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Authors: M.H. Herlong

The Great Wide Sea (11 page)

BOOK: The Great Wide Sea
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I saw the anchor sink into the sandy bottom. I snagged it tight.
Chrysalis
swung gently on her chain and slowly turned her bow into the wind. The quiet rolled over us like liquid. We sat there just looking out at the little circle of islands and feeling the gentle leftovers of breeze. It was peaceful; it was perfect; it was ours alone.
The next day we slept late—even Dad—and woke up only when we heard a voice calling, “Hello! Hello! Ahoy
Chrysalis
.” I heard Dad knocking against the hull as he woke up. He was at the companionway before I had pushed off my covers. By the time I sat up, he and Dylan were already on deck. I heard voices.
“De worse dat could happen,” a Bahamian man said, and I was on deck too.
He stood in his dinghy, rowed by a single paddle astern, and held on to
Chrysalis
's gunwale. Beside us now, in our perfect anchorage, was a Bahamian fishing boat. On the deck several fishermen lounged and watched their mate.
“De worse dat could happen, mon,” he said again. “We have forgotten to bring de sugar for de tea.”
And Dad laughed. He threw back his head and laughed. “Sugar!” he said. “I thought someone was dying. Ben, go get these guys some sugar. Lots of sugar.”
Dylan and I looked at each other. He had said “dying.” He had laughed.
I came back up with an unopened three-pound bag of sugar. Behind me came Gerry, wiping his eyes with Blankie.
“Tanks, mon,” said the Bahamian. He looked at us. “Dese all yours, mon?”
“Every one,” Dad said.
“You lucky,” the fisherman said. “We catch some lobster, we'll bring you some.”
“Sure,” Dad said. “Sure.”
The fisherman rowed away, standing in his boat, pushing the stern paddle from right to left and cradling the sugar in the crook of his arm.
Dad turned to us smiling. “Coffee?” he said, and the perfect day began.
What was so perfect about it? Just that it was. Dylan and I spent the morning in the dinghy, puttering around the end of one of our sheltering islands. Dylan was watching the bottom, looking for conch. After lunch, we took Gerry with us, and he leaned over to look too.
We rounded the end of one of the islands in the circle. Out there was the great wide sea, green and glittering and calm. To our right was a sudden crescent of sand no more than ten feet long. We beached the dinghy and sat there, the three of us, alone, looking out to sea.
In that moment, I imagined we were the only ones on earth. From where we sat on our miniature temporary beach, it was an easy thing to imagine. Except for the dinghy and the tiny whiff of exhaust and gas, there was no sign of human life. Before us lay the ocean, behind and around us the little scrub island. No Dad. No
Chrysalis
. No nothing. Just us and the waves and the fiddler crabs and the conch. I lay down and looked at the sky, and something in me felt light enough to rise right on up with the clouds and go spinning off in some kind of crazy, wild dance.
I jumped up. “Let's swim. Come on, Gerry. We'll teach you.”
“Just a little, Ben,” he said cautiously.
I felt so soft inside. “Okay, buddy. Bare butts, everyone.”
So we stripped, laughing and poking. My brothers' skinny white butts looked like little rabbit behinds as they hopped into the water.
Gerry reached out for Dylan's hand and Dylan took it. They didn't look at each other. It was just electricity, I guess. I remembered Mom doing that. She could be looking 180 degrees away, and Gerry's hand would go out and hers would be right there—like she had some kind of radar or something. When I saw her in my mind like that, it wasn't sadness I felt. It was joy. This sudden bolt of joy.
So I ran into the water and tackled Dylan and splashed Gerry. I yelled and they started screaming and splashing. Gerry's head got wet before he thought about it and he was pushing himself on the bottom with his hands and kicking his feet.
“You're swimming,” we yelled like wild hyenas, and launched ourselves backwards into the water. I picked up Dylan like a baby and pitched him thrashing and howling back into the water. He came up laughing and wanting more.
Gerry carefully tried coming deeper.
“You want me to throw you?” I asked.
“No.”
So I didn't—just like that. Because he said no. “Okay, I'll hold you up to practice swimming.” But I could see he didn't trust me.
