Day Five: My Voyage
Written by Sam Nicolas. Posted on August 12th 2008
Day 5
Today I rest. I have collected sufficient fruit and water for my voyage. I leave at dawn.
Day 6
I am happy to be back on the ocean. The smooth up and down motion of the waves calms my trembling hands. The current has carried me west and the sun has traversed the sky above me while I sit here and wait.
I miss my home in London. I miss the English. I miss Providence. I miss my brother. How could all of this have happened to me? How am I so cursed as to have lost everything?
I should not dwell on the past. I should look forward to the future with hope. That is what I have always done. But when my future is cursed, I would rather not think of it, but instead the idyllic scenes of my childhood.
Day 7
[Half of the page is torn out. The remaining half is filled with bloody scratches and marks.]
Day 8
I can see land now, but I do not possess any hope for the future, on land or on sea. I merely accept my curse. If I am branded a traitor because I cannot control my actions any more than the marionette, then so be it.
If only there were a way to escape, to make up for what I have done. For what I will soon do. Damn that voodoo witch! I wish I could with my ink blot out her existence and free myself.
Shortly I will reach land. I will reveal all of my sins when I am returned.
[Editor's Note: This is part of a series of entries taken from a worn journal that was found in a box of mostly worthless trinkets bought at an estate sale years ago. While most of the writing is legible, some of the ink has faded and a few pages are missing. Sam has taken the liberty of filling in any gaps. ]
Day Three: Murder
Written by Sam Nicolas. Posted on August 6th 2008
Something terrible happened today. I cannot in my present state begin to understand the course of events which have led to the current situation. Only the future will fully explain. I must confess however that I have killed a man and now am in possession of a raft.
As my mind clears, I am beginning to piece together the events of the previous night. I will explain, to the best of my ability, what occurred. I entrust my sanity to the reader, hoping not to be condemned, but not expecting forgiveness.
Yesterday, I was sitting in the sand at the edge of the trees on the side of the island where I landed. The sun had sunk into the waves, illuminating the clouds above with red and pink rays. I was thinking about my unfortunate situation, my squandered fortune and lost love, and the night slowly stole the light from the earth. Then I heard noises from the jungle behind me. Startled, I turned around and saw lights in the jungle. They wavered and danced up the steep the mountain side, forming a flickering tail as they moved. For a moment I was entranced, then realized the lights were torches.
I raced into the jungle toward the lights, making quick progress in my frantic state. I soon approached the men carrying the torches, who were nearing the top of a ridge. I thought that soon I would be off the wretched isle and began to shout, “Hello there! Please, help me! I am alive!” Visions of my home and my beloved began to fill my head and I became giddy with joy as I ran toward the lights.
I stumbled into a clearing in the jungle and immediately found myself surrounded by swords. I stopped shouting. The torch light danced back and forth in the reflection of each of the nine shiny steel blades, all pointed at me. I saw that the men behind the swords were Spanish and Portuguese, and I knew from their dress that all were all high-ranking officers. I held my breath in fear that they would recognize me.
The men started to glance back and forth. Then their leader, who I knew to be Don Melchor de Aguilera, began to speak, his rich baritone voice emanating from beneath his dark mustache.
“I will give you a choice: you may choose life, or you may choose death. The condition of life is this: you must join us as our servant. If you choose life, you must kill the man who now serves us. You will do this to prove yourself to us, and if faithful your service will be handsomely rewarded.”
From his words, I concluded that he did not recognize me. I also concluded that to save my own life, I would be forced to accept his terms. There was no other choice. I did not want him to recognize my voice, so I quickly nodded and uttered a damning single word: “Life.”
The men surrounding me slowly stepped backward a few paces, enlarging the circle. From behind them, a small man was thrust into the circle, stumbling and falling to the ground. Blood poured down the side of his head and I saw a desperate fear in his crazed eyes. Then a sword was tossed onto the ground beside me. From the ground he began to plead for his life.
“Please! Do not kill me!” His words began to slur and he struggled to stay conscious. “I am innocent!” he screamed. “I have been true to my word! Spare me! Please!”
