Voyage of Midnight (24 page)

Read Voyage of Midnight Online

Authors: Michele Torrey

I saw Oji stumble toward the mother’s bunk, feeling his way. Meanwhile, Uncle began touching everything that came within his grasp. A pallet with three children, all ill with the flux. A woman dying of a lung disorder. The girl with the broken leg. Uncle seemed not to notice her splint as he stumbled over prostrate bodies, searching, searching for a baby.

“Uncle, please, this isn’t necessary.” I followed him, urging the people in their native tongue to make noise, my head pounding with the beat of my heart even when the infirmary filled with a symphony of misery.

“But I done heard it, Captain Towne,” said Billy, standing inside the door. “Ain’t no doubt. My mama had ten babies, and I know what they sound like.”

By the time Uncle reached the mother’s bunk, Onwuha was safely stowed in his hiding place beneath the planks. Uncle felt the bunk, then the mother, and moved on.

I breathed a sigh of relief, but it wasn’t until Uncle finished his search of the entire infirmary that the throbbing in my head began to lessen.

“There’s no baby here,” Uncle said to Billy. “You heard wrong.”

“But, Captain Towne, I heard—”

“Philip wouldn’t disobey my instructions.” Uncle looked in my direction. His voice hardened. “He knows the consequences. He knows I do not like to be made a fool, don’t you, Philip?”

“Yes, Uncle.”

“Quite right. You see, Billy? There’s no baby here.” And with that pronouncement, Uncle left.

Billy stood there, staring into the infirmary as if he could will himself to see the truth.

“Clear off, you worm,” I told him. “And don’t you ever listen outside my door again or I’ll set Pea Soup on you. He
loves
white meat.”

Billy cast me a look of hatred.

I blinked and stepped back, alarmed.

The hatred didn’t bother me. Indeed no. What did I care if Billy the Vermin hated me? What made me gasp were his eyes.

Billy the Vermin’s eyes were looking horribly, horribly healthy. It’d be only a matter of time before he could see.

The wind died.

Where before our beautiful white sails had been filled to bursting with a fine, fresh wind, now they hung slack. Rippling with an occasional breath. Hanging this way, then that, depending upon which way the
Formidable
was listing. The slackened ropes dangled, useless.

All was still.

“I don’t like it,” said Uncle. “Never happened to me before in this part of the world. Are you certain you’re on the correct heading?”

“Quite certain.”

“You’ve made mistakes before.”

“Yes, I know. But never again.”

The leak continued to require pumping. So many crew became ill with the bloody flux that it was necessary to force them to work despite their illness, despite the pain that gripped their bowels so fiercely. They hunched over the pumps in agony.

“Pump!” Uncle ordered. “Your lives depend on it.”

“God save us!” cried Roach. He stood in a wooden tub meant to catch his bodily wastes, for the flux was relentless in its release of liquids. “I need water.”

“You can survive thirst, you filthy, stinking mongrel!” shouted Uncle, the veins bulging in his neck. “But you can’t survive drowning! Or must I dunk you over the side to prove my point?”

Roach looked alarmed. “But—but, Captain, there are sharks.”

“At least it would end,” said McGuire, his voice as shrunken and disheveled as his once-handsome person.

Billy spoke. “We could take the boats and leave this tub.”

At this suggestion, there was a silence. Only the
scree, scree, scree
of the pumps.

I couldn’t breathe. My fever suddenly pounded in my head.
Leave the ship?
“Uncle—”

“Philip, how many slaves have recovered their sight?”

“Last—last I counted, which was several hours ago this morning, it was—let me think—”

“How many?” he screeched, his face turning an unhealthy red.

“One hundred thirty or so,” I lied, hoping the number didn’t sound too falsely inflated.

“Too many for the boats,” he said. Beneath his eye patch, he frowned.

“Please, sir,” gasped Roach. “Let’s just leave. I’m—I’m dying. Truly, I am.”

