The New World: A Novel
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Washed ashore after escaping Treasure Island, young Jim Hawkins and his companion Natty find themselves stranded on the Gulf Coast of Texas. Their ship, the Nightingale, has been destroyed, and besides one other crew member, they are the only survivors. Before they can even grasp the full scope of their predicament, they realize they are not alone on the beach. When a band of Native Americans approaches the shore in a threatening fury, they brutally kill Jim and Natty’s last shipmate, rob their dead crew, and take the two desperate survivors hostage.
Suddenly, Jim and Natty are thrust into an adventure that takes them all across the unruly American South. Starting with a desperate escape from a violent chief who obsessively keeps close on their trail, they join up with a troupe of entertainers who take them to a thriving and dangerous New Orleans, and seek the closest port so they can set sail for home once again.
In magnificent, free-wheeling prose and in a high-flying style, Andrew Motion has spun a fantastic yarn that will win the hearts of adventure lovers everywhere.
Andrew Motion
Andrew Motion was poet laureate in the United Kingdom from 1999 to 2009, and is the 2015 winner of the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry for his collection Peace Talks. The author of several biographies, he won the Whitbread Prize for Biography for his authorized life of Philip Larkin (1993). He has published a memoir, In the Blood (2006), and two acclaimed young adult novels based on Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island: Silver and The New World. Cofounder of The Poetry Archive, Motion was knighted for services to poetry in 2009. He is currently Homewood Professor in the Arts at Johns Hopkins University, and lives in Baltimore, Maryland.
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Reviews for The New World
79 ratings33 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5After washing ashore after what he was certain was his death, Jim Hawkins finds he has somehow survived--a fate almost everyone else onboard the Nightingale did not share. But his companion Natty has made it to shore with him, and they'll need to find their way. When they're intercepted by a tribe of natives and imprisoned, they know their choices are limited. When they find a moment to escape they expect they will never get again, they take the chance. But they soon learn it's not as easy as just getting out of the village, and the new American South is nothing like the home--a home they hope they will both get a chance to see again someday.
This is a sequel, but I don't think you need to have read the first book to follow the story. The adventure here is pretty self-contained, and any references to previous events are shared with enough context to understand what's going on.
If you're a fan of an epic adventure, you'll enjoy this. Jim and Natty are on the move from very early on in the book, and their pursuers are hot on their trail. There are twists and turns to keep you guessing as a reader, and it's never quite clear how it's all going to resolve until it gets there. I picked this up on a bit of a whim, to be honest, but I'm glad I did. It's a departure from everything else I've been reading lately, and a refreshing one at that.
[I received a copy of this book from Blogging for Books in exchange for an honest review.] - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This was an Early Reviewer giveaway that unfortunately due to family circumstances I was unable to read until now. I truly regret not doing so sooner since this is a story that was worth the read. I found this story by Andrew Motion easy to read and indeed a page turner in which I had a hard time putting it down. I found myself reading far into the wee hours of the night until I was so exhausted I couldn’t keep my eyes open. To follow the adventure of Jim and Natty through shipwreck, capture by frightening natives, escape and then running for their lives in order to make it finally back to where they began was exhilarating. I really felt as if I were along for the ride. This story is one I would defiantly recommend to anyone who loves adventure and wants a story that reads as if it were a true story. Although it is a fictional novel it did just that.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book was very well written. The descriptive nature of Motion's style really brought the world alive. I didn't really connect with the characters though. There's a lot to process in the plot and I think that detracts from the average characterizations. I didnt hate the book. It just wasn't one I killed myself to get finished.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was another Early Reviewer giveaway that I looked forward to from its promotional reviews. Andrew Motion's descriptions were beautifully crafted but I found the rest of the plot and the characters stumbled along and did not interest me. I did finish the book but am the type of reader that likes to read them in order-of-appearance and would have liked to have read the others before this. I would say try it and you might like it but for me - not interested. Thank you, Early Reviewer for the opportunity to peruse new-to-me genre's and titles.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I received this book as an Early Reviewers giveaway. As homework, I also read the previous book by Andrew Motion "Silver". "The New World" literally picks up where the previous book left off. That being said, "The New World" is my least favorite of the two. The relationship between Jim and Natty was, at times, annoying. However, when there was action, I was enveloped. The ending left something to be desired - definitely left it open in anticipation of another book, I'm assuming. Didn't love "The New World", but definitely didn't hate it. If there was another book in the series, I'd read it.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I received this as a LibraryThing giveaway. I liked the plot of this book with the shipwreck, capture, theft and escape from one tribe on Native Americans, friendship and habitation with another tribe and the characters they meet on their way back to “civilization”. Natty I found to be annoyingly vague at times and willful to the point of endangering other members of the whatever group she’s in. Jim despite trekking from Black Bay on the Gulf of Mexico to Louisiana remains quite naïve as to how everything will end with Black Cloud and the Painted Man. As the Rider says when asked if they can give the stolen amulet back, “The insult remains. You cannot change that.” It was a fun book though the bickering between Jim and Natty can get tiresome
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It took me a long time to sit down to this book, but when I did, it was a quick, pleasant read.
