The Wake of the Lorelei Lee: Being an Account of the Further Adventures of Jacky Faber, on Her Way to Botany Bay (Bloody Jack Adventrue Series)

Hardcover
from $0.00

Author: Louis A. Meyer

ISBN-10: 0547327684

ISBN-13: 9780547327686

Category: Teen Fiction - Adventure & Survival

Jacky Faber, rich from her exploits diving for Spanish gold, has purchased the Lorelei Lee to carry passengers across the Atlantic. Believing she has been absolved of past sins against the Crown, Jacky docks in London to take on her crew, but is instead arrested and sentenced to life in the newly formed penal colony in Australia.\ To add insult to injury, the Lorelei Lee is confiscated to carry Jacky and more than 200 female convicts to populate New South Wales. Not one to give in to self...

Search in google:

Jacky Faber, rich from her exploits diving for Spanish gold, has purchased the Lorelei Lee to carry passengers across the Atlantic. Believing she has been absolved of past sins against the Crown, Jacky docks in London to take on her crew, but is instead arrested and sentenced to life in the newly formed penal colony in Australia. To add insult to injury, the Lorelei Lee is confiscated to carry Jacky and more than 200 female convicts to populate New South Wales. Not one to give in to self pity, Jacky rallies her sisters to "better" their position--resulting in wild escapades, brushes with danger, and much hilarity. Will Jacky find herself a founding mother of New South Wales, Australia? Not if she has anything to do about it!

