Chapter 1: Ship in a Bottle
Karl Ransenhoff
lay on his couch in the one room shack he lived in on Hubbard Beach at five
o’clock in the morning. He was reading an old adventure novel, which he had
begun the night before and had spent the entire night reading. Manny, his old
but still-vibrant golden retriever, lay on the floor beneath him. Karl could
hear the sound of his breathing as he slept. Outside, it was raining, and the
sound of the raindrops could be heard on the flat tin roof overhead. The room
itself was not too cramped, with plenty of space for three large bookshelves
filled with books, a kitchenette, and couch and a round coffee table, which was
also covered in books, as well as a plate with the remains of last night’s
dinner. There was no bed, as Karl slept (when he did sleep at all) on the couch.
Karl had lived here for the last five years alone with Manny, spending his days
reading and wandering the beach. Formerly, before retiring to the shack, Karl
had been a junior high school English teacher. He had always insisted on
teaching Treasure Island and other
adventure stories. However, at about the same time his wife Linda died after a
long struggle with early onset Alzheimer’s disease, the principal of the school
ordered him to follow a more rigid syllabus that excluded the books Karl most
enjoyed.
When
Linda died, Karl, who had never been any good at taking care of himself, fell
apart. He became depressed, and began to have trouble sleeping. He started
showing up to work wired and exhausted. His son, Charles, insisted that he see
a psychiatrist, but Karl refused. When the new syllabus was ordered, Karl
decided he’s had enough and quit his job. This also upset his son, as he knew
his father was financially strapped, and after the father and son had a heated
argument over the phone about these subjects, Karl refused to speak to his son.
This vow of silence persisted for five years up to the point of the beginning
of this story, and Karl had even refused to meet his one-year-old granddaughter.
Karl
indeed did have financial issues. Even with the low cost of the rent for his
shack, he was heavily in debt. Day after day he received mail from the loaning
agency, which he would promptly toss in the trash. A majority of this debt was
owing to the financial strain his son had put him through as a young man. Karl
had paid for his college education, and even had to pay for his wedding, as
Charles’ wife’s parents were both deceased. These, along with paying for his
wife’s funeral out of pocket, paying off the mortgage of his old house, family
vacations, his compulsive book buying habit, and other expenses, were not
within the practical range for a junior high school English teacher who was the
sole breadwinner for his household. Add that to the fact that his former house
was still on the market after five years, and it was easy to see how Karl could
find himself in such a situation. His son, who was now a doctor, had offered to
help him out, but Karl, in his stubbornness, refused.
Karl even looked stubborn.
One could see from his face that he was withholding something from the world,
something that he cherished above all else. Perhaps it was the sense that life
was an adventure—an adventure that he never really began but was on the verge
of beginning. After all the books he’d read, he truly believed he was more
entitled to the grand eloquence that life had to offer. Only, his days brought
him little satisfaction. Reading was a satisfaction, but only to the extent
that he was allowed to escape from the reality of his life. He lived in a dream
world mostly, and when that grand eloquence of life came knocking, he did
everything he could to shoo it off.
He
never had any visitors, except the postman, who, it seemed to Karl, considered
him a complete maniac. Sometimes Karl wondered if indeed he was. But there was
no way of knowing. He had made himself a hermit. At five fifty six, Karl
finished reading the last sentence of the novel. He closed his eyes, and all
the wondrous adventures of the protagonist flashed before his eyes. Just as the
sun began to rise and the rainclouds began to dissipate, he fell asleep.
Three
hours later, he was awoken by his dog licking him on the face. This had become
typical for Karl, with Manny serving as his very own kissing-alarm clock. Karl
looked at his watch. It was just about nine o’clock, and the sun was already high
and bright in the sky. Manny was whining for food. Karl got up, went to the
cupboard and took out the bag with Manny’s food, and poured him a bowl. Manny
ate with relish. Karl himself made a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and ate
it quickly. When man and beast had finished their respective meals, Karl opened
the door of his shack, letting the dog run out onto the yellow sand of the
beach. Following Manny out the door, Karl shielded his eyes from the sun. The
dog was a good hundred feet down the beach, and Karl followed him.
The
stretch of beach which Karl lived on was privately owned by a nearby
manufacturing plant. They began renting out the shack many years ago for extra
income. Karl didn’t mind the fact that the beach was lined with the large, gray
buildings. He kept his eyes focused on the sand, the sky, and the ocean. It was
already very hot, and the tides were very low. He loved to watch Manny run down
the beach and sniff in the sand. Occasionally, Manny would splash around in the
edge of the water, and Karl loved to collect the shells that gathered on the
shore. The seagulls were out in full force this morning, circling above the
shore, diving for fish, and walking idly about on the beach. Occasionally,
Manny would chase after these birds, always to no avail, though Karl figured
this didn’t bother Manny in the least. As Karl walked, his thoughts were on the
story he had finished the night before. He felt as if he were still enmeshed in
the folds of the story, living out the adventures of the protagonist.
Occasionally, however, thoughts of his past came to mind—thoughts of Linda, his
son, and the job he had left behind. He assured himself that there was still
some great adventure on the horizon, waiting to be discovered.
Just
as these thoughts were running through his mind, he heard Manny barking. He
looked up, and saw his dog about thirty yards down the beach, his nose in the
sand. Manny looked up and barked at his master. Then he began digging in the
sand. Karl knew that he had found something, but what? He ran over to the spot,
and looked down at where his dog was digging. There, buried in the sand, he saw
a yellow glint of light, and recognized a piece of clear glass. He crouched
down, and as his dog watched with eager curiosity, Karl dug the object out of
the sand. He pried the object up, and held it up to the light.
It
was a glass bottle, about the length of his forearm, and somewhat wider, and
inside was a miniature model of what appeared to be a three-mast ship with
black sails. Also, tucked in at the side, was a piece of parchment, with
something written across the surface. Karl took off the rubber stopper in the
bottle, reached inside, and managed to pull out this parchment. He spread the
parchment open and read, in plain English, these words: “After the year 1905,
to break the spell, say Sheranza, and
cast into the ocean.” Karl looked down at Manny, as if in search of an
explanation, but Manny looked as dumbfounded as he himself felt. Karl shrugged,
stood up with the bottle in his hand, and walked towards the ocean. Using both
hands, he chucked the bottle into the sea, saying the word “sheranza.” The
bottle, without the rubber stop, began to sink. Karl watched it from the shore,
and the light from the sun was so bright that it made it nearly impossible to
see. Karl waited, for a minute, then two, and finally, shrugging, turned away.
Just
then, Karl heard the sound of what seemed to be a huge spray of water coming up
from the ocean. He looked. The surface of the water began to bubble violently, and
then, he noticed a large shadow forming in the water. Three large polls broke
the water’s surface, and rose high upward toward the crystal blue sky. Karl
nearly fell from terror. Finally, from out of the sea, arose a giant ship, just
like the one that had been in the bottle, furling black sails. With a gush, the
water receded from the ship’s sides, and it stood, proud and majestic, upon the
surface of the sea. Karl and Manny watched in amazement as the ship rolled,
slowly, its prow cutting the surface of the water, toward the shore.
The
ship landed ashore, and after standing aghast for a moment, Karl heard a loud
“wa-hoo!” come from the cabin of the ship. A group of men, in motley attire,
began flooding out of the cabin door. They cheered and jumped up and down. One
of them, a wizened man with an eye patch over his left eye and a black bandana
tied over his head, went to the edge of the ship, and looked out. Soon, his
gaze met Karl’s. He stood, his one eye fixed on Karl, and a dour expression ran
over his heavily lined face. The other men soon noticed Karl as well, and gave
him the same serious expression of both curiosity and dubiousness.
“Ahoy
there!” said the man with the eye patch. “Who you be?”
“I’m
Karl. I...I...”
“Go
on,” said the man. “Explain yourself to me and my lads.”
Karl
scratched his head. He was hoping someone would explain things to him.
“I
found a ship in a bottle,” he said. “There was a parchment...it said to say a
word and toss the bottle into the sea. So I did, and...”
“Ah!”
said the man. “The she-devil cursed us! And you have broken the curse. Well,”
he said, squinting and rubbing his bearded chin, “All will be explained, my
good man. All will be explained! Lads!” He turned to his men. “Let’s take to
shore!”
One
of the men threw a rope over the side of the ship, and one by one they climbed
down to the beach.
Chapter
2: Two Feasts, a Remarkable Story, And a Proposal
All
the pirates circled around Karl and Manny, and the man who had addressed him
from the ship, presumably their leader, stepped forward. “Tell us, my good man,
what year is this?”
“It’s
2016,” said Karl.
“2016?!
Well give me a second eye! No wonder I’m so hungry! It’s been over two hundred
years since I’ve had a bite!”
The
other men laughed. Karl tried to smile, but his face was frozen in dumb
amazement.
“So,
my name is Reginald. I’m the first mate of our good ship. The Beacon, she’s called.
What be your name?”
“I’m
Karl.”
“And
what about your doggie there?”
“Manny.”
Reginald
looked down the beach in the direction of the shack. “Is that your home, Karl?”
Karl
nodded.
“Well,
let’s return there and have ourselves a feast. How does that sound, lads?”
The
other men all cheered.
“But,
I don’t have much food,” said Karl.
“Don’t
worry, Karl. We come prepared.”
“Is
your food,” said Karl, “still good?”
“I’m
almost certain it is,” said Reginald. “After all, we still look fresh, don’t we boys?”
Again,
the men all cheered.
“Alright,
you bow-legged brigands! Bring out the stores!”
The
men went into the ship’s hold and pulled out two large slabs of cured beef,
jars of pickled onion, and a keg of rum. They carried all of this down the
beach to Karl’s shack. Karl didn’t have nearly enough chairs for the men, but
they didn’t seem to mind sitting in the sand. Cups were brought out and the rum
was poured. The beef was cut and served. The men ate with relish. By the time
they were finished, the keg of rum was gone, and so was the cured beef and
pickled onions. Drunk, all of the men fell fast asleep, and didn’t wake up till
it was nearly dark.
As
the men slept, Karl considered his options. The most logical option, he
thought, was to call the police. He gazed around at these men with their long
sabers and muskets, their scarred, tattooed bodies and their ridiculous
clothes, and wondered if he was dreaming. He did not call the authorities,
however. He was far too curious to find out what story lay behind it all. When
the men awoke, all apparently around the same time, Karl heard their moans and
groans. “What a sleep!” one of them cried out. “I feel fresh out of my mother’s
womb!”
“I’m
starving!” cried another. “I’d say it’s time we had another feast!”
Reginald,
who had been relieving himself at the water’s edge, turned. “Well, boys! Bring
out some more!”
So
the men all went back to the ship and collected more food, and more rum. They
began their feast as the sun was going down. They built a fire, and sat around
it singing, eating, and drinking. Karl, thinking that someone might see the
fire from afar, complained, but the men just laughed at him. He went and sat
with Manny near the shore, staring out at the ocean. As he was trying to wrap
his head around all that was happening, he was approached by Reginald, who sat
beside him in the sand.
“Well,
Karl,” said Reginald, “I’d say it’s time we exchange our stories. I’d tell you
mine first, but something tells me mine is much longer than yours. Why don’t
you tell me what happened, and how you set us free?”
Karl
told him the story of how he’d found the bottle, and the piece of parchment
inside.
“Hmm,”
said Reginald. “I think I can make some sense of that. Of course, it’s all a
mystery to you. I suppose you’d be wanting an explanation. Well, I won’t deny
it. I will tell you all.” He took out his long amber pipe and a leather tobacco
pouch, and proceeded to prepare a smoke. He lit a match and took a long pull on
his pipe. “My full name is Reginald Patterson Pierce, and I was—am—the first
mate of the Beacon. My comrades and I are, as you may have guessed, not into
any legal enterprise, but are in fact pirates of the open sea. Our captain was
William Desperteaux, the most cunning, greedy bastard that ever sailed under
the black flag. Hah! He and his lover, the sorceress, Envilisa, ruled over our
ship like tarantulas, so that by the end of our voyage we couldn’t bear the
sight of them. We set sail from England in the Autumn of 1802, for the Japanese
island of Kojiwana in search of the lost treasure of Seymar Candoleen, the last
king of Atlantis. The legend was that, knowing Atlantis was doomed to
destruction, Candoleen buried all the city’s treasure in what was then the
mountain of Cylo-Koo. Included in this treasure was the famed Diamond of
Candoleen. It was said that, when wielded by a sorcerer, the diamond had the
power to give everlasting life to both the sorcerer and the one he or she loved
the most. After weeks of toil, we found the treasure, and made our way home.
However, we got laywayed in the Americas, and that’s where the great betrayal
took place.”
He
took a long pull on his pipe, and blew the smoke out toward the sea.
“The
captain called a meeting on deck,” he continued. “We all figured it was to talk
about our course home. We waited, my men and me, on the main deck, watching the
captain and his terrible vixen as they stood above us on the quarter—he with a
little smirk on his face, she peering at us with the cold eyes of a viper.
“Men,” cried the captain. “Before I discuss with you the plan for our course
homeward, Envilisa has a word to share with you.” She stepped forward, bedecked
in her black velvet and lace dress, her black hair tied up in two buns on her
head, the Candoleen Diamond glowing white around her neck. She raised both her
arms and shut her eyes. We stood transfixed. Then she opened her eyes, showing
just the whites, and with her forked tongue she began to speak in a language
that must be spoken by the Devil himself. Before we could bat an eye, we were
done for. They took all the treasure for themselves and left us in a shrunken
ship inside a glass bottle.”
“As
far as the parchment in the bottle goes, that, I suspect, must have been the
cause of Leroy McFee. Leroy was off at a saloon getting drunk, the poor
bastard, when the meeting was called. He must have come back, found the ship
gone and the miniature floating in the water in its place, and taken it ashore
to a local magician, who gave him the reverse for the spell.”
In
all its intricacies, Karl thought, it seemed like a logical story. But still,
there was nothing logical about the fact that he was sitting here talking to a
pirate from the nineteenth century.
“So
what now?” he asked.
“Now,”
said Reginald. “Now, we go after what was stolen from us.”
Karl
looked out at the sea. A flock of seagulls was circling in the distance. The
sound of the waves hitting the shore and then receding was like the voice of a
hypnotist, enticing him to fall into a deep trance.
