Tale of the Thunderbolt (19 page)

BOOK: Tale of the Thunderbolt
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Valentine leaned forward in his chair. “Captain, do you have some special reason to have us stay here?”
Boul drummed his fingers on the table, but stopped as soon as he looked down and realized what he was doing. “I will lay my cards down, as you New Orleans gamblers say. Though we pay tribute to the cursed ones on the other side of the island, we still suffer their torments. Even now one of their Drakkar, a wooden vessel known as the
Sharkfin,
approaches. On it are the Drinkers of Death, the robed ones who come in the dark. A ship such as yours in the harbor will make them think again about anchoring. I saw your gun — it would blow the
Sharkfin
into kindling. Our market is poor because even at the rumor of one of the Drakkar, the Dragon-ships, my people fly to the mountains.”
“We can't stay here forever,” Valentine said. “And were we to destroy the
Sharkfin
, New Orleans would hear about it, and it would be trouble for us.”
“But you may save us this season. This would not hurt your patrol, perhaps three days here. And I do mean what I say about making inquiries among the fishermen. You may buy what you will, and each day you stay your men will feast on what my poor town can provide. We make a very good rum, vodka even from potatoes.”
Carrasca nodded. “So be it. We shall stay a few days. We'll anchor so our gun can cover the sea. And your town, in case of treachery, Captain Boul.”
“Thank you, Captain. You are helping my people a great deal. Though I cannot blame you for thinking it, do not fear treachery.”
Valentine escorted Boul off the
Thunderbolt
and asked about springs flowing into town. Boul pointed out a beach and assured Valentine the water was good there. Nevertheless, Valentine made a mental note to remind the party about the water-purification tablets. He returned to the captain's cabin, knocked, and entered. They sat down and talked about the watering and market party.
“Fresh food and time. We lucked out,” she said once they'd decided which men would do what.
“Unless this
Sharkfin
shows up. Much as it would be nice to blow it into flotsam, our cover story would suffer. Even worse, one of your own ships could sail in.”
“Doubtful, nothing on this side of the island worth going after,” she said.
“Well, with your permission, tomorrow I'll take a few men into town and have a look around. All I need to do is make it easy for this man to find me.”
He stood up, as did she. As he turned sideways to get past her to go out the door, their chests touched. She glanced up into his eyes and then away, as if afraid of what she might find there.
 
The watering party left under the supervision of one of Carrasca's petty officers. They used the
Thunderbolt
's two boats, the smaller motor launch and a lifeboat, heaped with plastic ten-gallon barrels. It wasn't the most efficient way to water the ship, which had been amply filled before leaving Jamaica anyway, but it gave the men something to do and added a touch of realism to the story.
Under further instructions from Carrasca, they also returned with planking torn from an old fishing boat. Some men fashioned it into a raft and attached a makeshift flag; then they towed the target out beyond the surf for gunnery practice. Carrasca made sure the distance was greater than that to the town, and she had her men lob a few shells at the target, to impress those ashore that the gun worked and they had shells to spare. She still didn't trust anyone on Hispaniola, no matter what promises came from below a handsome mustache.
Valentine was with Post when the gun began to fire. The healing lieutenant startled at the sound.
“Just gunnery training. I told you, remember?”
Post was red-faced. “Sorry, Val.” He raised his arm on his wounded side. “Nerves might not be healed yet, but the shoulder's working great. Hardly a twinge.” He flapped an elbow and smothered a wince.
 
