"Pohl, Frederick - The Sweet, Sad Queen of the Blazing Isles" - читать интересную книгу автора (Pohl Frederick)From Pohlstars version 1.0 THE SWEET, SAD QUEEN OF THE GRAZING ISLES
At the World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago in
1982 I was part of a panel discussing the work of the
late Cordwainer Smith (pseudonym of the Johns Hopkins political science professor, Paul M. A. Liriebarger).
Paul Linebarger was an author whom I published extensively as long as he lived while I was editing Galaxy
in the 1960s, and one whose work I greatly admire still.
He was not merely a contributor but a friend, for which
reason he tolerated my practice of changing almost
every title of the Cordwainer Smith stories I published.
(Other writers were less forgiving.) While talking about
this on the panel, it occurred to me that it was a long
time since I had made up a Cordwainer Smith story
title. So I amused myself (in the boring periods while
other people were talking) by inventing titles for stories
Paul had never written, but should have. The one I
liked best was this one. . . and so, that afternoon, as
part of my self-imposed regime of defacing four pages
of clean paper with writing every day of my life, I began
to write a story to go with the title. I do not think it is a
"Cordwainer Smith story' by any means. But I did borrow
one of his favorite devices in the writing of it-
perhaps some readers will detect which one.
In Twenty and Three, born at sea,
Her daddy endowed her a legacy.
In Twenty and Ten her brother Ben
Stole the inheritance back again.
She loves but she loses, she weeps as she smiles,
The sweet, sad queen of the grazing isles
BECAUSE I DID THE OLD COMMODORE A FAVOR, he promised I would always have a job with the Fleet.
I always did. I always do still, because even now I have the job.
The title and the pay and the working conditions have
changed a dozen times, and these times not the best of
them. But even Jimmy Rex knows I have that right to a
job, and grants it. Meanly.
The favor I did for Commodore Mackenzie was done
long before he was a Commodore, and I could have gone
to jail for it. Jason, he said, give me a month. I need an
extension on my loans, thirty days at most, and if you
give it me, you'll never have to worry again as long as
you live. I will worry, though, I said-a boy still in his
twenties, just a keypuncher in the records section of a
bank-I'll worry about the law, at least until the statute
of limitations runs out, because buggering the records is
a penal offense. Only if they catch you, he said, laughing,
and that they can't do. For you'll be at sea, where the
land law cannot reach. It was his first oaty-boat that was
building at the time, you see, and he had used up all his
wife's money and all he could cajole out of his first two
financial backers, and the third one, the big one, was
trying to make up his mind to plunge.
He was a powerful man even then, James Mackenzie.
No older than forty. no gigger than most but the blue
eyes flashed and the smile was sure, and he knew how
to talk a person toward any place he chose. But what
decided me was not Mackenzie. It was his young wife,
the lady Ella. She loved him. So I worked overtime one
night, and displayed his file, and changed a few dates,
sweating with fear. He had his thirty days. And the backer
did, at the last minute, come through with the money to
finish the boat, and so James William Mackenzie became
the Commodore.
He was a son of a bitch, Commodore Mackenzie, but
he had style. Fifty shares of stock I got and a title: Executive Assistant to the Fleet Captain. Very grand. Even
if the fleet was still only a single vessel. But even one
oaty-boat is a huge and costly machine, two hundred thousand metric tons of hull and works, towing twenty kilometers of tubes and pumps, with a deck the size of a
township. The Commodore did something you won't believe with that deck, or at least with the part forward of the bridge. He planted it. He pumped aboard half a million
cubic meters of San Francisco Bay bottom muck while
the boat was still at the builder's dock. The water ran off
through the scuppers, and the soil remained. He sailed it
up toward Tacoma for the deep-water fitting and steamed
slowly around the wettest, stormiest part of the Pacific
Coast until the rain had rinsed it clean. Seeds and slips
and bulbs and saplings came aboard, and by the time we
were on our first cruise there was grass there, and gardens, and the beginnings of a grove. For his dear lady
Ella hated the sea. So Owner's Quarters were an apartment below deck and a terrace above, and if you looked
only forward you could think you were in some fine manor
house with the weather always balmy and the lawn as
steady as any on Earth. The weather was always fine
because oaty-boats are never in bad weather. That is why
they are boats, instead of drilling platforms or moored
barges, so that they can seek out the places where sea
and air are best to do their work.
And for four years they were happy, and I was happy,
and the great boat steamed slowly through the fruitful
patches of the southern ocean, sucking up the cold and
pitting it against the warm, and, oh, how the money rolled
in! And we were happiest of all in the fourth year, when
Ella was pregnant. She was a tiny, frail woman, all spirit
and no stamina, and there were times when in even the
calmest seas she seemed unwell. Yet as a pregnant woman
she bloomed, prettier than ever and glowing with the child
inside. The baby was born, even prettier than her mother.
It was in the month of May, and so they called her May,
and then the happiness stopped because Ella died. It was
not childbirth alone-she had the best of doctors, flown
in from Sydney and San Francisco. It was cancer. She
had known she had it, and kept it secret, and wouldn't
let them cut it away because it would have cut away the
unborn child as well. Childbirth merely finished her off.
It was her wish to be buried on land. The Commodore
walked dry-eyed through the crew quarters and crooked
a finger at an oiler's mate named Elsie Van Dorn. A large,
plain woman, but a kind one. And when he came back
from the funeral, he took all the Fleet stock that was in
Ella's name and put it into baby May's, and gave me a
new job. "Van Dorn will be May's nursemaid, he said,
"but you'll be her godfather. That was a joke, I think,
because we had been told that money was his god. "You're
Managing Director of the May Mackenzie Trust, and if
you do anything wrong with it I'll kill you. Even if I die
for it. Even if I die first, for I'll leave a little sum of money
and some orders, and someone will be watching who has
a gun. He still owed me for the favor I had done him,
you see, but he remembered what it was.
And for seven years baby May grew, and wasn't a
baby any more.
There are little girls with a face so fine and a look so
sweet that they'll break your heart. May was one. She
was slight for her age, and all her life. Yet even when she
first toddled she would pause, and stick her thumb in her
mouth, and gaze out over the privet and the boxwood
hedges at the southern seas with an ancient mariner's look
of sadness and resignation that made you forget the rumpled hair and the dragging diaper; and when she was old
enough to talk and tie her shoes, I fell in love. It is not a
thing I want to have laughed at and so I will say no more,
but it's true. I did. I loved her truly and purely, and went
on doing so. Not as a godfather.
She had a father's love for those seven years, though.
She was the Commodore's only daughter and his only
legitimate child-the only child of his I saw then, for the
bastard was away at school and then at work in the Fleet's
landside offices. He was busy every minute, the
Commodore, but he always found time to see May and
to play with her, and to tuck her in at night. I was less
busy than that. There was not much work attached to
being the Managing Director of the May Mackenzie Trust,
for every penny of it was invested in the oaty fleet, two
ships, and then seven, and then a dozen; the money rolled
in, but every spare penny went back into building more.
So I competed with Elsie Van Dorn. I became May's other
nanny. They were the best years I have ever lived. I took
her with me around the boat. We watched the dry ammonia powder being pumped out of our belly into the hold
of a tanker, kerchiefs to our noses to keep from sneezing,
and we listened to the screaming hydrogen flow as it went
into the refrigeration ships, the huge red flags warning us
not to light a match or scratch a spark-as though anyone
in the Fleet were such a fool! We watched the huge slow
spinning of the low-pressure turbines as they transformed
the heat into power, and we waved good-by to the crews
of the scout skimmers as they went out to seek colder
depths and warmer air to steer toward. Every member of
the crew knew May, and petted her when she would let
them. They weren't truly a crew. They were more like a
city, for we had power workers and fertilizer chemists
and oceanographers and engineers and navigators and
cooks and cleaning men and fire wardens and a ship's
master and five assistants to guide us and half a dozen
gardeners for the greensward and the farms on the afterdeck.
There were more than eighteen hundred human
beings on board, and I think May knew the name of every
one. She knew none better than me. I was her godfather
and her friend. There were a hundred other children on
board, and four who were her special friends, but there
was no person who was more special than I.
And then the Commodore one morning came to breakfast in May's room,
as he always did when he was aboard,
and looked tired, admitted he'd had a bad night's sleep,
got up from the table, fell face down on his plate, and
died.
I could forgive the Commodore for dying. He didn't
plan to do it, and it happens to us all. But I will never
forgive him for dying with his will so written that his
bastardly bastard son, Ben, became May's guardian until
she was thirty years old.
He was aboard before the body was cold and had moved
into the Commodore's rooms before the smoke of the
Commodore's cigars was aired out. The will gave him the
voting rights on May's stock. I could forbid him to sell a
share. I could take the dividends and invest them anywhere
I chose-but where was there a better investment
than the oaty fleet?
For a month, then, I looked over my shoulder every
minute, expecting to see the Commodore's hired assassin,
but the assassin never came. All that came was a note,
one day, mailed from Papua New Guinea via the boat's
air service, and all it said was, "It's not your fault, this
time.
The Commodore never broke a promise to me but two.
The first was that he'd have me killed if I failed to protect
May's interest. I did fail her then, and knew I had, but I
didn't die. The other promise was that I would never have
to worry again, because after he died, for twenty years
and more. I did nothing else.
Later on, in Twenty-three,
The queen she married, but not to me.
Later still, in Twenty-four,
A scowling imp of a son she bore.
She bore him and raised him for years and miles,
The son of the queen of the grazing isles.
When May was fifteen, Van Dorn went at last back to
the engines, and May went off to school. She took her
four friends with her, the four other Mays with whom
she'd grown up, but Ben would not allow me to join them.
"You can keep your job and your pay, Jason, he said to
me, "but leave my sister May alone, for when she's ready
to fall in love it will be with a rich boy and a sensible boy
and a handsome boy, and not with a dirty old man who
sleeps with her socks under his pillow. That was a lie.
I told him it was a lie. But what was behind it was no lie,
for the love was still there. If May had been five years
older, if she had been a year older even, I might easily
have told her what I felt before I let her go. And might
have got a good answer, perhaps. There was thirty years
between us, and I am not handsome. But she was easy
with me, and trusted me, and had good reason for trust.
So Ben the Bastard fouled Owner's Quarters with his
fat dark wife and their sallow brat, Betsy, who never liked
me. Nor I her, to be sure. That whole family was repellent.
I never knew Ben's mother, but I knew who she was. A
file clerk in a lawyer's office. The Commodore seduced
her to get a look into the lawyer's contract files, where
there was something worth money for him to see. He got
his look. She got his child. He would never marry her,
of course, for she hadn't a dime, and when she pupped
his bastard, he was long gone away. I will say for the
Commodore that he acknowledged the son. He paid the
bills to bring him up, even when it was hard for him. He
sent the boy through school and gave him a place with
the Fleet, though not at sea, but would never give him
his name.
So it was Benjamin (which means "gift of God ) Zoll
(for that was the woman's name) who came aboard with
the will in his pocket and the resolve in his heart to reign.
Well, he had more than arrogance. He was a mean-
hearted man, but a hardworking one. The first day he was
over the side in a diving mask, discovering cracks in the
antifouling plates and surfacing in a fury. Twenty maintenance workers lost their jobs that day, but the next crew
kept the plates repaired, and we saved a thousand dollars
worth of steaming fuel a week.
An ocean-thermal generating boat lives off the temperature difference between deep water and sun-warmed
surface water. The top water warms the working fluid-
a halocarbon with a low boiling point-and it becomes
steam and goes through the low-pressure turbines to make
electricity; the electricity splits water into hydrogen and
fixes nitrogen from the air, and we sell what it makes.
The difficulty is the halocarbon working fluid. It is too
expensive to vent to the air. It must be condensed and
recycled, and for that we need something cold. The sea
gives us that. There is plenty of cold water in every deep
sea, but it is half a kilometer down or more, and so we
must pump it to the surface. Pumping and pumping.
Pumping cold water up from the deep. Pumping the working fluid through the solar collectors. Pumping water past
the electrodes to be split into its gases; pumping the gases
into the refrigerator ships to be carried away. Out of every
hundred kilowatt-hours of energy we make, ninety-seven
go into running the gear itself.
But that three percent left over makes us rich, for once
the boat is built it is all free.
Ben Zoll had never worked on an oaty-boat, and so he
had much to learn He learned it fast If he did not have
the Commodores name, he had at least inherited his drive.
May had the name. And bastard Ben kept her from
everything else, kept her from the presidency of the Fleet,
kept her from the voting rights to her stock.
He did not begrudge her money. She had the best
schools. She had horses to ride and clothes for a princess.
It was no sacrifice to Ben to allow her any money she
needed. The billions of land people hungered insatiably
for every grain of ammonia and every wisp of hydrogen
we could make. The company prospered under bastard
Ben.
And so did I, for my pitiful fifty shares of stock had
already made me a millionaire. I didn't need the job anymore. But I kept it, and I stayed on the O.T. Where else
was there to go? No sensible person would want to live
on a continent with all those writhing billions. Land people are a suing, assassinating, conniving bunch. And I had
formed the habit of living under the Law of the Sea-
And, besides, every now and then May came home to
visit.
She did not come often. But there were school holidays. Any time there were afew days together, she would
take the long five-hour flight from Massachusetts to the
Bismarcks or the Coral Sea or wherever we were grazing,
and in the summers, always, for weeks on end. It was
not May alone, for the four other Mays always came too,
to visit their families and to get away from the stink and
strife. They were beautiful girls. Girls to break a thousand
hearts, and I suppose they did. There was Maisie
Richardson, huge and blond and glowing with health, and
May Holliston-Peirce, the hydrologist's daughter, with
trusting blue eyes and a sweet, guileful tongue, and Tseling Mei, who became a movie star, and May Bancroft,
black and handsome and the wisest of them all. And May
herself. My May. She was always the most beautiful of
them all. There are pretty babies who grow up blotchy
or sullen or fat, but there was never a day in any company
when May was not the most beautiful there. They were
all almost of an age, May and the four other Mays, and,
oh, heaven, how they brightened up the old O.T.!
There was a May for any man's taste, and all of them for every
taste, for they were kind and clever, they were lovely and
loving. They chattered and whispered among themselves,
and if ever a joke went the wrong way or a word touched
a nerve, they made it up at once with a kindness and a
kiss.
And then there was Betsy.
Betsy Zoll. Bitch child of the bastard, Ben. If you take
the raw materials for two young women and give all of
the beauty and kindness and grace to one-say, to May-
what is left over is Betsy Zoll. May was a diamond. Betsy
was flawed glass. When the Mays were not aboard, Betsy
was the princess royal, and sometimes, on a good day,
she almost looked the part. But in their shade she drooped
and sulked. The shiny glass was beside true diamonds,
and its luster was gone. They let her tag along with them,
out of kindness. Out of envy, she wished them dead. So
the holidays were no joy for Betsy Zoll, and she couldn't
wait, couldn't wait for them to be over and the Mays back
in school so she could try to reign again.
And then there was a Christmas season coming when
Betsy was all smiles and triumph.
She must have hunted all over the boat for me, for I
was down in the boiler room to see if there was a need,
as ship's gossip said there was a plan, to buy new generators. "Well, Jason, she said, beaming so fondly that
my heart sank, "getting ready for Christmas?
The engineers and oilers watched us from a distance,
whispering to themselves, although no one needed to
whisper with the great coughing sigh of the low-pressure
turbines in every ear. I wished her a Merry Christmas
civilly and excused myself to let my office know where
I was-there was no reason not to now, you see, because
Betsy had already found me. When I finished with the
phone, she giggled. "Next week that will cost you a
quarter, she said.
I had known she would bring bad news, of course,
because that was her nature, but what she said was
astonishing. "It will cost money to use the ship's phone?
She pursed her lips and inclined her head. "To use the
phone, and to run your video, and to turn on a fan, yes,
she said, the sallow face and the pale eyebrows twitching
with pleasure. "Father says it's time we started charging
for all the electricity the crew uses. Fifty cents a kilowatthour to start, Father says.
"It makes no sense!
"Dollars and cents, she said gleefully. "That's our
electricity, old man. It's worth money. Why should we
give it away when we can sell it?
I drew back from her, because she had pressed her
face almost into mine and her breath was like a sewer.
Betsy was fifteen years old then, but the freshness of
youth had never touched her. I said, "We can't sell electricity, Betsy, only what we can make from it. If we want
to produce more to sell, we'll have to devote more space
to conversion processes, and where's the space to come
from?
"Good question, old man, she said triumphantly.
"Father has of course thought of all that. To begin with,
there's a thousand cubic meters wasted under the foredeck. We'll do our hydrogen electrolysis up there, which
gives more room amidships for the ammonia and-
"Owner's Quarters! I said.
"Old man, she lectured, "people like us won't live on
this little tub forever. We've got new boats building ten
times the size of this. We're going to move the flag.
The ship's gossip was not only gossip, then, and the
truth was worse than the gossip. It was worse than I knew,
in fact, for Betsy had saved the worst for the last. "When
May comes home for Christmas, we'll see what she has
to say, I said, for it was in the Commodore's will that
May's own quarters were hers forever. And I had delivered myself into Betsy's hands.
"When May comes home for Christmas, she parroted
spitefully, "what we'll see, old man, is that she isn't comming
home for Christmas. Why, Jason! Do you mean she never told you that she's
got a boyfriend? His name's
Frank Appermoy, and she's spending her Christmas with
him and his mother.
And May had not written me a word! As Betsy well
knew. She did not bother to disguise her triumph as she
glanced at her watch and moved her lips for a moment
before she spoke, that charnel breath well suited to the
words she said. "Allowing for the time differences, she
said, "I'd guess they're probably humping in his big water
bed on Hawaii right now. Tough shit, old man, she said,
and turned and left me standing.
Back in my office, the first thing I did was order up
all the data we had in store on Frank Appermoy and the
rest of the Appermoy clan. The second thing, while I was
waiting for the readouts, was to put through a call to May
at the Appermoy estate on the Big Island. It was 10 P.M.
on the 'Kona coast, and according to the butler who answered my call, Miss May and Master Frank were at a
luau and were not expected to return for at least two
hours. So I asked them to call me, and got down to the
hard-copy prints.
I already knew that the Appermoys were rich. I even
knew that they competed with us, or wanted to, though
their total production of nitrogen and hydrogen in a year
was less than that of the smallest of our boats. Their
process was not the same as ours, either.
The Appermoy money came, in the first place, from
radioactive waste. Old Simon Appermoy had been as
clever as the Commodore and as diligent. He had worked
out a plan, and then had sought out and signed disposal
contracts with every nuclear power plant he could find
and half a dozen national defense departments, all of them
so madly happy to find anyone who would take their waste
radionuclides away that they paid huge amounts for every
ton. Then Simon Appermoy vitrified the dirty stuff. He
dissolved it in glassy chunks, and then he did the clever
thing. He bought a couple of seamounts in the Pacific,
the tail end of the Hawaiian chain, the volcanic islands that
had risen from the sea bottom and been planed flat
by the waves over tens of millions of years. Whether the
sovereign state of Hawaii had any title to sell them was
a whole other question, but a clouded title never worried
old Appermoy-I'll say why in a minute. Then he drilled
holes in the flat summits of the seamounts and dumped
the glassy radionuclides in.
So far it was simple waste disposal. Enough to make
him rich, but only the beginning. His next step was to
become our competitor.
Some unsung genius on Appermoy's payroll had informed him that all that hot stuff a thousand fathoms down
would start a warm-water plume moving up toward the
surface; and that plume contained energy that Appermoy
could suck out with slow, huge, vertical-axis blades. And
so he did, and used that energy just as we did, to make
electricity that would fix nitrogen and split water into fuel.
