Cynthia
Bloomenfeld, Smuggler
A
Tale of Sail and Tail
By izzy ess of happiness
Cynthia
Bloomenfeld was 32. She was bored and
only took up SCUBA diving to occupy her time.
Her enthusiasm increased as she realized she loved the solitude and
shadowy, distorted reality of the underwater vista. Cynthia was recently divorced from Sergei
Surawicz, an ambitious, hard-working Russian plastic surgeon. He was extremely wealthy, here in Napa
Valley, California. Cynthia enjoyed her
princess-like existence, but she missed her job as a registered nurse at San
Francisco General Hospital. She had
worked there eight years before she quit, becoming a house-wife with a staff of
housekeepers, cooks, and gardeners, at home with Sergei. In fact, Sergei was hardly home. When they divorced, she hardly knew him and
didn’t miss Sergei. However, she did
enjoy the legal, no fault California divorce which made her an independent
millionaire.
Cindy
amused herself with painting and sculpting but didn’t like her finished products. She gave up on being an artist and tried
several sports, like tennis and golf.
She gave up on those, mainly because she didn’t enjoy the company of the
other queens and princesses who belonged to the exclusive, Napa Valley Spa and
Sports Centre. The facilities were
grand, and she enjoyed the Spanish architecture and the landscaping. It was the other women she couldn’t get along
with. They all seemed content to accept
the largess of their husbands and paramours, and while away the hours
discussing clothes, jewels and gossipy details of other women. Most of them were slim and trim and spent a
lot of time with the young muscular trainers, male and female, receiving
soothing massages and many other benefits, according to the gossip she was
fed. Those that were overweight and jiggled,
didn’t seem to mind about their appearance and, apparently, neither did their
partners.
Cynthia
liked SCUBA diving immediately. There
were no conversations! She had to admit
that she liked to be alone with her thoughts and her sensations, feelings and
observations. Sometimes, she composed
poetry underwater. Often, she remembered
several lines or couplets and could easily finish the poem later, out of the
water. Also, she noticed that she
returned to painting, mainly with water colours and started reproducing the
shimmering, distorted vistas of the darkened underwater worlds she saw. She got the technique of showing the shafts
of light from the surface and the waves of sand at the bottoms of the ocean
shores she visited.
About
six months after she started SCUBA diving, she read about the interesting,
unexplored depths of the northern waters, including the Great Lakes and the
Hudson and James Bay bodies of water.
She started with a trip to James Bay in the summer for a week and
enjoyed it immensely. She had taken up
underwater photography and had purchased a very expensive underwater camera. She took lessons in underwater stuff and was
complimented by her instructors on her ability to capture the feelings and
sensations of the world beneath the surface of the water. Especially, she liked the shafts of light and
took some dazzling pictures of the sun’s rays as they struck the water, at
noon, just for a few moments, and came far below the surface to light up some
things that rarely saw the light, of any kind.
Cindy’s
trips became longer and longer. Finally,
she bought a nice, refurbished, old house in Welland at a price she couldn’t
believe, based on her exposure to the California Real Estate market. She was able to buy a house in Welland, on
the Welland Canal for under $300,000 which would have cost her at least
$3,000,000 on a river shore in Napa Valley, at a time when the Canadian and
American dollar were at par. From
Welland and the Welland Canal, she could easily get to any part of the Great
Lakes, the Niagara Peninsula, and the streams, lakes, bays, ponds and rivers of
the Province of Ontario. Cynthia had
taken her maiden name back and didn’t talk much of her marriage to anyone.
Several
of the men in the neighbourhood tried to make time with Cynthia, but she was
good at turning them off. She did,
indeed, like her solitude and wasn’t about to get close to anyone, especially a
man. She did buy herself some sex toys
and felt the need to play with them and with herself about once a month. Sometimes, the urges for sexual sensations
lasted several days, sometimes a week.
This was rare however; about once a month seemed to meet her needs. Her needs for an erect penis were easily
satisfied by a toy resembling her husband’s erect penis, as she remembered it,
large and hard, and uncomfortable. The
toy was just as large, but never uncomfortable.
