Authors: Janice Clark
I dipped my flickering candle into the flame on Mordecai’s table. He was looking up at me; I tried to allow no expression to cross my face. His forehead, where he had struck it on the ceiling of the cave, was swollen as though he had just struck it—it had been two days since I had seen him, though it seemed longer. The dark bruise had spread across his forehead and down one cheek, blotched black and purple; I couldn’t help but think of Erastus’s mottled sisters. He was otherwise as pale as he’d ever been before our journey. He had been so alive during our time on the
Able
, when we swam together, as though the sea itself had cured him of all his ills. Now his irises had washed nearly to white. His cloud of hair had flattened to a few thin white strands. He leaned heavily on his arms as he wrote, his pen rasping against the paper.
He looked up at me briefly, with a slight smile, and continued writing.
“I was not sure you would find your way here,” he said.
“The song.”
His pen stopped. He sat up straight, then slumped back in his chair, his eyes turned up.
“Oh yes. The song. How does it go again? ‘Father, Father, sail a ship …’ ”
Mordecai sang an octave higher than his speaking voice, in the high thin tone that I had taken for a boy’s, for Gideon’s. He sang the song, staring up at the hull over us, from start to finish. It had been Mordecai all along. I reached for a chair and sat heavily down. I waited to speak until I could keep my voice from breaking.
“Why? Why did you pretend to be him?”
He continued to stare up for a few moments more, then sat straight, picking up his pen, leaning again over his journal.
“Oh, that I could never do, Mercy.” He smoothed open the chart in the center of his journal, unfolding it so that it draped over the edge of the table and hung to the floor. “I did try, though. I was not permitted on the dock or on board to learn the necessary skills, but I studied them as best I could, in my books.” He picked up a seaman’s manual from the pile nearest him and flipped through its pages. Dozens of pictures of ships flashed by. “I knew the name of every part of the ship, each piece of rigging. I knew more of navigation than Gideon, as much as your papa, though I was never given the chance to employ it. I was not granted the advantage of invigorating exercise in fresh air, as was your brother, but I could have become as hale and strong had I been given opportunity.” He drew himself up and gave me a defiant look. “Captain Avery permitted me to handle the
Able
’s dinghy on the way here. Certainly it is no three-master, but nevertheless I am not entirely without skills.” I wondered how the captain had managed to let Mordecai think he had handled the boat.
He really believed that he could have thrived, given the chance. If he hadn’t, he couldn’t have flourished so in our time on the
Able
, however short. And I had half believed it myself. I’d believed he’d sailed with Papa to the Arctic and back.
“But when we were with Captain Avery, and you spoke of the icebergs, of the polar bear … I was sure you had been there yourself.”
He smiled, shaking his head, then grunted and put a hand gingerly to his forehead. “I begged and begged your mama to be allowed to go to sea, on those rare occasions when she came to the attic. She always denied me.” He cleaned his pen on a napkin and lay it down. “And Uncle Benadam clearly did not consider me seaworthy.”
Mordecai’s journal slid to the floor. He stared down at it, leaned stiffly and picked it up, and slowly closed the cover.
“I sometimes believed that I had been on every voyage, so clearly did I imagine them. I experienced each mile more than did Gideon,
though he was the one who sailed, he the one who took each trip for granted, who knew nothing of waiting and wanting.” Mordecai pushed away his books and pens and lay his head on the table, his face turned away.
I sat next to him and took his hand. It felt fleshless, dry and hot.
“Mama didn’t mean to hurt
you
, Mordecai.” I let go of his hand and looked away. “Or my brother.”
Mordecai turned his face slowly back. “What do you mean?”
“Don’t you remember what you told me, back in Circe’s cave?”
He looked at me blankly.
“Back at the cave. You told me my brother was in Mama’s way. That she had made a bed for him in a barrel. She had stuffed him in a barrel, you said.”
“Oh, Mercy.” Mordecai’s face sagged first, then his body followed. He slumped, defeated, over the table. “I should never have drunk from that stream.” He hesitated, then reached for my hand and awkwardly stroked it; his own hand was trembling. “I didn’t want you to ever have to find out. I tried my best to keep it from you, I thought I had. I thought I got you away before you saw.”
