Bed of Nails (24 page)

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Authors: Michael Slade

Tags: #Canada

CAPTAIN COOK
 

Over the Pacific Ocean

April 17 (Two days later)

“The almost certainty of being eaten as soon as you come ashore adds not a little to the terrors of a shipwreck,” noted the botanist Joseph Banks in his journal during Captain Cook’s first voyage around the world in 1768, when a storm threatened to sink the
Endeavour
off the coast of the cannibal islands that became New Zealand.

Now
that,
thought Zinc, is adventure.

As a farm boy marooned on the flats of Saskatchewan for all those years of misspent youth, Zinc had escaped by daydreaming himself into the skins of the great explorers he studied at school and the even greater superheroes he encountered in the movies, in the comic books, and on the TV programs produced by American pop culture.

As Radisson, Zinc was tortured by the Iroquois.

As Tarzan, he swung from vine to jungle vine.

As Davy Crockett, he went down swinging at the Alamo.

Adventurers, in this day and age, are a doomed species. It used to be that all a bored youth had to do was follow that sage advice to “Go west, young man.” But whether Christopher Columbus or Buffalo Bill, point your compass in that direction and you could end up as dinner or lose your scalp. In the case of Columbus, west gave us a new word: “cannibalism.”

That noun was first used by Columbus in his journal on November 23, 1492. On his initial voyage to the New World, the great explorer met the peaceful Arawak.
Caniba
—an Arawak term—was a corruption of
cariba,
meaning “bold,” the label the Caribbean Indians of the Lesser Antilles used to describe themselves. When their neighbors, the Arawak, cribbed it for their own use, the term became an insult meaning “extreme barbarity.” Columbus misinterpreted
caniba
as
Khan-iba
because he was searching for the Orient to meet the Great Khan of the Mongols. He also linked it to
canis
—the Latin word for “dog”—and because Pliny, the classical author, had populated the far edge of the world with man-eating Cyclopean and dog-headed tribes, Columbus put two and two together to equal three after the Arawak warned him of man-eaters too. “I therefore repeat,” he journalized on December 11, 1492, “what I have said several times already: that the Caniba are none other than the people of the Great Khan, who must be neighbors to these. They have ships, they come and capture these people, and as those who are taken never return, the others believe that they have been eaten.”

Columbus returned to the New World in 1493. On that voyage, he finally met the Caribs on the island of Guadeloupe. There, he discovered mutilated body parts and a severed head in an abandoned Carib village. That seemed to confirm the accusations of the Arawak, and when Columbus’s adventures were widely disseminated in
De Orbe Novo
in 1511, Europeans learned how “the wylde and mysterious people called Canibales or Caribes … eat mannes flesshe.” From then on, it was seared into the collective consciousness of Europe that cannibal tribes plagued such newly discovered lands.

Which was true, as Captain Cook found out.

How Zinc Chandler wished that he had a time machine. Oh, to be Marco Polo or David Livingstone. Oh, to be free to go where no one had gone before, to venture into the great unknown beyond the outer edge of all current maps. He knew he should be thankful to have been born Canadian. At least his country still had a frontier, and that—truth be known—was why Zinc had joined the Mounted Police. Yes, he’d had far-flung adventures on duty with Special X—his body was marked by the scars he’d brought back as souvenirs—but somehow that experience wasn’t as satisfying as
pure
adventure.

Air New Zealand’s Flight 53 from Los Angeles to Rarotonga in the Cook Islands had left the City of Angels for the South Seas at 10:15 p.m. this Thursday night. The inspector’s travel plans were in disarray, thanks to a bomb threat at Los Angeles International Airport yesterday. Three days before that, in the final hours of the World Horror Convention in Seattle, Zinc had sought out Yvette at “the dead dog party”—that farewell blowout at which all the remaining booze and food is consumed by those conventioneers who stay until the last dog is hanged—to tell her that he wished to venture out on the Odyssey.