She figured it out: it was the husband to which the large erectile penis
was attached that was uncomfortable, not the penis, itself. As time went on, Cindy found she liked the
artificial penis. She found one somewhat
larger and found that it was more exciting.
In fact, she found herself having some very enjoyable orgasms, unlike
when she was married, when she had very few orgasms, with or without
foreplay. She also felt the need for a
larger, vibrating, curved rubber penis she found in a sex shop in Niagara
Falls, Canada, “the honeymoon capital of the world.” It was so pleasing and exciting that she
started using it more frequently. Soon,
it became a nightly affair. She found it
the most pleasant way to end the day.
Often she fell asleep with her “Rubber Lover” inside of her, still
vibrating. She enjoyed the bizarre
dreams of Neptune taking her by force and raping her beneath the surface of the
sea. Often, she dreamed that she could
breathe underwater, so that fooling around with Neptune was never a
problem. Often, in her dreams, she was
the aggressor and raped Neptune, the beautiful man that lived in the depths of
the darkened water. She loved the feel
of his large cold, stony hard, erect penis, which was permanently erect.
Despite,
or because of, her new found sexual pleasures, Cynthia Bloomenfeld’s enthusiasm
for the cool, deep waters of Ontario, increased, as time went on. She spent as much time as was feasible
underwater, sometimes just relaxing and feeling and observing. She took some great photographs and published
a few in National Geographic. The Globe
and Mail, in Toronto, accepted a full page story with her photographs which
attracted a lot of attention. The
Canadian National Geographic Society approached her and offered her a grant to
study and photograph the depths of the Great Lakes. She accepted and produced a great article
within six months. She received more
grant money to continue. She did a
spread for each lake. She was surprised
how interesting the Welland Canal and the St. Lawrence Waterway were. She received a large grant to study the
waterways and tie in the historical aspects of the developments of the
important canals which could allow ocean-going ships to go back and forth from
the North Atlantic Ocean to Lake Superior, part of the border separating the
USA and Canada. Connections in Lake
Michigan and Lake Superior, Chicago and Thunder Bay, allowed shipped goods to
be easily shipped the rest of the way to the west coasts of the USA and
Canada. Otherwise, the ships would have
needed to traverse the Panama Canal and sail up the west coast to ports in
California and British Colombia.
Cynthia
liked the linking of the waterways to the economy and development of the
interior of North America. She found,
also, that the Welland and St. Lawrence sea lanes played crucial roles in the
battles between the USA, the French, the British and the native Americans,
which established the borders and the large provinces of Quebec and Ontario and
of the country of Canada, itself. Her
articles were full of such historical details, geography and landmarks,
emphasized with beautiful under the water and over the water photographs.
Cynthia’s
commissions for stories and photographs eventually played themselves out. She had more time to relax and enjoy, without
pressure, the beauties of the Southern and Northern Ontario waterways. Just outside her front yard, the Welland
Canal beckoned her. It was the old
Welland Canal, no longer being used for ocean liners and freighters. Now it was effectively blocked in Welland,
itself, inasmuch as the new Canal was built to circumvent the city. Not even motor boats were allowed in the
city. There were swim meets, rowing and
sculling, canoes, casual swimming, SCUBA diving,
instructors and students, from Brock University, in St. Catharines, inflatable
rubber rafts for just having fun, fishing and paddling to and from Welland,
Chippewa and Wellandport, Ontario, as well as some fooling around by teenagers
and adults on hot sultry afternoons.
Cynthia
wasn’t even tempted by the beefcake that sometimes abounded during the hot
summer days, in the old Welland Canal just a few yards from her home. She took a few secretly done photographs of
some of the scantily clad folks that dipped into the water, right in front of
her. If someone did excite her, she just
went into the house and used her reliable and satisfying rubber penis. She grew to like it as she pushed it deep
inside of her and either turned on the vibrator or thrust against it while she
thrust it rhythmically into herself. At
night, when she knew she might fall asleep for the night, after using her toy,
she liked the pleasant relaxing vibrating mechanism. Tonight was one of those relaxing
nights. She pictured Neptune coming
inside of her as she slid the vibrating rubber erection deeply into herself,
raising her knees and spreading her legs.