I stared back at him. Mordecai crossed his arms over his chest and squeezed them tightly, as though he were cold, and closed his eyes.
“I saw her. I see it all the time, your mama, standing in front of that barrel. Your brother’s face, staring up out of the brine. She put him there. She killed him.”
“No. No. She was taking him out.”
Mordecai’s eyes sprang open and he stared at me.
I reached into the pocket of my gown and held up the last thing Crow had flown down to me from the walk the night before. A packet of oilcloth, which I unwrapped to reveal a small thick book, sheathed in whale ivory.
“This house still hides a few mementos you haven’t discovered. I found this one under the bones, at the bottom of the trunk.”
Mordecai gazed at the little book covetously. Its covers were made from thin sections of a sperm tooth, tapering to a point. The pages
had been trimmed to the same shape. It was hinged with soft, knobby gray leather—the whale’s skin—and on its smooth face nothing was graven. Mordecai reached out for the book; I snatched it back and put it in my pocket.
I told him how Gideon had been salted and sent home. Not on Papa’s ship; the
Verity
didn’t return then, and never had since. The barrel had been passed to a merchantman at sea and delivered to Naiwayonk by a few of its crew, in a jolly boat.
I told him how, after Mordecai had taken me away, Mama had pulled Gideon out of the barrel. I didn’t know how she had gotten him up to the walk; perhaps Larboard and Starboard helped, though she was always so strong, she might have carried him herself. She did not describe every detail, but I could picture it all easily enough: Mama hauling my brother, grunting, from the barrel. The brine sloshing; a thud and a wet slap. Mama sitting on the floor in a pool of brine, my brother lying across her legs, wrapped in a length of cloth. Her hands are busy and she speaks to herself. She is sewing, stitching the cloth in a long neat seam up the front of my brother, with an awl and a length of line. At his feet, two round lumps under the cloth—two cannon shot Mama has put there to weigh him down, as men are weighted for burial at sea, so that their bodies will sink. The two shot must have remained at the bottom of the trunk on the walk, too heavy for Crow to carry down to me along with Gideon’s bones.
Mordecai sat back, sighing. He sat quietly for a while, fingering the rope on a crate that stood nearby, avoiding my eyes.
“Perhaps … perhaps I wanted to think your mama had killed Gideon. And wanted you to believe it, too.” He pushed a drift of hair from his eyes and looked at me. “She didn’t murder Gideon, but she murdered me.”
Crow squawked from his perch on the bust’s head, one yellow eye fixed on Mordecai. Mordecai felt among his papers, found a dried plover egg, and tossed it up to Crow, who deftly beaked it and swallowed it whole.
“I was happy when he drowned, happy to see that barrel, to know
that he would spend his days whitening in a box as I have all these years.”
He had begun to shiver. I pulled off my shawl and draped it over his shoulders. He lay his head back down.
“Mama did care for you, Mordecai. I know she did.”
“Oh yes. She held me in such high regard that she never troubled me with her company.”
I pulled a shriveled starfish from beneath a book and twirled it between my fingers. “Don’t you remember walking along the beach and playing in the surf when you were small?”
He raised his head a little from the table and squinted at me.
“Certainly I remember. One of the old ones used to take me. Bemus, I think.”
“It wasn’t Bemus. It was Mama. She walked you along the beach every day, when you were very young. She would have worn pale blue in those days, and she held a black parasol over you against the sun.”
A different light came into Mordecai’s eyes. I could see him reluctantly casting back, trying to remember. He wanted to hear something good about Mama, and yet he didn’t.
Mordecai turned his head and stared up at the hull. His expression had lost its wary look, his eyes had softened. The skin around the sockets was drawn and dark. He looked as old as I had once believed he was.
“I have a lesson for you, Mordecai.”
Without lifting his head, he looked up at me with a wan smile.
“The sperm’s favored diet?”
I smiled back, no more brightly than him.
“Squid and skate are preferred … No. A different sort of lesson. Are you sure you want to hear?”
His eyes flashed a little. He remembered, too, when he had asked me that question, when he had first told me about the man in blue and Mama.
“It would be better if I read to you.”
