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Boston Jacky

Page 5

by L. A. Meyer


  I stagger through the outer door with Josie in my arms and suck in great gulps of good, clean air.

  “Oh, Mommy, Josie’s dead!” screams the little girl upon seeing me and my limp burden. “Josie’s dead!” The mother herself is stretched out on the ground with Molly Malone kneeling beside her, wiping her face with a cool wet cloth, and does not hear her daughter’s cries.

  My chest bucks as I cough, clearing my lungs of the awful smoke, as I lift Josie up and clamp my hand around her snout, holding her jaws together. Then I put my mouth over the puppy’s nose and blow. My other hand cradles her chest and I feel it expand. I squeeze to expel the air therein, and then blow again and squeeze again . . . and again . . . and again.

  I despair, but then the dog’s eyes suddenly pop open and she coughs, then sneezes . . . then sneezes again, spraying my face with a fine mist. She starts to struggle in my hands.

  After passing the panting Josie off to her young mistress, who wraps her arms about the dog and buries her face in its fur, her face a mask of tears and joyous relief, I look about.

  Arthur and his boys are deep in the interior of the building, and I hear the sound of axes rending away burning timbers, shouts of warning, and the constant gush of the water pouring out of the tank car. I see that many people have gathered about, some to help, some not, and I am aware of a wagon that has pulled up close to the action.

  On the driver’s seat sits Pigger O’Toole, his helmet on his head and Glory Wholey by his side. In the back sits the little white-haired man I saw at Skivareen’s earlier today. He ain’t lighting matches now, no, he’s just lookin’ up at the smoking wreck of the house with a look of complete rapture on his thin face. Pigger looks down on me, grinning.

  “Just saw you suckin’ that dog’s nose,” says Pigger. “My, my . . . and you callin’ my Glory here dirty? That ain’t right, Little Mary. Earlier today I gave you the offer of a kiss, but now, with your mouth full o’ dog snot, I don’t know. I might find it . . . distasteful. What you think, Glory?”

  “I think she’s a little snot-mouthed uppity bitch what’s gonna get hers if I ever catch her alone,” says Glory Hole, without much merriment in her voice.

  “Glory, dear, so nice to see you again,” I say, all cheerily, “and in the finest of company, too.”

  Glory Wholey’s face turns bright red and she seems ready to launch herself at me, but she thinks better of it as I pull my shiv from my sleeve and hold it up in front of my face, the sunlight glinting off its razor-sharp blade.

  “Fat Pigger there can tell you that I’m a Cockney from Cheapside,” I say with a smile, “and we fight real dirty there.”

  She gets my point and settles herself back down, fuming. She gives Pigger a poke in the side as if she expects some defense of her honor, but instead he raises his voice and says to the crowd in general, “I am sure all of you good people know that the damage to this poor dwelling would have been far less had that silly green symbol not been pinned to the side o’ the house . . .” He points to the shamrock. “Tsk, tsk! No, best stick with the Free Men’s Fire and Insurance Company, for the best fire protection . . . and prevention.”

  The little white-haired man in back explodes into giggles over his boss’s words, but his eyes never leave the burned-out building, out of which steps a soot-covered Arthur McBride. He sees Pigger and company and comes over.

  “Get out of here, Tooley. You ain’t wanted here.”

  “Why, Captain,” says Pigger with a wide grin. “We just stopped by to see if we could help out a fellow firefighter.”

  “Help?” Arthur spits a black gob of spittle on the ground in front of the wagon. “Is that why you brought yer whore and yer looney instead of yer water wagon?”

  “You be careful just who you slanders, Captain,” warns Pigger, his grin still in place as he chucks his team and rolls off.

  “I know the two up top, Arthur, but what is the thing in the back?” I ask.

  “He’s known as Pyro Johnny, and he is a dirty piece of work, for sure. He’s holed up at Skivareen’s with the rest of Tooley’s crew. People ’round here hire him to burn brush and garbage, but the word is he sets other fires, too.” Arthur looks significantly at the smoldering house. “This fire could have started in the kitchen below, but it could have been Pyro’s work just as easy. Look at him, Jacky, he can’t get enough of this.”