She let the vibration touch her clitoris, frequently having several
small orgasms before she approached the really big climaxes she was now capable
of achieving. She liked to feel the
penis fill her vagina completely. Inside
she could feel the tip reaching up beyond her bladder into the depths of her
abdomen, behind her belly button. If she
pushed down on her belly button, she could feel the rubber erection against her
hand and it increased the feeling of excitement, almost as if she could
masturbate like a man. In fact, she had
learned she liked to do just that. She
would lubricate the erect toy penis and encircle it with both her hands. She would imagine herself a man and hold the
toy in front of her pubis and rub it hard with her encircling palms. Especially if she could rub her clitoris
rhythmically while she was thus imitating a man masturbating, she could get
some great sexual sensations and long, strong orgasms.
Cynthia
was no stranger to Freudian Psychoanalysis.
She had had some depressions when she was studying to become a
nurse. She had seen a psychoanalyst who
was associated with her nursing school to get some ordinary counselling. She was introduced to the idea of penis envy
and she realized even then that she had a large amount of penis envy. She read about it, hungrily, and decided it
was OK for her to imitate a man. She
found it fun at bars, before she met her husband, to smoke cigars, stand with
one foot on the brass bar and ogle the pretty women with the large
breasts. She knew she was not a lesbian
but she flirted with the idea of trying it as the male partner. Even to this day, she thought about it. She decided her marriage was not very
exciting because of her thoughts about intimacy with a woman, as a man. But she never played out her fantasies and
thought she never would. Alone in bed at
night, it was enough for her to imitate a man masturbating by using her
erection toy. She felt she was a
reasonably satisfied, independent woman, with normal urges and ideas about both
men and women.
One
afternoon, she was SCUBA diving just outside her house, in the old Welland
Canal. She noticed something she hadn’t
seen before. There were compartments in
the walls of the canal about 15 feet below what would have been the most
shallow level, at one time. She explored
the deep dark outlines of the compartments and saw that she would have needed a
key to open the heavy metal doors that were still in place. She could discern the key-holes and the rusty
hinges. She talked to a locksmith, who
turned out to be an amateur SCUBA diver.
He offered to dive with her and see if he could determine what kind of
key to look for or make for the doors she had seen.
Cynthia
liked Jonathan Charles Smith. He was
good-looking, fit and trim. His interest
in SCUBA diving, piqued her interest, just as it was obvious that she piqued
his interest. She found herself asking
if he was single. He replied that he was
divorced several years back and presently had no significant other. Cindy could not believe her next reaction, which
was to huge him hungrily and say something like, “I really relate to your
having trouble finding a suitable friend for the lonely evenings. Would you like to be my friend?” Jon smiled and said, quietly, “I thought
you’d never ask. Of course I’d like to
be your friend. I’d like to be more, if
our friendship is good. You’re the best
thing that’s happened into my shop for a very long time and I’m ready for you,
and anything that happens between us.”
Cindy smiled and thought, “He’s more interesting than I would have ever
guessed. I guess it would be OK if I
showed him some special parts of my body.
I better slow down. He’ll think
I’m too horny, which I guess I am, after all this time.” Cynthia left the shop with firm commitments
for Jon to come and see her at her house with his SCUBA gear, prepared to go
diving where she had seen the compartments.
That
evening, Cindy Bloomenfeld felt like a teenager with a crush on the new boy
next door. She experienced the wildest
orgasms before she slept, without the use of the rubber penis. She fingered herself for the first time since
she was a teenager. It was very, very
exciting for her.
Actually,
Jon did the same. For the first time
since he was a teenager, he took the risk of insanity and hair growth on this hands
and masturbated vigourously, several times in the evening and several times
during the night, his sleep being disturbed by the exciting images of what he
guessed Cynthia would look like naked.
Jonathan
appeared at the appointed time of 1:00 pm, the next afternoon. He was dressed in a flashy green bathing suit
and a bright red T-shirt which read, “I’d rather be under the water!” On the back, it read, “SCUBA DIVERS FLIP OUT
MORE!” Cynthia greeted him at the door
wearing a flimsy, see-through robe over a very skimpy bikini. She felt she just as well have been naked and
then felt pleased she dressed exactly that way, more naked than not. She felt pleased even more when she saw Jon
giving her a not so fast looking over.
