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White Seed: The Untold Story of the Lost Colony of Roanoke




  White Seed

  The Untold Story of the Lost

  Colony of Roanoke

  By Paul Clayton

  Copyright © 2009 Paul Clayton

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author.

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  I would like to dedicate this book to James Clavell,

  James Michener, and also Ken Follett,

  wonderful authors of the big, compelling ‘time-trip’ kind of books I love to read.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Epilogue

  Afterword

  Chapter 1

  Spring, 1587. Plymouth England

  Maggie knew that this old man would do to her what the other had -- if he could get her alone. She stood on the deck of Sir Walter Raleigh’s ship, the Lion, the afternoon sun burning through her simple gown of green linen, as she waited for her turn to be interviewed for a place in Raleigh’s New World Virginia Paradise. She had not eaten all day and the stench of garbage and pitch pine from the harbor threatened to make her retch. The old man, a sailor with a gray goat’s beard sprouting from his chin, sat at a table ten feet away, writing in a black leather-bound ledger open before him.

  Maggie Hagger, seventeen years of age, had long, red hair and a fair, pretty face flecked with freckles. The ship, although tightly tethered to the quay, moved slightly on a swell. Maggie took her eyes off the man to look up at the looping white of the furled sails as they moved slightly across the blue vault of the sky. Like a graceful swan, this ship would take her far away to safety upon its downy back -- if she got a contract of indenture. And get one she must -- or hang!

  “Next,” the old sailor said finally.

  As Maggie approached, she looked to her left at twenty-five or so common people dressed in plain brown woolens and homespun, whose terms of indenture had already been purchased. They waited in the stark sunlight with their belongings in shabby bundles about their feet. On the other side in the shade cast by stacks of wooden pens containing sheep and hens, about a dozen of the better sort, dressed in fine clothes and wearing hats of bright colors, talked softly. They were all watching Maggie expectantly.

  “Name?”

  “Maggie Hagger.”

  He had an ugly voice like the bark of a dog, recalling to Maggie the bray of the man who had pursued her and Thomas halfway across England. She remembered their escape from the London warehouse in the blackness of night. They had crept along the slippery stones of the exposed banks of the Thames as a horrid, faceless man shouted after them, “Redheaded whore! Wherever you go I will find you. Hear me! I will find you and you shall hang!” Maggie suspected that the man had had some connection to Thomas’s master.

  Thomas, who was two behind Maggie in the line, called to her, “Worry not, Maggie. We will soon be aboard.”

  Maggie prayed that he was right. A fellow countryman, Thomas had been her traveling companion for much of the last year, but it was by chance and not choice. A dull looking, straw-haired lad of eighteen, Thomas stood out only by virtue of the jaunty fig-colored felt hat upon his head, its crown bulging up roundly like the crust on a newly baked pie. The old sailor continued his scribbling and Maggie looked at the crumpled handbill she had found nailed to a wall the day before. It had a drawing of a proud little merchant ship, its white sails bellied out by a fair breeze. She read silently:

  The City of Raleigh Offering Most

  Excellent Fruits By Planting

  In The Virginia

  Paradise.

  Planters,

  Artisans And

  Common Folk Apply At The

  Berth Of Sir Walter Raleigh’s Ship, Lion.

  “Step up, wench. Quickly!”

  Maggie’s legs shook slightly from weakness and fear as she approached the man.

  His eyes pawed over her body. “What is yer age?”

  “Seventeen.”

  He continued to speak as he looked down and wrote in his ledger, “And what service would yeh be offering these gentlemen, wench?”

  Guffaws of laughter came from some nearby sailors coiling some ropes and Maggie’s face turned crimson. “Cookmaid or serving girl,” she said quickly. “Child teacher too. I can read and write and sum.”

  The old sailor looked up from his ledger. “We’ve already signed aboard the serving girls,” he said. He looked around at the crowd. “Be there anyone still in need of a cookmaid or child teacher?”

  Silence greeted the question and Maggie felt the blood run out of her. She must find a place on this ship and sail away. She must! She looked around at the people but only indifference or amusement showed in their faces and her hope sank like a stone.

  “Next!”

  Maggie was turning to go when a gruff male voice called out, “Are yeh a good cook, girl?”

  A tall, muscled, middle-aged soldier pushed through the crowd. Maggie thought him handsome in a rough way, but something about him inexplicably made her wary.

  “Aye, sir,” she said, taking in his broad shoulders, blue eyes, and thick brown hair. He smiled, attempting to put her at ease, but his eyes bore into hers so brazenly that she had to look away.

  He turned to the old sailor. “I will pay ten pounds for her term.”

  “Very well, Captain Stafford,” said the old sailor, “ten pounds.”

  “I will pay fifteen!” The voice was kindly, but bold. Maggie looked up to see a white haired gentleman step out of the crowd. “I could use a wench to help my daughter, Eleanor.”

  “Aye, Governor White,” said the sailor, “fifteen is offered.”