I thought the story was fine on its own--I didn't feel much need to know what had come before, for these characters. I liked the portrayal of Natty, a strong woman character. Their story seemed almost surreal in parts, which made it interesting, and I liked the perspective on the newly emerging American West; it made me consider some parts of that history in ways I hadn't before. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Well this review is long in coming, but mainly because it took me this long to get through it and then I re-read it just to make sure...unfortunately the second read was just as unsatisfying as the first one!
I thought the writing was plain and overly descriptive in a negative sense. My attention kept wandering away from the book in the same way that it does when someone is speaking in a monotone to me...sorry to be so harsh, but this book truly took an effort to finish and left me completely unsatisfied. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Beautifully written, but the rambling nature of the coming of age story kind of derails it. I admit, I did not read the first in this series, and after reading this I am unlikely to pick it or any other additions up. Jim Hawkins (beloved Treasure Island character) and Natty (a young black girl and Jim's "romantic" interest/best friend) find themselves stranded in a strange land when their ship wrecks. They are taken hostage by some savage indians and right before they escape Jim makes the wise decision to steal Chief Black Storm's beloved necklace. It was then one long journey (over two years) through Indian territory, deserts, forests, rivers to escape the wrath of the wronged Chief. The story just did not tickle my fancy. The characters fell flat as did the plot. Good for kids perhaps, but not for me.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Difficult to know what to say about this book. Others have described the plot quite thoroughly. The writing is fine, and the landscape, adventures, and people met along the way are described beautifully. Yet I found I could read it for only twenty minutes or so at a time and felt reluctant to pick it up again. Reminded me somewhat of Lonesome Dove, the long journey with its hardships and trials. But that was a journey which I wanted never to end; whereas, I was happy to reach the end of The New World which lacks the interesting characters and wonderful dialogue of Lonesome Dove. The New World is all description,and the narrator, Jim Hawkins, is a dull young fellow. It is well written, and well meaning, not a boring book, but I was a bored reader.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I was so excited to read this book since it's a secondary follow-up book to Treasure Island. I even bought the first book Silver so I could be prepared for this one. After 25 pages into Silver, which is a 400 page book, I gave up. I couldn't get into the writing style at all. So, I decided to just go ahead and jump into The New World and right away, I enjoyed the writing style much better than the first one. Although, the writing content was too drawn-out; most of the writing was lengthy, descriptive passages that could have been omitted and wouldn't have changed the storyline one bit. The characterization also wasn't what I would expect from a novel, but rather from a text book. The characters lacked depth and emotion throughout the entire book. I also didn't like how easily Jim was led around by Natty. He may have not liked the risks she took and things that she did, but he never once said anything to her about it. He just followed her around like a lost puppy. He was definitely a weak character. Natty was the stronger of the two but her attitude was one of indifference toward Jim. I did enjoy the story but felt that it could have been better with characters who showed and expressed their emotions better. Even the savages, who were portrayed as true vicious savages in the beginning of the novel, lacked that intense savagery throughout the rest of the book. Overall, this book fell flat for me and I thought it was just ok.
I received this book for free from LibraryThing's Early Reviewers Giveaway. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Like a number of the other reviewers, I didn't realise this was a sequel. It's definitely worth reading, it's been a while since I read Treasure Island but it made sense to me. Recommended.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book makes me want to read Andrew Motion's novel, SILVER. This story follows Jim and Natty after they're shipwrecked in Texas upon their escape from Treasure Island. They're captured by hostile Indians but escape to be rescued by peaceful Indians. After a few years they resume their journey to return to England and meet up with a band of traveling entertainers headed to New Orleans. Lots of suspenseful action accompanies Jim and Natty during all of their travels. The book paints a wonderful picture of the vast wilderness the United States used to be. I look forward to the next installment if there is one. The ending is just itching for another sequel.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Even though The New World was supposed to be tied to Treasure Island, it seemed more like a Huck Finn to me - right down to riverboat travel. But that's definitely too complimentary. Although not bad, it's far from a classic. It's just alright. Too much depended on Deus ex machina for my taste. Also, even the climax seemed anti-climatic and I never could figure out what the narrator or other main characters were really supposed to be feeling, or why I should care. Some of the writing was nice and poetic, saving it a little, but overall it was a forgettable novel.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This sequel continues Motion's retelling of Stevenson's Treasure Island. Motion writes in a very descriptive and "literary" style-making this action/adventure story seem a little more epic. I loved the writing style, and Jim has a very strong voice. His adventures on his way through the American South, to New Orleans, in order to return to England are gripping and fast paced. I wish I had read the first book before starting this one, but will definitely be reading it next!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This would have easily made that fifth star rating had the male lead been a touch more masculine and the setting more fitting the style of the author's writing. That said, it's easily a four star book with exceptional handling of the English language and how to best utilize wording. The descriptions are very well developed without going overboard. The plot is a touch cliche but it is still interesting enough with good pacing to keep the pages turning. I received an ARC through a LibraryThing giveaway in exchange for an honest review. This in no way influenced my opinion.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I got almost all the way through without realizing this was a sequel. I don't think you necessarily need to have read Silver to understand what's happening, but it would certainly add to the experience. I did know it an offshoot of Treasure Island, which I know the gist of but haven't actually read either. Could be why I considered it kind of a slog, but I think the more likely reason was that I just didn't get into the story and the style. It sort of reminded me why I never read TI in the first place.