Chapter 1\ April 1807 Boston, Massachusetts USA\ "Must you have your grubby hands on her chest, Davy? Must you? I swear you are just the dirtiest little monkey!" Davy Jones is leaning over the bow and has a grimy paw on each of the girl’s breasts.\ The rogue grins hugely, but does not change his grip. "Gotta hold on to somethin’, Jacky. We wouldn’t want to drop her in the drink now, would we?"\ "You drop her in, Mate, and you’re goin’ in after her. Tink, take a strain. John Thomas, swing her in and hold her. There. Good."\ "She’s in place, Skipper."\ "All right, pound ’er in."\ Jim Tanner swings the heavy mallet and drives in the thick pegs that will hold the girl in place on the bow, under the bowsprit. Then we all step back to admire the figurehead.\ My, my . . . Look at that, now . . . She is absolutely beautiful.\ I had hired a master woodcarver to carve her because my ship lacked such a figurehead, and I felt we needed one to guide us on our watery way; and a real master he turned out to be. She is carved of good solid oak and positively glows in her new paint—luminous pink skin with long amber tresses that wrap around her slim body. Her back is arched to match the curve of the ship’s stem; her breasts thrust proudly forward, peeking out through the thick strands of her hair. She smiles—her red lips slightly parted, as if her voice were lifted in song—and her hands hold a small golden harp, a lyre, actually, which conveniently, and modestly, covers her lower female part. When we’d discussed the sculpture, the carver, Mr. Simms, thought it would be just the thing if the piece looked like me, and I agreed. The Lorelei Lee is my ship, after all, and so I posed for him—in my natural state, as it were. All who know me know that I am not exactly shy in that regard. Plus Master Carver Simms is an old man, so what’s the harm? I must say Mr. Simms succeeded most admirably in capturing my particular features, and I am most pleased with the result.\ And, oh, I am so very pleased with all the other parts of my beautiful ship, as well.\ She is called a brigantine, having two sturdy masts, square-rigged on the foremast, with three fore-and-aft sails off the front and the mainmast rigged with a fore-and-aft spanker as mainsail. She is, in dimensions and sail rig, much like my first real command, HMS Wolverine, which was a brig; but in elegance and spirit, she is much more like my beautiful Emerald, who now sleeps beneath the sea. I like saying brigantine better than brig, as it sounds more elegant. And, oh, she is elegant. I fell in love with her at first sight, lying all sleek next to Ruffles Wharf, looking as if she wanted to shake off the lines that bound her to the land and go tearing off to sea. It was from there that we did take her directly for her sea trials, and she performed most admirably, running before the wind like a greyhound, dancing over the waves and pointing up into the weather like she wanted to charge directly into the teeth of the gale itself. Glory!\ I had purchased the Lorelei Lee from a Captain Ichabod Lee, who had named her after his daughter. I decided to keep the name, the mythic Lorelei being something like a mermaid who sat on a rock on the Rhine River in Germany and lured poor sailors to their doom with her singing. So it seems appropriate, somehow, my having been something of a mermaid myself in the near past, as well as my being a singer of songs, though I wish no doom on any poor sailor.\ How could I afford such a splendid craft, you ask? Hmmm? Well, that’s where the mermaid bit comes in. Earlier this year I had been sent by British Naval Intelligence on a treasure hunting expedition, diving on a Spanish wreck off Key West in Florida. It was entirely against my will, but my will or wishes don’t seem to matter much in this world. The wreck was the Santa Magdalena, and she had yielded up much, much gold and silver, so much so that it didn’t seem quite fair that King Georgie should get all that loot and that I should get none. No, it did not. I, who was the one who risked life and limb and peace of mind by diving down into those horrid depths to bring up all that gold from the Santa Magdalena. No, I did not find it fair at all, not by half, so I squirreled away a few of the gold ingots—well . . . actually about fifty of them—in the hold of my bonny little schooner, replacing part of her ballast, and after the diving was done, hauled it all up to Boston.\ And speaking of ballast, I have in my hold right now the selfsame diving bell we had used to get me down two hundred and fifty feet into the Caribbean Sea. I had the thing on my little schooner the Nancy B. Alsop when we were detached to return to Boston, and since no one was here to claim it, I stashed it, under cover of night, of course, deep in the hold of the Lorelei Lee. It’s as good a ballast as any dumb lead bars, and who knows, it might prove useful someday.\ So anyway, we got back to Boston, revealed the golden stash to the astounded Mr. Ezra Pickering, my very good friend and lawyer, and he set about converting the gold into cash, lines of credit, and whatnot, hiding it all very cunningly in various dummy corporations and holding companies, so that King Georgie wouldn’t find out and perhaps be a bit miffed. Clever man, that Ezra.\ *****\ Hammers have been pounding since the day of the Lorelei’s purchase. We have constructed four relatively spacious cabins, two on either side, aft, on the mess deck, just under my cabin. Forward of them we have twelve regular-sized cabins (big enough for a bed, dresser, and dry sink), again on each side, making a total of twenty-four. Then we have three levels of open hammock spaces, two hundred hooks in each. The upper level, being a bit airier than the lower, will be more expensive, of course. It’s all in what one can afford. Hey, I have swung my hammock in many a dank hold, and what was good enough for me will be good enough for them. I intend to give everyone, regardless of berth, plenty of fresh air and as good food as I can manage. We can carry three hundred passengers, as well as thirty crew.\ And, yes, of course, the fitting out of my beautiful cabin continues, the design of which is being directed by my very good John Higgins, second in command of Faber Shipping Worldwide. Never let it be said that Jacky Faber goes any way but first class when she can afford it, and Higgins does not spare the expense.\ There will be separate facilities for families with young children and a separate dormitory for young females traveling alone. After they are established in the New World, men will be sending back for their wives and sweethearts, you may be certain of that.\ *****\ "One thing is for sure, Sister," I had said to my friend Amy Trevelyne when she had come onboard several days ago to view our progress in outfitting the Lorelei. "My ship shall never become a floating brothel."\ "Are you not the one, dear Sister, who once admonished me to never say never, as it has a way of coming back on you?"\ "Well, it won’t happen this time, Amy," I’d answered with the sure and smug certainty of the truly stupid. "And furthermore—Hello, what’s this?" A cheer had gone up from the dock.\ We looked over the rail and found that the new figurehead of the Lorelei Lee had chosen just that moment to be delivered.\ "Isn’t she fine?" I exulted, drawing in a deep, satisfied breath and regarding the richly painted figure glowing in the sun and smiling up at us with what, to Amy, would be a very familiar wolfish grin.\ Amy’s mouth fell open upon seeing the sculpture, unable to speak. I gave out an evil chuckle and put the backs of my fingers under her fallen chin and gently lifted it back to its proper place.\ She regained the power of speech and cried despairingly,\ "Oh, Jacky, no!" as she had said so many times before.\ So anyway, here I am with this fine ship all outfitted and ready to go, awaiting word from my darling Jaimy, back in London, that my name has been cleared of all charges against it and that I am back in the good graces of the King, upon which word I shall immediately set sail for Merrie Olde England and—finally!—marriage to Lieutenant James Emerson Fletcher. Hooray!

