Read Night Birds On Nantucket Online
Authors: Joan Aiken
âYour big bang, my dear professor, would leave this island in a devilish undesirable location.'
âCould firing otherwards round world mayhaps?' the Professor said hopefully. âI fixing nordwestbang.'
âNo, no, professor, that would push us out into the middle of the Atlantic, right over to Spain probably. Can't you see, we don't want the gun fired at
all
.'
The professor's face fell.
âBesides,' Dido pointed out kindly, âyou really can't shoot poor old King James, you know!'
âNa, na, na, snat Kung Jimsbangen, âsKung Georgebangen. Kung George IV!'
âKing George the Fourth?' said Dido, bewildered. âBut
we haven't
got
a King George! It's King James the Third, bless his wig!'
The professor shook his head and burst into a flood of refutal, mostly in his own incomprehensible language, which it took some time to disentangle.
âI see what it is,' Dido said at length. âThose peevy culls have been leading him up the garden path, making him believe there was a Hanoverian king on the throne because he's really
against
the Hanoverians and they wanted him to make the gun for them. Talking about pitching the double! What a lot of swindlers! Can you explain to him, Doc?'
It took some time to get across to the professor that there was already the sort of king he preferred on the English throne and therefore no need to shoot anyone off it; in the end he was convinced but greatly disappointed.
âFiring at sönn, at mönn, at stare?' he suggested as a last forlorn hope.
âNo, Breadno, that just
wouldn't do
. It would sink us. We'd go right under water. Have a bit of sense, can't you?'
Poor Professor Breadno sighed heavily and stumped away from the council down to the edge of the waves, where he stood skipping stones and gazing mournfully at Rosie, who, exhausted by her great aquabatic display, was resting comfortably in the swell, her tiny eyes fixed on Captain Casket with a look of great devotion.
âYou say the gun is now all ready to fire, and the professor's presence is not needed?' Doctor Mayhew said to Dido.
âThat's right. Aunt Trib â Miss Slighcarp said she
would fire it. They only need the cannonball and that's being delivered today. Then they plan to go back on board the ship, tipping us over the cliff on the way, I dessay, and skedaddle till the rumpus has died down, before coming back to pick up the gunner. They wasn't aiming to pick poor old Breadno up at all; I wonder if they'll leave Auntie Trib behind too?'
âSo,' said Doctor Mayhew thoughtfully, âas we haven't enough able-bodied men on the island to deal with a whole shipload of desperate ruffians, our best plan would be somehow to get rid of the gun itself before they can fire it.'
âBut, Doc, it's
huge
! It's about a mile long, and as thick as a tree! I don't see how you'll ever get it moved if you've got no help but grannies and young 'uns and whaling widders.'
âNo more do I at present,' Doctor Mayhew said frankly. âBut somehow it must be done, so we had all better set our wits to work.'
For a long time nobody spoke. They sat frowning in the silence of intense thought.
âWe couldn't stuff the barrel full o' summat?' Dido suggested doubtfully.
âThat might lead to a most disastrous explosion,' Doctor Mayhew said.
âCut the gun into sections â no, that would take too long,' Nate muttered.
Several hours slipped by in fruitless discussion. Nate paced about the beach in circles, staring at the ground.
At last Pen said, âSheep.'
âSheep, Penny?'
âThere are such a lot on the island. Could they not
be put to some use? Harnessed to the gun and made to drag it away?'
âDunnamany ropes you'd need,' Dido said kindly. âHave another try.'
Nate, who had wandered near, strolled down to the edge of the waves and skipped stones with the professor.
âOr we could bury â no, that would not do,' Pen sighed in discouragement.
âHallo, what's bitten Nate and the professor?' Dido suddenly said.
Nate, apparently galvanized by an idea, had grabbed the professor's arm and was talking to him earnestly, using a lot of gestures, sometimes pointing out to sea. They buttonholed Captain Casket, and brought him into the discussion. He nodded, at first doubtfully, then with confidence and animation.
âWhat's the lay?' called Dido. Nate came pounding back over the shingle with the others close behind him.
âWe've got it! The very thing! We'll use the pink 'un.'
