The Ghost of the Mary Celeste (9 page)

Read The Ghost of the Mary Celeste Online

Authors: Valerie Martin

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Retail

The sound paused, then resumed, paused again. I was barefoot and the floorboards were chilly under my feet. I stepped along quickly to her door. The scratching took up again. What was she doing? “Hannah,” I said softly, laying my palm against the door panel. The latch was up and the door drifted open before me, revealing bit by bit a nightmare far worse than the one I’d just escaped. Would that it had been a dream.

Hannah was seated at her writing table, where the lamp burned brightly, with a pen in her hand and a page before her. Strangely, her body leaned away from the table, supported by her right arm propped rigidly against the seat of her chair. Her head was thrown back as if she had been struck, her loosened hair tumbled past her shoulders, her mouth was agape, and her eyes, unnaturally wide, fixed on a corner of the ceiling. The muscles of her face were so strained and tense she was hardly recognizable. Her left hand, holding the pen, scribbled hurriedly, moving from right to left on the page, seemingly without her knowledge or her will.

I had the sense that I was entering the equivalent of a gale at sea. Nothing moved, save that demonic hand. My skin tingled the
way it does when the barometer drops suddenly and those with old injuries claim to feel them anew. “Hannah,” I said again, firmly this time, but she gave no evidence of hearing me. I approached—what else could I do?—and though I stood looking down at the writing spiraling from the pen, I couldn’t read it. It was that same cryptic language I’d seen in her journal. I looked at her face, which was turned away from the light, as if to keep as far away as possible from the writing hand. Her eyes were utterly vacant, flat, and unmoving as the false eyes in a china doll.

I brought my palm down hard upon the writing hand. There was no resistance, her fingers sprawled. Hannah screamed, rose from the chair, and collapsed in my arms. I heard Father’s feet hit the floor in his bedroom, and then his hurried steps coming toward us in the hall.

D
OCUMENTS

C
ONCERNING THE
R
ECOVERY OF THE
B
RIG
M
ARY
C
ELESTE
, F
OUND
D
ERELICT
E
AST OF THE
A
ZORES ON
D
ECEMBER
4, 1872

Cable: Gibraltar, December 13, 1872

To: Board of Underwriters, New York

BRIG MARY CELESTE HERE DERELICT IMPORTANT SEND POWER ATTORNEY TO CLAIM HER FROM ADMIRALTY COURT

HORATIO J. SPRAGUE

Cable: New York, December 13, 1872

To: Horatio J. Sprague, United States Consul at Gibraltar

PROTECT BRIG MARY CELESTE WANT VOYAGE PERFORMED

OGDEN

Cable: Gibraltar, December 14, 1872

To: Parker, New York

FOUND FOURTH AND BROUGHT HERE MARY CELESTE ABANDONED SEAWORTHY ADMIRALTY IMPOST NOTIFY ALL PARTIES TELEGRAPH OFFER OF SALVAGE MOREHOUSE

New York Times
—Dateline Gibraltar

December 14, 1872

The brig
Mary Celeste
is in the possession of the Admiralty Court.

New Bedford Evening Standard
—Marine Intelligence

December 21, 1872

Brig
Mary Celeste
, from New York Nov. 17 for Genoa, is reported by cable as having been picked up derelict and towed into Gibraltar 16th inst. She was commanded by Capt. Benjamin Briggs, of Marion, who had his wife and child with him, and much anxiety is felt for their safety.

The Boston Post

February 24, 1873

It is now believed that the fine brig
Mary Celeste
, of about 236 tons, commanded by Capt. Benjamin Briggs of Marion, Mass., was seized by pirates in the latter part of November, and that, after murdering the Captain, his wife, child, and the officers, the vessel was abandoned near the western Islands, where the miscreants are supposed to have landed. The brig left New York on the 17th of November for Genoa, with a cargo of alcohol, and is said to have had a crew consisting mostly of foreigners. The theory now is that some of the men probably obtained access to the cargo, and were thus stimulated to the desperate deed.