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5When I saw The New World listed as an Early Reviewer book, I got pretty interested, but unfortunately I could never get into the story or the characters. This one's not for me, and I can't really recommend it.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I honestly did not make it the whole way through The New World. I did not know that this book was a sequel to a book called Silver, which annoyed me when I received it and I ended up having to track down Silver through the library. I had a difficult time making it through Silver, which made it close to impossible to get through The New World. This book felt like it tried too hard to be something, if that makes any sense. Things were overly described to the point of being a distraction and there was not enough action to keep me interested.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It took me a little while to be able to get into this book. After I did though it was really good. I didn't realize until after I read it that it was part of a series. Maybe that's why I had a hard time getting into it at first. It was very well written and easy to follow along with.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In this sequel to a sequel to Robert Louis Stevenson's TREASURE ISLAND, Jim Hawkins and Natty survive a shipwreck and end up in Texas in 1802. At once, they are captured by Indians. And so this story begins. Except I found it slow and sometimes boring at times. At other times I found the lives of these two engaging but still it wasn't satisfying as the original.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was sent to my by the publisher as part of the LibaryThing Early Reviewers program. Borrowing two characters from the classic, Treasure Island, this book is an adventure that roams from a shipwreck off the Gulf of Mexico, through the wilds to New Orleans, then on to England. Natty, daughter of Long John Silver, and Jim, son of Jim Hawkins, must make their way through the wilderness filled with both hostile and friendly Indian tribes, eccentric carnival acts, quirky river dwelling hermits, and salty ship captains. The conflict is set when Jim steals the sacred silver necklace from the evil chief Black Cloud and his nefarious sidekick, Painted Man. As Natty and Jim make their way east to the Mississippi and the ship that can take them back home to England, they are constantly looking over their shoulder for Black Cloud, who will stop at nothing to regain the silver necklace. The book starts out slowly, and it takes a while to get in synch with the style of writing (which pays homage to Treasure Island). Midway through, as the encounters and adventures get more quirky, the pace does pick up. The author is at his best when describing the flora and fauna these two encounter as they race across the continent to what they believe will be safety and home.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Jim Hawkins and Natty are having an adventure in America, and there is no shortage of crises. Hunting bear, being chased by Indians, pushing their way through dense forests, boating through fog and eating all kinds of unfamiliar foods - these are some of the situations that arise for them. It's interesting - the author does not seem to want us to get TOO scared, though. Each situation gets resolved before moving on to the next, with only one exception. Being pursued by Black Cloud and Painted man continues throughout the novel, but even that ends with only a modicum of tension.
Actually the lack of suspense is not a drawback, it is more of a surprise because the setup of the story led me to believe that there would be more nailbiting moments. The bigger problem for me was the lack of character development. Jim and Natty hovered on the edge of a relationship throughout which felt incomplete. The other characters - the innkeeper, Achilles, the circus ringleader, all seem pretty two dimensional.
My favorite part of the book was the bear hunt. I felt really involved in that scene and I liked the way it played out. I only with the rest of the 350 pages could have been that compelling. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is not the typical book I read, love a good who-done-it. I really did enjoy the book, read Treasure Island a long time ago. Did leave me wondering what happened. Now I know the rest of the story. Great book for all ages.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5While this book is a continuation or sequel of "Silver", which I had not read, I found the story quite able to stand on it's own. An exciting story of Jim and Natty surviving the wreck of the "Silver" and being taken into captivity by Indians that are murderous. While waiting their fate in captivity they are given an opportunity to escape and do, with horses and a treasured silver necklace that seems enchanted from the leader of the tribe that took them into captivity. They travel many miles while concealing the necklace and meet one tribe they stay with and are protected by for over 2 years. Jim loves Natty but he can't seem to overcome her dominance over him, in fact, some would say he's a wimp. All the while the original owner of the necklace is after them and in their thoughts and conversations they seem to have made much more of him than he really is. He, however, has picked up their trail and is close behind. They joined an "entertainment" troupe after moving on from the tribe they had stayed so long with and during the first performance they come face to face with their pursuer. Thru some expert marksmanship by a fellow troupe member they are performing with they are able to escape once again and with an Indian friend travel many miles to their next stop. They come across Native Americans that are suffering from disease and starvation and by using the necklace Jim finds it helps the wife of an Indian chief back to health. While we have many suggestions the necklace may be enchanted this is the only instance in the story that demonstrates that type power. They make their way to Baton Rouge and become shipmates on a ship going to New Orleans where they again find a willing protector. They soon find the pursuer is nearby and inquiring about them at their hotel. Finally, a confrontation takes place and the new friend/protector shoots the pursuer(s), Natty, after a short debate, finishes the job with shots to the heart and, seemingly they are now free of a murderous pursuer and can return to England with the enchanted necklace. They again get on board a ship bound for New York and then sail to England where their lives used to be prior to their world adventure. As they go up the Thames River, Jim departs Natty with no clearcut plan to ever see her again. She waxes philosophically and, as always, Jim accedes to her needs rather than his own. Jim is left to experience the most difficult part of the trip alone, for when he arrives at his father's house he finds it deserted and no one can tell him where his fathers gone. Certainly, the author left the window for a sequel and I look forward to it.