His eyes had lingered at her pubic area and her ample breasts and
nipples, which were clearly discernible, today.
She caught his attention and pointed to her eyes, smiling, “My eyes are
up here. Look at the rest of me at your
own risk. I bite back!”
Both
Jon and Cindy enjoyed a hearty laugh. It
would have been obvious to anyone watching that they were falling rapidly in
love. They enjoyed the prepared coffee
and coffee cake at the kitchen table and kept looking at each other’s important
parts, surreptitiously, but not too surreptitiously. Sitting side-by-side, Jon put his open hand
on her thigh and squeezed a little during a conversation about the compartment
she had seen. She smiled and moved to
let his hand linger very near her pubis.
It felt great to her to have someone tickle her fancy and she laughed to
herself. “I wonder which one of my
private parts is called, ‘fancy?” Jon
thought, “This is going much better than I imagined. I don’t think I’ll be masturbating by myself,
tonight.” After the coffee and coffee
cake, the happy couple gathered up their very heavy SCUBA gear and walked
toward the shore of the old Welland Canal, to a spot, indicated by Cindy, close
to the compartments she had seen.
Unabashedly,
the couple removed their clothes and started donning their skin-tight rubber
SCUBA duds and flippers. They handled
the heavy tanks with ease and slung the backpack of compressed air tanks over
their shoulders, while positioning their mouth pieces and rebreathers in front of
their mouths. Simultaneously, they wet
their masks and snapped them on over their eyes. Then they started their air tanks and put
their mouth pieces in position between their teeth and their lips, clamping
down firmly on the little rubber nipples of the mouth piece to keep it all in
position. Cindy led the way to the stone
wall edge of the old canal, turned and fell backasswards into the water. Jon was beside her and followed suit. Once under the water, Jon followed the
beautiful body of his new friend, Cindy.
She led him to the bottom of the old stone wall of the original canal
and pointed. Sure enough, he could
easily see the outlines of two large doors at a depth of about 25 feet. As Cindy had described to him, they appeared
to be very heavy metal doors with a large traditional key-hole under one of the
large knobs. Jon retrieved two large
skeleton keys he had brought as possible openers, based on her estimated
size. One of them worked. Slowly, he turned the key and grunted as he
pulled open the heavy doors under a lot of water pressure. The chamber inside was pitch black. It was big enough to allow the couple to
stand, comfortably, at the entrance, peering inside. Jon and Cindy both retrieved torches, which
they lit, together. The chamber was
huge, perhaps 50 by 50 feet square. The
wall furthest away from the canal was not clearly visible. The chamber was empty.
At
the back wall, Cindy and Jon held high their torches. They found a door on the ceiling, similar to
the one leading to the canal. They key
worked with this door, as well as it had with the first door. As they pulled it open, the ceiling water lit
up. There was sunlight coming from
above. The couple slowly floated up
through the ceiling entry/exit. The
light became brighter. They broke the
surface of the water about 25 feet up and found themselves in a beautiful,
marble furnished room, about 25 feet square.
Tables and chairs made of artistically shaped grey and white marble were
positioned as if this were a large conference room, suitable for a
well-appointed business or professional office.
Another
set of locked doors could be opened by Jon’s key. It lead to another large room with furniture
of marble resembling bedroom pieces. It
all looked very comfortable and inviting.
Without saying anything, the couple took off their gear and wet suits
and lay on the marble bed, naked. They
entwined and enjoined on a marble surface which felt remarkably smooth and soft
to the skin. Their shared love-making
experience was exquisite. There’d be no
self-flagellation, today or tonight.
They both sensed that they’d found a partner who was worthy of his, and
her, time. After an hour of love-making,
grunting and sweating, the happy couple arose and started looking around for a
pantry or larder. Both of them supposed
that there were closets or pantries or storage areas, somewhere, and that there
might still be something edible or drinkable.
