Rising Tides
Page 44
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He wondered who this particular woman might be. Not that he stuck his nose in other people's business. He minded his own and expected his neighbors to do the same. But a man had a right to a little curiosity about things.
He pondered on how to bring the subject around when an under-the-limit she-crab found a tiny hole in his glove and snapped before he could toss her back.
"Little bitch," he said with a wince but without much heat.
"She get you?"
"Yeah." Jim watched her splash back into the waves. "I'll be back for you before the season's over."
"Looks like you need new gloves there, Jim."
"The wife's picking me up some today." He shoved the thawing alewives they used for bait into the trap.
"Sure helps matters to know you got a woman to do for you some."
"Uh-huh." Ethan shoved the steering stick with one hand, picked up the gaff with the other, and timed the chop and the distance.
"A man spends the day working on the water, it's a comfort to know his woman's waiting for him." A little surprised that they were having a conversation, Ethan nodded. "I suppose. We'll just finish up this line, Jim, then head in."
Jim culled the next pot, let the silence settle between them. A few gulls were having what Jim thought of as a pissing match overhead, screaming and diving and threatening each other over loose fish parts.
"You know, me and Bess, we'll be married thirty years come next spring."
"Is that so?"
"Steadies a man, a woman does. You wait too long to marry up, though, you get set in your ways."
"I guess."
"You'd be around thirty now, wouldn't you, Cap'n?"
"That's right."
"Don't want to get set in your ways."
"I'll keep that in mind," Ethan told him and shot out the gaff. Jim merely sighed and gave up.
when ethan wanderedinto the boatyard, Cam was at the skill saw and three young boys were sanding the hull. Or pretending to.
"You hire a new crew?" Ethan asked as Simon trotted over to investigate. Cam glanced to where Seth chattered away with Danny and Will Miller. "It keeps them out of my hair. You give up on crabs today?"
"Pulled in enough." He pulled out a cigar and lit it while he gazed thoughtfully out the open cargo doors.
"Rain's coming down pretty hard."
"Tell me about it." Cam sent an accusing scowl toward the streaming windows. "That's why those three were in my hair. The little one'll talk your ears blue. And if you don't have the others doing something to keep them busy, they make trouble out of thin air."
"Well." Ethan puffed out smoke, watched the kids send Simon into ecstasy with rough rubs and scratches. "At the rate they're going, they'll have that hull sanded down in ten or twenty years."
"That's something we have to talk about."
"Hiring on those kids for the next two decades?"
"No, work." It was as good a time as any to take a break. Cam stooped and pumped iced tea out of the cooler. "I got a call from Tod Bardette this morning."
"The friend of yours who wants the fishing boat?"
"That's right. Now, Bardette and I go back a ways. He knows what I can do."
"He offer you another race?"
He had, Cam mused, cutting the dust in his throat with the sweet tea. Turning it down had stung, but the sting had eased more quickly this time around. "I made a promise here. I'm not breaking it." Ethan tucked a hand in his back pocket and looked toward the boat. This place, this business, had been his dream, not Cam's, not Phillip's. "I didn't mean it that way. I guess I know what you put away to pull this off."
"We needed it."
"Yeah, but you're the only one who's given up anything to make it happen. I haven't bothered to thank you for it, and I'm sorry for that."
Every bit as uncomfortable as his brother, Cam stared at the boat. "I'm not exactly suffering here. The business is going to help us get permanent guardianship of Seth—and it's satisfying on its own account. Of course, Phil's bitching about our cash flow every time you turn around."
"That's his strength."
"Bitching?"
Ethan grinned around the cigar clamped in his teeth. "Yeah, and cash flows. You and me, we could never pull this off without him nagging us about the details."
"We may have more for him to nag about. That's what I started to tell you. Bardette has a friend who's interested in a custom catboat. He wants fast and he wants pretty, fitted out and sailing by March." Ethan frowned and worked timetables in his head. "It's going to take us another seven or eight weeks to finish this one, and that puts us into end of August, beginning of September." Calculating, he leaned back against the workbench, his eyes narrowed against the smoke. "Then we got the sport's fisher. I can't see us finishing her off before January, and that's pushing. That doesn't give us enough time to deliver."
"No, not the way things are. I can give it full-time and after crab season's over, I imagine you'll put in more hours here."
"Oystering isn't what it was, but—"
"You'll have to decide if you can juggle more time off the water, Ethan, and in here." He knew what he was asking. Ethan didn't just live on the water, he lived for it. "Phil's going to have to make some hard decisions before much longer, too. We're not going to have the cash to hire on laborers for a while yet." He blew out a breath. "Unless we count a couple of kids. This friend of Bardette's isn't ready to commit. He's going to come down and take a look at the place, and us, and what we've got here. I figure we make sure Phillip's around to sweet-talk him into a contract and a deposit." Ethan hadn't expected it to happen so soon, to have one dream grow and steal from the other. He thought of the chill winter months spent dredging, the rise and fall of the skipjack over hard chop, the long, often frustrating search for oyster, for rockfish, for a living. A nightmare for some, he supposed. But hope and glory for him.
He took the time to look around the building. The boat, nearly finished, waiting for willing and able hands under the hard overhead lights. Seth's drawings were framed on the wall and spoke of dreams and sweat. Tools, still shiny under a coating of dust, stood silent, waiting. Boats by Quinn, he mused. If you wanted to grab ahold of one thing, you had to let go of another. "I'm not the only one who can captain the workboat or the skipjack." He saw both the question and the understanding in Cam's eyes and jerked a shoulder. "It's just juggling time where it needs to be spent most."
