On our way, we run into a couple of other sailors we know, a pair from Texas. “You just missed the excitement,” he says. “One guy just chopped off another guy’s hand with a machete. Over a woman.”
Back home, business would have stopped cold for hours while the area was marked off with yellow crime-scene tape, reports taken, a cleanup crew mopping and sanitizing while people gossiped and gaped. Here, the hand was simply put on a bed of ice—the same ice that had been holding raw fish minutes before—and sent with its owner to hospital. The market was back to normal within minutes, the flies resettled on the snappers, the vendors resettled in their seats. But the Texas couple is empty-handed: “Somehow we just didn’t feel like buying any fish,” he says.
We are not deterred. There are no stray appendages in sight when we step into the market’s cool, dim interior, and we immediately stop to admire a gorgeous whole yellowfin tuna. The vendor leaps to his feet, and as soon as Steve indicates the thickness we want, slices thick red steaks off the fifty-pound fish with quick swipes of his cutlass, as the long, curving machete is called here. I have just a moment’s hesitation, wondering where that cutlass had been a few minutes earlier, but Steve is exuberantly unconcerned. With the tuna the equivalent of $1.80 a pound, it’s all I can do to stop him from buying the whole damn fish. Dinner tonight has clearly been decided.
On the way back toward our homeward bus, we poke into one more shop. Unlike the market, here the prices are posted, and I see the sign above one of the bins. “Ceylon Mangoes,” it says. Or Sealawn, in the lilting voice of an islander. I laugh as broadly as my favorite market lady.
When Steve raps on the roof, My Heart Desire lurches to a stop in front of Nimrod’s, and the conductor kid hands down our backpacks and my canvas cooler bag. A little time perched on one of Nimrod’s three stools, schmoozing with Hugh and gulping a cold drink, is required before returning to the dinghy dock. Nimrod’s is the closest thing to a convenience store in Lower Woburn, and customers wander in and out to buy one thing or another, or have a glass of rum. An old-fashioned wooden case on the counter holds baked goods while the shelves behind are dotted with just a few essentials: cooking oil, rum, fruit juice, rum, evaporated milk, rum, insecticide, rum. Whenever he gets a chance, Hugh puts aside his paintbrush and the sign he’s working on to join his customers in a glass, while his slender, sad-faced wife, Bernadette, stoically keeps the place running. Besides getting customers their groceries, she takes in laundry, sends faxes, and prepares vats of chicken curry, which she scoops into large, thin pancake-like roti breads, wraps into neat packages, and sells at lunchtime. We occasionally see her heading off to church in the afternoon in a flowered dress, Bible in hand, while Hugh waits for her to disappear around a curve in the road so he can return to his schmoozing and his rum.
On our first visit, Hugh unearths from the back room a set of fat, dusty oversized ledgers with cracked covers. “Dey been signed by those who cross deh bridge,” he says in his soft voice, and he insists we turn their pages to get a sense of the tradition—whatever it is. We haven’t seen a bridge anywhere in Lower Woburn. The ledgers, which date back more than a decade, don’t shed much light, even though verses, drawings, and oblique references to the difficulty of “crossing deh bridge” are sprinkled among the signatures of other cruisers.
Eventually, Hugh swears us to secrecy—and brings out a wooden model of a suspension bridge that he sets on the counter. There are spots for rum cups on each side. “Ready to cross?” He fills the cups to the brim with rum from Clarke’s Court distillery, just down the road, while Bernadette puts glasses of water alongside. Hugh makes a sweet toast of welcome and friendship to those who come to this little village on the coast. He then indicates we have to down the rum in one go—demonstrating with his own cup, of course. Bernadette just looks on. I pick up my cup and gulp. Jesus. This is why rum was once called “kill devil.” This is the local overproof stuff, fresh out of the still, no aging in barrels to temper the raw fire. I cough and sputter and grope for the water that Bernadette has prudently provided. She gives a little knowing smile: I wouldn’t be able to spit out the word right now to ask for it myself. While Steve, his eyes watering only slightly, joins Hugh in a second, I sneak a peek at the bottle: 138 proof, 69 percent alcohol.
