Hell Ship The Flying Dutchman

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by Ben Hammott




  Hell Ship – The Flying Dutchman

  Ben Hammott

  Copyright 2019 ©Ben Hammott

  No part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any other information storage and retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the written permission of the copyright holders.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  The author can be contacted at [email protected]

  Author website: Ben Hammott Books

  Book formatted by format-your-book-4u

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Author’s Note

  CHAPTER 1 | Manuscript

  CHAPTER 2 | Finished

  TOM’S STORY

  CHAPTER 3 | No Headway

  CHAPTER 4 | Retaliation

  CHAPTER 5 | Attacked and Repelled

  CHAPTER 6 | Strategy

  CHAPTER 7 | They Come. They Kill!

  CHAPTER 8 | The Final Skirmish

  CHAPTER 9 | Defeated

  CHAPTER 10 | Pirates

  CHAPTER 11 | Slave Ship Hannibal

  CHAPTER 12 | Boarding Party

  CHAPTER 13 | The End

  EPILOGUE

  Hell Ship Notes

  STRANGE

  Chapter 1 | Sinister Mansion

  Chapter 2 | Strange Painting

  Chapter 3 | Strange Chest

  Author’s Note

  The writing of this book involved a visit to some Dutch East India Company (VOC - Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie) sites in Amsterdam, as well as research carried out at the Dutch East India shipping archives in the Algemeen Rijksarchief, The Hague, Netherlands. I also visited the full-size replica of a Dutch India vessel, the Amsterdam, located at the Amsterdam maritime museum quay.

  The existing records of the departure from Texel leading up to the last sighting of the Fortuyn at the Cape of Good Hope provided a starting point for the story of the ship’s fateful voyage. I gleaned further details from information and illustrations based on archive records of the Fortuyn and other Dutch ships of the similar period, class and size.

  Fortuijn - modernized spelling Fortuin and anglicized as Fortuyn, the spelling used in this book.

  The last recorded sighting of the Fortuyn was on 18th January 1773 heading around the Cape of Good Hope when it became parted from the accompanying ships. The Fortuyn was never to be seen again, and its fate is a matter of speculation to this day.

  Dutch records show that the Fortuyn was declared missing in 1774, with loss of all crew. Exact date and location are unknown.

  The first mention of the Flying Dutchman in print was in 1839 when author Frederick Marryat wrote a novel featuring the ghost ship with a cursed captain named Vanderdecken. Van der Decken can be translated as of the deck and thus probably meant “captain of the deck” and not an actual sea captain’s name. Sightings of a ghost ship later to become commonly known as the Flying Dutchman began to appear after Wagner composed the opera Der Fliegende Holländer in 1840.

  Another origin story points to Captain Bernard Fokke or Falkenberg, who sailed for the Dutch East India Company, as captain of the doomed vessel. He was able to navigate from Amsterdam to Indonesia in just three months, which led many sailors to speculate that he had traded his soul for amazing speed during a game of dice with the devil. That story served as imagery for Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, written in 1798.

  Almost forgotten nowadays is another phantom Dutch East Indiaman that haunts the Cape; the Libera Nos, aboard which Bernard Fokke captains a skeleton crew. No doubt, it is sometimes mistaken for the Flying Dutchman or may even be the real Flying Dutchman. The Van Diemen, another Dutch ghost ship, haunts seas closer to modern day Indonesia.

  In dramatizing this story, I have taken certain liberties with some of the gathered information.

  I hope you enjoy it.

  CHAPTER 1

  Manuscript

  For the tenth time in as many minutes, Vince Parker rearranged the stacks of his latest novel, Horror Island, on the table. Sensing the disapproving gaze of the bookshop’s owner, Seymore Jessop, whom he had persuaded to let him hold a book signing in his bookstore, he avoided looking in his direction. So far today, only two customers had bought a signed copy, far removed from the fifty to a hundred copies he had told Jessop he would likely sell. That optimistic estimate now seemed as fictional as some of the events in his novels.

