Read Galapagos Regained Online
Authors: James Morrow
The thought of assuming a recumbent posture vis-Ã -vis Mr. Dartworthy had an immediate and incandescent effect on Chloe. She recalled a speech from
Siren of the Nile,
Cleopatra telling Antony that he'd become “a proximate moon, tugging at my blood, raising tides of desire in my veins.”
“Since we now both have time on our hands,” Mr. Dartworthy continued, “may I suggest that we visit a cantina and keep our appointment with the great Omar Khayyám?”
During the voyage to Manáos, Chloe had learned much about Mr. Dartworthy's lifeâhis decision to abandon the family's sedate trade for the sea (his father and grandfather were both drapers), his South Pacific adventures with the American author Mr. Melville (whose recently published novels
Typee
and
Omoo
included characters inspired by Ralph Dartworthy), the ten months he and Runciter had spent in gaol for “an escapade that, viewed with a magistrate's squint, might be termed piracy”âbut little of the inner man, though she hypothesized he had not a caddish bone or loutish ligament in his body: a theory that, she suspected, was about to be put to the test.
“No doubt this proposition will sound rather forward,” she said, “but I am inclined to savor Mr. Khayyám's verses in the privacy of my hotel suite.”
“Miss Bathurst, you shock me.”
“I'm sorry.”
“Apology accepted. Shock me again.”
“
Voilà !
” said Chloe, pulling the Madeira from her sack. I am the Covent Garden Antichrist, she mused, the She-Devil from Dis, beyond good and evil and everything in between. “We no longer have need of a cantina. Come to my room in a half-hour's time.”
A noise like the croak of a Surinam toad escaped Mr. Dartworthy's throat.
“My Lord Poseidon, having lost your trident to me in the great equatorial pageant, you are now required to do whatever I say.”
“I am yours to command, my Lady Athena.”
“Tap softly on my door. Bring your Persian poetry. Adieu.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
As the storm thrashed the city, the raindrops clattering madly against the sealed shutters, Chloe sat in her front parlor, dressed in her white linen robe and sharing a divan with Mr. Dartworthy. After pouring them each a glass of Madeira, he perused his
Rubáiyát
manuscript, employing a fountain pen to number the poems with the aim of producing what he called “a dramatically satisfying effect.”
“Are you not thereby violating the poet's aesthetic scheme?” she asked.
“It matters not in what sequence a person reads Omar Khayyám, for there is little continuity from one quatrain to the next.” Mr. Dartworthy passed the pages to Chloe. “I decided we should alternate the poet's sensualism with his blasphemy.”
“Beginning withâ?”
“The sensualism, unless you would preferâ”
“I would not.” She leafed through the manuscript and, finding a Roman numeral one, read the designated poem aloud.
My love, whence came your smiling eyes so keen?
You must have stolen them from some dead queen,
O little, fragile, laughing soul that sings
And dances, tell meâwhat do your eyes mean?
Mr. Dartworthy applauded, then imbibed a mouthful of Madeira. “A magnificent performance, my fair philosopher.”
“Second only to the one I shall give at Alastor Hall.”
“Were I to learn the meaning of thine eyes, I should die a happy man.”
“We turn now to Khayyám the unbeliever,” Chloe said, demurely removing her left slipper. Receiving Mr. Dartworthy's nod, she committed her talents to the poet's meditation on the silence of God.
There are no answers written in the air,
Pray not, for no one listens to your prayer,
Great Allah does not see the world below,
So turn your eyes from Heaven if you dare.
“You did it justice,” he said.
“Throughout my theatrical career, I heard only one actress, a Miss Templeton, claim she'd gotten her fill of flattery, and she was lying.” Chloe continued to molt, dropping her second slipper and loosening her sash, thus making her thighs accessible to Mr. Dartworthy's discernment. “Let us now revisit Khayyám the sensualist.”
Touch not your flesh of myrrh, your golden hair,
Except to bring them tender love and care,
Know your own wonder, worship it with me,
See how I fall before you deep in prayer.
“Another splendid recitation,” said the mariner. “Tell me, my fair philosopherâChloeâdo you know your own wonder?”
