A man in red pants and a white tennis hat hailed him from the dock. Dick cupped his hand to his ear. The man said he wanted his dinghy back. Eddie was on the guy like a shot. Dick watched Eddie’s hands open like flowers in front of his chest, his head cock to one side. The man’s eyes followed Eddie’s to the boat. The man lifted his hand to catch Dick’s attention. “Okay, take your time.” Dick paddled back in anyway.
Dick said he was sorry, he’d thought the dinghy was a yard boat.
The man wanted to chat. He said, “That’s some boat. I didn’t think they still built commercial boats out of wood.” He looked at Dick again. “Didn’t you use to work in the yard here?”
Dick recognized the man’s face, couldn’t place him. The man pointed to a large catboat at a mooring. “You worked on my boat a couple of times.”
Dick looked. “Yeah. I remember your boat. An old Crosby.”
The man seemed pleased.
Dick said, “You used to let the Perryville School kids take her out.”
The man said, “That’s right, that’s right!” He was quite excited by this recognition.
Dick looked down the channel to see if the boys’ skiff was in view.
“Your boat wasn’t built in this yard,” the man said. “Was she built in a Rhode Island yard?”
Eddie said, “You could say that—he built her himself in his backyard.”
Dick looked up toward the parking lot. He saw Elsie’s Volvo. Then Elsie and Mary coming round the yard office.
“Good for you,” the man said to Dick. “That’s something I’ve always wanted to do myself.”
Dick said, “Something I’ve always wanted to do myself is be a brain surgeon.”
The man lifted his face in surprise. Then hurt spread across it slowly, like the stain of a dye-marker at sea.
Eddie said, “Dick. Jees. Take it easy.”
Dick breathed in and out through his nose and shook his head at himself. He said, “Yeah. I don’t know why I said that. Sorry.”
The man said, “I take your point. I only meant … congratulations on succeeding where so many merely wish.”
Elsie and Mary came down the gangplank to the dock. Elsie said, “Good. We’re not too late. Mary brought a bottle of champagne for May to christen her with.” She turned to the old man. She said, “Hello, Mr. Potter,” and kissed him on the cheek. She introduced Mary Scanlon to Mr. Potter. Then Dick and Eddie. Mr. Potter shook their hands.
Dick felt stupid and mean all over again.
Elsie looked around brightly. “Are your boys here? I don’t see them. I stopped in to see Miss Perry on the off chance she might be able to … She sends her congratulations. Captain Texeira was there, so he came along.”
Mr. Potter asked after Miss Perry.
“Much better,” Elsie said. “Would this be a good place to take pictures, Dick? Or should I get up someplace high and shoot down? There’s sort of a splash, isn’t there?”
“Not supposed to be. She’s on a marine railway, she’s not going to skid in.”
“Oh. Well, maybe Schuyler will get here. He’s back, so maybe he’ll show up and we can use two cameras.”
Dick felt a terrible new intimacy, as though he and Elsie were stuck to each other, floating through the air out of control in front of a crowd, which Elsie didn’t notice or didn’t care about, because she kept pressing her face in to him. No, she did notice, because she was also waving to the crowd.
Dick shook his head.
“Dick,” Elsie said, “maybe the roof of that shed.” She really did put her hand on his forearm. “I want to be sure to get May in.”
“Fine,” Dick said. “Anywhere out of the way.”
He saw the skiff at last, coming up the channel. He looked up to the parking lot and saw Charlie drive in. Parker was with him.
Dick said to Eddie, “Have Tom stand by with the skiff right here.”
He walked up to the parking lot. The manager was rounding up his crew.
Parker slapped Dick on the shoulder.
“How you doing, old buddy? Goddamn, look at that! There she is, your own genuine, self-financed, offshore boat, fully guaranteed for five years or fifty thousand miles, whichever comes first. Who-ee!”
Charlie laughed.
“Now, that is a boat, son.” Parker shook Charlie’s shoulder. “And your old man’s the one that built it. What do you think of that?”
Charlie was embarrassed.
Dick said, “He knows the boat. He did some work on her too.”
“Well, there you go,” Parker said, releasing Charlie’s shoulder. “Say, Dick, I hear you took Mamzelle out while I was gone.”