I hesitated, then picked up the sword. And in one swift strike, the deed was done. I stared at the bloody blade as it dropped from my hands. I had killed a man, and I knew then that my conscience would never let me rest peacefully again. I looked up as Melchor spoke.
“Your life belongs to us now. Never forget that.” I blacked out as something hit the back of my head.
When I awoke, I was on the sand of the beach, but it was still early in the night. A torch was propped in the sand near me. My head ached and my right hand burned with pain. I ripped off the bloody white bandage to see that an X had been carved into my palm. Blood still oozed from the sliced flesh and I quickly rewound the bandage. Then I fainted.
When I regained consciousness, I looked around and saw a small raft up the beach. I walked to it, finding a paper tied with string to one of the large branches forming the raft. I read the note then returned to where I had hidden my journal and in my crazed condition wrote a few words. Then I fainted again, unable to awaken myself from the nightmares until the morning light.
I do not dare reveal the exact details of the note in this journal. I fear that I have sold my soul.
[Editor's Note: This is part of a series of entries taken from a worn journal that was found in a box of mostly worthless trinkets bought at an estate sale years ago. While most of the writing is legible, some of the ink has faded and a few pages are missing. Sam has taken the liberty of filling in any gaps. ]
Day Two: Food and Exploration
Written by Sam Nicolas. Posted on August 3rd 2008
The night was warm but sleeping on land was strange after so many cold nights at sea. On my ship, the sea rocked me back and forth, the soft crashing of the waves whispering lullabies as she lulled me to sleep each night. Last night I tossed and turned in the sand, dreaming nightmares of a vengeful mother.
It rained twice during the night, both warm showers that filled then spilled my canteen. I was able to aright it before the second rain ceased, and ended up with half a canteen of water for the day. After the unsettling night, I couldn’t stomach any fruit for breakfast.
I left early in the morning, circling around the whole of the island. I have marked the trees at regular intervals while counting my steps. I believe that the whole island is no more than 20 miles in circumference. I also found a very small stream across the island. I followed it inward for a while, but returned, not caring to ascend into the mountain of jungle. I became hungry after the activities of the day and ate a long yellow fruit. The skin is hard, but was easily removed with my knife. The inner core is soft and strange, with tiny soft seeds.
I spent most of the afternoon thinking about how I could invent a fishing rod and hook. I have carved a branch into a suitable pole and imaging that vines twisted together could act as line. The hook evades me. How did the first men create the hook? I know not. If a woman created it, then I am lost, for I understand not the workings of the mind of the fairer sex.
[Editor's Note: This is part of a series of entries taken from a worn journal that was found in a box of mostly worthless trinkets bought at an estate sale years ago. While most of the writing is legible, some of the ink has faded and a few pages are missing. Sam has taken the liberty of filling in any gaps. ]
Day One: Survival
Written by Sam Nicolas. Posted on August 2nd 2008
The fierce storm raged against me for five days. Repeatedly assaulted by nature’s wrath, I was nearly torn from my vessel into the depths of the abyss. I struggled against the forces, doing everything in my power to continue my voyage, but in the end my efforts were in vain. Early this morning, my small ship crashed into the reef, stranding me on a small island.
As if content with my demise, the storm passed, leaving in its place a strange calm of clouds. I am now confined to this tiny world, imprisoned by the vastness of the empty endless void surrounding me. The sea and the sky begin to merge in my mind, both taking on a grayish blue hue as the difference between them disappears.
I spent most of the day exploring this side of the island. There seems to be sufficient fruit in the trees for my survival, but no animal life is to be found. I have used the ship wood that washed ashore to build a shelter for myself. I fastened my shirt on some branches to catch rain water, which I will collect below in my canteen. I must find a stream or some other source of water if I am to survive.
Of my possessions, only my canteen, knife, and small chest containing my papers and ink washed ashore with me. I shall endeavor to record these solitary struggles until I am rescued or until I die.
[Editor's Note: This is part of a series of entries taken from a worn journal that was found in a box of mostly worthless trinkets bought at an estate sale years ago. While most of the writing is legible, some of the ink has faded and a few pages are missing. Sam has taken the liberty of filling in any gaps. ]
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