  Pigger’s wagon is about to disappear around the corner, but the little man has moved to the back of the cart, still staring at the fire scene, his hands gripped on the sides, his eyes shining.

  “Why hasn’t he been sent to a lunatic asylum, then? Or hanged?”

  “Because Constable Fat Ass Wiggins would have to be the one to arrest him, and you know the name of that tune, don’t you?” says McBride. He looks me up and down, his white toothy grin splitting the black of his face. Then he says, his mind no longer on Wiggins, “So, our Saint Jacky of Assisi today risks her own dear skin to rescue and breathe the air of life back into a mongrel dog. Such a thing, it fair tears me heart out.”

  I give a bit of a sniff. “Someone once did that same thing for me and I felt I should pass it on.”

  He laughs and turns to his men. “We’re done here, lads. Patsy, Dougie, fill some buckets and stick around and watch for flare-ups. Rest o’ you, let’s go—we gotta refill in case Pyro makes some more work for us.”

  The woman of the house is being taken away, weeping, by friends and relatives. Her little girl tags along, her puppy bouncing by her side. The ladders are stowed and secured and I put my foot on one of them and regain my perch on top of the pump. Molly comes up behind me and wraps her arms about my waist, the men cling to the sides, the team is turned, and we head off, back down Beacon Street.

  Again we approach the Lawson Peabody School for Young Girls, but this time a black-clad figure leaves the front porch where she has obviously been standing, waiting for our return, to advance to the middle of the street, right arm upraised, palm forward. Arthur reins in the horses and we come to a halt. The person says nothing, but only points to me and then points to a spot in front of her.

  With a sigh, I climb down and go to the spot and curtsy, as best as I can, given my soot-streaked face and dress.

  “My office, Miss Faber,” she says, then turns away.

  “Yes, Mistress,” I say with a certain amount of resignation in my voice. I wave the others on, for they must fill their pump and I am not far from the Nancy B., which is where I intend to stay this night. They wave and clatter off and I follow Headmistress Amanda Pimm into the Lawson Peabody.

  I enter her office, as I have done so many times before, in a state of disarray, and put my toes on the white line, once more a schoolgirl. I resist the impulse to flip up my skirts and lay my upper body across the desk, ready to receive punishment.

  “So, Miss Faber, where have you been?” asks Mistress, her mouth set, her gaze level. “Explain.”

  And I do.

  I tell her of France and Napoleon and the battles I have seen, of the legions of the dead lying on the ground, of Newgate and the South China Sea and the Lorelei Lee and Cheng Shih and Chopstick Charlie and the Duke of Clarence and . . .

  In the middle of it I am interrupted and allowed into Mistress’s washroom to rinse the soot from my face and hands while she sends out for tea. When I return, we sit at a small table and the tea is brought.

  . . . and King George III and General Wellesley and Portugal and Francisco Goya and Spanish guerillas and the Romani . . . and . . . and . . .

  And eventually I tell it all, more or less coherently. I sit back in my chair, both physically and spiritually exhausted. It has been a very long day.

  Mistress thinks for a while on what I have said, then says, “Remarkable. Truly remarkable.” She looks me over. “You are not in a fit condition to take dinner with my girls. Plus you seem very tired. However, we are having graduation next week, it also being the end of the term, and I invite you to attend, as I am sure many of your cla
ssmates would enjoy seeing you there. Will you come?”

  “Yes, Mistress, I would like that very much.”

  “Good. You are excused, Miss Faber.”

  When I climb back aboard the Nancy B., still streaked and sooty, Jemimah doesn’t say a word but merely stokes up the kitchen stove and sets kettles of water on it to heat for my bath. In a short while, I am in it.

  Ahhhhh . . .

  As I lie back in my beautiful little brass-bound copper tub made especially for me and my small size, I reflect that this is my first real bath in a long time—one in a tub, anyway—not since I was a member of Francisco Goya’s studio, and then I had a circle of artists about the tub, drawing me as I lolled in the suds. Of course, after I joined King Zoltan’s caravan of Romani, Medca and Lala and I and the rest of the unmarried girls bathed frequently in the rivers and streams along the banks where the gypsy caravan camped. As for my way over the Big Pond to here aboard the Margaret Todd, there was certainly no lolling about in a tub. One does not take full baths on a merchantman crossing the Atlantic, not when one is a girl posing as a male seaman.

