Bring It Close (22 page)

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Authors: Helen Hollick

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Historical

BOOK: Bring It Close
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Forty Seven

A raised voice aroused Alicia slightly. She lay a moment listening, then burrowed deeper beneath the bed covers, her head throbbing, her stomach threatening a renewed attack of the nausea that had plagued her since Monday morning.

“Sir. I insist. You cannot enter. My lady is unwell.”

“All the more reason to permit me to see her. Let me pass or I will forcefully remove you from barring my way.”

The maid must have moved, for Samuel Trent entered Alicia’s bedchamber.

Momentarily disorientated by the gloom within, he stood inside the threshold – leaving the door open behind him for propriety’s sake. The room was spacious, well furnished, but the windows that were on two sides of the room were shuttered and curtained. With the day being dull and inclined to a light drizzle, and although it was not far from noon, the room was quite darkened. Allowing his eyes to adjust, he went to the bed where he could see Alicia’s form hunched beneath the covers.

“My dear! They said you had caught a chill. Has the physician been? Has he examined you?”

Muffled, Alicia begged him to leave her be. “Please Samuel, I thank you for your concern, but I will be well soon, I am sure.”

“Can I do aught? Fetch you brandy, wine, something tempting to eat? A little chicken broth perhaps? Or coddled egg?”

“No. Please, just go away.”

Was that a sob he heard in her voice?

“I would do anything to assist you if you are in trouble, Alicia. You know that.”

“Yes. Please go.”

What more could he do? Forcibly pull back those blankets and sheets? Bully her into telling him what was amiss? He could do neither such thing! He rose, returned to the door from where the maid was anxiously peering in at him. “If there is anything, anything at all that I can do…” He paused, chewed his lip. Should he say? Perhaps, aye, he should. “Has your malaise to do with Captain Acorne, Ma’am? He is taken to Williamsburg for trial. I am certain he will be acquitted after a fair hearing. Governor Spotswood is a man who well observes the law.”

The sob that issued from the bed was like a child in pain. Fearful, Trent sprinted across the room, heaved back the covers and took Alicia into his arms, cradling her to him, her face buried into his shoulder as she wept great gasps of dread. He stroked her hair, patted her shoulder, unsure what to do.

“My dear, please, do not distress yourself so. Captain Acorne will be able to show that this is all a matter of a mistake. He had a Letter of Marque, after all, and…”

The sobs burst into a crescendo of anguished wails. “You do not understand! Oh you do not understand!”

All Samuel Trent could answer was the truth. That no, he did not understand. What was there to be understood?

The shout of rage a few moments later silenced the rest of the house. Trent’s bellow of, “You did what? You stupid woman! In God’s name, why? Why?” echoed from room to room, only silenced by the abrupt slamming of Alicia’s bedchamber door to shut the listening servants out. Several moments passed before Samuel could calm his furious temper. He took a series of deep breaths, spoke deliberately; slow and measured.

“Tell me again. You took Captain Acorne’s Letter of Marque and hid it. Why? For the sake of God, woman, when Maynard came searching for it, why did you not give it him?” The anger was rising again. He choked it down. Shouting would get them nowhere.

Hunched, miserable, her eyes red-rimmed, her cheeks blotched, Alicia buried her face in her hands, the tears trickling through her fingers. She had never heard Samuel shout before. Never seen him so very angry.

“I was being blackmailed,” she hiccupped. “I needed to get some money to keep an odious little man quiet. I thought that if Jesamiah was arrested I could let him worry for a day or two, then offer him back his letter for the amount I needed.”

“Which is how much?” Samuel spoke in almost a growl.

“Two hundred pounds,” she whispered.

He did not hear. “How much?”

Her temper getting the better of her; embarrassment, confusion, distress, all of it combined made Alicia slam her hands to the bed covers and shout, “Two hundred bloody pounds! Where was I to get such money? What choice had I? What was I to do? Sell my jewellery? Have everyone know I need money?” She shuddered at such a detestable thought. “Were you in a similar position you would have done the same!” She drew breath, screeched on, “Do not tell me you have not thought of ways of getting money. Had you thought of it, had you had access to that letter, would you not have used it to your advantage?”

