/ 
Outlander #3 - Page 128
Download
https://novelcool.info/novel/Outlander.html
https://novelcool.info/chapter/Outlander-3-Page-127/590789/
https://novelcool.info/chapter/Outlander-3-Page-129/590791/

Outlander #3 - Page 128

Once reaching the coast, he had made his way to the waterfront, and tried there to pass himself off as a seaman, but failed utterly, as his fingers, so skillful with brush and ink, knew nothing of the art of knots and lines. There were several foreign ships in port; he had chosen the one whose sailors looked the most barbarous as being likely to carry him farthest away, and seizing his chance, had slipped past the deck guard and into the hold of the Serafina, bound for Edinburgh.

“You had always meant to leave the country altogether?” Fergus asked, interested. “It seems a desperate choice.”

“Emperor’s reach very long,” Mr. Willoughby said softly in English, not waiting for translation. “I am exile, or I am dead.”

His listeners gave a collective sigh at the awesome contemplation of such bloodthirsty power, and there was a moment of silence, with only the whine of the rigging overhead, while Mr. Willoughby picked up his neglected cup and drained the last drops of his grog.

He set it down, licking his lips, and laid his hand once more on Jamie’s arm.

“It is strange,” Mr. Willoughby said, and the air of reflection in his voice was echoed exactly by Jamie’s, “but it was my joy of women that Second Wife saw and loved in my words. Yet by desiring to possess me—and my poems—she would have forever destroyed what she admired.”

Mr. Willoughby uttered a small chuckle, whose irony was unmistakable.

“Nor is that the end of the contradiction my life has become. Because I could not bring myself to surrender my manhood, I have lost all else—honor, livelihood, country. By that, I mean not only the land itself, with the slopes of noble fir trees where I spent my summers in Tartary, and the great plains of the south, the flowing of rivers filled with fish, but also the loss of myself. My parents are dishonored, the tombs of my ancestors fall into ruin, and no joss burns before their images.

“All order, all beauty is lost. I am come to a place where the golden words of my poems are taken for the clucking of hens, and my brushstrokes for their scratchings. I am taken as less than the meanest beggar, who swallows serpents for the entertainment of the crowds, allowing passersby to draw the serpent from my mouth by its tail for the tiny payment that will let me live another day.”

Mr. Willoughby glared round at his hearers, making his parallel evident.

“I am come to a country of women coarse and rank as bears.” The Chinaman’s voice rose passionately, though Jamie kept to an even tone, reciting the words, but stripping them of feeling. “They are creatures of no grace, no learning, ignorant, bad-smelling, their bodies gross with sprouting hair, like dogs! And these—these! disdain me as a yellow worm, so that even the lowest whores will not lie with me.

“For the love of Woman, I am come to a place where no woman is worthy of love!” At this point, seeing the dark looks on the seamen’s faces, Jamie ceased translating, and instead tried to calm the Chinaman, laying a big hand on the blue-silk shoulder.

“Aye, man, I quite see. And I’m sure there’s no a man present would have done otherwise, given the choice. Is that not so, lads?” he asked, glancing over his shoulder with eyebrows raised significantly.

His moral force was sufficient to extort a grudging murmur of agreement, but the crowd’s sympathy with the tale of Mr. Willoughby’s travails had been quite dissipated by his insulting conclusion. Pointed remarks were made about licentious, ungrateful heathen, and a great many extravagantly admiring compliments paid to Marsali and me, as the men dispersed aft.

Fergus and Marsali left then, too, Fergus pausing en route to inform Mr. Willoughby that any further remarks about European women would cause him, Fergus, to be obliged to wrap his, Willoughby’s, queue about his neck and strangle him with it.

Mr. Willoughby ignored remarks and threats alike, merely staring straight ahead, his black eyes shining with memory and grog. Jamie at last stood up, too, and held out a hand to help me down from my cask.

It was as we were turning to leave that the Chinaman reached down between his legs. Completely without lewdness, he cupped his testicles, so that the rounded mass pressed against the silk. He rolled them slowly in the palm of his hand, staring at the bulge in deep meditation.

“Sometime,” he said, as though to himself, “I think not worth it.”