  While wondering how much longer he should suffer the embarrassing experience, he picked up his signing pen and twirled it in his fingers. His gaze flicked to the entrance when the bell above the door chimed to announce a customer entering. It was an older lady, late fifties, early sixties, Vince thought. Though she didn’t seem like someone who would read his books, he wasn’t one to assign labels to people on first sight. Her gaze around the store ended on him with a smile. She made a beeline straight to him and held out a hand when she reached his signing table.

  “Greetings, Vince Parker. I’m Elizabeth Hardy, a big fan of yours, but you can call me Lizzy.”

  Vince smiled as he shook her offered hand. “Hello, Lizzy, that makes three today.”

  The woman glanced around the shop. “It does seem a bit quiet.”

  “Deathly so,” agreed Vince, taking an immediate liking to her. “I heard crickets and glimpsed tumbleweed rolling by a few minutes ago.”

  Lizzy laughed as she picked up one of his paperbacks. “I’ve been waiting to read this but held off buying it online when I learned you were holding a book signing here. It’s only a short train journey from where I live.”

  “This signing is something I’m starting to regret, but thanks for making the effort. It’s appreciated.”

  “Good things come to those who wait,” said Lizzy with a smile. “Which brings me to another reason why I was eager to meet you, but first, I’d like you to sign my copy.” She held out the paperback.

  “I’d be happy to.” Vince took the book and opened it to the title page. “Would you like it to Elizabeth or Lizzy?”

  “Lizzy, please.”

  Vince wrote a short dedication, signed it and handed it back.

  “For Lizzy, who brightened my day.” Lizzy read the inscription aloud. She closed the book and smiled at him. “I’m hoping that rings truer than you presently think.”

  A confused expression appeared on his face from Lizzy’s cryptic remark.

  “Oh, you can lower those confused bushy eyebrows of yours. I’m not your greatest fan like Annie Wilkes from Stephen King’s Misery.” She pulled a plain cream folder from her handbag and placed it on the table. “Inside is something I believe will intrigue the author in you. I’m heading for a spot of lunch in the Fawcett pub just along the street. Meet me there when you’ve finished here, and I’ll explain everything. They do a lovely steak pie and creamy mash. I’ll wait for two hours and then I’m gone.” She held out her hand again. “Goodbye, Vince, and I hope you come. It’s been a pleasure meeting you.”

  For the second time, Vince shook her hand. “Likewise, Lizzy.”

  Without further ado, Lizzy turned away and headed to the counter to pay for the book. Vince returned the wave she gave him when she headed for the exit.

  Vince groaned when he spied the owner striding purposefully over.

  “Well, Mr. Parker, it’s not the rush of fans I was led to believe would descend on my shop t
o purchase your book, is it?”

  Vince shrugged. “It could be worse.”

  “Worse! I don’t see how. You’ve only sold three copies.”

  “Less would be worse,” offered Vince.

  Jessop snorted. “Only barely.” He picked up one of the books and stared disapprovingly at the dark, and foreboding cover picturing a spooky-looking island in a storm-tossed sea.

  “Would you like me to sign it for you?” Vince asked, feigning innocence.

  Jessop promptly returned it to the stack. “How much longer do you intend to prolong your embarrassment? I ask, not to save you discomfort, only because it reflects badly on my shop. Also, you’re taking up a lot of room with your tacky display. Space that I could put to better use for books that sell, and make me money.”

  Vince glanced around at the two sandwich boards with his Horror Island book posters on them. He’d have to haul them back to his car that was parked a couple of streets away. He looked at Jessop sheepishly. “Another hour tops.”

  Jessop nodded. “Unless we are inundated with your promised hoard of fans and reflected book sales, which seems an impossibility, not a second longer.” He turned away and returned to his command post behind the counter.