Several others murmured their agreement.

“Nephew, how many days till we reach land?”

Again my head filled with a fevered pounding. I wanted to lie down and sleep. Die. Do anything except stand on my feet and answer a question of life and death. If I said too many days were left, Uncle would abandon ship this minute. If I said too few and we didn’t arrive as promised…

Ikeotuonye
, I said to myself.

“Philip?”

The strength of one person…

“I—I don’t know. Without the wind …”

“If the wind were to return?”

“Three, four days at most.”

Uncle smiled grimly. “Hear that, men? You can survive the pumps for another four days. After that, if we’ve no wind we’ll take what slaves we can and leave the ship where she lies.”

Billy the Vermin looked at me then and smiled, his irises clear and unclouded.

I swore that he could see me.

But then he looked past me, his eyes unfocused, and I released the breath I’d been holding.

Two days later I lay on the deck after a morning mess of one weevily biscuit and a quarter cup of scummy water. It was time to visit the infirmary, but I couldn’t find the strength to rise. Oji lay beside me, his eyes closed, his face drawn with pain, his pointed teeth chattering with the chills.

The sails still hung slack.

Uncle had the boats down and the carpenter was running his hands over them, checking them for leaks.

The pumps still operated.

Scree, scree, scree
.

I heard someone calling my name, begging for help, saying he was dying. The voice stopped; there was a cough, then silence.

Scree, scree, scree
.

Across from me, the gunner lay on his back on top of the arms locker, his head hanging over one end of it, his long hair sweeping back and forth, the strands clotted with deck filth.

Scree, scree, scree
.

I stared at the gunner’s body, at his mouth hanging open, at the flies buzzing in and out.

There was something wrong. I blinked. Then knew.

I looked up. The sun was blazing overhead, its round orb staring at me like an eye.

My cloud cover
.

It’s gone
.

Latitude 4°01’ N and longitude 8° W.

I took the reading again, wiping the grime from my hands onto my trousers.

Yes
.

A frightful trembling seized me that had nothing to do with fever or hunger. Once again I felt like a diminutive child shivering under the glare and cane of Master Crump.

We’re but forty miles south of Africa. If the wind picks up (dear God, let the wind pick up!), we could arrive tomorrow
.

I peered north, willing my eyes to see land. A ribbon of brown, stretching across the horizon. But there was nothing. Nothing but the endless ocean.

“W
e’ll shackle them together,” I whispered, “after we’ve taken control of the ship.”

“We will kill them,” said Oji.

We sat together on the floor of our cabin, candle burning in the lantern above. It was well past midnight.

The
Formidable
was still dead in the water, still forty miles from Africa—her sails slack as a dead man’s mouth, her bow pointing this way, then that, rising and falling on the ocean swells.

Tomorrow Uncle planned to abandon ship. It was necessary that Oji and I develop a plan to save the captives, who would otherwise die, trapped inside a sinking vessel. Their only hope was a lone white boy
who didn’t know how to operate the sails and who lacked the strength to man the helm or the pumps.

Oji clenched his fists and pounded the side of my bunk. He threw his head back and exposed his pointed teeth in a silent cry of rage. “They have taken my father and my sight,” he finally said. “They have taken everything from me.”

“For now we must concentrate on getting all our people into the boats,” I told Oji.

Oji had buried his head in his hands. “There must be strong men in each of the boats.”

“Yes, and before we cast off, I’ll release the crew from their shackles.”

“Leave them shackled. They can sink and die.”

“With no surgeon aboard and with everyone blind, they’ll probably sink and die anyhow.”

“Then it will be in the hands of the gods.”

“Once we leave the
Formidable
behind, we’ll have other concerns.”

Oji raised his head, gazing sightlessly at me. “Yes. What happens when we reach land? What then?”

“I—I’ve not thought that far ahead.”

“Whatever we do, we will all succeed or we will all fail.”