“That’s right,” Dick said. “Somebody had to check those pots.”
“That’s what I’m saying,” Parker said. “I’m obliged to you. Maybe we can have a little talk later on in the day, catch up on each other. After you get squared away.”
Parker strolled off to look at the boat. Charlie’s gaze followed his wake. Dick felt the air was filled with secrets.
Charlie said, “He was on board when we got there, so we explained, and he just got in the car with me.” Charlie sounded dubious.
“That’s fine,” Dick said. “Your mother just sees the one side to him. I wouldn’t want you boys to ship out with him, but he’s … got his good side.”
Charlie said, “I guess he’s got a sense of humor.”
Dick looked sideways at Charlie to make sure it was his son who made this remark. Nothing to it really, but it came out so flat, saying just so much.
Elsie came fluttering around the corner of the office. “Dick, come on! And here’s Charlie! Good. You go stand by your mother when she breaks the bottle. Tom’s already there.”
Dick said, “Jesus, Elsie. I just want to put the boat in. See if she leaks. I don’t want a side show.”
“The trouble with your father,” Elsie said, “is that he takes gloom pills.”
Charlie laughed.
“It’s a Yankee superstition,” Elsie said. “You think if you’re grumpy enough you’ll have good luck. But just this once, Dick, don’t be a wet blanket. Everybody else wants a little celebration.”
Elsie went back toward the boat. When Dick and Charlie came round the office they saw there was a crowd. Elsie strapped on her camera and climbed a ladder to the roof of the shed.
Mary Scanlon had rigged a bottle of champagne on a yard of ribbon and was holding it out to May. May said to Dick, “It won’t hurt the paint, will it?”
Mary Scanlon said, “No, I’ve practically sawed the bottle in half with a glass-cutter.”
May said, “What do I say?”
Mary said, “You say, ‘I christen you Spartina.’ ” Mary turned to Dick. “Is that right, Dick? It’s what Elsie told me.” Mary turned back to May. “And then you let loose with the bottle. You can’t miss.”
Mary waved to the manager, who was at the controls of the marine railway. He gunned the engine and then cut back to idle.
Dick said, “Spartina-May is what she’s called.”
May said, “I can’t say my own name.”
“Come on, May. Say her full name.”
“You do it, Charlie.”
Mary Scanlon said, “It’s got to be a woman.”
Mary held her arms up over her head.
Now that everyone was quiet, the crowd seemed even bigger. Captain Texeira with his hat in his hand. Joxer Goode. Elsie’s sister and her husband. Eddie Wormsley down on the dock holding one of the lines. Parker grinning at Schuyler and Schuyler’s wife.
Dick looked away from the people, down the harbor. The southwest onshore breeze was just picking up, a cat’s paw flickered toward him, relieving the dull surface of the channel.
May held on to his arm, took a breath, and said in a high voice, “I christen you Spartina-May.”
The boat was already moving when May finally let go of the bottle, which broke neatly in two on the bow, gushed, and then dribbled foam from the dangling
neck.
Charlie said, “Way to go, Ma.”
For the time it took the boat to run in and float up from the carriage, Dick felt squeezed tighter and tighter, and then released as he came loose with her. Now it was just the two of them. He felt her press up from the water, felt her colors bob into order: her gray hull, her royal-blue waterline, and a slice of her rust-red bottom as she rode light in her first taste of the sea.
Dick didn’t remember speaking to anyone, or even having lunch. It was only when May reminded him to thank Mary and Elsie for the champagne bottle and the picnic basket that he figured he’d eaten. Dick let Charlie and Eddie Wormsley show people around for a while. Then he moved Spartina to her mooring. Dick kept the boys’ skiff and stayed on board for the afternoon. He didn’t do any work. He just looked at everything, touched everything, listened to the soft creak of the hull in the wake of passing boats. He went home for supper, but went back on board with a mattress for one of the bunks and spent the night. In the morning he turned on the bilge pump. She’d taken on a little water, about right for the first day. By the third day she was bone dry in the morning, completely made up. In his time on board Dick had rigged the antennas and the crow’s nest.
He took Charlie, stopped off to pick up Parker, and went out for a quick shakedown cruise.