  Vince sighed. His dreams of becoming an A-list author seem to slip farther away to the land of wishful thinking every day. Remembering the folder Lizzy had left him, he opened it and stared at the photocopy of what seemed to be the title page of an old document. The neat, legible handwriting was easy to read: The true catastrophic events of the Fortuyn as witnessed by Tom Hardy, the sole survivor from the aforementioned vessel. Underneath in brackets and different handwriting and modern blue point pen was written, (Fortuyn = The Flying Dutchman). Though longwinded, it had to be the title of the document absent from the file.

  HE TURNED THE A4 PAGE over; the back was blank. When he reread the title, something dawned on him. Tom Hardy had the same surname as Lizzy. They must be related.

  Vince had researched the Flying Dutchman legend for a planned novel he never got around to writing, one of the many he had started but never finished. The ship is nowadays referred to as the Flying Dutchman because some of its early sightings reported the alleged ghost ship as flying above the waves. His research had revealed this spectacle is often experienced, even today when the weather conditions are right and is called a Fata Morgana. The optical phenomenon can sometimes create the illusion that a ship on or just over the horizon is floating above the sea.

  Lizzy was correct—he was intrigued. He’d stick it out for another hour, clear his stuff and head for the Fawcett pub to meet with her. Hopefully, she’d have the full manuscript with her and let him read it. Why else would she mention it? It could prove to be an ideal subject for his next book.

  Vince thought that most people must have heard of the Flying Dutchman legend, though perhaps not as much as the more modern-day Mary Celeste. Everyone enjoyed a mystery, and this was one that had never been solved. It wasn’t even known what ship had become the ill-fated ghost ship, but if the title was of a true account, that part was no longer a mystery—it was the Fortuyn. A story about the actual events leading to the demise of its crew could prove to be popular and perhaps the number one best seller he, and most authors, yearned for.

  If Tom Hardy had been aboard the Fortuyn and somehow survived, it seems he had recorded what he had witnessed. But why hadn’t it been published before now and why hadn’t he come forward to let people know he had survived and what indeed happened aboard the Fortuyn? Was Tom the only survivor or were there others who had kept quiet?

  His eyes focused on the True catastrophic events section of the title. It could only mean something disastrous had happened onboard. His author’s imagination went into overdrive as he trawled through different violent scenarios. He glanced at the clock. In about forty minutes, he’d hopefully find out.

  VINCE PLACED THE PHOTOCOPIED manuscript he had just skimmed through on the table and looked at Lizzie who sat opposite.

  “Well, what do think?” asked Lizzy.

  “I think it’s a fantastic tale.”

  Sensing Vince’s skepticism, she said, “But...”

  Vince took a deep breath. “It seems a bit...let’s put it this way, and I mean no disrespect, it sounds more like a sailor’s ghost story than anything that actually happened.”

  Lizzie was unperturbed. “Oh, it happened all right.” She fished a hand into her handbag, pulled out a slim wooden casket and placed it on the table.

  Vince studied the box. It looked old, antique with its Dovetail joints on the corners, and a slight curve to the lid held closed by a simple brass clasp. He tilted it slightly to see the faded image painted on the top. Though faint, it depicted strange creatures climbing the side of a ship. Its crew fired pistols and stabbed at them with swords and flaming torches in an attempt to ward them off. He recognized the scene from the manuscript he had just skimmed through.

  “Tom made the box and painted the picture,” explained Lizzie. “Once he arrived back in England, he never went to sea again. He recorded the terrible events he had witnessed aboard the Fortuyn to try and stop the recurring nightmares that plagued his sleep. Eventually, they did fade, but he never forgot what happened.”

  “If the story I’ve just read is a true account, I’m not surprised,” said Vince. Intrigued by the casket, he asked, “What’s in the box?”

  “Proof,” Lizzy replied. “Proof that Tom’s story is true.”

  With eyebrows raised, Vince wondered what the casket could contain that would prove such an unbelievable and fantastical tale was factual. He released the catch, lifted the lid and stared at something wrapped in a piece of sailcloth.”

