by Maddy Hunter
Jonathan wiggled the fingers poking out the end. “Three weeks.”
Duty hardened Margi’s gaze. “Have you sanitized it yet? My clinic recommends weekly scourings with a nonabrasive cleaner. I have some with me; would you like to borrow it? It smells a little like lemon-scented hog manure, but it does a dandy job of getting rid of those nasty germs.”
Margi’s fanaticism in her battle against common household germs had earned her the nickname “Immaculate Margi.” Her sister was even worse. We called her “Lysol Linda.”
“How did you hurt your arm?” I leaped in before Jonathan could crush Margi’s feelings by saying he’d rather be devoured by germs than smell like a pig.
He twisted his mouth self-consciously. “A surfing accident.”
“You surf?” Wow. He sure didn’t fit my image of your average surfer.
Nils’s interest in Jonathan Pond escalated tenfold. “The three of us, we would like to learn this sport.” He slapped his chest before nodding toward Gjurd and Ansgar. “The conditions in the fjords are not so good, not like in your Hawaiian Islands. Where do you do your surfing?”
“Mostly in my dining room,” Jonathan said. “That’s where the computer is set up.” He paused to reconsider. “Where it used to be set up…before the accident. I was surfing the net when a pickup truck hit the house. Lost its brakes and plowed through the wall at sixty miles an hour. I’m lucky I escaped with only a broken arm. You should see what it did to my computer; it was really gruesome. I have a photo. You want to see?”
“That’s okay,” I said, as he started reaching for his wallet.
He stayed his hand. “Are you sure? I have pictures before the fire and after.”
“Fire?”
“Yeah. The house burned down the next morning. Totally unrelated to the accident. Electrical short or something. Went up like a matchstick.”
I stared at him in shock. “Was anyone hurt?”
“No one was home when it happened.” He exhaled a painful sigh and with downcast eyes explained, “My wife left me last summer. Ran off with someone in her gourmet-cooking class. But who could blame her? Beth liked nice things. French copper cookware, Henckel cutlery — everything I couldn’t afford to buy her anymore, even at online discount prices. I give her credit for sticking around as long as she did, after they outsourced my job to India. Beth is a real dish. I couldn’t expect her to wait around forever while our finances improved. Anyone who’s ever been unemployed knows that sending out résumés to potential employers and finding the right job can take months, sometimes years.”
“How long did she stay after you lost your job?” Margi asked sympathetically.
“Longer than I ever expected. Four and a half days. Just goes to show you how tolerant she’d gotten over the years.”
He’d lost his job? His wife had run off with another man? His house had burned down? He’d broken his arm? Geesch, this guy made my life look like an enchanted fairy tale. “You’ve had a healthy run of bad luck,” I said, trying to lighten the mood.
He nodded. “But I’ve fully recovered from my broken leg. I don’t even limp anymore.”
I scanned the ceiling in search of hidden surveillance devices. We were on Candid Camera, right? But I had to ask. “When did you break your leg?”
“Just before I lost my job. Would you believe I blew a tire and accidentally rammed the Oscar Mayer Weinermobile on its cross-country trip to promote meatless hot dogs? My Chevy ended up in the scrap pile. The weiner never got a scratch. The police determined the bun gave it extra protection.”
Margi clucked out a warning. “Broken bones are a very bad sign. I’d recommend a bone density test to check for osteoporosis. How’s your daily milk consumption?”
The wine steward appeared at that moment to take our drink orders, followed by Darko, who scribbled down our main course orders before collecting our menus and merging back into the stream of foot traffic headed for the kitchen. How everyone managed to move so quickly and not collide with each other was beyond me.
“I approve of your choice of the New England clam chowder,” Margi said, nodding to Jonathan. “Calcium helps build strong bones.”
“It’s the only thing on the menu I could eat one-handed.” He sighed with disgust. “I was so stupid!”
“You’re being too hard on yourself,” Margi consoled. “Think about it. The king crab legs would have been impossible.”