\ Children's Literature\ - Elizabeth D. Schafer\ Jacky Faber, age sixteen, craves being the center of attention. The eighth story in "A Bloody Jack Adventure" series finds Jacky in summer 1807 preparing her ship, Lorelei Lee, for trans-Atlantic business ventures. She sails to London, planning to be reunited with Jaimy Fletcher, her fiance, but is prosecuted for embezzlement, joining female convicts on her seized ship for transport to the New South Wales penal colony. En route, Jacky interacts with friends and enemies, is intrigued by new characters, especially a blind drummer, and meets factual historical figures including pirate Cheng Shih. Resilient Jacky, who is fearless and impulsive, refuses to despair, impacting people and places she encounters on her voyage. Her actions provoke positive and negative outcomes which advance the plot. She resourcefully dives for coins sailors throw into the sea at exotic ports where the ship docks, earning income to purchase desired amenities. Unsure of Jaimy's fate, Jacky is relieved to see him on another ship transporting male convicts but outraged when she witnesses him being flogged. Vowing vengeance, Jacky develops an alliance with pirates who abducted her. An approaching typhoon suggests winds will blow Jacky into her next adventure. Jacky's outlandish, often risque, characterization sometimes stretches credibility, but her bravery, antics, and generosity will appeal to both female and male readers. The author's naval background enhances realism of depictions of life and traditions on ships. Read with Paul Dowswell's Prison Ship: Adventures of a Young Sailor (2006) and Gerald and Loretta Hausman's Escape from Botany Bay: The True Story of Mary Bryant (2003). Reviewer: Elizabeth D. Schafer\ \ \ \ \ VOYA\ - Dawn Talbott\ Mary Farber, also known as Jacky Farber, has been in several scrapes with the law in the 1800s. In fact, though she is only sixteen, Jacky has earned many enemies. Her past has finally caught up with her, and she is being sent to spend the rest of her years in Australia—on her own boat, which was commandeered by the English government and sold to the East India Company. Luckily, Jacky has earned many friends as well, and these friends will be vital in her attempt to escape a life sentence at the penal colony in New South Wales. Jacky does not intend to accept this fate, and she uses her wit, beauty, charm, and numerous skills to wiggle herself out of yet another fine mess in this newest addition to the Bloody Jack Adventures. L. A. Meyer's writing style is easy to read and entertaining. The story moves along at a brisk pace, with new turns in the plot keeping the reader's attention throughout the considerable 560 pages. Meyer conveys well a sense of adventure, and many excerpts from songs and sea shanties add flavor to the story. Harsh language, sexual situations, and violence pepper the book, as they should in a good pirate story, but the content is too advanced for younger readers. Jacky is, in essence, a pirate, loaded on to a ship full of prostitutes traveling from England to Australia to serve as breeding stock for the new continent, so an older audience is the target for this voyage. Reviewer: Dawn Talbott\ \ \ From the Publisher"[Jacky] uses her wit, beauty, charm, and numerous skills to wiggle herself out of yet another fine mess. . . . Easy to read and entertaining."—VOYA\ "Meyer knows how to spin an exciting yarn, particularly on the high seas. Fans will enjoy watching this irrepressible and decidedly uninhibited heroine make the best of yet another seemingly hopeless predicament."—Booklist\ \ \