But he did not suck all the energy out, because he wanted
some of that warmed plume to reach the surface so that
it could carry with it the organic detritus from the bottom
that had accumulated for tens of millions of years. If you
saw that trash in your living room, you would call it filth
and try to mop it away; but if you saw it in your garden,
it would delight your heart, for it was rich in organics.
And as it came to the surface, it fed microorganisms to
feed krill to feed fish. Any kind of fish Appermoy chose
to stock, in fact, because the steel skeletons that held his
works above the seamounts made marvelous habitats for
food fish arid game fish and every fish that swam in the
sea. I don't know what reward Simon Appermoy gave
the flunky who devised this plan. Most likely Appermoy
gave him cement overshoes and a quick drop without a
face mask to the surface of the seamount, where his poor
empty-eyed skull could watch the muck swirl slowly upward.
But it all worked. It was almost the opposite of our
process, you see. We pumped up cold water to condense
the warmed vapor that the sun boiled for us. Appermoy
warmed the waters of the deep with his radioactive filth-
to make much of the same end products, yes, but also to
gain what we did not, several thousand tons a day of high-
quality ocean fish to feed the billions on the land.
A rich family they were. A decent family they were
not. Their empire was built on poisons at the base, and
the money that gave Appermoy his start was more poisonous still. He got it the same way the Commodore did-
he married it-but while the Commodore married a lady,
what Simon Appermoy married was the spawn of four
generations of Mafia chiefs. That was how they got their
first contracts for disposing of radioactive waste. That
was how they kept competition away. Others saw what
Appermoy had done and tried to find seamounts of their
own, but if strikes did not befall them, unexplained accidents did.
So the family was foul; young Frank Appermoy himself, less so. There were no great sins to his record in the
datastore, unless you call polo playing a sin. He did not,
however, meet Ben Zoll's specifications except for the
first of them. He was rich. But you can't call someone
who lives to hit a little ball from horseback sensible, and
handsome he certainly was not. One of his horses had
thrown him and kicked him. He was not yet fully recovered, the datastore said, and the picture confirmed it.
Although the right side of his face had been very much
rebuilt since the accident, he looked odd. He did not look
terrifying or repulsive, but not even a mother could call
him handsome-not even the mother of all lies and
wickedness who had borne him, Simon Appermoy's
wretched wife.
And yet my May had chosen him to wed.
The scouts had found us a nice flow of cold water in
the deeps south of the Philippines, and that is always a
great treasure. Every extra degree of differential between
surface temperature and deep makes a great enhancement
in power yield when you work with such short margins
as ours. So we were thousands of kilometers west of
Hawaii, and yet it was well dark before May and her
gallant called me back. I was sitting on my private little
weather deck, gazing at the Southern Cross and wishing
I had been born a couple of decades later than I was,
when the phone rang.
There they were, the two of them. His arm was around
her shoulder, and he was grinning at me with that twisted-
but not evil-face, and May was looking apologetic but
ecstatic. "It has all gone so very fast, Uncle Jason. She
had never called me "uncle before. "I wanted to call you
a thousand times, but-
"It doesn't matter," I said, lying.
"You will come to the wedding, though, won't you?
Please?
As though there were any doubt of that! But the boy
added his pleas as well. "You're the only real family May
has, sir. None of her young men had ever called me "sir
before, either. "My mother says she'll try to be her mother,
too, since I never had a sister, and heaven knows, sir,
I'll do all I can to make her happy! And it wouldn't be
right to marry May if you weren't here.
The statute of limitations had expired long since, of
course, but there was nothing I wanted on land. Even on
an island. Especially an island belonging to the Appermoys. But he added the clincher: "You really have to,
sir, because we want you to give her away.
And I gave her away.
I gave her away on the steps of the mansion at South
Point, with Kilauea steaming behind the house, with a lei
around May's sweet neck and the priest wearing a microphone in his collar so that all the fourteen hundred
guests could hear, and Betsy grinning wickedly at me from
the first row, and the groom white-faced and sweating,
for he had had some kind of convulsion just before the
ceremony. He had good enough manners, young Frank
Appermoy. But I did not want to give May away to any
man, with good manners or bad, rich or poor, young or
old, as long as that man was not me. Especially not to
one who, as I learned, every now and then had blinding
headaches and convulsions. I wish that horse had kicked a little harder.
Whether they were happy or not I do not know..
I suppose they were. The next year they had a baby, James
Reginald Appermoy, and the year after that young Frank's
scrambled brain quit trying to keep him alive and my May
was a widow at twenty-two. The bitch mother-in-law said
she killed him.
At one and twenty to a husband was wed.
At two and twenty the husband was dead.
Her mother, no mother, called her no wife.
Her sister, no sister, plagued all of her life.
Her living was bounded in snares and guiles,
The sweet, luckless queen of the grazing isles.
May could not stay on the Big Island with the old
Appermoy woman spreading scandalous tales about her.
Ben the bastard invited her home. Not to the boat she
had grown up on, because her old home there had become
part of the new electrolysis plant, but to the homes on
the biggest of the new oaty-boats. Two million deadweight
tons! The oaties weren't boats anymore, they were floating islands, and there was room for a dozen large families
in owner's country on the foredeck. In spite of this, Ben
claimed at first that there was no room for me, but that
was only to make May beg. "Oh, well, he said, giving
in as he had planned to all along, "at least he can change
the baby's diapers. I'll find him quarters with the crew.
Quarters with the crew. And I custodian of May's vast
estate and a part owner in my own right, with my fifty
shares. May owned three Fleet shares to bastard Ben's
one, but they did us little good. For Ben had the will, and
control of the voting rights until she reached the age of
thirty. I could not believe the Commodore had been so
insane. Yet when I slipped away to Reykjavik and spoke
to a lawyer at the Sea court, he told me the will was firm,
and I went back to May with a shifty lie about where I
had been and watched her nurse the child. I did not know
what to say to her.
But May did not ask. In those first months she was all
for the child, singing to him, petting him, nursing him-
wincing now and then, for he was a terrible biter. And a
terribly ugly little brat, too. May would sit by the great
oval pool among the palms on the foredeck with Jimmy
Rex in her arms or whimpering in a bed beside her; and
I would be there to give her company; and surely, almost
every time, there would be Betsy as well, practicing her
dives off the high board or sipping mai tais with one of
the corrupt, pretty young men who were always her
houseguests. And always with one eye on May and the
child.
It was easy to know what Betsy wanted. Whatever
May had, that was it. She had even wanted that sorry,
spasmed Frank Appermoy-and had got him, at least
long enough for a tumble in his water bed, and made sure
I knew she had. Now she wanted Appermoy's child. At
first I thought all she wanted was a child. She could have
had one easily enough, with all those young studs sniffing
after her; I thought what stopped her was, a little, the
bother of marrying one of them or, most of all, the unpleasantness and pain of actually giving birth. In that I was wrong. What she wanted was James Reginald Appermoy, with all his tantrums and colics, and only because
he was May's.
So for half a year May was the perfect young mother
bereft, with the imperfect wretch of a babe. Then the brat
was weaned, and she seemed to come back to the world.
Perhaps she realized at last that she was lonely. She had
no friend but me on the oaty-boat. If anyone in the huge
seven-thousand-man crew showed signs of becoming a
friend, Betsy told Ben, and Ben transferred him away.
Even the four other Mays could come on board only for
a day or two at a time, with all the long flight to get there
and the other to leave again, for we were mostly far from
any land. So it was no wonder that my sweet girl began
to look elsewhere for pleasure. It was a house party here,
and a fox hunt there, and Switzerland for the skiing, and
Tokyo to see the shows. If she was to be away for just a few days,
she would leave Jimmy Rex with me, nasty
child whom I tried with all my heart to love. If it was a
matter of weeks they would both be gone, and I had
nothing to do and no one to do it with, for my friends
were suddenly needed badly on another boat as well. I
wished for another Elsie Van Dorn, but Elsie herself was
now a second engineer on the old boat, and I did not want
to involve her in Ben's anger. So I had a succession of
cooks' assistants and young things from the typing pool.
None lasted more than a few weeks. The ones who were
not kind enough and strong enough to put up with the
brat I had to send back to their regular work, and the
others Ben transferred away.
And the unsigned messages came in. One a month.
Some came from Australia and some from Seoul, and one
from Capetown, but they all said much the same thing:
"If you value your life, help her now.
But how was I to do that?
I did not need the unknown assassin's reminder to want
to help my May. I made an excuse to slip away again and
this time found a better lawyer, or at least a- more high-
priced one. He did not simply tell me the Commodore's
will could not be broken. He gave me two days of his
time, quoting the Law of the Sea and citing precedents.
He charged accordingly, and it all came out to much the
same. Ben had the law on his side until May was thirty.
It was the only time I was on land that year. I thought
of following May to her parties, to see if she would talk
freely off the boat, or more truthfully just for the pleasure
of being near her. I could have done it. I would have, I
surely would have, if she had said a word or given a look
to say she wanted me. The word never came. The look,
maybe.
She was off to New York City this time, May and the
child. I carried Jimmy Rex to the airplane and handed
him over to her at the door. "New York for the opera
season'? I didn't know you loved opera that well, I said,
and May smiled at me.
"A little culture would do neither of us any harm,
Jason, dear," she said, and paused, and thought for a moment, looking out over the wide, warm sea. I knew that
look. I almost expected to see her with her thumb in her
mouth and her hip-huggers sagging to the ground, for it
was a lost and thoughtful look. The pilot was flipping his
control surfaces back and forth and glancing back over
his shoulder at us, for he had a schedule to keep, but May
stared at the sea for some time. Then she turned back to
me as though she were about to speak.
She did not. She looked past me, over my shoulder,
and changed her mind. "Good-by, then, dear Jason, she
said, and kissed me. She took the baby from my arms
and was gone.
As I stepped back to get out of the way of the VTO
jets, I bumped into what had changed her. It was brother
Ben. He was looking worn and fretful, for all he was only
a dozen years older than May, and sullen Betsy was
scowling at his side.
The hydrogen flame screamed and licked against the
baffles, and the plane lifted in a blue-white burn too bright
to look at. Betsy turned to me. "We came to say good-
by, she said nastily, "but I guess May doesn't want to
waste good manners on the family.
The plane was a kilometer up now, and moving away.
Ben shaded his eyes to squint after it. "Jason, he said
without looking at me, "let's talk business. I'll buy your
stock.
"You will not, I said, "for I don't want to sell to you.
He gave me a hooded look. It was the look of a man
who has some pieces to a puzzle, but not enough to make
the pattern clear. "Have you been enjoying your trips to
Iceland? he asked.
I had never doubted that he was spying on me. I didn't
bother to answer. He said, "I'll pay you more than your
shares are worth.
"They're worth more to me than they are to you, Ben,
I said, and turned my back on him. As I walked to the
lift I could hear him coughing behind me. He was a sick man.
I went to my desk and began to study my reports, but
I did not have my mind on them. Part was on May, as
part of my mind was always. But part was on Ben. I
wished the bastard no good at all, but I did not wish him
dead. I knew who would inherit his stock when he died.
And the Reykjavik lawyer had told me that Ben could
name his successor as May's guardian and, for all that
she was years younger and the guardianship a mockery,
I knew who he would name.
I could not get out of my head that May had been about
to say something to me before she left, and so I decided
to hear what it was. Three days after she was gone, I
called in my assistant and told him he was on his own for
a week, and took the same plane.
We were cruising in the Philippine sea at the time, so
it was VTO jet to Manila, then orbital craft to the great
floating terminal off Sandy Hook, and a helicopter to the
roof of my hotel.
I do not like the land. I do not like the crowds and the
roar and the stink of the land, and especially I do not like
a city. I had taken rooms in the same hotel where May
was staying, and I did not intend to leave it except to see
her. So as soon as I was settled in my suite I walked out
into the hall and took the elevator a dozen flights and
knocked on the door. Tse-ling Mei opened it. "Uncle Jason! she cried, with pleasure and surprise in her voice,
and maybe a little worry, too. "Oh, come in, please!
All four of the other Mays were there. So was little
Jimmy Rex, bawling at the walls of his room because he
was being made to take a nap, but my May was not.
The young beauties sat me down and clustered around
me like meadow flowers in the spring. "Some tea? asked
Mei, and, "Have you eaten? from Maisie, and "What
Jason probably needs most is a drink, from May Bancroft, and from May Holliston-Peirce, "Oh, tell us what's
new on the boats!
So we chattered for a while and I felt almost at ease,
though concerned that they seemed to have no idea when
May would be back. Then May Bancroft sighed and said,
"Oh, hell. We all turned and looked. Jimmy Rex was
standing in the doorway, glowering at us, escaped from
his crib and come to make us unhappy. In one hand he
waved the perfectly dry diaper he had managed to squeeze
out of. With the other he guided himself as he pissed
deliberately on the Auhusson rug. Do you see what a
foolish lottery we gamble in when we make a child? He
could have taken after his mother, May. Even after his
father, and been nothing worse than a fool. But in the
random lottery of the DNA exchanges he had caught the
very soul of May's bitch mother-in-law, and how heavily
that has cost me since.
It cost me then, too, because it broke the mood of the
party. I got up to go. Tse-ling Mei was holding the brat
down while Maisie tried to pin the diaper back on him,
and May Holliston-Peirce was bringing towels from a
bathroom to mop up the rug. May Bancroft said, "I'll
walk you to your taxi, Uncle Jason. I had no intention
of a taxi, but the look on her face stopped me from saying
so.
So we walked through the hall with her hand in mine,
and dropped like stones in the elevator-my heart in my
mouth, for there are no such high-speed lifts on the oatyboats-and she walked me through the lobby to a back
entrance, and around a corner and another until she found
a taxi that suited her. I was dressed for the Philippine
sea, not New York in November, and May not much more
warmly, not to mention the crush, and the stink, and the
noise. But I let her keep up her chatter all the way without
interrupting. Tse-ling Mei had been given a marvelous
new part, and one May was to be married and another to
run a hospital somewhere in New Jersey or Indiana, and
May Bancroft herself was back in school for a law degree.
And then she peered inside a parked cab and nodded her
head and leaned forward to kiss my ear. She did not give
me just a kiss. She gave me an address and a room number,
and then turned and hurried off without looking back.
I had wit enough to change cabs and walk a bit before
I hailed the second one, although I nearly froze while I
was doing it, but in five minutes I was there.
The address was the seediest of old hotels. The room
number was on the seediest floor. The air in the hall was
choked with marijuana fumes and the smell of human
sweat, and the door was opened by a man of forty or
more. He was wearing pants that he had zipped but not
belted, no shoes, and a shirt that he had left unbuttoned.
He was a sober-looking, serious sort of a man, not what
you would expect to find in a whore's hangout like this,
far from good-looking but solid.
And behind him, lying on an unmade bed, wearing a
thin muumuu, was my May. Her expression was filled
with fear.
"It's not what you think, Uncle Jason, she said to me
at once, and to the man, "Hurry! Let him in!
The man moved quickly to do it. He pulled me in by
the elbow, showing surprising strength for a pudgy little
man not much younger than myself. He stuck his head
out into the hall, and looked both ways before he closed
the door. Then he turned to me.
"I'm Jefferson Ormondo, he said, "and I'm an investment banker. I apologize for this place and the way
we look, but the windows don't open and the heat won't
turn off. And Ben Zoll has willing ears in too many places.
He was buttoning his shirt while he spoke. He sat to put
on his shoes and said, "I'll take a look around the lobby
to make sure it's all right. May will tell you what's going
on. And he was gone, and there I was in a sweaty halfhour room with my sweet May gazing up at me out of a
rumpled bed.
"We're going to get Ben's guardianship set aside, she
said.
"That's impossible, I said-with my voice, but I know
that what my face was saying was, That's unfair, May, to try such a thing without me!
And she answered my face.
"Jason, dear, it's no secret from you. I can't do it
without you.
"The best lawyers in Reykjavik say you can't do it at
all, I told her, "for the will is in proper form.
"But what if it is forged, Jason?
I goggled at her.
"Forged, she said, nodding. "Not all of it. Just the
matter of dates. The guardianship was supposed to stop
when I was twenty, and Ben had someone get into the
datastores and add ten years to the time.
Now, that was getting close to a line of conversation
I did not want to pursue. I didn't know-I have never
known-if the Commodore ever told his daughter about
the favor I had done him. She did not say anything then,
or ever, to give me an answer one way or another, but
hurried on: "And that is fraud, Jason, and somebody may
well go to jail. But proving it! It's so hard. And Ben has
everything on the boats bugged, of course. I couldn't
speak to you there-and besides, she said, sitting beside
me and touching my arm, "he knows you're smarter than
I am, so he watches you twice as hard.
I said, "You don't have to explain anything to me,
May. But I wanted explanations all the same. I got them.
The plump little bald-headed man, Ormondo, worked for
the bank that held Ben's stocks, and it had seemed to him
that there was something funny about the records. For
one thing, the will should have existed in several data-
stores, not just the bank's. But the Commodore's own
bank had been swallowed up by another and its records
were unavailable, and in the hall of records where the
will had been filed the system had crashed, all the data
lost.
Ormondo came to believe that there was a forgery. He
could not prove it, but it made him curious to look further.
There was plenty to find.
Ben had been milking the fleet. He had set up corporations
of his own to buy the hydrogen from the oatyboats and to sell the ammonia on land, and to lease to us the pilot cutters that prospected for cold, deep water, and
even the aircraft that carried us to shore. Everything the
Fleet bought cost a little more than it should, and everything we sold went for a little less, and the difference went
to Ben.
And then Ormondo had met May at a party, not by
chance, and whispered in her ear.
And ever since then, for the best part of a year, the
two of them had been searching out records and interviewing people who might know things. Whispers had got
back to Ben, surely. But Ormondo was a careful man.
And they had the pattern almost complete.
"The next step, Jason, she said, "was going to be to
talk to you. I almost asked you to come with me this time.
I'm glad you didn't wait to be asked.
"Of course I'll do everything you want, I assured her.
She smiled sweetly and touched my arm. "Of course
you will, dear Jason. There's one other thing.
She looked embarrassed. She pursed the pretty lips,
hesitating, her eyes gazing at the chipped paint on the
ugly wall as though she were staring over the wide sea.
Then she said, "I need a husband, Jason.
She had caught me unaware. "A husband?
"I need a husband for me, and for help in this fight,
because it will be a terrible one. And most of all I need
one because of Jimmy Rex. He must have a father, Jason.
Not a silly boy. A grown man, wise and kind and sensible.
It doesn't matter if he's older than I am. It only matters
that he be someone I can trust and love with all my heart.
These were the words I had been dreaming of hearing
for all the long years. I could hardly speak. "Of course,
my dearest, I said, and reached out for her, and was
puzzled by the astonishment that sprang into her eyes.
It was a terrible fight, indeed. For months we were
more on Iceland than in our propper home, all of us. That was
a high enough price to pay in itself, for me. Iceland
is where the Law of the Sea is administered, and indeed
it is land that has come from the sea, bubbling up in roaring
steam, some of it within the memory of living men. But
it is still the land, and all the geothermal steam and hot
swimming pools do not make up for losing the warm
breezes of the southern seas.
But we won. Or mostly we won. Bastard Ben might
well have gone to jail indeed, if he had not gone to the
hospital instead and did not come out alive.
So it was Betsy who lost the suit, not Ben, and she
did not lose it all. We could not prove the falsification of
the will. The litigation was long-drawn and savage, and
three of our witnesses disappeared, but the records of the
dummy corporations did not. So May settled at last for
a division. The guardianship was annulled. All Ben's contracts to buy and sell were voided. The Fleet was divided
in two. Half the oaty-boats went to Betsy, the rest, with
half the money from Ben's loot, to May. And Betsy began
at once to build more.. . but we were at ease at last, back
at home on that first old boat, steaming slowly through
the Strait of Malacca, and the Commodore's daughter was
at last the undisputed queen of the grazing isles. She ruled
us happily, along with her child.
