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Authors: Valerie Martin

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The Ghost of the Mary Celeste

BOOK: The Ghost of the Mary Celeste
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2014 by Valerie Martin

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, a division of Random House LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Penguin Random House Companies.

www.nantalese.com

DOUBLEDAY
is a registered trademark of Random House LLC.

Nan A. Talese and the colophon are trademarks of Random House LLC.

Jacket design by Emily Mahon

Jacket artwork: James Abbott McNeill Whistler, American (active in England), 1834–1903;
Nocturne in Blue and Silver: The Lagoon, Venice
(detail), 1879–80; oil on canvas; 50.16 × 65.4 cm. (19 3/4 × 25 3/4 in.); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Emily L. Ainsley Fund, 42.302; photograph © 2013 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

All rights reserved.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Martin, Valerie, 1948–

    The ghost of the Mary Celeste : a novel / Valerie Martin. —1st ed.

        pages cm.

1. Ghost stories. 2. Paranormal fiction. I. Title.

PS3563.A7295G46    2014

813′.54—dc23          2013029153

ISBN 978-0-385-53350-8

eBook ISBN: 978-0-385-53351-5

v3.1

 

For Adrienne Martin,

who knows how we hope

 

Why does the sea moan evermore?

Shut out from heaven it makes its moan.

It frets against the boundary shore;

All earth’s full rivers cannot fill

The sea, that drinking thirsteth still.

C
HRISTINA
R
OSSETTI

The unknown and the marvelous press upon us from all sides. They loom above us and around us in undefined and fluctuating shapes, some dark, some shimmering, but all warning us of the limitations of what we call matter, and of the need for spirituality if we are to keep in touch with the true inner facts of life.

A
RTHUR
C
ONAN
D
OYLE

Contents
A D
ISASTER AT
S
EA

The Brig
Early Dawn

Off the Coast of Cape Fear, 1859

The captain and his wife were asleep in each other’s arms. She, new to the watery world, slept lightly; her husband, seasoned and driven to exhaustion the last two days and nights by the perils of a gale that shipped sea after sea over the bow of his heavily loaded vessel, had plunged into a slumber as profound as the now tranquil ocean beneath him. As his wife turned in her sleep, wrapping her arm loosely about his waist and resting her cheek against the warm flesh of his shoulder, in some half-conscious chamber of her dreaming brain she heard the ship’s clock strike six bells. The cook would be stirring, the night watch rubbing their eyes and turning their noses toward the forecastle, testing the air for the first scent of their morning coffee.

For four days the captain’s wife had hardly seen the sky, not since the chilly morning when their ship, the
Early Dawn
, set sail from Nantasket Roads. Wrapped in her woolen cloak, she had stood on the deck peering up at the men clambering in the rigging, confident as boys at play, though a few among them were not young.
The towboat turned the prow into the wind and the mate called out, “Stand by for a starboard tack.” A sailor released the towline, and as the tug pulled away, the ship creaked, heeling over lightly, and the captain’s wife steadied herself by bending her knees. Then, with a thrill she had not anticipated, she watched as one by one the enormous sails unfurled, high up, fore and aft. A shout went up among the men, so cheerful it made her smile, and for a moment she almost felt a part of the uproarious bustle. We are under way, she thought—that was what they called setting out. A line from a poem she loved crossed her thoughts, “And I the while, the sole, unbusy thing.” Her smile faded. She had left her little son, Natie, with her mother and now she felt, like a blow, his absence. How had she been persuaded to leave him behind?

In the year since their son’s birth, the captain’s wife had not passed two consecutive months in her husband’s company and she was sick of missing him, of writing letters that might never find him, of following his progress on a map. Her mother had urged her to go. Her father, another captain, retired now, home for the duration, avowed that he would have his grandson riding the pony by the time she returned. Her mother offered reassuring stories of her own first trip as the captain’s wife, long years ago, and of the wonders she had seen on the voyage to Callao and the Chincha Islands. “There’s nothing like the open deck on a warm, calm night at sea,” she said. “The vastness of the heavens, the sense of being truly in God’s hands.” And her father chimed in with the time-honored chestnut, “There are no atheists at sea.”

The captain’s wife lowered her hood and turned to gaze at her husband, who stood nearby, his legs apart, his face lifted, his eyes roving the stretched canvas, which talked to him about the wind. He was a young man, but he had been at sea since he was scarcely more than a boy and had about him an older man’s gravity. His dark eyes, accustomed to taking in much at a glance, were piercing. He was lean, strong, and steady. His frown could stop a conversation; his laughter lifted the spirits of all who heard him. After his first visit to the rambling house they called Rose Cottage, her father had
announced, “Joseph Gibbs is as solid a seaman as I know. He keeps his wits about him.”

