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Authors: Joan Druett

Shark Island

BOOK: Shark Island
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For Steve

Take care, bro.

Author's Note

On Sunday, August 18, 1838, the six ships of the first, great United States South Seas Exploring Expedition, commanded by Lieutenant Charles Wilkes, crewed by 246 officers and men, and with seven scientists and two artists on board, set sail from the Hampton Roads, Virginia, headed for the far side of the world. Almost four years later, in June 1842, the remnants of the expedition straggled into New York. One vessel had been sent back in disgrace; one had been lost with all hands; another had been wrecked at the Columbia River; and a fourth had been sold into the opium-running trade on the coast of China. Much had been accomplished—huge tracts of the ocean had been charted, plus 800 miles of scarcely known Oregon shore and 1,500 miles of entirely unknown Antarctic coast. The Stars and Stripes had fluttered off the lagoons of well over 200 tropical islands, and more than 4,000 artifacts and 2,000 scientific specimens had been collected, an enormously rich fund that became the foundation of the collection of the new Smithsonian Institution. For uncounted thousands of Pacific Islanders the Exploring Expedition had been their first introduction to the official face of the USA. Yet, instead of returning home in triumph, Lieutenant Wilkes chose to slink on shore by hitching a ride on the pilot boat.

The strange voyage of the U.S. Exploring Expedition is the setting of the Wiki Coffin mystery series. While the novels are based on true events, and many of the participants in the stories are real, the mysteries and the people most intimately involved with them are figments of the author's overactive imagination—as is the brig
Swallow,
the seventh ship upon which most of the action takes place.

One

Atlantic Ocean, October 1838

The hours were dragging. After watching the boat carry Forsythe from the brig
Swallow
to the expedition flagship
Vincennes,
Wiki Coffin had waited at the taffrail for a very long time. Now, however, patience had fled, and so he paced nervously up and down the quarterdeck of the
Swallow,
while foreboding coiled inside him.

It had been dawn when Forsythe had departed, and the misty air had been relatively cool. Steam had risen lazily from newly swabbed decks as the five boats from the different ships had converged on the
Vincennes
in response to Wilkes's urgent summons for a council of war. The distant sounds of marines stamping to attention and the boatswain's piping had echoed with uncanny clarity as the five junior captains had clambered up the side of the flagship and vanished through the doorway of the lofty house on the poop. Another flurry of activity had followed as the boats had returned to their respective ships, but since then there had been no movement on the water.

Now it was almost noon, and the hot sun was high in the sky. The ships lay quiet and still on top of their rippling reflection—the two big sloops
Vincennes
and
Peacock,
the gun brig
Porpoise,
the schooners
Flying Fish
and
Sea Gull,
and the ex-privateer brig
Swallow.
The seventh member of the discovery fleet, the storeship
Relief,
had been sent ahead long since, as she had sailed so badly that she was retarding the progress of the rest all the time she was with them; with luck, they would meet up with her again in a few weeks' time. On the
Swallow,
caulking of the deck boards was shrinking in the heat, and the acrid smell of warm tar rose up so strongly it was almost visible as Wiki paced from one rail to another. Because Forsythe's second-in-command, Lawrence J. Smith, was still on board, he was wearing boots as part of his effort to keep peace with the self-important little man. Lieutenant Smith had no authority over him, Wiki being the expedition translator and therefore a civilian, but Wiki knew perfectly well that the pompous officer would have sniffed and carped if his feet were as bare as those of any common sailor. However, he still wished he could shuck the hot footwear.

At long last, just as pipes shrilled to the tune of “Nancy Dawson” and the usual stampede for the morning ration of grog began, there was movement in the distant doorway of the house on the
Vincennes.
The tall, distinctive figure of Charles Wilkes, the expedition commander, came out on deck first, to be followed by the rest in a huddle. Signals jerked up the far-off lanyard, ordering the various ships to send boats for their captains. Behind Wiki, Lieutenant Smith raised his voice, but blocks were squealing already as the men anticipated his orders and the
Swallow
boat was lowered. Wiki leaned over and watched as it went down. The splash as it hit water was too much to resist—he gave way to impatience and vaulted over the rail, landing on his feet in the bottom of the boat.

When he looked up after settling in the stern thwarts, Lieutenant Smith's face was peering back down at him, flushed red with affront. “Wiremu,” he barked, using his peculiarly irritating version of Wiki's name. “Mr. Coffin, sir! What do you think you are about? I do not believe I heard a request for your presence on the flagship.”