“You want to be a writer?” she had asked.

“I’ve had enough of copping.”

“Why don’t I believe you?”

“You tell me.”

Yvette cocked her head, closed one eye and arched a quizzical eyebrow on the other side. “I think you think that either Bret or Wes is a killer.”

“I do?” said Zinc.

The blonde nodded. “You think one of them killed that producer in North Vancouver a year or two ago, then used the experience to plot his novel. You think the same person killed the businessman whose head was found spiked upside down at Ted Bundy’s house and whose body—the rest of him—was strung up like the Hanged Man at the bottom of the Thirteen Steps in Maltby Cemetery.”

“Why kill him?”

“To promote the killer’s book.”

“That’s insane.”

“Exactly,” said Yvette. “You think the same madman hammered a slew of nails into the face of the Cthulhu sculptor who was killed here in his room last night.”

“Why kill him?”

Yvette shrugged. “The killer’s running amok.”

“The problem with your insight is their maze of alibis. Bret was in bed with Petra when the headless victim was killed. Wes was in bed with Petra when the Cthulhu monster came calling.”

“Someone’s lying.”

“Who?”

“Probably Petra. And that’s why you want to join the Odyssey. To find out for sure.”

Drifting away from the party, they had moved out to the pool area to escape from eavesdroppers.

“There could be another reason.”

“Oh?” said Yvette.

“I don’t think you’re safe on a trip with Bret, Wes, and Petra. You need someone to watch over you.”

“Someone like you?”

“Perhaps.”

“I doubt if I’m in danger. You may have noticed that all the dead so far are male.”

“So far,” Zinc said. “But winds do change.”

“There could, of course, be another reason why you want to come along.”

“What’s that?”

“To seduce Petra … or
me.

“Petra maybe. But you, I doubt.”

“You never know,” Yvette replied, “unless you try.”

And so she had conspired with Zinc to turn him into a stowaway on the Odyssey. The wannabe writers and their published gurus were set to fly out of Vancouver—by way of L.A.—for Rarotonga on Tuesday of that week. At 5:00 a.m. on Wednesday morning, they would land in the Cooks, and after spending a day recovering from jetlag and loss of sleep, the group would island-hop to Atiu at 11:00 a.m. on Thursday. Because Zinc had a budget conference at Special X on Tuesday, his departure would follow twenty-four hours later. Air Canada would land him in Los Angeles at 6:35 p.m. on Wednesday evening, then he would connect with Air New Zealand at 10:15 that night, and when he landed in Rarotonga at 5:00 a.m. Thursday morning, he’d hop a ride to the resort where the Odyssey members were snoozing, and be there to surprise Bret, Wes, and Petra when they awoke. Off the group would fly to Atiu at 11:00 a.m., and he would set foot on Cannibal Island with the Eloi and the Morlocks.

That was the scheme.

But you know what the poet said about “best-laid schemes.”

The bomb threat at LAX was one of those terrorist future shocks still rattling from 9/11. The result was that Air Canada didn’t touch down in L.A. until Air New Zealand had hightailed it out of town. The Kiwis being the only carrier to the Cook Islands, Zinc had to wait another day to connect with Thursday’s flight, which meant he would land in Rarotonga too late for the hop to Cannibal Island. The upside was that he got to fill a gap in his life experience by finally spending a day on Tom Sawyer’s Island and in the haunted house at Disneyland.

So here Zinc sat, in seat 20J on Flight 53 while the flight attendants cleared the remains of the late-night after-takeoff meal for
The Count of Monte Cristo,
the first of multiple in-flight movies. Instead of watching swashbucklers skewer each other with épée and foil, the Mountie dug out the book about Captain Cook that he’d used as a shield against the chief’s wrath over flouting his no-work order, and he settled in to set sail for the South Seas.

Avast, ye hearties!