“Of
course,” said Reginald, breaking the spell, “you’re welcome to come with us.”
Karl
turned to Reginald in amazement.
“It
should be an adventure, my good man. That’s saying the least.” Karl watched as
he took several draws from his pipe. “So, what do you say?”
Again,
Karl looked out over the water. The seagulls were still circling, only now,
they seemed more alive, more like the predators they were.
“I
say, if you can bear the burden of an old man, I’d be happy to come.”
“That’s
a good man!” cried Reginald, slapping Karl on the shoulder. “’Bring your dog,
too. We’d much enjoy the company of your beast on board.”
Karl smiled and
nodded in agreement.
“Twill be a
wonderful adventure!” cried Reginald. “Rum will be drunk, blood will be
spilled, and treasure will be had!”
“So,”
said Karl. “Where exactly are we going?”
“First,
my good man,” said Reginald, “We need more rum.”
Drinks
on the House!
Karl
assumed that what Reginald had meant was that they needed more rum from the
ship, but as it turned out, they were running low, and needed more for their
journey. “Where is the local distillery, my good man?” asked Reginald as the
two men walked over to join the rest.
“There
isn’t one, as far as I know,” said Karl.
“Well
then where do you get your rum?”
“The
local liquor store.”
“Well
then that’s where we shall go.”
Karl
didn’t ask how Reginald planned to pay for the rum. He himself obviously didn’t
have the money to buy enough rum for all of these men. A dark portent filled
his mind as Reginald addressed his men.
“Lads,
we’ll be needing five men to come help me carry away the rum. Karl will lead
the way.”
Karl
led the six men down the beach and up the road that led to the center of the
small California town near the Yukon Peninsula, a small, wayward town with a
population of about two hundred. Everything was quiet, and closed in the town,
except for the liquor store, which was always open, as the owner, a Mexican man
by the name of Paco, was always desperate for a customer. The men entered the
store, and the pirates looked around.
“Where
are the kegs of rum?” one of them exclaimed.
Paco,
who looked at them curiously, said: “No, man. We ain’t got no kegs here.”
“Bottles
it’ll have to be boys,” said Reginald.
The
men began pulling the bottles off the shelves, and loading them in the large
tan bags they had brought. Karl, amazed, accosted Reginald.
“Reginald!
We have to pay for all this!”
“Hahah!”
laughed Reginald, darkly. “A pirate only pays when he has the money. Otherwise,
he takes what he needs.”
The
men, with their loaded bags, headed towards the door. Paco, stunned, cried out:
“Hey! You guys got to pay for that!”
“Think
again, my little man!”’
Paco
reached under the counter, and pulled out a large shotgun. “You guys got to pay
for that!”
The
men stood still. Karl watched in horror as Reginald slowly walked towards Paco,
swaying his arms like a man strolling in the park. “Be a good lad and put the
gun away.”
Paco,
in horror, cocked the hammer. Swiftly, as if without any hesitation, Reginald
grabbed the hilt of his sword, drew it, and with one slash, cut Paco’s head
clean off.
“Boys!”
he cried. “The booty is ours!”
Karl
stood, gazing at the headless body. Blood gushed like a river from the neck.
Then he looked at Paco’s head, frozen in an expression of sheer unsuspecting
terror. “Come along, my friend,” said Reginald. “No use staring at the dead.
They’re not much for entertainment.”
Karl
followed Reginald and the rest of the men out into the night. As the men
walked, they sang a ghastly tune:
Tonight we sail with loads of booty,
Tonight we sail with loads of rum!
The sea is calling and the sails are unfurled,
There is much more a’ danger to come!
Chapter
4: Sea Legs
As
soon as the men returned with their bags full of alcohol, they began preparing
to set sail. A course was set for Donarath Island in the middle Pacific, home
of the ancient Pirate Hall of Records, where Reginald hoped to find news of
what happened to Captain Desperteaux and his mistress Envilisa, as well as the
treasure they had stolen. That night, as Karl lay on a wooden bed in the ship’s
hold, he became sick to his stomach. The men gave him a bucket to puke in, and
before the night was over, it was almost filled to the brim. That, along with
the loud snoring of the rest of the men, kept him from sleeping. At about four
in the morning, he got up, leaving Manny asleep on the floor, and went onto the
deck. There, he found Reginald standing alone, peering out into the darkness.
“Ah!
Karl, my good man! Is the sea not suiting your restful desires? Well, then.
There will be plenty of time to sleep. Join me here. Let us bask in the silence
of the sea.”
“Reginald,”
said Karl, feeling the ship rocking beneath him. “I’m not sure I am cut out for
this. I’m an English teacher by trade.”
Reginald
just smiled. “I shall tell you a story,” he said. “I myself came from a wealthy
family. Well-educated up to the age of thirteen, I was. But my father, curse his
soul, was a mean sort. A regular monster, he was. If I did not complete my
lessons in time, he used to whip me with his knotted cane. Every day I failed
to finish my lesson, he’d whip me five more strokes. Well, one day I decided
I’d had enough, and ran away. That’s how I came to be a pirate. I started out a
cabin boy, and the first couple of months I remember were a living hell. The
only reason I didn’t give up was because I knew that to go back to my father
was even worse. So tell me, Karl, do you not feel that the adventure in store
for you might not be worth the struggle? Would you rather return to your little
shack, and spend your remaining years doing absolutely nothing? If so, we shall
turn around and bring you back. But I tell you, lad. You shall have many a’
story to tell by the time all of this is through. And you may just end up
feeling like a youth again. Now, let us listen to the silence for a moment, and
then you tell me your decision.”
The
men were silent for a long time. Karl thought of his books back home. All of
those adventures he had read—none of them seemed to compare to the adventure he
was now partaking in. The thought of going back to his books seemed completely
repulsive to him now. “OK,” said Karl. “I will stay along.”
“Ah!”
said Reginald. “You are already beginning to sound like a seafarer.”
The
rest of the night Karl walked around the ship with Reginald, telling him about
his struggles. Reginald was a deep and thoughtful listener, and as Karl told
him his story, he began to make sense of it in a way he never had before. He
began to feel more at peace with his decisions, and yet, he also began to
understand that perhaps change in his life for the better was possible. He even
had some fond recollections of his son, though he was quick to push these out
of his mind. As he walked, he became more comfortable on his feet, so that,
after a time, he could barely notice the swaying of the sea beneath him.
“Perhaps,” said Reginald, “the sea will awaken in you a greater passion for
your life. Perhaps you will become a pirate in spirit, even if you do remain a
law abiding citizen in the end.” By the time dawn had risen, Karl could tell
that he was beginning to get his sea legs.
Chapter
5: Spinning the Top and A Bolt of Lightning
That
morning, after eating a light breakfast, Karl went back to sleep and slept a
good five hours. The sea was calm that morning, so he slept peacefully. When he
awoke, he went on deck and found the men at work. He looked up at the crow’s
nest atop the middle mast. Koloo, a large African with rippling muscles stood
there watching the sea through a telescope. Other men were tying and pulling
the rigging, hammering nails into loose boards, working the udder, and other
sundry activities. Reginald, meanwhile, was standing in the middle of the deck,
barking orders. “Bolster the jib well, my boys! Secure the main stay! At a rate
of knots is the goal! Ah! Karl! Are you well rested, my lad?”
Karl
nodded, smiling. Manny stood at his side, wagging his tail.
“I
see your dog there never leaves your side. That’s the way a dog ought to be.”
“He’s
my greatest friend,” said Karl.
“Well,”
said Reginald as he turned to face the water. “The ocean is as calm as a
Chinese opium den and the winds are purring. The gods are shining down on us
today.”
Karl
looked around. “Is there anything I could help with?”
“No,
lad! You enjoy the good weather. There’s a game of Spinning Top going over
there if you’d like to join.”
Karl
looked. A table was set up near the quarter deck at the side of the boat, where
four men seated at a table, and one was standing just near it, playing a game
with a spinning top and bottles of brandy. Karl went over. As he approached,
the men were chugging from the brandy bottles as the top spun on the table’s surface.
Once the top stopped spinning, the men stopped drinking. One of the men, after
the top had fallen, invited Karl over and explained the rules of the game. They
were as follows: the top was spun by an outsider—the standing man—and the other
four men were to chug as much brandy as possible during the top’s spinning.
This was repeated until all but one of the men had finished the bottle. This
man was then forced to finish his bottle, and do an “laggard’s dance” for the
other men. The game, as Karl began to watch, was nearing an end. The loser of
the game, a gaunt, sallow cheeked man with greasy black hair, stood up and
began to dance as the other men banged on the table and sang a song. He danced
like a crow vibrating its wings, bobbing his head forward and back, taking high
steps in his high brown leather boots. After about a minute of this, the men
laughed heartily and cheered.
“Sit
down, now, Karl. You have a go.”
So
Karl took the loser’s place, and four more brandy bottles were brought out.
“Let us go a little easy on the old man,” said one of the pirates, a swarthy
fellow with a wisp of a graying black beard.
“Why
should we?” asked a younger pirate with flowing blonde hair. “His gullet is
just as wide as ours!”
The
others laughed.
“Do
as you like men, do as you like,” said the top-spinner. “I’m sure the old man
can take care of himself.”
The
top spinner placed the top on the table, holding the brass knob with his thumb
and forefinger, the nails of which were long and sharp, yellow and blackened.
He gave the top a twirl and the game began. Karl was amazed by the burning in
his throat as he began to down the red liquor. He immediately pulled the bottle
away from his mouth and saw the other men gulping away like it was water. He
put the bottle back to his lips and tried his best, but he could only take a
little at a time. The swarthy pirate down nearly a third of the bottle in one
spin.
The
top fell and the men stopped drinking. All the pirates slapped their hands on
the table with a crash. “A rich blend, this!” said the third pirate, a fat man
with chubby cheeks and large golden rings in his ears. After a brief moment,
the spinner put the top back on the table, and gave it a spin. Again the men
drank. After this, Karl was beginning to feel woozy.
It
took six spins before the other three men had finished their bottles. Karl had
nearly half a bottle left.
“I’ll
tell you what,” said the swarthy pirate, “You finish half of that, and we’ll
let you do your dance.”
The
other pirates agreed, and Karl began to plug away at his bottle. The pirates
cheered him on as he drank. “Learn to love the taste,” said the young blonde.
“Imagine
it the ambrosia of the gods,” said the fat man.
Karl,
reeling, finally managed to complete his task. He sat, swaying with his eyes
half shut.
“Haha!”
said the fat pirate. “A true laggard, that!”
“Give
us a dance!” they cried.
Karl
got up, barely managing to stand, and started to sway back and forth. He lifted
his left leg high, and losing his balance began to stumble.
“Careful!”
cried the swarthy pirate as Karl careened toward the side of the ship. Before
the spinner could grab him, he fell right over the ship’s edge and plummeted to
the sea.
The
water was cold, though he could hardly tell because he was basically unconscious.
He sensed an odd creeping feeling in his body—the water was heading straight
for his lungs. Panic struck him, and he thrashed about wildly, but he could not
get to the surface. Choking, he sank, and felt that it was the end. He closed
his eyes, and everything went black.
Next
thing he knew, he was on the ship deck, panting, and looking up at the swarthy
pirate, who was also wet and kneeling beside him, and Manny, who began licking
his face. “Are you alright, ma’ lad?” the swarthy pirate said.
“What
happened?” asked Karl, still feeling woozy.
“The
ocean nearly swallowed you, and you the ocean!”
He
sat up. Manny, greatly excited, danced around. Karl grabbed him and hugged him
around the neck. He looked around at the pirates. “I think I’m going to be
sick,” he said, and vomited.
Karl
went to the cabin and slept it off. When he awoke, it was night time and the
ship was being tossed about in a storm. He went out to the deck and found the
men hurryingly battening down the hatches, and tethering the sails. The wind
was so strong he barely could get the momentum to walk forward, and the rain
was coming down by the bucket full. The sea itself was in a frenzy, and the
waves were towering above the ship so that it seemed that at any moment it
might capsize.
Reginald
spotted Karl from across the deck and came running over, struggling to keep his
balance all the way. “Karl!” he said. “You must get inside! You’re liable to
drown if you stay out here!”
Just
then, as Karl was about to reply, he felt a strange sensation, as if all of the
hair on his head stood upright. He heard a loud crack, and a surge of
electricity ran through his body. He stood, amazed, his hair standing up, his
eyes goggled, and the soles of his feet where the lightning had left his body,
burning. Coming to his senses, he saw Reginald leaping and hollering in front
of him.
“By
Jesus! By damn! You’re a regularly magnet for troubles! Get inside, my good
man, before the very foot of God comes down and squashes you!”
Karl
turned around, and stumbled back to the cabin. He sat on his bed, grabbed the
bucket on the floor, and vomited. Sitting on the edge of his bed, he felt the
churning of the sea beneath him. Manny sat right in front of him, and after
Karl puked a second time, the dog placed his paw on top of Karl’s lap. “Don’t
worry,” said Manny. “It’ll be alright.” Had the dog really just spoken? Could
it be possible? No, thought Karl, it’s not possible. I’m hallucinating because
a bolt of lightning just passed through my brain. Karl moaned and lay down
on his bed, rolling himself into a ball. What had he gotten himself into?
Chapter
6: Ship Ho!
All that night the
storm tossed the ship about, and the crew was hard at work making sure it
didn’t tip over. Karl only slept a couple of hours just after dawn, when the
skies cleared and the ocean calmed. When he awoke, he saw Manny looking at him
and wagging his tail. “Good morning, Karl. Do you feel better this morning?”
Karl couldn’t help
but smile. “Indeed I do, Manny. Thank you.” Perhaps having a talking dog
wouldn’t be so bad after all, he thought. He got up, feeling more alert and
awake than he could remember feeling in ages. He went onto the deck, and saw
that the sky was clear except for a few puffy clouds on the horizon. The ocean
was again calm. All that day Karl sat in a chair on deck and watched the men as
they leisurely went about their work. They sang songs with great gusto,
laughing and making merry. They especially enjoyed playing with Manny, who
continued to offer words of encouragement to Karl. Karl sat, basking in the
sunlight and the warm ocean breeze. One pirate offered him a cigar, and for the
first time in his life, he found himself smoking. Imagine if Linda could see me now, he thought, blowing out a long
stream of tobacco smoke. He smiled. “What do you say, Manny? Are we feeling
like pirates yet?”
