Authors: Tim Severin
Dan asked his cousin a few more questions, then added, ‘My guess is that the men in the pirogues are English or French. If so, they should be warned about the Spanish patrol ship. Jon is willing to lend me his canoe if I want to go there to find out more. I could be back inside three days if this wind holds.’ Dan seemed eager to make the trip.
Jacques considered for a moment before replying. ‘All right then. I’ll wait here for you.’
‘In the meantime you can try out your turtle recipe on my cousin,’ said Dan cheerfully.
T
HE UNIDENTIFIED
travellers were much closer than expected. Before noon on the second day Dan glimpsed the three pirogues. They were beached inside a river mouth less than thirty miles from where he had left Jacques. Cautiously Dan steered across the sandbar at the river mouth, keeping close under the bank so that the canoe’s sail brushed the overhanging branches of the mangroves which stretched away in an unbroken wall on both sides of the estuary. When he reached the travellers’ camp, the first person he saw was Hector. Moments later the two friends were greeting one another with astonished delight.
‘How on earth did you get here?’ the Miskito exclaimed as Hector helped him haul his canoe up on the muddy bank. ‘I thought you were in Jamaica.’
‘I managed to get away and join the Bay Men,’ Hector explained. ‘But we were flooded out by a bad storm, and had to abandon the site. Coming down the coast we met up with these other logwood cutters. They had all suffered the same misfortune. We joined forces, keeping the largest of our boats. But it’s been a difficult journey. We’ve been living on wild fruit and an occasional seabird we shot.’
Dan could see that the survivors were in a bad way. There were about twenty men in the party and they looked emaciated. One man was shivering with fever. ‘There’s a Spanish cruiser in the area. You know what will happen if they catch the Bay Men,’ he warned Hector.
‘But they’ve resolved to go no further until they’ve filled their bellies. That’s why they decided to stop here in the estuary. They intend to go inland and hunt wild cattle or pigs, if they can find them.’
Dan shook his head. ‘That’s foolish. The Spaniards could be here by then. I’ll fetch meat for them.’
‘Jezreel!’ Hector called out, ‘I want you to meet a good friend of mine. This is Dan. He was with me in Barbary.’
The prize fighter’s glance took in the Miskito’s long black hair and the narrow face with its high cheekbones and dark, sunken eyes like polished pebbles. ‘Did I hear you say that you can get food for us?’
Hector glanced into the Miskito’s canoe. ‘You haven’t even brought a musket with you.’
‘I won’t need one. This is my cousin’s canoe and he left his fishing gear in it. But you’ll have to help me.’
Mystified, Hector was about to step into the bow of the canoe when Dan stopped him. ‘No, your place is in the stern,’ he said. ‘I’ll tell you what to do.’
Under Dan’s instructions, Hector hoisted the little sail and together the two men rode the river current out across the bar and to the sea. Instead of heading out to the fishing grounds as Hector had expected, Dan told him to steer close along the shore. ‘Stay in the shallows, close to the mangroves,’ he instructed.
Occasionally Dan rose to his feet and stood in the bow, silently scanning the surface of the water. Every time he did this, Hector feared that the canoe would capsize through his own lack of skill as steersman. But Dan shifted his weight to counteract any clumsiness and, sensing his friend’s uneasiness, would soon sit down again.
‘What are we looking for?’ Hector asked his friend. He spoke in a whisper for it seemed to him that Dan was listening as well as watching for his mysterious prey.
An hour passed, and then another, and still Dan had not found what he was searching for. Then, suddenly, he held up his hand in warning. His gaze was fixed on something in the water, not fifty yards away and close to the edge of the mangroves. He reached down into the bottom of the canoe, not taking his eyes off what he had seen, and eased out from the bilge a straight staff about eight or nine feet long. With his free hand Dan groped between his feet and produced what appeared to be an oversized weaver’s bobbin wrapped around with several fathoms of cord. The free end of the cord was lashed to a barbed metal spike as long as his forearm. Carefully Dan pushed the shank of the spike into a socket in one end of the staff. Then he unwound enough cord until he could slip the bobbin over the butt of the pole. Now he rose to his feet and stood in the canoe, the harpoon in his hand. Using it as a pointer, he showed Hector the direction that he should steer.
Hector squinted against the glare of the late-afternoon sunlight as he tried to make out the target. But there was nothing unusual. The water was green-grey and opaque, cloudy with particles of vegetable matter. He thought he saw a slight ripple, but could not be sure. The canoe slipped forward silently.
Ahead of him Dan had moved into the classic posture of a man about to throw a javelin: his left arm pointed forward, his right arm bent. The hand which held the harpoon shaft at its balance point was close beside his ear. He stood poised, ready.
Hector heard a faint breath, the puffing sound of lungs expelling air. He leaned sideways, trying to see around Dan, hoping to identify the source of the sound. His sudden movement upset the balance of the boat even as Dan threw.
The harpoon soared through the air. But as it left Dan’s hand, Hector knew that he had spoiled his friend’s aim. He saw Dan twist his body, swivelling to keep the direction of his throw. ‘I’m sorry, Dan,’ he blurted, apologising for his clumsiness.
His words were lost in the explosive upheaval at the spot where the harpoon had struck the water. The metal spike and the first two feet of shaft plunged out of view. A second later the surface of the sea rose up in a great, roiling mass. A large grey-brown shape surged upwards, water sluicing off a rounded back. Hardly had this shape appeared than it sank downwards almost as quickly, returning into the murky water, and the sea was closing over it in a small whirlpool. The entire length of the harpoon vanished, dragged downward.
