Ahab's Wife

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Ahab's Wife Page 30

by Sena Jeter Naslund


  “He befouled himself,” the boy said, embarrassed. “I be helping him to wash.”

  In fact, he was washing Kit by himself, as Kit sat cross-legged on the deck, stripped to the waist, one hand chained up and the other lying idly in his lap. Terror swept through me. I shook his wet shoulder and called his name, but Kit continued to stare.

  Finally he said, “We’ve eaten everything else. Why not? That’s what Giles said.”

  “No, he didn’t say that,” I said.

  “Yes, he did. You didn’t hear, Una.”

  “Stop it,” I said. I could feel hysteria rising in my voice. “Stop this!”

  “Una. Come closer. I want to whisper to you.”

  I leaned over to listen. The wash boy retreated.

  “Bake me a pie, Una, and in the pie, hide a rasp. A file. Bring me the pie at dusk when they can’t see well. I’ll saw free—very quietly—in the night.”

  “Una!” It was Sallie calling me. “Una, come away now. Let the men take care of him.”

  I looked at the brownish puddle on the deck, a foul-smelling and shallow sea. What tiny, invisible creatures swam there? A degraded universe.

  AS THE DAYS passed, Kit’s dementia deepened, and he imagined me to be his mad mother. “Let’s bake bread,” he would say. He spoke of seasonings, of raisins and cinnamon and cardamom, as though they were magical in their powers. He spoke of eyes as witching stones and said that mine were lapis and his were agate. He said the wind smelled of blood. He tried to unfasten his trousers.

  My grief for Giles became displaced by anxiety for Kit.

  Sometimes he was quiet, and then he was allowed to walk about if I or another accompanied him. One day, he ran for the rigging and tried to climb up, to look for Giles. After that he was chained, and again there was talk of pies and rasps when I visited him. Once he asked Sallie where was his wife?

  I had a cold dread that he would point an accusing finger at me and tell that we had coupled or how we had survived. But so many of his words were wild and whirling that I doubted his stories would be taken as anything but madness. Yet I dreaded to hear those true words uttered in the open air. I dreaded to have to pretend that the idea was shocking.

  I would have sat with Kit all the live-long day, and night, too, in spite of this dread, but Sallie and her Captain Swain firmly asked me not to do this. Sometimes in the night I fancied I heard him shrieking Una, Una, Una and the jerking of a short chain. There were no potions or herbs for treating madness aboard the Albatross. “We can only try to keep his body safe,” Sallie said. His mind sank, like the wrecked Sussex, beneath waves of melancholy and dementia.

  Now it was my time again to stand at the rail and look to sea. With the sun warming me, I strove to concentrate its goodness in my person. Often I felt I gathered strength and resolve till I was brimming with it. Then I went to see Kit, to try through sheer dint of cheerfulness to plant him with the seed of a happy thought.

  Once he was standing manacled to the foremast with his hat off, staring at the sea. When I came nigh, I could not cause him to look at me.

  “We will resurrect him,” Kit said.

  “It can’t be done.” I answered as judiciously as though he had said that we would merely climb a mountain.

  “Under the right conditions,” Kit spoke intensely, “anything is possible. Giles called it the Theory of the Impossibility of Impossibility.” Kit did not look at me, but he put his hand on my shoulder. “I want us to marry.”

  Was I as mad as he? I simply said yes.

  For a moment, it seemed everything stopped.

  I TOLD KIT not to stare so at the water, that the glare would hurt his eyes. I glanced up. Clouds moved again. Slowly Kit lifted his eyes to the sky.

  “It’s a contest,” he said. “I’m going to make it stop.”

  “What?” Hadn’t our lives already stopped? And started again?

  “I will make the sun stand still.” He spoke and stared with riveted gaze at the sun. “Then Giles will rise from the water.”

  And so he stood all day while the sun passed over his head and down the sky into the western waters.

  I was not mad, yet Kit’s madness seemed woven into me. His steadfastness, his devotion, sang through his pain of our great loss. How could I ease Kit’s pain? My own I could scarcely face.