Manny
laughed, his beautiful brown eyes glistening. “Argh!” he cried. “Indeed we are,
good man! Indeed we are!”
At
about five o’clock that evening, Layman Smith, the pirate in the crow’s nest,
called out to the men on deck. “Ship on the horizon! To the southeast! Maybe five
miles, headed our way!”
“What
it be?” cried Reginald.
“I
don’t know, sir. It’s white, fairly large, and looks to have no sail.”
“No
sail? Strange...” Reginald looked at Karl, who had gotten up from his seat to
look for the boat, and Karl, anticipating his question, told him about motorboats.
“Very
strange indeed,” said Reginald. “Well, we shall bear down upon her. Redirect
our course, men!”
Karl,
recognizing the potential for a repeat of what had happened at the liquor
store, became worried. “Reginald,” he said. “You can’t behave quite the way you
did in the nineteenth century. Things have changed.”
“Don’t
worry, lad,” said Reginald. “We’re just going to give her a quick look and be
on our way.”
About
fifteen minutes passed before all the men aboard could make out the suspicious
craft. Karl, seeing that it was a yacht, made the announcement. He described it
to the befuddled pirates as “a kind of luxury residential ship,” and when
seeing that most of them still didn’t understand, he called it, “a mansion in a
boat.” The Beacon soon came within
hailing distance, and raised the hailing flag. As the Beacon sidled up next to
the yacht, three people—two men and a woman—came on deck. One of the men looked
to be in his early fifties and was wearing a white captain’s uniform with gold
epaulettes on the shoulders. The other man looked younger—in his mid thirties
perhaps—and was dressed in pleated khakis, a turquoise polo shirt, and
sunglasses. The woman, who seemed to be the younger man’s girlfriend, was
dressed in a black yoke skirt, a white halter-top displaying a toned midriff,
sunglasses, and a white sun hat. The young couple, holding cocktails, smiled as
the Beacon pulled up alongside them. The captain, however, looked suspicious.
“Ahoy
there!” Reginald cried.
The
couple looked at one another and laughed. Then, turning back to Reginald, the
young man cried out: “Ahoy!”
“Is
there some sort of reenactment going on?” the woman asked.
“Reenactment?”
said Reginald. “No ma’ lady. No.”
“Well
are you headed somewhere to put on a show?” the man asked.
“Show?
No, no show. We be pirates in search of booty, we be. And if you behave well, I
promise ye you won’t lose your heads.”
The
young man laughed. “You are very good!” he cried. “You almost have me
completely fooled.”
Karl
saw Reginald frown, and his eyes become icy and sinister. “Lads,” he said,
“let’s board her!”
When
the pirates began laying planks out as bridges to cross over to the yacht, the
captain slinked back into the ship—presumably, as Karl thought, to radio for
help. Now, the young couple looked terrified. “Come on boys,” said the young
man nervously, “the game’s over now. Let’s not get too caught up in this
fantasy.”
Karl,
remaining on the Beacon with Manny, watched as Reginald sent several men to
find the captain, and with the rest, surrounded the young couple, who stood
petrified.
“Karl,”
said Manny, “you must do something. You don’t want those people to die, do
you?”
“You’re
right,” said Karl. “Wait!” he cried, crossing over one of the planks. “Please,
Reginald, don’t harm them.”
“I
won’t,” said Reginald, turning to the young couple and glaring at them
menacingly, “just as long as they give us the booty.”
“Booty?”
said the young man, practically shaking in terror. “What booty?”
Reginald
turned to the men, and they had a good laugh.
“What
booty,” he said. “That’s good.” He pulled out a long curved blade and held it
up to the young man’s neck. “Tell me where it is, lad, and it’ll save you some
blood.”
Just
then, the three pirates who had been sent off to search for the captain, came
back out to the deck, holding the captain in their arms.
“Perhaps
he knows,” said one of the pirates.
Reginald
turned to the captain. “Where is the booty?” he asked.
The
captain, amazed, was speechless. “Men, since our captives no longer seem to
have voices, there’s no use in keeping them alive!”
“No!”
cried Karl, but it was too late. The pirates slit all three of their throats in
a flash, then kicked their bodies overboard.
“Let’s
search the hold!” cried Reginald.
The
men found a large collection of alcohol, close to ten thousand dollars in cash,
jewelry and other sundries, and brought them aboard the Beacon. Karl, in shock,
stood on the deck of the yacht staring at the blood in the water.
“Come
on, lad,” said Reginald, finally. “It’s time to be off.” Karl kept staring, and
did not reply. Reginald grabbed his shoulder. “Don’t be sorry, lad. They were
scoundrels.”
Karl
looked at Reginald, then again at the bloody water.
“Anyways,
they are dead. Say a prayer if you must and let’s be off.”
The
men on the ship began singing a song:
The dead are dead and the living keep
living,
We have the booty so we shall keep singing.
Only those with the treasure have the right
to say
I have done right, and done it my way!
The
song stirred something in Karl, and he forgot all of his reservations. It was
like fuel to a fire that had been kindled by the open sea, and he did not want
it to go out. He wouldn’t let it go out. He would go on, and see this adventure
through.
Chapter
7: The Tale of Koloo
The
next two days were calm and peaceful aboard the ship. The men were left mostly
to their leisure. At night, they sat around the cabin table, drinking and
telling stories. Karl listened with rapt attention to the amazing stories,
taking it all in the way he did his adventure novels at home. In particular,
the story of Kaloo, the African, captured his imagination. Kaloo had turned his
story into an epic poem, which he had memorized, adding slight variations with
each telling. The men, for Karl’s sake, insisted that he tell it, and after
looking bashful for a moment, he began to speak in his deep, rotund voice:
Born in the Village of Kobotulu, near the
Western sea,
A member of the proud tribe of Assana I was.
We worshipped the god Choluku, of the
diamond spear,
Strong in the ways of war craft we were.
My father Kolosi was chief,
He wore a necklace of ivory and gold
And had many wives, including Sibona, my
mother,
Who was farer than the rest.
As a boy I spent my days hunting and fishing
When I was not building huts or working in
the field.
Well feared was I as a fighter I was,
Surely I had my father’s blood.
One night as I slept on my tiger-skin bed,
I was awoken to the sound of screaming.
I was awoken to the sound of screaming.
I went out to see—the Umans, a tribe to the
North
Had come on the backs of horses—where did
they get them?
And with guns—from the Portuguese.
We Assanas fought with spear,
This was the war craft we knew.
But the Umans with their machines of war
Could not be beat, and so
We were defeated, rounded up and taken away.
In chains we were brought to the Northern
coast
Where white men waited in heavy clothes.
We stood as they gazed
In awe of our muscles, in awe of our
strength.
We were bought and put on ships.
I never saw my mother again after that.
Buried in the hold of the ship,
Suffocating in heat and our own excrement,
We waited many days to come to shore,
In great pain and great worry all the while.
To the Americas they brought us—me and my
father
Where again we were sold (luckily together)
To a man who lived in a great palace.
There we were put to work,
But my father was brave
And strong, and proud.
He would not allow the master to hit me.
And so, he was killed.
But it was a grave mistake, for the people
knew my father
And together we rose up in arms.
We killed the white man
And burnt the palace to the ground.
I escaped, made my way North along the coast
Where I met Captain Desperteaux
Who took me aboard the Beacon ship,
Where I could be free.
Now, I take from the rich white man
Whenever I can,
And cut off his head when I feel like it.
Do not challenge me to a fight,
For the blood of the Assanas still lives on
In Kaloo, son of Kolosi, the mighty chief of
the Assanas.
When
the story was finished, the pirates raised their glasses and cheered. Kaloo
looked proud, and mightier than he had before. An aura of impenetrableness
surrounded him, as if formed by the god of his ancestors. From that point on,
Karl often stared at him with awe as he went about his work, noticing more than
ever the ripples of his muscles, and the strength in his eyes. Sometimes, they
would lock eyes, and Kaloo would smile and nod. Karl would nod back, feeling
great awe, and great pride that he, Karl Ransenhoff, shared the same vessel as
Kaloo of the Assanas.
Chapter
8: A Map
After
six days of sailing, the island of Donarath was in sight. It was part of an
archipelago, and as the ship weaved its way through the tiny islands that sat
like green teeth in the gums of the ocean, the sun was just beginning to go
down in the West. As they approached, Karl gazed with wonder at the great stone
facade of the library that was built into the side of the rocky green island,
with little wooden huts scattered about here and there. A single red sailboat
with white sails was resting at the dock. The ship pulled up along side it and
the pirates moored it to the dock.
Karl,
Manny, and the rest of the men got out of the ship and climbed the long stone
stairwell from the dock to the causeway. They went up another flight of stairs
to the library, which, as Karl was amazed to see, was actually a large cavern
built into the side of the island. He gazed up in wonder at the huge marble
capitals that rose to a triangular pediment with carved images of dragons,
demons, and pirates doing battle with sabers. The floor of the hall was also of
marble, and the ceiling was a huge marble dome, on top of which was a hole
through which light entered, and on the pillars that lined the hall were
lanterns. The walls were lined with shelves nearly twenty feet high, and at the
end of the hall was a huge desk, behind which sat an old man with a long white
beard. He was reading a huge book with a red velvet cover and making notes onto
a parchment when the men entered.
Finally,
as the men approached, the man looked up from above a pair of thick reading
glasses. Not surprisingly, he eyed the men with curiosity and disbelief. “Are
you here from the university?” he asked.
“No,
my good man. We are not. We are pirates.”
The
man glanced at Karl, as if he would have an explanation. Karl just shrugged.
“How
can I help you, then?” asked the old man.
“We
are looking for the whereabouts of the Captain William Desperteaux and the
Sorceress Envilisa, and the treasure of Candoleen,” said Reginald.
The
old man’s mouth suddenly dropped open. “You are the pirates of the Beacon!” he
cried. He looked around at the pirates, goggle-eyed.
“That
we are,” said Reginald.
“So
the spell was broken?” the old man gasped.
“It
was. And here’s the culprit,” said Reginald, gesturing toward Karl.
The
old man smiled at him, effusively. “Well,” he said, turning again to Reginald.
“I know exactly where to look. Come with me gentlemen.”
The
old man lead them to a shelf in the back, went up a ladder and pulled off a
large black leather bound book. He brought the book over to the desk, and
opened it. The men leaned over his shoulder as he began flipping through the
pages.
“Ah,
it’s here!” he cried, placing his finger on the page. He began to read: “In the year 1802, the Captain William
Desperteaux and his mistress, the sorceress Envilisa cast a spell upon the crew
of the Beacon, taking the treasure of Candoleen to the island of Dove’s Beak
off the coast of Turkey, where they established the Candoleen Resort.
Well,” said the old man. “They would certainly be dead by now, my friends.”
“No,
no,” said Reginald. “You are forgetting the power of the Candoleen Diamond.
“Of
course!” cried the old man. “I had completely forgot. Well then,” he blinked,
“they may very well still be there. There’s your answer, boys. Ah, here is the
location of the island.” He pointed to a map on the opposite page.
The
old man made a copy of the map and handed it to Reginald, who thanked him
heartily. “For your service,” he said, and handed him a string of pearls he had
stolen from the yacht. Karl was beginning to get a sense of Reginald’s code of
morality. Take from those who can’t help you find the treasure, give to those
who can.
The
men left in high spirits. Karl gave one last look over the library, and
followed them out. “You’ll never see something like this again,” said Manny.
Karl
smiled, and nodded.
Chapter
9: A Brothel
When
the men walked out of the library it was nearing dark. “There won’t be any
navigating out of these islands now, boys,” said Reginald. “It looks like we’ll
have to spend the night.”
Karl
was surprised when the men cheered at this. “Why are they so happy?” he asked
Reginald.
“Because
we get to stay at the Vixen,” was the reply.
As
the men walked down the road past the various huts, they talked in detail about
their past exploits at the Vixen. Some of it was quite shocking. “It’s too bad
ol’ Linda won’t be there anymore,” said the fat pirate. “It would have been
nice to have another go-around with her.”
“Don’t
worry,” said Reginald. “I’m sure the new crop is just as good as the old one.
Unless you’d prefer to get your lovin’ in the graveyard!”
As
the men laughed at Reginald’s joke, Karl considered his situation. “You aren’t
actually considering paying for a woman, are you Karl?” Manny asked. Karl
hadn’t been with a woman since his wife died, and before that, it had been
nearly forty years since he had been with a woman other than his wife. The idea
both excited and frightened him.
The
Vixen was an old wooden bungalow with a second story patio set on a rocky hill
about a quarter of a mile down from the library. The sign post displayed a naked
woman with red hair, winking at the viewer with a come-hither air. A large
group of people were seated on the patio—gruff looking men and voluptuous women
in short skirts—drinking and smoking, talking and laughing. Everyone turned in
wonder to watch the group of pirates enter the establishment. Because of the
large group, some of the men had to wait outside. Karl and Reginald were part
of the group of around twelve men who entered first. Inside was a pub with an
old oak bar and long wooden tables. On the walls were sabers, muskets, maps,
gems, and other objects dating back to the very earliest pirates. A busty red
head was serving beer behind the bar to a rowdy group of men and women seated
around the long table. The room went silent when Karl, Reginald, and the other
pirates of the Beacon entered.
One
of the men at the table, an African pirate with a large machine gun strapped
around his shoulder, was apparently the leader of the group. “Check it out,
boys,” he said. “Pirates of the Caribbean.” His men laughed.
“Interesting
musket,” said Reginald, grabbing the hilt of his sword. “I wonder if it fires
off as quick as your mouth.”
Karl
ran over to him quickly and grabbed him by the shoulder. “Reginald,” he said.
“Let me talk to you.”
“About
what, lad?”
“Those
guns are machine guns. Just one of them is enough to blow us all away.”
“Hm,”
said Reginald, grabbing his beard. “I see. Don’t worry, lad. We won’t do
anything brash.”
Reginald
and the rest of the men went to the bar and ordered pints of beer, then sat at
the table near the other pirates. As they began drinking, Karl could tell that
Reginald was still stewing over the other pirate’s insult. He set down his mug,
and began whispering into the ear of the pirate sitting next to him. Then, that
pirate whispered into the ear of the next pirate, and on and on till Karl
finally grasped what was going on. He looked at Reginald and shook his head.
