Alias Hook (32 page)

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Authors: Lisa Jensen

BOOK: Alias Hook
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“Captain.” I come about to find my steward poised gingerly at my elbow. “We—”

“Brassy!” I hail him. “A pot of your worst, if you please. Bring it to my quarterdeck.” It will take a tankard or more to burn off the edge of my rancor.

But I chase the first with a tankard of rum shared with the men in the mess room after their morning labors. It’s brutal hot on deck, but pleasant enough down here. Nutter fetches me another, and whatever sense of urgency I came here with is fast ebbing away. I can scarcely recall now what it was that so troubled me earlier. But whatever it was I had to do can surely wait. We’ve nothing but time in the Neverland.

 

 

A faint, brash piccolo, or perhaps a tiny bell rouses me out of deep, dreamless torpor. The next thing I know, an agitation like furtive bees snags my attention once more, another high piping, echoing down as if from some prodigious height. My wits are uncommon sluggish; the voices, if such they be, are out of harmony with each other, one lugubrious, the other harsh, fleet, rattling.

“What do you get out of it?” rolls the first.

“The destruction of my rival,” spikes the other.

I must be dreaming, after all; it can’t be fairy speech. But thought of fairies bursts the dam so painstakingly built up out of rum, anger, and oblivion, and my argument with Stella comes flooding back to me in all its naked viciousness. I groan, sit up, grapple for my coat, and the dream voices vanish.

Blinking about, I see I’m in my cabin aboard the
Rouge.
The sun is westering toward the distant fog bank; the golden light of afternoon slants across my stern windows. How can I have been here so long, the day all but gone? What must Stella think? My bruised, defiant heart cares nothing for her thoughts, but now my wits are ticking back to life, I’m more ashamed than angry. We spoke terrible words to each other, and now I must go back and face the consequences. It is all that separates me from the boys. Otherwise, I prove her accusations true.

At my cabinet, I select two crystal wine goblets, which I wrap up in another linen shirt and conceal inside my coat. I stop in the galley for another bottle, not rum, a seasoned port. Stella’s favorite.

“But Cap’n, you ain’t leaving us?” Nutter protests, clawing up on deck as I march astern for my boat.

“My work is best done at night, while the boys sleep,” I tell them all, and climb down the chains.

 

 

Stella does not come on deck to greet me when I tie up and climb aboard
Le Reve.
Small wonder, after our bitter words. The golden afternoon has given way to violet dusk, and the gloom below decks is total. I pause, blinking, at the foot of the ladder to get my bearings until the shadows arrange themselves into the familiar shapes of cookpot and bricks in the galley, heaps of tools stowed away in the salon. But none are Stella. The cabin too is empty, and the hold. In a panic now, I race above again, but discover no fallen form, collapsed in a swoon or worse, behind the cabin top or in the bows. Stella is an excellent swimmer; she can’t have drowned in the lake. Swum off to the beach? But I don’t need my glass to see the whole of the black sand beach is empty.

She is simply gone.

I can scarcely breathe for the fear clutching at my insides. The boys, it must be, made off with her at last. But there is no evidence of struggle. The hatch cover hangs complacently where I left it, unlatched, not hacked to bits. There is no toppled furniture, nor stray arrows poking out of planks, nothing disturbed or out of place. Nothing at all is the matter with
Le Reve
except Stella’s absence.

I grasp the rail, heart pounding. She’s run off. Abandoned me to this living nightmare for all eternity. She didn’t get what she wanted of me and now seeks it elsewhere. She is either the falsest, cruelest woman to ever draw breath, or part of some vast conspiracy in the Neverland to wound me beyond all enduring. Both explanations are equally repellent. Hook, the gull. Hook, the fool. Rage boils up inside me from some deep, rank place, blotting out the day, the beach, my sloop, the feeble bleating of my ruined heart. Rage, my oldest ally and only friend, hotter even than the bloodrage of battle, seductive as black drops, an inferno of consuming, unthinking rage; take me my old friend, use me.

I storm below again, desperate to stop the spinning of the world and all its mockery, trembling with the urge to destroy some thing of hers as she has destroyed me. All is fearfully shipshape in my cabin, bedclothes straightened under the coverlet, a little pile of her garments folded neatly on the bed. The lantern hangs on its peg; candle stubs and flints are arrayed upon the shelves beneath the window, alongside her precious Milton and the long, curling pink flamingo feather. This last I grasp, but it seems to hum against my skin like a kiss or a sigh, or a butterfly’s downy wing, sensation more potent than memory, fraught with all we shared. Once.