Wiki simply lifted his hand in a silent salute. As the six men of the
Swallow
boat's crew took up their oars they wore broad approving grins, but he disregarded that, too, staring tensely forward as the boat surged rhythmically across the stretch of water that divided them from the
Vincennes.
He was desperate to know if his friend George Rochester, who had been unfairly demoted to the rank of midshipman on the
Vincennes
some weeks earlier, had been restored to the command of the
Swallow.
If not, Wiki—who had never wanted to be part of the exploring expedition in the first place, and had only consented to come because it was a chance to be on the same ship as his old comrade—was determined to jump ship at the next port the fleet touched.

The stern of the boat clicked against the hull of the
Vincennes,
and the man at bow oar reached out and snatched a dangling rope. The boat swung round with the momentum, coming side-on, and then stilled. The instant it was steady Wiki stood up, grabbed the leading edges of planks, and began to climb. Halfway up the side, it crossed his mind that while he didn't care a jot about Lawrence J. Smith's opinion, Captain Wilkes was a much more daunting proposition. Not only was he suddenly glad he was wearing boots, but he rather wished he had lashed up his long black hair, particularly when he arrived on deck and the squad of marines on duty stamped loudly to attention.

These soldiers were bravely sporting crimson coats—yet another sign of the general disaffection within the fleet, which was something that had been obvious long before the ships had sailed from Norfolk, Virginia, in August. Over the past ten years, ever since Congress had first voted to dispatch a body of explorers to the Pacific, the enterprise had stumbled along so badly that it had become known as “the deplorable expedition,” and the men assigned to that expedition had felt the general scorn very deeply. Years had dragged by while the administration and the navy battled and the sailors and marines had waited around in growing frustration. Many of them had been unwelcome guests in the Norfolk Navy Yard, on board “that great ship of the line, the venerable
Constitution
”—as the newspaper reporters grandly phrased it—and had become the butt of coarse humor.

Naturally, they had taken every chance to express their disgust and disenchantment, and one of the most flamboyant mutinies had been staged by the marines. When ordered to get newfangled uniforms—uniforms that Congress expected them to pay for themselves!—they had simply pointed out that it hadn't even yet been decided what the uniform of the U.S. Marine Corps should actually be, official opinion swinging through shades of gray to hues of blue (though some of the nabobs in Washington favored a peculiarly seasick shade of olive green), and had staunchly refused to exchange their old-fashioned red jackets for anything more recent. Informed that only musicians were legally entitled to wear scarlet coats, they had all instantly taken up the drum and the fife, with the result that the
Vincennes
was the most discordant ship on the seven seas. Right now, the boatswain refused to pipe Mr. Coffin on board, Wiki Coffin being a mere civilian and a Kanaka native of some Pacific island, at that, so one of the most daring of the red-coated rebels jauntily whistled a couple of notes on his fife.

Swinging round at the sound, Captain Wilkes exclaimed, “Wiki Coffin! What brings you here?”

Wiki didn't answer. He had just clapped eyes on George Rochester, who was standing at the back of the group of captains, his face stretched wide with an enormous grin. Forsythe was also there, but looking moody and sardonic, and so Wiki deduced with a surge of joy that the command of the
Swallow
had been restored to George. Accordingly, he wasn't paying proper attention.

“How did you guess I wanted to see you?” Captain Wilkes demanded. “However, I'm glad you came,” he went on without waiting for a reply. “A small conference, if you please!”

Wiki ducked his head, doing his best to hide his astonishment. The day before, when he'd done his utmost to explain a series of horrid murders that had sullied the first few weeks of voyage, Wilkes had been in a state of hysterical panic. Indeed, the sensational revelations had brought the expedition commander so close to a nervous collapse that Wiki wondered why he wanted to risk a repetition. Silently, however, he followed him into the big after house that had been built on the poop of the flagship.

A white-painted, lofty corridor divided the first part of the house into two halves. On the larboard side there was a series of varnished doors, which Wiki knew led to cabins for Wilkes himself, plus the four scientifics who lived on board the
Vincennes,
while on the starboard side a spindled partition partly hid a large dining saloon, which smelled of coffee and ham. Casters of crystal glasses hung high in the skylight above the big oblong mess table that took up much of the space, casting iridescent glitters with the slight sway of the ship. The revolving chairs screwed to the floor were turned every which way, just as the diners had left them, while a steward was gathering up dirty dishes and mugs, so Wiki gathered that this had been where Captain Wilkes had held his council of war. However, the commander kept on going, heading for the big room at the end of the passage, which was full of bookshelves and drafting tables, and lit with another skylight. It was here in this wonderfully well lit, high-ceilinged place that the scientifics worked, and the shelves were packed with jars and boxes of specimens as well as books. Right now, however, the room was vacant.

BOOK: Shark Island
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