And with her husband. Who was not me.
She was the kindest of women, my May, but she could
not be kind enough to allow me to forget how foolishly I
had missed her meaning when she was trying to tell me
that she meant to marry Jefferson Ormondo.
For the sake of her son and to claim her due,
At four and twenty she wed number two.
They battled and won in the struggle to keep
Her fair-owned gifts from the generous deep.
Blest was the respite from worries and trials
In this short happy time for the queen of the isles.
Although I had lost her again, it was a good time. May
was happy. Jefferson Ormondo had the good sense to be
happy-well, what else could he be? Even little Jimmy
Rex became more tractable, since he was away from
Betsy's constant need to spur on his own born-in meanness.
We even made a sort of peace with Betsy herself. It
was not easy or comfortable. Yet she came to pay a visit
to our quaint old thermal grazer, and then there was nothing to do but for us to visit her great new flagship. Though
I took no joy in seeing Betsy, I was glad enough of the
trip. Her Works Captain was a decent enough man-we'd
sailed together under the Commodore-and besides, I
wanted to see some of their engineering.
What we want for the heat exchangers is the hottest
surface water we can get, the top meter if we can get it,
for that's where the sun's heat is strongest. But when you
pump a hundred tons a second, the suction tubes are not
fastidious about what they take. So when Captain Havrila
took me up on his bridge, beaming with pride, I knew
what he was going to show me. I'd seen it from the air.
The boat was surrounded with a screen that lay thirty
meters away from the hull in all directions; I'd seen it,
and realized at once that there was a shallow lip all around.
"You pump direct from the hull, I guessed, ~ and you've
trapped surface water in a moat. The screen's to keep out
fish?
He grinned ruefully. "I knew once you laid eyes on it,
Jason, I wouldn't have to say a word. We pump from a
reservoir ten meters deep, but all that comes in to replenish it is the very top of the sea.
"It's a nice solution. I complimented him. "But doesn't
it cut down your maneuvering, with all that drag?
"It destroys it, he said happily, "but we're not going
anywhere very fast anyway. And we've been getting delta-Ts of twenty and up
-well, most days, he corrected himself. "Tell me, Jason, what are you doing about
organic fouling?
"Same as you, I guess. Reverse fluse every ten days
with little plastic marbles. We lose nearly half of them
every time, though. The sea is full of little living things
that want something to cling to-unfortunately, they don't
care what. The lining of our intake tubes is as good a
place as any. There's not too much trouble with the deep-
water intakes, because the water down there is too cold
for them to be very active. But the surface intakes are
another story.
"We're recovering nearly a hundred percent on the
surface, he boasted. "It's all trapped in the moat, you
see, so we just scoop them up again.
"Good job. But what do you do when the perimeter
screens begin to foul? And he laughed and offered to
buy me a drink, for that was the weakness in the system.
I took his drink, and a lot more than one over the three
days we were there. I had no quarrel with Betsy's captains
or Betsy's crews, but I did not like Betsy's friends. I didn't
like May's liking them, either. The women called themselves actresses or models-polite lies.
The men lied less politely. They called themselves men. There was Simon
Kellaway, Las Vegas-born, slim and quick and temporarily living at sea on
Betsy's charity because there was a murder charge in Nevada that he couldn't hush up.
There was Dougie d'Agasto from Miami Beach, tall and
fair and a pimp's recruiter if I ever saw one. They came
from Chicago and Los Angeles and New Orleans, and
they all had money, or acted as though they did, and I
did not believe that even one of them had got it inside the
law.
The one I liked least was d'Agasto, the handsomest
and emptiest of men. What I liked least of all was that
May did not reject his company. They sat together at
dinner the first night. I assumed he was Betsy's bedmate.
I assumed that of every man I saw her with, for she was
always, and after Ben died openly, available, accessible
and even aggressive about it. Even, to my surprise, with
me, for at two in the morning she knocked on my door
to announce that she wasn't in the mood for sleep. When I told her that I was,
she shrugged and said, "Well, you'd
probably be no good to me anyway, old man, especially
after you've starched your sheets already over May. She
left without protest, and I-I wished we had never come
there.
So I spent my time as far away from Betsy and Betsy's
friends as I could. Captain Havrila fed me in the ship's
officers' mess. We talked shop-openly-pretty openly,
because there were things I did not mention to them, and
I know there were a good many they didn't tell me. A lot
of what we talked about, though, was no secret. I knew
that Betsy was diversifying, because what she sold to the
land became public knowledge the minute she sold it. I
didn't know, but I would have found out shortly anyway,
that she was planning to try total manufacture-refining
steel, even. Electric refining, mostly. "The ships that come
in are in ballast anyway, said their marketing chief, Jim
Mordecai, "so they might as well carry ore-and we've
got the electricity-and we've got a lot of extra oxygen,
because if we keep on expanding L-H-2 production the
way we're going, the extra oxygen's sure to depress the
world market. And then there's pollution.
"Pollution? Out here? I asked.
"Here's the place for it, Jason, at sea, where it won't
make the land worse than it is-although- he grinned-
don't know if the folks in Tahiti are going to agree with
me. He glanced at the captain before he went on, "We
do have a kind of pollution problem, though. The captain
must have signaled it was all right, because he completed
his thought. "We're pumping so much deep water here
that the dissolved CO2 doesn't dissipate right away. We're
up to pretty nearly five hundred parts per million.
"Oh? I didn't notice anything.
"Well, you won't, boomed Captain Havrila. "As far
as we can tell there's no health risk-and actually Miss
Betsy says she kind of likes it. It does make the plants
grow in her garden! Care for a brandy now, Jason?
I did. I had one. I even had two with them, but they
all had work to do, and I couldn't keep them from it. So I vonulteered to take Jimmy Rex for a walk,
and we headed for the gardens so I could see for myself, and indeed it
was true. Bougainvillea and orchids and flowering ginger-everything was lush and beautiful.
Jimmy Rex was being not particularly awful, for he
liked picking flowers. He crushed them as soon as he
picked them, threw them away and picked more, but there
were plenty of flowers. I let him do pretty much as he
pleased, following slowly after him and thinking the unpromising thoughts of an aging bachelor, till I heard voices
and saw him dart into a cluster of dirty-boy shrubbery.
"Come back, James Reginald, I shouted. For a wonder,
he did, looking abashed. I heard someone moving away
out of sight, and in a moment some other someone came
around the shrubs to see who I was.
It was Dougie d'Agasto. He was partly dressed in shorts
and unlaced tennis shoes, carrying a sports shirt slung
over one bare shoulder. "Oh, it's you, Jason, he said,
smiling-at least I give him the credit of saying that he
probably meant it for a smile, though it had a lot of smirk
in it. "I figured if Jimmy Rex was here you couldn't be
far behind. I'm glad you two didn't get here ten minutes
sooner!
Well, I had no interest in his tacky whoring in the
bushes. I put my hand on Jimmy Rex's shoulder-he was
behaving well enough to let me-and said, "We were just
going.'
He nodded absently, stretching, yawning, pulling the
shirt on over his head, but he kept his eyes on us. "You're
smart to keep close to the kid. he said.
I said stiffly, "I don't let him near the rail. D'Agasto
looked at me as though I were talking a foreign language.
"I'm not talking about accident, for God's sake. I'm
talking about snatch. Kidnap, he amplified, and this time
it definitely was a smirk. "Do you know what that kid's
worth for ransom'?
Now, if you'd met d'Agasto on a tennis court, say,
you might easily think he was just another bright and
handsome young sportsman, because he had the wide-eyed good humor
and the trim, strong body of healthy
youth. I had never thought that. Not for a single second,
because before I ever met him I knew he was some sort
of second-rate kin to one of the lesser Mob families in
Florida. Even if I had ever thought it, listening to him
talk would have straightened me out in two sentences.
The way his mind worked!
And went on working. "What is it you've got now,
Jason? he ruminated. "Eighteen boats in May's fleet?
There's probably construction loans against every one of
them, but, say, ten million dollars apiece average net
worth? And that's only pocket change, because when old
lady Appermoy kicks off, there's no heir left but the kid.
Why, you've got your hand on a billion dollars, pal! What
say you just quietly sneak him on the plane when I leave
and don't say anything until I'm in San Francisco-we'll
split the ransom fifty-fifty!
He was watching my face, so he winked and turned
away and left without waiting for an answer. Jimmy Rex
stared after him with scared delight. "Was he just making
a joke, Uncle Jay'? he asked.
"What a stupid question! Of course it was just a joke!
But it wasn't.
I was glad to be back on our own ship, and the first
thing I did was have a talk with the security chief. From
that moment on there was somebody near Jimmy Rex
every minute he wasn't with me or his parents.
I didn't stop worrying, but after a while I didn't worry
as much. For May and Jefferson Ormondo it was the best
time of their lives. When they walked about the boat, they
were hand in hand. He was a good husband to her, for
all he was no beauty, and would have been a good father
to Jimmy Rex if the boy had been capable of being a son.
The money grew and grew. The more fuel we made,
the more hungrily the land people clamored to burn it.
We could not fix nitrogen fast enough to meet the demand
for fertilizer, and so the price went up and up. We weren't
The only boats on the sea anymore - now and then we'd catch sight of Japanese ones, or
Australian. We built more
of our own, and bigger ones, and yet there was plenty for
all.
When Jimmy Rex was three years old, we moved us
all to the newest and hugest oaty-boat on the sea. Two
million eight hundred thousand tons. We could have run
a nation off the power we produced. It was well along in
the shipyards before Jefferson Ormondo ever saw it, but
he cherished it as his own, for the last of the fitting, and
most of the owner's country, was his own design. May
encouraged him to plan on a grand scale. And grand it
surely was-but I had been happy enough on the old one.
"You're a sentimental man, Jason, said May when I told
her as much, "and a very dear one to me. But it's such
an old boat. And little-why, it doesn't even have a decent bridle path!
She was trying to tease me cheerful-she knew I'd
never ridden a horse. "So we're going to sell it for scrap
metal, then?
"No! Then less emphatically, "I don't think so. What
can we do with it, Jason? The Gulf of Mexico?
I'd thought of that myself, but it wasn't good sense.
There was good grazing in the gulf for smaller boats, but
it didn't seem to me there was enough sea room for an
aging oaty-boat to get out of the way of bad weather.
"Maybe the Brazil Triangle, I said-that was good, too,
from the eastern coast of South America to the African
Gold Coast-but how did you get it there? It would never
go through the Canal, of course, or even the Straits of
Magellan, and the seas south of Cape Horn would probably sink it.
"I'll think of something, I said, and after a
while I did. I sold it to May's old in-laws. They moored
it for a fixed OTEC station in the straits off Lahaina, for
the gray whales to stare at. It was no joy dealing with the
old witch, but she made us a fair price, and even sent
May a wedding present into the bargain-a year late and
a lot too little, but May took it kindly and even offered
to let Jimmy Rex visit his grandmother now and then out
of gratitude.
But I missed the old boat. The big one wasn't just
bigger. It was better designed. We put in a new cold-
water intake system, with a single pipe five kilometers
long and six meters wide. The thicker the pipe was, the
better the surface-to-volume ratio, so the water didn't
warm up as much on the way up. It does warm a little,
of course. But the dissolved gases expand a little, which
tends to cool it-in fact, we had to install relief valves
along the pipe to bleed out the excess pressure; otherwise
it would have ruptured. We were reliably getting a delta-T
of 26 or 27-once even 29 for five days in a row. But the
damn pipe was so long it wanted to curl up like spaghetti,
and so we had to divert scout subs from prospecting for
cold-water lenses to pushing it back into shape almost
every day. And because we were bringing up so much in
the way of nutrients, the fishing fleets from Korea and
Peru followed us around. I didn't begrudge them the fish,
but I liked it better when we couldn't see other ships on
the horizon.
May just laughed at me when I said as much. "You
just don't like to change anything, she told me, halfway
between teasing and tenderness. We were on a lower
deck, Jimmy Rex pretending to shoot the dolphins that
were larking around our moat. Naturally, I'd installed the
same sort of warm-water trap as Betsy's flagship, and
naturally, the dolphins weren't going to let a little two-
meter-high screen keep them from jumping over into a
new playpen.
I said, "I like things to get better, not just different.
She sighed and pulled Jimmy Rex back from the rail.
"And isn't this better'?
"It is in some ways.
"Name one it isn't!
I pointed over the screen, at the open ocean waters.
"We didn't see dead squid floating around the old boat.
"Jason, be fair! That's not the boat's fault. There are
fish kills all over this part of the Pacific- And then, out
of the corner of her eye, she saw that the boy had climbed
up onto the rail to get a better make-believe shot. "James
Reginald Appermoy! she yelled, and dragged him back
just as he was about to go over.
Well, it wouldn't have hurt him much, a twelve-meter
fall into a warm bathtub, but he wouldn't have liked it,
either. He was good for almost a minute, and even let me
put my arm around him for almost that long. But I was
still worrying about the squid. A dead fish at sea is a
curiosity; as soon as anything slows down enough to be
dying, something else is sure to eat it. "I hear they're
worse off on Hawaii, I said, and May said:
"Oh, that reminds me. Jimmy Rex is going to see his
grandmother next week.
I said nothing, but I didn't have to. "It's all right, she
reassured me.
"It's all right if he can take Pan and Jeremy along, I
bargained-they were the two security men Jimmy Rex
hated least.
"Well, if you don't think Grandma's feelings will be
hurt- She saw my eyes and dropped it. ~They'll go,
she promised. "But after all, the Appermoys are family.
And so's Betsy, and when Jimmy Rex comes back from
Hawaii, I'm thinking of inviting some of her friends over.
"Betsy's family, I admitted, "but the trash she keeps
around her are not.
"But they're amusing, Jason. With all the space we've
got now, it's no trouble to have a few guests.
"That, I said, "is another way the old boat was better.
But I could not really argue against family. And if we
entertained Betsy and her friends, then Betsy must entertain
us and ours, so May and Jeff and the boy and the
four Mays and I flew over to visit good queen Betsy. Our
flagships were not usually very far apart-I speak geographically.
With the scouts for both our fleets getting
better at finding the best delta-Ts and the hydrologists
improving their predictions about how stable they were
and the navigators getting more skilled at plotting courses
that would graze where the deltas were greenest- well,
there are only so many optimal solutions to a problem,
especially as we each copied the other's technology as
soon as it was proved. It was no wonder that we often
came to the same solutions. And the same problems, for
looking over the side of Betsy's flagship with Havrila by
my side, I said, "I see you've got dead squid, too.
"The fishing fleet's complaining, too. He nodded
gravely and then laughed. "Best thing we ever didn't do,
he said, "was diversify into fishing.
"We thought about it for a while, too, I said, "and
decided to stay out of perishables. There are plenty of
other fields!
And there were. We were getting into dozens of them.
Mining the hot heavy-metal brine from the springs of the
East Pacific Rise. Scooping up manganese pellets from
the ocean bottom. The only "perishable we got into was
fresh water-we built two experimental sailing tugs, huge
devils with revolving masts to catch the winds, and used
them to tow icebergs from Antarctica to the Persian Gulf.
All the ventures prospered-though nothing more than
the ocean-thermal that was our core money spinner-
even the icebergs. They were Jefferson's own pet. He
was land-born and land-oriented, and he could not resist
something that would make things better for people on
land. He went off to supervise the project now and then,
a week at a time. I didn't like his leaving May alone. I
liked it least when it began to be so that, as Jeff was
leaving, some of Betsy's giddy friends would arrive. The
one who came most often was Dougie d'Agasto.
There was bound to be trouble, and it came. Dougie
stayed a day too long. Jeff came home, and he must have
been looking for his family with field glasses as the plane
came in, for he didn't bother to go to their rooms. He
dropped his bags with a deckhand and headed straight for
the pool. May. looking ethereally ravishing in her skimpy
suit, was watching to keep Jimmy Rex from drowning
himself-heaven knows why. Dougie d'Agasto was
standing beside her, whispering in her ear. His arm was around her waist,
and his fingers were toying delicately
with the elastic of her trunks. Jeff did not look like a
fighter. His bald head gleamed sweatily in the Pacific sun,
and he was shorter and fatter. But he spun d'Agasto around
and decked him with one punch. Into the pool went Dougie
d'Agasto, and came up screaming and fingering his bloody,
but not broken, perfect nose. He was off the boat in an
hour, and what May and Jefferson said to each other about
it I do not know.
I know what I said to May. First chance I got her alone
I said, "You're a fool to risk Jeff for that little pimp.
Was it any of my business? At least she didn't tell me
it was not. She said seriously, "I am not risking Jeff, Uncle
Jason. Dougie's flattering, though. He's such a beautiful
boy.~~
"He's a louse.
"He's almost family.
"He's some kind of poor relation to your former mother-
in-law, yes, and that's Mob family. Those people are criminals.
Drug pushers. Arm breakers. Murderers.
She laughed good-humoredly and pecked my cheek.
"Dougie never murdered anybody, Jay, except maybe a
few women he loved to death. But you're right. I shouldn't
let him think he's being encouraged. And I won't.
So for six months I saw nothing of Dougie d'Agasto,
but long before that he'd written both May and Jefferson
most abject letters of apology. Jeff relented-he didn't
ask my advice. Then Betsy came over for a party, and
she brought d'Agasto with her.
We were competing in earnest then, and actually the
visit was partly so that we could talk over some business.
There's a lot of ocean, but only narrow bands of it, and
short, where the temperature difference between surface
and chilly deep is enough to run the turbines at full speed.
We both were sticking pretty close to the equator, too.
It wasn't so much for the solar heat, although there was
plenty there. It was for protection from the storms. Our
boats were getting a lot too big and clumsy to risk in a hurricane.
You don't get hurricanes on the equator, or
anyway very rarely. The equator isn't north and it isn't
south, so there's no Coriolis force to speak of. The funnel
doesn't know which way to turn, so the big funnel storms
don't develop there.
So more often than not the ocean wasn't empty anymore. There were
other oaty-boats in sight, often ours, more often hers--or
Russians or Japanese or Norwegians. The time was coming
just beyond the horizon when
there might be more grazers than forage for OTECs. So
there was some high-powered arguing between Betsy's
nav chiefs and ours before the party started, and I can't
honestly say the question ever really got resolved. Still,
the guests had a good time at the party. It was New Year's
Eve, and we'd given everybody any time off that could
be spared at all. The guests were all over the boat, the
crews were welcomed in owners' country; I saw Betsy
and May singing "Auld Lang Syne with the kitchen staff
and Dougie d'Agasto slapping the back of an assistant
pipe fitter, and if we were out to cut each others' throats
in the marketplace as soon as the party was over, the
swords were sheathed while it lasted. And the next morning,
while most of the ship was nursing hangovers, Jefferson Ormondo
was inspecting intake gauges on a
hydrogen freezer-ship line.
There was a leak. Any leak was dangerous, but it
shouldn't have been a disaster for two reasons. The first
reason was that hydrogen in the open floats quickly up
and away. Anyway, as soon as they heard the shriek of
escaping gas, Jefferson and every body else broke for the
rail-it was only a twenty-meter drop, and the water in
the moat was calm and warm. The second reason was
that there was no reason for a spark to ignite it. Nothing
that could make a spark was ever on a hydrogen ship's
intake stage.
Except this time. I had guarded the wrong member of
the family.
Even if there had been an explosion within a few meters
of jeff, he should have survived. But he was within the
explosion. He was inside a mass of mixed hydrogen and
air, and the same mixture was inside his lungs. When the
explosion came, it exploded outside him and in. He lived
an hour. The whole time he kept trying to scream in agony,
but he hadn't lung enough left to scream with anymore.