  Mmmmm . . .

  I wallow in sinful pleasure for a long time, while Jemimah rustles up some grub for the two of us. Daniel Prescott is the only other one onboard, and he is out on watch, already well fed.

  When I finally get out, leaving the water a lot grayer than I usually do, I dry myself and get into my nightdress, and then Jemimah and I sit at the long mess table and share a companionable meal—cold chicken, hot rice, and biscuits with gravy. Mmmmm . . .

  I tell Jemimah of some of my travels and, in particular, my encounter with Brother Bullfrog when I was starving back in Spain, as I think she would enjoy the telling of it . . .

  Hello, Brother Bullfrog. How you been? I said to the frog. The bullfrog brought his big googly eyes to look upon me.

  Well, hello, Sister Girl. I been jus’ fine. Whatcha got on yo’ mind?

  My mind is set on eatin’ you, Brother Bullfrog—legs, belly, croaker, and all, that’s what.

  Hmmm . . . I might be havin’ a bit of a problem wi’ dat, Sister Jacky. What makes you think you can ’complish dat t’ing?

  It’s ’cause I’m low and cunning and powerful hungry, and I’ll get it done. You’ll see, Brother. You be restin’ in my belly soon.

  Y’know, Sister, I recalls that Brother Fox and Brother Bear tried alla time to eat Brother Rabbit, but it never happened, no. Brother Black Snake give it a try or two, as well, but it ain’t happened yet, no ma’am. Don’t ’spect it’s gonna happen here, neither.

  And he was right in thinkin’ that, Jemimah. It didn’t happen, no. Last I saw of Big Daddy he was still happily croakin’ on his lily pad.

  When I wind up the tale, Jemimah slaps her knee in delight, and says, “That one’s goin’ in my Brother Rabbit story bag, Sister Girl, that’s for damn sure!”

  I lift my glass and say, “Here’s to Brother Bullfrog. Long may he croak! I sure did appreciate those fine, fine crawdaddies he provided for me! Without ’em, I don’t think I’da made it to Madrid!”

  Then we sit and talk, and I tell her of my plans for the Pig and the barn next to it, and how she might fit in and make some more money for herself, and she is all for that. But then my head begins to droop, so she damps down the fire and sends me off to bed.

  Ah, my lovely, lovely little cabin. How I missed you, Nancy, I missed you so very, very much . . .

  . . . and I miss you, too, Jaimy, and I hope to see you soon. But I dunno . . . things turn this way and then they turn that way and what happens is never anything I expect, y’know? Chopstick Charlie says you’re all settled in your mind now and are headed to Boston. Who’da thought any of that. I just don’t know, I . . . I just fall over the edge of all thought and . . . slip down and . . . sleep.

  Chapter 5

  James Fletcher

  Envoy, House of Chen

  New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA

  June 10, 1809

  Jacky Faber

  Somewhere on this continent, it is to be hoped

  Dear Jacky,

  I landed today in the New England town of New Bedford and again I step onto the soil of the United States of America.

  It is a charming town, well laid out, with many fine houses and a forest of high masts at the docks. It is a whaling town, as I believe you know, since you once took ship from here, according to what I have read in one of Amy Trevelyne’s rather vivid accounts of your journeys . . . and your equally vivid . . . doings.

  My way over here on the Mary Bissell was most pleasant, after we had rid ourselves of the company of the loathsome Mr. Skelton. I spent many happy hours in the presence of the Reverend Lowe and his lovely wife and daughters. His son, Jeremiah, attached himself to me early on, viewing me as some sort of exotic warrior, I suppose, and I did teach him some of the basic moves of the Bo stick, as well as some of the more rough-and-tumble tactics common to Royal Navy ship’s boys. I fear for the health of any schoolyard bully who attempts to cross our young Mister Jeremiah Lowe in the future. Upon docking, he pleaded to come with me on my travels, but I convinced him that a proper education was a prerequisite for a young man before entering a life of adventure as an officer and a gentleman, and he reluctantly agreed and left the ship still secure in the bosom of his loving family. I wish him well for he is a fine lad.