Reginald just smiled at him wryly. About a minute later, Karl counted to three,
and before the other pirates could even look up, the men of the Beacon pounced
upon them with their sabers. In a flash, throats were cut and blood filled the
hall. Karl ducked beneath the table, along with Manny. “What’s going on?” the
dog asked.
“Stupidity,”
said Karl.
Machine
gun shots were fired, there were screams, and then silence. Karl waited
fearfully, closing his eyes, expecting death at any moment. Then he heard the
sound of loud cheers.
“It’s
alright Karl,” said Reginald. Karl opened his eyes and looked up from beneath
the table. Then men of the Beacon stood wiping the blood from their blades in
triumph. “The bastards never knew what hit ‘em.”
Karl
and Manny came out from underneath the table and looked around. The women stood
against the wall in terror. Two men of the Beacon lay on the floor, dead. Karl
stared at Reginald, who just smiled and put his hand on Karl’s shoulder.
“Thanks for the warning,” he said. “But no pirate takes an insult well, my lad.
These bastards should have either been friendlier, or more ready to do battle.
Barkeep!” he cried. “These women shall be ours for the night!”
The
men, leering, approached the women and gave them their sly greetings. After a
while, the women seemed entertained—enchanted even—by the men’s old-fashioned
gruffness. Karl, with Manny, sat alone in the corner, watching. Manny did not
seemed pleased by the debauchery. “Do you believe this, Karl?” he said. “No dog
I’ve ever known has acted with such perversity.”
Reginald,
with a woman on each arm, approached. “Why sit ye’ here, ignoring the fun?” he
said. “Come. This is Yvette.” He pushed forward the woman on his left, a buxom
black haired woman with pale skin, rosy cheeks, and dark eyes.
“Hello
there, Karl,” she said in a husky voice. “Reginald has told me so much about
you. Mind if I pull up a chair?”
Karl
glared at Reginald, who smiled, turned, and walked away with the redhead on his
arm. Yvette pulled up a chair and sat down next to Karl. “Is this your dog?”
she asked, petting Manny.
“It
is. Manny is his name.”
“Manny!
Aren’t you beautiful!” And she rubbed his shaggy face. “So Karl,” she said,
looking up at him with her soft, seemingly innocent eyes. “You know, you were
the first one I spotted when you and your companions walked in. I thought to
myself, there’s a kind, lonely soul who’s in need of a bit of love.”
Karl
blushed and fought back a smile.
“Do
you know,” she said in a whisper, “there are some men that come in here who I
can barely stand to give away my services to. They’re brutes, mostly.” She put
her hand on his leg. “But for you, I’d give myself away for free.” She put her
finger to her lips. “Shh. Don’t tell anyone, OK?” She winked. Again, Karl
blushed.
“I’ll
tell you what,” Yvette continued. “We can go upstairs. There’s a very good
bottle of chardonnay in my bedroom, and two glasses. I’ve been saving it for a
special occasion. I think tonight is the night. What do you say?”
Karl
looked at her smiling face. Her full lips were parted in a smile, and her dark
eyes glistened.
“Because,”
she said, in a low sultry whisper, “I like you, and...I want you.” She
laughed—a sweet, girlish laugh.
“I
suppose I can have a drink with you,” said Karl, feeling himself get hot.
They
went upstairs, where Yvette lead Karl into a small, quaint bedroom. The bed was
made with a red knitted blanket and a large fluffy white pillow. There was a
small wooden desk with a lamp and a high backed chair, a dresser, and a
cabinet. “You can sit on the bed, if you like,” said Yvette as she went to the
cabinet, opened it and pulled out a bottle of wine and two glasses. She sat
down in the high backed chair and poured the wine. She handed the glass to
Karl, and held up her own glass in the dim light of the lamp. “Here’s to you
and your adventures, Karl,” she said. They clinked glasses and drank. The wine
was warm and sweet, and Karl’s thirst seemed to blossom like a flower when he
drank it. He looked at the glass in amazement.
“This
is delicious,” he said.
“I
know,” said Yvette. Yvette, who was wearing a short black skirt, had her legs
crossed, and she was rubbing her forefinger back and forth down the length of
her thigh. “Do you like me, Karl?” she asked.
Karl
felt a lump growing in his throat. He nodded.
“Good.”
She set down her glass, got up, and straddled Karl on the bed. Karl gulped down
the rest of his wine and put the glass down at the end of the bed. As she began
to kiss him, he lay back, and like the Beacon had been carried by the force of
the wind, allowed himself to get carried away by the feel of Yvette’s body
against his.
Chapter
10: An Ailment
Karl
awoke the next morning with the light from the little window shining on his
face and Yvette draped all over him. He carefully moved out from under her so
as not to wake her. He looked at her as she slept. Her skin looked like marble
in the morning light. He bent down and kissed her on the head. He dressed, and
took out a pair of diamond earrings from his pant pocket, which Reginald had
given him from the yacht, and placed them on the dresser. He went downstairs
and found the rest of them men sitting at the table, drinking. Manny was there,
too. He came up to him, wagging his tail, and jumped up to kiss him on the
face.
“Here
he is!” cried Reginald.
“He
looks like a new man!” cried the swarthy pirate.
Karl,
smiling bashfully, pulled up a chair. Manny put his head in his lap. “You still
love me best, don’t you Karl?” he said. Karl patted his head, and he seemed
pleased.
Some
of the women from last night were there also, seated on some of the men’s lap.
“Would you like a drink?” asked the bar keep.
Karl
considered. “Sure,” he said. “Pour me a beer.”
The
pirates laughed and Reginald slapped him on the back. “Feeling a bit looser
this morning, are we lad?”
The
map was spread out on the table. Using a compass, Reginald charted the course.
As Karl sat there, listening to the men, he began to feel incredibly
uncomfortable. There was an itch in his genital region. He put his head in his
hands. “Oh no,” he said.
“What
is it?” said Reginald, looking up.
Karl
sat, for a moment, considering. “I...I have an itch in my crotch.”
The
men began rolling with laughter.
“Did
you sleep with Yvette?” asked the bar keep.
Karl
nodded.
“Damn
it!” said the barkeep. “I told her to wash up good! It’s the crabs, I’m afraid.”
Karl,
hunched over in his chair, balled up his fist and moaned.
“No
worries, lad,” said Reginald. “We’ll get it taken care of. Have you any
Stinging Cream?” he asked the barkeep.
The
barkeep nodded.
“Well,”
said Reginald, turning to Karl. “All you must do is shave off your pubic hairs
and apply the cream. You can use my blade, if you like.”
Karl
gave Reginald a glaring look.
“I’ll
help, if you like,” said Reginald, and burst out laughing.
Karl
used the bar keep’s razor and did what needed to be done. When he applied the
cream, he let out such a loud yell that everyone in the house heard him. Karl
was so angry he nearly went back upstairs to take the earrings he had left for
Yvette, but finally decided that she had been sweet to him, and that last night’s
pleasures made up for the pains of the morning.
The
men left just before ten o’clock that morning, stopping first at a supply store
before heading off. The plan was to head back west, and sail through the Strait
of Magellan before heading North to the coast of Turkey. Karl thought about
informing Reginald of the existence of the Panama Canal, but when he considered
the inspections they would be forced to go through there, he decided the Strait
of Magellan was the better idea. It would be a long journey, and Karl,
realizing how lucky they had been so far not have run into any coastal
authorities, was worried about this prospect. When Karl expressed his worries
to Reginald, Reginald did not seem too concerned. “We shall deal with whatever
comes,” he said. “Whether it be storm, sea kraken, or sea police.” Karl,
realizing it was no use arguing, kept the better part of his worries to
himself.
Chapter
11: A Stowaway
On
the third night of sailing a huge storm blew in from the West and knocked the
ship off course. The men, in desperation, landed the Beacon on a small deserted
island about three hundred miles to the Northeast of French Polynesia. They
moored the ship to a large rock on the coast, and settled in for the night to
wait out the storm.
The
next morning, they went ashore and made camp to eat breakfast. It was a
beautiful white-sand beach, and some of the men went collecting coconuts from
the palms that lined the thick forest the filled the interior of the island.
Karl sat with Manny on the beach a ways off from the rest of the men, staring
out at the ocean. As he sat, dreaming about Yvette and her beautiful
marble-white skin, a whiff of something caught his nose. It smelled like meat
cooking. He looked down the beach at the other men. They hadn’t built a fire.
So where could it be coming from? He stood up, and followed his nose to the
edge of the forest.
“Where
are you going?” asked Manny.
Karl
began to make his way through the forest. The smell of cooking was growing
stronger. As he clamored through the thick brush, smoke became visible, and he
heard a most strange sound. It was the sound of singing—a quiet, cheerful
singing. Then, in a clearing, he came upon a most strange sight. A small old
man with a white beard was crouching beside a campfire, holding a stick with a
silver fish impaled at the end. He was barefoot, and wore dark corduroys that
had been torn away at the knee exposing wiry, tan legs; a red cotton tee shirt;
and a white boating hat. He looked up at Karl with wild black eyes. Seeing
Karl, he stood up, his mouth agape in stupefied wonder. Then, after a moment,
that same mouth worked itself into a wide smile, revealing a heavily gapped set
of brown and yellow teeth. His right arm rose, slowly.
Karl,
bewildered, began to turn away.
“Wait!”
cried the old man. “Don’t go!” He dropped the stick he was holding and ran up
to Karl. “I’m Peter,” he said, holding out his dirt-stained hand, the nails of
which were long and yellow. There was a pungent odor of stale sweat about his
body, and his breath was ten times as bad. Gnats swarmed about his head.
Karl
took his hand. It was rough and dry. “Karl,” he said.
“Are
you part of the rescue party?” Peter asked, a hopeful gleam in his eye.
“No,”
said Karl, “I...” It occurred to him that to tell this man the truth about why
he was here would be utterly ridiculous, and far too complicated. So instead he
said he was here sailing with friends.
“Oh,
I see. I see,” said Peter, nodding his head. “Could you take me aboard?” he
asked. “You could drop me off at the nearest port. I won’t cause any problems.”
He smiled his gap-toothed smile. There was something not quite right about this
man. There was a look in his eye of almost clinical insanity. Karl thought he
had been here alone for a very long time.
“I
don’t see why not,” he said. “Only, you should know, my friends are a
little...” He was going to say odd, but looking at Peter, he thought this would
be superfluous at best.
“No
worries, my friend!” said Peter. “I can get along with anyone. You see, I’m a
fisherman. My boat was shattered against the rocks and I’ve been stranded here
for, well...close to ten years.”
The
man explained to Karl how he had managed to survive on the island. The poor man
had suffered much, indeed. As he talked, Karl led him out of the forest to
where the other men were camped. The pirates eyed Peter suspiciously as they
approached. Karl introduced Peter, and the pirates welcomed him warmly. The
man, oddly enough, did not seem at all befuddled by their appearance. Perhaps,
after ten years alone on the island, thought Karl, he had been drained of any
sense of the absurd. That, or he was just too anxious to get off the island to
judge those who would take him.
After
they had had their fill of food and drink, the men packed up their things and
went back aboard. It was decided that the old man would be dropped off at the
Southern tip of South America, which was about a five day’s journey. The old
man thanked Karl and Reginald heartily, and went to the cabin for a long sleep.
“Strange
old man,” said Reginald to Karl after Peter had left. “He’s got a rather
cackled look, I do say.”
Karl
agreed. Actually, he thought the old man would fit in quite nicely with this
group of wild men.
Chapter
12: Thief
Peter
served as great entertainment for the men of the Beacon. He was full of good
humor, and when he was drunk (which was basically all the time) he would tell
incredible tales of his experiences on the island. The man had suffered a great
deal. He had broken his leg in a fall, and the tale of how he managed to
survive was harrowing to say the least. He also talked about his time spent as
a fisherman. Apparently, he had been after a rare breed of tuna when he was
stranded on the island. He could be rather volatile, however, even when
compared with the pirates. During a game of poker one night he attacked one of
them, and was nearly killed. Only through Karl’s persuasion was he spared.
One
night, while drinking with Peter and some of the other men on deck, several of
the pirates brought out a fiddle, a flute, and a tom-tom and began to play.
Peter, drunk, got up from his seat and began to dance. The men clapped their
hands and cheered the old man on. He was a very nimble dancer, and Karl found him
enchanting to watch. Even Manny seemed completely captivated by him.
“Now
watch this!” cried Peter, and he fell forward onto his hands in a handstand,
and began walking about on his hands. Then, Karl noticed, something fell out of
his pockets. The other men noticed it too. When Peter stood up from his
handstand, Reginald went over and picked the objects up and inspected them.
“What’s this?” he cried. He held up in his hands two diamond pendants, objects
the men had taken from the yacht. “Where did you get these?” cried Reginald.
Peter, his eyes wide with terror, began to back away.
“I
found those, um...On the floor in the cabin. Honestly, I...”
Reginald
grabbed him by the shirt. “Grab the ropes, lads. It looks like we have a common
thief on board.”
The
pirates bound Peter in the ropes, and Karl, greatly perturbed, approached
Reginald. “Reginald, what are you going to do?” he asked.
“He’s
a thief. Therefore, he’s got to pay the thief’s price.”
The
men led Peter to the plank on the edge of the ship. “Reginald,” said Karl.
“There must be another way. Can’t we just leave him somewhere? Maroon him?”
Reginald
smiled warmly. “I see,” he said. “You feel for the old man, and don’t want to
see him die. Well,” he placed his hand on his shoulder. “Pirates have laws too,
my lad. They may seem barbaric to you, but it’s the way we survive. Without our
laws, we cease to be men. Don’t you worry,” he said. “The Lord above knows
what’s best, and Peter’s soul will go to the place it needs to go.”
Karl
was on the verge of saying something more, but he knew that there was no use
arguing. Besides, he was beginning to get used to the reality of the senseless
death that was taking place around him. He reassured himself by telling himself
that it was nothing he could control, and that he himself was not perpetrating
any crime. Yet, he still felt somewhat guilty. He decided to numb this guilt by
drinking rum.