  “Eleanor Dare has a husband to help her,” said Stafford, “and a father. I will pay sixteen pounds for the serving wench’s contract.”

  The sailors had stopped their work to listen intently. The crowd grew quiet and craned their heads inquisitively.

  “I will pay eighteen,” said John White.

  The mast and yards creaked in a sluggish breeze. Captain Stafford placed his hands on his hips and shook his head. He laughed suddenly and raucously. “Very well, Governor. My quarters may well be unti
dy during the crossing but at least I shall retain my humble fortune.”

  The sailors laughed. The old ledger-keeper scowled at them and they went back to their work. He turned to Maggie. “Very well, wench. Governor White has agreed to pay the cost of your transport to Virginia. For this yeh will work for him and his daughter, Eleanor for a term of four years. She is with child and will need much care on the crossing. Do yeh agree to this?”

  Maggie could not help smiling. “Aye.”

  The old sailor placed his knobby finger on the ledger. “Make your mark here.”

  Maggie signed her name and walked across the waist to stand with the others. She was shocked to see Lionel the cutpurse among them. Lionel’s idiot son, Humphrey, who had always been at his side, was now nowhere in sight and Maggie wondered what had become of him.

  Lionel had obviously seen Maggie, yet he would not look at her. He had disappeared the day before without a word of goodbye. No longer the patch-worn cutpurse masquerading as a gentleman, Lionel was now a humble yeoman farmer in brown homespun he had evidently stolen from a clothesline somewhere. Maggie marveled at the man’s ability to transform himself.

  Her face still warm from all the eyes upon her, Maggie gave Lionel wide berth. A broad-faced, heavyset woman about a dozen years older than Maggie was signed next. Carrying two heavy bundles under her arms, she rocked back and forth as she crossed the deck. She stood next to Maggie, setting her bundles down with a sigh.

  Her rough face softened into a smile. “‘Tweren’t more than a dozen behind me, Dearie,” she said softly, “so we shan’t have to stand here in this sun much longer.”

  Maggie smiled upon hearing the lilting tones of her own country in the woman’s voice.

  “Next!” called the old sailor and Thomas stepped forward.

  “Yer name?” said the old sailor.

  Thomas licked his lips. “Thomas Shande.”

  “Age?”

  “Eighteen.”

  “What is yer occupation?”

  “Apprentice cooper.”

  The woman next to Maggie clucked her tongue impatiently. “Thinks he’s the grand high inquisitor.”

  A nearby soldier cast a warning look but the woman went on undeterred. “The sun and sea have long since roasted what little brains the poor man had. That is why the heat bothers him not.”

  Maggie smiled but she was beginning to worry. If Thomas did not get a place on the ship, would he let her go? Or would he turn her in out of jealousy? Sadly, she did not know the answer.

  “To whom were yeh apprenticed?” said the old sailor.

  Thomas swallowed visibly, looking around at the people. “Ah… Master John Smith,” he lied. Someone in the crowd laughed. “He died last year,” Thomas quickly added, “and I have found no position since.”

  “Well,” said the sailor, “we already have a cooper and he already has an apprentice.” He looked sternly at Thomas then said, “Next!”

  Maggie’s hopes fell as Thomas turned to go.

  “Wait!”

  It was the captain who had attempted to buy her contract.

  “Not afraid of hard work, are yeh, boy?” the captain asked Thomas.

  Thomas shook his head. “Nay, sir.”

  “Take off yer shirt.”

  Thomas quickly took off his shirt and the captain assayed his physique.

  “I will buy his term for the company,” said the captain. “He appears healthy and we can always use another strong back.”

  “Aye,” said the old sailor. “Purchased for four years by Captain Stafford.”

  Thomas came over to stand with the common people.

  Maggie looked over at Lionel. With his thinning hair combed forward and his pointed little beard, he looked too cunning to be a farmer. His intelligent gray eyes met Maggie’s briefly and she read in them that he wanted to remain anonymous. She looked away.

  “That is all for now,” the old sailor called to the crowd. “Take them below,” he said to one of the sailors

  Maggie and the others picked up their things and followed the sailor to an open hatchway. Her worries and loneliness faded as she trudged down the steps. Shuffling footsteps reverberated in the dark passageways as Lionel deliberately lagged behind and Thomas disappeared somewhere. Maggie and the others squeezed through the narrow spaces, hugging their bundles and bags close. Finally they came out into a larger, open area amidships on a lower deck where daylight streamed down through latticework hatches. Four cannon pointed out through opened gun ports, admitting additional sunlight. A raised wooden hatch covered the entryway to the deck below. Straw-filled tick mattresses lay about on the plank floor between the cannons, half of them already occupied by women and children, a few of them asleep. The air was humid and tinged with the smell of sweat, but the breeze coming through the gun ports mitigated its unpleasantness. After having had her prayers answered and securing a place on the ship, Maggie knew she should be at peace. But only after they were safely at sea and her awful pursuer no longer a threat, could she rest easy.