And now he kept his wife about him. She studied the sailors, absorbed in their labors, each one different from the others, one skittish, one bullying, another diffident, a shirker, a bawler, a rapscallion, and a fool, yet each at his task harkened to the voice of the Master. Doubtless her mother was right—they were all of them in God’s hands, but should the Almighty turn away for a moment, every soul on this ship would shift his faith to the person of Captain Joseph Gibbs.

“I’m going below,” she said to him, and his eyes lowered and settled upon her. He smiled, nodded, turned to speak to the mate who was striding briskly toward them. Clutching the ladder rails, she backed down into the companionway, where she paused a moment, patting down her hair, before entering the cabin. There was, of course, no one there. For an hour she busied herself with sewing, for another in reading a volume of poems. The ship moved around her, above, beneath, rising and settling, picking up speed. A sensation of nausea, no more than a twinge at first, gradually announced its claim on her attention. She stood up, dropping the book on the couch, anxiously looking about the neat little room. She spied a pot hanging from a hook near the table. As she staggered to it, her stomach turned menacingly, and no sooner had she taken up the vessel than she emptied her breakfast into it. “Oh Lord,” she said, pulling out her handkerchief to wipe the perspiration from her brow. She carried the pot through to the cabin and poured the noxious contents into the bucket, then closed the lid and sat down upon it. The sailors, when so afflicted, had the option of vomiting over the side, but it wouldn’t do for the captain’s wife, who wasn’t allowed anywhere near the main deck on her own. She pressed the handkerchief to her lips. Another eruption threatened. Best not stray far from this place, she counseled herself. She wondered how long it would last.

It lasted three days, but during that time her stomach was the least of her problems. When at last the captain descended to find
his wife flat on her back in the bunk, fully clothed, with a wet cloth draped across her forehead, it was to tell her that he didn’t like the look of the western sky. For another hour she slept fitfully and woke to hear the officers talking in the wardroom. Her husband came in to ask if she wouldn’t have a cup of tea, which she declined. The ship was pitching bow to stern and he held on to the bedframe as he bent over to press his cool hand against her cheek. “My poor darling,” he said. “You’re pea-green. What a way to begin your maiden voyage.” At the word “maiden,” she smiled; it was a joke between them.

“Don’t worry about me,” she said.

There was a shout from the deck, a clatter of boots in the companionway. The captain made for the door. “Here it comes,” he announced as he went out.

It was a squall out of the northwest, which shifted to the southwest and blew a hard gale for eighteen hours. A jib and a topgallant were carried away, as well as a rooster, last seen wings outspread riding backward on a blast of spray. Gradually the wind abated, though the sea was still high, kneading the ship like bread dough between the waves.

The captain’s wife didn’t witness the storm. When it seemed the bunk was determined to dump her on the carpet, she turned on her side, gripping the frame. All she could hear was the wind howling, the timbers creaking, and the men shouting. At last it grew calmer; she lifted her head and glanced about the cabin. Her small collection of books had been scattered widely, as if an impatient reader, pacing the carpet in search of some vital information, had thrown down volume after volume. There was a knock at the door and to her query “Who is it?” the nasal voice of the steward Ah-Sam replied, “Mrs. Gibbs. I have tea for you.”

She scrambled from the bed, relieved to find, as she sat on the chest next to her empty bookshelf, that her stomach, though decidedly tender, was calm. “Come in,” she said.

Cautiously, his head bowed and his legs wide apart to keep himself steady, Ah-Sam came in holding a mug between his hands. “This beef tea,” he said. “Good for stomach.” She reached out, taking
the cup, but before she had time to speak, the man had backed out the door. “Thank you,” she said, as the latch clicked behind him. The broth was dark, clear, fragrant, revitalizing. She sipped it, swaying lightly as the ship swayed, and planned her next appearance above deck.

But by the time she had washed and changed her clothes, the wind had turned to the east, the heavens crackled with lightning, the rain came on in torrents, and darkness closed over the ship like an ebony lid. The captain, his face gray with exhaustion and care, descended to invite his wife to the wardroom, where he and his first officer sat down to a hurried meal. Ah-Sam rushed in with the coffeepot and a slab of hard cheese wrapped in a cloth, and then disappeared in his self-effacing fashion. The captain’s wife poured out the coffee, declining the mate’s offering of tinned meat and soft tack. “Ah-Sam brought me some lovely broth,” she told her husband. “Did you tell him to do that?”

“I just told him you were green,” he said. “He knows everything there is to know about seasickness.”

“Well, he must, for he has cured me,” she agreed.

When the men were gone, the captain’s wife sat at the table for some time, listening to the fury of the storm and comparing the sensation of being in a ship to that of lying in her bed at home on a tempestuous night. No wonder the sailors were sometimes so contemptuous of landsmen. As the night wore on, she persuaded herself that it was only a matter of time before the storm must abate and she might as well go to bed, as it was impossible to hold a needle, or a pencil, or even a book. She undressed and crawled back into the bunk. After what seemed a long time, but was barely an hour, she slipped into a dreamless sleep.

BOOK: The Ghost of the Mary Celeste
13.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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