by Davis Bunn
elixir
DAVIS
BUNN
© 2004 by Davis Bunn
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or any other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Publisher’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bunn, T. Davis, 1952–
Elixir / by Davis Bunn.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-8499-4471-6 (softcover)
I. Title.
PS3552.U4718E45 2004
813'.54—dc22
Printed in the United States of America
04 05 06 07 08 PHX 5 4 3 2
This book is dedicated to three friends, wise men all
Chip MacGregor
Don Pape
Steve Arterburn
whose wonderful gifts of spiritual wisdom and creative insight helped me forge this story.
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
Epilogue
Wall Street Journal: Revell Executive Ousted
chapter 1
TAYLOR STOOD ATOP THE CLIFF OF GUETHARY. The hill’s curved ascent formed an immense sound baffle so that the ocean roared at him from all sides. Below him the narrow cobblestone lane snaked between red-roofed Basque houses to the medieval harbor. Further out to sea, the cliff ’s natural enclosure had been extended into great stone arms. These protective walls rose twenty feet above the ocean’s surface and narrowed the harbor mouth. Today the surf was so mammoth each inside wave crashed over the walls and bathed the stone in foam. A mist rose from the skirmish of water against rock, drifting like earthbound clouds. Taylor Knox breathed the saltladen air and knew a piercing regret over having been brought to this magnificent realm on such an impossible quest.
A trio of doll-sized surfers began the paddle through the harbor entrance and out into the wash. The outside break was gigantic. Even from this height, Taylor knew that he was staring at the biggest waves he had ever seen. It was one thing to dream about surfing the behemoths of the Basque country. It was another thing entirely to have no excuse for not paddling out.
“Puts the old gut in a right twist, that.” Kenny Dean was a Brit who had migrated from London to Devon by way of Australia’s Gold Coast. “First time I caught sight of the heavies out there, I felt the old fear factor grab my throat like a noose.” He clapped Taylor on the shoulder. “Cheer up, Yank. It’s a lot worse than it looks.”
Red Harris moved up to Taylor’s other side. “I don’t see how that’s possible.”
“Get yourself down to sea level; things will look different, believe you me.” Kenny sounded vastly satisfied with the prospect. “Eyeball to eyeball, these beasties have a way of positively clearing the mind.”
There were a lot of people watching, but fewer than two dozen surfers in the water. Taylor stood in a tiny park on a cliffside promontory, surrounded by surfers from around the globe— Japan, Brazil, Spain, Portugal, California, New Zealand, France, Australia. Knights in neoprene armor, drawn by the prospect of battling the mythical dragons in their deep blue realm.
“Time to motivate,” Kenny urged. “It doesn’t get better with the waiting.”
The three of them suited up and started down the cobblestone lane. The alley was shadowed by the close-set Basque houses, all of them whitewashed and asymmetrical. The Basque considered their village architecture a gesture of both unity and defiance. The bright red roofs shone in the sunlight like brilliant steps clambering up the Pyrenees cliffside.
They rounded the final corner and halted. The blue sky and light offshore wind were mocked by rumbling thunder. All the gaily colored Basque fishing boats were in harbor today. Late August and early September marked the first of the big Arctic howlers, lows deeper than hurricane eyes and storms broad as Greenland. Two thousand miles north, a tempest was sending out waterborne mountains. For the past three days, as Taylor and his traveling buddies had made their way south from the Normandy ferry port, all the French surf shops and surfers’ hostels had meteorological charts tacked to their front doors. Forget the tourist brochures and their photos of placid Riviera waters. This was France’s other face. The Basque locals still called the Bay of Biscay by its medieval name, the Bone Coast.
The water was jewellike beyond the harbor walls, flattening between sets until the sea became a vivid reflection of the sky’s brilliant blue. Then the next set stacked up like liquid corduroy, and the first wave struck the harbor walls. The sound of water upon stone was a great booming wrath. The wash drenched the stone in white, then retreated. The boats were tucked up tight against the cliff walls, as far from the harbor mouth as possible. Even so, they rocked like bathtub toys.
And this was the inside wave.
The next wave hissed over the rock beach as Taylor launched himself into the sea. The retracting wave sucked him out fast. By his third stroke he was already halfway to the harbor mouth. The barrier rocks were big as cars, the stone arms they formed thirty feet thick. When the next breaking wave poured across in foamy whitewash, Taylor felt the thunder in his chest. The retreating wave drew him out and through the wall and into the inside break.
Once through the harbor entrance, Taylor passed into a deepwater channel. He had never paddled so hard in his life. The central channel remained calm, save for miniature whirlpools spun by the crashing waves. To either side, the furious torrent boomed over the harbor rocks.
Taylor pulled over the last of the set waves and entered a calm interlude. The sea mocked him with placid serenity, impersonal in its power. Taylor’s two companions drew up to either side, puffing from both the paddle and the realm they had entered.