Indeed, they found what appeared to be a kitchen with a pot-bellied
central stove. In the locked pantry,
there were pots of delicious liquidhoney and bottles of corked very potent port
wine, very salty beef jerky and stony hard oatmeal cookies. Still naked, Cynthia and Jonathan helped
themselves to a delicious repast.
Dipping the cookies in the wine and then the honey, made them quite
edible, actually quite delicious. The
wine was sipped slowly as they became aware of its potency. The jerky was excellent. Fresh water was provided by a natural spring
in the middle of the room; it was delivered by a beautiful marble statue of
Aquarius, the Water Carrier.
Jon
looked at the shapely Cindy and asked, “What now?” Cindy felt as sexy as she’d ever felt under
the influence of the wine, which was making her slightly light-headed. “Come over here, my young Neptune and lie
down on the floor in front of me.”
Jonathan gladly complied. Cindy
fell to her knees at his side and took his manhood into her mouth and tongued
it. Jon started sweating and moaning as
his erection became very hard and very large, just like the one of Neptune, for
which Cindy had longed, for years. She
looked admiringly at his penis and then stepped over him, a foot beside each
hip. She lowered herself until her knees
rested aside his hips, ensuring his penis slid into her moist vagina, up to the
hilt. She could feel Jon’s erection deep
inside of her. She started rocking
gently and immediately started climaxing.
She had a dozen or more gradually intensifying orgasms until Jon
climaxed with a loud scream, when she had the best she had ever had… ever! They both screamed together and then started
laughing at the noises they were making.
They lay together face to face and smiled and kissed and hugged for a
long time. Jon’s penis stiffened, again,
while Cindy’s vagina started moistening, again.
They had a great sexual experience that was slow and delicious. Cindy achieved orgasms two dozen times, at
least, while Jon could hold his erection for more than half an hour before he
exploded with pain and pleasure.
Finding
and donning their wet suits, the couple felt that there must be another way out
not involving going underwater. Indeed,
there was another door which opened into a small cave in a small hill, just
south of Welland, on the way to Port Colbourne, in the Mud Lake Conservation
Park, beside the old canal, just north of where it branched off from the new
canal, which bypassed downtown Welland.
In their hands, they thought they had a treasure.
First
Welland Canal
Main
article: First Welland Canal
The
Welland Canal Company was incorporated in 1824 by William Hamilton Merritt, in
part to provide a regular flow of water for his watermills. The construction
began at Allanburg, Ontario, on November 30, at a point now marked as such on
the west end of Bridge No. 11 (formerly Highway 20). This canal opened for a
trial run on November 30, 1829 (exactly five years, to the day, after the
ground-breaking in 1824). After a short ceremony at Lock One, in Port
Dalhousie, the schooner Anne & Jane (also called "Annie &
Jane" in some texts[citation needed]) made the first transit, upbound to
Buffalo, N.Y., with Merritt as a passenger on her deck. The first canal ran
from Port Dalhousie, Ontario on Lake Ontario south along Twelve Mile Creek to
St. Catharines. From there it took a winding route up the Niagara Escarpment
through Merritton, Ontario to Thorold, where it continued south via Allanburg
to Port Robinson, Ontario on the Welland River. Ships went east (downstream) on
the Welland River to Chippawa, at the south (upper) end of the old portage
road, where they made a sharp right turn into the Niagara River, upstream
towards Lake Erie. Originally, the section between Allanburg and Port Robinson
was planned to be carried in a subterranean tunnel. However, the sandy soil in
this part of Ontario made a tunnel infeasible, and a deep open-cut canal was
dug instead.
A
southern extension from Port Robinson opened in 1833. This extension followed
the Welland River south to Welland (known then as the settlement of Aqueduct,
for the wooden aqueduct that carried the canal over the Welland River at that
point), and then split to run south to Port Colborne on Lake Erie. A feeder
canal ran southwest from Welland to another point on Lake Erie, just west of
Rock Point Provincial Park. With the opening of the extension, the canal
stretched 44 km (27 mi) between the two lakes, with 40 wooden locks. The
minimum lock size was 33.5 m by 6.7 m (110 ft by 22 ft), with a minimum canal
depth of 2.4 m (8 ft).
