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Authors: Rebecca Hale

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I sighed tensely, not wishing to prolong the conversation. It would be at least another forty minutes before we docked in Cruz Bay. “I’ve just started a new job. I’m a manager at one of the resorts on the island.”

“Mmm, interesting.” Conrad made several exaggerated facial expressions while absorbing this information. “And where’d you come from before that?”

“Oh, up in the States,” I said evasively.

Conrad assumed a critical stare, waiting for me to supplement my answer.

With another sigh, I relented. “California. I used to be a lawyer.”

I bit down on my lip. The last phrase had slipped out before I could catch myself. I’d opened myself up to another line of questioning—one that I would rather not have to fudge the answers to.

“I’m a lawyer too,” my companion stated immediately. “Self-taught,” he added unabashedly. “Been in court dozens of times. I always represent myself, and I’ve always won.”

He pointed proudly at his chest. “That district attorney man, he’ll never convict me.”

With a wan smile of relief, I leaned back in my seat.

“You should come visit me at Maho Bay,” he invited eagerly. “I’ll cook you dinner at my teepee tent.”

Conrad quickly read the refusal on my face. He stroked his chin and tried another tack.

“You know, they’ve got a ghost up there at the campgrounds. I’ve seen her lots of times.”

I cleared my throat. This was quickly turning into a very
long
ferry ride. “You don’t say.”

“Oh, yes,” he replied, pushing himself onto the edge of his seat so that he could crawl even farther over the back of mine. “If you walk into the woods and stay real quiet, become one with the surrounding nature—you know, let your Zen ooze out—oftentimes, she’ll just sneak up behind you and tap you on the shoulder.”

Conrad’s bony fingers gently touched my shoulder blades.

“I bet I could introduce you to her, to the ghost that is, if you come for dinner at my teepee tent.”

Wincing dismissively, I shrugged out from under his grasp.

Conrad continued, undeterred. “This ghost, she’s from the 1700s, back when the islands were full of sugar plantations.”

His eyeballs bulged, stretching his skin against the tight contours of his face.

“She was part of a group of slaves that were brought over from West Africa. Her people were called the Amina. They were one of the most powerful tribes in the Gold Coast area, fierce warriors that all the others lived in fear of.

“But I guess the Amina had a run of bad luck and lost a couple of battles. A rival chief sold them to the Danish slave traders.”

Raindrops began to spit against the windows of the ferry as the sky grew darker, dimming the light inside the cabin. Conrad’s pale face glowed in the shadows. He licked his upper lip, warming to his narrative.

“Before her capture, the woman who became this ghost, she’d been part of her tribe’s nobility. She was the king’s daughter, the tribe’s princess. A delicate flower of a woman—just like you.”

Conrad paused for a lecherous wink in my direction. I rolled my eyes and looked pointedly at my watch. He cleared his throat and returned to the tale.

“The Princess managed to survive the ocean passage across the Atlantic to Charlotte Amalie; that’s where she and several other members of her tribe were auctioned off. Most of them were bought for plantations over on St. John. You can still see the ruins of the sugar mill where the Princess used to work, just off the North Shore Road on your way up to Maho.”

Conrad smacked his lips together. “It was a hard life, being a sugar slave—rough, I tell you.” He wiped his brow for emphasis.

“But from the moment of their capture and enslavement, the members of this warrior tribe began plotting their revenge. A couple of months after they arrived on St. John, they organized a massive revolt and took over the island. It was a bloody siege that caught everyone by surprise. Some of the plantation owners and their families escaped to St. Thomas, but most of them were”—Conrad twisted his face into a lurid expression and made a slicing motion across his bobbing Adam’s apple—“slaughtered.”

The rain was coming down now in nearly horizontal sheets, slamming against the windows of the ferry. I gripped the side of the bench as the boat heaved sideways in the rolling waves.

“These rebel slaves, they held on to the island for six or seven months before reinforcements of French troops arrived to help the Danes. Once the slaves saw the size of the incoming fleet, they knew they were outnumbered. And they knew what would happen to them if they were captured. So, as the troops advanced on their camp”—he drew in his breath, his thin face wrinkling under the force of an exaggerated cringe—“they committed suicide.

“Some of them used the muskets they’d stolen from the plantations. Some slit their throats with their knives. But one of the rebel slaves, the Princess, she chose a different method. She hiked up to the northern rim of Mary’s Point, just beyond the curve of Maho Bay. There on a cliff, overlooking Tortola, she stepped to the edge, closed her eyes, and jumped off”—he made a whirring flap with his
lips, followed by an imitation of a loud splash before completing the sentence—“into the ocean.”

Conrad leaned even closer toward me, the pale skin on his skeletal face shining in the storm’s eerie half-light. His voice dropped to a whisper.

“Something about her death—the way the water swallowed her up—it didn’t quite do the job. Her spirit was too strong. It survived even after her body perished. The waves tossed her out onto the beach there at Maho, and she’s been haunting the island ever since. Everyone at the campground has seen her at least once or twice.”

He
thunked
his chest solemnly. “Every year, the Princess, she comes to visit me.”

He paused, switching his expression to an impish grin. “In my teepee tent at the far end of the campground.”

Wearily, I shook my head. I’d heard more than enough about Conrad’s teepee tent.