“No! I was stupid about my first trip to the islands last year, when I pocketed a rock from the volcano fields on the big island. Worst mistake of my life. They don’t post signs; they don’t warn you in the tourist brochures. But when your luck starts going south and you try to figure out why, you discover some dumb myth about the volcano goddess Pele making your life a living hell if you steal any of her precious lava rock. Volcano goddess. Right. Who believes stuff like that? I’m a techie. Techies don’t believe in primitive superstitions; we’re too firmly grounded in virtual reality. But I took a rock the size of a silver dollar and I’ve been paying for it ever since, so the old girl made a believer out of me.”
“Which island is the big island?” asked Margi.
“Hawaii!” Nils, Gjurd, and Ansgar shouted, like game show contestants in lightning-round mode. I suspected World Navigators probably had global atlases tattooed onto their chests as part of some initiation rite.
“I’m not on this cruise to enjoy myself,” Jonathan continued. “I’m here for only one reason: to dump that cussed rock back where it came from.”
“You couldn’t simply mail it?” I asked. “It would have been cheaper.”
“Entrust it to the Postal Service? Are you crazy? Even if I sent it registered mail, return receipt requested, there’s no guarantee it wouldn’t end up in a dead letter office someplace. And then I’d be doomed for the rest of my life.”
Which could be dramatically brief if his streak of bad luck continued at its present rate.
“I didn’t even dare take a plane to the islands. I hopped a freighter out of L.A. to Honolulu. I didn’t want to risk any kind of air disaster.”
Nils raised a questioning finger. “When you return the rock to its rightful home, your luck will then be restored, yah?”
“According to the myth, everything should get back to normal…ifI can manage to survive that long. I’m just thankful there aren’t any icebergs in the vicinity.”
Speaking on behalf of the other nineteen hundred and ninety-nine passengers aboard the Aloha Princess, I was thankful for that, too.
“Icebergs, yah,” said Nils, looking wistful. “Many years ago, my ancestors battled icebergs.”
Margi sucked in her breath. “Oh, my goodness. Was your family on the Titanic? That’s my very favorite movie ever. I saw it sixty-three times. Did your family survive?” She flattened her palm against her chest as if to quell palpitations. “Did they ever mention Rose and Jack?”
“My ancestors were Norsemen. First to cross the North Atlantic in open boats. First to navigate iceberg-infested seas. First to discover the continent of North America.”
Margi snorted amusement. “I beg your pardon, but Christopher Columbus discovered America. We even have a special day to honor him. It has a real catchy name; maybe you’ve heard of it. Columbus Day?”
Nils slammed his fist down, causing our silverware to bounce across the table like aerial acrobats. “Christopher Columbus? Bah!” He whacked the table again, catapulting my salad fork into my lap. “Bjarni Herjulfsson discovered America!”
I squinted one eye at him. “Barney who?”
“Bjarni Herjulfsson.”
“How do you say that in English?”
He squinted back at me. “B — jarrrni Herrrr — julfsson.”
Oh, yeah. That was much better.
Jonathan looked perplexed. “How come I’ve never heard of him?”
Nils slapped his palm onto the table. Margi lunged for her flatware. “Because everyone has forgotten the sagas and the tales. They remember
Columbus. They remember Magellan. No one remembers Herjulfsson!”
I suspected this oversight might have been corrected if the explorer in question had thought to change his name to something people could actually pronounce.
“Five hundred years before that imposter Columbus, Herjulfsson sailed through a fog when looking for Greenland and ended up finding North America.”
“Oh, sure.” Margi realigned her silverware. “Like our federal government closes banks and shuts down postal service to honor an imposter. I don’t think so. Our national holidays are not venues to showcase phonies. What do you think shows like Jerry Springer are for?”
Gjurd and Ansgar spouted something at Nils in voices so loud and frenzied that people at neighboring tables pivoted in their seats to stare at us. Nils spouted something back, face red, eyes bulging, voice booming. Man, I could see what Bailey meant about these guys being a little testy. If you were smart, you wouldn’t want to cross them. But, hey, now that we were on the subject…
“Do you have to be Norwegian to belong to the World Navigators Club?” I asked above the shouting.