So Dylan held him. I watched and played cheerleader. “Do your arms like this. Now kick. Try floating on your back. It's just like sleeping. Hold your arms out. Stick up your chin.”
Before too long, Gerry was ready for Dylan to let go.
But he sank. I snatched him up and he came up with his eyes big and round and scared, wiping water off his face with his palms. Blowing and puffing, but not crying.
“I think he beat Mom's record for the fastest sinking ever,” Dylan said, and we laughed.
“Want to try again?” I asked.
He shook his head.
And I almost remembered something. Like when you catch a whiff of something and your brain starts clicking like a motor trying to start. But it can't. You click and click and then it's lost. This time it felt like a cool breeze in the summer heat or a touch of shade in the summer sun. Something in it felt like closing my eyes and just drifting in cool calm. But I lost it, and as it floated away, I thought something in it was about Mom.
I waded back out of the water and sat on the beach, propping my arms on my knees, watching Dylan and Gerry play until I found myself staring at the sand between my knees and felt Dylan's fingers on my head.
They sat on either side of me. The quiet grew. A seagull squawked. The tiny waves kissed the beach. The lizards slithered behind us.
“Come on,” Dylan said. “Tide's coming in.”
I looked up and saw that the ocean was crowding out our little beach. The sand crescent was almost gone. Quietly we launched the dinghy. Quietly we puttered to the boat. Quietly we watched the sun set.
When night came, we sat in the cockpit with Dad and ate the lobster the fishermen had brought while we were playing in the water. Everyone had his own lobster tail. It was way too much. We were dripping butter down our chins and Dad was laughing at us. He kept telling Gerry to wipe his face and then wiping it for him.
It was fun. Sitting in the dark, dripping butter, and listening to Dad and Gerry laugh.
Dad asked us about our exploring mission, and Dylan told him about seeing the conch and finding the beach and going swimming.
“Ben made us take off our clothes!” Gerry said suddenly.
“You swam naked!” Dad said, pretending to be shocked.
Gerry nodded. “It was weird.”
“But you like to swim naked,” Dad said.
“I remember,” Dylan said. “The beach at the lake.”
Dad nodded. “Remember that green swimsuit with motor-boats all over it?”
Boy! Did I remember! Gerry wouldn't wear anything else when he was two and it was way too big.
Dad was wiping the butter off his fingers. Then he turned and took Gerry's hands and started gently wiping the fingers one by one.
“Once upon a time,” Dad said, “there was a boy named Gerry who always wore a green motorboat suit when he played in the water. Now Gerry had a teeny, tiny, baby bottom, and every time he stood up in the water the suit slipped right over his behind and down to his knees. An old man, who was Gerry's dad, fussed at a beautiful woman, who was Gerry's mom.”
Did Dad really stop to catch his breath or did I imagine it?
“‘The boy needs his string tied!' the old man said. Poor Gerry came to him, crying and dragging his suit around his ankles. The old man hoisted the suit, adjusted it around that teeny waist, and pulled on the strings. Nothing happened. The strings were just decoration!
“ ‘Just go without,' growled the old man. But little Gerry refused. He cried and tried to play in the water while desperately holding up his suit. The beautiful lady laughed. The old man laughed. And little Gerry cried and cried.”
Then Dad really did stop talking. He turned and looked straight at me.
“And suddenly,” Dad said, “out of nowhere came Gerry's biggest brother. Within a second, the brother's suit was off and he had tossed it in a ball to the beautiful lady. He scooped up little Gerry. The middle brother caught Gerry's suit as it fell to the water and then stripped off his own suit and brought them both to his mom.
“And the three boys marched into the water butt naked. And the mom and dad weren't laughing. They were smiling and being very careful not to look at each other because their eyes were all glittery. Then the lovely lady's fingers touched the old man's hand and without turning her head, she said very quietly, ‘I'm sure glad there's no one else at the beach today!'
“And then they laughed and laughed and the boys played and played. And that's the story of how Gerry learned to swim naked. The end.”
“Is that true?” Gerry asked.
“Every word,” Dad said, and leaned back to gaze at the sky. “Orion,” he said. “Dylan, look. There's Orion.”