Samuel swung away, disgust gorging bile into his throat. He stood at a window – the curtain thrown wide and shutters opened now, for he had not been able to tolerate the close confinement. If he craned his neck slightly he could see the graving dock. The men had come back on Tuesday morning. From here he could see only
Sea Witch
’s masts and the tangle of half-completed rigging. Nothing of her decks or keel, but he had walked down there this morning and seen that she seemed, to his landlubber’s eye, almost ready to return to the water. She was most certainly an exquisite vessel.

To his reflection in the glass, not daring to look around for fear the anger would boil to the surface again, he said, “I thought you were a lady. Ever since I first saw you I thought you a goddess. Why? Because you were arguing with your husband and he was getting the worst of your tongue. God’s good truth, but I thought you the most wonderful woman in the world for that. I so despised Phillipe. Twice I had resolved to shoot him. Did you know that? Twice. But I did not have the stomach to do it.”

Alicia blew her nose.

“How I rejoiced when I heard the rumour that his own half-brother, that Jesamiah himself, had finally done away with him.” He turned around slowly, his fists clenched at his side, his expression like God’s own wrath. “They condemned him, you know, those bigots in the town. Condemned Jesamiah for throwing that louse overboard. You should have heard my father! ‘Like father, like son,’ he kept saying. ‘Mereno Senior was a fish-gut scavenger. So is his son. So is his son.’ God’s teeth, but the times he said it! Over and over, and each time I wanted to hit him. I wanted to pummel his face and shout that Jesamiah was a good man – that Phillipe was the fish-gut heap of offal!”

Blowing her nose a second time, Alicia had become curious. From the first day when she had arrived here as Phillipe’s bride, she had been aware of the boy from the next plantation up-river. A skinny, shy, lonely lad, the youngest of a brood of sons. She had befriended him initially out of pity. He was a cuckoo in the nest if ever she saw one. Out of place among his brash, bold family; out of place anywhere, probably.

Trent hesitated and moved a step closer, ”I was aware of what Phillipe did to his brother, how he tormented him. I used to hide in the bushes down by the river to escape my own brothers. They were as foul and evil as your dead husband.”

Suddenly, he strode across the room, stood beside the bed, tall, straight, his arms folded. “Once, when I was eight years old, my brothers were swimming in the river. Phillipe was with them, having a grand game of throwing me in. I could not swim. They had a rope tied around my waist, thought it amusing to haul me out when I started to drown, drag me on to the jetty and throw me in again.” His attention wandered to the window, to where the river lazed by outside, reliving the horror in his mind.

“I can still taste the choke of water in my mouth, my lungs bursting for air, the fear that writhed through me as they took hold of my arms and legs, one limb each, and swung me back and forth then tossed me in. Again and again.” His voice faltered, the memory too vivid, too cruel. He pulled a chair forward, sat, wiped his sleeve across his eyes. “And then Jesamiah came along. Only a few years older than me, younger than those bastards – already afeared of his brother.” He stared at Alicia. “And do you know what he did?”

Slowly she shook her head.

“He tried to defend me; shouted at them to leave me alone, but of course they only laughed and threw me in the water yet again, then pitched him in as well.” Samuel Trent laughed, a short, sharp sound. “They were no brighter then than they are now, my brothers.” Another laugh. “You see, Jesamiah could swim. He grabbed hold of me, cut the rope, towed me to a safe distance and took me to his mother. We told her I had fallen in. She dried my clothes and gave me honey cakes and lemonade. But it turned out she had seen what had happened and she promptly marched over to my father and gave him a piece of her mind. She was a lady, was Mrs Mereno. My brothers left me alone after that. But not Jesamiah. He suffered for intervening. So I did the only thing I could, I copied Mrs Mereno’s example and stomped right up to Captain Mereno and told him what had happened. Told him everything. The Captain scared me witless more than all my brothers ranged together. But tell him I did. I was expecting him to do something. To stop Phillipe’s abuses. But you know what he said?”

The tears had almost stopped as Alicia had listened. She dabbed again at her eyes, mumbled, “No. Tell me.”