Valentine went to the market the next day. Much of the town looked to be in rubble, victim to wave and war, storm or earthquake, and never rebuilt. What was still standing was gaily painted: blue-trimmed doorways looked out from whitewashed buildings, and elaborate designs like a child's drawing of men and animals decorated awnings and window sills. The widest street in Cape Haitian was crowded with straw-hatted food vendors, selling produce out of wooden carts. Valentine and his men would have been besieged by beggars and hustlers, except Captain Boul sent a set of navy-uniformed gunmen to act as escorts and intermediaries in the market. Which was just as well, because the Creole dialect of the streets was beyond Valentine's French. The acting-purser simply picked out items, and the strongmen passed out what looked like beaded ribbons to the people in the market.
Shouted offers for liquor, drugs, and even women tempted a few of the sailors, but Valentine and the petty officer kept them at work filling the cart.
“Hey Lieutenant, you want a good drink?” someone hallooed in English. “Wine, me got some wine. I have friends up North, and I know what you like, what you want.”
Valentine spotted the man waving to him from the crowd, a dark bottle in his hand.
“Don't buy anything from that one, sailor sir,” the sergeant of the escort said in a mixture of French and Spanish. “There's better wine to be found. Off, Dog-boy, or you'll be sorry.”
He looked like a man to Valentine, and he didn't see any dogs. The man's eager eyes implored him across the sea of straw hats in the market, and he held out the bottle again. “Have a taste — you'll want more.”
Valentine reached for the bottle, and one of the guards rewarded Dog-boy with a crack across the wrist with a baton. It dropped, but Valentine's reflexes saved it from crashing to the cobblestones.
“You don't want his piss, sailor sir.”
Valentine sniffed the open mouth of the bottle. His ears picked up the sound of something clinking against the glass within. Dog-boy had disappeared into the crowd.
“Maybe I don't. I've got a drain that needs unclogging on board — I'll use it on that.”
Valentine kept the bottle in his hand for the remainder of the session in the market, using it as a pointer. The purser and his men hauled their acquisitions back to the dock, yet another set of round trips were ahead for the motor launch.
Once back on board, past the Grogs hungrily eyeing the supplies coming alongside, he took his bottle down to the cabin and emptied it down the drain. Whatever was within refused to come out, so he smashed the bottle against the steel sink. A wooden tube, lacquered and stoppered, had been stuck inside. He examined it for a moment, then pulled out the cork, and extracted a rolled-up note from the tube:
To officer with black hair and scar —
I will come to your ship tonight after midnight.
I will swim to the anchor chain.
Must keep clear of soldiers in boats.
— Victo
 
Valentine read the note twice, then got Ahn-Kha and took it up to Carrasca.
“Is he telling us there is danger from soldiers in boats? Or that he has to swim clear of them?” Ahn-Kha asked, after the note had been passed around in the cabin.
“The Oerlikon could sink any number of boats,” Carrasca said. “I've looked around the harbor. They have a lot of those canoe fishing boats. I suppose they could put a couple hundred men in the water, but we'd sink them before they got halfway here. But we might want to shift anchorage, farther out.”
Valentine shook his head. “He'll have a tough enough swim as it is. Let's wait until he's on board.”
There was a rap at the door, and a teenager entered. “Captain, one of those rowboats dropped off a letter,” he reported.
“Thank you, Lloyd,” Carrasca said, opening it.
“Today is a day for notes,” Ahn-Kha observed.
She handed it to Valentine. “An invitation to a dinner and beach party in our honor tomorrow night. However many officers and men as I choose to bring. I smell a rat with a nice mustache.”
“We'll make some excuse tomorrow during the day,” Valentine said. “A radio message. As long as this Victo is on board, we can take our leave of
El Capitán Boul.

“You think he means to take hostages?” Carrasca asked. “Why didn't he do it today? There must have been ten or twelve men on shore at various times. He could have taken you and your party. That would have given him something to bargain with.”
“He could be waiting for orders.”

Huevos.
The man's a schemer — I could read his eyes,” she said, touching the corner of her own. “He may be playing us false, but it's to his own purposes.”
“I'm going to arm Ahn-Kha's Grogs and what's left of my marines. You might want to have the machine guns ready tonight.”
“They'll be manned. I want everyone to have a chance at fresh food, though. There's an old tradition at sea to give your men a good feed before action.” Her expression softened into that of the woman he'd played mah-jongg with in Jamaica. “Would you care to have dinner with me in the cabin?”
“Far be it from me to break with tradition,” Valentine said.
 