âOld Rosie?' said Dido. âWhy, o' course! She's just the article. Why in Pharaoh's name didn't I think of that meself?'
âBut how? How do you mean?' said Pen.
âWhy, it was your notion of the sheep that put it into my head,' Nate told her. âTie a rope to her flukes, don't you see, and get her to haul the gun into the sea. It'd be as easy as a greased slide.'
âBut would it be
kind
?' said Penitence dubiously.
âWe can fix a knot that'll come undone as soon as the gun's in the sea. Cap'n Casket's agreeable to the idea. Says he don't think it'd upset her too much.'
âWe'd need an uncommonly strong rope, and a long one,' Doctor Mayhew observed.
âThere's the lifeguard rope,' Nate said. âThat's best new five-inch Manila, and there's nigh on two mile of it.'
âWe'll need all of that. Now let's think of how we'd go about this. One party would have to make an end of the rope fast to the gun, while Captain Casket and somebody else must row out to the whale with the other end. We can use the lifeguard's dory â I'll explain to him afterwards. I had best be with the captain, who must obviously remain here on the shore so that the whale does not swim away before we are ready. Nate, you had better go with Professor Breadno and tie the rope to the gun; the professor will know the most suitable place to make fast.'
Nate saw a difficulty.
âHow're we going to shift the rope? That coil's powerful heavy.'
âIn Mungo's cart,' Dido suggested. âWe can all lift it in, and then it will unroll as you go.'
âWe can't take the cart all the way to the forest; if there's anybody left on guard they'd spot us.'
âNo, but you'll have unrolled a lot of rope by the time you get there, it won't be so heavy. You can leave the cart about half a mile away and roll the coil along the last bit. There are sheepskins in the cart; put those on your shoulders and meander through the scrub a bit aimless-like and stooping; anybody watching from the forest'll think you're a sheep. I'll come with you to keep a lookout,' Dido volunteered.
âWe really ought to try to find out when they aim to
fire,' Doctor Mayhew said. âIf Miss Slighcarp's going to do it, we only have to keep an eye on her movements, and as soon as she starts for the forest we'll know. Who could do that?'
All eyes turned on poor Penitence, who became rather pale, swallowed once or twice, and then said valiantly, âI'll do it. I don't mind. That is if, Doctor Mayhew, you'll promise to look after Papa.'
âPenny you're a real bang-up hero,' Dido said warmly. âI wish I could come with you, but if Aunt Trib was to see I'd got out of the lighthouse she'd twig the whole lay in a minute. But you can pretend you know nothing about anything and just act like a saphead â try to delay her from going to the forest if she seems liable to start before Nate and the cap'n are ready and we've got the gun away.'
âHow should I delay her?' asked Pen nervously.
âWhy, talk to her, distract her, ask her advice about summat â ask her how to make wedding-cake or some blame thing.'
âAnd supposing she wants to know where I've been and where Papa is, what shall I tell her?'
âWhy, you can tell the truth. Say Doc Mayhew reckoned as how it would do your pa good to have a look at the pink whale and that he's a-sitting on Sankaty beach. That sounds innocent and harmless and will put her off the scent.'
âVery well,' said Pen, wan but resolute.
Everything was now in train. The whole party helped to lift the lifeguard rope, which was kept coiled in a chest at the foot of the lighthouse, on to Mungo's cart. Then Doctor Mayhew and Captain Casket returned to
the beach, dragging with them one end of the rope, while Nate, Dido, and Professor Breadno drove slowly away down the Polpis road, unrolling the coil as they went. They took Pen with them for some way, and then she left them and struck off across the moors towards Soul's Hill.
âPoor Penny,' said Dido who waved vigorously as Pen looked back for reassurance. âI reckoned as how I'd teach her to stand up to Aunt Tribulation, but I never figured things would be quite as rugged as this. But she's coming up smiling, I will say; I'd never a thought Pen had so much gumption in her. Reckon her pa ought to be mighty well satisfied with her now, considering what a little puny moping thing she was on board ship. If he could take his mind off that blame whale o' hisn for five minutes, that is!'
The whale was still just visible, rocking like a pink blancmange in the breakers, and Nate began singing softly:
âSweet whale of Nantucket, so rosy and nice.