This is a well developed story with a good plot that occurs during the early years of American development. The author does justice to Indian customs, their tragedy as a civilization as the white man moves them from the land of their spirit. It seems in the sequel the author will need to let Jim demand what he needs from Natty or stand up to her constant demeaning of him. During the story she is very taken with an Indian in the "entertainment" troupe and nearly leaves with him. Jim is jealous, but never confronts Natty about his feelings for her. He seems to walk away from every encounter with her lesser than the last. Twisting and turning relationships is great fodder for an author and laureate like Andrew Motion and I expect in the sequel that Jim will become more assertive with Natty, or move on.
I would recommend this book to any reader, especially those who've read "Silver" and "Treasure Island". As I said, I think the story can stand on it's own and I didn't note much of a connection with Treasure Island except generational. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/53.5 - 4 stars. The new world in Andrew Motion's beautifully written book is a vast wilderness populated by strange new citizens, displaced natives and a surreal loneliness. The New World is a sequel to Silver: Return to Treasure Island which is in turn a sequel of sorts to Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. While Silver follows Jim Hawkins son, also Jim, and Natty (Long John Silver's daughter) as they return to the island, this story picks up after a shipwreck leaves them stranded somewhere on the coast of Texas. The pair cross paths with Native warriors, peaceful Natives, a traveling show, and have numerous other interesting interactions. The descriptions of early America are really superb and the main reason that I continued to read this novel even when I was extremely frustrated with the main characters. Jim is extremely passive and just seems to float in whatever direction others lead him with limited personality. Natty is unlikable and not very well developed. I will say that I did not read Silver and that may affect my opinion of the characters and their growth during this book. Overall, I thought this novel was well-written and the plot interesting but I never really felt an attachment to the main characters. I received this book from a LibraryThing giveaway in exchange for an honest review.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5As I read this book, I thought of another adventure story I recently read, [The Martian]. When I read that book, I was with the characters every step of the way, riveted by the challenges and how the characters faced them. When I read [The New World] by Andrew Motion, however, I felt a distance between me and the book.
I guess I'm saying that I could not bond with the characters in this book. Part of the problem is that I did not read the earlier book, [Silver]. So as a reader I come into the plot in the middle of things. The two main characters, Jim and Natty, are driven by desires and needs that are not readily apparent to the new reader. Not understanding what drives Jim and Natty makes it difficult for me to empathize with them.
With that reservation, I can say that [The New World] is a travelogue masquerading as an adventure story. Jim and Natty journey through the southern portion of Texas and eventually to New Orleans, trailed by a nemesis from whom they have stolen an object of great value. We visit a couple of Native American cultures, a dusty one-street town, a troupe of entertainers, and a river boat before we arrive in New Orleans and the climax of the story.
For those looking for a literary turn to their adventures, I recommend reading [Silver] before reading this sequel. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A novel of struggle and acceptance. Two friends, one with arms length feelings, are shipwrecked, held hostage and then forced to test their mental and physical strength. The descriptions and emotions are well-written and real.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is definitely am interesting light read if you have enjoyed Silver and Treasure Island. It carries on the story from the perspective of Silver's daughter Natty and Jim Hawkins. However, I would have to agree with other reviewers that the characters are perhaps a little lacking in depth, especially compared to the original Stephenson story. The plot too is a lot more light hearted in content. Nevertheless, it would make a great beach read for the Summer!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The story in and of itself was good. My only problem was understanding the characters. So many of their reactions seemed misplaced and almost shallow. To be honest, I'm still not sure what I think of this book, but I do get the feeling that I might understand it better if I read the first book.
Book preview
The New World - Andrew Motion
PART I
THE SHORE AND THE LAND
CHAPTER 1
My Afterlife
When I approached the gates of heaven there was no brightness of the kind we are told to expect. No dazzle, no promise of homecoming, no rapture. There was only darkness, like a sky at night without stars or moon or cloud, and a mild but steady breeze blowing in my face, making me turn and look backward over my shoulder.
Miles below me, dozens of miles but perfectly clear as if caught in the eye of a microscope, I saw—myself. My own young body stretched on a black shore, with my hair in my eyes, and my arms flung about, and my legs half-in and half-out of the water, and my skin puckered with cold, because…
Because why? Memory failed me, then sparked again.
Because of the hurricane.
The wreck.
My plunge from our ship.
The plunge, and the water rushing into my throat, and the wave that suddenly lifted me up. The smaller and gentler wave, that singled me out and brought me safely to land.
The lens of the microscope left me there and shifted back to the sea. Outlined in starlight was the miracle that had saved me—a rock-ledge jutting out from the beach, keeping the worst of the storm at bay. And beyond it, sixty yards off where the waves still surged and battered, with the first gleams of daylight brightening their white caps: the Nightingale. But not our home as she had been, never that any more. The Nightingale quite finished, with her two masts torn down, her sails billowing underwater, her hull smashed through, and deep at the heart of her wound—our treasure.
But the microscope would not let me see that. The microscope darted off once more, suddenly impatient with the sea and switching instead to the black cliffs that enclosed the beach where my body lay unconscious, scouring the rock-crannies and birds’ nests, searching the clefts and cracks, before deciding it had done with them too and must turn instead to the shoreline.
Where at last it found what it wanted.
Which was Natty.
When I saw her there in the eye of the microscope, her bare feet stamping on the stones for warmth, I felt my grip loosen at my enormous height, and the breeze in my face strengthening, trying to shake me off.