“He said Jesamiah was on his own. He had to learn to look after himself. And he said it would be better for me if I learnt to swim. Jesamiah said the same a few days later. Took the time to teach me, in that rocky inlet the other side of Urbanna.” His voice trailed off. “I will always be grateful to him for that. Always.”

Alicia was silent a while, digesting everything. She had known none of this but then, why should she? Phillipe had never spoken of Jesamiah, or the past here at la Sorenta. And then the way in which Samuel had said ‘I will always be grateful to him for that’, sank into her brain. And she suddenly realised something.

“My God,” she said, her hand going to her breast, her mouth opening, astonished. “You love him. You are in love with Jesamiah. You are a sodomite – that is why you are different! My God!” She did not know whether to be shocked, outraged or disgusted: sodomy was illegal in the eyes of the Church and the law; but then, she had known many a molly boy in her days as a prostitute. Not one of them had been evil like her husband.

Slowly Samuel wandered towards the door. “Love is a strange thing, Mrs Mereno. Jesamiah believes I love you – I do not. I never have, I never will. But I used to admire you. I used to think of you as my friend.” He shook his head, lifted one hand, dropped it, defeated, to his side. “No longer. I have no interest in sluts who lie and would see a man hang for their own gain.”

Stunned by his words, made all the more vehement by the dull, flat tone in which he spoke them, Alicia shoved the covers aside, swung her legs from the bed. “No! I only wanted him in gaol for a day or two, nothing more!”

She hurried to her dressing table, yanked a drawer open and rummaged through the froth of laced underwear. Retrieved the Letter of Marque with a modest flourish of triumph. “I have it here. I have the proof Jesamiah needs!”

In three strides Samuel was across the room. He snatched it from her, glanced quickly to ensure it was the correct document and shoving it into his coat pocket was back at the door.

“Where are you going?” she cried, running after him, suddenly afraid. He was halfway down the stairs. She leaned over the banister, her hands gripping white-knuckled on the mahogany rail. “Samuel! What are you going to do?”

He did not pause, did not look up. “Rescue Jesamiah. What do you think I am going to do?”

Alicia crumpled to the carpet runner on the landing, incongruously noted a stain across the red and blue of the pattern. It was a Wilton weave, purchased from the catalogue from England. The carpeting for the house had cost Phillipe a fortune. Except it had been her fortune and there was now none of it left.

Samuel’s footsteps rapped smartly across the tiled hall, the door slammed as he went out. She rested her forehead on the turned wooden spindles, closed her eyes. He was going to sort this mess out. Jesamiah was not going to hang. “Oh thank God,” she breathed, “thank God.”

Only later, as her maid helped her back to bed, a fever on her cheeks and beading her brow, did Alicia pause to wonder what she was now going to do about that foul little man who knew so much about her past. She would have to sell some of her jewellery. She no longer had a choice.

Alicia turned on her side, buried her face in the pillow and sobbed.

Forty Eight

“But how long before she can sail?” Trent was almost dancing in frustration as he hopped from one foot to the other. “We need to sail. I need to get to Williamsburg. We need to get to Williamsburg.”

Nat Crocker scratched at his unshaven chin, sniffed loudly, shook his head. “You see, it is like this. If any one of us goes within spitting distance of Williamsburg we will be arrested and hanged. So we stay here.”

“And leave your Captain to hang? Good God, you spineless worms!”

Several of the men nearby stopped the work they were doing – finishing the paintwork of the hull – and glowered at him, offended. The
Sea Witch
was almost finished. They had worked hard cleaning, repairing, restoring her to her full beauty. All it needed was for the paint and varnish to dry, the rigging to be completed and the next high tide to float her clear of the graving dock. Then her cannon would be swung back aboard, her ballast replaced, food and water stores replenished, and she would be ready for sea.

“It is not a matter of leavin’ our
Capitaine
to ‘ang
Monsieur
. There is nothing we can do to stop it. ‘E knows that. ‘E is not a fool.” Rue spread his hands, at a loss for what else to say. “Without a letter of authority, we are marked as pirates. And as pirates we shall ‘ang.”