We have crossed the bridge. We have arrived.
Back on board, the shopping put away, I slide off Receta’s stern ladder into the water to swim just before sunset, as I do every afternoon, so I can watch, up close, the sea change color—the blue surface becoming streaked with rose and mauve as the sun sinks. Here, not quite 12 degrees north of the equator, sunset comes early, even in August. The sun is here one minute, below the horizon the next, and I am left to do my last lap around the boat in a pool of deepening gray, clutching an old toothbrush. I haven’t entirely given up the obsessive multitasking of my old life: As I swim, I scrub off the tiny barnacles determined to get a foothold along the waterline of our hull. I then shower in the cockpit, using fresh water that was heated by the sun while we were at the market.
Steve claims tonight’s dinner is the best I’ve ever cooked—on land or water—though in truth I do almost nothing: mince a little market ginger and garlic, add a couple of splashes of soy and olive oil, and let that thick yellowfin tuna sit in the mixture for just a few minutes; steam some rice, and turn one of the “Sealawn” mangoes into a salsa the color of the sunset. Meanwhile, on the small gas barbecue mounted on Receta’s stern rail, Steve quickly grills the fish, and it is dazzling: Seared on the outside and barely cooked inside, it has a sensuous, almost silken texture, the sweet salsa a perfect counterpoint to its fresh sea taste. Seven months later, another tuna, this one a blackfin we catch ourselves eleven islands farther into our journey, finally supplants tonight’s as the best thing Steve has ever tasted from my kitchen. But until then—even after lobster season opens a few weeks from now—the yellowfin will remain first in his affection.
After we do the dishes—by hand, in one small pan of water, since every drop of fresh water we use now has to be caught when it rains or ferried aboard in jerry cans—I go up on deck to look at the sky and cool off in the breeze: doing nothing, doing everything. I’ve even taken to sleeping in the cockpit on still nights, when no wind disturbs the sultry air, the heat lies like a heavy blanket, and Steve gives off a million BTUs in our berth below. Not a building is visible on either mainland or island shore—no houses, stores, hotels, or restaurants—so there are no lights to dim the stars embroidered on the dark velvet overhead. The breeze is gentle and, as always, the piping frogs sing.
This is what I traded my Day-Timer and business clothes for a year ago. This is what my daily life has become. Ann of a Thousand Deadlines has slowly, surely, been left behind.
The Five-Year Plan
Your courage is like a kite. Big wind raises it higher.
FORTUNE COOKIE, TORONTO, CANADA;
NOVEMBER 1996
Relinquishing fears now allows you to succeed.
FORTUNE COOKIE, PORT OF SPAIN, TRINIDAD;
NOVEMBER 1998
Perhaps the hardest thing, we realized in hindsight, was making the decision to go.
It had started as idle, dreamy chat in the bleak days of January and February, the time of year I detest in Toronto, when all the color is sucked out of the city, and even the snow looks gray and tired. As I do.
I left for work in the dark and returned home in the dark. On the rare days the sun bothered to show itself, it was a pale lemon pretender, offering little warmth and barely brightening the gunmetal surface of Lake Ontario. When I cooked dinner in the evening, Steve would catch me warming my hands over the stove, and, later, huddling over the heating vent in our bedroom while I read. It’s a very sad sight, he would say. I looked like the little match girl rather than a successful magazine editor. I didn’t care. I longed to be too hot.
Steve—three years younger than me, all hard angles and sharp edges on the outside, a romantic softie within—w
as my partner in work as well as life. A small-town Ontario boy, he’d relocated to the city to go to art college in the seventies and never left. For the past few years, we’d been working for the same magazine, and it was hard to tell most days where business ended and private life began. We operated in separate spaces: he, the freelance art director, from a crammed studio tucked into the back of the second floor of our house; me, the editor, at the magazine’s main office, a fifteen-minute drive away. But we speed-dialed each other incessantly and flung e-mails and electronic story layouts back and forth all day long. When people asked how our relationship could survive our working together, I’d exclaim about the virtues. “How many people have a chance to see firsthand how really good their spouses are at what they do?” That was on the good days.