But I was not yet ready to slip back to myself, my earthly self. I still hung at my distance, high and separate.
Except that nothing was separate now, because everything was Natty. Natty in her tattered white shirt and knee breeches, with the cliffs rearing around her, and the ocean roaring, and the moon dipping between clouds. When her head tipped forward I caught the sheen of her beautiful brown skin, and the gleam of her eyes. And her hair—the tight curls of her hair shining as brightly as metal as they blustered around her face.
What was she doing, though, staring at the waves continually and paying me no attention? I was lying no more than a few yards away from her! Had she not seen? Or had she seen all too clearly, and given me up for dead?
I am here!
I called to her. Me, Jim Hawkins! Your Jim!
But I was not just a few yards away; I was still dozens of miles above her, and she did not notice.
I knew then I must find my way back to her, not wait for her to search for me. I knew I must tumble down through miles and miles of swirling air and rain and spray until I landed smack on the stones, the black stones.
Where she would find me and know who I was. Where she would fold me into her heart.
CHAPTER 2
A False Start
She reached me at once, hauling me out from the waves with the stones grinding beneath my heels. When I was clear she knelt down and rested my head in her lap; when she whispered my name there was no other sound I wanted to hear.
But I moved my head. I rolled it from side to side for pure pleasure, with life running warm in my veins again, and so I lost sight of her, finding the cliffs instead.
All through the hours we had floundered in ruins, with the Nightingale shattering beneath us, and her corridors flooding, and her cabins breaking open to the sky, and our friends dying, I had thought these cliffs were a blank wall. A vertical stop; the end of the world.
Now as they dizzied into the rain above me I saw they were covered with scrapes and scratches—there, near the summit, where the first daylight was crawling across. Rockfalls I thought, my eyes blurry with salt. Gouges made by the rain and sea. But as the light grew stronger, much stranger than that.
They were teeth and tongues; but just for a blink because now a new ghost-mark had appeared. A fissure that ran from the crown of the cliffs in a zigzag down to the beach and ended twenty yards off.
A stairway.
I opened my mouth to tell Natty, to say she must see this too and help me to walk and climb and make our escape. But I only groaned, which made her whisper my name again.
So I forgot the cliffs. I forgot them along with the path and the stones and the storm and the wreck and the friends we had lost.
I’ll sleep for a moment longer, I told her, or meant to at least. I’ll sleep and we’ll find our way home together, and heal ourselves in the old world we know, and be happy.
And I’ll find my good sense there as well.
And my sentences.
But first I must sleep; I must sleep and dream.
CHAPTER 3
In the Black Bay
Jim?
Her voice was so small the sea almost smothered it.
Natty?
It was my first word and I could think of no better.
I saw you,
she said. I thought you were…
She did not like to continue, but the word she had left unspoken hung between us in the half-light, until she placed her hands either side of my face and a flame sprang in my heart.
Natty?
I spluttered. Who else is alive?
I felt like an infant, born for the second time.
She was adrift and not thinking of me, even while she brought me her comfort. Where are we, Jim?
she said vaguely. Where are we?
—then she lifted my head from her lap and floated away from me over the grinding stones like a sleepwalker.
When I propped myself on my elbow I saw her standing on the shoreline with her back turned, staring out to sea. It was not the waves she saw; it was the dark shapes that weltered there, all lifeless now.
I redoubled my efforts and sat up straight, then shuffled toward her and for a moment we were silent, waiting for the sunrise to show us the horizon.
Is there no one else?
Natty said at length, and still with her back to me. No one at all, and no silver?
This I could answer. There is no more silver,
I told her. Don’t think about silver, Natty…
I meant for our friends,
she said, then twisted round to stare at the cliffs behind us, as if a voice had suddenly called out.
A moment before I had sketched a stairway there, and the beginnings of faces. Now in the stronger light I discovered a kind of madhouse, with cats and dogs and creatures like freaks and devils all carved in the stone together.
What are they, Jim?
Natty whispered. She was pointing toward a gigantic bear, a monster looming over the zigzag path with a mound of bodies heaped on his tongue. His eyes had almost popped out of their sockets with the effort of swallowing so much flesh.
Who made them?
I said, more to myself than to her.
Wickedness,
she said, as if I had asked a different question. But why here?
Why not here?
I said.
This is the New World!
Wickedness is everywhere,
I said.
She glanced round then and I saw she was weeping. This was my doing, I felt sure of it, and gathering all my strength I stood up at last and caught her in my arms. I dare say it made a very dull sort of embrace, a kind of deadlock in fact, but for a second or two the world disappeared: the sickening surf, the gull-cries, the hiss of the wind. All I could hear was Natty’s heart; all I could feel was her breath.
Then it was over and she was shoving me away. No, Jim, no!
she gasped. Look there in the water behind you!
I expected—I don’t know what I expected. Broken timber. A twist of rope. But when I dipped my hand in the surf whatever it was felt slick as a bolt of silk.
I almost choked, but I kept on looking and found a kind of mouth grimacing at me. A neck that was severed clean through.
I clattered away on the stones. Not yet,
Natty said, holding her ground; this was her old voice now, which I knew from London and the start of our life together. I need you to help.
Help you with what?
I asked, looking toward the skyline as if the answer might be shining in the distance; there was light everywhere now, with the purple gone from the clouds and a pearly brightness coming in.