Through the night, we discussed every detail. The placement of the arms. The moment at which to unlock the captives. The vast numbers to squeeze into just three boats. The possibility of building several rafts to tow behind. Where to stow the provisions of food and water. Praying for calm seas and strength enough to row. Even as we discussed the plan, it seemed impossible. Ridiculous, even. As if I were a child moving toy soldiers about. As if it’d no relation to real life and real people.

And through it all, I couldn’t help but feel sorrow for the crew, especially my uncle, left behind on a rotting tub, all blind,
all betrayed by someone they trusted. Me, Philip Arthur Higgins, surgeon aboard the
Formidable
, nephew of Captain Towne.

I didn’t want to do this. I was too ill; my bowels were beginning to loosen with the gripes. Fever clouded my thoughts so that I could scarcely remember what we’d discussed even a few minutes before. I had to concentrate—
had
to concentrate!

Blast it, I’m so ill!

“We’ll take the medicines,” I was saying.

“I will let the infant bellow like a horn as we row away across the great lake,” Oji said.

Through my feverish thoughts, I pricked up my ears. I’d heard something. “Did you hear that, Oji?”

“Is the devil listening outside our door again?”

“No, no.
Listen.”

And there it was. A creaking, a moaning; a shifting of the vessel, ever so slowly.

“It’s—it’s
wind
,” I whispered.

Under the moonlit predawn sky, the breeze was fine and bracing. The hair was blown from my fevered forehead. Chills raced down my scalp.

“We’re saved!” breathed Calvin.

“Saints be praised!” said Roach.

Harold said, “I hope I live long enough to feel grass beneath my feet again. In just a day or two we’ll be on land, right, Mr. Surgeon? Right?”

I ordered the new heading, and with Uncle beside me, instructing me sail by sail, line by line, I became the eyes of the crew as they climbed about with a newfound strength that defied their illness.

“No, not that line, the line next to it, I believe. Yes, that’s right. Pull now. Give it all you’ve got. There. The yard’s turning
to port. That’s what we want, isn’t it, Uncle? The yard to turn to port? To catch the wind coming from our starboard quarter? By the deuce, Uncle, if I keep this up, I’ll become a sailor through and through. Ha!”

I continued my charade until finally the course was set and every sail trimmed. I estimated our speed at eight knots. At this rate, we’d arrive in five hours or so.

Oji and I returned to our cabin. There was much to discuss.

We’d still need to disembark all of the captives while keeping the crew at bay, but now we’d five hours to accomplish it rather than twenty-four as before.

“I’ll carry the arms into the hold a few at a time so as not to attract attention,” I told Oji, groaning and clenching my teeth.

My bowels! Bugger and blast, my bowels!

The cabin swirled about me in a haze of dizziness. I groped for the chamber pot. It was ten minutes before I could talk again. “When it’s time, the crew mustn’t be able to find a single weapon.”

“They will resist anyway.”

“I know.”

“How will we get them to submit?”

A wave of helplessness washed over me. I’d asked myself this question again and again and had no answers. Beg them, I supposed. Ask them nicely. This much I knew: I didn’t wish to use violence. I was heartily sick of it. I put my head in my hands. “I don’t know, Oji. We’ll think of something. Lure them somewhere one by one, maybe. Use their blindness against them.”

For a long time, we said nothing. Uncle was calling for me from the deck. “We will leave the food and water here,” Oji said.

“Leave it? But—”

“We will take half the Africans and come back for the rest. Come back for the food as well.”

“Oh, right, right, of course. We’ll be close enough to shore where we can do that. We needn’t overload the boats unnecessarily. Oji …”

“Yes?”

“Help me off the pot.” And as Oji helped me, and as Uncle kept calling my name, demanding my presence on deck, I thought,
This will never work. We’re doomed to failure
.

I’ve brought them this far only to fail
.

A pathetic boy and a pathetic plan
.

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