  CHAPTER 54: I Am Married

  AS WE APPROACHED the Azores, a whaling ship that once I had watched through a spyglass came into view—the Pequod, out of Nantucket. I knew that whaling ships did not often stop to gam with merchant ships such as the Alba Albatross, but when the Pequod hove into view, I got the scent of home—Kit’s island home—and I asked my captain if he would not try to hail the Pequod and prevail upon its captain to take Kit to Nantucket, if they should be homeward bound, as they appeared to be.

  “What of yourself?” Sallie asked. “Will you stay with me?”

  “I doubt the captain yonder would board Kit without a caretaker.”

  “But if he will…”

  My mind would not knead the question.

  I did not tell Sallie that I had agreed to marry my Kit. Perhaps Kit himself had forgotten. Let it be as Kit willed, but I knew that if I was married to him then I would have some say in his care. Who would care for him if not I? Charlotte, that name, came to me—his friend who had kept his pet vixen. But he never spoke of her. And he had lain with me.

  And I had had enough of trying to live at sea.

  THEN THE WORLD was full of sails as the Pequod and the Albatross drew together. I saw the ivory tackle of the squarish Pequod, built so much more sturdily than the clipper Albatross. And the captain—Ahab with the zaggy mark down the side of his face. I thought of how, when I was still a girl at the Lighthouse, the lightning had come close to me. Ahab had an eagle’s face; he wore no hat, and his gray-white hair streamed back from his brow.

  He was of medium height, and though he was not young, his body had an extraordinary hardness to it, as though he had endured much. Whatever the gods had hurled at him he had withstood, I reasoned. Time might blanch his hair, calamity might mark his face, but he strode the deck as though every nail belonged to him. His hands had a peculiar reddish hue, as though they had reached into a fire and snatched out whatever it was that Ahab wanted.

  His foot in a rope loop, Captain Swain was swung by the cargo crane to the Pequod, which then moved off a short distance. With the calm certainty that my life had come to another crossroads, I watched the two captains talking on the deck. Captain Swain gestured back to the Albatross, and Captain Ahab looked at me.

  At once Ahab walked to the rail of his Pequod toward us, speaking to Captain Swain as he moved. They boarded a whaleboat, were lowered and ferried back toward the Albatross. I stood still and waited. Someone brought Kit to stand beside me. He seemed to know that some judgment was to be rendered on us, and he stood quietly, though I could sense the contraction of tension in him. I knew he would insist on being judged aright.

  As Captain Ahab strode toward us, I heard him mutter, “I never liked the tread of a merchant vessel.”

  “Nor I,” Kit suddenly said.

  Ahab eyed him closely. “Ye’d go to Nantucket on a whaler then? With Ahab, would ye? With cannibal old Ahab?”

  “Brother,” Kit said, unsmiling, challenging. He stared at Ahab as though he were the sun.

  “Brother?” Ahab questioned. “Ye’d better count me on fingers and toes and teeth as well. I’d say ‘Father,’ were I ye, before I said ‘Brother.’ ”

  “With my wife.”

  I felt my head jerk up with surprise.

  “Captain,” Sallie said, “they’re not married.”

  “Marry us,” Kit said, turning to Captain Swain.

  “I won’t,” he answered. “It’s not fitting.”

  “Marry us,” Kit said to Ahab, “on your ship.”

  “The man’s mind spins like a weathervane,” Captain Swain said.

  “What would ye?” Ahab asked me, and as he asked
, there was a softening of his tone, imperceptible to the others perhaps, but soft as dew to me.

  Kit grasped my hand and squeezed till it hurt. “I will not go,” Kit said to me, “if you fail in your promise.”

  “Una!” Sallie exclaimed, gently taking my hand away from Kit. He let go and watched. Sallie led me aside. She spoke softly, directly into my ear; she implored me to consider the seriousness of marriage.

  “I did say that I would,” I answered.

  “A promise to a madman cannot be binding,” she said. “You were probably half gone yourself. Did you think of what you were saying? Answer truly.”

  I told her no, that I had not thought. I had only said the word that seemed inevitable.

  “Inevitable?”

  “The universe prepared us for each other.”

  She put her gentle hands on my shoulders and shook me.

  What sentences could I speak that would seem meliorating and reasonable? I told her that I had loved Kit for many months, that I was not afraid, that I believed that he would never hurt me, that we had an old understanding.