  “I slept in worse, I’ll tell yeh that,” said the heavyset woman, breaking into Maggie’s thoughts.

  Maggie smiled.

  Maggie took a mattress and the heavyset woman took the mattress beside her. The woman’s words -- the simple musings of a fellow traveler, someone who was not after Maggie for what she could get, but rather wanting only to pass the time -- warmed Maggie like the glow of a fire. “What is your name?” Maggie asked.

  “Elizabeth McNeil of Belfast. And thee?”

  “Maggie Hagger.” Maggie saw Lionel Fisher enter the cabin and claim a mattress on the other side. He glanced briefly at Maggie and then lay back to rest. The light filtering down through the latticework grew dim as a cloud passed overhead. Elizabeth patted Maggie’s hand kindly. “‘Tis no fun being footloose, is it, Dearie? Always on the move, living hand-to-mouth. Well, that will soon change.”

  Maggie nodded.

  “And yer indentured to the governor and his daughter! They’ll take good care of yeh, that I’ll wager.”

  “Aye.” Maggie remembered the old gentleman’s kindly face and hoped Elizabeth was right. Several sailors entered and lay down more mattresses on the deck. One of them hung a gimbaled lamp from a hook on the bulkhead to be lit later.

  “Who bought your contract?” Maggie asked Elizabeth.

  Elizabeth smiled. “A young gallant from Devon, Sir James Duncan.” Elizabeth leaned conspiratorially close, “The one with a blue peacock’s feather flyin’ from a red Italian hat. He be a friend of Raleigh’s and looking to get rich stealing the savages’ gold.”

  Thomas approached. Nodding to Elizabeth, he got down on one knee. “Maggie, there be a sow giving birth to a litter. Come and see.”

  Maggie knew what he really wanted. She shook her head tiredly. “Nay. I am too tired. Show me on the morrow.”

  Thomas got to his feet. “Suit yerself.” He walked off into the growing dimness.

  Maggie closed her eyes, giving in to her exhaustion. Elizabeth’s voice roused her from falling into sleep.

  “Maggie, that lad fancies yeh. Better let him catch yeh before yeh get too old.”

  Maggie shook her head. “I’ve had my fill of him since we left London.”

  “London town!” said Elizabeth with wonder. “And why would you leave such a grand city?”

  Maggie looked around for a place to keep their talk confidential. Some of the people were sleeping, a few snoring. “Let us go somewhere else,” she said.

  They walked a little ways down the passage, coming to another open space. The dim golden light of a lamp revealed stacked casks and boxes rising like small hills. A farmer sat among them on a mattress. He looked at them tiredly. A few feet from him a thick door led to another passageway. Maggie tried it but it seemed to be bolted from the other side.

  “Let me try?” Elizabeth grunted as she tugged at the door. “Tight as a drum.”

  “They always lock the doors,” said the farmer.
<
br />   “Pray tell why?” said Elizabeth.

  The man frowned as if she should know the answer. “So yeh will not run away. We had some run away while we were tied up in Portsmouth. Since then they always lock the doors.”

  Elizabeth clucked scoldingly. “Treat us like beasts, they do.”

  They went back to their quarters where the other lamp had been lit. “Let us sit,” said Maggie. “I am tired.”

  After they sat, Elizabeth looked around and then said to Maggie, “You said you left London. Why?”

  Maggie sighed. Elizabeth would not let her alone until she told her more. But, she reasoned, she was from her own country and so could probably be trusted. “I used to sell beer,” Maggie began, “to the tradesmen and sailors on the quays along the Thames.” Elizabeth nodded her head encouragingly. “Thomas worked as an apprentice in Master John Spencer’s cooperage on Shandling Quay. I was in the habit of stopping in to see him and we would talk of country and kin.”

  Elizabeth nodded sadly. “Aye. Go on, girl.”

  “This day when I went in, Thomas was not there.” In the telling, Maggie began to relive the event, finding herself once again in the dim coolness of the cooperage, the smells of freshly cut wood and resins filling her nose. Thomas’s tools lay scattered about near a huge, nearly completed tun cask, big enough to hold several grown men inside. When the barrel was finished, it would be filled with wine from the vats overhead.

  Maggie heard shuffling. The old woman who cleaned the place came down the stairs carrying her broom. Maggie cringed at the sight of her dirty skirts and unkempt hair, her wrinkled skin. A hag is what she was. It was an uncharitable thought, Maggie knew, but the old Englishwoman made no secret of her dislike for Maggie and so to hell with her. Maggie was about to go back out into the street when someone called her.

  “Wench! Up here.”

  From a small window in his loft, Master Spencer, the cooper, waved to her to come up. She climbed the stairs. The door to his office was open and she looked in. He leaned over a table full of drawings and drawing tools. He looked over and waved her in. “Close the door,” he ordered, “yer invitin’ the flies in.”

  Maggie’s breathing had quickened from the stairs. She looked around for Thomas as she quickly poured a cup of beer for Master Spencer. She handed him the cup and he regarded her calmly as he slowly drank it.