I led him to his berth and helped him lie down, tucking him tight
under the blankets. I set a beaker to boil for tea. Then I pulled a chair close and settled myself, smoothing the skirt of my gown and pressing the little book open so that it would lie flat in my lap. The pages were closely covered in indigo ink, in Mama’s long, impatient hand, the words slanting off and away, sometimes leaping off the page altogether.
I called Crow down from the bust to my shoulder, where he folded his wings and tucked his beak. I flipped through the diary and chose a few entries, and began to read.
April 12
When I lean out the window the sea is right under me, far down. It’s nearly twilight. He’ll be back soon. I can smell the pines, they grow right up to the house. The cliffs are pink in this light, with the sun setting. There are birds nesting in holes all along the cliffs, swallows. They lift and drop on the wind, looping and diving, so close I can almost touch them. He’s been gone since first light. He said he couldn’t miss a day of fishing, not even for me. I knew he would come for me. He didn’t tell me his name until last night. Benadam. It was all I could do to wait until E. went to bed—was it only two nights ago? When Benadam walked in the front door I was waiting at the top of the stairs with my cloak on, my trunk packed. There are the boats now. He’s coming.
April 16
He lies on top of me so that I can’t move, barely breathe. I love how heavy he is on me. How straight and strong. His blood runs right under his skin, it streams along those thick blue veins. I can hear his heart in every part of his body, wherever I lay my ear.
April 18
He fills my every gap. He swells my every sea. He splits me apart. I don’t care. He stitches me together again.
April 22
The sea is warmer here, and the fish—the water is thick with them just past the surf. So many more than back home. Yellow-tail and flounder, great crowds of cod, spiny dogfish and rosefish. Sometimes a school carries me with them out and away, deeper down. I almost forget that he’s not with me, when I’m out swimming. When the boats return and he comes home, he strokes my hair and pulls strands of weed from it, and shards of coral from the reef. He laughs and says he wonders it doesn’t turn green to match my eyes, with all the time I spend in the sea.
May 7
The whales came today. They never surfaced, they were far below me, far from shore, swimming north, three of them. I felt them coming. I knew they were sperm from the old stories, their great blunt heads, pushing slowly through the water, one after the other. The last turned on his side as he passed under me, opening his long jaw to take in a stream of little fish, then sank down until he was swallowed by black. My stomach twisted when he opened his jaw and I felt like I was sinking, too. Benadam ran down to the point as soon as I told him. It was full dark already, I knew he would see nothing, but he’s still down there.
May 8
He said the whales used to pass by the island twice a year, close in to shore. He’s still down at the point, standing there with his lance, scanning the water, as though he could reach them. There are at least twenty, strung out for miles. They’re still passing but they’ll be gone soon. None of them has breached since first light, they’re all well down. Too far for him to reach, with no ship.
I asked him why he didn’t just keep E.’s cutter. He sent it back, right after the wedding. He said he wouldn’t sail any ship of my
brother’s. And that the
Argo
was too small, anyway, not suited for whaling.
I wonder if I should have told him about the whales.
If he hadn’t seen me and brought me here, he would be out on the
Misistuck
by now. He would be in a whaleboat now with his lance, not standing down there on the rocks, staring.
I know what he’s thinking. He can’t forget what E. described, what E. never saw or felt himself—the boats, the chase. He wants to face something stronger than him. He wants to know what it feels like to be afraid.
It’s what I’ve always wanted, too. For it to be the way it used to be. I knew it the moment I saw him, that he could meet the whale the way Moses did. And now he has me instead, and the whales swim on and away.
July 2
One of the women, Hannah, is teaching me how to clean the fish and to cook a little. At first I was impatient with the work. I only did it to pass the time until Benadam comes home each night. But more and more I like spending time with the other wives and the children. We talk of common things: the weather, the children’s health, and such things … but I like it. I never would have guessed how nice it is just to sit among other women, peeling apples or mending a smock or braiding a girl’s hair, light voices and laughter all around me.
The men all fish, from the little boys to old Nate, who turned eighty-three last week. There are a dozen houses, each with a family. Nine children, the youngest Hannah’s baby, a fat little girl with red ringlets, Sarah. Hannah lets me hold her.
Little Sarah is not much older than Mordecai. She’s so plump, and laughs all the time. I told Hannah about Mordecai. I told her about E. and me. She hugged me, and said I couldn’t have known any better.