The
men were gathered around the plank as the swarthy pirate, with saber drawn,
forced Peter down the length of the plank. “Have you any last words before you
take the plunge?” asked Reginald from on deck.
Peter,
whose eyes were sunken in abject sorrow, looking down, said, “I only meant to
do right in this life. But, alas, the Lord cursed me. I blame him for this
travesty, not you, my good men!”
And
with that the swarthy pirate put the tip of his blade on Peter’s stomach. Peter
turned around, and with a deep sigh, jumped into the water. The men could hear
him splashing about, and they began to sing:
Take the plunge! Take the bath!
The ocean’s warm and inviting!
Reach out your hands, but nothing’s there!
Down you’ll go—there’s no use fighting!
To break the code means paying the price!
The sharks are hungry, and a thieve’s flesh
tastes nice!
Karl sat listening
to this song on the on the other side of the ship, drinking his bottle of rum
and feeling very depressed. Manny was sidled up next to him. “I don’t like
this,” he said to Karl. “These men are cruel.”
“They are indeed,”
said Karl. “But what can we do? We’re pirates now, Manny. Either we put up with
their brutality, or we become victims of it ourselves.”
And yet there was
part of him, as he listened to the pirates’ song, that felt a surge of vitality
at the thought of being involved in such a horrible spectacle. Perhaps he was
beginning to see himself in a new light. He began to wonder if, should the
situation arise, he would be able to take another man’s life himself, and
almost desired to see if he could. These pirates were a different breed of men,
it was true. But they were only different because their lives had made them so.
Would living the life of a pirate make Karl like them? He wondered. And in
fact, he sensed that the transformation was already underway.
Chapter
13: War
The next day, Reginald
presented Karl with a gold-hilted saber and a leather belt with a scabbard.
“What’s this for?” asked Karl.
“’Tis for your own
protection,” he said. “You never know what danger you might find yourself in,
my lad. Now you need to learn to use it.”
Karl spent the day
practicing with the swarthy pirate, Joe Connors. Joe taught him how to control
the saber from his wrist, and how to maintain balance in a fight. Karl, despite
his age and inexperience, was a quick learner. He grew proud of his new sword,
and even more so of his new skills. The next three days he practiced
constantly.
On the third day,
at about three o’clock in the afternoon, the man in the crow’s nest called out
to the rest of the men. “Ship! Ship! Coming straight for us! About a mile off!”
“What is it, lad?”
asked Reginald.
“I don’t know,
sir. It’s very large. Perhaps a war vessel!”
“Let me go up
there and look,” said Karl.
Reginald nodded.
Karl climbed up to the crow’s nest and took the telescope. Peering through it,
he saw a large frigate, heavily armed. “It’s a war vessel alright, and there’s
no use trying to blow it up. It’s made of steel.”
“Steel?” said
Reginald, with disbelief.
Karl came back
down and advised Reginald to cooperate with whoever it was that was coming, and
Reginald agreed. However, as Karl stood gazing out over the water, Reginald
secretly told his men to go into the hold and collect the machine guns they had
acquired on Donarath, and wait there.
As the frigate
approached Karl saw that there were a group of about ten men on the boat’s
deck. One of them, a handsome older man with graying black hair wearing a gray
suit, appeared to be the captain. The rest of them, wearing the same gray
suits, were armed with machine guns. They pulled up alongside the Beacon and
set out a metal bridge-ladder to cross over. Reginald, Karl, and several other
pirates were there to greet them. “Ahoy there!” cried Reginald as the captain
and his men crossed over to the Beacon. “How can we be of service to ye’?”
“My name is
Captain Alvarez,” the elder man said in a Hispanic accent. “This is my ship, La
Merienda. We are with the Chilean Navy. Word has come to us of a ship moving
through the South Pacific. Supposedly they pirated a yacht about a week ago,
and killed those on board. I’m afraid we will have to inspect your ship,
Mr....”
“Pierce,” said
Reginald. “Reginald Pierce.”
The captain of La
Merienda nodded. “Yes, well...we need to inspect your ship, I’m afraid. You and
your men can wait on deck. Are there are any more men on board?”
Reginald shook his
head. Karl, recognizing Reginald’s lie, became perturbed.
Five of the men,
including the captain, went down into the Beacon’s hold, and five men stayed on
deck to keep an eye on the pirates. “That’s a lovely uniform,” said Reginald to
one of the officers. “What material is that?”
“Not sure,” said
the officer.
“Do you mind if I
have a feel?” asked Reginald. Just as Reginald was beginning to walk up to the
officer, machine gun fire was heard coming from the hold. The officers,
surprised, looked over, and Reginald, along with the rest of the men, drew
their swords and flew upon the officers. Karl ran, along with Manny to the
other side of the ship, ducking. He heard gun shots, screaming, and when he
looked back, five men—three officers and two pirates—lay dead on the ground.
Reginald and two other pirates were struggling with the remaining two officers.
A large gun from La Merienda was fired into the side of the Beacon. Then, the
pirates from the hold ran out with their machine guns. Reginald and the other
pirates on deck finally finished off the remaining officers, and they, along
with the pirates from the hold, crossed the bridge over to La Merienda. Another
large gun shot was fired into the Beacon. Karl watched as Reginald and the
pirates stormed into the frigate. He heard machine gun fire, and screams. Then,
as he felt the Beacon slowly beginning to sink, silence. He waited in great
fear.
Finally, the
pirates reemerged. Or, what was left of them. Reginald, along with ten of the
over twenty pirates that had went in, came out, including Joe Connors and Kaloo.
The blonde and the fat pirate were not with them, however. “What happened?”
cried Karl as they crossed back over to the Beacon.
“They’re done for,
lad.”
Karl, amazed, was
still not appeased. “But, did they radio for help?”
“We took care of
that, too,” said Reginald. “No need to worry.”
Karl would have
asked for more detail, but he was in shock. “Every Navy in the entire world is
going to be after us!” he cried.
“No, lad,” said
Reginald, “No. We took the radio man hostage and forced him to say everything
was good. Then we killed him.”
Karl fell to his
knees. Manny, concerned for his master, tried his best to comfort him.
“We will need to
repair the ship,” said Reginald. “We should be able to make it to a port by
nightfall, which is plenty of time, I think. Haul the bodies overboard, men!”
Karl thought of
all the men who had died. This was no longer a simple game of playing pirates.
This was real war. And something told him, the worst was yet to come. Reginald
directed the men to bolster the Beacon’s side, and do their best to repair the
other damage done to the ship. They bucketed out as much water as they could,
but they were still riding low in the water. After giving his orders, Reginald
approached Karl, who sat in his chair on deck, brooding. “Come along lad,” said
Reginald. “Join me for a drink! I’d say we deserve it!”
Chapter 14: A Fight
Reginald was right
in his calculations. They reached the port of Hermelles on the Western side of
the Strait of Gibralter by nightfall. Hermelles was a hotbed for illegal
activity. Even the ship builders they brought the Beacon to for repair were
involved in it. After leaving the Beacon with them, the pirates went to explore
the town. It was so full of motley characters the pirates barely stood out. A
group of motorcycle gangsters rode past on their Harleys, street performers
swallowed swords and blew fire into the air, men were gathered in a sandlot
watching a mongoose do battle with a viper, and the town was filled with
saloons brothels and gambling houses of a all sorts.
The men spotted a
saloon called Vega’s, and went inside. There turned out to be a brothel
upstairs. Karl, still repenting from his experience at the last brothel,
decided to wait for them in the saloon with Manny. He ordered a beer and sat at
a table in the corner, Manny at his feet. There were just a few people in the
saloon, as it was still relatively early. A big, burly man wearing a leather
jacket cut off at the sleeves, exposing enormous arms, and a black bandana,
kept looking over in Karl’s direction. He was seated across from two other men
dressed in a similar fashion. Finally, the man put out the cigarette he was
smoking, took a swig of his beer, and got up. He approached Karl ominously. The
other two men turned around to watch.
“That’s a nice
looking dog,” said the man in a deep, gruff, sinister voice.
“Thank you,” said
Karl.
“What’s his name?”
“Manny.”
At hearing the
sound of his name, Manny looked over at Karl, then at the large man standing in
front of him, who bent down and petted his head. “Manny,” he said warmly.
“That’s a good dog. Well,” he stood back up and nodded over at the two men he
had been seated with. They stood up. One of them was carrying a muzzle attached
to a leash. Karl, seeing the two men, put his hand on the hilt of his sword. He
heard a click. The man had drawn a pistol, and was pointing it straight at
Karl. “We’ll be taking your dog now, Mr.”
As the two men
approached, Karl considered his options. He couldn’t fight off all three men.
He was certain of that, but perhaps if he put up a fight, he could get Manny to
run away. He stood up and moved to draw his sword, but before he could draw it
all the way out, the man with the gun knocked him on the top of his head with
the butt, and he fell on the floor. Manny, cornered, bared his teeth. The other
two men grabbed him, and Karl, in a daze, watched as they muzzled him and
dragged him out the door. Karl, collecting his senses, got up, and walked
slowly to the door. When he was outside, he saw the men loading Manny into the
back of a pickup truck. As he approached, again the burly man pointed his gun.
“You stay right there,” he said. Karl froze. The men got into the truck, and
drove away. Karl watched as the truck drove off, Manny looking back at his
master with worried eyes.
“Help me, Karl!”
Manny cried.
Karl ran after the
truck, but it soon disappeared. Distraught, he went back to the pub to inform
the rest of the men.
Karl climbed the
wooden staircase up to the brothel, and found the men gathered in a lounge with
a bevy of women about them, smoking hookah. “Reginald!” he cried. “Someone’s
taken Manny!”
“Who?” said
Reginald.
“Three men. They
muzzled him and drove off with him in a red pickup truck. I don’t know where
they’re taking him.”
“There’s only one
place they would be taking him, lad. To the fighting pits. Men, let’s be off.”
The pirates paid
the whores for their services and left, along with Karl, who was greatly
perturbed by what Reginald had told him. Manny was a strong dog, but he had no
fighting experience. If they should arrive too late, Karl was certain Manny
wouldn’t survive his fight. Reginald asked the bar keep where the local
fighting pits were, and they set off. It was a ways away, all across town—a
distance of maybe four miles. They had no choice but to walk. The whole time
they walked, Karl imagined horrible things.
The fighting pit was in a sandlot behind an
old saloon. A pit was dug in the center of the lot, and a low metal fence
surrounded it. When Karl and the men arrived, hundreds of boisterous people
were gathered around the fence. There was a fight already in progress. Karl and
the men pressed their way through the crowd to see. Karl’s worst fears were
realized. Manny was standing in the corner of the fence, and another dog—a
large brown mastiff—was standing in the middle, eyeing him menacingly, and
snarling. “Wait!” cried Karl. “That’s my dog! Stop the fight!”
Several large men
with machine guns were perched on a hill above the pit, watching the crowd. He
now wished the pirates had brought the machine guns with them so they could end
the fight. The pirates approached the fence, but there was nothing they could
do. The fight was underway. “Do something!” cried Karl to Reginald.
“This whole crowd
is liable to turn on us, and besides, those men have us square in their
sights.”
Karl looked.
Indeed the men with machine guns were in perfect position to gun them down
should they do anything. It was useless. They would have to wait it out.
Karl watched in
agony, as the mastiff charged at Manny. Manny was quick, however, and was able
to dodge his attacks. Finally, on one of the mastiff’s charges, Manny’s right
leg was bitten. This slowed him down some, but not much. Then next time the
mastiff charged, he went straight for Manny’s throat. Manny dodged this
attacked and bit the mastiff’s eye. The mastiff yelped, and backed away.
“That’s the way,
Manny!” cried Reginald. “Dodge and strike!”
Karl couldn’t
believe that Reginald and the rest of the men seemed to be enjoying this. He
could barely watch.
Finally, after
drawing some blood, it seemed that instinct kicked in and Manny took on a
remarkable fighting form. He dodged this way and that, springing on his agile
legs, nipping at the big mastiff’s neck and face. The mastiff kept going
straight for Manny’s neck, but each time Manny would move his whole body out of
the way and slash at the mastiff’s side. The mastiff, now completely bloodied,
was not deterred. Finally, despite Manny’s quickness, the mastiff got hold of
his neck. Manny let out a loud yelp as the giant dog’s jaws closed around his
jugular. Then, however, Kaloo, standing at such a distance off that he would
not be perceived, grabbed a stone and threw it as hard as he could at the
mastiff’s head, making a direct hit. The mastiff loosened his jaws and
stumbled. Then, seeing his chance, Manny went right for the mastiff, jumping on
his back and clamping his jaws around the back of his neck. This was useless,
however, as this part of the mastiff’s body was well protected. So Manny
repositioned himself on the mastiff’s side, and managed to get a lock on the
underside of his neck. He tore the flesh right open, and the mastiff fell to
the ground. Manny did not let go until the mastiff stopped struggling, and lay
still, with blood gushing from his neck in a river. The crowd cheered. As the
handler came into the pit to collect Manny, Karl and the pirates approached.
“How much for the
golden?” Reginald asked him.
“A thousand
dollars,” said the handler.
Reginald reached
into his pocket and pulled out two large diamonds, and five hundred dollars in
cash. “Will this do?” he asked.
The handler
inspected the diamonds. He nodded. Manny, bloodied and exhausted, was turned
over to Karl, who embraced his dog and wept tears of joy and relief.
“Oh, Manny!” he
cried. “I’m so sorry!”
Manny licked his
face. “It’s OK, Karl. I fought hard,” he said.
“You fought,” said
Karl, “like a champion.”
Chapter 15
Their ship
repaired, Karl and the men of the Beacon left Hermelles two days later and made
their way North through the Atlantic. That first night of sailing, after
spending a couple of hours with Manny in the main quarters to make sure he fell
asleep and was not in too much pain, Karl joined Reginald and the rest of the
men in the captain’s cabin for a bout of drinking. When Karl entered, the men
were drunkenly discussing the various ways they would spend their money once
the treasure had been found.
“I shall buy me an
island in the South Pacific,” said Joe Connors after finishing off a glass of
rum. “I’ll raise pigs like my father (curse his soul), and eat bacon every
morning and ham every night. I’ll have a hundred wives, too—each prettier than
the last. Of course I’ll share them with all of you whenever you come to visit!
Hahaha!”