The rest of the time, I drove home in the cold at night, freezing and fuming, replaying the day, and arrived ready to rant: about the sloppy writers, the uninspired stories, the cheapskate publisher, the blown deadlines and, especially, the talented but unreasonable art director. “Turn it off, the office is closed,” Steve would say. And I would—for at least a full minute. Our work and our personal lives were inseparable.
And there never seemed to be enough hours for both. Every day required a battle plan. Besides the magazine, we squeezed in other publishing projects that we worked on together—including a small ongoing series of guidebooks for boaters on the Great Lakes that Steve published himself. They took a backseat to the other stuff and were, like their publisher, often late. Meanwhile, I was ruled day and night by my watch and the to-do lists in my Day-Timer. “I can barely brush my teeth without a deadline,” I joked to friends. But increasingly I didn’t find it funny.
On the surface, Steve remained calm and unruffled, letting the pressure swirl around him, seemingly as casual about business deadlines as he was about his standard business attire (T-shirt and jeans no matter what, unless the weather permitted shorts or required a sweatshirt). “It will all get done,” he’d tell me, “whether you stew about it or not.” Yet I knew he was growing more and more resentful of the constant demands on his time and his perpetual state of overcommitment. Not to mention what he swore was “ten months of winter a year.”
His solution was thrown out casually—just another sensible suggestion, like telling me I should crank up the thermostat when I complained about the cold. “So let’s take a break and sail south to the Caribbean for a couple of years,” he said.
Right. Escaping work and winter for a couple of years sounded wonderful—but escaping on a sailboat? Was he nuts? Sure, I needed a break—we both did—but did he think I had somehow been miraculously grafted onto someone else’s sea legs?
I had never set foot on a sailboat until one of my first dates with him, and it was hardly an auspicious beginning to a relationship, let alone a sailing career. Having taught himself to sail and fallen in love with sailing a few years earlier, Steve had planned a romantic afternoon for two on his boat on the lake. In fact, we didn’t even get away from the dock, after he backed over one of his mooring lines leaving the slip and wrapped it on the propeller. (“I was too busy trying to impress you,” he told me later.) Our second sailing date wasn’t much better: It was aborted at the marina’s fuel dock, when he discovered one of the boat’s hoses had become detached, filling the bilge with gasoline. I, meanwhile, had identified sailing as an activity where things frequently go wrong.
When he did eventually get me out on the lake, I loved the feeling of being propelled by the wind, the total quiet except for the water gurgling past, the sense of freedom that came with leaving land (and land-based concerns) behind. But I only loved it on days when the lake was flat and the breeze gentle. My nervousness increased in direct proportion to wind strength, and so did my tendency to seasickness. I was most definitely not a natural sailor. I didn’t react instinctively to the wind—or to the movement of the boat. “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks,” I’d mutter, lurching into the companionway and simultaneously barking a shin and a shoulder.
One August, several years after we had bought a house and moved in together, I had a routine checkup with my doctor. As she was examining me, she suddenly asked in all seriousness, “Is your husband beating you?” She was staring at my assortment of multicolored sailing bruises, which I’d become accustomed to having all summer long. I still had not developed anything that could remotely be called sea legs.
By the time Steve popped his “let’s sail south” suggestion about five years later, I had fewer bruises and a few more basic skills, but not much else had changed in my relationship with sailing. Steve, meanwhile, had become an even more competent and confident sailor. He now raced the boat every Wednesday night in Toronto’s harbor, and also entered longer weekend races on Lake Ontario when he could get crew. He knew better than to look to me to fill that role.
However, not wanting to focus on my personal shortcomings, I cleverly decided to point out a few other niggling drawbacks to his “let’s sail south” idea instead. Like money. We were both self-employed; there was no company or educational institution offering sabbaticals, no family trust fund, no cash reserves or investments to help pay for a midlife break from the working world. So how were we going to finance this little adventure?