  “It was Giles you loved.”

  “Sir,” I called to Ahab, “will you marry us?”

  “If ye wish it,” he said.

  “You are a barbarian,” Captain Swain said to Captain Ahab.

  “She chooses her fate,” Ahab said. “Look at her.” Something like a smile passed his face.

  So I turned to Sallie and asked if I might take a few things with me.

  “Whatever you like,” she said, true to her generous nature to the end. But she did not accompany me belowdecks.

  In going toward my cabin, I passed one of the merchant sailors whom I had seen before only at a distance. Though I was preoccupied, I looked at his eyes, and he stopped and looked deeply at me for a moment as we passed in the corridor. A voice within me spoke: He is the most interesting man I have ever seen. In an abstract, detached part of my mind, Giles and Kit grew pale. Interesting—why that cold word? Did I mean promising? And promising what? As I walked into the room to pack a few dresses, my inner voice added with regret: But now is a time when I must leave this place.

  I had said I would go with Kit, and I would. I wanted to be truthful and loyal.

  I was wearing a navy dress, and I was glad of it, for marriage, like leaving the Island, had the feel of beginning a journey, even though I had already put my foot upon the path. I selected two of Sallie’s older dresses, folded and placed them in a pillowcase along with a few other items. A sad little part of me thought of the dried rose petals, the gift of Giles, that had accompanied me onto the Sussex and sunk with her. I threw the pillowcase over my shoulder like the sailor boy I had tried to be and hurried to the deck.

  Ahab and Kit had already crossed over to the Pequod, and Ahab, his hand at a long bone of a tiller, was bringing his ship close beside the Albatross. In Ahab’s stance—legs spread, body balanced—I thought there was something wild, outside the usual laws of risk and chance. At the corner of my eye, I saw Bob in his red-and-white-striped shirt. I crossed to Bob, held out both hands to him, but the words of thanks would not come.

  “I was glad to help ye,” he said simply, his face red, his eyes teary.

  I kissed Sallie through her weeping, tried to thank Captain Swain, and settled myself into the half-barrel chair, upholstered in red oilcloth, with which the Albatross had equipped itself for the sake of comfortably transporting Sallie onto or off the vessel. Thus, seated in the barrel chair, I was swung by a crane from one ship to the other, though Ahab had brought the Pequod so close I could have walked a plank between the ships.

  Kit came to me with that gallantry I had noted so long ago on my Island, to help me from my seat. There we stood together on the deck of the Pequod, holding hands, not looking back at our kind friends. We sailed west. When we were at a distance safe from accidental collision with the Albatross and yet again some—far enough to feel our freedom —Ahab gave the tiller to the first mate—Starbuck, he called him—and approached us.

  “Now be it true,” he asked, “be it true still that ye both would be married?”

  When we both answered yes, Ahab reached for our hands. He held them between both of his—rocky hands, like the kind of outcropping that could scrape the hull out of a ship, but forming for our nuptial a natural cathedral, one flinty hand for our floor and another for our ceiling. Within that strong vise, he pressed our hands together. “Now ye be married,” he said.

  CHAPTER 55: Aboard the Pequod

  GINGER COOKIES,” Kit said. “One pint molasses, one cup sugar, one of butter, one-half cup water, two cups flour, one of saleratus, and one of ginger.”

  “His mother was a baker,” I said to Ahab. “Of Nantucket. Their name is Sparrow.”

  “Ye have the name, too, now,” Ahab said.

  I felt surprised, a nudge, as when the search boat, bearing nothing of Giles and all of a new reality, had nudged against the Albatross.

  “She has the ginger in her,” Kit said to Ahab.

  “Man, take your little wife below,” Ahab said. “I’ll give ye and her my quarters. I’ll sleep with the mates.”

  I was astonished that a captain would casually give up his quarters, but Kit gestured toward the hurricane house built on the deck. “Who lives there?”

  “Naught. Naught but time and weather. That little house is reserved for winter wind. We’ll meet him as we sail. He’ll be stamping his foot on deck in a week or two.” Ahab stared at Kit with the fixed gaze of a man mesmerized by fireplace embers. “Take your wife and go below,” Ahab repeated.