46

WE MEET A PORPOISE

I had been conscious for some time that Marsali was trying to get up the nerve to speak to me. I had thought she would, sooner or later; whatever her feelings toward me, I was the only other woman aboard. I did my best to help, smiling kindly and saying “Good morning,” but the first move would have to be hers.

She made it, finally, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, a month after we had left Scotland.

I was writing in our shared cabin, making surgical notes on a minor amputation—two smashed toes on one of the foredeck hands. I had just completed a drawing of the surgical site, when a shadow darkened the doorway of the cabin, and I looked up to see Marsali standing there, chin thrust out pugnaciously.

“I need to know something,” she said firmly. “I dinna like ye, and I reckon ye ken that, but Da says you’re a wisewoman, and I think you’re maybe an honest woman, even if ye are a whore, so you’ll maybe tell me.”

There were any number of possible responses to this remarkable statement, but I refrained from making any of them.

“Maybe I will,” I said, putting down the pen. “What is it you need to know?”

Seeing that I wasn’t angry, she slid into the cabin and sat down on the stool, the only available spot.

“Weel, it’s to do wi’ bairns,” she explained. “And how ye get them.”

I raised one eyebrow. “Your mother didn’t tell you where babies come from?”

She snorted impatiently, her small blond brows knotted in fierce scorn. “O’ course I ken where they come from! Any fool knows that much. Ye let a man put his prick between your legs, and there’s the devil to pay, nine months later. What I want to know is how ye don’t get them.”

“I see.” I regarded her with considerable interest. “You don’t want a child? Er…once you’re properly married, I mean? Most young women seem to.”

“Well,” she said slowly, twisting a handful of her dress. “I think I maybe would like a babe sometime. For itself, I mean. If it maybe had dark hair, like Fergus.” A hint of dreaminess flitted across her face, but then her expression hardened once more.

“But I can’t,” she said.

“Why not?”

She pushed out her lips, thinking, then pulled them in again. “Well, because of Fergus. We havena lain together yet. We havena been able to do more than kiss each other now and again behind the hatch covers—thanks to Da and his bloody-minded notions,” she added bitterly.

“Amen,” I said, with some wryness.

“Eh?”

“Never mind.” I waved a hand, dismissing it. “What has that got to do with not wanting babies?”

“I want to like it,” she said matter-of-factly. “When we get to the prick part.”

I bit the inside of my lower lip.

“I…er…imagine that has something to do with Fergus, but I’m afraid I don’t quite see what it has to do with babies.”

Marsali eyed me warily. Without hostility for once, more as though she were estimating me in some fashion.

“Fergus likes ye,” she said.

“I’m fond of him, too,” I answered cautiously, not sure where the conversation was heading. “I’ve known him for quite a long time, ever since he was a boy.”

She relaxed suddenly, some of the tension going out of the slender shoulders.

“Oh. You’ll know about it, then—where he was born?”

Suddenly I understood her wariness.

“The brothel in Paris? Yes, I know about that. He told you, then?”

She nodded. “Aye, he did. A long time ago, last Hogmanay.” Well, I supposed a year was a long time to a fifteen-year-old.

“That’s when I told him I loved him,” she went on. Her eyes were fixed on her skirt, and a faint tinge of pink showed in her cheeks. “And he said he loved me, too, but my mother wasna going to ever agree to the match. And I said why not, there was nothing so awful about bein’ French, not everybody could be Scots, and I didna think his hand mattered a bit either—after all, there was Mr. Murray wi’ his wooden leg, and Mother liked him well enough—but then he said, no, it was none of those things, and then he told me—about Paris, I mean, and being born in a brothel and being a pick-pocket until he met Da.”

She raised her eyes, a look of incredulity in the light blue depths. “I think he thought I’d mind,” she said, wonderingly. “He tried to go away, and said he wouldna see me anymore. Well—” she shrugged, tossing her fair hair out of the way, “I soon took care of that.” She looked at me straight on, then, hands clasped in her lap.

“It’s just I didna want to mention it, in case ye didn’t know already. But since ye do…well, it’s no Fergus I’m worried about. He says he knows what to do, and I’ll like it fine, once we’re past the first time or two. But that’s not what my Mam told me.”

“What did she tell you?” I asked, fascinated.