Second
Welland Canal
In
1839 the government of Upper Canada approved the purchase of shares in the
canal company in response to the company's continuing financial problems in the
face of the continental financial panic of 1837. The buyout was completed in
1841, and work began to deepen the canal and to reduce the number of locks to
27, each 45.7 m (150 ft) by 8.1 m (26.5 ft). By 1848, a 2.7 m (9 ft) deep path
was completed, not only through the Welland Canal but also the rest of the way
to the Atlantic Ocean via the St. Lawrence Seaway.
Competition
came in 1854 with the opening of the Erie and Ontario Railway, running parallel
to the original portage road. In 1859, the Welland Railway opened, parallel to
the canal and with the same endpoints. But this railway was affiliated with the
canal, and was actually used to help transfer cargoes from the lake ships,
which were too large for the small canal locks, to the other end of the canal
(The remnants of this railway are today owned by the Trillium RR). Smaller
ships called "canallers" also took a part of these loads. Due to this
problem, it was soon apparent that the canal would have to be enlarged again.
Third
Welland Canal
In
1887, a new shorter alignment was completed between St. Catharines and Port
Dalhousie. One of the most interesting features of this third Welland Canal was
the Merritton Tunnel on the Grand Trunk Railway line that ran under the canal
at Lock 18. Another tunnel, nearby, carried the canal over a sunken section of
the St David's Road. The new route had a minimum depth of 4.3 m (14 ft) with 26
stone locks, each 82.3 m (270 ft) long by 13.7 m (45 ft) wide. Even so, the
canal was still too small for many boats.
Fourth
(current) Welland Canal
Construction
on the current canal began in 1913 and was completed in 1932. The route was
again changed north of St. Catharines, now running directly north to Port
Weller. In this configuration, there are eight locks, seven at the Niagara
Escarpment and the eighth, a guard lock, at Port Colborne to adjust with the
varying water depth in Lake Erie. The depth was now 7.6 m (25 ft), with locks
233.5 m (766 ft) long by 24.4 m (80 ft) wide. This canal is officially known
now as the Welland Ship Canal.
Fifth
(proposed but uncompleted) Welland Canal
In
the 1950s, with the building of the present St. Lawrence Seaway, a standard
depth of 8.2 m (27 ft) was adopted. The 13.4-kilometre (8.3 mi) long Welland
By-pass, built between 1967 and 1972, opened for the 1973 shipping season,
providing a new and shorter alignment between Port Robinson and Port Colborne
and by-passing downtown Welland. All three crossings of the new alignment—one
an aqueduct for the Welland River—were built as tunnels. Around the same time,
the Thorold Tunnel was built at Thorold and several bridges were removed. These
projects were to be tied into a proposed new canal, titled the Fifth Welland
Canal, which was planned to by-pass most of the existing canal to the east and
to cross the Niagara Escarpment in one large superlock. While land for the
project was expropriated and the design finalized, the project never got past
the initial construction stages and has since been shelved. The present (4th)
canal is scheduled to be replaced by 2030, almost exactly 100 years after it
first opened, and 200 years since the first full shipping season, in 1830, of
the original canal.[citation needed]
It
appeared to be a ship’s log with entries that started on the day the original
Welland Canal was opened to connect Lake Erie to Lake Ontario, allowing ocean
liners to get to the Midwestern USA and Canada, April 1, 1854. The last scribbled entry was February 15,
1938. In hard to read handwriting, the
title page read, “Jonathan Charles Merritt, citizen of London, England.” The entries in the ledger pages were all
dated, in sequence, from beginning to end.
All entries appeared to be names, some abbreviated, some in code, from
William Jefferson Clinton to Henry Davis, III.
There were loads of Smiths, Jones and Williams. Jon got a count of over half a million just by
estimating the number of entries for most pages and the number of pages in the
huge log book. Each name was followed by
a city of origin and a city of destination, plus a numerical piece of data, in eighths,
from 1/8 to 16/8, generally, with an occasional 3 or 4.
On
her laptop, Cindy searched Google for the History of the Welland Canal and for
Merritt/Welland. She saved all the data
and printed all the material. Jon and
Cynthia, naked in bed, spread out the material and opened the log book for
reading, in between love-making sessions. Apparently, Merritt, William Hamilton
Merritt, was a British enterprising citizen who grabbed large parcels of Crown
land between Port Colbourne and St. Catharines, establishing Merrittville,
which eventually became the city of Welland.