  Kit pointed up the mizzenmast. “Who inhabits the heights?”

  “Lightning and thunder, sea hawks and wind.”

  “My wife would like that.”

  “Go below. Take your sweet wife. She’s married you, man.”

  WHAT KIT dreaded most was to be locked up belowdecks, but I coaxed him into Ahab’s chamber, a room very spartan compared to the other two samples of captain’s quarters I had known so well aboard the Sussex as a boy and aboard the Albatross as a woman. The captain of the Pequod slept in a hammock, not a gimbaled bed. He had slung the hammock in the stateroom.

  Ahab had an enormous library of maps, with shelves built vertical to stand them in, and a very large table upon which to spread them. His clothes had been relegated to an ivory-plated sea chest, with scrimshaw ovals and rectangles. These decorative lozenges, of varied styles and motifs carved by many hands, were fastened with tiny screws to the wood of the chest so that it looked shaggy, covered with a congeries of whitish scabs. In the corner stood bundles of harpoons and lances wired to the wall so that they could not shift in some swell and strike the hand or person of him who should have wielded them. When I opened the door to the chamber usually used by captains as a bedroom, I found an extra storage space stacked to the ceiling with small casks of spermaceti.

  Kit peered out one after another of Ahab’s three aft portholes. Anxiety swept his countenance. “Where have we been?” he asked. “And where are we going?”

  “Home,” I said. “To Nantucket.”

  “We’d best study the way.” He reached up into the vertical shelves and clutched the gilt spine of a map book. Spreading the map on the table, he remarked, “I’ll copy this. This time we’ll know the right way.”

  I put my hand on his shoulder, a bit timidly. “We’re married now.”

  “If you say so.”

  A knock at the door, and a rough-and-ready steward appeared with a stack of covers. He stammered that they were “for a pallet” and retreated, red with embarrassment.

  I arranged our bed and called Kit to come and sit, but he replied that he needed to copy a map, before the ship sank and we were adrift, chartless in an open boat. “Which is this?” he asked. “The South Pacific or the North Atlantic?” When I told him, he set to work, making free use of Ahab’s pens and paper and Ahab’s broad table.

  As Kit worked, my eye visited the shaggy chest decorated with little
ivory plates. Among the scrimshaw pictures was a particularly fine row of whales, a kind of encyclopedia, including narwhals with their unicorn horns, the right whale with his ironic smile, the finback, the great blue with his mammoth pleated baleen hanging like a basket under his mouth, the sperm whale whose body is one-third head, the orca shaded in black and white, and many others.

  Through the porthole, I watched dusk and then night come on, but ere nightfall, after a knock, I found left at our door a burning candle and a platter of food. Ahab had had sent to us a common salver, assuming that I and my husband were one. But at night Kit climbed into the hammock and I slept on the pallet.

  I could not sleep for wanting the comfort of my husband. Gladly would I repeat the pain for the sake of his warm embrace. Perhaps in his mind we were not even married. But we had lain together on a hard bed. That forecastle floor of the Albatross was the hard fact of Giles’s death. Kit and I were married then more than by words uttered and hands pressed together on the Pequod. Had he forgotten the Albatross? Suppose he did not want me, but dreamed of Charlotte? But he had wanted the pleasures of the flesh, with a natural, male wanting, on the Island. And my body had yearned in response.

  Certainly he dreamed, for he mumbled continually in his sleep, but the words were misshapen and incomprehensible. Not English words, nor words in any language, but syllables cut loose from sensible words. From his fitful slumber, sounds rose and fell, in volume and in pitch, as though his tongue were a sea-tossed ship.

  But Shakespeare counsels that sleep can knit up the raveled sleeve of care, so I let Kit be. The babbling might have come from a babe rocking in his cradle.

  At length, I rose and stood at the porthole and looked at the starry sky. I was grateful for the glass between us. What did I know of madness? Only what the poets taught. I knew Lady Macbeth, Hamlet and Ophelia, Lear. None of them ate dung. I knew a bit of my own madness from the boat. Now the stars were sturdily framed by Ahab’s porthole, but then they had been loose in the sky and diving into the sea. There had been another universe, one in my mind, so lonely and distant that its presence was an absence.

 

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