The food tasted better in the cooler night air. Valentine put on a plain white shirt with his best pair of pants fresh from the laundry and went lightly up the stairs to Carrasca's cabin. Askin, her only lieutenant, answered the door. A handsome young Jamaican with hair cropped so short it made Valentine think of peach fuzz, Askin was dressed in a trim black uniform decorated with a heavy silver whistle on a thick chain. A linen covering added a formal note to the table in the wardroom. The
Thunderbolt
's best plates and cutlery lay upon it.
“We really should have asked Post, as well,” Carrasca said. She wore the same blue uniform Valentine remembered from the dinner at Commodore Jensen's, though now it bore an epaulette on the right shoulder.
“He's only just started walking,” Valentine reported.
“The Chief doesn't care for formal meals, and Ahn-Kha — ”
“Just wouldn't fit in,” Valentine finished. “I don't mean with us, but in this cabin.”
“It would be a bit like having a horse in here for dinner,” Carrasca laughed. She sat, and the men followed suit.
Carrasca began uncovering dishes. “Askin, you did wonders with the birds.”
“A sugar glaze from the beets on this island,” the lieutenant explained. His diction held only a hint of Calypso.
She took another cover off. “The bean-and-rice dish is mine. Sweet potatoes. Crab cakes with goat-milk butter, and a fruit platter.”
Valentine took a bite of a buttery crab cake, feeling guilty that he hadn't brought anything. He turned to Askin. “The captain tells me you've landed here before.”
“Farther along the north coast, near the Samaná Peninsula,” Askin said. “We were chasing some little trading ship. They beached it and waded through the surf to escape us. It took us forever to take off the cargo. Something must have scared some of them worse inland, because they came scampering back.”
“Did they say what it was?” Valentine asked.
“I think they got a look at one of the mines. Bauxite, maybe. Those and the sugar plantations — they're hell on earth. Hispaniola is the worst island in the Carib.”
“The Kurians have a knack for doing that.”
“That old Specter by Kingston, he was a saint compared with the creatures running Santo Domingo. They don't even try to keep their people alive.”
Unspoken agreement turned the three to their dishes, further conversation might spoil their appetites. Valentine had seen his share of cruelty in his years facing Kur, and worse, recently participated in it as part of his assumed role as a Coastal Marine.
The meal ended with fruit for dessert and a single glass of wine chilled into sangria. There were no toasts this time. Askin excused himself, carrying two green bananas out with him.
“He has the bridge as soon as it gets dark, even though we're at anchor,” Carrasca explained. “I told him to be extra careful tonight. I warned the watch to keep an eye open for our swimmer. Now we wait, David.”
Valentine sipped at his sangria, enjoying the sound of his name from her lips. “I have no complaints. I'm left alone with a beautiful woman.”
Carrasca smiled, her teeth gleaming against her dusky skin. “Captain Valentine, I'm shocked. A breach of etiquette. But for God's sake, don't stop.”
Valentine's innards warmed to the wine and the spark in her eyes. “I haven't had a woman to talk to in a long time, Malia. When all this is over, when we can both relax and take off our respective hats, so to speak, I'd like to spend some time with you. You're someone I can talk to.”
“So that's what you'd do with me? Conversation?”
He met her gaze. “Yes, long, in-depth conversations. Late into the night.”
“Really, David?” she asked. “How long has it been since your last good conversation with a woman?”
“Over a year. In New Orleans I was tempted to pay a woman to talk to me, but I resisted.”
“It's better to wait for a decent conversationalist,” she agreed.
“Yes.”
“I'd like to talk to you, too. I'm sure you'd enjoy it. Women with any Cuban blood in them — well, they make great conversational partners. You'd be amazed at how many different topics I'm familiar with.”
“I'm sure,” Valentine said, smelling her femininity in the confines of the dining cabin.
“It's a shame, now that you've got me thinking about it, I've been lacking in decent conversation myself. The only problem is, we're both married to our duty. We can't have the men thinking anything else.”

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