Even with full fuel tanks she rode high. Dick could feel her dance as soon as they slipped through the breakwater. He hadn’t filled the water tank or taken on any ice for the fish hold. He pumped some sea water into the lobster well, and that settled her a bit.
Dick let Charlie take the wheel and went below to listen to the engine. Parker came along.
“Plenty of power,” Parker said, “and, my God—look at your lobster tank—you’re pretty optimistic.”
“Seven thousand pounds,” Dick said. “It’s about half of what Texeira’s boats’ll take. But, then, they stay out twice as long. I figure I’ll be staying out ten days when the weather’s right.”
“And you figure what for crew?”
“I’d like two, and a boy during summer.”
“And how many pots?”
“Well, now,” Dick said, “let’s talk about pots. You and I started out with just about fifteen hundred, maybe a thousand of them yours. But every time we lost or busted one, I replaced it. So by now we’re even.”
“Hold on, Dick, just a second there. When we lost a pot, who says it was mine and not yours?”
Dick said, “It was me put out a new one.”
Parker said, “But if it was one of yours got busted, you don’t gain a pot. Don’t you see that?”
Dick said, “Let me put it this way. You owe me money.”
Parker said, “That’s right. You got a little money coming to you.”
“Not so little.”
“Well, Dick, here’s how that works—once I had to bring Schuyler in to help out when your first run didn’t work out, that kind of rearranged things. You can see that, can’t you?”
“You’re heading south,” Dick said. “You don’t want pots. You don’t want to hire a tender to bring in all them pots. It’d take you a month to bring them in on Mamzelle. And, selling them dockside, you wouldn’t get much even if you were willing to sit around waiting for the different skippers to come in. Now, I’m willing to take over your pots and call it even.”
Parker laughed and went back up on deck.
Dick knew his own position was unreasonable. But he also knew Parker was impatient. Parker had never stayed north past the first week in October. Parker might go out with Mamzelle another two times. Maybe he could bring some pots back on her, maybe use a tender and bring in a bunch, and maybe he could peddle them. Parker was sharp enough, but he didn’t have patience. Dick could wait.
Dick spent the rest of the afternoon checking out the loran, the RDF, and boxing the compass, lining Spartina up on Block Island, on Brenton Reef, on Point Judith Light.
Parker started up again when Charlie was out of the wheelhouse. Parker said, “You’re being an overreaching Yankee son of a bitch, but I’ll tell you what—I’m not going to spoil a beautiful friendship—”
“Okay,” Dick said. “You’re right. Let’s not have any hard feelings. We’ll just divvy up the pots and not even try to make a deal. I’ll take all the pots east of Lydonia Canyon. That’s about half.”
“Hold on, Dick, just listen to me a minute. I’ll call it fifty-fifty on the pots. Now, that’s something right there. You buy my pots. I’ll give you the twenty-five hundred dollars I owe you toward the purchase price.…”
“How much per pot?”
“Ten dollars.”
“Parker, me and the boys can make them cheaper than that. You keep your half of the pots and pay me the money you owe me. And that ain’t any twenty-five hundred.”
“I cut Schuyler in.”
“Bullshit, Parker. You may have given Schuyler a slice of the pie, but the pie got bigger.” Parker kept his face still, but his eyes registered. Dick said, “Schuyler went to his club, saw some friends, and made out like a bandit. And I figure the reason you’re back here so late and I had to run your boat for you is ’cause you went to Virginia and made a down payment on your new charter boat.”
Dick thought that scored a hit too. Before Parker could say anything, Dick called Charlie into the wheelhouse and asked him to fix him some tea.
Dick said to Parker, “You want some tea?”
Parker nodded, waited till Charlie went below. He said, “Schuyler had me over a barrel. You’re going to have to be a little less mistrustful, Dickey-boy.”
Dick said, “Don’t give me that shit. If Schuyler had screwed you, you wouldn’t be smiling at him. I saw you and him, you both looked pretty happy. But I’m not happy. You want to hear why I’m not happy? It’s on account of when I got you out of that salt marsh and found your boat for you in the middle of nowhere, and on account of once you were safe on board you said, ‘Sorry, it didn’t work. No money!’ Well, now it worked. And I’m not even asking you for money. Just some pots you got no more use for.”