Ahead, the channel broadened. Taylor could see the stream spread out like rippling underwater fingers. The tidal suction lessened, but further out the set waves formed long unbroken walls. Which meant timing for the final outside push was a matter of survival.
The world’s seventh-deepest ocean basin was only twenty miles off the Basque coast. The entire coastline was shaped like cupped hands four hundred miles wide, forming the Bay of Biscay. The bay was aimed straight north, which meant that when the great Arctic storms created their mammoth surges, the Basque coast became crowned by the largest and thickest waves in the North Atlantic. From the second week in August to the last of November, seldom did a week pass without at least one day of waves over twenty feet.
The next set arrived. To either side of Taylor’s deepwater perch, the inside waves jacked up twice his height. Call them twelve feet. A bodyboarder took off and screamed his way down the face, flying so fast he skipped like a Styrofoam rock over the surface. Then the wave’s lip came down like a blue-crystal f
ist and hammered the bodyboarder into liquid oblivion.
Taylor turned shoreward. The harbor mouth looked miniscule from here. He could actually see the wash suck through, a great hush of water. The only way in was to face the lineup, catch a wave, and surf it away from the port. To the north, a hardscrabble beach formed the only safe exit. As another set wave rose and broke to either side, Taylor watched three surfers clamber over the rocks and stumble up a path that meandered along the cliffside. He tracked further up to the cliffside park, full of watchers. Beyond them, a group of older locals stood beneath the plantain shade trees and observed both the surfers and a game of pelota.
Taylor focused on the cliffside scene and did his best to ignore the raging fury to either side. He was living a dream. Of course he was afraid. But he would not let that fear defeat him. He would ignore how the surfers stumbled in abject exhaustion as they mounted the cliffside path. He would think instead of the green and purple mountains, the golden drifting mist, the beauty of this day.
Taylor found himself recalling the lessons he had studied back in Iona. The Scottish monk’s voice became intensely audible. The old man could have been seated there beside him, sharing this day of crystal blue. The monk’s name was Brother Jonah, and he had known his own time in the whale’s gullet, though he had never told Taylor the entire story. Only that God had been forced to seal Jonah inside his greatest fear to gain his attention. The monk was stunted and twisted like the shoreline cedars of St. Augustine, Taylor’s home. But Jonah’s eyes were as vivid as this day, and his voice held such gentle passion he could speak to Taylor about things Taylor had spent a lifetime ignoring. And Taylor had listened. He listened still.
When the sea quieted once more, he was ready.
The paddle from the safe channel to the outside lineup was over a quarter of a mile. Taylor grunted deep and heavy in his chest with each downstroke. There were six of them paddling now, joined by three surfers returning from the last set.
Taylor was the first to spot the long dark line. He gave up enough breath to shout, “Incoming!”
They all accelerated. The time for holding back was gone. Taylor could hear the others panting with the effort and the fear. Eyeball to eyeball, Kenny had said. The next set was a rising dark shadow separating sea from sky. Mentally there was no room for anything more than the next deep stroke, the next breath, the next glimpse of the distance yet to cover.
In the outside lineup, two surfers peeled away and began paddling south, toward the channel. Taylor heard Red groan. He agreed with the sentiment but could not spare the breath. There was only one reason surfers in the lineup would move over. The peak, the highest portion of the wave and the first to break, was aimed for the channel. Straight at them.
The wave was so large Taylor could not tell how far he had yet to travel. It was already the largest wave he had ever seen up close, and still it was seventy-five yards away, perhaps more. Taylor’s shoulder tendons popped with each stroke. The wave was sweeping grandly toward him, a mobile crag with a face so clean and pure it caught the sunlight and blinded him. Taylor squinted against the glare and began the climb up the wave’s face. Up and up and up, rising so fast now his gut swooped. The wave’s leading edge began to feather just as he crested the peak. To his right one of the waiting surfers paddled furiously and made it over the ledge and disappeared.
To his other side, Red crested the ledge and leaned back, panting hard as he pushed himself to a seated position.
Taylor caught sight of what lay ahead and screamed, “Don’t stop!”
Beside him Kenny shouted as well, but the words were lost to the thunder and the spray from the wave crashing behind them. Ahead rose a wave larger than the first. The larger the wave, the further out it broke. They were not safe yet.
Taylor pushed beyond his limits. He had to make it over. His chest was on fire. He did not have enough air left for a long holddown. And being caught inside on a wave this size would mean a trip to the bottom. Surfers had a term for the area in front of a large wave. They called it the impact zone.
He clawed his way up the face. Blinded by the spray, he was too afraid of what might lie further on to stop. Which was good. Because the third wave was largest of all, so huge even the surfers further out were pushing for the horizon.
Midway up the third face, Taylor knew he could not make it over.
