby black breeches, and a pair of tall black boots. The hilt of a knife protruded from the right-hand boot and another knife, with a wide-curving blade, was thrust through his belt. He grinned evilly at Jamie, displaying broken yellow teeth. “What’s ’is name?” he asked.

Black Ben cuffed Jamie on the ear. “The captain’s speaking to ye!” he said. “Speak up sharp, now!”

“J-Jamie Pritchett, s-sir,” Jamie stammered.

“So you want to go to sea, eh, laddie?” The captain grinned, taking a swig from the wine bottle and wiping his mouth with the back oof his hand. “You want to sail on the old
Albatross
, eh?”

Jamie was just building up the courage to say, “No, thank you, sir, I’d much rather go back home,” when another voice chimed in from a dark corner of the cabin, behind a tattered velvet curtain hanging at the end of the captain’s bunk.


Run!
” it squawked. “
While you have the chance! Run! While you have the chance! Run!

It might have been his own thoughts shouting aloud. Jamie jumped in surprise, his heart pounding. The captain cursed, thrust back his chair, reached out a long arm, and snatched aside the curtain. The warning screech was the voice of a bird, a scruffy green-and-red parrot with bright yellow eyes, chained by one leg to a metal perch.

“Shut up, you flea-bitten scum!” the captain roared, and struck the parrot with his fist. Shrieking, it fell backward off its perch in a flurry of feathers. As it fell, Jamie suddenly felt the floor of the cabin shift and bob beneath his feet.

The
Albatross
had put to sea. There was no going home now.

Jamie was tired. He was always tired these days. There was never any time to sit down. It seemed that he barely climbed into his hammock at night before some booted foot was kicking him awake, shouting at him to move his lazy bottom because there was work to be done. Everyone had chores for him to do. There were floors and pots to scrub, barrels to mend, boxes to haul, buckets to empty, sails to stitch, and endless sacks of potatoes to peel. He had to make the captain’s bunk, polish his boots, sharpen his knives, serve his meals, and care for his parrot, whose name was Ernestine. Ernestine was Jamie’s only friend on board the
Albatross,
except for the ship’s cat.

The ship’s cat was thin and black, with one white paw. Jamie called him Beetle because he scuttled about the deck like a bug, hiding behind ropes and barrels, taking care to keep out of the sailors’ way. When the sailors spotted him, which was seldom, they threw bottles at him. Sometimes they threw bottles at Jamie too. Jamie liked Beetle. He felt that he and the cat were kindred spirits, companions in adversity

though Beetle, Jamie thought, was certainly less fortunate than he was. Beetle had never had a home at all. Whenever he could, Jamie saved bits of dried beef for Beetle from his meager dinner. Sometimes, late at night, the black cat would leap up into Jamie’s hammock and lie next to the boy, purring and kneading him with his paws, keeping him warm.

Without Ernestine and Beetle, Jamie’s life at sea would have been pure misery. And the more Jamie learned about the
Albatross,
the unhappier he became. As he watched and listened, he became certain that this was no ordinary trading voyage to the islands of the Indies. Each day, morning and afternoon, the captain mounted the poop deck, spyglass in hand, and scanned the horizon, searching, ever searching, while the crew seemed to hold its collective breath, each man straining his eyes in one direction and then another, waiting.
For what?
Jamie wondered, and in spite of himself, he found his eyes straining and searching too.
Sea monsters? Whales?

Finally, one afternoon as he worked at peeling potatoes in the ship’s galley, his curiosity became too much for him. The cook, a fat bald sailor in a greasy red shirt, sometimes liked to talk. Jamie risked a question.

“Please, sir,” he asked, “what is everybody keeping a lookout for?”

The cook growled. “None o’ yer business, boy,” he rasped. “The captain has his reasons.”

Disappointed, Jamie bent his head over the bucket of potatoes.

Then the cook relented. “There’s a ship out after our captain,” he confided, “an old mate it is, who thinks our captain did him wrong. They fought in the old days, the story goes, and our captain left him for dead and made off with his gold. But he wasn’t dead, not by half, and he’s been after the captain’s blood ever since. Red Jack, his name is. A ship with red sails, he’s got, red as blood, and we hear tell that he’s threatened to burn the
Albatross
to the water line if ever he crosses her path. It’s Red Jack the captain’s looking for.”

The cook gave a sudden evil-sounding laugh. “At least part o’ the time.”

“What about the rest of the time?” Jamie asked.

But the cook refused to say more.

The answer soon became clear. One day

a bright clear day, with the sky and the sea the same deep shade of blue

the lookout in the crow’s-nest screamed out in excitement, “There she is! Captain! There she is! A sail! A sail! To the northwest! A sail!”

The ship erupted into wild activity. The captain burst from his cabin and flung himself against the rail, training his spyglass on a distant glimmer of white. He squinted for a moment, craning his neck forward, and then turned to the crew and grinned. “It’s her all right,” he said. “His Majesty’s payroll ship, loaded with gold, bound for the colonies.” He put the spyglass to his eye again. “She’s armed,” he said, “but unsuspecting. Raise a signal flag, men

signal that we need help. Let’s lure her in.”

Jamie’s jaw dropped. “But that’s not an enemy ship!” he gasped, afraid to believe his ears. “That’s one of ours!”

“Not one of
ours,
” a burly deck hand said, testing the blade of a cutlass on his thumb. “That’s floating plunder, boy. That’s the ship will make us all rich, lords in London every one of us, and me with a gold watch and chain, a carriage all trimmed in red leather, and a team of fine black horses.”

“Here she comes,” a one-eyed sailor spoke up, grinning. “Floating along innocent as a rose, thinking we’re here all hurt and helpless, and when she gets within range . . . ,” he paused, made a deathly gargling noise and a gesture of slitting his throat.

“And no one left to tell tales.”

“Down to Davy Jones’s locker, every last one of them.”

Jamie’s voice trembled. “You can’t!” he cried. “That’s murder!”

A hand gripped his shoulder roughly as Black Ben strode by. Jamie winced in pain. “Shut up, boy, and mind your business!” snapped Ben. “All quiet! Ready your weapons! Let her move in!”

The doomed ship drew nearer and nearer. Its sails gleamed in the sunlight. Jamie could see the men bustling about on her deck, the red-and-blue flag snapping in the wind, the carved figurehead

a green-tailed mermaid with flowing golden curls

and the name painted on the side:
The Sea Lady
. The captain

Jamie thought it must be the captain in a blue hat with a gleaming gold cockade

raised a spyglass to his eye and aimed it toward the
Albatross.
Jamie felt as though it rested directly on him. Closer and closer the ship came. The men of the
Albatross
tensed, cannon loaded, swords and pistols in their hands, awaiting their captain’s order.

Jamie could stand it no longer. He sprang to the rail and hauled himself up, waving an arm in the air, and shouted at the top of his voice, “Turn back!
Turn back!
There are pirates here!
Pirates!
Turn back!” At first he thought that his warning had gone unnoticed. Then he saw a change: the captain barking orders, seamen leaping to the rigging, the ship beginning to turn.

On the
Albatross,
the captain bellowed in fury.

“They may not be out of range!” howled Black Ben. “Fire all cannons! Now! Fire!”

The guns roared and spat red flames. Cannonballs sped across the water, deadly balls of blackened metal, enough to cripple a ship and leave it broken and drifting, sinking in the water. But the cannons roared too late. The cannonballs fell short, plopping harmlessly, like pebbles, into the bright blue waves. The trap had failed. The
Sea Lady
had escaped.

BOOK: The Dragon of Lonely Island
13.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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