We must bring them ashore,
Natty told me; she had forgotten all her fear. We must bury them.
Who?
I said, still wavering.
Everyone,
she said.
Everyone?
I said, beginning to understand. But everyone is too many! We should leave them and look after ourselves, that’s all we can do.
Natty smiled her smile then, the same that had brought me from England, and so to the Island, and so to our disaster, and now had raised me to life again.
We can think of ourselves soon enough,
she said. First there is this.
She was so definite I simply nodded and stepped into the water; I bent over and found the monstrous thing that bulged beneath the surface; I felt the slithery skin and gripped.
Then we took the weight together, scrabbling backward over the stones, and a second later I recognized it—recognized her I should say. She was Rebecca, the slave I last saw on the Island with a Bible pressed to her heart, the friend who read from the good book when we buried the captain. When her head jarred and twisted as we dragged her forward, and her tongue flopped over her teeth, I paused to straighten the body and give it some dignity; we only stopped for good when we reached the high-water mark, where we laid down our burden on a bank of seaweed.
A moment later I faced the sea again, the sea and the ship that was no longer our Nightingale but a graveyard. Not even a graveyard in fact; more like a death-spout, a fountain hurling up severed arms, and legs, and feet, and heads, and hands.
I dropped onto my knees with my eyes closed, and when Natty touched my shoulder I trembled to feel its weight.
Thank you,
she said.
But I could not look up yet. Fifty more bodies, was all I could think. Fifty more bodies, if all the ship’s company drift ashore.
Fifty bodies that will need fifty graves.
Fifty graves we must dig with our bare hands.
And no food to sustain us, and no shelter to cover us. And only rainwater to drink.
We would have managed somehow or other, I like to believe. In the event we never began.
CHAPTER 4
Savages
Up to this point I have been forced to collect my memories piecemeal; my sea-battering had scattered my wits. But I came to myself as we began our burial work. Salt and salt water drained out of me. Warm blood pumped into my toes and fingers. Exhaustion? Of course I was exhausted; we both were. But I could move, I could understand, I could speak—so I can tell my story more easily now, without always gasping for air.
After we had done our work with Rebecca, hiding her body beneath a mound of black stones, the next friend we hauled ashore was Mr. Creed, who had fought beside me on the sand of Captain Kidd’s Anchorage, beating away Smirke and his comrades. He was anonymous when I first caught hold of him, his face hidden by a rag of weed. As I pulled this aside and saw the pockmarks covering his cheeks and forehead, now all turned a peculiar clay color by the water, I remembered how much his disfigurements had embarrassed him in life. He often used to dab at them with his handkerchief, as though one day he might manage to blot them away entirely.
Then Natty called me, pointing to the cliffs again. High up where the zigzag path began she had noticed creatures scampering toward us. Dogs, I thought at first—a dozen or so. But they turned into people. People squeezing around the faces carved in the black rock; people slithering over the rolling eyes and long fangs; people skipping and scrambling and rushing the last few steps onto the beach and huddling to stare at us.
I jumped to Natty’s side and grabbed her by the hand. When I first saw Smirke and the rest on the Island I had felt terrified by their wildness. These men were not in the least bit wild; not savage at all in fact but very composed, standing stiff and straight with their weapons at their sides—bows, and axes, and arrows.
They were small, the tallest no more than five foot.
And young—twenty or so, the same age as ourselves.
With black hair combed away from their foreheads and slicked down with grease.
And clean-shaven faces decorated with swirls of green and red paint, which made their noses stand out like beaks.
With bare arms and legs but otherwise neat and tidy, wearing tunics of tanned animal hide, and moccasins.
And tucked into their belts, into every belt, a short knife with a bone handle.
Who are they?
I was staring hard, as if this would keep them still or make them disappear.
Red Indians,
Natty said, still perfectly calm.
I knew the words—I had heard them in Mr. Clarke’s schoolroom at Enfield—but Natty might as well have told me they had fallen from the sun.
They must be Indians,
she said; she had made up her mind. What else can they be? We’re in America.
I stared at the ground thinking how the storm had blown us back past our Island and into the Bay of Mexico, how it had swept us north in the final part of its rampage, how this meant we must be—where in America, exactly? I remembered Mr. Clarke again. I saw the map he had shown us. I saw the Bay of Mexico like a gigantic mouth, and on the northern shore the long spit of Florida, Louisiana with its marvelous big river, the desert of Texas.
Then I looked up. We are in Texas!
I said, like a conjuror producing a bird from his hat.
Was there ever a stranger geography lesson? We were guessing at territories, knowing we might be killed any minute.
Which means…
I went on, it will be easier for us to get home.
Why on earth?
Natty asked.
Because the English are in America.
The English are everywhere,
Natty said, as if our countrymen made no difference to anything. But I did not want to hear this. I felt so encouraged to know where I stood on the earth, I turned back to the Indians and lit up a smile.
It was well meant but not well done; it made them decide they had waited and watched long enough, and now should begin strutting forward—which they did while bunching closer together, and bulging their eyes, and wrinkling their foreheads, and sticking out their tongues. I thought the cliff behind them had come to life and its demons had leaped down to hurt us.
Natty was more sensible. Letting go of my hand, she picked up two stones from the beach and weighed them to show she was wondering which might be the better to throw.