“Not my own, perhaps, but surely the wonder of these verses.” She availed herself of the Madeira, then leaned towards Mr. Dartworthy and rotated the top button of his silk day-shirt as if winding a clock. “Did I mention that my dressing-table holds such paraphernalia as women use to exempt themselves from procreation?”
“Please know I am not in the business of deflowering virgins.”
“Nor am I bent on maintaining my chastity under all circumstances. Like Eve, I long ago surrendered my innocence to a cad named Adam.” The Madeira was performing its intended function, allowing her she-devil dimension to emerge in full. “Your flesh is decorated, Mr. Dartworthyâof this I am certain. Pray tell, what manner of tattoo adorns your chest? A mermaid? A sinking ship? A skull and crossbones?”
“An octopus, actually. I could afford to pay the artist for six tentacles only, as opposed to Nature's eight.”
“We need another infusion of blasphemy,” Chloe said, straightaway enacting Khayyám's musings on the pointlessness of piety.
Alas, for all my knowledge and my skill,
The world's mysterious meaning mocks me still,
And yet I shan't persuade myself that I
Must bow before a supernatural will.
“A reading to remember,” said Mr. Dartworthy.
“I cannot decide which sort of poem moves me more, the paeans to Eros or the odes to doubt. Now comes our third and final hedonistic quatrain.”
Were I a sultan, say what greater bliss
Were mine to summon to my side than this,
Thy gleaming face, far brighter than the moon,
My loveâand thy immortalizing kiss!
“Might I suggest a brief intermission?” said Mr. Dartworthy, his words alternating with staccato breaths.
“No, Ralph, but you may advocate for a protracted one.” It seemed to Chloe that her heart and his were beating synchronouslyâno, not just those two hearts: at that moment every organic pump in Amazonia was pounding out the same cadence, so that the room thundered with the blood of anacondas, macaws, ocelots, sloths, and stiletto-toothed caimans.
“The poet got it right, my fair philosopher. One kiss, and I shall live forever!”
“Immortality is not a thing to postpone,” said Chloe, whereupon she and her mariner rose from the divan and headed towards her bed-chamber, there being no other place in Amazonia that might accommodate their ardor.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Although the Albion Transmutationist Club had never been amongst Malcolm Chadwick's favorite organizations (even the Shelley Society seemed less vainglorious), he admired the
esprit de corps
its members had exhibited throughout their tedious weeks on the river. But now that the quest was on hiatus, with everyone living at the Hotel da Borboleta Azul, it seemed that Miss Bathurst's band had fallen prey to a kind of moral cirrhosis. The city had gotten into their blood, infecting them with a profligacy such as Malcolm had rarely observed outside of Alastor Hall.
Having determined how his company would get to Iquitos, Captain Runciter now spent most of his time swilling
caxaça
rum in the Dragão Verde. Algernon Bathurst, meanwhile, had become a fixture in that same saloon, and although he was finding estimable uses for his gambling profits (such as paying Malcolm's hotel bill and buying him a sturdy cotton jacket), all that cardsharping was surely warping what remained of his character. As for Miss Kirsop, while she'd not quite relapsed into strumpetry, she was nevertheless sinning on a daily basis, or so Malcolm inferred from her frequent visits to Mr. Pritchard's rooms. Worst of all, Miss Bathurst had entered into an equally unsavory arrangement with Dartworthy (their assignations were obviously not confined to recitations of Persian poetry), and it grieved Malcolm to see so intelligent a woman succumbing to the snares of a roué.
And what of the Reverend Mr. Chadwick? Had the rot of Manáos seeped into his soul as well? Was he censuring others when he ought to be judging himself? Before his conversion to the Church of Awful Doubt, he would have solicited God's assistance in addressing this question. Instead he paradoxically sought the company of Miss Bathurst, inviting her to the Parque dos Pássaros de Guarda-Chuva for a picnic complete with bread, cheese, and wine.
“I feel compelled to raise a delicate matter,” he told her after they'd settled onto the bench. “I am rarely comfortable discussing the domain Saint Augustine called âconcupiscence,' and so, to reverse a common locution, I shall mince words.”
“You may begin by mincing âconcupiscence,' for I'd never heard that mouthful before,” said Miss Bathurst, adjusting her Panama hat.