  Lizzy pointed at the canvas wrapping. “That is the only surviving part of the Fortuyn that exists. A piece of one of its sails.”

  Vince fingered the material, an actual relic from the infamous Flying Dutchman, before folding back the edges. With mouth agape in surprise, he stared at what he had uncovered. After a few moments of letting the vision sink in, he raised his head to Lizzy. “Is this real?”

  Lizzy, obviously pleased with Vince’s reaction, nodded. “It is. Tom brought it back with him. It’s the arm the pirate captain Trent chopped off one of the creatures in the story you just read.”

  Vince returned his attention to the mummified arm chopped off below the elbow. Though only about nine inches long, its sharp claws were frightening. According to Tom’s account of events, the creatures had six claw-tipped limbs, making them formidable foes indeed. He scrutinized the arm for any signs of tampering; the finding of strange creatures had been hoaxed before by joining pieces of different species together. Though he was no expert, the claws were like no other he recognized. They had tiny, almost scalpel-sharp teeth running down their cutting edges. They would rip through skin and flesh like the proverbial hot knife through butter.

  Now at least believing the monsters in Tom’s story might be real, he rewrapped the limb and closed the box. “Okay, I’m ninety percent convinced, but why come to me? You could take Tom’s manuscript and the limb to one of the major publishing houses, who would probably jump at the chance and possibly pay you a huge fee for the publishing rights.”

  “If I wanted money that’s exactly what I would have done. As I said when we first met, I’m a big fan of your books. I like your writing style. You get to the point and keep the story moving along without stuffing the pages with wasteful filler. I know when I pick up one of your books I won’t want to put it down until I’ve read the last word.”

  “Thank you, Lizzy.” He tapped the photocopied manuscript. “Tom’s account is very factual and will need dramatizing. I’ll also have to create some of the events preceding and surrounding Tom’s encounter with the creatures, but I promise I’ll do Tom’s story justice.”

  Lizzy smiled. “If I thought otherwise, I wouldn’t be here.”

  “Again, thank you, Lizzy. This story could be the big break I need.”

&n
bsp; “Nothing would please me more. You deserve to be read by a wider audience.” She pulled a leather satchel from her bag and handed it to Vince. “Tom’s original manuscript.”

  Vince reverently accepted the package. “Thank you. I’ll be sure to return it when I’ve finished with it.”

  “No need. Keep it. I’ll likely be dead by the time you’ve finished writing your book.”

  Stunned by the news, he looked at Lizzy with concern.

  “Damn cancer has me,” Lizzy explained. “If the chemo doesn’t kill it, or me, three to six months, maybe a year if I’m fortunate but unlikely, and I’m gone.”

  “I’m so sorry,” said Vince, who felt genuinely saddened by the news.

  Lizzy tutted. “What will be, will be.”

  Vince nodded a little sadly.

  “Tom also invested wisely, so I’m already well provided for.” She glanced around the pub that was starting to get busy from the lunch trade. “Now you know why the money doesn’t interest me. Even if I needed it, I probably wouldn’t be around to spend it, and I’m the last of the Hardy line. The Great Plague killed a lot of the family off when it swept through London in 1666, and we never really recovered. I have something wrong with me below, meaning I never had children to carry on the Hardy line. My husband died a few years back, so I’m looking forward to being reunited with him in the afterlife if such a thing exists. If not, I suppose I’ll be none the wiser.”

  “I’m sorry, Lizzy, but I’m at a loss as to how to respond.”

  Lizzy reached across the table and laid a hand on his. “A response isn’t necessary. Just write the book as fast as you can and then perhaps I’ll get to read it before I depart for God knows where.”

  Vince placed his other hand on top of Lizzy’s. “I promise I’ll do my utmost.”

  Lizzy smiled warmly as she retracted her hand and sat back. “I know you will, Vince. You seem like a nice guy, and I hope Tom’s story helps boost your career.”

  “I’m sure it will. There’s one thing I’d like to ask, though.”

 

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