A small line showed between the light brows. “Well…” Marsali said slowly, “it wasna so much she said it—though she did say, when I told her about Fergus and me, that he’d do terrible things to me because of living wi’ whores and having one for a mother—it was more she…she acted like it.”

Her face was a rosy pink now, and she kept her eyes in her lap, where her fingers twisted themselves in the folds of her skirt. The wind seemed to be picking up; small strands of blond hair rose gently from her head, wafted by the breeze from the window.

“When I started to bleed the first time, she told me what to do, and about how it was part o’ the curse of Eve, and I must just put up wi’ it. And I said, what was the curse of Eve? And she read me from the Bible all about how St. Paul said women were terrible, filthy sinners because of what Eve did, but they could still be saved by suffering and bearing children.”

“I never did think a lot of St. Paul,” I observed, and she looked up, startled.

“But he’s in the Bible!” she said, shocked.

“So are a lot of other things,” I said dryly. “Heard that story about Gideon and his daughter, have you? Or the fellow who sent his lady out to be raped to death by a crowd of ruffians, so they wouldn’t get him? God’s chosen men, just like Paul. But go on, do.”

She gaped at me for a minute, but then closed her mouth and nodded, a little stunned.

“Aye, well. Mother said as how it meant I was nearly old enough to be wed, and when I did marry, I must be sure to remember it was a woman’s duty to do as her husband wanted, whether she liked it or no. And she looked so sad when she told me that…I thought whatever a woman’s duty was, it must be awful, and from what St. Paul said about suffering and bearing children…”

