In an Adventure With Napoleon
Page 7
‘And this …’ the Governor said proudly, ‘is the prehistory of the island.’ He pointed at a model of St Helena covered in a lush tropical jungle with sparkling waterfalls and trees heavy with exotic fruit. A couple of dinosaurs were standing next to a flag pole saluting the Union Jack.
‘That was this island?’ said the Pirate Captain, incredulous. ‘What happened to all the plants?’
The Governor pointed at the next diorama, which featured a boat stuck on some rocks with a goat peeping out of a porthole. ‘In 1567, a ship carrying the King of Spain’s goats ran aground on the island. Two years later …’ he ushered the Pirate Captain on to the next diorama, ‘this was all that was left.’ It showed the familiar windswept scenery, complete with a couple of goats looking moody as they polished off a dinosaur skeleton. Only the Union Jack remained.
‘Bad news those goats,’ said the Pirate Captain. He patted the Governor on the shoulder.
‘England will prevail, Pirate Captain. England will prevail. And finally, we have our star exhibit, as donated by our most celebrated islander, Mister Napoleon Bonaparte.’19
‘Ah, yes, well, as a matter of fact, Curator, I’m in a bit of a hurry,’ said the Pirate Captain, suddenly clapping his hands. ‘So I suppose I ought to present you with my generous donation.’
‘A donation? For us?’ exclaimed the Governor.
‘Seems only right that a man of my stature should help patronise such an important place of learning as this. Bring it in, lads!’ The pirates dragged in the bundle and propped it upright.
‘Now,’ said the Pirate Captain, ‘I’m sure you’re familiar with my most famous adventure?’
‘Is it the one with the slugs?’
‘No,’ said the Pirate Captain, ‘guess again.’
‘Ah!’ said the Governor, ‘it’s the adventure where you left your tax return to the last minute!’
‘Actually, it was Black Bellamy who had that adventure. I always do mine in April,’ said the Pirate Captain. ‘One more try.’
The Governor spent a couple of minutes thinking very hard and looking slightly blank.
‘The Monstrous Manatee!’ exclaimed the Pirate Captain, finally losing his patience. ‘Everyone knows that. I fought him with my bare hands! It lasted six days! The Monstrous Manatee! I’ve told you about it at least three times since I arrived here.’
‘Of course,’ said the Governor, ‘the Monstrous Manatee. An excellent adventure. I’d hate to meet that brute in person.’
‘Funny you should say that.’ The Pirate Captain grinned and whipped the sacking away from the bundle. ‘Ta da!’
If you took a loyal but miserable pirate, put his legs in a sleeping bag, tied his arms to his sides as makeshift flippers, dangled seaweed from his head and put some teeth made from orange peel in his mouth, you’d have something that was pretty close to how a monstrous manatee might look. Certainly close enough to fool a landlubbing museum curator, providing you’d told the pirate to stand very still.
The Governor recoiled in fear. ‘My goodness, Pirate Captain! Is that him?’
‘Certainly is. Stuffed and mounted. Unfortunately he shrank to about a quarter of his size in the process. Note the fearsome claws. He nearly had my eye out with those.’
‘Amazing. They look rather like common table forks, but then you did tell me that he was an uncanny and unnatural monster. It really is awfully generous of you, Captain.’
‘Oh, it’s nothing,’ said the Captain modestly. ‘The least I could do.’
He looked around the museum and tapped his teeth with his fingernail. ‘Now, where to put it? It would be a shame to hide him away, don’t you think? What about here, smack bang in the middle of the room? You could put some lanterns on the floor to uplight his face so that he looks extra scary.’
The Governor paced up and down and chewed his lip. ‘I’m afraid there’s Mister Bonaparte’s handkerchief exhibit where you’re pointing, Pirate Captain.’
‘So there is,’ said the Pirate Captain airily. ‘I hadn’t noticed. Well, that’s easily fixed.’ He hefted the handkerchief jar over to a dusty corner and casually plonked it down on top of a wastepaper bin.