“As for me,” said
Kaloo, “I will buy the palace of the man who killed my father. I will have
hundreds of white slaves, and a great library that will hold the greatest and
rarest of all books. A private orchestra will play for me and my family each
night, and great golden spears will line my halls. My children will be taught
all of the languages of the world by the most learned men, and they will become
great scholars and princes. In my garden there will be exotic plants from my native
Africa, and a great golden fountain studded with rubies and sapphires. I will
wear silk clothes and pearl-studded slippers as I walk about my grounds with my
beautiful wife of royal blood.”
“Ahh,” said the
men, and nodded their heads. “What about you, Reginald?” asked Joe Connors.
“What will you do with your portion of the treasure?”
“Me?” He lifted
his head in contemplation. “I will buy a nice house on the beach, and marry a
beautiful young woman. She will look like...” He cut himself off. The rest of
the men looked embarrassed. Karl wondered why. “No matter,” continued Reginald.
“She will be beautiful. That is all that I require. And what about you?” he
turned to Karl.
Karl was taken
aback. He had not even considered the idea. He didn’t even realize he would be
getting a portion of the treasure. Of course, now that it hit him, it made
perfect sense. “I don’t know,” he said. “I don’t really need anything.”
“Come on lad!”
said Reginald. “You don’t mean to tell us you want to keep living in that tiny
shack, do you?”
Karl laughed. “I
suppose not,” he said. “A bigger place would be nice. Certainly on the beach.”
He thought of his son, and his granddaughter, who he had never met, and sighed.
“Yes,” he said, “that would be nice.”
Later, after the
rest of the men had headed off to sleep, Karl sat alone with Reginald.
“Reginald,” he said. “Earlier, when you were talking, I couldn’t help but get
the feeling that you were referring to a particular woman.”
Reginald looked up
at the ceiling. “It’s true,” he said. “There was a woman in my life.”
“Who was she?”
asked Karl.
Reginald poured
himself a glass of rum, downed it, and placed the glass on the table. “Ah,” he
began “She was a beauty, she was. Sharon was her name. I can remember the first
time I saw her. I was in Ireland preparing for our journey to Kojiwana to go
after the Treasure of Candoleen, and one night I stopped in at a local pub. She
was serving the customers their drinks, and I prayed to God Almighty that she
would be serving me. ‘What’ll it be?’ she said, leaning over the bar.
“’Give me a pint
of your finest ale,’ I said. She came back with my pint. ‘What’s your name?’ I
asked. ‘Sharon,’ she said. ‘Sharon,’ I say. ‘You don’t belong in a place like
this. You belong in a palace.’
“She smiled. ‘And
I suppose you’re the one to give me one,’ she said. With that she turned away,
and I was in love.”
“So what
happened?” asked Karl.
“I went back to
the bar night after night. I continued to flirt with her. She seemed taken with
me. So, the night before our voyage, I stayed after the bar closed, and waited
for her. We sat up till morning, drinking and talking. She told me all about
her life, how she lived with her parents and ten siblings in a small house, and
how she had been working to help her family since she was very young. She was a
jovial, bright-spirited woman, but I could tell that her situation was making
her sad.
“’I’ll tell you
what,’ I said, ‘I am leaving in a few days, but I promise to come back, and
when I do, I will be a rich man. I will take you out of your parent’s home and
put you in a palace. You don’t believe me?’
“She looked
incredulous. I reached into my pocket and took out my lucky gold coin.
“’Here,” I said,
giving her the coin. ‘Keep this as a sign of my vow. I will return to you. By
the Lord Almighty, I swear it.’
“She leaned over
and kissed me. When I came to the dock that morning, I was in high spirits,
thinking the future was all laid out for me. Of course, it was. Only it wasn’t
the future I had in mind.” Reginald sighed and hung his head.
“You will find
someone else, Reginald,” said Karl.
“Perhaps,” said
Reginald. “But my heart is still with Sharon, wherever she be. Ah, well...” He
poured himself and Karl a glass of rum. “Here’s to new beginnings.” The two men
clinked glasses and drank.
Chapter
16: A Party
The
next few days were smooth sailing as the Beacon made its way up through the
Atlantic. They stayed as far away from the coasts as possible, to avoid further
trouble. About five hundred miles North of the tip of South America, they came
upon a small island. From a distance, they could see a large upscale bungalow
perched on the island’s rocky coast, and as they grew nearer, they saw that it
was full of people, and the sound of music playing could be heard.
“What
a party!” Joe Connors cried.
“Perhaps
they wouldn’t mind a few uninvited guests,” said Reginald, smiling.
Karl
immediately sensed trouble, but he knew there was no use trying to convince
Reginald. For him, all the world was a giant party, and he meant to crash it by
whatever means necessary. The Beacon pulled up to the dock, and Reginald
greeted the astonished party-goers. “Ahoy there!” he cried. “We saw that you
were having a party, and thought we might join you. We have plenty of booze to
share. The owner of the house stepped forward to the edge of the patio.
“Who
are you?” he asked.
“We
are merely pirates of the open sea, looking for a good time before we carry on
in our mission.”
Another
man approached the owner of the house. “Let them in,” he said. “They seem like
interesting characters.”
“You
say you have booze?” the owner of the house asked.
“Ay!
That we do, my good man. That we do.”
“Well,”
said the house owner, “bring it in.
As
Karl and the pirates entered the house, everyone turned to them with curiosity.
“Good day to you ma’am,” said Reginald, bowing to a beautiful blonde woman in a
pink dress. She seemed utterly pleased. The men carried in a bag full of booze,
and began laying out the bottles on the large oak bar inside the house. Joe
Connors, carrying the now empty bag, began to walk around the house, pulling
trinkets from the shelves, and putting them in the bag. When Karl noticed him,
he gave Joe a menacing look. Joe just smiled and winked at him, and carried on
in his thievery. All of the guests at the party were terribly drunk, and were
completely amused by the party crashers.
Karl
overheard a conversation between a busty brunette and Reginald. “You say you’re
pirates?” the woman asked.
“That
we are,” said Reginald, preparing his pipe.
“How
fascinating!” the woman cried. “It’s like something out of a dream, isn’t it
David?” She turned to a tall man with dark hair in a blue suit.
“It
certainly is. But you all seem so friendly! Just how I’d imagine pirates to
be.”
“We’re
not all friendly,” said Reginald. “Some wouldn’t hesitate to kill you for that
nice outfit you’re wearing.”
The
man laughed. “Charming!” he said. “Absolutely charming!”
Karl
wondered through the house. It was extremely opulent, with oak paneling on the
walls, chandeliers on the ceiling, and valuables of all sorts elegantly placed
around the rooms. In one room, there was a karaoke machine. A man was singing,
“Two Tickets to Paradise” and a crowd of people stood around him, watching.
Several pirates entered the room and also watched. “Strange music,” said Kaloo.
“What is it?”
“It’s
called Rock n’ Roll,” said Karl.
“I
like it,” said Kaloo.
When
the song was over, Kaloo volunteered to sing a song, but he was unable to
decide what to sing. “I don’t know any modern songs,” he said.
“Don’t
you know any songs?” a woman asked him, delighted with the large man.
“I
do, but they are all pirate songs.”
“Well
sing us one!” the woman cried.
Everyone
else cheered on this idea.
“You
sing into this,” said the flushed looking man who had been singing, handing the
microphone to Kaloo.
“Hello,”
said Kaloo into the microphone. He heard his amplified voice and was astonished
and delighted. “OK. I will sing you a song I know. Here it goes.
We pirates like the gold, we stack it to the
moon.
We pirates like loose women, too.
If we could, we’d make love all morning,
night and afteroon,
With bottles of rum in between.
Then if a fool comes who wants our gold,
We chop off his head and drink the blood.
We pirates are known for our lust for life,
No amount of gold, no amount of love,
No amount of blood will suffice!
We take what we need, and if it upsets you
Go to Hell! is what we say.
We pirates only do what we want to do.
When
he was finished singing, the drunken crowd hooted and hollared in delight.
“More! More!” they cried. Only, just then, a loud crash was heard from an
adjoining room. Everyone ran to see. A man was laying where a glass table, now
broken, used to lie, and above him Joe Connors looked down menacingly. Karl ran
to Reginald, who stood nearby.
“What
happened?” asked Karl.
“He
accused Joe of stealing,” said Reginald.
“What’s
in the bag?” a man asked, brazenly.
“Just
a few trinkets. Parting gifts.”
The
brazen man approached Joe, going for the bag, and Joe pulled out his saber.
“Back off, my friend, unless you wish to lose your head.”
Karl
grabbed Reginald’s arm. “I think it’s time to go,” he said. “Please.”
Reginald
smiled. “Lads, what do you say? Shall we leave these good people in peace?”
“Hell
no!” cried Joe. “Let’s get the lot.”
Reginald
looked again at Karl, smiling, then back at Joe. Reginald nodded, and Joe,
smiling with delight, plunged his sword into the brazen man’s neck. The rest of
the pirates pulled out their swords and the butchering began. The party guests,
screaming, in a panic, rushed headlong for the exit, but the pirates barred
their way. The slaughtered every last guest, then took what they had, along
with the valuables of the house.
Karl
stood by and watched, hardly unsettled or surprised. He looked down at Manny,
who stood beside him. “Argh!” he said. “Pirates now we be!”
Chapter
17: A Dream
The
ship sailed through mostly calm waters for the next several days, and the men
waited anxiously for their arrival to the Island of Dove’s Beak. Karl did a lot
of drinking during these days, and a lot of sleeping. On the third night, he
had a strange dream. He was aboard the Beacon, and all the men were on deck. It
was night, and Reginald stood on the quarter deck, with a conductor’s baton in
his hand. The rest of the men watched him as he waved his baton, and they began
singing. It was a low and mournful tune, like a requiem, as if they were
honoring someone’s death. Karl got the sense that it was his own death they
were honoring. He sat behind the rest of the men, with Manny, drinking from a
bottle of rum and smoking a cigar. He felt languid, and rather ill. As the song
reached its crescendo, the sun rose in a burst to the East. Then he heard the
sound of a baby crying. He stood up and went to the edge of the ship, and
looked out over the water. In the water, about fifty yards out, he could see
his son treading water, and holding onto his young child. Karl yelled to the
men, “Wait! Turn back! My son and granddaughter are drowning!” But they did not
hear him. They simply carried on in their singing, as if in a trance. In a
panic, Karl dove off the side of the ship and swam after his son and
granddaughter, but it seemed the harder he swam, the further and further they
drifted away from him. Then, he felt something heavy pulling him down. He
looked into the water, and there, attached to his leg by a rope, was a giant
treasure chest made of gold. He went under, and he tried to remove the rope
from his legs, but he was unable to, and down and down he went, to the bottom
of the sea. He could still hear the pirates singing. Their last words were,
“And the sea was made his home. That is where he dwelt.” The water began to
fill his lungs, and in a panic, he woke up.
Karl
looked down at Manny, who was sleeping peacefully on the floor. He heard the
sound of the other men snoring. He was wide awake, and decided to go out to the
deck. On deck, he found Reginald, standing alone and smoking his pipe.
Reginald, who seemed also in a trance, nodded at Karl. “Having trouble
sleeping?” he asked.
“A
dream awoke me,” said Karl. “A very strange dream.”
Reginald
nodded solemnly.
“Reginald,”
said Karl. “Do you think we are going survive this?”
“There
is always a chance that we will not,” he said. “But we have already survived
many a’ danger, so perhaps the gods are shining down on us. And if not, you
will have at least lived your last days to the fullest, ma’ lad. You can be
certain of that.”
Karl
looked up at the night sky. It was full of stars. Just then, he thought of his
son, and wondered if he would ever see him again. “Life to the fullest,” he
said, as if to himself. “I wonder.”
Chapter
18: Bustle at the Casino
The
Beacon made its way North through the Atlantic for seven days. Besides one
major storm that blew them off course, the sailing was easy, and the ocean
calm. On the seventh day the Island of Dove’s Beak was in sight. It was a hot
day and the sun was shining off the multitude of buildings that lined the
coast. Captain Desperteaux had set up a booming commercial industry indeed.
There were high-rise apartment complexes and hotels made of glass, casinos
lined with gold paneling and a steel circular theater with a blue and white
onion dome. The beach was crowded with people, and all about were beautiful
palms and exotic plants. The dock was burgeoning with ships of all kinds, some
bringing in goods to supply the various restaurants and stores that dotted the
island. High above it all, perched atop the apex of the island, was a large
white mansion, surrounded by an iron gate.
They
pulled into the harbor and nobody gave them a second glance as they
disembarked. Walking along the wharf, they saw all sorts of strange people. A
man with a giant boa constrictor wrapped around his shoulders, dressed in
nothing but a loincloth, was playing a penny whistle and smiling at the passer
bys. Two acrobats were performing on a giant pillar-like apparatus. A man dressed
in livery was singing “Nessum Dorma.” And an old man in white robe, with a long
gray beard was reciting a nonsensical poem at the top of his lungs.
“This
is my kind of place!” said Reginald. “That is one thing about the captain, he
always had style.”
Most
of the people walking around looked like tourists. Mostly wealthy couples and
groups of young people looking for excitement. Reginald approached an elderly
couple seated on a bench. “Good day to you!” he cried. The couple looked at
him, astonished. “Do you know where the Captain resides?”
“The
Captain?” asked the elderly man.
“Yes,
the owner of the island.”
“Oh,
yes!” said the woman. “I believe he lives in the mansion at the top of Beak
Hill. But you can’t go up there. It’s private.”
“Can
you tell me how to get there, just so I can have a look?” Reginald asked.
“Beek
Hill Drive is about four blocks that way, just past the casino.”
Reginald thanked
the couple and rejoined Karl, Manny, and the rest of the men. “Well, men,” said
Reginald. “I know the way, but chances are, security will be tight. So stay
lively, boys!”
The men walked
down the road toward the casino. When they passed it, the men gave it a gander.
“What a lively place!” cried Joe. “Let’s have a look inside.”
Reginald nodded,
and the men walked up the entrance to the casino. When they reached the
entrance, a tall, burly security guard stopped them. “I’m afraid we don’t allow
weapons inside, gentlemen. Karl was relieved. He did not want to go into the
casino, as he was certain it would only result in further bloodshed. Joe
reached for his saber, but Reginald, to Karl’s great surprise, stopped him. Joe
stared at the security guard for a long time. Karl wondered if he would snap.