He foresaw the potential of a canal which allowed big ships to go from
the North Atlantic to Lake Superior, competing handily with the USA’s Erie
Canal from Buffalo to Manhattan, NY.
William became an extremely wealthy landowner and entrepreneur. Merritt was smeared all over the area on
streets, highways, suburbs, factories and businesses, and still is. Merritt Island, formed by the Welland River
when it was re-routed under the Welland Canal as an aquaduct, is bordered by
the Old Canal and the old Welland River, which was the main canoe route for the
Chippewa from Hamilton to the Niagara River.
The portage from what is now the town of Chippewa, through the villages
that eventually formed the Canadian city of Niagara Falls, to what is now
Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, on the shore of the Niagara River at its entry
into Lake Ontario. Historically, these
areas formed the battlegrounds which were eventually won by the British over the
Americans, were the main reasons that Canada became a sovereign country. One can get a good idea of the military
skirmishes that abounded when when drives on the original portage route, now
called the Niagara Parkway, along the western shoreline of the Niagara River
from Fort Erie to N-O-T-L. Fort Erie and
Fort Niagara are to a large extent well preserved and feature festivals to
re-enact the battles between the colonists and the loyalists, the British,
French and Native Canadians versus the American rebels, mainly of British and
Teutonic militant, revolutionary immigrants, fast becoming wealthy
landowners. Both sides had components of
Europeans and Africans seeking freedom, personal and religious. Presently, the conflicts around the Welland
Canal and the St. Lawrence Seaway are about the possibility of Quebec striving
for its independence from the rest of Canada, a very real possibility,
depending on how you sniff the winds of political changes.
Cynthia
was enthralled by Jonathan and the lively discussions of politics, religion and
sex. Jon was equally thrilled by the
prospects of a great relationship with an exciting, beautiful woman. The mysteries of the log book and the secret
compartment were extremely challenging and stimulating. They liked to re-visit the secret home of
Jonathan Charles Merritt. Googling for
geneology information about the Merritts yielded little for Jon Chas. They couldn’t find a record of his birth or a
ships log indicating his passage from Britain to Canada. The records for the famous Merritt, who left
his mark on everything he touched, were easy to find. The crown land acquisitions and
entrepreneurial spirit of the man were outstanding, in retrospect. That he was the most famous Brit in the
Niagara Peninsula easily matched the other famous Brits, Brock, Mackenzie and the
rest of the ancient politicians who formed Quebec and Ontario and a grand
country of Canada, which has an important place in world economics and
politics, today. Sociologically, Canada
rates today as number one for Education and ranks fairly highly in successful
economic structure by its banking and trading practices, improving even steadily,
today. The Separatist movement in Quebec
may come to fruition. The French in
general are forever politically chauvinistic, it seems.
Cindy
and Jon searched each nook and cranny of the underground chambers for clues
about the “other Merritt.” They figured
he was about 20 when he started his underground and underwater life. He must have been driven by the events of his
day, including the economic and political changes. Evidence that there was another occupant of
the secret home was missing. There was
no “woman’s” touch. It seems he was in
daily contact with men and women and children moving from America to
Canada. The couple of explorers felt
that the Canal was an important part of the “underground railway” route for
African folks looking for freedom in Canada.
Many
stories of famous American and Canadian folks who harboured escaping victims of
slavery were emerging everywhere. In
Illinois, a retired Swedish General of the Northern American Civil War Army,
built a grand, one of a kind, Swedish Gothic mansion, distinctly unusual in its
area, a Southwestern suburb of Chicago.
The location was strategic, on the edge of the old shoreline of Lake
Michigan, a sort of escarpment that was a part of all the escarpments surrounding
all the Great Lakes, a remnant of the ice age of 10,000 years ago. The house featured two towers allowing
sighting of escapees for hundreds of yards in advance of their arrival at the
Mansion. The basement was built with
blocks of stone, 2 feet thick, allowing no water leakage, at any time. The three-coach, attached coach house
predated the three car attached garage by more than 100 years. The secret spiral staircase in the kitchen
pantry allowed passage through a trap door to the upstairs maid and probable
mistress, and allowed visits both up and down.