‘There you go,’ he said, looking pleased with himself. ‘Score one to the Pirate Captain.’
‘I beg your pardon?’ said the Governor.
‘Sorry, forget I said that. I didn’t mean to say that bit out loud, I just meant to think it in my head.’
18 There are actually quite a few boring museums you can visit around the world. Prague Castle has one that focuses almost exclusively on stone column bases.
19 The late John K. Lattimer, professor emeritus and former chairman of urology at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, bought Napoleon’s penis for $3,000 in an auction in 1977. It had previously been on display at the Museum of French Art.
Nine
THE HORROR OF
FANG VALLEY
he next morning the pirate crew were woken up from fitful dreams of hefty ropes and seagulls by a rhythmic banging coming from the garden. They grabbed their dressing gowns or wrapped blankets around their shoulders and traipsed outside to see what was going on, only to find the Pirate Captain, bare-chested against the elements, hammering bits of wood together. He’d obviously been busy. A gigantic beehive towered a full ten feet above the ground. You could tell it was a beehive because right at the top there was a little sign that read in slightly wonky handwriting: ‘Welcome, Bees!’
‘Hello, lads and Jennifer,’ said the Pirate Captain, wiping his brow and putting his hammer down for a moment. He gestured proudly at the creation looming behind him. ‘What do you think?’
Most of the pirates didn’t know what to think at all, so they just thought about shanties, which was their default thing to think about in situations like this. Taking their lack of response for impressed speechlessness, the Pirate Captain swung open the front of the hive and eagerly waved them forward to have a closer look. Inside, the beehive was divided into a series of lovingly decorated little rooms. There was a dining room, a lounge, and even a kitchen. The top of the hive was devoted to a series of offices for the bees to make honey in. The Pirate Captain wasn’t sure how much direction bees needed but he had added another sign that said ‘PUT HONEY IN HERE’ next to a jar with an arrow pointing at it, just to be sure.
‘It’s brilliant, isn’t it?’ said the Pirate Captain happily. ‘Look, there’s the queen’s chambers, that’s the best bit.20 I’ve made a tiny throne for her to look all regal on. And there’s a little gym for them to work out in, because it’s important my bees remain healthy. And you’ll see I’ve hung up lots of miniature pictures of flowers and pollen and things like that, which bees are into.’
‘It’s certainly not what I was expecting,’ said Jennifer.
‘Thank you,’ said the Captain graciously. ‘Once word gets out in the insect community the bees will come flocking. If bees can flock. Between you and me I think I’ve got a good chance of getting her into the “Readers’ Hives’ section of next month’s Bee-keeping News.”
‘Where did you get the wood, Captain?’ asked the pirate with a scarf, thinking some of the hive looked a little familiar.
‘Off the bottom of the pirate boat. She came apart surprisingly easily,’ said the Pirate Captain with a shrug. Several of the pirates looked aghast, which they conveyed by putting their hands by their cheeks and making their mouths into an ‘O’ shape.
‘Don’t worry, it’s not like we’ll be needing her anymore,’ said the Captain reassuringly. He had just picked up his hammer and started banging a few more nails into the wood when he heard a discreet but unmistakably surly cough, and Napoleon’s big round head appeared over the top of the garden fence.
‘Hello, Pirate Captain,’ said Napoleon, in a tone so glacial that it could have had a polar bear standing on top of it.
‘Hello, Napoleon,’ said the Pirate Captain, equally frosty.
‘I hear you have been kin
d enough to donate to our little museum.’
‘Aarrrr, well, one tries to do one’s bit.’ The Captain stopped banging nails for a moment. ‘For the kids really, more than anything.’
‘Very public spirited of you.’
‘It’s just my way,’ said the Captain modestly. He was hoping that might be the end of the conversation, but Napoleon seemed to be lingering. ‘Sorry, is there something I can do for you?’
‘Yes, Captain, there is.’ Napoleon held up a wodge of papers and waggled them under the Captain’s nose. ‘As you can see, I am trying to write my memoirs.’