The only damage to the oaty-boat was some scorched
paint and a few fittings. That didn't matter to May. She
didn't want to live on it anymore. Jimmy Rex needed a
good school, she said, and so she was taking him and
herself off to live in Florida. What it was that May needed
I only guessed. Did not want to guess. Could not helping
guessing when, a few months later, she phoned me and
said, "I have news for you, Uncle Jay.
That sweet, sad face on the phone, it melted my heart.
All I said was, "Who's the lucky man?
Pause. "Please don't say anything against him when I
tell you, promise?
My mouth was dry and my heart was pounding, but I
managed to smile. "It's Dougic d'Agasto, right? And
you've made up your mind?
"I have, dear Jay. He's a nicer man than you think he
is.
"I hope so.
"Oh, Jay, please! Try to see it my way. I married one
husband because Ben insisted, and another hecause I
needed his help. This one's for me, Jay. Please say it's
all right!
"May, I said to my lifelong love, "whatever you do
is all right with me, always. Twice a widow at her age--
could I blame her?
No. It was easier to blame myself. And bastard Ben
had been right. He said she would marry a rich boy and
a sensible boy and a handsome boy. He never said they
would all be the same man.
Consort the first was slow to learn.
Consort the second was quick to burn.
The higher her worth, the meaner her fall,
And consort the third was the worst of them all.
Sweet Truth despises and high Honor reviles
The last man to king the queen of the isles.
They made their home in Miami. Miami! I could not
imagine how my May could be happy among land people,
especially those land people, but her letters were cheerful
enough. They were short, yes, and infrequent. But the
only news they ever contained was good. Dougie, she
wanted me to know, had buckled down and was studying
ocean-thermal engineering! It was too bad that it kept him
away from home so much, but he was very clever at
learning it. May herself was swimming, golfing, riding-
always busy. And Jimmy Rex was happy to be back in
his school. There was no word of whether the school was
happy to have him. So there was some kind of a bright
side for me. If I didn't have May, at least I didn't have
Jimmy Rex, either.
So owner's country was all mine, and I rattled around
in it lonesomely. I was in no mood for parties, and if
Betsy wanted to be invited, she had the good sense not
to tell me so. I kept busy. We were in a dozen big industries by then.
We were selling liquid gases-oxygen,
nitrogen, hydrogen; solid C02 ammonia, methanol,
chlorine, caustic soda; small quantities of argon and helium, too,
when we could find anyone to buy them. I was
toying with the idea of microwaving energy to a low satellite and
beaming it back to, say. Australia or Japan.
Betsy's steel industry wasn't going anywhere, but I'd taken
a tip from what Captain Havrila had said about the ships comming in in ballast:
I had ours syphon sand up from the port
bottoms for ballast, and then we used the sand to make
a slurry to scour out the fouling organisms in our deep
intake pipes-no need to try to recover it! Of course, I
wasn't the owner of the Fleet, and everything I did I had
to ask permission of May for. But she gave it, every time.
Because I had plenty to do, I should have been happy-
or as happy as I could be expected to be, with my May
married to a rodent that walked like a man. If I wasn't
happy, part of the reason was that I got the letter I had
been expecting for weeks. No return address. No name.
Just the message:
The Commodore's orders are still in effect. I didn't
know whether it was time for me to carry them out
or not, so I flipped a coin. You won this time.
I almost wished the coin had come up the other way-
better, I wished that my unknown pen pal would come
and talk to me about it. If he decided to kill me afterward,
well-I didn't want him to, but there were some bad
nights when it seemed like a way out of a place where I
didn't want to be. But God knew I needed advice-even
from my assassin.
And then May's weekly letter said, "Please come and
visit us, and enclosed with it was one from Dougie
d'Agasto:
We have some important business to talk over,
Jason. You'll come out of it rich. Besides, it's what
May wants.
Even when the man was trying to be ingratiating he
raised the hackles on the back of my neck. I had not
forgotten the last deal he had offered me! I did not for
one second think that he wouldn't have made the same
offer again-except that he'd found a better one for himself.
You don't have to steal the child when you can capture the mother.
I certainly did not want to talk over anything with
Dougie d'Agasto, no matter how rich he proposed to make
me. But it was May who'd asked me to come.
It is not a long flight from Papeete to Miami, but it
uses up a whole night-you cross over five time zones.
And so I arrived at ten in the morning with no more than
an hour's sleep and my disposition cranky. I took a taxi
from the airport to the address Dougie had given me. What
I wound up in looked like a warehouse district and smelled
like the city dump. A couple of gasoline-burner cars, half
dismantled, rusted along the curb. We were only a block
or two from Biscayne Bay-that accounted for part of
the smell. At least two of the low-rise buildings on the
block had been burned out and boarded up. An elderly
black woman was throwing a bucket of hot, soapy water
on the sidewalk in front of a little grocery store and attacking
it with a broom. I walked up to her, carrying my
overnight case. "Excuse me, I'm looking for Douglas
d'Agasto, I said.
She straightened up. "Round back, she said. I thought
there was some hostility in the way she looked at me, but
she added, "You want me to help you with that bag?
"Thank you, no. But it's kind of you to offer: I gestured
at the soapy sidewalk. "I didn't really expect to see
anybody doing that around here.
"I ain't from around here, she said, dismissing me.
At least there seemed to be one decent person in the
neighborhood to keep May company, I thought-but could
d'Agasto really have May living in this wretched slum?
Well, of course he could, if it suited his purpose-but
not himself!
Of course, I had made a wrong assumption. Neither
of them lived there. It was an office, not a home, and
once you got to the inner courtyard, obviuusly a luxurious
one. A slim black man appeared from a vined trellis and
circled a marble fountain to ask what my business was.
When I gave my name, he passed me on through a door-
there was a very thick frame around it; weapons detectors, I realized-
and into a handsome, huge waiting room.
There a handsome small woman with rose-red hair conducted me
to the very office of Douglas d'Agasto himself.
I've seen pictures of a bigger office. It belonged to that
old dictator, Mussolini. "Uncle Jason, d'Agasto cried
welcomingly, rising to wait for me to cover the fifteen
meters to his desk before he stretched out his hand. "Glad
you could come! Sorry to make you come to my office
first, but I figured we might as well get the business out
of the way so you could relax when we get to the house.
I let him shake my hand. "What's the business we're
talking about?
He nodded approval of my directness. He was just as
direct. "May wants to own the Fleet free and clear. No
more trustee. No other owners. So we want you to turn
the trust over to her and sell her your stock. We'll pay
you fifty million dollars for it, Uncle Jason.
He had not invited me to sit down, but I sat down
anyway. "I'm not your uncle, I said, "and my stock's
not worth that much. Fifteen or twenty at most. It doesn't
matter, though, because I don't want to sell.
"May really wants you to-
"What May wants me to do, May will tell me to do
herself.
The look he threw me was instant anger on top. That
didn't bother me a hit. Underneath was a cocky confidence,
though, and that did. "In that case, he said,
spreading the dimples on the sun-tanned face with a wide
smile, "we better just get our asses out to the house so
she can do that little thing. I think you're going to like
our place.
If what Dougie meant was that I would think it very
luxurious, I knew that sight unseen. I had been signing
the fund transfers into May's account to pay for it. The
luxury started long before we got there. We were only a
block or two from Dougie's boat dock on the bay, but
there was a chauffeured car waiting in the courtyard to
take us there. As we pulled out into the street, I saw the
old black woman pause in shining her cracked store window
to glare at us over her shoulder. I appreciated that;
at least now I knew who the hostility belonged to. We
got in a hydrofoil with a three-man crew and screamed
down the waterway, under causeway bridges, past small
islands, until we came to a large one. We coasted along
it for a while. There were lavish estates along the shore;
then there were none, just mangroves and cypress, until
we came to a dock that could have handled an oaty-boat.
Well, not really. I exaggerate. But the dock was an exaggeration, too.
There was no vessel he might want to
own that would need that much space.
The house was as grand as I could have expected, but
the grandest part was May running down the green, green
lawn to meet me. She hugged me twice as tightly as I had
expected, then leaned back to look at me. And I at her.
It was my veritable sweet May, as ever was, the clean,
clear face, the thoughtful, wide-set eyes, the silky hair-
"You look tired, I said. I hadn't meant to, but it was
true. It was not polite, so I added, "Too much golf, I
suppose.
The smile flickered, but it came back fast. "It's more
like too much not seeing you, Jay. Come on in! Oh, Jason-I've missed you so much!
If consulted by the tribunal when it is time to decide
how long Dougie d'Agasto should roast in hell, I will say
on his behalf that at least he let us alone to talk. He
excused himself at once. He went up to his "study for
an hour, came down for lunch, and immediately took off
in the stiltboat for most of the afternoon-it was for his
tutoring in thermal engineering, he said. So I had May to
myself. I saw the house. I heard how Jimmy Rex was
doing. May told me that the secessionist mobs were pretty
worrying when they rioted, but maybe they were right
and this part of Florida should anschluss with Cuba. She
wanted to know if I'd seen much of the big new Chinese
boats that were being launched, or any more dead fish. I
even had time for a nap before dinner; and not once did
she bring up the trust, or I.
Dinner wasn't grand-just very good, with all the things
in it that May had known I liked all her life. When the
coffee was on the table, Dougie chased the servants out
of the dining hall and leaned back.
"So tell him, honey, he said with that smile that was
on the very verge of curdling into a smirk.
May looked reluctant, but she didn't put it off. She put
her elbows on the table and her chin in her hands, and
she gazed at me. "You've been as good a father to me as
my father ever was, Jason.
Those were not the words I most wanted to hear from
her, but under the circumstances they were about the best
I could expect. I reached across and patted her hand.
"So don't think I'm not grateful to you, dear, because
I am. I always will be. But I'm not a child anymore. I'm
a grown woman, married- Three times married, I
thought, and she was thinking the same because she hesitated-
married, with a child. As much of an adult as
I'm ever going to be, Jason. So I'm asking you to dissolve
the trust. Dougie pursed his lips and nodded judiciously,
as though he had just heard the idea for the first time and
thought that by and large it might be sound. He didn't
say anything. That was just as well, for I might have said
something in return that could never be unsaid. "You
don't have to sell your own stock if you don't want to,
Jay, she went on. "Dougie thought that might be a good
idea for you, but it's up to you. But, please, will you do
the other'?
I didn't look at Dougie again. I didn't have to, for I
could feel the temperature of his smile.., and I could feel
it drop to zero as I said, "If I do that, May, I will be
killed. It's your father's orders. And I spread before
them the nineteen letters I had received from my unknown
assassin. And I told them what the Commodore had said
to me.
Dougie slammed his fist down on the table. It was thick
teak, but it shook. I didn't look at him, and he didn't say
a word. May, with tears in her voice, said, "You mean
my father paid someone to have you killed? But that's
horrible!
I touched her hand again. "No, love, it's not. He was
right to make sure of me. If I'd failed you, it would be
fair punishment. And wished I were more sure that I
hadn't failed her already.
May was crying openly now. It was her husband's
place to comfort her. but her husband was studying the
nineteen letters, their envelopes, their postmarks. I got
up and went around the table, knelt beside her, and put
my arms around her. No one said anything for a while. I
would not have minded if that while had gone on indefinitely,
with May warm and unresisting in my arms, hut
at last Dougie had finished his chain of thought. He swept
the letters in a fan across the table and sat back. "I guess
you're not lying, he stated.
In my arms May stirred and detached herself. "Jason
doesn't lie to me, she told him, "ever!
"I don't think he could have cooked up all these letters,
he said, "so let's say you're right. What about it,
Jay'? Don't you have any idea who this person is?
I hesitated, but it was too late to do the person any
harm. "I thought for a while it might be Captain Havrila,
I admitted, "but he died six months ago, and I've had
letters since.
"Never tried to find out? See where they were mailed
from? Find the people who mailed them?
"How could I? For that matter, why would I want
to? I had accepted the situation as just when the Commodore had laid it on me.
He nodded. He wasn't agreeing, he was only recognizing the fact that
I didn't have the guts or the determination to do anything about
the situation. "What we
can do, he proposed, "is get you the best damn guards
you ever saw in your life. Twenty-four hours, round the
clock. As long as you live. And forget about fifty million,
I'll go to-
"Dougie, stop it! cried May. He blinked at her, but
she stared him down. Then she turned to me. "What you've
said changes everything, of course. So that's out. We'll
go on the way we are for the present.
And I expected an explosion from Dougie. I didn't get
one. I was slow to learn that the only safe expectation
about Dougie d'Agasto was that he would never do what
I expected him to do, but always something worse. He
nodded, and picked up the letters and stuffed them in a
pocket and gave us both a sunny smile.
"In that case, he said, "anyone for a game of billiards?
If Dougie d'Agasto did not get what he wanted out of
our meeting, he got quite a lot in other ways. He got the
right to tell me what to do. Every one of his letters of
instruction was countersigned by May herself, but there
was no doubt who had written them.
His instructions were not all that wicked or dumb, to
be honest-perhaps there had been worse ones that May
refused to sign. Cancel the plans for another ore pumper-well,
the manganese nodules were a drug on the
market these days, with so many boats fishing for them.
Kill the iceberg project and sell off the tugs-it had
become a running sore in our cash-flow accounts anyway.
He never attempted to keep me from spending any sum
on keeping the Fleet seaworthy and comfortable for its
crews, but he did veto almost every plan for expansion.
He was hoarding capital, it seemed. No doubt there was
a plan, and no doubt I would find out about it sooner or
later.
Meanwhile I followed his orders, and life was not all
that bad. The officers and crews liked me, I think. Not
just on the flagship. When I flew to Dubai to sign the sale
papers on the sailing tugs and pay off the crews, they took
me out for a night on the town. I could not have expected
that from forty men and women I had just fired, and they
weren't angling for other places in the Fleet-they were
all fine sailors, and there were plenty of jobs. They were
simply saying good-by to a friend, and I was touched. I
was also very, very drunk, and when at last I got back
to the flagship I was still parched and headachy, but not
unhappy-at least not until I saw that Betsy's private VTO was parked on the landing deck.
"I thought, she said, "it was time I paid you a visit,
since you don't ever come to see me.
She was not a person I wanted for a friend, but I didn't
particularly want to offend her. "You are always welcome
on May's fleet, I told her, with a great deal of politeness
and not nearly as much truth, and I called the housekeepers'
section chief to tell them that they were to prepare suitable
accommodations. Of course, they were way
ahead of me. They had put fresh flowers in the vases and
ice in the bowls in the suite that sheikhs and sovereigns
occupied when they were our guests. For a wonder, Betsy
didn't pout when I told her I had to work for a bit- "I've
been away quite a while, I said, "and I really need to-
And she put her finger against my lips, with a smile that
under any other circumstances I would have called flirtatious.
"May I try your pool out, Jay? she asked, quite politely,
and she occupied herself with swimming and lazing
around the big waterfall that sheeted down the glass of
the owners' suite and into the pool, while I did what I
had to do. Which was only partly business. Mostly it was
sucking oxygen out of a bottle and swallowing aspirin,
because if I had Betsy for a guest I wanted a clear head.
She had asked that dinner be served out in the garden,
and when I came out to see her, she was wearing something
long and filmy and white, with white hibiscus tucked
into a diamond tiara on her hair. "How very nice you
look, I said, as required. She smiled dreamily, watching
the butler pour the wine.
"To us, she said, and then, when we had each taken
a sip, "How fresh and clean the air is here, Jay.
"I hope it stays that way, I said, because there had
been rumors of Betsy's next plan for expansion and diversification.
She gave me a thoughtful look, but she was
too busy being sweet to follow it up. All through the meal
she was all sweet prattle and gossip about rich friends
and reckless doings. It was quite a meal. The chef had
had time to do his best, and so it was mahimahi and rack
of lamb from our own flock, and a compote of mostly
ugly-fruit for dessert with enough kirsch in it so that I
didn't require an after-dinner brandy. Or, after the previous
few days in Dubai, at all want one. Betsy had no
such restraint. She ate every scrap and drank all that was
poured, and when it was done she sighed, "I wish I had
your cook, Jay! I guess I can tell you that I've tried to
hire him away.
"I know, I said. I also knew the reason he had told
me for turning her down-young Betsy was a terror to
her servants.
"You know a lot about my business, don't you? she
purred, watching me. "I think you meant something by
that remark about the air pollution.
I shrugged. "I have heard, I said carefully, "that you
are contracting for large amounts of Australian coal. The
only thing I can think of you wanting to do with it is
pyrolize it into gasoline, so we'll have a floating Galveston
out here.
"You have very good sources of information, Jay. I
do too. You were a fool to turn Dougie down, you know.
She was sitting between me and the setting sun. I moved
to get the sun out of my eyes so that I could see her
better, and she laughed and hitched her chair closer to
me. "You're always a surprise to me, Jason, she said.
"Those nineteen letters coming in all these years, and
nobody knew but you.
I had finally puzzled it out. "You've got a spy in May's
house, I said.
"My dear Jason! Of course I'm always interested in
what's happening with my sister.
"She's not your sister.
"I think of her as my sister. She hitched her chair a
bit closer, and our knees touched. "Would you like to
know how I think of you?
Now, the advancing years had not made me any more
handsome. I was older than Betsy's father. I could not
think of any reason why she would be after my body, but
her eyes were half closed, and her lips were half smiling,
and her voice was husky.
I got up to replenish her drink, and when I was seated
again, we were no longer touching. "Why was I stupid,
Betsy?
"Accidents happen, she whispered over the rim of her
glass. "You've got a few good years left if you're careful,
Jay. I moved restlessly, rejecting the implication. "May
has more than that, she went on, "unless there was an
accident. Why, do you know, Jason, under the terms of
the Commodore's will, if May died your trusteeship would
terminate? And then you'd have nothing to say about what
happened to her stock.
"It would just go to Jimmy Rex.
"And if something happened to Jimmy Rex?
I was getting angry-it was not because she was putting new
thoughts in my head, for what angered me was
that these same thoughts had occurred to me long since.
Fortunately for my peace of mind I had reasoned out an
answer to that. "May's money, I said, "is a lot, but it's
nothing compared to what Jimmy Rex is going to inherit
from his grandmother. The Appermoys have billions, and
Jimmy's the only heir.
And Betsy laughed out loud. "To think, she marveled,
"that you were the one who got us interested in the dead
fish!
I nodded as though I understood. I doubt that I fooled
her. I did not understand at all, and to make time to help
puzzle it out I poured myself a brandy after all. I dawdled,
savoring the Courvoisier. Either she was being deliberately
mystifying, or I was more tired and hung over and,
yes, already slightly drunk all over again than I thought.
Perhaps I had not made myself clear? The logic was very
simple. Nothing would happen to Jimmy Rex-at least
nothing that Dougie might arrange-as long as his grandmother was
alive, because Dougie would not endanger
his chances of somehow getting his hands on the Appermov fortune.
What dead fish had to do with all this I did
not know, and Betsy was not helping me think. She leaned
forward, with her eyes as close to sparkling as she knew
how to make them, and licked the lobe of my ear. "You're
an exciting man, Jason, she whispered.
"For God's sake, Betsy! I protested, not quite sure
whether it was the sense of what she was saying that I
objected to, or her warm, moist tongue in my ear. I was
getting to be an elderly man, but I wasn't dead. I didn't
like Betsy at all. She was not beautiful. But she was young,
and she was healthy, and she was wearing at least a
hundred dollars' worth of French perfume in the folds of
the clinging gossamer gown. I tried to redirect the
conversation. "Will you please tell me what you're trying to
say?
She smiled mistily and leaned back-it was not a way
of putting space between us, it was only so that she could
throw her breasts out. I did not fail to notice them.