The
Mary Celeste
was fallen in with by the British brig
Dei Gratia
, Capt. Morehouse, who left New York about the middle of November. The hull of the
Celeste
was found in good condition, and safely towed into Gibraltar, where she has since remained. The confusion in which many things were
found on board (including ladies’ apparel, &c.,) led, with other circumstances, to suspicion of wrong and outrage, which has by no means died out. One of the latest letters from Gibraltar received in Boston says: The Vice Admiralty Court sat yesterday and will sit again to-morrow. The cargo of the brig has been claimed, and to-morrow the vessel will be claimed.

The general opinion is that there has been foul play on board, as spots of blood on the blade of a sword, in the cabin, and on the rails, with a sharp cut on the wood, indicate force or violence having been used, but how or by whom is the question. Soon after the vessel was picked up, it was considered possible that a collision might have taken place. Had this been the case, and the brig’s officers and crew saved, they would have been landed long ere this. We trust that if any of New-England’s shipmasters can give any information or hint of strange boats or seamen landing at any of the islands during the past ninety days, that they will see the importance thereof.

The Boston Journal

March 15, 1873

The brig
Mary Celeste
, found deserted at sea and taken into Gibraltar, as before mentioned, has been libeled and a suit commenced in the United States District Court in this city, the libel alleging that the vessel had obtained American registry by fraud. It has recently been stated that there are strong suspicions that her desertion at sea was done to defraud the insurance companies. Nothing is known as to the fate of her crew. And the whole affair is involved in mystery.

Letter: April 4, 1873

To: Department of State, Washington, D.C.

I beg to enclose a copy of a communication which I have this day received from Prussia, asking for information regarding some of the missing crew of the derelict
Mary Celeste
. It is somewhat gratifying to learn three out of the five men composing the crew of the
Mary Celeste
were known to the writer of that communication as being peaceable and first-class sailors, as it further diminishes the probability that any violence was committed on board of this vessel by her crew.

Horatio J. Sprague, United States Consul at Gibraltar

Letter Enclosure

March 21, 1873

I
NVENTORY
of the contents of a desk found on board the American Brig
Mary Celeste
of New York, by the Marshal of the Vice Admiralty Court of Gibraltar, and delivered to me this day, by the said Marshal; the said desk is supposed to belong to Captain B. S. Briggs, the missing Master.

A desk containing: Twenty one letters; an account book; a pocket-book; a ruler; two pieces of sealing wax; four United States postal stamps; a pencil; a paper cover containing sundry papers, envelopes and accounts; wafers; a case of leads; three receipts signed by J. H. Winchester & Co., New York, viz: for $1,500 dated 3rd October 1872, for $500 dated 16th October 1872; for $1,600 dated 22nd October 1872

Consulate of the United States of America,

Gibraltar March 21, 1873

(Signed)
Horatio J. Sprague, U. S. C

A
N
A
FRICAN
A
DVENTURE

S.S.
Mayumba,
1881

A SUMMONS

One wondered whether the colonies were really worth the price we had to pay
.

A
RTHUR
C
ONAN
D
OYLE

A loud rap at the house door startled the young doctor, who was carefully embellishing architectural curlicues in the margins of a page half-filled with his own neat cursive script. As there was no one but himself to answer, he crossed the small parlor in three steps and pulled the door open wide. There he found a thin, bedraggled boy, dressed in a dark-green woolen jacket bearing some resemblance to a uniform and some to a jockey’s coat, stovepipe pants that ended well above his bare, scrawny ankles, and dusty brown boots with the nail heads exposed around the soles. In his gloved left hand he held out a yellow envelope. “Dr. Doyle, innit?” he inquired.

“So it is, my boy,” said the doctor, taking the envelope. It was a telegram. The doctor produced a penny from his coat pocket and
pressed it on the boy, who, taking the coin without a word, dashed off down the street.

A telegram. Was it the longed-for hospital appointment? Was it evil news concerning his poor father? The doctor carried the envelope back to his writing desk, where the half-finished page rebuked him. Ignoring it, he tore open the flap and drew out the brief message.

Here was news. The African Steam Navigation Company was cordially responding to his now ancient and nearly forgotten query with orders for Dr. Conan Doyle to proceed at once to Liverpool and there take medical charge of the steamer
Mayumba
, bound for Madeira and the West Coast of Africa.