‘How’s that going? Have you got to the part where the Duke of Wellington thumps you yet?’21
‘No, I have not. In fact I am barely out of the womb – though already I’m showing my precociousness by being the only baby in Corsica who could eat three rusks at a time.’
‘Writer’s block, eh? Have you tried holding your breath for thirty seconds and wrapping a hot towel around your head? I always find that helps.’
‘I do not have writer’s block, Captain. I am unable to work because your intolerable banging is making it impossible for me to concentrate.’
‘I’m nearly done, so you can keep your hat on. I’m just making my bees a little library. I don’t really expect them to read much – it’s more of a social thing, somewhere for them to network, pick up other bees, that kind of stuff.’
Napoleon looked up at the towering hive and grimaced. ‘What in the name of the revolution is this architectural carbuncle?’
‘It’s not a carbuncle,’ said the Captain with a pout. ‘It’s a beehive.’
‘Well, it won’t do. It won’t do at all,’ said Napoleon. ‘Your “beehive” is blocking the light to my garden.’
‘I beg your pardon?’
‘This,’ Napoleon indicated the patch of garden that now lay in the shadow of the hive, ‘is where I intend to grow a prizewinning marrow. I have achieved many things in my life, Pirate Captain, and one of the few spheres left for me to conquer it that of outsized vegetable produce. I have no choice but to demand that you dismantle your hive immediately.’
‘I will do no such thing,’ said the Pirate Captain, drawing himself up to his full height. ‘A pirate’s beehive is his castle.’
‘I’m afraid I must insist.’ Napoleon paused and gave a sly smile. ‘There are planning regulations to be observed. Not to mention the fact that this construction is clearly an appalling health and safety hazard.’
‘Planning regulations?’ The Captain snorted and pulled a face. ‘Says who?’
Napoleon’s sly smile turned into an outright grin. ‘Says the new head of the St Helena Residents’ Association. I volunteered my services yesterday. You see, Captain, I also like to do my bit for the community.’
And with that, Napoleon flourished his hat triumphantly and ducked back down behind the fence.
The Pirate Captain found the Governor on St Helena’s windswept little beach, painting a watercolour of the view out to sea. It was his favourite thing to paint, because all you needed was a ruler and two slightly different shades of grey.
‘So I’m sure it’s just a bit of a mix-up,’ said the Pirate Captain, striding down the shingle towards him, ‘but my esteemed neighbour seems to be under the impression that he’s the head of the St Helena Residents’ Association. You know how these continental types get ideas into their heads. Too much olive oil in their diet, not enough ham, that’s the trouble.’
The Governor looked a bit guilty and put down his paint brush. ‘Hello again,’ he said, with a strained smile. ‘Actually Mister Bonaparte is quite correct. He came and offered his services yesterday. The truth is we’ve never had a St Helena Residents’ Association, but he seemed so keen I didn’t like to bring that up. Frightfully good of him, really. It’s not a problem, is it, Captain?’
The Captain looked at the Governor and thought for a moment. He prided himself on his ability to multitask, both looking and thinking at the same time. Sometimes he even combined it with walking and eating.
‘Not a problem as such, Governor,’ he said eventually, ‘But the thing is, do you remember how you told me that St Helena is “a little piece of England”?’
‘Oh yes,’ said the Governor brightly. ‘And then you got rather confused and asked how on earth they had managed to lop off a piece of England and tow it thousands of miles away into the middle of the Atlantic. And then I explained that I was talking figuratively, but you didn’t really seem to grasp that and went on speculating that they must have used porpoises attached to ropes. It ended up being quite a long conversation, as I recall.’
‘Yes, well, aside from how it got here, my point is this: St Helena is a little piece of England. And what is England famous for?’
The Governor shrugged. ‘Our delicate cuisine? Our fine dentition? Our uninhibited raw sexuality?’
‘Democracy!’ exclaimed the Pirate Captain. ‘England is famous for inventing democracy.’
‘Are you sure that wasn’t the Greeks?’
