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Showing posts with label pirates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pirates. Show all posts

Sunday, June 2, 2013

An Excerpt from Scarlet Sails by TS Rhodes

TS Rhodes lives with two cats and a turtle that is in love with Nathan Fillian. She makes pirate costumes, reads history, and is the winner of the Robyn Harrington Memorial Short Story Competiton. She was a finalist on the reality show Project Publish. She is not, currently, in the market for a pirate ship.

Read her series of books, The Pirate Empire, on Amazon Kindle. Below is an excerpt from Scarlet Sails.

*

"Where's the bloody payroll?"

Scarlet MacGrath strode from the ruin of the captain's cabin, grabbed the schooner's captain by the front of his shirt and dug the muzzle of her flintlock into the flesh of the man's face, up under the cheekbone. The white of his eye rolled upward. They stood against each other for a long moment, and finally he said, steady enough, "There ain't no payroll, the men are in on shares."

She backed off then, half a thoughtful step, leaving the print of her pistol barrel on his cheek, and asked a little more politely, "What are you meanin' by that?"

"I own the boat. I suspected the merchant houses of cheating us, so it bein' the off season, I told the boys that any man who came south with me would have a percentage. I was aimin' to sell in Jamaica."

She lowered the pistol and gave him a little more space. "Well, I have a great respect for a man what treats his crew fair. We'll still rob you, mind, but I will apologize about your cabin." Litter from her search was visible through the open door, clothing and books scattered, the desk overturned, the sea chest rifled, the bunk torn apart.

Scarlet put the pistol away in her coat pocket and turned to her quartermaster. Burgess had just come up from below decks, and stood polishing his steel-rimmed glasses. "Captain MacGrath. I've seen the cargo. It's just as the men say, one hundred tons of salt cod, no more no less, and not a penny's worth of other cargo aboard her."

"You see, we're no treasure ship. Will you let us go now?" the schooner's captain asked, rubbing the mark on his cheek.

Scarlet ran a hand through her long red hair and laughed. "Do you think we only look for Spanish gold? If we held out for that we'd starve, sure as sure as sunrise. No, cod's good enough for us. Mister Burgess, how much can we take on?"

Burgess took the big brown ledger from under his arm and consulted it. "Five tons I should say, Captain."

"Five tons it is. Kindly ask Mister Flynn if he will rig the cargo crane, and we'll bring it over easy." She spared an affectionate glance to her own Donnybrook, bobbing alongside the schooner; sixty five feet of deck, ten guns, and Mister Bracegirdle hanging about them, still hoping for an excuse to fire.

Scarlet turned back to the schooner captain. "I've just one more thing to ask, but if you answer true, I'll make it worth your while."

The man still rubbed thoughtfully at his cheek, but his eyes traveled up and down Scarlet's body. She did not make a display of bosom, but her shirt fit her close and she had, as usual, pinned her skirts up nearly to the knee, showing her sea-boots. She let him look for a moment, laughed again and said, "Not that. I mean to offer you information. That is free and won't delay our parting."

"Well then, ask."

"How much liquor on board?"

"It's a long way from the cod banks. We've two barrels of cider left."

"Well, I will take one of them. And here"s your gift. Don"t sell in Jamaica. That"s a colony of England, and England owns all them northern fishing banks. Your cod merchants may have purchased some sort of monopoly from the Crown. If they have, and they notice you selling, they'll seize your cargo and fine you or jail you or both."

"Damn. You may be right. This long old trip for nothing."

"That ain't what I said. Where you should sell is the island north, Cuba. The Spanish love cod, and they'll pay dear, for they don't own any cod banks."

A slow, sly smile came into the sloop captain's eyes. Then he looked sharp at Scarlet. "And will you be selling my fish there, too?"

She looked out at the horizon. "Cuba's a little... warm for us right now. We'll find a buyer. Everyone wants the stuff, and I don’t need to bother about the price. If we can't sell, we won't go hungry. My navigator will tell you what you need to know." She called out to the Donny"s quarterdeck. "Pryce!"