I slam the feather back on the shelf. Damn her and all her kind! I never claimed to be aught but the monster I am. I challenged her to love me, and she failed that challenge. If she thought to reform me, like some coy little Wendy, with her laughter and her clever talk and the sweet refuge of her body, she was sadly mistaken. I’ve been cozened and betrayed by women all my life. Why is this one so remarkable? Perhaps it’s the precision with which she cut through my defenses, found the part of me kept hidden even from myself, dazzled me with the falsity of hope, and then destroyed it all. Devastation will consume me for the rest of eternity. Infinite wrath or infinite despair? Which way I fly is Hell.

Thus paralyzed I remain on board
Le Reve
as night falls, hoping against all reason that Stella might yet come back to me.

 

 

Blue moonlight bathes the frothy carrot tops, the corrugated cabbage leaves, mutes the vivid hues of my irises until all resemble an eerie, phantom landscape on the bottom of the sea. The pealing of a tiny bell, and a presence rustles up beside me, so near I could touch it, a voice as soft as the moonlight.

There’s always a way. We can find it together.

I turn slowly; the shadows fall away. My hand stretches out as the figure comes closer still. At last, I see my companion, my redemption, a woman’s pale face under cinnamon colored hair, dark greenish eyes, mouth tilted slightly up in heartbreaking intimacy. My heart soars. Stella.

Take my hand.

A grazing of skin, a surge of joyful relief. And then consciousness glimmers and all of it, redemption, release, Stella’s warm, forgiving smile, all spirals away from me like sand in a hurricane. Clutching madly at nothing, feverish with remorse and despair, I come awake alone on board
Le Reve,
reeling, heartsick, my sex so hard I have to relieve myself with my hand like a green youth. My agony is complete when in the very instant of self-release, I moan for Stella. Never, not once in over two hundred years I’ve suffered in the Neverland, never, ever have I so wanted to die as in this moment.

3

“She’s dead, Cap’n.”

Filcher blinks at me with rabbit-like sincerity, but the shock his words produce must tell in my face, for he melts back another step. “That’s wot you said, i’n’it?” he falters.

Recovering myself, I nod to reassure him. “So I thought.”

The sky is murderous blue today, back aboard the
Rouge.
Stella did not come back to
Le Reve
last night. Run off to the loreleis, perhaps. Had she any intention of coming back to me, she’d have done so at night, while the boys slept.

But had the boy himself or any of his allies captured her, he’d waste no time coming to me to trumpet his victory. For this reason, I’ve returned to the
Rouge
at first light. I know not which I dread more, that Stella has deserted me or been made off with by some enemy, but either way, I must know.

“She never came back here?” I quiz Filcher.

“Blimey, Cap’n, what for?” he exclaims.

Why, indeed? To beg my forgiveness? Not likely, after what I said to her. Or to launch a new plan of escape, for another grim thought has stolen upon me in the bleak light of day: that the signs and the quest have nothing at all to do with Proserpina cursing me. It was only Stella’s insistence that led me to imagine they were connected. What if I am still here because my eternal curse can never be lifted? If Stella realized it, she might have even gone off in search of some other man whose journey the signs foretell, some renegade Lost Man, ready now to go home. Perhaps she’s already found the way out, the path, the lover’s kiss that was truer than mine.

I must know, must feed my anger, stoke up my flagging rage; I will be a sniveling, broken thing forever if I don’t steel myself against the anguish of losing her. Did she find a more compliant ally among my crew, I must torture myself with knowing to which man she’s transferred her pinchbeck love, which body she prefers to mine, quell the whining of that simpleton, James, within me, before he can point out how little rage, revenge, or even the phantom hope of escape can ever mean to me without Stella.

There’s no more reason than ever to assume one of my men is on this prophetic journey. Except for the trouble someone took to keep me aboard the
Rouge
yesterday, for if I know my hook from a handsaw, I recognize now the hypnotic effect of black drops. Someone must have found an old vial of the stuff after all. I will know soon enough by whose orders they were placed in my drink. And why.