"Jason, she murmured, "I think better when I'm lying down.
In bed. With a nice warm body next to me.
There was no possible doubt in my mind that it was
Betsy's intention to add me to her already outstanding
collection of lovers. I am embarrassed to say that at that
moment I could almost believe that it was for my own
aging body's sake-almost. I croaked. "Why are you doing
this, Betsy?
"Aw She pouted. Then she shrugged. "Because I
want everything that belongs to May. But I promise you
it'll be worth it. I'm really good, Jason. And I also promise
you, she added, getting slowly up and tugging me to my
feet, "that in that nice big bed that you sleep in, that used
to be May's, after the important stuff has been taken care
of, I will tell you everything you want to know, and it
will truly fascinate you.
On that promise she cheated me, though not on anything else.
I did not sleep much that night. When I woke
at daylight and remembered who I had for a bedmate, she was gone.
I pulled myself raggedly out of bed and threw
a robe on, and while I was puzzling over what had happened,
I heard a jet scream. I went to the lanai and there
was Betsy's plane, a bright blue-white trail streaking across
the pink morning sky. She had gotten what she wanted,
and gone.
She spoiled my sleep for more than one night. I could
not get out of my mind what she had said and hinted. The
worst was the implication that Jeff's death had not been
an accident. Dougie was filth, of course. I had not thought
he was a murderer, at least in my conscious mind; but
now that Betsy had made me think about it, I could not
doubt it anymore.
I called in the security chief again, and from then on
I was never without a couple of huskies within call.
But that protected only me. What could protect my
May? Logic told me that it would not make sense for
Dougie to harm May as long as the boy would simply
inherit-nor would it be reasonable for him to want the
boy out of the way as long as Jimmy Rex stood to inherit
the vast Appermoy billions. It would surely pay Dougie
to bide his time, at least until the old lady died.
But the stink of dead fish showed me there was something
wrong with that chain of reasoning. Betsy knew
what it was but, typically, had not told me. So I started
other inquiries into motion.
They weren't necessary. Before my agents had a chance
to report, a morning came when I was awakened by the
Fleet bursar pounding at the door, bursting with news.
The dead fish had done the Appermoys in.
For old man Appermoy had not been able to resist one
more villainy before he died. The glassy pellets he
dissolved the radionuclides in for disposal were not
expensive. It was not usually worth his while to steal in so
trivial an area. But there was a strike in a settling farm
that he had not been able to buy off, and an accident to
one of the vitrifying plants that put him behind schedule,
and so he had eight hundred ton lots of high-level radio
active waste with no legitimate place to put them. He had
dumped them, raw, into his seamount. Of course, they
had begun to dissolve into the sea almost at once.
Appermoy had not killed the Pacific Ocean, for it was
too big for even him. But he had so polluted three million
square kilometers that fish were dying. The family had
been able to keep the lid on-it is cheaper to bribe than
to comply-until the weather betrayed them. For a solid
month the Hawaiian winds blew the wrong way. They
swept the waters out of the west, and washed radioactively hot waves onto Oahu and Maui and the Kona
coast.
The damage was too immense for bribes to work anymore, and they were a land-based conglomerate.
So the land law could reach them, and that meant something like
twenty billion dollars in damage suits already, with more
in the offing, and the lax government agencies forced at
last to stir themselves. "I'm sure, said the bursar gleefully,
"that the old lady's tucked a few million away in
pocket change here and there. But the company's bust!
So Jimmy Rex had lost most of his legacy. . . and May
had lost her insurance.
Since I no longer believed that Jeff's accident had been
an accident, I had to believe that an accident could easily
happen to May and her son. What could I do to prevent
it? I ruminated a thousand plans. I could confront Dougie
with my suspicions and warn him that he was being
watched-foolish idea! The one thing you could not do
to Dougie d'Agasto was frighten him off. I could warn
May. I could tell her what I believed and beg her to leave
him. But that was almost as foolish. If she had been willing
to listen, she would never have married the creature in
the first place. The best plan was the one that I rejected
most positively and at once. I could, I thought out of my
anger and despair, do to Dougie himself what I feared he
would do to May.
But I could not stoop so low, though for many years
I have wished I had.
And while I was stewing over whether to call May,
and what to say to her if I did, I got a call from her. She
looked troubled and very weary, but she was trying to
sound happy. "Good news, Jason," she cried, though her
eyes made liars of her words. "Dougie says we won't
have to worry about that-that letter problem, anymore.
He says he is certain of it. He has gone to get documentary
proof, and he'll bring it to you. But she added, although
I could see that it cost her, "But you're the one who has
to decide if the proof is enough, Jay. I'll abide by whatever
you decide.
And two days later, before dawn, Dougie's plane
screamed in. It woke me from my sleep. By the time I
got to the landing strip he was gone, the pilot waiting by
the ship to pass on his instructions for me. Mr. d'Agasto
had had the deck crew take his materials down to the
scavenging deck. Mr. d'Agasto would wait for me there.
Mr. d'Agasto asked that I join him at once.
Mr. d'Agasto was getting on my nerves. Why the scavenging deck?
It was not much more than a sewer head-
when we built lips around the oaty-boats, we could no
longer throw our garbage over the side, so there was a
well that opened out under the hull. It was a tiny, dirty
chamber down near the waterline, not a place where anyone
went for choice. I didn't like Dougie's choice of a
place, I didn't like getting orders from him-most of all,
of course, I didn't like Dougie himself. But I went. And
all the way down on the hoist, and all across the wide,
hissing, rumbling of the boat's workings as the tram carried
me through the low-pressure turbine decks, I was
wondering if this was a scheme of Dougie's to kill me and
dump me down the scavenging well. I had not forgotten
what he was.
I also had not forgotten some of the other things Betsy
had told me. They were not useful things. They were what
she thought were sexually stimulating things. They had
to do with Dougie's tastes: How he liked to do that, she
said showing me that and also this, demonstrating this,
and most of all he likes to do these others... But some
of those others I would not allow at all, and my stomach
turned as the images formed in my mind of what went on
between Dougie and my May in their private hours. So I
did not want to see the man at all. And if it was his plan
to kill me-well, then at least I would never again be
troubled with these poisonous thoughts.
He did not have any such plans, it turned out.
He was alone in the scavenging chamber. It reeked,
for he had opened the main access hatch and the oily,
warm water was only a few meters below, with all its
leftover stinks. Dougie had a great packing ease at his
feet, and he was smoking a joint to combat the stench.
"Close the door, he ordered.
I did as I was told. Dougie could see that I was ill at
ease. It amused him. "This won't take long, he promised.
"Help me open the box.
I did that, too, very obedient to his instructions. The
box was very heavy, and there was waterproof sacking
around it, a metal container nearly two meters long. It
was sealed and locked. "You take good care of your
documents, I panted as I lifted one corner so that Dougie
could unlock the strapping.
He laughed-I did not then know why. It took him
some time to get the lid open-
The lid of the coffin.
"You don't have to think of her anymore, chuckled
Dougie. "You're really pretty dumb, old man. It stood to
reason that the Commodore would have arranged for your
guard dog to get some money. All I had to do was get a
look at his private bequests-you know how that's done,
don't you? I flinched, but didn't meet his eyes. "Once
I found her, it wasn't hard. She even had copies of the
letters in her safe deposit box.
I could not speak. I could only stare at poor Elsie, who
had loved the child she had cared for and at the last paid
the tariff on that love.
"You've seen enough? You're convinced? And Dougie
shoved the box into the scavenging chute. It was a two-
meter drop, splash, gone forever into the secret deeps of
the ocean. "So you don't have any excuse anymore, old
man, said Dougie, "and I've had the papers drawn up
for you. Here they are. Sign.
And of course, as soon as he could get back to Miami
with the signed papers, May turned over all her stock to
him. I had begged her not to. She wouldn't meet my eyes
on the phone as she said, "I feel-anyway, I hope-that
once he has what he needs, he won't have to-
She stopped there and shook her head, not wanting to
name what he "had to do otherwise. And Dougie d'Agasto
was crowned king of the grazing isles.
Toll the bell, sound the knell,
My lady she married the lord of hell.
Her life she gave as wife and slave
To a treacherous, lecherous, blood-soaked knave,
An impudent villain whose touch defiles
The sweetness and woe of the queen of the isles.
The oaty-boats had a long run for their money, but
there were clouds on the horizon. There was a new land-
based energy source, deep methane from far under the
crust; there was a new sky-based one, with MHD generators
in orbit beaming down floods of microwave power.
And every month a new huge oaty-boat appeared, or more
than one, to add to our fleet or Betsy's or some
foreigner's. They all had five-kilometer intakes now, and we were
all huddling in the same patches of ocean, sucking out
the delta-Ts. It was not just that the sea was never empty
now, it was worse than that. The sweet Pacific reeked of
oil. My suspicions about Betsy's plans were correct
though it wasn't just gasoline she was making. She bought
cheap coal from Australia, pyrolized it to make liquid
hydrocarbons, and reacted them with her electrolysis gases
to turn the waste char into fuel alcohol. It was cheap fuel
to ship and cheap fuel to store, for it needed no liquefying,
and she sold every drop of it back to the Australians, or
to the Americans or the Europeans or the Japanese. And
left the stink of her oil and the smudge of her filth far
beyond the horizon.
Half the other fleets were beginning to do the same,
and Dougie called me on the carpet to find out why I had
not proposed it for ourselves. They were back in the
owner's country now, he and May and the boy, for he simply
had overruled her objections to living in the place where
Jeff had died. He kept me standing before his huge teak
desk for ten minutes while he punched out data sets to
study, face impassive, head twisted back to avoid the
drifting smoke from the joint he never took out from
between his lips, and then he confronted me: "Well? Can
you explain why we missed the boat on this?
Dougie d'Agasto's opinion of me didn't matter at all,
but I didn't want him convincing May I was an old fool.
"The market has peaked already, I said. "There's too
many boats doing it.
"Because we're getting to it too late!
I shook my head. "Because hydrogen's a cleaner
fuel- I saw that wasn't registering with him- and will
always get a higher price- that did- and this little
boom won't last long enough to amortize the cost of the
pyrolytic converters. All it will do is turn the Pacific into
Los Angeles. And indeed, there were days when my
eyes stung out in the open sea wind.
"Well, he said, as though he were giving me one more
chance and begrudging it, "we'll say no more about it.
Anyway, I've got plans of my own.
But he didn't tell me what they were. I didn't ask. I
confess to curiosity, though, because to give the reptile
his due, Dougie had not entirely wasted his time in "studying"
oceanthermal industrial processes in Miami. He hadn't
wasted much time doing any actual studying, either; I do
not believe more than one hour a week went to his tutoring,
and where the rest of it went I could guess-and
so could May, for the lines on her face were not all due
to too much golf and sunshine. He found that there was
a simpler way, though. He simply bought the school. He
hired away twenty of the expert instructors and flew them
to the Fleet. He knew enough to make good choices,
anyway. All of them were skilled, and one or two I knew
myself-Desmond MacLean had worked as a junior engineer
on the Commodore's first boat, before going back
to school and winding up a teacher. But even Desmond
did not volunteer what Dougie's plans were.
I must give the devil one more measure of due. He
was a worker. He worked as hard as Jeff Ormondo even,
though how he found time for it all I could not guess.
When they were aboard the boat, he was everywhere,
looking into every hold and engine room and control point;
but he and May lived jet-set lives, parties everywhere,
on all the seas and on the land. He took May away from
me for three weeks out of four. It was not only May he
took. Dougie was grossly and tastelessly-and after a
while almost openly-an addicted womanizer. I could not
forgive him his infidelity, for was there any other man
alive in the world who would have wanted more woman
than May'?
I understood at last what Dougie wanted: Everything.
He wanted it all. He had grown up as a very junior poor
relation in his mob family. Now he was almost the richest
of them-but that "almost was the iron in his soul. He
wanted Betsy's half of the Fleet back to add to May's. If
he had twenty thermal engineers on the payroll, he had
ten times as many lawyers-but so did Betsy. When they
met, which at one ball or race meet or another was often,
they joked with each other about their lawsuits, and both
would have pointed the jests with steel if they had dared.
"Mr. d'Agasto, said Desmond MacLean, "says I can
tell you now. Come up on the weather bridge. And he
only grinned at me without a word as we rode the hoist
up to the snug cabin on top of everything. He punched
in his present location to the ship's circuits and waved an
arm in a half circle. "What do you see, Jason? he asked.
What I saw was what I had seen every day. The great
mass of the vessel stretched out for hundreds of meters
in every direction, and beyond our decks was the sea with
its dozen vessels steaming slowly through the sooty air.
1 see stink, I said.
"So you'll be glad to see us making more hydrogen
and cheaper, won't you? he asked cheerfully.
I shrugged. "Where are you going to get the delta-Ts'?
"That's the problem, right. He punched in the commands and
displayed on his intercom console a map of
the Pacific Ocean. "Here's where we are- pointing-
"in the middle of this shaded green oval here, stretching
from New Guinea to Hawaii. There are now four hundred
oaty-boats grazing it, and each one pumps nearly a hundred
tons a second average. That's- he punched out the
calculations- "eighty billion liters a day, thirty trillion a
year. Every year we move thirty cubic kilometers of water
from the deeps to the surface!
"There are plenty of cubic kilometers in the Pacific,
I said, unwilling to believe that our puny pipes could
change anything in the majestic mass of the ocean.
"But not plenty that we need at the five-kilometer
depth, he said.
"Well, of course. That's why we stay out of each other s wakes-or try to.
"We do, he agreed, "as long as we can. But either we
settle for coming close to another boat or we work lenses
that aren't quite as cold as we'd like. Look at the arithmetic.
When we have deep water at six degrees and surface water at
thirty-two, which is what our turbines are
designed for, we've got a delta-T of twenty-six. The efficiency
goes up with the cube of the temperature difference. So the figure of merit for those
temperatures is twenty-six cubed- 17,576.
"We've not had a twenty-six degree delta-T for some
time, I admitted.
"And we won't for a while longer, because we're competing
with the heart of the oaty-boat fleet. We're cooling
the surface water and sucking up the best lenses of cold.
So most of the time we're dealing with top water that's
as much as three degrees cooler than it should be, and
bottom water sometimes three degrees warmer. Delta-T,
twenty. Cubed figure of merit, eight thousand. Which
means just about half the energy we should be getting.
"As bad as that!
"And going to get worse, he said, but cheerfully, so
that I asked irritably:
"All right, come on! Tell me what you've got up your
sleeve.
"We go deeper! he said triumphantly. He shook his
head when I started to object, and keyed the map back.
This time it was featureless. "Here are unexploited areas
with a surface temperature of thirty or more- He displayed
areas hatched in red lines, and as I peered at them
I began to object again- "Wait a minute, Jason! And
here are huge lenses of three-degree deep water. Three degrees,
you understand me? And look-there's a patch five
hundred kilometers across where we've got both. Thirty-
three degrees on the surface, three degrees at depth-
delta-T, thirty-cube that for a figure of merit, Jason!
I didn't have to. It was an oaty-boater's dream. "Shit,
Des, I said contemptuously, "you're talking about bottom water.
"Damn near. Ten kilometers down, most of it.
"And I know those charts. What you don't show there
is that there are mid-depth warm currents. You try to
drop a suction intake down through them, and they'll
curve into spaghetti!
He grinned smugly. "Right, he said, "and wrong. I'm
not talking about a rubber hose. I'm talking about steel tubing,
bouyed along it's length to keep it neutral, dynamically
positioned by its own engines. Of course, those
figures of merit aren't all profit. A hell of a lot goes into
energy to keep the currents from tying the tubes in knots,
and a hell of a lot of capital into building them in the first
place. But I did the feasibility studies myself! With a
figure of merit of twenty-seven thousand you can afford
a lot.
I only had one question left. "When? I begged.
"It's already started, Jason! The contracts have been
let out for the new gear, deliveries will start in sixty days.
Mr. d'Agasto has started hiring construction crews and
they'll be coming aboard next month-
"Aboard? Here?
There was a shadow on Desmond's happy face as he
said, "Well, yes. The conversion's going to be done at
sea. That's Mr. d'Agasto's plan. I really think, he said
wistfully, "that we'd do better taking the boats in one at
a time to some nice deep harbor, maybe in the Sunda
straits, and refit there. I showed him the figures. It'd be
cheaper and faster. . . but he's the boss, Jason.
I nodded. He was. He was showing it. He hadn't said
a word to me-hadn't even allowed Desmond MacLean
to whisper it to me until now, when the work was already
begun and the secret would be no secret anymore. He
was the boss. And I-was superfluous.
Prophecies fulfill themselves; a man who thinks himself
useless becomes so. The best estimate I could make of
myself was that I was an old fool who was in the way.
So I got out of the way. I took myself off to New
Zealand.
It could just as easily have been Okinawa or Iceland.
There was no place on the Earth where I was particularly
needed, or had any particular reason to be. I thought I
might like to see geysers before I died, so New Zealand
won the toss. There were one or two people there I had
some sort of friendly relations with-shipping agents and
freight forwarders, and a banker named Sam Abramowitz
whom I had known for forty years. I was shy of meeting
Sam, for I had known him first while I was a scared kid
in the accounting department of the bank, and he was one
of the few people in the world who knew I had juggled
the books to give the Commodore his start. But he made
me at ease when I hinted at the subject. "Ah, Jason, he
said, "that was a hundred years ago in another world.
That was back in America, and we've both gone a long
way away from what we were then. For he'd been personal
banker for a lot of Mob money, until his stomach
wouldn't take it anymore and he emigrated. "Forget it.
Have a drink. And in the morning I'll take you to see all
the damn geysers you want. .
So I dawdled away a month, and then half of another.
The geysers didn't keep me interested that long. Neither
did New Zealand, for when all was said and done it was
still land, though only a fairly small piece of it and remote.
I longed to be back on the sea, but more than I wanted
that I wanted to be wanted there. And so when at last
May phoned me, it was all I could do to keep my voice
calm and my face bland. "A party'? I said. "Well, I'm
not much of a one for parties, my dear.
"Oh, please. Jason! The Mays are going to be here,
and a lot of our other friends-it'll be the biggest party
we ever gave.
"I would like to see the Mays, I admitted.
"Not as much as they want to see you! I don't know
if they'll even come if I can't tell them you'll be here.
And, Jason- there was real sweetness in her voice and
in her half-fearful smile- I've missed you so.
Well, of course I went! I was getting pretty sick of
sheep, anyway-and even sicker of being on the land.
May had kept my rooms for me, but there was going
to be a crush of guests. I gladly vacated them for May
Bancroft and Tse-ling Mei to share, and I moved in with
the crew. There was not much more room there. The work
crews were coming aboard for the refit. When I looked
them over, they were the sorriest, meanest bunch of
roughnecks I have ever seen. If I had not been told they
were deep water construction workers, I would have
guessed them to be knee breakers for the Mob. Every
one of them was allowed a hundred and fifty kilos of
personal luggage, and I did not believe that any of it was
musical instruments or books.
They did not help morale on the boat. Dougie cleared
six hundred of our own people out of their quarters and
put the new ones in one whole section together. They ate
together, they talked together, they kept together. The
rest of us were doubled up and excluded. In the first day
the boat's security staff arrested a couple for hard drugs,
but Dougie was having none of that. He ordered the charges
dropped, and then ordered the security forces to stay out
of the construction workers' area entirely. Not just the
security forces. All of us were told to stay away, and
hard-nosed types that had come aboard with the new work
crews stood guard at the passages to keep the rest of us
out. The new ones all wore a new kind of uniform-
scarlet sea jackets and crash helmets-and they looked
as much like an invading army as anything else.
