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In an Adventure With Napoleon

Page 12

by Gideon Defoe; Richard Murkin


  ‘Are you a ghost or are you a zombie?’ asked the albino pirate tentatively. ‘If you’re a zombie then don’t just say “ghost” in order to gain ready access to our brains.’

  The Captain patted him on the head reassuringly and looked the mural up and down. ‘Not sure you’ve done justice to my famous hourglass figure,’ he sniffed, hands on hips. ‘But I like the ponies, they’re a nice touch.’

  ‘Your pony is called Starchaser. And Mister Napoleon’s is called Moon jumper,’ said the pirate in green eagerly. ‘I’ve written some stories about the adventures you get up to riding about on them in the afterlife.’

  ‘And they’ve done you very well, Napoleon,’ added the Captain, turning to the other washerwoman, who the pirates now saw was actually the moonfaced little general. ‘Really caught the quiet strength of your eyebrows.’

  ‘Hang on,’ said Jennifer. ‘Do you mean to say you two like each other now?’

  ‘Yes, it’s amazing what five days sharing the same bit of driftwood will do for a relationship,’ said Napoleon, winking. ‘It’s real kill-or-cure stuff. I think they should recommend it to married couples going through difficulties.’

  ‘But where have you been all this time? And why aren’t you in the afterlife?’ asked the pirate with gout.

  ‘Like Napoleon says, we drifted around for a while. Endless lapping waves, unremitting tedium, all the usual lost-at-sea stuff. But Neptune must have been in one of his better moods, because just before we got to drawing lots for who got to eat my succulent thighs first, we were picked up by a passing ship. Of course, slightly less fortunately it turned out to be a slave-ship run by those black-hearted brigands from the East India Company. So before you could say “I like ham” we were thrown in the hold and clapped in irons.’

  ‘Dear me. How on earth did you escape?’ asked the Governor.

  ‘Aarrr, well. It’s a bit of long story.’ The Pirate Captain sat down on a rock, adjusted his frock and lit a cigarette. ‘There we were, halfway to the other side of the world, hanging upside down in the bowels of this devil ship, facing certain death or worse …’

  ‘… and that’s how we defeated the combined forces of the East India Company, the Jade Emperor’s golden hordes, the King of the Cowboys, and the International Crime Cartel, armed only with a piece of seaweed and six barnacles.’

  All the pirates and islanders clapped, because it was easily the most exciting tale any of them had ever heard, or would ever be likely to hear, with inciting incidents and second-act climaxes and setbacks and moments of despair and character arcs and long dark nights of the soul and last-minute reprieves in all the right places.

  ‘The only thing I don’t quite understand,’ said the Governor, frowning, ‘is how you ended up emerging from the sea dressed as washerwomen?’

  ‘Oh, let’s not get into that right now,’ said the Pirate Captain, yawning. ‘Because it’s a whole other kettle of fish that I may or may not choose to explain at a later date, depending on how the mood takes me.’

  ‘Fair enough, Captain,’ said Jennifer. ‘We’re just happy you’re back. Anyhow, you’ll be delighted to know that we kept up with the bee-keeping. We’ve become quite proficient at it. It turns out the albino pirate is a bit of a natural.’

  ‘Yes, Captain,’ added the Governor happily. ‘Famous Nautical Honey is now St Helena’s most popular export.’31

  ‘Aaarrr, about that,’ the Pirate Captain said, absently twirling a lock of beard hair around his finger. ‘I hate to disappoint you, lads, but I’ve had another one of my unpredictable changes of heart.’

  ‘You mean we’re going to be pirates again?’ asked Jennifer, clapping her hands in delight.

  The Captain grinned. ‘Maybe I am a bit of an antique when it comes to modern piracy. And possibly we’re not the most successful bunch of brigands ever to sail the seven seas. But I still have a glossier beard and better tattoos than any of these young idiots with their all their fancy side-partings and qualifications. So just as soon as we’ve patched up the boat, who’s up for finding some treasure? Even if it is guarded by Giant Crabs with terrible clacking pincers?’

  The pirates waved goodbye to Napoleon and the Governor as the pirate boat sailed away from the island. They rubbed their faces against the rigging and happily inhaled the smell of tar and weevils. A few of them fell over, because they’d been on land so long that they hadn’t found their sea legs yet, except for the pirate with a hook for a hand, who’d found his sea legs because they were prosthetic and made out of wood, and he kept them safely in a trunk next to his hammock.

  ‘It’s good that Mister Napoleon has decided to go back to trying to conquer the world once he’s finished his memoirs,’ said the pirate in green.

  ‘And we’re glad you decided bee-keeping wasn’t being true to yourself, Captain,’ said the pirate with a scarf. ‘In fact, the lads clubbed together and made you something.’

  The pirate with a scarf beckoned to the albino pirate, who stepped forward sheepishly. He handed the Captain a little trophy that appeared to be made mostly from foil and sticky tape. The Pirate Captain held it up in the sunlight and peered at the inscription.

  ‘For the Pirate Captain,’ he read. ‘You’ll always be OUR Pirate of the Year. Love, the crew.’ The Captain paused, and bit his lip. ‘Boys, I don’t know what to say. I mean, obviously this trophy is extremely poorly made and of no monetary value at all, and I don’t suppose the judging process was particularly rigorous, but still, I’m touched. Anyhow, it’s been a long day and I need to get out of these washerwoman clothes,’ said the Pirate Captain, handing the wheel over to his second in command and heading towards his cabin.

  ‘Oh, and lads?’ The Pirate Captain stopped mid-stride, turned round and pulled a serious face. ‘The best thing about the seaside is the Punch and Judy shows.’ Then he marched through the big oak doors to his office.

  ‘He’s right, said the pirate in green. ‘It is the Punch and Judy shows.’

  ‘Especially the bit with the crocodile and the sausages,’ said the albino pirate.

  And with that, the pirates went downstairs to do some shantying.

  31 In the UK alone it is estimated that bees’ contribution to the agricultural economy stands at £1 billion, but this is threatened by the alarming recent spread of Colony Collapse Disorder, which has already wiped out a quarter of America’s 2.5 million honeybee colonies.

  Starchaser and Moon jumper

  Will return in

  Ponies Galore!

  Book 9 of the Pony! Adventure Series

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either

  are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events,

  or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2008 by Gideon Defoe and Richard Murkin

  Endpaper maps and interior illustrations copyright © 2008 by Dave Senior

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Pantheon Books,

  a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in

  Great Britain by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, an imprint of the

  Orion Publishing Group, London, in 2008.

  Pantheon Books and colophon are registered trademarks

  of Random House, Inc.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Defoe, Gideon.

  The pirates! in an adventure with Napoleon / Gideon Defoe.

  p. cm.

  eISBN: 978-0-307-37826-2

  1. Pirates—Fiction. 2. Bonaparte, Napoleon, Inspector (Fictitious

  character)—Fiction. I. Title.

  PR6104.E525P569 2009 823′.92—dc22 2008050923

  www.pantheonbooks.com

  v3.0

 

 


 


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