I peer again at my first mate, so gifted at lurking in the shadows. Those voices I thought I heard yesterday: product of my delirium or something more sinister? Did anyone else hear them?

“Filcher, you didn’t happen to be anywhere astern yesterday—” I pause, trying to recall the angle of the setting sun through my stern windows. “Say, an hour before twilight?”

Filcher’s shiny eyes round in apprehension; he’s not sure whether “yes” or “no” is more likely to satisfy me.

“I … don’t rightly recall, Cap’n.”

Surely, had he overheard anything remarkable, he’d have been eager to tell me. I wave him off with my thanks, and he melts gratefully away.

The idlers are still below at their morning mess. Going above, I mark Gato in the crows nest, and Sticks and Swab on watch. Filcher assured me Burley went out in the gig with Nutter and young Flax to manage the nets, and I go to the larboard quarter to watch as the fishing party pulls in. But all three men are there in the boat, Burley in the stern, Nutter and Flax on their feet, fixing the dripping net with its cargo of fish to the tackle Filcher sends down.

Flax is up the side first, after the fish are hauled in.

“Handsomely done,” I tell him as he clambers in over the wales. “Oh, and, Flax, where were you yesterday, an hour or so before twilight?”

Nothing seems to alter in his open face. “Dunno, Cap’n,” he shrugs. “With the lads, I reckon.”

Nutter is lumbering up over the railing, and I ask him the same question.

“Dammit, Cap’n, we got a ship to run,” he blusters. “I don’t know where I am every minute of the day.”

I gaze after them both. I’d make a jest about how the River Lethe appears to be flowing into the Bay of Neverland, but only Stella would understand it.

I turn to the tackle, where men are beginning to haul in the boat, absently take up a line. Perhaps she didn’t need any help from my men to effect her escape. Yet, how—I freeze in the act of winding the line round my hook. Suppose it was Stella’s voice I overheard yesterday, bargaining with a fairy. Ridiculous! What would either one of them be doing on the
Rouge
? Those voices were hallucination, nothing more, I convince myself, as we sway up the boat. And yet, Stella was the one so keen to talk to the imps.

Was she so angry with me yesterday, she made some unholy bargain with a fairy to leave the Neverland in my stead?

Is that why they drugged me?
The destruction of you rival.
Suppose Stella discovered that she and I were rivals for the escape route foretold in the signs. And then we quarreled. I must have made it so easy for her. I even dared her to trade me to the fairies to make good her escape. What if she did? Hook sacrificed on the altar of the boy’s pleasure, left behind for damnation eternal in the Neverland, was that the price of her freedom?

I scarcely notice water cascading across my boots from the streaming boat until Burley good-naturedly pulls me aside and takes my place at the lines. The shouting of the men swaying the boat in to her blocks seems as distant as the moon, as a rift of pain tears open my heart. Did my cruel words make Stella hate me so much?

Then the shouting of the men grows more urgent. The sky darkens above Pirates Beach as they come yelping and hollering toward us, a swarm of boys racketing along to the screech of Pan’s war pipes. Nutter stumbles over the tails of the lines he’s coiling on the wet deck, charges late round the deckhouse for Long Tom in the bows, bawling for his gun crew. But they are scarcely to the ladder before the boys gain the starboard rail. One grimy little fellow with a snakeskin across his middle lights on the foot of the gun near the touch hole and draws an arrow through his bow, a perverse little Cupid aiming at Nutter, who has sense enough to halt at the top rung.

“Hook!” cries Pan, from his perch in the center of the others along the rail. “I knew you’d come back!”

“What do you want?” I bark, steeling myself for the news that Stella is his captive, or worse.

“She’s gone, isn’t she?” He’s positively beaming. “I told you!”

My first response is relief, followed by an agony of loss more bitter than I have ever known plunging through my vitals; it takes all the willpower I possess to conceal it. “Well, what of it?”

Pan frowns at me as if I am a stupid child, then his eyes light up. “So I am the true captain of the Neverland!” he crows, exuberance lifting him high off the rail. “And you are nothing!”

He actually feints backward in the air, grasping the hilt of his sword, anticipating my furious charge. The boys too loom up expectantly, threading their bows, drawing their weapons, eyeing the men. I myself tremble with the urge to go roaring after him, a target at last for all my renewed misery, and my men would not fail me. It’s what they all want, men and boys, all of them.

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