Parker, who’d been looking a little numbed by Dick’s outburst, suddenly brightened. “You don’t want money. I can see that. You certainly don’t want a check. But maybe you’re afraid of cash too.” Parker lifted an eyebrow. “Now, I wonder where you got the money to put this here boat in. Joxer Goode? Maybe one of the conditions was you dump your old buddy Parker. No more fooling around with the notorious Captain Parker, not if you’re going to be an associate of a fine old New England family.”
Dick smiled. His guesses had scored better than Parker’s.
Dick said, “I’m my own old New England family.”
Parker laughed. “I was afraid of this, son. Having your own boat is going to your head. You know, you ought not to get shed of me. What I’ve done for you, that’s more than the money I’ve made you, is I’ve kept you disreputable. You’re not so bad when you’re messing around with me. But if you get all reputable … I don’t know, Dickey-bird, I just don’t know.”
Dick said, “I guess you’ve got me. I’m scared of your money—you give me five thousand dollars and watch me fall to pieces.”
Parker didn’t say anything. Dick took another compass bearing and checked it against the loran reading. Good enough. He rolled up the chart and pigeonholed it.
Just as he did that, he felt a lurch. It was so nearly physical that he looked around in alarm. The sea was calm. It was Elsie. He thought of Elsie. As he was riding high, sticking it to Parker by being single-minded and hard-ass, all his single-mindedness and hard-assedness dove into a trough.
What had Parker said?—that Parker kept him disreputable. If only that was all there was to it.
Dick looked at Parker. Parker hadn’t noticed anything, was standing there trying to come up with an answer.
Dick thought of their trip south. On their way they’d gone up Long Island Sound and toured New York City. They’d steamed around Manhattan in that yacht, Parker naming skyscr
apers and bridges. When they’d left the bay to go outside, just as they got to Sandy Hook, they’d run into a built-up sea. They’d plowed up it, up and up and over. And then plummeted—the whole bow end just fell down into the trough. She buried her bow. Water boiled past the wheelhouse. Dick’s feet flew apart so he had to hang on to the wheel. Parker fell on his ass. Even before she broke free, while he was still trying to get up, Parker was talking. “Goddamn! Last time I was here I told them about that. I told them about that damn hole in the water. Goddamn New Yorkers never fix anything.”
Now Dick thought, What the hell. Why spoil old times? He said, “Look. I don’t want to argue. You do what you think’s fair.”
Parker came up beside the wheel. He said, “Well, screw you too. Take the damn pots. I don’t want to hang around here, don’t want to go out there again. I’m going south.…”
Dick realized Parker thought Dick had spun him around. Dick said, “Don’t get all huffy about it. I don’t want you to go away thinking I’ve gouged you. Look. I still owe you the boat’s share for the last trip. I’ll bring it by your apartment.”
Parker said, “I gave that up. I’m staying on Mamzelle.”
Dick laughed. “You son of a bitch. You are about to head south.”
“Look. I’m giving you the pots.”
“You aren’t leaving ’cause you’re in trouble, are you?”
“Naw. If I was, I sure wouldn’t leave in Mamzelle. I got a man in Florida says if Mamzelle can make the trip down there, he’ll buy her.”
Dick said, “She’ll be better off down south, with her hull.”
Parker said, “And if she can’t make it, I got her insured for all she’s worth.”
“Not exactly in love with her, are you? I suppose you got your charter boat picked out?”
“Forty-five feet of space-age paradise. Fastest boat of her size. Four chairs. Flying bridge. I can get to the fishing grounds in one hour, or on out to the Gulf Stream in a day. The going rate is seventy-five dollars a head for a day’s charter. That’s six hundred dollars a day for a party of eight. The mate works for tips. So the six hundred is all mine. Spend two hundred on fuel, I’m still doing as good as a doctor or a lawyer. And, like them, even if I don’t produce I get paid. Winter in Florida, spring in Virginia Beach, come up here for the tuna derby in August. But I don’t have to be anywhere if I don’t want. I make my nut for the year in Virginia Beach. The rest is fun. The only thing I got to worry about is herpes.”
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