They felt that way, too. There was a meanness in the
air on our boat that I had never felt before, not even when
bastard Ben was king triumphant. I tried to talk myself
out of it. Old man Jason, I said to me, although I was still
not yet sixty and not really old at all, old man, you are
seeing ghosts and worrying without cause, for how can
things get worse than they are already? They can't, I said,
to reassure myself. But at sixty I had a lot still to learn.
I went to May and told her I didn't like the new people.
She was trying on her new party dresses, with two of her
maids fluttering around and admiring her and them, and
indeed she was as beautiful as she had ever been-a little
thinner, a little sadder, but the most beautiful woman in
the world-and the dresses nearly did her justice. "These
people are only for a little while, Jason, dear, she said.
"As soon as the new intakes are installed, they'll be gone.
"I'd hate to be the one that had to throw them off the
ship, I grumbled. She didn't look at me for a moment.
She stood there, staring out over the gardens towards the sea,
as she used to stare when she was two years old.
Then she said, "Perhaps you ought to talk to Dougie about
them instead of me. She had made up her mind not to
interfere with her chosen love's way of running the empire
she had given him. I had to respect her wishes.
So I did talk to Dougie. He laughed at me and told me
to get lost. He was busy, he said.
That was what he said, and that, in fact, he was, for
the refit was a huge task, and there was the party coming
up. The party was to celebrate the public announcement
of what everyone in the trade had known for weeks, that
we were going deeper and finding more. He had invited
people from the Russian and Japanese fleets. He had invited
a few of our principal customers from even the land.
And of course he had invited Betsy. Because May asked
me to be, I was polite to her-as polite as to Captain
Tsusnehshov or to old Baron Akagana when they came
aboard. I greeted her politely and offered her a drink and
helped her get settled in her rooms; and I did the same
for the Japanese and the Russians, and then went off to
see the Mays. If they were a little older than the last time
I saw them, they were at least that much more charming
and beautiful, too. Tse-ling Mei was one of the world's
most loved movie stars. Maisie Gerstyn, who had once
been Maisie Richardson, had brought her handsome husband
and her two fair, bright twin boys. We all sat around
the lanai that was part of my suite-theirs now-gossiping
and enjoying one another's company until the sun was
low and it was time for them to dress for the party.
I was in no hurry to dress, or to go to the party at all,
for that matter. I was ambling slowly toward my room
when the pager called my name. Desmond MacLean
wanted me to join him in the high bridge, and his voice
sounded strange.
The principal reason his voice sounded that way was
that he was half drunk. He wasn't alone, either. He was
sitting there with his face flushed and his tongue tripping
over the hard words, and there with him, matching him
drink for drink, was Betsy Zoll. "You idiot, I snarled at
him, you re out of your class! Can't you see she's pumping
you for information?
He shook his head stubbornly. "Other way, he mumbled.
"Y'unnerstan me? It's the other way. She's doing
the talking.
I had no patience with the man-or with Betsy, either,
who sat there serene and smiling. I called for a medic
with a tank of oxygen and some black coffee. "You'd
better stay away from the party, I said bitterly, "for
you'll disgrace the boat. He shrugged hopelessly. "Damn
it, I cried, "what's the matter with you? Don't you see
what a fool you are? And what did you call me for, anyway?
He pointed to Betsy. "Tell'm, he mumbled, and submitted
himself to the attentions of the medic, who had
just arrived.
While MacLean was choking down coffee and inhaling
as much of the 02 as the medic could force into him,
Betsy stood up. I'm sure she'd had as much to drink as
Desmond, but the only sign was that she moved very
carefully, as though the floor were rocking. There was
nothing wrong with her speech. "What I told him, old
man, she said, "was nothing you couldn't have seen for
yourself. Just look around you.
"At what? I demanded. She pointed out the window.
But there was nothing to be seen that I didn't already
know was there. True, Betsy's own flagship was hull down
on the horizon, and two others of our own fleet and one
of hers in sight-but I'd known that, for some reason or
other, we'd been steaming closer and closer to other boats
for the past few days. The only other thing that was in
any way unusual was the flotilla of stiltboats and fast
hovers in the water just outside the lip. And that was
easily understood. It was to ferry our guests back and
forth, of course-though it was, I thought as I looked
closer, a touch strange that the crews manning them all
owre the scarlet seas jackets of the new construction crews.
"I don't know what I'm looking at, I admitted stiffly.
Betsy laughed and turned to the medic. "Out, she
ordered. The woman glanced at me, then left, her expression
resentful. "Have you looked at the landing strip?
Betsy demanded.
"Why should I? But I did, and then I looked again.
There were a dozen aircraft parked at the side of the strip,
and instead of bringing them down to the hangar deck,
more were coming up on the elevator.
"Old man, she said contemptuously, "what you won't
see, you can't see. I knew this was happening weeks ago.
I only came to make sure.
"Sure of what'?
"Ah, Jason, what a fool you are! Can't you recognize
an invasion force when you see one?
"There's no need, I said, misunderstanding her, "for
Dougie to invade the boat, since May has given him the
whole fleet.
"Not her fleet, you old fool! Mine! He wants to steal
my ships!
"You stole them yourself in the first place, I said
stubbornly, not quite taking it in, "or your bastard father
did.
She stared at me with scorn. "Everybody steals everything;
how else can anybody ever get rich? How did the
Commodore get them in the first place, but with you to
help him in the stealing? God help you, old man, you've
blinded yourself. If you won't believe me, ask your drunken friend,
she cried, grinning, and left the bridge.
By then Des was nearly coherent. Still, it took him a
long time to get the story out. Betsy had plied him with
drink and got him babbling, and what he had babbled was
what I should have known for myself. He had poked
among the incoming stores for the new "work crews and
found that there were pumps and engines and tubing, all
right, but there were also rifles and grenades and bigger,
worser weapons than that. It was true. The reconstruction
was a ruse to import his storm troopers; the party was a ruse, too,
to get Betsy aboard as hostage.
God knows how long Dougie had planned this madness. God knows
how many of Betsy's people he had
offered bribes or how many fortunes he had squandered
to buy arms and hire his battalions. God knew-but I
should have known, too! If I hadn't let myself fling off to
New Zealand in a fit of pique, I might have seen it happening
in time to prevent it. But even so, I should have
known. I should have realized months earlier that Dougie
would never settle for half of anything. He wanted all of
the Fleet, not just May's boats.
And he wound up with nothing. For God knew, and I
should have known-but Betsy did know. People who
take a bribe will take a bigger one. As I was scrambling
down the ladder to Dougie's command bridge I heard the
distant scream of a stiltboat and saw Betsy's boat rising
on its skis. She was on her way back to her own ship,
and Dougie was caught with egg on his face. For by the
time I got past his uglies to confront him, she was home
free and talking to him on the intercom. "Give it up,
sonny! she taunted. "You missed your chance!
He roared obscenities into the microphone, and finished with
threats, but she cut him off. "It's too late,
she said. "Look to your starboard! He did. I did, too-
we all did.
And wished we had not.
I had never seen a mininuke at work before. The oatyboat next to
us in the grazing comb was a sister ship to
our own. Two million tons, and most of ten thousand
people aboard. You would not think to look at that vast,
slow juggernaut that anything could halt it, or even slow
it down, much less do it harm-you might as well try to
sink Gibraltar! But a hundred-K nuke into its engine room
was too much weapon for even an oaty-boat.
It was God's grace for us that the explosion was inside
the hull, for we were spared our eyes. Even the secondhand
radiation that bounced off the water and made a
bright haze of the smoggy air blinded me, and the concussion
shook our boat. When the wave came. it swamped
Dougies floatilla and drowned hundreds of his thugs,
but then it was over. The only real change was that our
sister boat was not there anymore. All that remained of
it was a glowing, rising cloud of steam.
Dougie did not know when to give up. He actually
thought, I believe, that his hired killers would be loyal to
their pay. When he tried to get them to attack Betsy's
boat as planned, no matter that the same torpedo tubes
that had just disintegrated one oaty-boat were now trained
on ours, the mercenaries did what mercenaries do best-
changed sides-and told him they were arresting him. He
would not submit. That didn't help; they only killed him
instead.
The Russians and the Japanese ranted and raved, but
what could they do? There was no law left on the sea.
And no peace, either. When Betsy came aboard again, it
was as a conqueror, with twenty armed hoodlums at her
back, and she demanded that May sign over every vessel
in the Fleet to her.
My May was poised and lovely, but very pale. She
looked at me for strength but, chained and gagged in a
chair, I had none to give her. "The world will not condone
piracy! she cried, but Betsy only grinned.
"The world, she said, "has troubles of its own, and
besides, who would lift a finger to help a murderess?
I groaned and struggled, for I could guess what was
coming. May could not. It was her greatest weakness,
that she could never gauge what evil really was. "You
murdered your husband, Betsy announced. "The second
one, anyhow-I don't know about the others! May didn't
bother to tell her she was lying; she only waited to hear
what form the lie would take. But it wasn't all lie. For
Betsy said, "I have a confession from the oiler who helped
Dougie d'Agasto murder Jeff, and proof that it's true.
And the confession says that you were as guilty as Dougie.
Planned it together - she grinned -"for everyone knows
that you and Dougie were lovers long before you killed
Jeff to get him out of the way!
And all I could do was groan.
Later, when the papers were signed and May was taken
away, Betsy got around to me. "Well, she said when the
gag was out of my mouth, "what shall we do with you,
old man?
"Whatever you want to, I said. "But you know May
was no part of that murder! You have no evidence that
will stand one second in court!
"But the only court there is, old Jay, is me. No land
court will try her. She'll never be on land again, you see,
because I'm going to keep her near me as long as she
lives.
"Treat her kindly at least, I begged, abject at last.
"Why not? In fact, she said, in high good humor, "I'll
let you be her jailer, old man-providing we can make
an agreement on what your other duties are! And then
you can treat her as kindly as you like.
And so all the years of peace were over, forever.
Thrice widowed was wasted her beauty fair.
Her son, no son, was her only heir.
Her sister, no sister, pent her there,
In a cage on the grazing isles.
I did it for a year, and three months, and a week, and
how I did it that long I do not now know. Then I went
to Betsy. "You'll have to wait, said her butler. "Miss
Zoll is engaged just now.
"I'll wait, I said, and I did, for an hour and more in
her "morning room. It was a bright and cheery place,
high over the foredeck and its gardens. May had no gardens.
May had four comfortable rooms all to herself, and
whatever she liked to eat and all the video disks and books
she asked for, but except for me and the servants she had
them all to herself. Three visitors were allowed. I was
one. Betsy was another, but she had the grace never to
go there, and the third, who would have been the most
welcome of all but never came, was Jimmy Rex. Betsy
had designed May's jail herself. It had bright, large windows,
but they looked on nothing but the sea. It had one
door, and there was an armed guard outside it always. At
a push of a button the door would lock and steel shutters
would slam across the windows, but there was never any
need for the button. There was nowhere for May to go.
So I waited the time in Betsy's morning room as patiently
as I could, and then she emerged in a robe, drowsily yawning
and stretching, absently petting the hairy
shoulder of the scoutship pilot who was her favorite of
the moment. "Well, old man? What do you want now?
Isn't May happy in her home? Would she like a little trip
to relieve the monotony-say, a week or two in Miami
with her drug pushers and arms runners'?
I would not let her anger me. "I've come to sell you
my stock, I said.
She frowned at me in silence for a moment. Then she
slapped the pilot's rump and pointed to the door. When
he was gone, she said, "What's the trick, Jay? There
was no feeling to her voice at all. It might have been a
machine talking, with a machine's requirement for more
data on which to base the emotionless, compassionless
decision of a machine. I felt myself chilled.
"I don't like what you do, I said. "I can't stop you,
but I don't have to be an accomplice.
She rubbed thoughtfully at her lips, which were bruised
and swollen, and then clapped her hands. At once her
maid appeared in the door, peering through with an armed
guard looking alertly over her shoulder. Betsy gestured
drinking from a cup of coffee, and the maid produced a
service for her at once. "You're not lying to me, I think,
she said then. "but there's some kind of truth you're not
telling me. What do you want to do with the money'?
"Go away.
"Leave your precious May?
I kept my voice steady. "I have to get out of here for
a while, Betsy. I'll come back later and go on being a
prison guard, but I need some time off. And I need to
plan for my future. She looked unconvinced. I said the
rest of it: "You're' the tyrant here, Betsy. It has pleased
you let May live, but some day you'll be drunk, or
doped, or in a rage at whoever is sharing your bed that
day. And you'll take it out on her. When I can't help May
anymore, I want to see what I can do for me.
She sipped the coffee, studying me over the lip of the
cup, and then shrugged. "I'll accommodate you, Jay. I'll
give you ten million dollars for your stock.
When I had turned down fifty! "Twenty-five, I bargained,
and she shook her head and said:
"Nine.
And nine it was.
May could see at once that I had something to tell her,
but she played the hostess and asked after my health and
inquired wistfully after Jimmy Rex. She let me come to
it in my own time. So, with a glass of wine in my hand,
I said, "I'm going to New Zealand for a bit.
"Oh?
"Just for a while, May. A few weeks maybe. Then I'll
be back, I promise.
"Of course you will, Jay, dear. But you're absolutely
right. You should get out of this for a while. And New
Zealand's a lovely place-I remember, the skiing is first-
rate! And then, her eyes longingly on the open window
and the emptiness beyond it, she said in a tone that wanted
to be light, "I'd love to be there again. I couldn't do Betsy
any harm there. She knew that every word was heard
as well as I did, and I suppose she was talking to Betsy
as much as to me, though she knew how little good that
would do. "I would give my word not to, she said, "and
I've never broken it.
I left her before the tears began to trickle down my
cheek. I knew that May's word was good. I also knew that Betsy, the mother of lies,
would never believe it.
And, oh! my Mary, oh Mary, my May,
Blest was the hope and accursed the day,
Curst was the day when I brought you away,
Away from the grazing isles.
New Zealand was not an idle choice. It had three things
going for it. First, it was lightly populated and far from
rest of the miserable landlocked world. Second, their
geothermal springs made them poor customers for the
Fleet, and so less likely to want to keep in Betsy's good
graces. Third, I had a friend there.
Betsy's eyes did not stop at the hull of the oaty-boat.
So on the first day in Auckland I visited six different banks
to talk about investing my nine million dollars. On the
second day I toured the sheeplands by air, on the pretext
of buying a ranch, and that night I allowed myself to have
two or three more drinks than usual in the guests' lounge
at the little hotel. To anyone who would listen I explained
what a vindictive bitch Betsy Zoll was, and how I had at
last given up hope that my sweet May would ever be free
again. I did not know which of the ranchers or barmen
or guests would be passing the word on to Betsy, but I
had no doubt she would know everything I said.
And on the third day I went to visit an offshore oatie
and there, in the low-pressure turbine room, I met Sam
Abramowitz, as we had arranged on the first. "No one
can hear us here, he said over the hiss and groan of the
generators. "What do you want me to do? And then,
when I told him, "You're insane!
I agreed that it was an insane world all over. "Still,
I said, "what I need is a scout vessel with a pilot, and an
aircraft willing to take the chance of being fired on, for a
million dollars.
He pursed his lips. He didn't answer at first, but turned
and gazed around the booming, gasping turbine room as
though he were suddenly less sure that we couldn't be
spied on. Then he said, "I couldn't set it up overnight,
you know.
"I don't want it overnight, Sam. I want some time to
pass, so Betsy will relax a little. At least a month. Six
would be better. Just send me a message when you've
got it set up-something about investing in a new sheep-
shearing machine, maybe-and the pilot must wear something
I'll recognize, so I'll know he's there.
He shook his head slowly, not to refuse, only to say
it was an outlandish idea. "A million dollars, did you say?
It may cost more.
"I've got more, I said. He sighed. It meant yes. I
reached out and grasped his hand in both of mine. "You're
a good friend, Sam. It's not just for me, you know. It's
for the finest lady who ever drew breath.
He looked away and didn't answer. There was a strain
in the set of his jaw that I didn't understand and didn't much
like. But the important thing was that he had agreed. Then
and there I wrote a power of attorney for him, to draw what
he liked and spend as he chose. If there was nothing left of
the nine million when he was done, well, then I would be a
penniless old man. But I would be free, and so would May.
And so should May have been, for it was a good plan and
Sam Abramowitz a better friend than I deserved. He was
also careful and cunning. When at last the signal came and
the scoutship showed up, it was from one of the new Argentinian
boats, and the pilot came to Betsy with a fine,
false tale of locating unsuspected patches of deep cold that
he was willing to sell for a price. And the pilot wore the
green scarf that identified him. I could not talk to him, for
he was closeted with Betsy, driving his bargain and delivering his
goods, but I went down to the sternways and studied the vessel with
care. A scoutship has no more beauty
of line than an egg. Speed is not important, nor looks. What
is important is the strength of hull to withstand whatever
pressures it may encounter as it dives deep and sends its
probes deeper still to measure the bottom water. It looked
solid. Once in it and well away, we had our chance. It would
be a run for the bottom to hide under the thermoclines and
the scuttering layers, and then away, well out of reach of
any of Betsy's eyes or guns. We had range enough to make
it to Australia or Hawaii or Japan, or anywhere between. I
had settled on Manila. Of all destinations that was the most
dangerous for us, since the islands were small and sea visitors
frequent, but therefore the one where Betsy would be
least likely to look while we did what we had to do to change
our appearance and find our way to a new home.
All that was needed was the aircraft.
And so, as soon as it was dark, I went down to May's
room. She was sewing as interminably she did, pausing
to read for a while and then to return to the needle. "It's
a hot night, I said, stepping to the port and gazing at the
warm sea, twenty meters below. By leaning out and craning my neck
I could see the scoutboat moored to the
sternways, just past the gate in the mesh. There was a
man in a long green scarf where he was supposed to be.
He was paying for the fuel he had bought, and his orders
were to stall until the aircraft arrived.
Which would not be long.
I said, ~ I wish we could go for a swim. May gave me
a sharp glance. "Look, I said, catching her hand and
drawing her to the port. "It's not much of a dive. And on
a night like this we could swim to Hawaii if we chose,
and see the palms and the black beaches again. It was
foolish talk, and I was grinning foolishly as I raised her
hand to my lips and kissed it. When I let her hand go, it
was curled around the scrap of paper I'd written out before. It said:
"When I say jump we both jump, and there will be a
boat to take us free.
"Have a drink, dear Jay, May said gently, nodding
me to the bar. And a while later she excused herself to
the bathroom, and when she came out she went back to
her sewing, only looking up to gossip about the fine fresh
pineapple they'd served her for dinner and the strange
dream she'd awakened with that morning.
Half an hour later we were still chattering away, when
the first-level aircraft-warning bells began to ring. I
assumed an expression of surprise and curiosity, and pulled
May toward the port to look out.
And May's door opened, and little Jimmy Rex walked
in.
He was eight years old then, spoiled rotten by Betsy
for the past three, and for that matter born with his
father's family's rotten blood in him. You must know that
in three years the boy had visited his mother just twice.
It was Betsy who had sent him, of course. His eyes were
bright with an eight-year-old's deviltry. "Are you going
to do something foolish, mother May? he asked, the
voice clear, the face pure, the heart made up of equal
parts brat and bully. I stood between them.
"What makes you ask a question like that? I demanded.
He pouted up at me. "Betsy says it's very strange,
he complained, "that you've become a drunk, and sold
your stock, and stopped asking me to visit here. And
there's a plane from the Soviet fleet that showed up on
our screens a few minutes ago, claiming that they've lost
their electronics and don't know if we're their home boat
or not.
I had not expected Betsy to make so quick a connection.
But outside the door the guard was paying no attention to
us. He was listening to the ship's intercom, his
scarred, mean face envious as he heard the challenges to
the Russian VTOL. The Russian was earning his pay, for
he knew as well as I that the boat's surface-to-air missiles
were homing in on him at that very second. I opened my
mouth to answer Jimmy Rex, but May caught my arm.