This at least made the men stop still and give up their eye-rolling and tongue-waggling. Instead they began a strange chant: a very ugly sound, like wild dogs yowling for food.
Natty.
I put one hand on her arm. We must show them we’re friends.
But how, Jim?
Her calmness had all disappeared and she sounded faint with fear.
By doing nothing,
I said, but she never heard me because the chant had reached its climax, which was a loud explosion of yelps, with the Indians shaking their bows above their heads.
Natty threw down her own weapons at once—her poor stones—and when they saw this the Indians finished making their noise and looked at us carefully for the first time, as though they were only now noticing the different colors of our skin, and our ragged clothes, and our bare feet, and our bedraggled hair and our bruises.
I thought they had taken pity on us and began hobbling forward, but this only made them lose patience. A moment ago we had been fellow creatures sucked from the ocean by the storm; now we were intruders and they felt free to hate us.
Two of the men stayed as they were, gripping their spears straight up at their sides like guards, while the other ten hurtled toward us screaming at the tops of their voices; the insides of their mouths were stained black as ink.
Natty and I raised our fists—ready for them, but in truth very pathetic. No matter, though; instead of knocking us down the men tore straight past; to my amazement they did not even glance at us; we might not have existed.
Were they like cats, deciding to murder us slowly? That was my thought, but when I turned to look—when I cringed and looked, I should say—I saw the men were still sprinting toward the sea, still ignoring us, and only pausing when they reached the water’s edge. Here they made a huddle again, chattering urgently before breaking apart and scampering along the shoreline, one of them stopping every few yards until they stood at regular intervals around the whole crescent of the bay.
Was it the wreck they wanted to loot, was that all? And if so, were we free to leave? I glanced back at the two men left to guard us, but they were scowling and gripping their spears more tightly than ever. Daring us to run, I thought, so they could skewer us, then hack us to pieces.
The idea was so frightening we stayed perfectly still.
A minute passed and none of us moved, or took our eyes from each other.
Another minute.
Then suddenly our guards began strolling toward us, swinging their arms with insolent slowness, stopping only when their faces were inches from our own. I smelled fish on their breath and winced away, but they would not allow this and one of them seized my chin; he made me face him again and began fiddling inside my shirt, along the waistband of my breeches, pinching me and prodding me. The other guard did the same with Natty, and giggled as he touched her.
Jim…?
Natty’s voice was trembling. What shall we do?
Both guards had finished their inspection and now they were leering at her, wiping their hands across their mouths.
Nothing,
I said, still as steady as possible.
Nothing again?
There’s nothing we can do.
What do you mean? We have to do something!
Natty spun round to face toward the waves and I followed, thinking our guards would haul us back. In fact they seemed pleased, because now we had to watch the rest of their troop, the savages along the shoreline who while our backs were turned had all stripped naked and begun scouring the water, launching themselves forward whenever a body appeared. They did this very nimbly, gleaming through the waves with their warpaint fading along their arms and shoulders, seizing a prize, then wrenching it up the beach as though it weighed nothing at all.
The first two or three of our friends they landed in this way, including Mr. Creed, were poor creatures who never owned anything valuable in their lives, not even a bracelet or an earring; their bodies were tossed aside as worthless. But when one of the men found the remains of Bo’sun Kirkby, who wore a gold band that remembered the wife waiting for him in London, he pulled the knife from his belt and sliced off the finger as if he was cutting a rose from a rose-bush.
As easily as that; the butcher had no human feelings at all. He slipped the ring onto the middle finger of his own left hand, then without pausing he lunged forward again to jerk the bo’sun’s head from the stones and flourish his knife. Once he had addressed himself to his task in this way, with relish, he sliced around the crown of the bo’sun’s head to strip the bald white skin from the scalp, pursing his lips to show it was a delicate job and required him to concentrate. Then he hoisted his trophy into the air; then he tucked it into his belt alongside his knife; then he turned back to the waves, looking for his next victim.
No!
Natty whispered. What’s happening, Jim?
She meant me to comfort her but I was dumbstruck. I thought I had seen our own death. I thought it must come soon.
Should we tell them about the silver?
Natty was desperate now, but still thinking more clearly than me.
Why would we do that?
I spoke in a kind of trance.
Jim. Listen to me.
I am listening.
I might not have been; I was looking toward the cliffs, but when I saw the stone creatures writhing inside their rock-prison I swung away again, scanning the gulls as they flocked above our wreck, or the sails of the Nightingale blooming underwater like colossal flower-heads, or the day’s first weak sun-shafts lancing down through the waves toward our silver on the seabed, or anything except our guards.
Then they were stampeding forward again, spinning us apart and separating us. We staggered on the stones, we floundered, and a moment later we all stood in line: one guard, me, Natty, the other guard.
Speak to him,
Natty said, meaning our leader who had turned to confront me; her voice was imploring. Be simple, Jim. Be kind as you are.
I felt touched by this, and another time would have said so. Now I only cleared my throat, and said what had always been in my mind, speaking slowly and clearly.
We come as friends.
There was no reaction, no light in the hard brown eyes.
We are your friends,
I said again, louder this time but still meaningless.
Meaningless and apparently outrageous, because my guard began chewing like a rabbit, pursed his lips, hollowed his cheeks, then cracked open his mouth and spat out a jet of disgusting black liquid. Some landed warm on my face, the rest on the tatters of my shirt so I felt it through the cotton.