His mind in panic mode, Taylor did the only thing he knew to do. The last thing he wanted was to let go of his only flotation, his only source of steady breath. But there was still more than ten feet of face to claw up, and already the lip was shattering like glass as the wave began its inexorable descent. So he slid off his board, gripped the tail, and stabbed the board with all his might through the wave.
He felt the wave grip him and knew he was going over. Falling away, descending into the maelstrom of a twenty-fivefoot monster. Taylor was struggling to draw a final gasping breath when the leash connecting his ankle to the board snapped taut. His board was through the wave and out the other side. At the last possible moment, it plucked him up and away to safety.
Taylor came up gasping, shaking the water from his eyes, clambering onto his board and paddling even before he could see. Then he stopped.
Ahead of him was only calm and blue and sea.
He had to lock his gut muscles to halt his trembling. To his right, a trio of locals chatted easily in French, as though it were just another day at the café. One man laughed and plowed a surfer’s trail with a flat hand.
Kenny’s voice sounded as shaky as Taylor felt. “Red didn’t make it.”
Taylor looked back. Far, far to shore, a little figure pulled himself out of the whitewash. The passing set had littered the sea with a froth so thick Red was turned hoary white, his entire body lathered with foam. But he was moving. A good sign.
Thankfully, the next set was long in coming. They sat and watched as Red paddled toward them. His arms were so weary he could scarcely raise his hands clear of the water. When he arrived, he straddled his board and sat trembling, breathing through a throat made raspy by swallowing seawater.
“All right, mate?” Kenny asked.
Red gulped a breath and managed, “Should’ve never stopped.”
Kenny pretended not to notice the man’s state. “If ever you catch a wave early in a set, best make ruddy sure to ride it far enough over to miss getting hammered by the others.”
There was nothing to be gained from rushing. Taylor sat through the next set. He studied the other surfers, saw how they watched for waves coming from both the north and the northwest. He saw how the northwest sets were larger, but the right walls sectioned and often closed out, a sure trip to the impact zone. He studied the locals’ takeoff positions, how they stationed themselves, the way they aimed either for the channel or the far reaches of the beachside where the inside waves lacked serious power. He read the sea as carefully as he could, drawing from an ocean-drenched life. He paddled for one wave he did not intend to take, measuring the draw up the face. The larger the wave, the more water rushed up the face, pulling the surfer off the back. Going for a big wave meant total commitment. Aggression and power and determination so focused it bordered on rage were required to make it over the ledge. Fear was a far worse killer than the wave itself.
When the next set arrived, Taylor moved for position. He was closest to the peak and thus in the spot to claim the first wave. Two of the French guys backed off when they saw him going. There was one heartstopping moment when he saw the pit for the first time, lost in shadows far below. The wave had not yet started to break, but already he could hear the bellow, or perhaps it was just his heart. His mind screamed to pull out, push away, drop to safety. Taylor yelled back, shouting so hard his voice went falsetto, using all the air in his lungs to shove the fear aside. To either side the lip began to feather. The chasm below hunched and opened, the wave ledged, and Taylor was over and falling.
The big-wave gun was twice as heavy as the surfboard he used in Flo
rida, and as steady as a table. Taylor rose to his feet and almost tumbled when the board did not give as he was accustomed. His arms did a gull-like swing; he shifted back and steadied into proper balance. His descent was so smooth he was down below eye level before he could actually accept the fact that he had caught his first monster.
Then he screamed again.
The crashing thunder drowned out everything. This was a singular moment, one between him and the ocean and the wave. The windless water was so calm he glided as on air. He reached and touched the wave’s face, trailing one hand along the wall. He drew himself closer still, leaning into the mobile force. The wave was a mountain; he was tucked inside the very depths. And he never wanted this moment to end. Never.
The wall by his face began to bow slightly. Taylor felt a visceral awareness, born of this adrenaline-drenched intimacy. The Guethary break rarely formed the liquid tunnels called tubes. Instead the leading edge tumbled into a great freight train of noise and froth. Taylor could sense the foaming maw edge ever closer. High overhead, the wave’s leading edge raced ahead in warning. He risked being shut down, trapped, hammered. Taylor crouched and drew his board up the now vertical face, adding the speed of constant descent. He remained untouched by all but the spray.
The spray. It roared out in a puffing blast, punched forward by the bellowing wave. Taylor was blinded. He shook his eyes clear. He was encased in a watery realm. Up ahead was blue sea and mirror sparkles and sunlight. Around him was a different universe entirely, one of power and speed and liquid cannonades and impossible balance. He wanted to shout, but his throat was clenched by an ecstasy as tight as real pain.
Too soon it was over. Too soon. He crouched lower and lower to maintain his flight as long as the wave would allow. Finally the wave spun him into a farewell funnel. He straightened and stood there an instant longer, hands gripping the sky and the moment. Far in the distance, other figures raised their arms and hooted. He fell into the water, wishing he could make eternal what was already gone.