"Can't we take him, Jason? she begged.
"We can not, I cried. "And we have no time to argue!
For if Betsy was suspicious enough to send him here, we
had minutes, maybe seconds, and the diversion of the
aircraft would not puzzle her for long.
There was no weakness in May's brain. She understood me well.
She knew I spoke the truth. But she was also a mother, whose only
child had been lost to her. She gazed
on him one moment more before she sobbed and turned
to the port.
That was one moment too many. "No! shrilled little
Jimmy Rex, and did the only thing he could do to stop
her. He darted out into the corridor and jerked the handle
that would seal May's cabins off and keep her from getting
through.
He did not keep all of her inside.
The door slammed.., and the terrible strong shutters
slashed closed upon my May.
There I was, alone with what was left of May. And
minutes later the steel outer door grudgingly slid open
again, and there was Betsy storming in, with Jimmy Rex
crowding behind her. Betsy looked furious and triumphant
and outraged all at once. . . and then, when she saw
that it was only May's headless body that lay bleeding in
my arms, more than anything else, relieved.
For Jimmy Rex I will say this much. He wept beside
his mother's decapitated corpse. He screamed and sorrowed,
and I believe he truly grieved-for ten minutes
or so.
Even Betsy was shaken, though not as long as that,
for he was still shrieking when she turned to me with an
expression of awe and delight. "You old fool, she said
admiringly, "I knew you'd do something dashing and
stupid to solve all my problems. I ought to thank you.
"if you do, I said as steadily as I could, "there'll be
two dead women in this room. And there would have,
though by then her goons were holding me fast.
The room was mad, with medics covering May's poor
body and a guard leading Jimmy Rex away and blood
everywhere-everywhere! But Betsy looked only at me,
and this time I could not read her expression at all. If I
had not known her so well, I would have thought there
was pity in it.
At last she sighed and shook her head. "Old man, she
said roughly, "keep your lonely illusions. Get off my boat."
She nodded to the guards, and twenty minutes later the
great OT was disappearing behind me as the scoutship
that should have carried May to freedom instead carried
only me to-I am not sure what.
And so the queen she met her end.
The axe was raised by her dearest friend.
Her son, no son, made the blade descend
To finish the queen of the isles.
The fair, sweet queen, the sorrowful queen,
Oh, pity the queen of the isles!
For more than a year after that I woke shaking every
night from a dream of the great steel shutter chopping
May's dear head off. It was bad, and what I woke to was
perhaps even worse. What "illusions made nasty Betsy
pity me?
I never found an answer to that question. Perhaps I
did not want one.
From Pohlstars version 1.0 THE SWEET, SAD QUEEN OF THE GRAZING ISLES
At the World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago in
1982 I was part of a panel discussing the work of the
late Cordwainer Smith (pseudonym of the Johns Hopkins political science professor, Paul M. A. Liriebarger).
Paul Linebarger was an author whom I published extensively as long as he lived while I was editing Galaxy
in the 1960s, and one whose work I greatly admire still.
He was not merely a contributor but a friend, for which
reason he tolerated my practice of changing almost
every title of the Cordwainer Smith stories I published.
(Other writers were less forgiving.) While talking about
this on the panel, it occurred to me that it was a long
time since I had made up a Cordwainer Smith story
title. So I amused myself (in the boring periods while
other people were talking) by inventing titles for stories
Paul had never written, but should have. The one I
liked best was this one. . . and so, that afternoon, as
part of my self-imposed regime of defacing four pages
of clean paper with writing every day of my life, I began
to write a story to go with the title. I do not think it is a
"Cordwainer Smith story' by any means. But I did borrow
one of his favorite devices in the writing of it-
perhaps some readers will detect which one.
In Twenty and Three, born at sea,
Her daddy endowed her a legacy.
In Twenty and Ten her brother Ben
Stole the inheritance back again.
She loves but she loses, she weeps as she smiles,
The sweet, sad queen of the grazing isles
BECAUSE I DID THE OLD COMMODORE A FAVOR, he promised I would always have a job with the Fleet.
I always did. I always do still, because even now I have the job.
The title and the pay and the working conditions have
changed a dozen times, and these times not the best of
them. But even Jimmy Rex knows I have that right to a
job, and grants it. Meanly.
The favor I did for Commodore Mackenzie was done
long before he was a Commodore, and I could have gone
to jail for it. Jason, he said, give me a month. I need an
extension on my loans, thirty days at most, and if you
give it me, you'll never have to worry again as long as
you live. I will worry, though, I said-a boy still in his
twenties, just a keypuncher in the records section of a
bank-I'll worry about the law, at least until the statute
of limitations runs out, because buggering the records is
a penal offense. Only if they catch you, he said, laughing,
and that they can't do. For you'll be at sea, where the
land law cannot reach. It was his first oaty-boat that was
building at the time, you see, and he had used up all his
wife's money and all he could cajole out of his first two
financial backers, and the third one, the big one, was
trying to make up his mind to plunge.
He was a powerful man even then, James Mackenzie.
No older than forty. no gigger than most but the blue
eyes flashed and the smile was sure, and he knew how
to talk a person toward any place he chose. But what
decided me was not Mackenzie. It was his young wife,
the lady Ella. She loved him. So I worked overtime one
night, and displayed his file, and changed a few dates,
sweating with fear. He had his thirty days. And the backer
did, at the last minute, come through with the money to
finish the boat, and so James William Mackenzie became
the Commodore.
He was a son of a bitch, Commodore Mackenzie, but
he had style. Fifty shares of stock I got and a title: Executive Assistant to the Fleet Captain. Very grand. Even
if the fleet was still only a single vessel. But even one
oaty-boat is a huge and costly machine, two hundred thousand metric tons of hull and works, towing twenty kilometers of tubes and pumps, with a deck the size of a
township. The Commodore did something you won't believe with that deck, or at least with the part forward of the bridge. He planted it. He pumped aboard half a million
cubic meters of San Francisco Bay bottom muck while
the boat was still at the builder's dock. The water ran off
through the scuppers, and the soil remained. He sailed it
up toward Tacoma for the deep-water fitting and steamed
slowly around the wettest, stormiest part of the Pacific
Coast until the rain had rinsed it clean. Seeds and slips
and bulbs and saplings came aboard, and by the time we
were on our first cruise there was grass there, and gardens, and the beginnings of a grove. For his dear lady
Ella hated the sea. So Owner's Quarters were an apartment below deck and a terrace above, and if you looked
only forward you could think you were in some fine manor
house with the weather always balmy and the lawn as
steady as any on Earth. The weather was always fine
because oaty-boats are never in bad weather. That is why
they are boats, instead of drilling platforms or moored
barges, so that they can seek out the places where sea
and air are best to do their work.
And for four years they were happy, and I was happy,
and the great boat steamed slowly through the fruitful
patches of the southern ocean, sucking up the cold and
pitting it against the warm, and, oh, how the money rolled
in! And we were happiest of all in the fourth year, when
Ella was pregnant. She was a tiny, frail woman, all spirit
and no stamina, and there were times when in even the
calmest seas she seemed unwell. Yet as a pregnant woman
she bloomed, prettier than ever and glowing with the child
inside. The baby was born, even prettier than her mother.
It was in the month of May, and so they called her May,
and then the happiness stopped because Ella died. It was
not childbirth alone-she had the best of doctors, flown
in from Sydney and San Francisco. It was cancer. She
had known she had it, and kept it secret, and wouldn't
let them cut it away because it would have cut away the
unborn child as well. Childbirth merely finished her off.
It was her wish to be buried on land. The Commodore
walked dry-eyed through the crew quarters and crooked
a finger at an oiler's mate named Elsie Van Dorn. A large,
plain woman, but a kind one. And when he came back
from the funeral, he took all the Fleet stock that was in
Ella's name and put it into baby May's, and gave me a
new job. "Van Dorn will be May's nursemaid, he said,
"but you'll be her godfather. That was a joke, I think,
because we had been told that money was his god. "You're
Managing Director of the May Mackenzie Trust, and if
you do anything wrong with it I'll kill you. Even if I die
for it. Even if I die first, for I'll leave a little sum of money
and some orders, and someone will be watching who has
a gun. He still owed me for the favor I had done him,
you see, but he remembered what it was.
And for seven years baby May grew, and wasn't a
baby any more.
There are little girls with a face so fine and a look so
sweet that they'll break your heart. May was one. She
was slight for her age, and all her life. Yet even when she
first toddled she would pause, and stick her thumb in her
mouth, and gaze out over the privet and the boxwood
hedges at the southern seas with an ancient mariner's look
of sadness and resignation that made you forget the rumpled hair and the dragging diaper; and when she was old
enough to talk and tie her shoes, I fell in love. It is not a
thing I want to have laughed at and so I will say no more,
but it's true. I did. I loved her truly and purely, and went
on doing so. Not as a godfather.
She had a father's love for those seven years, though.
She was the Commodore's only daughter and his only
legitimate child-the only child of his I saw then, for the
bastard was away at school and then at work in the Fleet's
landside offices. He was busy every minute, the
Commodore, but he always found time to see May and
to play with her, and to tuck her in at night. I was less
busy than that. There was not much work attached to
being the Managing Director of the May Mackenzie Trust,
for every penny of it was invested in the oaty fleet, two
ships, and then seven, and then a dozen; the money rolled
in, but every spare penny went back into building more.
So I competed with Elsie Van Dorn. I became May's other
nanny. They were the best years I have ever lived. I took
her with me around the boat. We watched the dry ammonia powder being pumped out of our belly into the hold
of a tanker, kerchiefs to our noses to keep from sneezing,
and we listened to the screaming hydrogen flow as it went
into the refrigeration ships, the huge red flags warning us
not to light a match or scratch a spark-as though anyone
in the Fleet were such a fool! We watched the huge slow
spinning of the low-pressure turbines as they transformed
the heat into power, and we waved good-by to the crews
of the scout skimmers as they went out to seek colder
depths and warmer air to steer toward. Every member of
the crew knew May, and petted her when she would let
them. They weren't truly a crew. They were more like a
city, for we had power workers and fertilizer chemists
and oceanographers and engineers and navigators and
cooks and cleaning men and fire wardens and a ship's
master and five assistants to guide us and half a dozen
gardeners for the greensward and the farms on the afterdeck.
There were more than eighteen hundred human
beings on board, and I think May knew the name of every
one. She knew none better than me. I was her godfather
and her friend. There were a hundred other children on
board, and four who were her special friends, but there
was no person who was more special than I.
And then the Commodore one morning came to breakfast in May's room,
as he always did when he was aboard,
and looked tired, admitted he'd had a bad night's sleep,
got up from the table, fell face down on his plate, and
died.
I could forgive the Commodore for dying. He didn't
plan to do it, and it happens to us all. But I will never
forgive him for dying with his will so written that his
bastardly bastard son, Ben, became May's guardian until
she was thirty years old.
He was aboard before the body was cold and had moved
into the Commodore's rooms before the smoke of the
Commodore's cigars was aired out. The will gave him the
voting rights on May's stock. I could forbid him to sell a
share. I could take the dividends and invest them anywhere
I chose-but where was there a better investment
than the oaty fleet?
For a month, then, I looked over my shoulder every
minute, expecting to see the Commodore's hired assassin,
but the assassin never came. All that came was a note,
one day, mailed from Papua New Guinea via the boat's
air service, and all it said was, "It's not your fault, this
time.
The Commodore never broke a promise to me but two.
The first was that he'd have me killed if I failed to protect
May's interest. I did fail her then, and knew I had, but I
didn't die. The other promise was that I would never have
to worry again, because after he died, for twenty years
and more. I did nothing else.
Later on, in Twenty-three,
The queen she married, but not to me.
Later still, in Twenty-four,
A scowling imp of a son she bore.
She bore him and raised him for years and miles,
The son of the queen of the grazing isles.
When May was fifteen, Van Dorn went at last back to
the engines, and May went off to school. She took her
four friends with her, the four other Mays with whom
she'd grown up, but Ben would not allow me to join them.
"You can keep your job and your pay, Jason, he said to
me, "but leave my sister May alone, for when she's ready
to fall in love it will be with a rich boy and a sensible boy
and a handsome boy, and not with a dirty old man who
sleeps with her socks under his pillow. That was a lie.
I told him it was a lie. But what was behind it was no lie,
for the love was still there. If May had been five years
older, if she had been a year older even, I might easily
have told her what I felt before I let her go. And might
have got a good answer, perhaps. There was thirty years
between us, and I am not handsome. But she was easy
with me, and trusted me, and had good reason for trust.
So Ben the Bastard fouled Owner's Quarters with his
fat dark wife and their sallow brat, Betsy, who never liked
me. Nor I her, to be sure. That whole family was repellent.
I never knew Ben's mother, but I knew who she was. A
file clerk in a lawyer's office. The Commodore seduced
her to get a look into the lawyer's contract files, where
there was something worth money for him to see. He got
his look. She got his child. He would never marry her,
of course, for she hadn't a dime, and when she pupped
his bastard, he was long gone away. I will say for the
Commodore that he acknowledged the son. He paid the
bills to bring him up, even when it was hard for him. He
sent the boy through school and gave him a place with
the Fleet, though not at sea, but would never give him
his name.
So it was Benjamin (which means "gift of God ) Zoll
(for that was the woman's name) who came aboard with
the will in his pocket and the resolve in his heart to reign.
Well, he had more than arrogance. He was a mean-
hearted man, but a hardworking one. The first day he was
over the side in a diving mask, discovering cracks in the
antifouling plates and surfacing in a fury. Twenty maintenance workers lost their jobs that day, but the next crew
kept the plates repaired, and we saved a thousand dollars
worth of steaming fuel a week.
An ocean-thermal generating boat lives off the temperature difference between deep water and sun-warmed
surface water. The top water warms the working fluid-
a halocarbon with a low boiling point-and it becomes
steam and goes through the low-pressure turbines to make
electricity; the electricity splits water into hydrogen and
fixes nitrogen from the air, and we sell what it makes.
The difficulty is the halocarbon working fluid. It is too
expensive to vent to the air. It must be condensed and
recycled, and for that we need something cold. The sea
gives us that. There is plenty of cold water in every deep
sea, but it is half a kilometer down or more, and so we
must pump it to the surface. Pumping and pumping.
Pumping cold water up from the deep. Pumping the working fluid through the solar collectors. Pumping water past
the electrodes to be split into its gases; pumping the gases
into the refrigerator ships to be carried away. Out of every
hundred kilowatt-hours of energy we make, ninety-seven
go into running the gear itself.
But that three percent left over makes us rich, for once
the boat is built it is all free.
Ben Zoll had never worked on an oaty-boat, and so he
had much to learn He learned it fast If he did not have
the Commodores name, he had at least inherited his drive.
May had the name. And bastard Ben kept her from
everything else, kept her from the presidency of the Fleet,
kept her from the voting rights to her stock.
He did not begrudge her money. She had the best
schools. She had horses to ride and clothes for a princess.
It was no sacrifice to Ben to allow her any money she
needed. The billions of land people hungered insatiably
for every grain of ammonia and every wisp of hydrogen
we could make. The company prospered under bastard
Ben.
And so did I, for my pitiful fifty shares of stock had
already made me a millionaire. I didn't need the job anymore. But I kept it, and I stayed on the O.T. Where else
was there to go? No sensible person would want to live
on a continent with all those writhing billions. Land people are a suing, assassinating, conniving bunch. And I had
formed the habit of living under the Law of the Sea-
And, besides, every now and then May came home to
visit.
She did not come often. But there were school holidays. Any time there were afew days together, she would
take the long five-hour flight from Massachusetts to the
Bismarcks or the Coral Sea or wherever we were grazing,
and in the summers, always, for weeks on end. It was
not May alone, for the four other Mays always came too,
to visit their families and to get away from the stink and
strife. They were beautiful girls. Girls to break a thousand
hearts, and I suppose they did. There was Maisie
Richardson, huge and blond and glowing with health, and
May Holliston-Peirce, the hydrologist's daughter, with
trusting blue eyes and a sweet, guileful tongue, and Tseling Mei, who became a movie star, and May Bancroft,
black and handsome and the wisest of them all. And May
herself. My May. She was always the most beautiful of
them all. There are pretty babies who grow up blotchy
or sullen or fat, but there was never a day in any company
when May was not the most beautiful there. They were
all almost of an age, May and the four other Mays, and,
oh, heaven, how they brightened up the old O.T.!
There was a May for any man's taste, and all of them for every
taste, for they were kind and clever, they were lovely and
loving. They chattered and whispered among themselves,
and if ever a joke went the wrong way or a word touched
a nerve, they made it up at once with a kindness and a
kiss.
And then there was Betsy.
Betsy Zoll. Bitch child of the bastard, Ben. If you take
the raw materials for two young women and give all of
the beauty and kindness and grace to one-say, to May-
what is left over is Betsy Zoll. May was a diamond. Betsy
was flawed glass. When the Mays were not aboard, Betsy
was the princess royal, and sometimes, on a good day,
she almost looked the part. But in their shade she drooped
and sulked. The shiny glass was beside true diamonds,
and its luster was gone. They let her tag along with them,
out of kindness. Out of envy, she wished them dead. So
the holidays were no joy for Betsy Zoll, and she couldn't
wait, couldn't wait for them to be over and the Mays back
in school so she could try to reign again.
And then there was a Christmas season coming when
Betsy was all smiles and triumph.
She must have hunted all over the boat for me, for I
was down in the boiler room to see if there was a need,
as ship's gossip said there was a plan, to buy new generators. "Well, Jason, she said, beaming so fondly that
my heart sank, "getting ready for Christmas?
The engineers and oilers watched us from a distance,
whispering to themselves, although no one needed to
whisper with the great coughing sigh of the low-pressure
turbines in every ear. I wished her a Merry Christmas
civilly and excused myself to let my office know where
I was-there was no reason not to now, you see, because
Betsy had already found me. When I finished with the
phone, she giggled. "Next week that will cost you a
quarter, she said.
I had known she would bring bad news, of course,
because that was her nature, but what she said was
astonishing. "It will cost money to use the ship's phone?
She pursed her lips and inclined her head. "To use the
phone, and to run your video, and to turn on a fan, yes,
she said, the sallow face and the pale eyebrows twitching
with pleasure. "Father says it's time we started charging
for all the electricity the crew uses. Fifty cents a kilowatthour to start, Father says.
"It makes no sense!
"Dollars and cents, she said gleefully. "That's our
electricity, old man. It's worth money. Why should we
give it away when we can sell it?
I drew back from her, because she had pressed her
face almost into mine and her breath was like a sewer.
Betsy was fifteen years old then, but the freshness of
youth had never touched her. I said, "We can't sell electricity, Betsy, only what we can make from it. If we want
to produce more to sell, we'll have to devote more space
to conversion processes, and where's the space to come
from?
"Good question, old man, she said triumphantly.
"Father has of course thought of all that. To begin with,
there's a thousand cubic meters wasted under the foredeck. We'll do our hydrogen electrolysis up there, which
gives more room amidships for the ammonia and-
"Owner's Quarters! I said.
"Old man, she lectured, "people like us won't live on
this little tub forever. We've got new boats building ten
times the size of this. We're going to move the flag.
The ship's gossip was not only gossip, then, and the
truth was worse than the gossip. It was worse than I knew,
in fact, for Betsy had saved the worst for the last. "When
May comes home for Christmas, we'll see what she has
to say, I said, for it was in the Commodore's will that
May's own quarters were hers forever. And I had delivered myself into Betsy's hands.
"When May comes home for Christmas, she parroted
spitefully, "what we'll see, old man, is that she isn't comming
home for Christmas. Why, Jason! Do you mean she never told you that she's
got a boyfriend? His name's
Frank Appermoy, and she's spending her Christmas with
him and his mother.