“It has not escaped my notice that Miss Kirsop and Mr. Pritchard are indulging in liaisons.”
“Had you moved more quickly, you might have won Solange for yourself,” said Miss Bathurst, taking a bite of cheese.
“Do not make light of my distress.”
“
Désolé
,” the actress replied in a tone partaking equally of chagrin and derision. “You've assembled a splendid picnic,” she added, enjoying a sip of claret. “So splendid as to merit a recitation from Mr. Khayyám. âA book of poems underneath a tree, a loaf of bread, a flask of wine, and theeâcouched here beside meâmake for such bliss that to Paradise I shan't ever need to flee.'”
“I am likewise alarmed byâ”
“By my dalliances with Mr. Dartworthy?”
“I shall happily accompany you to the nearest church”âhe pointed towards the Catedral de Nossa Senhora da Imaculada Conceiçãoâ“and listen as you confess your indiscretions to Heaven.”
“Heaven would hear only that my love for Ralph Dartworthy is the most exquisite thing I've ever known, though his octopus has but six tentacles.”
“What?”
“A local idiom.”
“I am likewise troubled by your brother's obsession with poker.”
“Speak of the Devil!” exclaimed Miss Bathurst.
Malcolm glanced upwards, his gaze coming to rest on the approaching figure of Algernon Bathurst, hugging a canvas sea-bag as a shipwrecked sailor might cling to a floating spar.
“Good afternoon, Reverend,” he said in a merry voice. “Hello, sweetest sister.”
“Your mood becomes you, Algernon,” said Miss Bathurst. “You should traffic in cheerfulness more often.”
“Last night all the gods of gaming were with me!” her brother exclaimed. “The contest was seven-card stud. Senhor Nogueiro, the wealthiest baron in Manáos, spreads his four queens and reaches for the potâbut then I tip my hand: the seven, eight, nine, ten, and knave of diamonds! This bag contains over three hundred
contos de réis
, easily worth four thousand English pounds!”
Malcolm expected Miss Bathurst to whoop for joy, but her response was rather more complexâa start of surprise followed by a thoughtful frown and cool words delivered in a sardonic tone. “I'd always known you were a genius at cards, little brother. Your decision to announce your good fortune in public likewise bespeaks great intelligence, for only by being robbed at knifepoint will you elude the guilt that accrues to undeserved wealth.”
With a tilted smile Algernon Bathurst acknowledged the merit in his sister's sarcasm. He sat down and said, quietly, “Tell me, Reverend, will it rain today?”
“As it did yesterday, and as it will tomorrow,” said Malcolm. “Might I offer you some claret?”
“My luck is intoxicant enough.” Algernon clasped his sister's hand and brought it to his chest. “The arithmetic is thrilling. My winnings will cover Papa's debts
in toto
, with enough remaining to pay Runciter a dividend of five hundred pounds. Dartworthy and Pritchard will divide another five hundred, which leaves more than a thousand for our own needs. In short, dear Chloe, we can all go home. Arriving in England, you and I shall appease our father's creditors, rescue him from the workhouse, and live in genteel poverty ever after.”
To Malcolm's consternation, and to Algernon's apparent bewilderment as well, Miss Bathurst neither smiled, laughed, nor praised the gods of gaming. Instead she lapsed into a brown study, speaking not a word.
“Sweetest sister, are you not delighted by this turn of events?”
“Naturally I'm pleased by the thought of breaking Papa's chains. I pray you, reward Captain Runciter and Mr. Pritchard as you propose, then join them on the next packet-steamer headed east. Exchange your
contos de réis
for pounds in Belém, hop aboard a brig to Plymouth, and secure our father's deliverance. Mr. Chadwick will want a berth on both of those vessels. As for myself, I intend to press on. I cannot answer for Ralph or Solange, but I suspect they will come with me.”
“Do you not grasp what has happened, Chloe? We needn't win that preposterous prize after all!”
“You needn't win it, but I must,” Miss Bathurst retorted. “âFor 'tis not mere blood we seek but the thrill of mocking the cosmos.' Quite the best of Carmine the vampire's lines, do you not agree?”
“How much wine did you drink before I got here?” asked Algernon.