With Reginald’s persuasion, however, Joe relented, and the men turned away. But
as they were walking away, Joe suddenly turned around, pulled out his saber,
and ran at the security guard. The guard pulled out a gun, and shot Joe in the
chest. Then, there was chaos.
The other men
pulled their swords and ran at the security guard, stabbing him. More guards,
hearing the commotion, ran outside. Karl, falling back, watched from the
sidewalk as the pirates were restrained, and in some cases, shot. As Reginald
and the surviving pirates were handcuffed and taken away, Reginald looked up at
Karl. “Find us,” he said, as h was stuffed into the back of a black police car.
Karl looked at him, stunned. Find them? And, supposing he did, how would he set
them free?
Chapter 19: Reginald’s Plan
Karl watched as
the police cars zoomed down the street and disappeared. He looked at Manny.
“We’re going to save them, aren’t we Karl?” said Manny.
Karl considered.
It might be very easy to find a transport home if he tried. Then, all of this
horror would come to an end, and he could live in peace. But no. During his
adventures with Reginald and the rest of the pirates, he had become attached to
them. They were his brothers now. And they needed him. But what could he do?
He approached an
officer that was still on the scene, and asked him where the pirates had been
taken.
“To the jail,”
said the officer.
“Where is that?”
asked Karl.
It was a ways
away, and Karl and Manny would have to walk. So, they went on their way. They
walked down a long road filled with packing plants and warehouses leading to the
back of the island, behind the Captain’s mansion, where the jailhouse resided.
It was nearing sundown by the time they arrived. At the door, Karl was forced
to relinquish his saber, not that he had any intention of using it. He had no
idea what he was going to do. He had been thinking the whole way there, but
nothing seemed workable. He would have to wing it, he supposed. Karl told the
sheriff that he was the pirates’ lawyer, and was granted access to talk to
them. Karl was led through the steal doors to the prison block, and down the
hall to where the pirates were being held. He was left alone to talk with them.
“Karl!” said Reginald,
obviously relieved to see him. “Have you a plan to get us out?”
“A plan?” said
Reginald. “What kind of plan could I possibly have? We’re screwed.”
Reginald smiled
and began tugging at his beard. “I thought you might say that,” he said, “which
is why I have also been putting my mind to the problem. Listen,” he lowered his
voice in a whisper. “If we could somehow inform the Captain that we are here, I
am certain that he would want to deal with us himself. You find the Captain,”
he said, “and you tell him that we have kidnapped you and brought you here
against your will, and that no amount of legal justice will suffice for your
vengeance. The Captain and Envilisa have always hated us, especially the
sorceress. It is likely they will devise something much more horrible for us
than prison time. But, at this point, there is nothing more that I want than to
see the Captain and Envilisa face to face, however horrible they may be. They
will get us out of here, though, to deal with us on their own terms. Then, at
least, there will be a chance that we might have victory. Trust me, my friend,
their bitterness will blind them, and we will have our chance.”
“But how am I
supposed to get in touch with the Captain?” asked Karl.
“I overheard,”
said Reginald, “from some of the other prisoners, that the Captain is throwing
a party tonight at his mansion. Go to this party. There you can find him and do
as I said.”
“It sounds
far-fetched to me,” said Karl. “But, I suppose if you think it’s the best plan,
I will do my best.”
“That’s ma’ lad!”
cried Reginald. “But be wary. Don’t give yourself away. And remember, if
Envilisa asks you about it, don’t look her in the eye. She will be able to tell
that you are lying.”
Karl nodded, and
he and Manny left. Now the only question was, how would he get into the
Captain’s party?
Chapter 20: Karl Meets the Villains
Karl and Manny walked
the long distance to Beak Hill Rd. Many cars—limousines, flashy sports cars,
and beautiful old town cars passed him by. Finally they reached the gate. The
men at the gate stopped them. “I need to see the Captain,” said Reginald.
“On what
business?” asked one of the guards.
“Tell him it
involves the pirates of the Beacon.”
The guard nodded
and walked into the compound, where hundreds of people were gathered for the
party. Karl and Manny waited outside the gate for nearly a half an hour before
the guard finally came back. “Come with me,” he said, and Karl and Manny
followed him through the gate. The mansion was in the old French Gothic style,
with flying buttresses, pointed arches and gargoyles, perfectly suited, Karl
imagined, to its residents. He was led around back, where he saw a huge garden
divided by a vast labyrinth of stone walkways, and replete with fountains and
statues in the same Gothic style. Karl and Manny were led to a blue wooden door
on the surface level of the house, and the guard knocked.
The door was
opened and they were greeted by an old man in a tuxedo. Karl figured he was a
butler. The security guard left and Karl and Manny went into the small but
elegant room, which was dimly lit by a lamp sitting on a large wooden desk.
Also in the room was a white leather sectional, several wooden chairs, tables
and decorations. One of the first things Karl noticed about the room was the
framed map drawn on old parchment paper on the back wall above the desk. The
chair behind the desk was turned around, facing the wall.
“Sir,” said the
butler, “this is the man.”
The large-backed
chair turned around swiftly, exposing a man in a black suit, seated with his
legs crossed. He was a striking looking man, perhaps in his mid forties, with
signs of gray at spots in his otherwise jet black hair. His eyes, Karl saw,
were like hawk’s eyes—dark and fiercely penetrating, yet the man himself seemed
languid in his repose. There seemed to be nothing threatening about him, other
than his dark eyes.
“Hello,” said the
man in a rich, velvety voice. “I’m Captain William Desperteaux. Have a seat.”
Karl sat down in
the leather chair facing the Captain’s desk.
“Lovely dog,” said
the Captain, looking at Manny.
“Thank you,” said
Karl.
“So, Mr...” the
Captain began.
“Ransenhoff,” said
Karl. “Karl Ransenhoff.”
“Mr. Ransenhoff,
tell me, what news do you have for me?”
“Well,” Karl
began. “A while ago (I can’t really remember how long. It’s been such a trying
experience) I set free the men of the Beacon on accident. They kidnapped me,
and dragged me along on their journey here to kill you and take back their
treasure. Only, they’ve been arrested.”
“Have they?” asked
the Captain, who up to this point did not seem the least bit moved.
“At the casino.
There was a fight, and some of them were killed. Reginald, and about ten others
are in the jailhouse now.”
“Good,” said the
Captain, smiling slyly. “Let them rot there. They’ll receive a worthy
punishment, I assure you.”
“No!” cried Karl.
“I mean, you see...They killed my son. I want them executed.”
“Hmm,” said the
Captain, thinking. “Well, perhaps we can see to it that they are. Tell me,
Karl,” he began, taking a cigarette from a wooden box on his desk. “Did they tell
you about my wife, Envilisa?”
Karl suddenly was
very nervous. “Yes,” he said, “they told me about her.”
“Well,” said the
Captain, smiling, “would you care to meet her?”
Karl swallowed.
“Of course,” he said.
The Captain got
up. “Wait right here. I’ll be back in a moment.”
The Captain left
the room, leaving Karl alone. Karl sat, ringing his hands, remembering what
Reginald had told him about Envilisa. About ten minutes passed before the door
opened, and the Captain, along with a beautiful woman wearing a giant diamond,
ten times the size of the Hope Diamond, around her neck, walked in. Envilisa
wore a black gown, and had striking, feline features. When Envilisa turned her
eyes on Karl, a cold chill ran down his spine. “This,” said the Captain, “is my
wife, Envilisa. Envilisa, this is Karl Ransenhoff.” Karl took her beautiful
white hand, which was as cold as the bottom of the sea, and shook it meekly.
“So,” said
Envilisa, in a voice at once so graceful, powerful, and full of menace that
Karl felt as if he were being hypnotized just hearing it, “I hear you have set
free the men of the Beacon. How unfortunate. They kidnapped you, I hear?”
Her eyes, like
whirlpools, seemed to be sucking him under. “That’s right,” said Karl, softly.
Envilisa smiled. A
cold, sinister smile. “Why don’t you come with me, Karl? There is something I’d
like to show you.”
Karl and Manny followed
the Captain and the sorceress out the door. They was led through many opulent
rooms. One of these rooms had a large painting of the Captain and Envilisa
hanging on the wall. They stopped, and stood before it.
“Beautiful, isn’t
it Karl?” said the Captain.
Karl nodded. The
captain walked up to the painting and, reaching up, removed it from the wall.
Behind it was a large steel door with a combination lock. He moved the
combination, and opened the door. It was dark inside.
“Go in,” said the
Captain.
Karl stepped into
the darkness, terrified. The Captain and Envilisa followed him. A light was
turned on, revealing a giant room full of treasure. Karl could not believe his
eyes. Gold was piled high to the ceiling. There were crates full of diamonds,
rubies, sapphires, pearls, and other gems. Karl wondered what the worth of it
all could be—probably enough to run a small nation by. The door was closed.
Envilisa’s eyes caught Karl’s. Suddenly, he felt a great pain in his chest, as
if his heart would explode. He went blind, and fell onto the floor, crying. He
heard Manny growling, and then begin to squeal in torment. “My friend,” said
Envilisa, “it is not wise to lie to a sorceress. I suggest you clear things up
as fast as you can.”
Karl, in a
uncontrolled burst of words, told them the whole truth. The pain went away, and
his vision returned. “Well,” said the Captain to his wife, “what shall we do
with him?”
Again, Envilisa
smiled. “Give him some gold,” she said, “and send him back to his home.”
“What about the
pirates?” asked Captain Desperteaux.
“Tell the sheriff
to send them here. It would be good to see the old crew again.” And with that,
she let out a horrible laugh that stung Karl’s heart just as much as her spell
had.
Chapter 21: Seizing an Opportunity
A transport was
planned for Karl the next morning. Till then, he was locked along with Manny in
the dungeon beneath the mansion. At first, he couldn’t sleep, but then he told
himself, perhaps it was for the best that he was leaving. He knew the pirates
were doomed to unimaginable torment, but, part of him felt that they deserved
it. When he awoke in the morning, two large men took him and led him out to the
parking lot in front of the house, where a car was waiting. The two men got in
the front seat, and he sat in the back along with Manny. They exited the
compound and began the long drive down Beak Hill Rd. As they were passing a
large field, Karl, looking through the front windshield of the car, noticed an
approaching vehicle.
“There they are,”
said the driver.
“Boy, are they in
for it,” said the man in the passenger seat.
It was a large
armored police vehicle. Karl understood that the pirates were within it, being
transported to the mansion for their torture at the hands of Envilisa. As the
vehicle approached, Karl again imagined to himself the pain that these men
would soon be put through. He remembered his experiences with these men, and
felt a pang of guilt at the thought of leaving them to suffer. He summoned his
courage. As the vehicle was approaching, he opened the side door. “What the
Hell?” said the driver as Karl jumped out, along with Manny, who followed him.
He ran in front of the armored vehicle, which swerved, lost control, and fell
on its side. Karl ran up to the vehicle, and opened the back door. The pirates
lay strewn across the floor, in handcuffs. The car that had been carrying Karl
stopped, and the two men got out. One of them pulled out a gun, and Manny,
seeing it aimed at his master, charged and bit the man’s arm, and he dropped
his weapon. The other pulled out a gun in turn, but Karl gave him a solid blow
to the head, and he fell to the ground. Manny moved on this man as well, and
the two men ran away across the field as fast as they could go. Karl went back
to the truck. The pirates, wobbly on their feet, were leaving it. “Ah, Karl!”
cried Reginald, elated. “I knew you’d come through for us. Not exactly how I’d
planned it, but it certainly suffices!”
They went to the
front of the truck and opened the passenger door. The driver lay unconscious.
Karl found the keys to the handcuffs in his pocket, and released the pirates
from their bonds.
“What next?” said
Karl, after the last of the handcuffs were undone.
“Next?” said
Reginald. “Next, we get our treasure back.”
Chapter 22: A Final Stand-Off
The men gathered
what weapons they could from the front of the armored vehicle. There were two
shotguns, which would be wielded by Reginald and Kaloo, and two handguns, one
in the glove compartment and one on the driver’s person. One of these would be
handled by Karl, the other by the fat pirate. The rest would have to go without
weapons. They made their plans, and after Karl showed Reginald and Kaloo how to
use their weapons, the men began the long walk back up the hill to the mansion.
Karl walked ahead of the rest of the men. When they neared the gate, the
pirates hid in the trees outside the compound, and Karl approached. The same
guard that had been there yesterday stood on guard. Karl held up his hand in
greeting. When the guard did the same, the pirates rushed out from behind the
trees and opened fire. The guard went down. Karl found the key to the gate on
his person, and he and the men went inside. Two more guards were standing near
the entrance to the mansion, and they pulled their guns. Karl took aim at one
of them, but Kaloo shot him before Karl could fire. The other ran inside. An
alarm was sounded. The pirates, along with Karl and Manny, went for the main
entrance, but it was locked. “Step aside,” said Reginald behind them. Karl and
Manny moved aside, and Reginald blasted through the lock with his shotgun. “Who
needs a key when you have this incredible beast?” he said, laughing. They
walked into the entrance hall.
“The safe is on
the bottom floor,” said Karl, leading the way.
“Yes, ma’ lad. We
shall get the treasure soon. But first, we have business with the Captain and
Envilisa.”
“Indeed you do,”
said a man’s voice behind them. The pirates turned. Standing there was the
Captain and Envilisa. Reginald, Kaloo, and the fat pirate raised their weapons.
Karl, petrified, stood still. With a wave of her hand, Envilisa knocked the
guns from their hands. Now everyone was petrified. “You dare enter the home of
Envilisa uninvited?” she said, her voice ringing out like a roll of thunder.
With a gesture of her hand, she lifted the pirates, along with Karl, into the
air. “Now you must die.”
Again, Karl felt
the horrible pain he had felt earlier at the hands of Envilisa. The Captain
walked up to the men, inspecting them with malicious delight. “Ah, men,” he
said. “What are you without your Captain? Just a band of ragged oafs, I’m
afraid.” Out of the corner of his eye, Karl saw Manny dash headlong at
Envilisa. Noticing the dog, she turned and waved her hands at him, and the
spell on the men was released. They fell to the floor. When Karl looked up at
Manny, he saw that he had turned to stone. He didn’t even have time to cry out.