And that’s how the Five-Year Plan was born: “Let’s think about sailing south five years from now,” Steve said, “and in the meantime we’ll see if we can put together enough money.” Mostly the Plan would involve paying down the mortgage on our house, which would involve the ever-popular concepts of fiscal restraint and concerted savings.
“Sure,” I said to Steve. Stay calm, I said to myself. Five years is a long way off. This doesn’t mean you’re agreeing to sail into the sunset. We can always use the money to do something else. And I had to admit, in the short term, having the Plan would allow us to fantasize on the cold, tough days about making the great escape.
When we arrive at Smith Island on the Eastern Shore of Chesapeake Bay, it is just before dusk. Rakish clouds with underskirts of gray scuttle across the sky. The public dock at the island’s main town of Ewell, where we tie Receta, is a mere six inches above water level, and it’s still not high tide; the main street is already awash ankle-deep. Neat white clapboard houses with red or green shutters are scattered along both sides, but there’s not a soul in sight—and no other boats at the dock—just a family of ducks paddling up the flooded roadway.
By far the most off-the-beaten-path spot we’ve stopped at since leaving Toronto two months ago, Smith Island, Maryland, is one of only two inhabited offshore islands in Chesapeake Bay. The other is Tangier Island, a little farther to the south and just across the Virginia state line. Isolated from the mainland 11 miles away, Smith’s 400 or so residents make their living by crabbing and, in winter, oystering, as they always have. In fact, the current residents are direct descendants of the island’s original settlers who came here in 1657. Almost half the population of Ewell has the same last name, Evans. “Visitors are well advised not to make jokes or ask too many questions about this,” says William Warner, writing about Tangier and Smith in Beautiful Swimmers, his Pulitzer Prize–winning elegy to the watermen and crabs of Chesapeake Bay. I’ve been reading it at night, and annoyingly recounting snatches to Steve (since he’s already read it himself) as we sail down the bay. I suspect Smith Island would be unusual at any time, but it is particularly unusual on this chill, blustery October weekday when we are the only visitors and an abnormally high tide laps across the carefully tended lawns.
We pull on our deck boots and wade up the deserted main street, eventually coming upon a lone crabber who, with the help of a young woman, is unloading the day’s catch into the back of a pickup. Blue crabs have been constantly on our minds lately because the most common method of catching them commercially is the crab trap, and crab traps and boats don’t mix. The traps lie on the bottom of the bay, the location of each one marked on the surface by a small round buoy about the size of an overgrown
grapefruit, which is attached to the trap below by a rope. During the summer and early fall, Chesapeake Bay is positively littered with them. “Watermen who normally set out 200 crab pots in the 1970s now work with 500 to 1,000 to get approximately the same catch,” Warner tells us. The last thing we want to do is run into one of those ropes and catch it on our prop, for an unpleasant reprise of our Toronto harbor date.
So one of us spots and one of us steers as we slalom from anchorage to anchorage down the bay. We’re particularly fond of the crabbers with the blue buoys—almost impossible to see in the waves until we’re right on top of them, at which point we have to zigzag quickly away, the sails flapping inelegantly from the unplanned change in direction. Steve figures the only way to get even for the stress of constant crab-trap watch is to devour as many crabs as possible. There’s no way we’re going to walk by a truck full of them on Smith Island and not buy some to cook ourselves.
“How much are they?” I ask the young woman hefting traps. She relays the question to the man in oilskins in the bed of the pickup, who shouts back an incomprehensible answer. The island’s isolation has allowed a distinctive dialect to survive, with outmoded words and grammatical constructions from seventeenth-century England. To our ears, it sounds like the crabber is gargling marbles with a Shakespearean southern drawl. “Thirty-five dollars for number one jimmies,” the woman translates. Number one jimmies are the big fat prime male crabs, the ones served steamed in restaurants; but even given that, the price seems high for buying direct from the supplier—higher, in fact, than we’ve sometimes paid when eating out. “Wannem?” The man in the pickup pushes a basket scrabbling with live crabs toward the pickup’s rear gate.
An Embarrassment of Mangoes Page 2