Tobacco juice. I stood my ground, wiping the foul stuff away, although it clung to my fingers even when I smeared them on my shirt, my breeches, the stones at my feet. But this was outrageous too. So outrageous the guard spat a second time and then began to harangue me, spattering me with his saliva.
I withstood this tirade as well, but my heart froze inside me. I thought: when this is done he will murder me, because I have offended him so much.
But when his fury burned out he did not even reach for his knife. Instead, with a flash of his yellow teeth, which I suppose might have been a smile, he led us to the foot of the cliff, where he ordered us to wait for a moment.
Although Natty was standing behind me now I heard her distinctly. Good-bye,
she said, as a drizzle of pebbles blew down from the carvings above, and under my breath I finished what she had begun. Good-bye to the Nightingale; good-bye to our friends; good-bye to our fathers; good-bye to England; good-bye to the lives we had known as children; good-bye to each other.
Then the guards growled again and I set my foot on the path. We began to climb.
CHAPTER 5
On the Clifftop
The cliff path was hardly a path; it was shallow steps hacked into the rock, and so steep I soon dropped onto all fours, telling Natty she must do the same. Our climb was therefore very slow and painful, and also very frightening. Stones cut my hands, my fingers, my knees, my feet. Lunatic eyes glared at me. Bulbous lips puffed at me. Gusts of wind buffeted and blustered—the last gasps of the storm. Once I slithered so far into empty space, only a tuft of grass kept me alive. And all the while our guards never lost their footing, but skimmed over the ground as though their moccasins were skates.
I had no breath for talking and no inclination, except at halfway when I muttered Nearly there
to encourage Natty. The guard in front of me immediately whisked round and slapped my face; the sting of his hand stayed on my skin like a burn-mark.
Silence,
he shouted—not that word of course, but his own ferocious yap.
After that, it would be too much to say I was thinking. I was too tired to think and too nervous. But I was not completely blank. I told myself that if cruelty was so natural to these men, we would only survive by convincing them we were broken, so they would lose their concentration and let us escape. Escape to what I had no idea; I thought freedom itself would be enough.
When I reached the end of the path I therefore made a pretense, humbly dragging myself over the last few yards, gazing wretchedly at the wounds in my hands, then flinging myself down with no more breath in my body.
The ploy succeeded after a fashion. When Natty collapsed beside me and seemed to be just as spent, our guards smiled at one another like smug farmers whose cattle have been driven safely to market.
In fact I was very relieved to lie quiet for a while, with the tangled smells of the earth filling my head, and the muggy breeze tousling my hair. I even let myself drift toward sleep for a while, or at least toward somewhere far distant, where I was not in danger.
But I had curiosity too; I wanted to know where we were, and a minute later hoisted upright again. Our clifftop, which was an arc enclosing the whole bay, was the only high ground for miles in any direction. A hundred yards to my left, and the same to my right, and the same facing inland, it sloped down to a wilderness where the course of our hurricane showed like the track of a colossal carriage. And either side of this track, where the country was still unscathed: gray sand with silvery meres and gullies. And beyond these: red-brown earth, and steam blowing here and there as if the earth had been molten lava only a moment before, and we were the first inhabitants.
As for our clifftop, the centuries had worn it bare, so I thought it would look clean and simple in good weather. Now it was a bump of chaos, littered with leaves and seaweed. Why had God landed us here, I thought, when anywhere else the Nightingale would have crashed into soft sand, and her cargo might have been saved? There was no explanation. What had happened had happened by chance, unless it had all been arranged by devils in the rock beneath us. Unless they had summoned us and we had not been able to resist them.
I scrambled to my feet and pulled Natty upright beside me. Her face was streaked with mud, and gashed across the forehead where a stone had struck her.
The end of the world,
she said, staring around and reeling a little in the breeze.
Or the beginning,
I said, putting my arm around her waist to steady her.
How do you mean?
she said.
I glanced at our guards to see if they minded us talking like this, but they were already bored with their power, and had moved away to admire the work of their friends on the beach below.
Because we are here,
I said.
And that’s enough?
It’s everything.
It’s all we have, you mean.
It’s all there is.
Natty spoke cautiously, as though our talk was a game and she could not decide which play to make next. In the end she gave up and broke away from me; for a moment I thought her strength had gone and she wanted to lie down again. But she was quite deliberate. She tested her balance, then walked carefully toward the edge of the cliff. When there were only a few inches of land left, she looked round and gave me a cat’s smile, as if she knew a secret but would not say what it was.
Natty!
I shouted, my voice drowning those of the guards who barked at her, then crouched down astonished. Get away from there! Come back!
Her answer was to keep facing me and stretch out her arms sideways, so she hung crucified on the empty air, with the whole swerve of the bay widening behind her.
I found myself gazing at her calmly despite the danger. Why this should have been I cannot say—some part of my brain demanded it, as though I had grown so used to her company in the last weeks and months, I needed to remind myself what she looked like. She was beautiful with her slenderness, and her short black hair in its coils, and her liquid eyes, and her brown skin like river-water. But it was not her beauty that held me. It was her wildness. Her quickness that made her seem like a bird who had learned the ways of mankind, but might renounce them again at any moment.
I am not sure how long I rambled like this in my mind; for a second that passed as slowly as an hour. And when