Trent almost screamed with annoyance; “But is that not what I have been trying to tell you?” He fished in his pocket. “The Letter of Marque has been found. Somehow it was inadvertently put among Mrs Mereno’s personal papers.”

Forty Nine

Friday 25th October

The two-and-a-half storey brick built Capitol Building of Williamsburg, Virginia, was essentially in the shape of an H. It was actually two structures of seventy-feet by twenty-five, connected by a central arcade. Each wing on the southern side terminated in a semicircular apse, with the ground floor punctuated by three circular windows. The classical, corniced architecture was topped by a six-sided cupola crowning the ridge of the hipped and dormered roof. To most observers it was an impressive building, but Jesamiah, being marched and prodded across the road from the gaol to the rear entrance and the single small holding cell beneath the courtroom in the west wing, was not overly enamoured. The Capitol Building was only thirteen years old and this cell seemed to have accumulated every bit of dirt and muck from every one of them.

In a room no more than a few yards square, the unwashed and unshaven prisoners sat in near darkness along a bench, their shackles chafing at wrists and ankles from the short but uncomfortable walk.

Yesterday, some of Jesamiah’s fellow prisoners had been taken to their doom. Immediately after trial and sentencing the eight-year-old boy had been given a severe thrashing to his backside and sent on his way. Two of the men had spent the rest of the day in the stocks being gleefully pelted by rotten vegetables, mud and dung – human and animal – and three had been branded on the cheek as thieves and set free. Were they to be caught again for the same crime they would hang without trial or deliberation.

This morning, three men had been hanged, one of them the whoreson Jesamiah had attacked. Another had been Henry. His trial was short, a foregone conclusion. He had been caught performing a sexual act of gross indecency with another man twice his age in a tavern’s miserable back room down in Jamestown. The man had escaped leaving Henry to take the full wrath of Christian moralistic judgement. He had pleaded guilty and had walked with pride and dignity to the gallows. It had been the bully who had pleaded for mercy, broken down and wept as the noose had been laid around his neck. He had taken twenty minutes to die, slowly strangling, accompanied by the sound of hisses and boos. The crowds did not like a coward.

Jesamiah’s invitation to join the proceedings was the last to be issued. He dared not say anything as the bailiff prodded him towards the door and the short flight of stairs beyond. What was there to say? This was all a lie, a misunderstanding? He had been saying that since his arrest, with only Maynard to speak up for him. But Maynard was not here in Williamsburg. He was at Jamestown with his ship, or at sea somewhere, it did not matter where.

It was difficult walking with the leg irons, twice Jesamiah stumbled up the steps, only to be punched in the back and grumbled at. He halted at the top, blinking in the brightness of the light and airy courtroom, the sun streaming in through the circular windows making his eyes water. The level of talk from the spectators – a gladiatorial audience – increased as he stood there, disorientated, his heart beginning to thump with apprehension. This was no jested prank, this was a courtroom where he could very well be sentenced to swing alongside poor Henry’s corpse come tomorrow morning. The spectators were seated on wooden benches placed in rows as if they were pews in a church; those come to gawp who had no room to sit, stood along the back, the muttered words of pirate and murderer galloping around the room and soaring up to the ceiling many feet above as Jesamiah appeared.

The room was all polished wood and windows, dust motes swirling in the shafts of sunbeams. At the front, the clerks were poised with their ink and quills, all staring at him as if he were a horned, tailed devil hissing fire and brimstone from his mouth and arse.

Jesamiah was prodded again, chivvied to move forward. He was aware that he stank, his clothes were stained and torn and his matted hair, like his body, was filthy. He had not washed or shaved since the day of the ball. Proud, determined in his innocence, Jesamiah squared his shoulders and walked with as much dignity as he could, considering the restrictions of the irons, to the bench at the front which the bailiff was pointing at.

The muttering died a little as Jesamiah sat, his back straight, but the whispering continued. The staring, the pointing, the wrinkled noses of utter disgust at his appearance, at what he supposedly was.

Is Alicia here
, Jesamiah wondered,
enjoying the entertainments of Williamsburg’s Publick Times? Enjoying the mischief she’s created
? He was certain, now, that she had procured his letter. Quite why he had not fathomed, but probably for some selfish, mean-spirited reason of her own.