He pondered on how to bring the subject around when an under-the-limit she-crab found a tiny hole in his glove and snapped before he could toss her back.
"Little bitch," he said with a wince but without much heat.
"She get you?"
"Yeah." Jim watched her splash back into the waves. "I'll be back for you before the season's over."
"Looks like you need new gloves there, Jim."
"The wife's picking me up some today." He shoved the thawing alewives they used for bait into the trap.
"Sure helps matters to know you got a woman to do for you some."
"Uh-huh." Ethan shoved the steering stick with one hand, picked up the gaff with the other, and timed the chop and the distance.
"A man spends the day working on the water, it's a comfort to know his woman's waiting for him." A little surprised that they were having a conversation, Ethan nodded. "I suppose. We'll just finish up this line, Jim, then head in."
Jim culled the next pot, let the silence settle between them. A few gulls were having what Jim thought of as a pissing match overhead, screaming and diving and threatening each other over loose fish parts.
"You know, me and Bess, we'll be married thirty years come next spring."
"Is that so?"
"Steadies a man, a woman does. You wait too long to marry up, though, you get set in your ways."
"I guess."
"You'd be around thirty now, wouldn't you, Cap'n?"
"That's right."
"Don't want to get set in your ways."
"I'll keep that in mind," Ethan told him and shot out the gaff. Jim merely sighed and gave up.
when ethan wanderedinto the boatyard, Cam was at the skill saw and three young boys were sanding the hull. Or pretending to.
"You hire a new crew?" Ethan asked as Simon trotted over to investigate. Cam glanced to where Seth chattered away with Danny and Will Miller. "It keeps them out of my hair. You give up on crabs today?"
"Pulled in enough." He pulled out a cigar and lit it while he gazed thoughtfully out the open cargo doors.
"Rain's coming down pretty hard."
"Tell me about it." Cam sent an accusing scowl toward the streaming windows. "That's why those three were in my hair. The little one'll talk your ears blue. And if you don't have the others doing something to keep them busy, they make trouble out of thin air."
"Well." Ethan puffed out smoke, watched the kids send Simon into ecstasy with rough rubs and scratches. "At the rate they're going, they'll have that hull sanded down in ten or twenty years."
"That's something we have to talk about."
"Hiring on those kids for the next two decades?"
"No, work." It was as good a time as any to take a break. Cam stooped and pumped iced tea out of the cooler. "I got a call from Tod Bardette this morning."
"The friend of yours who wants the fishing boat?"
"That's right. Now, Bardette and I go back a ways. He knows what I can do."
"He offer you another race?"
He had, Cam mused, cutting the dust in his throat with the sweet tea. Turning it down had stung, but the sting had eased more quickly this time around. "I made a promise here. I'm not breaking it." Ethan tucked a hand in his back pocket and looked toward the boat. This place, this business, had been his dream, not Cam's, not Phillip's. "I didn't mean it that way. I guess I know what you put away to pull this off."
"We needed it."
"Yeah, but you're the only one who's given up anything to make it happen. I haven't bothered to thank you for it, and I'm sorry for that."
Every bit as uncomfortable as his brother, Cam stared at the boat. "I'm not exactly suffering here. The business is going to help us get permanent guardianship of Seth—and it's satisfying on its own account. Of course, Phil's bitching about our cash flow every time you turn around."
"That's his strength."
"Bitching?"
Ethan grinned around the cigar clamped in his teeth. "Yeah, and cash flows. You and me, we could never pull this off without him nagging us about the details."
"We may have more for him to nag about. That's what I started to tell you. Bardette has a friend who's interested in a custom catboat. He wants fast and he wants pretty, fitted out and sailing by March." Ethan frowned and worked timetables in his head. "It's going to take us another seven or eight weeks to finish this one, and that puts us into end of August, beginning of September." Calculating, he leaned back against the workbench, his eyes narrowed against the smoke. "Then we got the sport's fisher. I can't see us finishing her off before January, and that's pushing. That doesn't give us enough time to deliver."
"No, not the way things are. I can give it full-time and after crab season's over, I imagine you'll put in more hours here."
"Oystering isn't what it was, but—"
"You'll have to decide if you can juggle more time off the water, Ethan, and in here." He knew what he was asking. Ethan didn't just live on the water, he lived for it. "Phil's going to have to make some hard decisions before much longer, too. We're not going to have the cash to hire on laborers for a while yet." He blew out a breath. "Unless we count a couple of kids. This friend of Bardette's isn't ready to commit. He's going to come down and take a look at the place, and us, and what we've got here. I figure we make sure Phillip's around to sweet-talk him into a contract and a deposit." Ethan hadn't expected it to happen so soon, to have one dream grow and steal from the other. He thought of the chill winter months spent dredging, the rise and fall of the skipjack over hard chop, the long, often frustrating search for oyster, for rockfish, for a living. A nightmare for some, he supposed. But hope and glory for him.
He took the time to look around the building. The boat, nearly finished, waiting for willing and able hands under the hard overhead lights. Seth's drawings were framed on the wall and spoke of dreams and sweat. Tools, still shiny under a coating of dust, stood silent, waiting. Boats by Quinn, he mused. If you wanted to grab ahold of one thing, you had to let go of another. "I'm not the only one who can captain the workboat or the skipjack." He saw both the question and the understanding in Cam's eyes and jerked a shoulder. "It's just juggling time where it needs to be spent most."