Gjurd and Ansgar bit back what they were saying to stare first at Nils, then at me. Nils inhaled a deep breath before sitting back in his chair. “There is no requirement that members be Norwegian, but it helps. Beards are also welcome.”
“So, what exactly do World Navigators do? I mean, do you have some kind of credo or something?”
“Credo. Yah.” He hoisted his shirtsleeve to his shoulder and flexed his biceps to reveal a colorful tattoo of a Viking helmet accompanied by the words Nils Nilsson, World Navigators Club. “We all have credos,” he said proudly.
Okay, no global atlases. I wondered if they’d nixed the idea because of the ever-changing geopolitcal situation, or problems with too much chest hair. Either way, I’d been close. “Credo,” I corrected Nils. “Mission statement. Like the United Nations? The Campfire Girls? It states the purpose of why you get together.”
“Why we get together? Yah. We drink good, strong beer. We sail in regattas. We discuss the greatest navigators in history — Bjarni Herjulfsson, Eric the Red, Leif Ericsson.”
“Not James Cook?”
“Bah! Cook was a fraud. He followed in the wake of others more skillful than himself and accomplished nothing besides getting himself killed. Where was the challenge? He had bigger ships. Sturdier sails. Better supplies. Chronometers. Five chronometers on every voyage! Herjulfsson sailed without instruments in more treacherous waters. The so-called experts have made too much of Cook. That must change.”
I shot him a puzzled look. “You said earlier that the reason you signed up for this cruise was to attend Professor Smoker’s lectures. Why did you spend so much money to hear someone lecture about a fraud?”
He hesitated before offering me an odd half smile. “We are not narrow-minded. We understood Professor Smoker was a most influential and respected man. We wanted to hear his version of history, study him in person, and accompany him on his many island excursions before we decided what tack to take to prove his views wrong.”
Hmm. Had they made their decision and acted upon it already? Euw, boy. Whether they were involved in Professor Smoker’s death or not, though, the demise of the ship’s academic headliner presented a scheduling nightmare for the guest relations people. “Do you suppose the entire Cook program will be canceled because of what happened? I imagine some of those excursions will lose their appeal without Professor Smoker there to provide the narrative.”
“What of his assistant?” asked Nils. “She could take over at the helm, yah?”
Was it me, or was he having a hard time keeping the anticipation out of his voice at the prospect of Bailey’s substituting for the professor?
“You can forget the assistant,” Margi declared. “I heard it straight from Bernice. That girl will probably have to stay in the infirmary for the rest of the trip because she’s on the brink of a nervous breakdown. She saw the person who pushed the professor overboard, and it’s got her all upset.”
Bernice? How had Bernice found out? She wasn’t supposed to know that. No one was supposed to know that!
“Someone got pushed overboard?” Jonathan choked out.
Margi nodded. “They still haven’t found the body.”
A chorus line of waiters banged out of the kitchen and charged toward our table, trays of appetizers balanced on their palms and shoulders. Down went the trays onto serving tables. Up flew dishes artistically arranged with pink salmon, ripe melon, and something that resembled Meow Mix. Down went the plates before us, consuming every inch of table space available. Off sped the waiters again, all elegance and efficiency.
My gaze drifted over the array of food, dazzled by the color, the variety, the presentation. Even the Meow Mix looked appetizing.
“My lettuce looks tantalizing, doesn’t it?” Margi commented.
“This is all my fault,” Jonathan wailed. He buried his face behind his one good hand and shook his head. “If I wasn’t aboard, that person might still be alive. I have to do something. I can’t go on like this. Don’t try to stop me, anyone.” He shoved his chair away from the table and sprang to his feet. “I have to confess everything to the captain!”
As he bolted away, my fruit cup suddenly skated across the table after him, accompanied by colorful plates of pâté, prosciutto, oysters, salmon, and Margi’s hunk of bib lettuce.
BOOM! Tinkle. CRASH! Splat.
Shrieks throughout the dining room. Gasps. Nils spat what sounded like a Norwegian cussword and leaped out of his chair, knocking it over with a BOOM that vibrated the floor. Gjurd let out a Viking yell. Ansgar glowered at the smorgasbord in his lap and growled something that needed no translation. Our appetizers lay splattered across the carpet like refuse from an all-you-can-eat buffet. Oh, my God. What just happened?