“All rise!”

The voices stopped but the coughing and shuffling of feet was as loud. Governor Spotswood entered walking, as if in royal procession, down the centre aisle and took his place at his judge’s bench, a throne-like chair raised on a dais. The clerks dipped their quills in the ink, bent their heads and began to write.

Spotswood was handed some papers. “The Court may be seated,” he said, then began to read. He had not looked at Jesamiah.

More rustling and shuffling. Unable to keep silent, the whispers began, then grew louder as if a wind was getting up in distant trees.

“Bailiff,” Spotswood stated without glancing up, “I remind you, this Government Court is in session. On several occasions this day I have found cause to remind you that I will have silence. If there is one more sound I will order the room cleared. Do you understand?”

The whispering ceased as if the little rise of wind was running off over the meadows.

The members of the Council who sat as jury were, to a man, merchants and traders. Each one strictly biased against piracy. The bailiff jerked Jesamiah’s chains and he was brought to stand at the low wooden bar.

At last Spotswood raised his head, stared at him.

“You are Jesamiah Charles Mereno, better known as Jesamiah Acorne?”

“I am innocent of this charge, I…”

Spotswood slammed his gavel with a resounding crack down on the bench. “You will answer the question and speak only when spoken to. I repeat; you are Jesamiah Charles Mereno, better known as Jesamiah Acorne?”

Jesamiah took a steadying breath to control his rising temper and the sudden galloping fear. This was not going to be a fair trial. He nodded. “Aye, Sir.”

The Secretary of the Court rose, began to drone the legal necessities.

Jesamiah listened to the first two words then stared at the nearest window, gazing out at the blue sky beyond. Had Rue rounded the lads up? Had they started on
Sea Witch
– finished? Would they have completed all the repairs in a week? They could usually careen in two or three days, and in the graving dock she would have been easier to get at – although there was a lot to do. Were the sails repaired? The rigging overhauled?

He sighed, listened to the secretary’s boring voice for a few sentences. He had missed the nature of the charge brought against him, but he knew what that was anyway. Piracy with intent to commit theft, arson and murder upon the High Seas.

“How do you plead?”

They had to repeat the question.

Lifting his chin, standing as proud and straight as the manacles and leg irons would allow, Jesamiah stared direct into Governor Spotswood’s eyes. “Not guilty.” A ripple of conversation ran like an Atlantic roller around the room. Spotswood used his gavel again.

A few witnesses, men Jesamiah did not know, were called, men who, he discovered, were crew of the
Fortune of Virginia
. They all said the same thing, as did Captain Daniel Lofts, although his testimony was more elaborate and succinct in detail. Their combined testimonies and depositions were damning; the
Sea Witch
, captained by Mereno-Acorne, had boldly and blatantly attacked the
Fortune of Virginia
with intent to damage, rob, and murder.

Jesamiah was forced to listen to the drivel, not permitted to say a word in his own defence.

Governor Spotswood studied some of the papers again for a few minutes, then looked ponderously at Jesamiah. “Prisoner at the Bar. You have heard the words of these witnesses. Jesamiah Mereno, have you in turn any defence to make or witnesses to declare on your behalf?”

“I prefer to be called Acorne, my Lord, if it so please the Court. I have not used the name Mereno for many years.”

Someone among the spectators called out, “Aye, not since you beat your brother to a pulp then ran away to a life of theft and debauchery!”

“And eventually to murder him!”

Spotswood banged his gavel for silence, then scratched his nose and considered a moment. He nodded, spoke to the clerks. “I will accept the name Acorne.” He transferred his attention to Jesamiah, waiting for him to speak.

Jesamiah remained silent for a moment, considering his best option. Tiola would testify, but this Court would only see her as his mistress, would treat her words with scorn, and aside, there remained the problem of keeping her identity secret from Teach. For the same reason, would they listen to Alicia? On the other hand she was Phillipe Mereno’s widow, how could the Court misinterpret anything she said as his witness?

“Mrs Alicia Mereno was aboard the
Sea Witch
,” he said boldly, doubting as he said it that the words would be of the slightest use. “She will testify that I did not attack Captain Lofts.”