Africa. He glanced down at the page he had yet to finish, a tale of the American West, a place he had visited only in his imagination, or, more correctly, in the imagination of Bret Harte, whose adventure stories had brightened many a gloomy hour of his youth. Africa meant Stanley and Livingstone, Victoria Falls, jungles screaming with monkeys, villages populated by naked cannibals, so black they could not be seen in the dark and the whites of their eyes disembodied in the humid night air accosted the unwary. As ship’s surgeon, he was unlikely to see much beyond the coast; the interior of the continent would be closed to him. The experience would be geographically speaking the opposite of his previous post on the Arctic whaler
Hope
, during which he had clubbed seals and gone out with the harpooner in the boat, holding fast to the rope beneath the mountainous side of a right whale. The blue sky, the white gleam of the drift ice, the endless daylight, the intoxicating air—for seven months every moment had been filled with wonders, and the work so constant and challenging that in none of those moments had he been idle or bored.

The steamer
Mayumba
would be an adventure of a different order, his function an official one, doubtless requiring a coat of blue serge, gilt buttons, white duck trousers, and shoes that would slip on the decks and take on water when the ship did. The captain wouldn’t encourage him to participate in the business of the voyage,
which was purely the transport of goods and passengers to Africa, discharging them, taking on new goods and passengers, and turning the prow for home. His work would be among and at the behest of these passengers, and he was unlikely to visit the forecastle unless a man was dying there. Instead of shifting ice and sparkling skies, there would be beaches, rivers, and tropical jungles. The doctor’s brain buzzed pleasantly over the contrast between his seagoing excursions, the first to the white world, where men pursued and slaughtered beasts as big as houses, the next to the dark continent, on a mission to administer quinine and morphine to various valiant servants and civilizers of the Empire.

In a week he was in Liverpool, lining up his books on the narrow shelf in his berth. Compared to the cramped and heavily populated whaler, the
Mayumba
was enormous, with space for twenty passengers and two saloons; the passengers’ saloon was as ponderously furnished as a hotel lobby. But unlike the
Hope
, she was dirty. Rust had a grip on her rails and spars, the skylights were streaked, and the upholstery faded and dingy.

The passengers would equally have benefited by a sprucing up. Among them were a parson named Fairfax, his wife, and two cadaverous boys of eight and ten, bound for Lagos; a pretty brunette, Miss Fox, not in her first youth, possessed of an educated air and an oversize bonnet, going out to meet her father in Sierra Leone; a Scottish crone, forever nameless, with bad lungs and a face like an ailing horse; two Negro tradesmen, dressed showily in the worst possible taste and escorted to the gangway by a phalanx of evil-smelling prostitutes; a British Negress with the manners of a she-wolf, who was betrothed to a missionary in the interior; and finally an Englishwoman, Mrs. Rowbotham, lively, cheerful, neatly dressed, and immediately flirtatious upon meeting the doctor as she was passing out of the saloon.

The captain, Duncan Henderson Wallace, a small man, bald on top with a flowing, well-tended white beard that thrust out from his face suggesting the prominent chin beneath, promised to be good company. He moved gracefully, without fuss, inside a force
field of authority. He greeted the doctor with a firm handshake and a bright eye that ran over his new colleague appreciatively, as if he’d seldom seen such a fine figure of a man, and indeed, the doctor was several inches taller and stones heavier than his commander. “Come and have a brandy in my office,” said Captain Wallace. “First time to Africa, is it?”

“It is,” said the doctor, following the captain into his private quarters, which were cleaner than the rest of the ship, and neatly appointed. In the conversation that followed, Doyle learned Mrs. Rowbotham was en route to her husband in Sierra Leone, and the querulous Negress was some madman’s idea of a desirable wife.

“I’ve had Parson Fairfax and his family before,” Wallace continued. “They go out once a year for six weeks, then back at the missionary work. It’s killing the wife, but she doesn’t complain.”

“The boys don’t look fit for much either,” the doctor observed.

“It’s the beastly climate. If they left those boys in Edinburgh, or better yet, Dundee, they’d fatten up in no time. But you’ll see, as we go on.”

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