To understand what the vignettes are, please refer to my first article, "Peter Cornelius Hoof and Me," and to my book interview.
The prison was dirty and unkempt.
So was he. He had been there for two months. His main thought the
entire time was gratitude that he'd had the foresight to send his
daughter away before he was arrested. He had sent her with his best
friend and former Quarter Master De Lorme. His wish was that she be
raised in France, where she would be educated and live a comfortable
life with no taint of her father's piratical crimes. He had sent her
with De Lorme on a French ship with a supply of money and references.
He was sure his family would take her in and help De Lorme see that
his wishes were fulfilled.
So
far his jailers and the authorities had no idea that he even had a
daughter, much less that she wasn't on the island. They would not
find out from him.
So he
was surprised when one his jailers, the one he considered to be the
uglier, but kindlier, man, came up to the door of his cage to
announce that he had a visitor.
Standing
slowly and a bit unsteadily from lack of activity and a poor diet of
tainted bread and water, he tried to brush off some of the dirt and
straw that had become a part of his hair and clothing during his
confinement.
Two
months of living in dirt with no chance to wash had left him unshaven
and his clothes in tatters. His previous visitors had been government
representatives whose revulsion of his smell and his appearance he
had enjoyed to no end.
But
he had been a clean and stylish man before his arrest, and suddenly
the thought of seeing someone other than a pompous government flunky
left him feeling a bit embarrassed.
“Who
is it?” he inquired as he brushed himself off.
“Who
am I to know?” the guard replied. “It's not for me to know and
not for you to question,” he barked as he unlocked the door of the
cage. He slammed it closed behind them.
Realizing
that this “kindlier” jailer had at least had the grace not to gut
punch him or slug him in the mouth for the act of asking even the
simplest question, he resolved to go along.
“Get
moving,” he ordered, gesturing for him to walk to the left, towards
the main room of the jail. Not much cleaner than the cells, there at
least was a table and a lantern.
“No,
not there,” the guard growled impatiently at him when he moved
towards the table, “in there.” He pointed at a room off to the
left that he had barely noticed before. He had always assumed it was
just another cage. Now he could see the silhouette of a robed and
hooded figure. He went towards it. He heard the door close behind
him.
The
figure lifted it's hood. It was De Lorme. His face was bruised andis
cheeks were sunken. Matthieu barely choked out, “What...?” when
a small figure darted out from behind De Lorme and threw itself at
him, wrapping its arms around him. His daughter. His daughter who was
supposed to be on her way to France, and safety. He felt his breath
leave him. He fell to his knees.
“Oceane!”
He cried, burying himself in her long brown hair. He threw his arms
around her, and his eyes burned with tears. It was a moment before he
could speak.
“What
are you doing here?” he finally managed to choke out.
“We
brought him back,” a strange voice spoke from the shadows. Suddenly
several men stepped out from the far sides of the room.
“We
had no choice,” De Lorme said. “They attacked our ship when we
were barely three days out.”
“Clever
of you to hide her for so long,” one of the strange men spoke, with
a bit of a laugh in his voice. “But the ruse is over. She will be
taken to a place where her every move will be monitored. Her days of
freedom are over, and you have lost.”
Matthieu
could do nothing but hold Oceane, on his knees in total defeat.
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