“No, no, honest, I swear,” he protested. “Late at night near the beach, you can hear her voice. It’s kind of a mournful, wailing chant.”

He made a strained caterwauling sound before nodding informatively at me. “They call her the Amina Slave Princess. The Ghost of the Slave Princess. Ask anybody. She hangs out most nights at Maho Bay.”

Conrad collapsed onto his bench and stretched his arms wide across its back metal railing. He was convinced of the ghost story, even if I wasn’t buying it.

“I tell you what, St. John, it’s an amazing place,” he said reverently. “I look forward every year to coming down here. This island, it will pull you apart, then put you back together again—if you let it.”

In the years since my first encounter with Conrad the charismatic hippie, I have heard many versions of the Amina Slave Princess story. The legend has been repeated over and over again, particularly among those of Afro-Caribbean descent.

Of late, some have come to believe that the Princess
walks among us—that she has taken on human form to protect the sanctity of the shoreline where her lifeless body washed up, all those many years ago.

I leaned back in the white plastic lawn chair and took another slurp from the strawberry drink. If the rumor that Hannah had been done in by the Amina Slave Princess was circulating among the waitresses at the Crunchy Carrot, it was well on its way through the island’s gossip chain.

Of course, I knew Hannah hadn’t been sucked into the water by a wrathful sea spirit. I knew exactly what had happened to her—because I was the one responsible for her disappearance.

3
A Dark History

Setting aside Conrad’s constant references to his teepee tent, his ferryboat recounting of St. John’s slave rebellion did manage to capture the overall gist of the event. He glossed over a few aspects of the historical record, however, that are worth mentioning.

Christopher Columbus stumbled across the Virgin Islands in 1493, during his second trip to the Americas, a region he inaccurately identified as the West Indies. (Columbus’s vehement geographical assertions to the contrary, the islands he discovered were nowhere near India, Asia, or any other Far East spice-trade landmass. Nevertheless, the people of this region are still commonly referred to as West Indians.)

For the most part, Columbus and his Spanish cousins passed up the Virgins in lieu of the Greater Antilles islands to the east, which, they believed, were more likely to hold the fabled gold mines they so desperately sought. Beyond the Virgins’ lack of obvious mineral riches, the European explorers were eager to avoid the area’s militant Carib
inhabitants—their warriors considered the Europeans’ ten-der human flesh to be a tasty delicacy.

So the Spaniards gave the Virgins a wide berth and focused the brunt of their marauding efforts on the island of Hispaniola (now divided into the countries of Haiti and the Dominican Republic). Unfortunately, even brief contact with the Europeans was enough to do in the Virgins’ native tribes. Many died from the strange new illnesses the explorers brought to the area. The rest were subsumed in the first wave of colonial slave trading. With the exception of a scattering of British settlements to the east, by the time the Danish set their sights on St. Thomas in the mid-1600s, the Virgin Islands were largely wild and uninhabited.

Despite the island’s unoccupied status, the Danes had a tough time getting their new colony started. Their fledgling settlement was raided and obliterated several times over by the pirates that plied the Caribbean waters. It wasn’t until 1672 that a permanent township finally took root in the area now known as Charlotte Amalie.

As reports of these trials and tribulations filtered back to Denmark, fewer and fewer Danes volunteered for the trip across the Atlantic. The government was forced to recruit nationals from neighboring Nordic states, and, as a result, there were soon as many Dutch as Danish in the Danish Virgin Islands.

Once the foothold on St. Thomas was finally established, the colony grew quickly. Before long, most of the island’s arable land fell under the control of a few wealthy plantation owners.

In 1718, searching for unclaimed fields to cultivate, a small group of farmers crossed the Pillsbury Sound to the neighboring island of St. John. They circled around to Hurricane Hole, the protected cove on the island’s opposite side, and set up permanent camps in what is now known as Coral Bay.
The meager contingent of Danish troops who accompanied the settlers built a rudimentary fort on a hill overlooking the settlement and the surrounding soon-to-be sugarcane fields.

Sugar production was the all-consuming obsession of the Caribbean during the colonial era, and this labor-intensive industry rapidly burned through the few native workers who had survived the Europeans’ initial invasion. Before long, it became clear to the colonial powers that the only way to maintain and harvest the islands’ valuable sugar crops would be through the use of imported labor, most readily found in the form of slave trade from Africa. The Danes soon turned to this approach for their primary source of manpower.

For the chattel on board the Danish slave-trading ships, it was a terrifying trip from the Gold Coast of West Africa to the auction yards on St. Thomas. During the months of ocean passage, the slaves were chained together and frequently packed into the fetid cusp of the ship’s hull. The extreme heat and unsanitary conditions in the below-deck quarters often led to the outbreak of illness and death among the hapless captives.

Those slaves that survived Danish transport across the Atlantic were put up for auction at Charlotte Amalie. The bidding price for each slave varied depending on the individual’s age, gender, and physical condition—but the most important criterion for determining a slave’s value was his African tribe affiliation.

By the early 1700s, the majority of slaves entering the Danish trading system were casualties of tribal warfare. Danish forts along the African coast traded with various tribal chieftains for slaves that were captured as part of ongoing intertribal conflicts in the region. As the Colonial demand for sugar slaves increased, the situation in West Africa grew more and more turbulent, destabilizing the established power structure and destroying many long-standing alliances.

BOOK: Adrift on St. John
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