 

In an obscure village and of obscure parents—a local girl and a Scottish farm laborer—James Cook was born in Yorkshire in 1728. At seventeen, the youth left home for a life at sea, which would be his all-consuming passion for the next thirty-four years as it carried him off to the uttermost ends of the earth.

In Whitby, Cook apprenticed with shippers in the coal trade. Time off was spent studying navigation, astronomy, and mathematics, until he was self-educated to a level of expertise. Eventually, in 1755, he joined the Royal Navy. So honed were his skills at conquering the sea that in barely two years he had advanced from able seaman to master’s mate to boatswain and finally to master in charge of running a ship.

During the Seven Years War, a bitter conflict between Britain and France over which Crown would reign supreme in North America, Cook mapped the hazardous St. Lawrence River for the Battle of Quebec, and later Newfoundland, to create charts that were so good that they would be used for more than a century. When, in 1768, the British decided to send an expedition to the newly discovered South Seas island of Tahiti so that scientists could observe the transit of Venus across the face of the sun, the Royal Navy selected Cook as the seaman to sail them there. His secret mission, however, was to thwart France, which, having been pushed out of North America and India, was seeking to annex new territories in the unknown vastness of the South Pacific. Up for grabs was a mythical land, the huge Southern Continent, which no one had seen.

Cook set sail from Plymouth on August 23 with Sir Joseph Banks (of the cannibal comment) and ninety-two men. The
Endeavour
was the kind of ship that Cook knew best, a Whitby collier designed for hauling coal. With its wide bows, raised poop, and square stern, the bark was a stubby little vessel, but what it lacked in sleek beauty it made up for in sea-keeping qualities.

Cook’s ship was all brawn.

Crossing the equator, the
Endeavour
headed for South America. As the ship approached Cape Horn, at the southern tip of that continent, the weather turned nasty. An icy gale pitched and rolled and yawed and corkscrewed the
Endeavour
about, draining the men of energy from bracing themselves against the motion. Finally, on January 24, 1769, Cook sailed around the Horn and into the South Pacific. From that date on, the history and future of the South Seas changed forever.

Cook arrived in Tahiti on April 13, after a voyage from Britain of eight months. What he found was a sun-drenched paradise of blue skies and bluer lagoons, where white torrents gushed down forest-green slopes and palms nodded lazily over sandy beaches. Tahitian females practiced free love, so while the scientists set about observing the transit of Venus, the
Endeavour
’s crew were off fucking their brains out. Two of Cook’s men—Gibson and Webb—took leave of their senses, and when it was time for the ship to sail, they deserted to the hills with their girlfriends. The method Cook used to force their return was to seize half a dozen local chiefs and hold them hostage until the Tahitians betrayed both deserters. Once the men had been handed over for punishment, the
Endeavour
set sail with two agreeable islanders, Tupia and his boy servant, Tiata. Launched with a rousing send-off by hundreds of Polynesian canoes, Cook ventured out into the great unknown.

The ship sailed fifteen hundred miles south to forty degrees latitude without sighting the mythical Southern Continent. The weather was abominable in the Roaring Forties, so, having reached the limit imposed by the lords of the Admiralty, Cook turned north and west. On October 7, the British spotted land. The ship was off the east coast of New Zealand. Hoping for a welcome like the one they had received in Tahiti, the first Europeans stepped ashore—and met venomous hostility from the Maoris. With tongues stuck out as their way of expressing defiance, armed warriors with tattooed faces and feathers in their hair attacked Cook and his men. In a series of bloody skirmishes, the British shot ten Maoris, then were shocked to learn that their adversaries
ate
enemies killed in battle.

These were cannibal isles.

Cook spent six months circumnavigating and mapping the North and South islands. Banks named the waterway between them Cook Strait. In January 1770, Cook, Banks, and Tupia went ashore, and passed the body of a woman floating in the water. The Maoris disposed of their dead kin by weighing them down at sea, so that was obviously a corpse that had slipped free from its ballast. On the beach, the landing party met a group of natives. In his journal, Banks recorded:

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