‘No, it was the English, same as everything else. Now don’t get me wrong, I’m certain Napoleon would do a great job as head of the residents’ association. But it’s just not very democratic, simply appointing him like that, is it? Can’t imagine Queen Victoria would approve.’
‘Oh dear, I suppose not.’ The Governor shook his bushy mutton chops anxiously. ‘What do you suggest I do?’
‘Well, I’m no expert on these matters, Governor, but I think you have to call an election.’
‘An election?’ The Governor paced back and forth and pondered for a moment. ‘But who on earth would stand against Mister Bonaparte? I mean to say, he’s incredibly overqualified for the position as it is.’
‘Aaarrrr.’ The Pirate Captain frowned. ‘That’s true. It would have to be someone with proven organisational abilities, because I suspect running a residents’ association involves a great deal of hard work, much like running a pirate boat. They’d need to be well travelled, a man of the world. And it would have to be someone the electorate could trust, so, really, you’d want them to have a pleasant, open face.’
‘Pirate Captain!’ exclaimed the Governor. ‘You have a pleasant, open face!’
The Pirate Captain pretended to blush, which is quite a tricky thing to pull off. ‘Me? But I’m just a humble beekeeper. Happy in my quiet life, rearing honey. Not the kind of fellow who lusts after political power at all.’
‘But, Captain,’ said the Governor, a pleading look in his eyes. ‘You wouldn’t be doing it for you. You’d be doing it for the good of democracy. For England!’
‘Oh well, when you put it like that, I suppose it’s hard to refuse.’ The Pirate Captain hunted around in his pockets for a second and then pulled out something small and shiny with VOTE PIRATE CAPTAIN FOR HEAD OF THE ST HELENA RESIDENTS’ ASSOCIATION written across it. ‘Here you go, Governor, have a badge.’
20 After mating with his queen a male bee’s genitalia will snap off and act as a sort of chastity belt, thus preventing her from mating again with any other males. There’s an entire book full of that kind of exciting fact called How Animals Have Sex (ISBN 0–297–85112–8), available in most good remainder bookshops/landfill sites.
21 Napoleon and the Iron Duke briefly shared a lover, the young actress Mademoiselle George. A bit tactlessly she later announced that Wellington was better in bed.
Ten
PERIL IN
CRAB CITY
Letters published in the St Helena Gazette, 1815.
Dear St Helena Gazette Letters page,
I’m sure I’m not the only resident to find our new arrival the Pirate Captain a real breath of fresh air. I especially enjoy his stentorian nose, and I think I probably speak for all us when I say that he has the most luxuriant beard ever. I wonder how he gets it so silky-looking? Perhaps, if he is not too busy, he could pen an article on the subject for our little gazette. I also like his shoes.
Hugs,
&n
bsp; An Anonymous Islander
Dear Sirs,
I am just writing to congratulate our island’s Amateur Dramatics Society on last Thursday’s fine staging of The Tempest. I think Monsieur Bonaparte deserves special praise for his brilliant and commanding Ferdinand – such a shame that the whole performance was somewhat let down by the rather hammy overacting of the Pirate Captain’s Miranda. Otherwise, four stars!
Salutations distinguées,
A long-time devoted reader
Dear St Helena Gazette Letters page,
What a pity that our island’s recent garden fete, which was for the most part a fun day out for all, suffered from such erratic judging in the Heaviest Marrow section of the competition. How Napoleon’s frankly anaemic-looking entry was judged to have been superior to the Pirate Captain’s gargantuan legume I will never know.
Hugs,
An Anonymous Islander
Dear Sirs,
I was recently unfortunate enough to purchase ajar of the Pirate Captain’s ‘Famous Nautical Honey’. Perhaps in piratical circles it is usual for honey to consist mostly of bee heads, soil and seawater, but I would not recommend it to anyone of more refined tastes. By the way, I hear that Monsieur Bonaparte will be signing copies of his memoirs, A Long Road To Greatness, at the local bookshop this coming Saturday. Make sure you get there early or risk disappointment!
Salutations distinguées,
A long-time devoted reader
Dear Hot and Nautical Magazine,