The Miskito spun round, plucked the canoe’s short mast out of its place and hastily wrapped the sail around the spar. Dropping the untidy bundle on the thwarts he picked up a paddle, knelt in the bottom of the canoe, and began to paddle with all his strength. ‘Over there!’ he shouted back at Hector who was trying to follow his friend’s example. Looking forward, Hector saw that the harpoon’s shaft had risen back to the surface, and was floating free a few yards ahead of them. Leaning forward as the canoe came level with the pole, Dan retrieved it. Both the metal spike and the wooden spool were gone. With a clatter Dan flung the shaft into the bottom of the canoe and was already scanning the surface of the water again. He gave a grunt of satisfaction and pointed. A little way ahead floated the wooden spool. It was spinning rapidly in the water, the coils of line unreeling and making the spool bob and twist as if it had a life of its own. The line was being stripped from the reel at a great pace.
‘Come on!’ urged Dan. ‘We must get that too!’ He was digging furiously at the water with his paddle. They reached the gyrating spool when only a few turns of the line remained. Dan dropped his paddle and threw himself forward to grab the bobbin. In one swift movement he had hoisted it inboard and jammed the spool under a thwart as he called, ‘Hang on, Hector!’
An instant later Hector felt himself flung backward, the thwart striking him painfully in the small of the back as the canoe suddenly shot forward. The line had snapped taut, droplets of water squeezing from the fibres. It had become a tow rope linked to an unseen and powerful underwater force. The canoe swayed from side to side as it tore onward, lurching wildly. The pull of the line was both forward and down, and for a terrifying moment Hector thought that the entire canoe would be dragged underwater as the bow dipped and the water rose to barely an inch below the rim of the dugout.
For three or four minutes the mad, careering rush went on. In the bow Dan anxiously watched the line where it was pulled taut across the edge of the canoe. Hector was sure that the cord was too thin to resist the strain. He wondered what would happen if it snapped suddenly.
Then, without warning, the water ahead of the canoe again burst into swirling turbulence. The grey-brown shape emerged in a welter of foam, and this time Hector distinctly heard the air rushing out of animal lungs. ‘Palpa!’ shouted Dan in triumph. ‘A big one.’
It took a full hour before the harpooned creature was exhausted and by that time the canoe had been dragged far along the coast. Gradually, the intervals between each surfacing of their prey grew shorter as the animal came up for air more frequently. With each appearance Hector could see more of it. At first it reminded him of a small whale, then of one of the seals he had seen when they hauled themselves out on the rocks off his native Ireland. But this animal was much larger than any seal he had known, seven or eight feet long, and far stouter. When it turned its head to look back at the hunters, he saw long pendulous lips, piggy eyes and a sprouting of whiskers.
Finally the creature gave up the struggle. It no longer had the strength to dive. It lay wallowing on the surface, close enough for Dan to pull in on the line and haul the canoe right alongside. From his cousin’s fishing gear he produced a second harpoon head, shorter and more stubby this time, and fitted it to the staff. He chose his moment and stabbed down several times. A stain of blood spread in the water. There were a few last convulsive heaves. Then the creature lay still. ‘Palpa. Your sailors call it sea cow,’ said Dan with evident satisfaction. ‘And a good fat one too. There will be enough meat to feed everyone.’
‘What does it taste like?’ asked Hector looking at the bloated shape. He recalled an old sailor’s yarn that claimed such creatures were mermaids because they suckled their young at their breasts. But this animal looked more like an overgrown and bloated seal with a drooping pug face.
‘Some say it tastes like young cow. Others that it is like the finest pork.’ Dan was lashing the carcass alongside the canoe. ‘It’ll be a slow journey back to camp. One of us can sleep while the other steers.’
Hector was still conscious that not everything had gone to plan. The hunt had taken far longer than it should. ‘I’m sorry that I spoiled your aim, Dan.’
His friend gave a dismissive shrug. ‘You did well. It takes years to learn how to strike palpa properly. If my striking iron had been better placed, the palpa would have died more quickly. What matters is that the creature did not escape, and we have the meat we promised.’
I
T TOOK THE
entire night, and more, to sail back to where they had started. The drag of the dead sea cow slowed the canoe to less than walking pace, and the sun was well above the horizon by the time they approached the river mouth. It was promising to be another very humid and hazy day. They were keeping close to the green wall of mangroves along the shoreline to escape the worst effect of the ebbing tide when they heard the distant thud of an explosion.
‘What’s that!’ Hector blurted, sitting up in alarm. He and Dan had changed positions in the canoe, and he had been dozing in the bow as his friend steered the craft.
‘It sounded like a cannon shot,’ said Dan.
‘But the Bay Men have only got muskets.’
Again there came the thump of a distant explosion, followed by another. This time there was no doubt. It was cannon fire.
‘Dan, I think we had better leave the sea cow where we can collect it later, and go ahead to see what’s happening.’
Dan brought the canoe to the edge of the mangroves. He untied the carcass of the sea cow and fastened it securely to a lattice of roots. ‘It should be safe here if the tide does not wash it away,’ he said.
Warily the two men edged their little vessel forward until they reached the point where they had a clear view of the river mouth.
A two-masted brigantine was sailing slowly across the estuary, but making no attempt to enter the river. The large ensign flying from her stern was clearly visible, three bands of red, white and gold and in the centre some sort of crest. As they watched, the vessel came within a pistol shot of the far bank and began to turn. A few minutes later she had taken up her new course and was retracing her path across the mouth of the river. Hector was reminded of a terrier that has cornered a rat in a hole and is pacing up and down excitedly, waiting to finish off the prey.