“Come along, lad!” cried Reginald, who was running into the next room along
with the other pirates. Karl followed, in great dismay over his lost dog.
The room they ran
into was filled with animal trophies. Buck heads lined the wall, and a giant
taxidermied polar bear stood menacingly in the corner. The room was also,
unfortunately, a dead end.
“Now,” said
Envilisa, as she and the captain entered the room, “where were we?”
She raised her
arms, and Karl and the rest of the men were frozen. Karl again began to feel
the pain in his chest.
“Wait!” Karl
cried. “Before you kill us, let me ask the Captain a question.”
“Very well,” said
Envilisa. “Speak.”
“It seems very
cowardly of you, Captain, to see stand there and watch as your wife gets rid of
all your problems. So, I have a proposition for you.”
Envilisa turned
and looked at the Captain, who nodded in compliance to Karl’s words.
“Fight me,” said
Karl, “and should you lose, you must set us free. Of course, we promise to
leave and never return, without any of your treasure. Isn’t that right, boys?”
“Ay!” cried
Reginald. “That be so.”
“You,” said the
Captain smugly, “want to challenge me
to a duel?”
“That’s right,”
said Karl.
The Captain
laughed. “Very well. Let it be so. Envilisa, release him.”
Karl felt the pain
in his chest subside, and he was released. The Captain took down a sword that
was hanging on the wall, and threw it at Karl, who caught it. The two men faced
each other, and took fighting postures. The Captain smiled, and then, his face
taking on a horrible aspect, he came at Karl in a vicious flurry. Karl blocked
him, but not with ease, and backed away. The Captain came at him again, and
this time nearly pierced him, but Karl was quick, and the Captain’s blade went
into the wall. Seeing his chance, Karl swung at the Captain, but before he
could strike him, the Captain removed his blade and blocked him. “You are
good,” said the Captain, “but you are not good enough.” Then he unleashed a
series of strikes that baffled Karl. He was able to block him, but the Captain
tripped him, and he fell. The Captain swung, but Karl rolled and came to his
feet, agile as a cat. He noticed a vase sitting on a table. The next time the
Captain came at him, he dodged him, grabbed the vase, and bashed the Captain
with it over the head. The Captain fell, and Karl placed the edge of his blade
on the Captain’s neck.
“Kill him!” cried
Reginald.
Karl looked at the
Captain. There was a look of sheer terror in his eyes. Karl dropped his sword.
“No,” he said. “I’ve defeated him.” He turned around and faced Envilisa. “Now
you have to fulfill your promise.” Envilisa looked at him wrathfully. Just as
she was about to speak, Karl heard Reginald’s voice from behind her.
“Karl, move!”
Karl turned
around. The Captain was coming at him with the tip of his blade pointed
directly at his heart. Agilely, Karl swerved aside. The Captain’s blade went
right into Envilisa’s breast. She let out a horrible scream, there was an
explosion of green light, and poof! She was gone. The Captain stood amazed. The
pirates now free of Envilisa’s spell, moved toward him. Then there was a loud
piercing screech. Karl looked down at the Diamond of Candoleen, which had been
around Envilisa’s neck. It was glowing. The Captain began to gag. His face,
which had once been so youthful, began to take on a haggard aspect. His skin
began to shrivel. His eyes fell out of their sockets, and landed at his feet.
He put his hands to his face, and tried to let out a scream, but to no avail.
His flesh turned to dust, and his skeleton fell motionless to the floor.
Karl stood amazed.
He heard a loud shout, and turned to see Reginald and the pirates celebrating.
“What a plan!” cried Reginald, slapping Karl on the back. “You, my friend, I
designate the new captain of the Beacon!”
Karl looked
around. He remembered Manny. He ran into the other room, and there he was, his
old furry self again. Manny jumped up and kissed Karl’s face. “Oh, Manny!”
cried Karl. “I thought I’d lost you! My dearest friend!” Man and beast, as they
had done so many times before, only now with a new relish, loved one another,
and the pirates, seeing Manny themselves, redoubled their celebration.
Chapter
23: Loading the Treasure
After
their celebration of the Captain and Envilisa’s defeat, Karl led the men
through several rooms and down a flight of stairs to the bottom level. There,
he found the room with the painting. He removed it from the wall, and he and the
men stood looking at the safe. “I don’t know the combination,” he said.
“Try
4-17-6,” said Reginald. “’Tis the date we set sail for Kojiawana.”
Karl
turned the knob, and heard a click. The safe came open.
As
the pirates stood staring at the treasure, Karl watched their faces with
delight. Reginald was the first to walk in. “’Tis ours, lads! The Treasure of
Candoleen is ours!” He dug his arms into a mound of gold coins and let them
overflow out of his hands. The other men followed suit.
They
found bags to load the treasure in the stock room, and stole one of the
Captain’s cars to carry it down to the ship. They couldn’t carry all of it in
one trip of course, but after a night and a day of loading, they managed to get
most of it onto their ship. At the dock during the final loading, as Karl was
carrying a bag of treasure up the ramp, a young boy walking along with his
parents saw him and asked him what it was he was loading. “Treasure,” said
Karl. The boy’s mouth fell open, and his parents smiled at Karl, who smiled
back and continued on his way.
Chapter
24: Saying Goodbye
The men set sail
for Switzerland, where the pirates would put their treasure up for auction
split their income, and set up private accounts. There, Karl would head home—in
fine style. The Diamond of Candoleen, it was decided, would go to Karl. Karl
knew that the diamond would bring him a fortune beyond any of his wildest
dreams, but that was the furthest thing from his mind. He was ready to go home
and see his son and granddaughter, and tell them his wild story (with some
parts left out for discretion, of course.
On there way to
Switzerland, the men celebrated with drink and song. Karl did not partake in
any of the drinking, however. He just stood by with Manny, laughing at the
men’s antics like a father watching his children at play.
They reached
Switzerland after five days of smooth sailing. Karl and the men set up an
appointment with the auction house, and about a week later, the auction was
held. The treasure sold for a total of around seven billion dollars. The
Diamond of Candoleen was not put up for auction, as Karl decided he would sell
it to the Smithsonian when he got back to the States.
The day Karl’s
ship embarked, he and the pirates arrived at the port in a limousine. Karl was
wearing a new fine-tailored suit, with a check for nearly a quarter of a
billion dollars in his pocket and the Diamond of Candoleen in a specially made case.
The men were dressed in the same tattered clothes they had been wearing when
their journey began.
When they arrived,
Karl and Manny got out of the car, as well as the men. Karl shook each man’s
hand, and they wished each other luck. Finally, it was time to say goodbye to
Reginald.
“Well Karl,” said
Reginald. “Didn’t I tell you it would be an adventure?”
Karl smiled.
“You go home and
see your grandchild, now,” said Reginald. “And when she’s old enough, tell her
the tale of how you sailed with the pirates of the Beacon, and helped them gain
what was rightfully theirs.” He held out his hand.
Karl looked at his
hand—grit-stained and brawny, the hand of a man who had taken many lives, but a
hand which he had come to respect nonetheless. Karl embraced Reginald, and
hugged him tightly. “You be good,” he said.
“Haha!” laughed
Reginald.
“And find a
lover.”
“I will, my lad. I
will.”
Karl began to walk up the ramp. Manny stood looking at the men. “Come on, Manny!” Karl cried. Reginald patted Manny’s head, and the dog licked his hand. Then, he turned and followed Karl. Halfway up the ramp, Karl turned, smiled at the men, and holding up the case with the Diamond inside, patted it with his hand and nodded. Then he turned and walked up the ramp.
Karl began to walk up the ramp. Manny stood looking at the men. “Come on, Manny!” Karl cried. Reginald patted Manny’s head, and the dog licked his hand. Then, he turned and followed Karl. Halfway up the ramp, Karl turned, smiled at the men, and holding up the case with the Diamond inside, patted it with his hand and nodded. Then he turned and walked up the ramp.
Chapter 25: A Woman
The ship that Karl
took back to America was a luxury cruise boat. Aboard it were many wealthy
people. Karl spent his days sitting out on the deck with Manny, absorbing the
rays of the sun and feeling the ocean breeze. He was completely at peace with
himself. As he thought about all that had happened, he did not mull over the
many deaths that had occurred, nor the many dangers he had survived. But
rather, he thought about the men—their laughter, their joyous spirits. They
were a part of him now. He would never be a pirate, but his blood still boiled
with the vibrancy of a pirate, and his soul rejoiced at the fact that he had
truly lived. He laughed when he thought of his old ways—the obsessive book
reading, the stubbornness towards his son. Life had been renewed for him, and
he was ready to make the most of his twilight years.
On the second to
last day of the journey, while lying on the deck with Manny, a beautiful woman
caught his eye. She was walking with another woman. She smiled at Karl, and
Karl smiled back. The next day, just as the ship was nearing San Francisco, Karl
was seated alone in the dining room enjoying breakfast, he spotted the same
woman. She had just gotten a plate of food, and was alone. She spotted Karl,
smiled, and approached. “Hello,” she said. “Do you mind if I join you?”
“Please,” said
Karl, gesturing at a chair. The woman sat down.
“I noticed you
yesterday. Do you remember me?”
“I do,” said Karl,
smiling.
“Was that your
dog?”
“Yes, that was
Manny.”
“Beautiful dog,”
said the woman.
“Thank you.”
Karl learned that
the woman, whose name was Theresa, was on the cruise with her sister. She lived
in Napa Valley, and was a writer.
“And what do you
do, Karl?” the woman asked.
“I’m retired. I
was a junior high school English teacher for many years.”
They began
discussing different books. They shared a love for old adventure novels. “So
are you here with anyone?” Theresa asked.
“No, just me and
Manny.”
“I see,” said
Theresa, obviously interested. “Well, Karl. It’s a shame we’re just meeting.
But I’ll tell you what, if you’d ever like to come Napa Valley, let me give you
my number.” She took out a pen and wrote down her name and number on a napkin
and gave it to Karl. About an hour later, the ship docked in San Francisco.
Chapter 26: Arrival
Karl did not go
home. Instead, he rented a convertible and drove straight to San Diego to see
his son. There was hardly any traffic on the highway as he drove, and he
listened to the radio the whole way, whistling to the tunes. And, as he drove,
he thought about his son. He imagined himself telling his son everything that
had happened. He hoped he wouldn’t look at him like he was crazy. Then again,
he did have the proof to back it up. He tried to imagine his granddaughter’s
face, and the look she would have when he showed her the Diamond of Candoleen. The
sun was just going down as he entered the city. It was a beautiful, clear day.
He smiled as he felt the wind on his face, and looked over at Manny, whose
tongue was out, and seemed to be smiling also.
When he finally
arrived, he parked his car out in front of the house. All the lights were on
inside. He imagined his son and his son’s wife gathered with their young
daughter, perhaps reading a book, or playing a game. Karl took out the case
with the diamond inside from the back seat. Manny watched him, looking at the
case, as if he could sense the value of what lay inside. Karl looked at the
sky. It was beautiful. The sun was just beginning to set. All of the colors
seemed to mirror his own soul, for the adventure he had been on had painted his
soul brilliantly, and now, like an artist ready to display his masterpiece, he
felt fear and exhilaration. He thought of all the years he had spent alone in
his little shack, all those books he had read. It was like a dream to him now.
He had a real story to tell. His story—and it was twice as magical as any he
had ever read in any book. Would they believe him? He doubted it. But perhaps
it didn’t even matter. Let them think him a madman! He would shower them with
love, nonetheless. For that was what he had gained: love. Love for himself,
love for life, and love for his son, which, really, had never gone away. It had
been in him the whole time. It just took an adventure to release it. He and
Manny walked up the walkway and onto the porch. Karl stood for a moment,
hesitant. He looked down at Manny.
“What are you
waiting for?” Manny asked.
Karl smiled.
Nothing. He had no need to wait anymore. His life was beginning all over again,
at the age of sixty-five. He never felt more alive, or more worthy of being
alive. “Well,” he said, “here goes nothing.” He knocked on the door.
Epilogue
Karl and his son
were reunited. His son had read a brief story in the papers about the auction
in Switzerland, but did not know the full story. When Karl told him, his son
sat silent for a long time, staring at the diamond which sat on the table in
front of him. “It’s a remarkable story,” his son said. “I cannot really believe
it, but I suppose I have no choice. If you say it happened as it did, well,
then I suppose it must be true.” Karl was delighted. He sat holding his young
granddaughter in his arms. She was still an infant, and was just becoming
curious about the outside world. She sat staring at the diamond, too. His son’s
wife was there. She prepared a late meal for Karl, and it was delicious. They
put the child to bed and the three adults sat up most of the night, talking.
Karl gave them a full account of what had happened, and Karl’s son and his wife
were overjoyed to hear his story.
After staying with
his son for some time, Karl went and sold the Diamond of Candoleen to the
Smithsonian for a total of five hundred million dollars. With the money he had,
he bought a large home in San Diego on the beach, and invited his son and
family to stay with him. He set up a trust fund for his granddaughter in hopes
that she would receive the highest level of education. Most of it he gave to
charity—primarily to Alzheimer research organizations. When Manny died, he had
his body cremated and scattered the ashes in the sea. He lived out his old age
in complete peace, watching his granddaughter grow into a young woman, and
writing his memoirs about his adventures aboard the Beacon. He often received
letters from Reginald and the other pirates. Reginald had become mayor of a
small town in Connecticut. He was happy to hear that he had found a wife. He
continued to sleep very little, but his mind was always sharp and his body
healthy. Often he would take walks along the beach, and stare out at the open
sea. It still seemed to be calling him, but when he heard its call he merely
smiled and thought of Reginald, Kaloo, and the other pirates. After his memoir
was published, he began to receive a great deal of fan mail, and often people
would come to talk to him. He would always treat these people with the utmost
respect, and loved to talk about his adventures with them. Sometimes, while
walking with his family along the beach, he’d grow silent and pensive. His
family took care never to interrupt these reveries. Lost in thought, he would
wander on even after his family had long gone back to the house. He’d walk long
into the night, dreaming of Manny, dreaming of Reginald, Kaloo and the pirates,
dreaming like a man with a restless spirit that has made the world his home.
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