  On the very wise advice of our mutual friend Charlie Chen, I intend to stay in disguise for the time being, considering my past actions in England. Rather rash actions, I will admit, but what is done, is done.

  As for this masquerade, before I left Rangoon, the crown of my head was gently shaved and the remaining hair gathered into a bun at the nape of my neck, giving me a definite Eurasian appearance. I will continue to use the name Master Kwai Chang gave me—Cheung Tong. It is Chinese for “Long Boy.” After my farewells to Captain Van Pelt and the Lowes, I stepped off the Mary Bissell and repaired to an alley. I had a long black hooded cloak, and dark silk clothing beneath it, which certainly enhanced my Asian appearance, and in that alley, I stuffed my simple seabag high up under the cloak to rest on my right shoulder, giving me the look of an unfortunate hunchback. I fashioned an eye patch from a bit of black cloth, and thus attired, I sallied forth, affecting a pronounced limp.

  It is not far to Boston. Consequently, I shall go by land, sometimes by coach, but, I believe, mostly by foot, so as once more to acclimate myself to these environs and to further rest my recently very turbulent mind. I thought I had seen the last of you, dear girl, when you were swept overboard on the Lee in the midst of that horrendous typhoon, but others have convinced me that I was wrong in that assumption, and dim recollections have returned to my mind. Were you really there on that black heath the night when my poor Bess was murdered? Did I really strike you, mistaking you for a demon from hell come to torment me? Did I really ball up my fist and slam it into your loving and trusting face? I hope I did not, but I fear that I did, and I further hope you will find it in your heart to forgive me for anything I might have done to you.

  And did I hear that you were sent off to Portugal with Lord Allen? Did I actually hear that, or was that just my jealousy raging? I do not know . . .

  So the walk to Boston will be good for me, maybe clearing out the remaining cobwebs from my mind.

  A poor mendicant hunchback limping my way to Boston, I now put my foot on the Post Road in the hope of finding you there, and I am . . .

  Yr. faithful & etc.,

  Jaimy

  Chapter 6

  I crack an eyelid as the morning light pours through the eastern window of Amy Trevelyne’s lovely bedroom at Dovecote. Amy sleeps next to me, her face in sweet repose. Heh-heh, I chuckle to myself, the wickedness rising up in me once again. We’ll fix that!

  Getting out of bed, I briefly visit le pot de chambre, wash hands and splash some water on my face, then go to Amy’s top bureau drawer, where I know she keeps sundry notions—pins and stuff. Sure enough, there is a paper of go
od sturdy hairpins. I take two and go to my seabag and take out a long leather tube, remove the cap on the end, and slip the rolled-up canvas it contains into my hand.

  On the wall facing the foot of Amy’s bed, there is a charming painting of a fluffy white feline looking smug on a pink pillow. I take the painting down and place it on the floor, and where it once hung, I pin up the painting, a cat of a very different sort.

  It is, of course, the painting that Amadeo Romero did of me when I was a student and sometime model at Estudio Goya in Madrid—The Naked Maja. It was Amadeo’s version, not Goya’s, which did not look like me at all. Amadeo felt that Goya, that dog, had a former mistress in mind when he painted his, but Amadeo’s was spot on in the way of resemblance. At the bottom of the painting, Amadeo had lettered, in faint but very clear lettering, La Maja Virginal. Con todo mi amor. Amadeo Romero, 1808.

  Mission accomplished, I slip back into bed next to Amy with a certain amount of anticipatory glee.

  Again snugged in, I peer up over the edge of the covers and look at the painting in all its golden glory. The warm morning sun plays over the picture, illuminating the nude figure of the girl lying serene on a couch, rich draperies all around. Oh, Amadeo, you did such a fine job. Fine job, indeed, as the girl looks exactly like me. No mistake, and no wonder, since I did pose for it, and for many other paintings of a like nature when I was at Estudio Goya.

  I give Amy a gentle nudge. She had been lying on her side, facing me, and we had spent the night so entwined.

  “Good morning, Sister. It looks to be a very fine day.”

  She moans and turns on her back. I bury my face in the warmth of her neck and wait till she comes fully awake.

 

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