The evening sunlight was certainly a spectacle to behold in the Caribbean, the calm picturesque azure seas lighting up spectacularly as the land began to draw its long shadows like daggers of the night. Tropical birds squawked their final farewells of the day before retiring for the night, where the strange humans that called the town they called Nassau home seemed to be at their strangest. The year was 1718 and for three years Nassau had been the heart of the Pirate Republic, although murmurs that the British would actually make us of their claim of the colony of Jamaica and drive them out. Amongst those who would fancy themselves pirates in this free man’s haven was Douglas MacNichols, a man of solid if slight reputation, enjoying the last rays of the Caribbean sun before she retired for the day and the lamplight of the taverns and brothels would light the streets, beckoning lustful men like moths to the flame. Whole most of Trident’s crew, a rambunctious lot, found their sins in the bigger and more frequented taverns or whore houses of the town, MacNichols enjoyed himself with the company of few others on a patio bar with a commanding view of the ocean. Some men drank to forget or to have a spot of fun before the gruelling labour of the voyages ahead. The Scotsman drank to toast another day lived to see another beautiful sunset.
Also, the lack of mutiny to disrupt such serene pleasures.
It was part of why he found himself secluded with men he knew the faces of but not the names, crew from other ships docked in the bay. The crew of Trident, a schooner of ill repute, seemed to be growing more and more outrageous by the day, and with rum’s unspoken properties of forcing a man to speak his mind plainly, more and more of the crew seemed to wish that Captain Brailham found himself disposed of, one way or another. It was the or another that had MacNichols concerned. He had his doubts and disapprovals like any other man, sure, but to wish Brailham dead after so many years of success and opportunity didn’t sit well. Perhaps he was getting old; hell, a man in his late 30s was practically a senior citizen in these parts, and diseases such as scurvy and malaria had yet to come claim the man, but he seemed to be becoming more timid, less brash than he used to be. Far too many lucrative opportunities slipped away, one to many times back to port with nothing to show for it. Perhaps he realized he was a mortal man and wished to live long enough to enjoy his riches. If the crew had their way, however, he’d soon find that time very short indeed.
However, it was a problem for tomorrow, or the day after, or maybe next week or month. What mattered now was watching without count the minutes until the amber orb kissed the horizon a sweet farewell and the rum would find its way into his veins until he had no care in the world, MacNichols decided. It was a shame there wasn’t a good scotch in port; despite the number of Scotsmen that could be found in the West Indies, the British colonies carried an English flavour, much to MacNichol’s displeasure. He sighed and lifted his glass to drink before his eye caught a silhouette in the gas that was impeding the lamp light he had grown accustomed to. He knew just who it was.
“If it isn’t my favorite vulture.” He said, gesturing to the barkeep to bring another glass to his table. “Those sharp eyes of yours always seem to be hunting for me, Mabel. What do I owe the pleasure?” he asked, only half sarcastically.
Also, the lack of mutiny to disrupt such serene pleasures.
It was part of why he found himself secluded with men he knew the faces of but not the names, crew from other ships docked in the bay. The crew of Trident, a schooner of ill repute, seemed to be growing more and more outrageous by the day, and with rum’s unspoken properties of forcing a man to speak his mind plainly, more and more of the crew seemed to wish that Captain Brailham found himself disposed of, one way or another. It was the or another that had MacNichols concerned. He had his doubts and disapprovals like any other man, sure, but to wish Brailham dead after so many years of success and opportunity didn’t sit well. Perhaps he was getting old; hell, a man in his late 30s was practically a senior citizen in these parts, and diseases such as scurvy and malaria had yet to come claim the man, but he seemed to be becoming more timid, less brash than he used to be. Far too many lucrative opportunities slipped away, one to many times back to port with nothing to show for it. Perhaps he realized he was a mortal man and wished to live long enough to enjoy his riches. If the crew had their way, however, he’d soon find that time very short indeed.
However, it was a problem for tomorrow, or the day after, or maybe next week or month. What mattered now was watching without count the minutes until the amber orb kissed the horizon a sweet farewell and the rum would find its way into his veins until he had no care in the world, MacNichols decided. It was a shame there wasn’t a good scotch in port; despite the number of Scotsmen that could be found in the West Indies, the British colonies carried an English flavour, much to MacNichol’s displeasure. He sighed and lifted his glass to drink before his eye caught a silhouette in the gas that was impeding the lamp light he had grown accustomed to. He knew just who it was.
“If it isn’t my favorite vulture.” He said, gesturing to the barkeep to bring another glass to his table. “Those sharp eyes of yours always seem to be hunting for me, Mabel. What do I owe the pleasure?” he asked, only half sarcastically.