From the mansion, a secret trip to Lake Michigan, possibly Chicago,
itself, some ten miles from the Mansion, would give the escapee access to a
water route to Canada by way of the Mackinaw Straits, Manitoulin Island and
Sioux Ste. Marie, Ontario. Some of the
escapees might have found safety with kith and kin that already lived in
Chicago.
The
trap doors and spiral staircases seemed to be a common architectural feature
for stations on the escape routes. It
had a distinctly romantic feeling when it was used. Perhaps there was a mentor somewhere, or
sometime, who taught it to the other captains of these secret stations. But where were the dresses, shoes and other
female clothing? They found some male
clothing in the old closets and furniture drawers. Could this Merritt have been a true loner or
was he a homosexual? Or, was he favoured
by the females coming through frequently enough to satisfy is sexual
needs? Finally, after many visits,
Cynthia discovered a hidden closet, locked behind a large door with a different
key shape, solved by Jonathan. It
contained a wardrobe of 19th century clothes, obviously for a woman
or for women. They were surprisingly
well-preserved. They fit Cindy,
perfectly. Jon donned some of Merritt’s
clothing, which fit well. They danced
and felt romantic. They made love with
the old clothes and without them. These
clothes made Jon and Cindy feel very close to the former occupants of the
Welland Canal Station. They pictured
Merritt and his bride as co-captains of the Station, making decisions, together,
concerning the fleeing families.
Cynthia,
my present wife, told me this story, in confidence, after we were married. Jon accidentally drowned when his SCUBA
equipment failed him. Unfortunately, he
was exploring a secret room behind a locked door, which locked behind him
unexpectedly. Cynthia didn’t know where
he was and Jon could not re-open the door without one of his special keys. When Cynthia missed him and started looking
for him, she entered his death chamber much too late to save him. She brought him to the surface and called the
paramedics and coroner who were helpless to save his life. Cindy managed to report the accident without
revealing the existence of their secret Station.
Cynthia
Bloomenfeld mourned for over a year. She
kept hidden the log book and the clothing back in the underwater station. She cried often as she dived to the Station
to visit it and the spirit of her deceased lover. In her home, she built a memorial for Jon and
frequently lit candles for the evenings of sadness. Cindy started feeling better after a
year. She returned to painting and
photography and writing about her adventures with Jonathon. As time went on, her memories of her life
with Jon, took on a magical quality which lived in her mind and heart.
Cynthia
and I met at one of her art shows, which now attracted many interested devotees
of shadowy, underwater photographs and paintings. I’m a Swiss artist, a devotee of Chagall and
Kandinski, Klee and Braque. Some of my
paintings hang in Swiss museums. I was
touring the Niagara Peninsula and the fabulous Niagara Falls, both Horseshoe
and American aspects, when I saw a notice of Cindy’s exhibition at the new
Scotiabank Convention Centre in NF, ON.
I introduced myself, Izaac Sommerstein.
As went out for coffee at BJ’s Restaurant in Chippawa and the rest is
history. We married about a year later.
Cynthia
entrusted me with the story, the location of the Station, the log book, the 19th
century clothing and details of the political atmosphere of the Merritt era in
Welland. We had lived together for over
40 years in Welland, on the shore of the old Welland Canal. We especially enjoyed each other and the landscape
and history of the region. We painted,
side-by-side, in our respective styles, which complimented each other.
Cindy
died of the complications of lung cancer last year. She had indicated that I write her story only
after a year after her death. She died
quietly, clutching the log book, looking forward to her re-union with Jon, Jesus
and Neptune. In her last breath, she
opened wide her eyes and lifted her arms.
She smiled and whispered, “Jon.”
“Good-bye
Cynthia. Until we meet again, somewhere,
I hope this written account meets with your approval. I remain forever yours sincerely, Itzik,
Izaac Sommerstein.” Amen.
THE
END
© izzy sommers, md
Welland, Canada
I'm afraid even i cried when i wrote it...
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