Chapter end

Report
<<Prev
Next>>
Catalogue
#5 - Page 252
#5 - Page 251
#5 - Page 250
#5 - Page 249
#5 - Page 248
#5 - Page 247
#5 - Page 246
#5 - Page 245
#5 - Page 244
#5 - Page 243
#5 - Page 242
#5 - Page 241
#5 - Page 240
#5 - Page 239
#5 - Page 238
#5 - Page 237
#5 - Page 236
#5 - Page 235
#5 - Page 234
#5 - Page 233
#5 - Page 232
#5 - Page 231
#5 - Page 230
#5 - Page 229
#5 - Page 228
#5 - Page 227
#5 - Page 226
#5 - Page 225
#5 - Page 224
#5 - Page 223
#5 - Page 222
#5 - Page 221
#5 - Page 220
#5 - Page 219
#5 - Page 218
#5 - Page 217
#5 - Page 216
#5 - Page 215
#5 - Page 214
#5 - Page 213
#5 - Page 212
#5 - Page 211
#5 - Page 210
#5 - Page 209
#5 - Page 208
#5 - Page 207
#5 - Page 206
#5 - Page 205
#5 - Page 204
#5 - Page 203
#4 - Page 202
#4 - Page 201
#4 - Page 200
#4 - Page 199
#4 - Page 198
#4 - Page 197
#4 - Page 196
#4 - Page 195
#3 - Page 194
#3 - Page 193
#3 - Page 192
#3 - Page 191
#3 - Page 190
#3 - Page 189
#3 - Page 188
#3 - Page 187
#3 - Page 186
#3 - Page 185
#3 - Page 184
#3 - Page 183
#3 - Page 182
#3 - Page 181
#3 - Page 180
#3 - Page 179
#3 - Page 178
#3 - Page 177
#3 - Page 176
#3 - Page 175
#3 - Page 174
#3 - Page 173
#3 - Page 172
#3 - Page 171
#3 - Page 170
#3 - Page 169
#3 - Page 168
#3 - Page 167
#3 - Page 166
#3 - Page 165
#3 - Page 164
#3 - Page 163
#3 - Page 162
#3 - Page 161
#3 - Page 160
#3 - Page 159
#3 - Page 158
#3 - Page 157
#3 - Page 156
#3 - Page 155
#3 - Page 154
#3 - Page 153
#3 - Page 152
#3 - Page 151
#3 - Page 150
#3 - Page 149
#3 - Page 148
#3 - Page 147
#3 - Page 146
#3 - Page 145
#3 - Page 144
#3 - Page 143
#3 - Page 142
#3 - Page 141
#3 - Page 140
#3 - Page 139
#3 - Page 138
#3 - Page 137
#3 - Page 136
#3 - Page 135
#3 - Page 134
#3 - Page 133
#3 - Page 132
#3 - Page 131
#3 - Page 130
#3 - Page 129
#3 - Page 128
#3 - Page 127
#3 - Page 126
#3 - Page 125
#3 - Page 124
#3 - Page 123
#3 - Page 122
#3 - Page 121
#3 - Page 120
#3 - Page 119
#3 - Page 118
#3 - Page 117
#3 - Page 116
#3 - Page 115
#3 - Page 114
#3 - Page 113
#3 - Page 112
#3 - Page 111
#3 - Page 110
#3 - Page 109
#3 - Page 108
#3 - Page 107
#3 - Page 106
#3 - Page 105
#3 - Page 104
#3 - Page 103
#3 - Page 102
#3 - Page 101
#2 - Page 100
#2 - Page 99
#2 - Page 98
#2 - Page 97
#2 - Page 96
#2 - Page 95
#2 - Page 94
#2 - Page 93
#2 - Page 92
#2 - Page 91
#2 - Page 90
#2 - Page 89
#1 - Page 88
#1 - Page 87
#1 - Page 86
#1 - Page 85
#1 - Page 84
#1 - Page 83
#1 - Page 82
#1 - Page 81
#1 - Page 80
#1 - Page 79
#1 - Page 78
#1 - Page 77
#1 - Page 76
#1 - Page 75
#1 - Page 74
#1 - Page 73
#1 - Page 72
#1 - Page 71
#1 - Page 70
#1 - Page 69
#1 - Page 68
#1 - Page 67
#1 - Page 66
#1 - Page 65
#1 - Page 64
#1 - Page 63
#1 - Page 62
#1 - Page 61
#1 - Page 60
#1 - Page 59
#1 - Page 58
#1 - Page 57
#1 - Page 56
#1 - Page 55
#1 - Page 54
#1 - Page 53
#1 - Page 52
#1 - Page 51
#1 - Page 50
#1 - Page 49
#1 - Page 48
#1 - Page 47
#1 - Page 46
#1 - Page 45
#1 - Page 44
#1 - Page 43
#1 - Page 42
#1 - Page 41
#1 - Page 40
#1 - Page 39
#1 - Page 38
#1 - Page 37
#1 - Page 36
#1 - Page 35
#1 - Page 34
#1 - Page 33
#1 - Page 32
#1 - Page 31
#1 - Page 30
#1 - Page 29
#1 - Page 28
#1 - Page 27
#1 - Page 26
#1 - Page 25
#1 - Page 24
#1 - Page 23
#1 - Page 22
#1 - Page 21
#1 - Page 20
#1 - Page 19
#1 - Page 18
#1 - Page 17
#1 - Page 16
#1 - Page 15
#1 - Page 14
#1 - Page 13
#1 - Page 12
#1 - Page 11
#1 - Page 10
#1 - Page 9
#1 - Page 8
#1 - Page 7
#1 - Page 6
#1 - Page 5
#1 - Page 4
#1 - Page 3
#1 - Page 2
#1 - Page 1
Setting
Font
Arial
Georgia
Comic Sans MS
Font size
14
Background
Report
Donate
Oh o, this user has not set a donation button.
English
Español
lingua italiana
Русский язык
Portugués
Deutsch
Success Warn New Timeout NO YES Summary More details Please rate this book Please write down your comment Reply Follow Followed This is the last chapter. Are you sure to delete? Account We've sent email to you successfully. You can check your email and reset password. You've reset your password successfully. We're going to the login page. Read Your cover's min size should be 160*160px Your cover's type should be .jpg/.jpeg/.png This book hasn't have any chapter yet. This is the first chapter This is the last chapter We're going to home page. * Book name can't be empty. * Book name has existed. At least one picture Book cover is required Please enter chapter name Create Successfully Modify successfully Fail to modify Fail Error Code Edit Delete Just Are you sure to delete? This volume still has chapters Create Chapter Fold Delete successfully Please enter the chapter name~ Then click 'choose pictures' button Are you sure to cancel publishing it? Picture can't be smaller than 300*300 Failed Name can't be empty Email's format is wrong Password can't be empty Must be 6 to 14 characters Please verify your password again