Dylan looked. We all looked. Orion was bright, especially his belt.
I closed my eyes.
And that was the golden day. Afterward I remembered Orion and the dripping butter. I remembered the naked butts skipping into the water. I remembered the splashing, backwards free falls. I remembered that I had almost remembered, and I wondered what it was I had lost.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
BUT THE GOLDEN day ended. We bounced through the Berrys. Then we went farther north to the Abacos, the top of the Bahamas. We headed north along the cays on the eastern side of Great Abaco—Little Harbour, Man-O-War Cay, Green Turtle Cay.
Dad's hand was still bothering him. The scar site was tender, and the injured muscles refused to tighten enough to allow him to take a strong grip on a line. Fortunately, I was getting stronger. I didn't need his help anymore to get the main up the last few inches, and sometimes it was easier to tighten the genoa just by pulling on the line without using a winch handle. Dylan had gotten strong enough to manage the anchor, and Gerry had turned out to be good with a fishing pole. We got better and better at our new jobs as we cruised through the last few islands before we headed home.
At one island, we gathered lobster just like the Bahamians did. At another, we watched sharks cruising after a fishing boat. At another, we found a coconut and ate it. At one island, Gerry turned six and we remembered to say happy birthday. Each island was small and perfect. Each one was our anchorage for days and days.
Then we stopped at Spanish Cay. It was beautiful just like all the others. Lonely, small, and empty. Dad and I could do the double-anchor trick now without using the dinghy if the harbor was big enough or empty enough. We sat in the cockpit eating lunch and dozing in the midday sun. Dad finished his drink, crumpled his napkin, and tossed it in the trash. “Boys,” he said. “I've made up my mind.”
I was lying on the port side of the cockpit. I opened my eyes and looked at him. Dylan turned from where he was sitting on the stern, hanging his legs over the side. Gerry pulled his legs up under him and twisted Blankie around his hands.
“About what?” I finally asked when Dad didn't speak again.
“You are an excellent crew,” he said. “Ben, you're a born sailor. Dylan, your navigation is perfect. Gerry, you try hard and you're learning. I've watched you all and I know you can handle it. You're the best.”
I sat up. Dylan moved to the cockpit.
“And
Chrysalis
is a good boat. She's not pretty and she's not new, but she's strong and seaworthy. She can take us anywhere.”
“What are you saying?” I asked.
“I'm saying,” Dad said, “that if we wanted to, we could cross the Atlantic Ocean. We could sail around the world.”
Hot sun filled up the cockpit. I felt the sweat under my arms. “But we don't want to,” I said.
“No,” Dad said. “Not now. But later. First, we'll just go to Bermuda. Tomorrow we'll turn back to Marsh Harbour. We need to get the radio repaired. That guy in Nassau didn't know what he was doing. And I'm still not happy about that noise in the rudder. So we'll spend a few days in Marsh Harbour making repairs and stocking up. Then we'll head to Bermuda. It's not quite nine hundred miles from here. It'll take us five to seven days to get there, I'd guess.”
“You're joking,” I said.
“No,” Dad said. “I'm perfectly serious. Look what we've done, what we've learned. Now we have a chance to do even more, learn even more.”
“What about money?”
“We'll work. People do that. Like we did in Nassau. You work where you go, and if you don't like it, you leave. I could probably teach in Bermuda. You guys could sit in a classroom if you wanted, or we could keep on with the homeschooling. It wouldn't matter. After storm season ended, we could go to—I don't know—Spain maybe. Learn Spanish. Or to Portugal, where the great sailors came from.” He laughed. “It's what I've always wanted to do, and now we can do it.” He stood up. “Storm's coming, boys. Better get the boat ready.”
He went down below, but we couldn't move.
Gerry held Blankie pressed against his mouth. Dylan twisted in his seat and looked out at the water.
A small sailboat quietly motored into the harbor. We watched the couple drop their anchor, bring up drinks, and sit to rest under their bimini.
The wind picked up suddenly.
Chrysalis
started rolling. The couple scrambled down below, but we were still frozen.
BOOK: The Great Wide Sea
6.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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