As round and as pink as a strawberry ice â'
âThat ain't stately enough,' Dido said. âThat don't give a proper notion of her at all.'
âAll right.' Nate considered a moment or two, while a few more fathoms of rope unrolled.
âHow about this, then?'
âSweet Whale of Nantucket, so pink and so round.
The pride of our island, the pearl of the Sound,
By Providence blest to our shores you were led,
Long, long may you gambol off Sankaty Head!'
âThat's better,' said Dido. âThough it was really Cap'n Casket she was led by, not Providence. I guess really, all the time he thought he was following her,
she
was following
him
.'
As Pen disappeared over a hill Dido said with a sudden pang of anxiety, âCroopus, I do hope nothing don't go wrong when Penny gets to the farm. I wonder did we do right to send her?'
âOh, I guess she'll be all right,' Nate said.
Dusk had begun to fall when Penitence reached the farm. Nobody was in sight. Penitence slipped quietly into the kitchen and then paused, as she heard voices coming from the parlour. The door was not quite closed.
â. . . should be loaded by now,' Mr Slighcarp's voice said. âThanks to that cursed whale and all the brats and old grannies swarming on the beach at Quidnet we were obliged to slip right round to the south side of the island, which meant the men had to carry the shot a great deal farther from the landing-place. We didn't want to risk anyone getting a sight of it.'
âNo, you were very right,' his sister agreed. âWhere is
Dark Diamond
now?'
âMaking northing again, back to Quidnet. Just coasting along she's innocent enough â might be going back for another sight of the pink whale. We've another boat beached at Quidnet ready to take us all off to her when the gun's loaded.'
âWhat delayed the ship so long?'
âThey were chased all the way from Spithead by a perditioned naval sloop, the
Thrush
, which several times nearly caught them; in order to give it the slip they were forced to beat right down to Trinidad.'
âWhat happened to the sloop, then?' asked Miss Slighcarp uneasily.
âThey lost her in the end; probably gave up and went back to report failure.'
âIt's as well we are now ready to fire.'
âThey could never have touched us on Nantucket; it's American soil. But we had best get away prudently and as fast as possible in case the sloop is still hanging about.'
âWhat time shall I fire the gun?'
Penitence drew nearer to the door and listened intently.
Mr Slighcarp did some calculating. âHmm, there's a fair south-westerly, say fifteen knots, plus the trip to Quidnet . . . Give us time to get away. Say six hours. Better make it eight hours. Don't fire before midnight.'
âVery well. I will fire at midnight exactly. Darkness suits us better,' she said. âThere is no risk of being seen on my way there. I don't want to be suspected before you come back to pick me up. As Tribulation Casket I am safe enough.'
âCome to think,' he said, âwhere is old Casket and the child?'
âLord knows. The wretched, foggy sea air in this place makes me sleep like the dead; when I woke this morning it was late and they'd gone off somewhere. To see the whale, I suppose. You'll deal with the prisoners?'
âWe couldn't just leave them, I suppose?' he said.
âFool! Use your wits! As soon as they speak to anybody, our whole plan comes crashing down. If the lighthouse keeper sees them â no, they must be dealt with.'
âI'll see to it, then. On the way to the boat. I must hurry. One last thing â'
âYes?'
The voices were approaching the door and Pen looked desperately round for a hiding-place. There was just time to scramble into the grandfather clock.
âShould any emergency arise, so that it becomes necessary to fire
before
the time agreed, we will communicate by rocket. If we let off a rocket, do you fire as soon as possible afterwards. Likewise, if for some reason you need to fire earlier, send off your rocket first to warn us and we'll make for what shelter we can, wherever we are. But fire at all costs; we shall never have a better chance. The usurping Stuart monarch is bound to be in his palace tonight because tomorrow is the State opening of Parliament.'
âI shall not fail.'
She laid the rocket on the kitchen table and the two of them went out of the house, still talking.
Pen acted on a lightning impulse. She sprang out of the clock, seized the rocket, which was about the size of a french loaf, and dipped it, first one end, then the other, in a large jug of buttermilk. A bundle of lucifer matches lay with the rocket. She served them in the same manner. There was just time to climb back into the clock before Aunt Tribulation reappeared.