I glanced at Jonathan, who stood awkwardly in the aisle, yanking at the umbilical cord of tablecloth that was tucked into the waistband of his pants.
Oh, yeah. This guy was cursed big-time.
Margi fished a small packet out of her purse. “Moist towelette, anyone?”
The mess was cleared up and our meals reordered with polite enthusiasm if not speed. The Vikings ripped apart platters of Alaskan king crab with their bare hands and left without ordering dessert. Margi bypassed a main entrée in favor of sampling everything on the dessert menu, then left halfway through to stake out a good seat for the evening’s entertainment in the Bali Ha’i Theater. My medium-rare prime sirloin arrived looking like a used engine part so I sent it back to the kitchen, and by the time they got it right, some early birds from the second seating were pacing beside the table, checking their watches and giving me dirty looks.
So much for leisurely dining.
I stood up, thanked Darko for all his trouble, apologized for leaving my meal uneaten, and knew I was doing the right thing when instead of looking disappointed, he looked relieved. I scooted down the aisle with my stomach growling from hunger, but the good news was, the dinner buffet in the Coconut Palms Cafe didn’t close until midnight!
I skirted around the waterfall at the entrance of the dining room and as I made my way down the corridor to the elevators, spied a familiar face walking away from the desk in the guest relations cove, though considering the sluggishness of her gait, I questioned whether she should be on her feet at all.
“Bailey?” I caught up to her in a half dozen steps. “Shouldn’t you be in the infirmary?”
She regarded me for a dazed moment before waving the plastic card in her hand at me. “I had to replace my room key. It’s so strange. I put it in my pocket earlier” — she poked two fingers into the shallow pocket of her knit vest — “but it’s not there anymore. I must have lost it, but that’s so unlike me. I never lose things. Ever.”
“Can I walk you back to the infirmary?”
She gave her head a slow, loosey-goosey shake, as if it were attached to the rest of her body by a flimsy rubber band. “I
’m not going back there. It was so noisy down there with people coming and going, I checked myself out. I told them I’d get a better night’s sleep in my own cabin.” She slapped her palm over her mouth and yawned. “I’m so sleepy. But I need to stay awake long enough to pack.”
“Pack? Are you leaving?”
“Right after I give a statement to the Kauai police tomorrow. The only reason I was on this trip was to assist Professor Smoker. After what’s happened” — she swallowed a sob — “I don’t think I’m quite up for the carnival atmosphere on the Aloha Princess. Virgos have an almost compulsive need to plan ahead, so I guess I’ll fly home and figure out where I go from here.”
I couldn’t fault her there. After my marriage ended, I’d gone home to regroup, too, but unlike Bailey, at least I’d had a family waiting to give me support.
“So I guess this is good-bye.” She offered her hand in a formal handshake but looked uncomfortable when our palms made contact. “Hey, it was nice meeting you, Emily. I just wish it could have been under more pleasant circumstances. Hope you enjoy the rest of your cruise.”
“Um —” I stood there awkwardly, caught between the classic rock and hard place. “I don’t want to frighten you, but I think you should know that some people on board know you’re the person who witnessed Professor Smoker’s murder.”
Bailey shrugged. “Doesn’t surprise me. I suppose it was bound to get out.”
“Yeah, but if that’s the case, wouldn’t you be safer sleeping in the infirmary tonight? I’m not implying that you’re a target, but if you are, I’d think you’d be better off in a place where there are lots of other people around.” People who were sick, lame, and drugged, but people nonetheless.
Her eyes narrowed pensively. “I actually gave that some thought while I was lying in my hospital bed. After what you implied this afternoon, every time someone passed by my door, I jumped a little, wondering if —” She paused. “Like I told you, there are way too many people down there, any one of whom could slip into a room undetected and take care of any business that needed finishing up. That’s one of the reasons I decided to leave. Unlike my infirmary room, my cabin has a dead bolt, and I intend to use it. The only way anyone will get at me tonight is if they beat the door down.”