Spotswood glowered at the faces in the Court. “Is the lady here present?”

The Secretary to the Court stood, “My Lord, I understand she was questioned by Lieutenant Maynard when he took the militia to search for this fellow’s accomplices. His report is included in your papers.”

The Governor shuffled through the papers and impatiently tossed them to his table. “You have a copy? Read me the relevant information.”

Complying, the Secretary found what he was looking for, and cleared his throat; “Mrs Mereno was questioned as to her presence aboard the vessel
Sea Witch
during the interval of the offence of piracy. She answered that she knew nothing as she had been forcibly incarcerated below deck. She was abandoned there and possibly left to drown, for water was up to her waist before her screams secured her release.”

The bitch
, Jesamiah thought. “I sent her below because I had every intention of engaging Teach and drawing his fire from the
Fortune of Virginia
,” he interrupted. “On deck during an engagement is no place for a woman.”

“So you admit she was below?” Spotswood responded. “If that is so then how can she prove witness to what occurred?”

Captain Lofts jumped to his feet, dramatically pointing his finger at the Governor then at Jesamiah, “Do you seriously believe this rag’s lies? That out of the goodness of his heart he was trying to save my ship from Teach’s ravaging?”

Peering at him sternly Spotswood repeated that he would have silence in his Court, then added, “Your statement is noted, Captain, but as to the accuracy of it, are we not all assembled here to ascertain that fact?”

“My Lord Governor,” Jesamiah said, aware that everything was tumbling down around him. It felt like the ceiling was caving in, the floor giving way and he was falling into an abyss of panic. He grabbed at the bar, the manacles grating against the wood. Fought down rising nausea and made one last plea. “Governor, I carried a Letter of Marque with a precise remit to aid the Admiralty in the clearing of undesirables from the oceans. To hunt pirates. That was why I attacked Teach and went to the defence of the
Fortune of Virginia
. I was doing what I was commissioned to do.”

A stir of surprised incredulity rippled through the spectators and swelled in volume.

Teach’ll come and finish the job of shooting me when he hears this
, Jesamiah thought.
He’ll have to ‘urry; get in before they ‘ang me
.

“Silence!” the bailiff cried.

“And where is this letter?” Spotswood enquired, leaning forward and patiently folding his hands together.

“In the drawer of my desk, aboard the
Sea Witch
.”

“And why was this letter not produced?”

The Court Secretary glanced up from writing in his ledger. “Because no such document was found, my Lord. Lieutenant Maynard discovered nothing of use or value anywhere aboard the said vessel.”

More chatter. To be heard, Jesamiah shouted above the noise. “I had one, my Lord! Ask Captain Henry Jennings, he it was who issued it! Send word to him!”

“Silence! Silence!” The gavel banged twice. “Jennings is in Nassau, this is Virginia. Enough of this time wasting. Council, how do you find?”

A moment of conferring, nodding heads. “Guilty, my Lord.”

Alexander Spotswood passed his papers to the Secretary. “You are found guilty of an act of piracy against the vessel
Fortune of Virginia
. The sentence is that you shall be taken to a place of execution and there hanged by the neck until you be dead. And thereafter your body shall be bound in chains and left upon the gibbet as a deterrent to others.”

The gavel banged down, a sharp sound of dreadful finality.

Jesamiah stared at Spotswood, his mind in turmoil, stomach churning, throat dry. Twice he opened his mouth to speak but no sound came out. He tried again; “Sir. I beg leave to appeal.”

The hush fell over the noise that had been rustling through the courtroom, all faces turned towards the ragged pirate.

Jesamiah repeated himself, louder, more confident. “I beg leave to make appeal. I am entitled to a stay of execution for a period of three weeks from this date in order to present evidence. I am innocent of this charge and I ask the Court to write to Captain Jennings of Nassau in order that I may prove it so.”

Spotswood considered for a few moments. Acorne was correct, he did have the right. The Governor was a fair man who respected and abided by the law; was it possible that Acorne could supply evidence of carrying a Letter of Marque? If that was so, and he did indeed have a commission to hunt pirates, then, as Maynard had once suggested, he could prove to be of great benefit to Virginia.

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