The man beside her stared for a moment, his expression half annoyance, half curiosity. "I never thought I'd take advice from someone robbing me. What's in it for you?"

Scarlet grinned. "I enjoy fekkin' with rich merchant houses. You may not know, but there's three rules to pirating in these waters. Take what you want. Get away with it. Have a good time." She headed toward the rail, then paused and looked back. "Welcome to the Caribbean."

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Meet Dianne Greenlay, Author

Dianne Greenlay is both an author of a series of novels featuring adventurous women pirates in the 1700s, and a busy physiotherapist. She also writes and directs plays. Her debut novel is called Quintspinner – A Pirate's Quest, and she has recently released a follow-up, Deadly Misfortune. She's currently at work on the third book in the Quintspinner trilogy.

Learn more about Dianne and her work by visiting Dianne's author page on Amazon.com as well as her blog and her Twitter page.

1. What is the significance of your title, Quintspinner?

Spinner rings, which are fashioned after Tibetan prayer wheels, figure predominantly in my books. The prayer wheels were used by Tibetan monks to induce prayer trances. Today's spinner rings are found throughout the Caribbean and tropical tourist belt. They are marketed as being manifestation enhancing, or often as stress-reducing items. In my books, there are five of them, and five has long been thought of as a powerful number--five oceans, five continents, five directions (with center being the fifth), five senses, five planets visible to the naked eye, and five holy books in most major religions. "Quint" had a more intriguing sound to it rather than "five".

2. Did you set out with the intention of writing YA readers, or did your work "become" a YA series because of the age of Tess, your heroine?

As I researched life in the 1700s, I became aware of the fact that people back then were much more independent and mature in their teens than we are today. Most were married by age 15 or 16, or had at least moved out of their parents' homes and had a vocation. It was not unusual for sailors, for instance, to be aged 12 and up. An editor that I worked with suggested that I make my protagonist's age 16, as her adventure would have been historically accurate for the time in the 1700s, and that would allow Quintspinner to be considered a "YA" novel as well as one whose content would entertain adults. This made it officially a "cross-over" novel, a term which exists, but is not often referred to.

3. How did you decide to write about the life of a pirate, and what are the challenges of writing in this particular genre of historical fiction?

It was a Google search gone wrong. I had entered a medical term, and in the search results, up came "women pirates." I didn't even know that there were such things! I was fascinated by the topic, and it didn't take much research at all to learn that not only were there such women, but that there had been several throughout known history, and the lives of most had been fairly well-documented. Two of them--Anne Bonny and Mary Read--were particularly infamous, and they lived, sailed, and died during the so-called Golden Age of Piracy in the 1700s in the Caribbean. Reading about them, I was totally hooked.

4. What is Wattpad, and how has it helped you grow your readership?

Wattpad is an online site that connects writers and readers, many of them in the YA age category. It has an enormous number of users, so I uploaded several chapters from Quintspinner there last fall, and was soon invited by its administrators to upload the entire story and become one of their featured authors. Within the first 4 months of being on Wattpad, Quintspinner had gathered over 300,000 reads, and I had received hundreds of compliments and messages from readers who loved the story and were begging for more. I have since uploaded several chapters from Deadly Misfortune there, as an introduction to part two of the continuing story.

5. What's your secret in being honored with so many different book awards?

Quintspinner has placed First or Honorable Mention in 14 different book awards, and in several different categories. I guess it breaks the rules, because it has gained fans and earned its awards in more that one genre. Because of its setting and the research that I did, it qualifies for the historical genre; the protagonists are 16 (yes, there is a young woman AND a young man!) so it falls into YA; it is a fast-paced adventure story with possibilities of marketing merchandise, so it falls into the commercial novel category; and fans have said that it is a good beach read as well! I am thrilled that it entertains such a wide variety of readers (and judges) and hope to be able to continue the interest throughout the trilogy.

Thanks, Dianne!