And May had not written me a word! As Betsy well
knew. She did not bother to disguise her triumph as she
glanced at her watch and moved her lips for a moment
before she spoke, that charnel breath well suited to the
words she said. "Allowing for the time differences, she
said, "I'd guess they're probably humping in his big water
bed on Hawaii right now. Tough shit, old man, she said,
and turned and left me standing.
Back in my office, the first thing I did was order up
all the data we had in store on Frank Appermoy and the
rest of the Appermoy clan. The second thing, while I was
waiting for the readouts, was to put through a call to May
at the Appermoy estate on the Big Island. It was 10 P.M.
on the 'Kona coast, and according to the butler who answered my call, Miss May and Master Frank were at a
luau and were not expected to return for at least two
hours. So I asked them to call me, and got down to the
hard-copy prints.
I already knew that the Appermoys were rich. I even
knew that they competed with us, or wanted to, though
their total production of nitrogen and hydrogen in a year
was less than that of the smallest of our boats. Their
process was not the same as ours, either.
The Appermoy money came, in the first place, from
radioactive waste. Old Simon Appermoy had been as
clever as the Commodore and as diligent. He had worked
out a plan, and then had sought out and signed disposal
contracts with every nuclear power plant he could find
and half a dozen national defense departments, all of them
so madly happy to find anyone who would take their waste
radionuclides away that they paid huge amounts for every
ton. Then Simon Appermoy vitrified the dirty stuff. He
dissolved it in glassy chunks, and then he did the clever
thing. He bought a couple of seamounts in the Pacific,
the tail end of the Hawaiian chain, the volcanic islands that
had risen from the sea bottom and been planed flat
by the waves over tens of millions of years. Whether the
sovereign state of Hawaii had any title to sell them was
a whole other question, but a clouded title never worried
old Appermoy-I'll say why in a minute. Then he drilled
holes in the flat summits of the seamounts and dumped
the glassy radionuclides in.
So far it was simple waste disposal. Enough to make
him rich, but only the beginning. His next step was to
become our competitor.
Some unsung genius on Appermoy's payroll had informed him that all that hot stuff a thousand fathoms down
would start a warm-water plume moving up toward the
surface; and that plume contained energy that Appermoy
could suck out with slow, huge, vertical-axis blades. And
so he did, and used that energy just as we did, to make
electricity that would fix nitrogen and split water into fuel.
But he did not suck all the energy out, because he wanted
some of that warmed plume to reach the surface so that
it could carry with it the organic detritus from the bottom
that had accumulated for tens of millions of years. If you
saw that trash in your living room, you would call it filth
and try to mop it away; but if you saw it in your garden,
it would delight your heart, for it was rich in organics.
And as it came to the surface, it fed microorganisms to
feed krill to feed fish. Any kind of fish Appermoy chose
to stock, in fact, because the steel skeletons that held his
works above the seamounts made marvelous habitats for
food fish arid game fish and every fish that swam in the
sea. I don't know what reward Simon Appermoy gave
the flunky who devised this plan. Most likely Appermoy
gave him cement overshoes and a quick drop without a
face mask to the surface of the seamount, where his poor
empty-eyed skull could watch the muck swirl slowly upward.
But it all worked. It was almost the opposite of our
process, you see. We pumped up cold water to condense
the warmed vapor that the sun boiled for us. Appermoy
warmed the waters of the deep with his radioactive filth-
to make much of the same end products, yes, but also to
gain what we did not, several thousand tons a day of high-
quality ocean fish to feed the billions on the land.
A rich family they were. A decent family they were
not. Their empire was built on poisons at the base, and
the money that gave Appermoy his start was more poisonous still. He got it the same way the Commodore did-
he married it-but while the Commodore married a lady,
what Simon Appermoy married was the spawn of four
generations of Mafia chiefs. That was how they got their
first contracts for disposing of radioactive waste. That
was how they kept competition away. Others saw what
Appermoy had done and tried to find seamounts of their
own, but if strikes did not befall them, unexplained accidents did.
So the family was foul; young Frank Appermoy himself, less so. There were no great sins to his record in the
datastore, unless you call polo playing a sin. He did not,
however, meet Ben Zoll's specifications except for the
first of them. He was rich. But you can't call someone
who lives to hit a little ball from horseback sensible, and
handsome he certainly was not. One of his horses had
thrown him and kicked him. He was not yet fully recovered, the datastore said, and the picture confirmed it.
Although the right side of his face had been very much
rebuilt since the accident, he looked odd. He did not look
terrifying or repulsive, but not even a mother could call
him handsome-not even the mother of all lies and
wickedness who had borne him, Simon Appermoy's
wretched wife.
And yet my May had chosen him to wed.
The scouts had found us a nice flow of cold water in
the deeps south of the Philippines, and that is always a
great treasure. Every extra degree of differential between
surface temperature and deep makes a great enhancement
in power yield when you work with such short margins
as ours. So we were thousands of kilometers west of
Hawaii, and yet it was well dark before May and her
gallant called me back. I was sitting on my private little
weather deck, gazing at the Southern Cross and wishing
I had been born a couple of decades later than I was,
when the phone rang.
There they were, the two of them. His arm was around
her shoulder, and he was grinning at me with that twisted-
but not evil-face, and May was looking apologetic but
ecstatic. "It has all gone so very fast, Uncle Jason. She
had never called me "uncle before. "I wanted to call you
a thousand times, but-
"It doesn't matter," I said, lying.
"You will come to the wedding, though, won't you?
Please?
As though there were any doubt of that! But the boy
added his pleas as well. "You're the only real family May
has, sir. None of her young men had ever called me "sir
before, either. "My mother says she'll try to be her mother,
too, since I never had a sister, and heaven knows, sir,
I'll do all I can to make her happy! And it wouldn't be
right to marry May if you weren't here.
The statute of limitations had expired long since, of
course, but there was nothing I wanted on land. Even on
an island. Especially an island belonging to the Appermoys. But he added the clincher: "You really have to,
sir, because we want you to give her away.
And I gave her away.
I gave her away on the steps of the mansion at South
Point, with Kilauea steaming behind the house, with a lei
around May's sweet neck and the priest wearing a microphone in his collar so that all the fourteen hundred
guests could hear, and Betsy grinning wickedly at me from
the first row, and the groom white-faced and sweating,
for he had had some kind of convulsion just before the
ceremony. He had good enough manners, young Frank
Appermoy. But I did not want to give May away to any
man, with good manners or bad, rich or poor, young or
old, as long as that man was not me. Especially not to
one who, as I learned, every now and then had blinding
headaches and convulsions. I wish that horse had kicked a little harder.
Whether they were happy or not I do not know..
I suppose they were. The next year they had a baby, James
Reginald Appermoy, and the year after that young Frank's
scrambled brain quit trying to keep him alive and my May
was a widow at twenty-two. The bitch mother-in-law said
she killed him.
At one and twenty to a husband was wed.
At two and twenty the husband was dead.
Her mother, no mother, called her no wife.
Her sister, no sister, plagued all of her life.
Her living was bounded in snares and guiles,
The sweet, luckless queen of the grazing isles.
May could not stay on the Big Island with the old
Appermoy woman spreading scandalous tales about her.
Ben the bastard invited her home. Not to the boat she
had grown up on, because her old home there had become
part of the new electrolysis plant, but to the homes on
the biggest of the new oaty-boats. Two million deadweight
tons! The oaties weren't boats anymore, they were floating islands, and there was room for a dozen large families
in owner's country on the foredeck. In spite of this, Ben
claimed at first that there was no room for me, but that
was only to make May beg. "Oh, well, he said, giving
in as he had planned to all along, "at least he can change
the baby's diapers. I'll find him quarters with the crew.
Quarters with the crew. And I custodian of May's vast
estate and a part owner in my own right, with my fifty
shares. May owned three Fleet shares to bastard Ben's
one, but they did us little good. For Ben had the will, and
control of the voting rights until she reached the age of
thirty. I could not believe the Commodore had been so
insane. Yet when I slipped away to Reykjavik and spoke
to a lawyer at the Sea court, he told me the will was firm,
and I went back to May with a shifty lie about where I
had been and watched her nurse the child. I did not know
what to say to her.
But May did not ask. In those first months she was all
for the child, singing to him, petting him, nursing him-
wincing now and then, for he was a terrible biter. And a
terribly ugly little brat, too. May would sit by the great
oval pool among the palms on the foredeck with Jimmy
Rex in her arms or whimpering in a bed beside her; and
I would be there to give her company; and surely, almost
every time, there would be Betsy as well, practicing her
dives off the high board or sipping mai tais with one of
the corrupt, pretty young men who were always her
houseguests. And always with one eye on May and the
child.
It was easy to know what Betsy wanted. Whatever
May had, that was it. She had even wanted that sorry,
spasmed Frank Appermoy-and had got him, at least
long enough for a tumble in his water bed, and made sure
I knew she had. Now she wanted Appermoy's child. At
first I thought all she wanted was a child. She could have
had one easily enough, with all those young studs sniffing
after her; I thought what stopped her was, a little, the
bother of marrying one of them or, most of all, the unpleasantness and pain of actually giving birth. In that I was wrong. What she wanted was James Reginald Appermoy, with all his tantrums and colics, and only because
he was May's.
So for half a year May was the perfect young mother
bereft, with the imperfect wretch of a babe. Then the brat
was weaned, and she seemed to come back to the world.
Perhaps she realized at last that she was lonely. She had
no friend but me on the oaty-boat. If anyone in the huge
seven-thousand-man crew showed signs of becoming a
friend, Betsy told Ben, and Ben transferred him away.
Even the four other Mays could come on board only for
a day or two at a time, with all the long flight to get there
and the other to leave again, for we were mostly far from
any land. So it was no wonder that my sweet girl began
to look elsewhere for pleasure. It was a house party here,
and a fox hunt there, and Switzerland for the skiing, and
Tokyo to see the shows. If she was to be away for just a few days,
she would leave Jimmy Rex with me, nasty
child whom I tried with all my heart to love. If it was a
matter of weeks they would both be gone, and I had
nothing to do and no one to do it with, for my friends
were suddenly needed badly on another boat as well. I
wished for another Elsie Van Dorn, but Elsie herself was
now a second engineer on the old boat, and I did not want
to involve her in Ben's anger. So I had a succession of
cooks' assistants and young things from the typing pool.
None lasted more than a few weeks. The ones who were
not kind enough and strong enough to put up with the
brat I had to send back to their regular work, and the
others Ben transferred away.
And the unsigned messages came in. One a month.
Some came from Australia and some from Seoul, and one
from Capetown, but they all said much the same thing:
"If you value your life, help her now.
But how was I to do that?
I did not need the unknown assassin's reminder to want
to help my May. I made an excuse to slip away again and
this time found a better lawyer, or at least a- more high-
priced one. He did not simply tell me the Commodore's
will could not be broken. He gave me two days of his
time, quoting the Law of the Sea and citing precedents.
He charged accordingly, and it all came out to much the
same. Ben had the law on his side until May was thirty.
It was the only time I was on land that year. I thought
of following May to her parties, to see if she would talk
freely off the boat, or more truthfully just for the pleasure
of being near her. I could have done it. I would have, I
surely would have, if she had said a word or given a look
to say she wanted me. The word never came. The look,
maybe.
She was off to New York City this time, May and the
child. I carried Jimmy Rex to the airplane and handed
him over to her at the door. "New York for the opera
season'? I didn't know you loved opera that well, I said,
and May smiled at me.
"A little culture would do neither of us any harm,
Jason, dear," she said, and paused, and thought for a moment, looking out over the wide, warm sea. I knew that
look. I almost expected to see her with her thumb in her
mouth and her hip-huggers sagging to the ground, for it
was a lost and thoughtful look. The pilot was flipping his
control surfaces back and forth and glancing back over
his shoulder at us, for he had a schedule to keep, but May
stared at the sea for some time. Then she turned back to
me as though she were about to speak.
She did not. She looked past me, over my shoulder,
and changed her mind. "Good-by, then, dear Jason, she
said, and kissed me. She took the baby from my arms
and was gone.
As I stepped back to get out of the way of the VTO
jets, I bumped into what had changed her. It was brother
Ben. He was looking worn and fretful, for all he was only
a dozen years older than May, and sullen Betsy was
scowling at his side.
The hydrogen flame screamed and licked against the
baffles, and the plane lifted in a blue-white burn too bright
to look at. Betsy turned to me. "We came to say good-
by, she said nastily, "but I guess May doesn't want to
waste good manners on the family.
The plane was a kilometer up now, and moving away.
Ben shaded his eyes to squint after it. "Jason, he said
without looking at me, "let's talk business. I'll buy your
stock.
"You will not, I said, "for I don't want to sell to you.
He gave me a hooded look. It was the look of a man
who has some pieces to a puzzle, but not enough to make
the pattern clear. "Have you been enjoying your trips to
Iceland? he asked.
I had never doubted that he was spying on me. I didn't
bother to answer. He said, "I'll pay you more than your
shares are worth.
"They're worth more to me than they are to you, Ben,
I said, and turned my back on him. As I walked to the
lift I could hear him coughing behind me. He was a sick man.
I went to my desk and began to study my reports, but
I did not have my mind on them. Part was on May, as
part of my mind was always. But part was on Ben. I
wished the bastard no good at all, but I did not wish him
dead. I knew who would inherit his stock when he died.
And the Reykjavik lawyer had told me that Ben could
name his successor as May's guardian and, for all that
she was years younger and the guardianship a mockery,
I knew who he would name.
I could not get out of my head that May had been about
to say something to me before she left, and so I decided
to hear what it was. Three days after she was gone, I
called in my assistant and told him he was on his own for
a week, and took the same plane.
We were cruising in the Philippine sea at the time, so
it was VTO jet to Manila, then orbital craft to the great
floating terminal off Sandy Hook, and a helicopter to the
roof of my hotel.
I do not like the land. I do not like the crowds and the
roar and the stink of the land, and especially I do not like
a city. I had taken rooms in the same hotel where May
was staying, and I did not intend to leave it except to see
her. So as soon as I was settled in my suite I walked out
into the hall and took the elevator a dozen flights and
knocked on the door. Tse-ling Mei opened it. "Uncle Jason! she cried, with pleasure and surprise in her voice,
and maybe a little worry, too. "Oh, come in, please!
All four of the other Mays were there. So was little
Jimmy Rex, bawling at the walls of his room because he
was being made to take a nap, but my May was not.
The young beauties sat me down and clustered around
me like meadow flowers in the spring. "Some tea? asked
Mei, and, "Have you eaten? from Maisie, and "What
Jason probably needs most is a drink, from May Bancroft, and from May Holliston-Peirce, "Oh, tell us what's
new on the boats!
So we chattered for a while and I felt almost at ease,
though concerned that they seemed to have no idea when
May would be back. Then May Bancroft sighed and said,
"Oh, hell. We all turned and looked. Jimmy Rex was
standing in the doorway, glowering at us, escaped from
his crib and come to make us unhappy. In one hand he
waved the perfectly dry diaper he had managed to squeeze
out of. With the other he guided himself as he pissed
deliberately on the Auhusson rug. Do you see what a
foolish lottery we gamble in when we make a child? He
could have taken after his mother, May. Even after his
father, and been nothing worse than a fool. But in the
random lottery of the DNA exchanges he had caught the
very soul of May's bitch mother-in-law, and how heavily
that has cost me since.
It cost me then, too, because it broke the mood of the
party. I got up to go. Tse-ling Mei was holding the brat
down while Maisie tried to pin the diaper back on him,
and May Holliston-Peirce was bringing towels from a
bathroom to mop up the rug. May Bancroft said, "I'll
walk you to your taxi, Uncle Jason. I had no intention
of a taxi, but the look on her face stopped me from saying
so.
So we walked through the hall with her hand in mine,
and dropped like stones in the elevator-my heart in my
mouth, for there are no such high-speed lifts on the oatyboats-and she walked me through the lobby to a back
entrance, and around a corner and another until she found
a taxi that suited her. I was dressed for the Philippine
sea, not New York in November, and May not much more
warmly, not to mention the crush, and the stink, and the
noise. But I let her keep up her chatter all the way without
interrupting. Tse-ling Mei had been given a marvelous
new part, and one May was to be married and another to
run a hospital somewhere in New Jersey or Indiana, and
May Bancroft herself was back in school for a law degree.
And then she peered inside a parked cab and nodded her
head and leaned forward to kiss my ear. She did not give
me just a kiss. She gave me an address and a room number,
and then turned and hurried off without looking back.
I had wit enough to change cabs and walk a bit before
I hailed the second one, although I nearly froze while I
was doing it, but in five minutes I was there.
The address was the seediest of old hotels. The room
number was on the seediest floor. The air in the hall was
choked with marijuana fumes and the smell of human
sweat, and the door was opened by a man of forty or
more. He was wearing pants that he had zipped but not
belted, no shoes, and a shirt that he had left unbuttoned.
He was a sober-looking, serious sort of a man, not what
you would expect to find in a whore's hangout like this,
far from good-looking but solid.
And behind him, lying on an unmade bed, wearing a
thin muumuu, was my May. Her expression was filled
with fear.
"It's not what you think, Uncle Jason, she said to me
at once, and to the man, "Hurry! Let him in!
The man moved quickly to do it. He pulled me in by
the elbow, showing surprising strength for a pudgy little
man not much younger than myself. He stuck his head
out into the hall, and looked both ways before he closed
the door. Then he turned to me.
"I'm Jefferson Ormondo, he said, "and I'm an investment banker. I apologize for this place and the way
we look, but the windows don't open and the heat won't
turn off. And Ben Zoll has willing ears in too many places.
He was buttoning his shirt while he spoke. He sat to put
on his shoes and said, "I'll take a look around the lobby
to make sure it's all right. May will tell you what's going
on. And he was gone, and there I was in a sweaty halfhour room with my sweet May gazing up at me out of a
rumpled bed.
"We're going to get Ben's guardianship set aside, she
said.
"That's impossible, I said-with my voice, but I know
that what my face was saying was, That's unfair, May, to try such a thing without me!
And she answered my face.
"Jason, dear, it's no secret from you. I can't do it
without you.
"The best lawyers in Reykjavik say you can't do it at
all, I told her, "for the will is in proper form.
"But what if it is forged, Jason?
I goggled at her.
"Forged, she said, nodding. "Not all of it. Just the
matter of dates. The guardianship was supposed to stop
when I was twenty, and Ben had someone get into the
datastores and add ten years to the time.
Now, that was getting close to a line of conversation
I did not want to pursue. I didn't know-I have never
known-if the Commodore ever told his daughter about
the favor I had done him. She did not say anything then,
or ever, to give me an answer one way or another, but
hurried on: "And that is fraud, Jason, and somebody may
well go to jail. But proving it! It's so hard. And Ben has
everything on the boats bugged, of course. I couldn't
speak to you there-and besides, she said, sitting beside
me and touching my arm, "he knows you're smarter than
I am, so he watches you twice as hard.
I said, "You don't have to explain anything to me,
May. But I wanted explanations all the same. I got them.
The plump little bald-headed man, Ormondo, worked for
the bank that held Ben's stocks, and it had seemed to him
that there was something funny about the records. For
one thing, the will should have existed in several data-
stores, not just the bank's. But the Commodore's own
bank had been swallowed up by another and its records
were unavailable, and in the hall of records where the
will had been filed the system had crashed, all the data
lost.
Ormondo came to believe that there was a forgery. He
could not prove it, but it made him curious to look further.
There was plenty to find.
Ben had been milking the fleet. He had set up corporations
of his own to buy the hydrogen from the oatyboats and to sell the ammonia on land, and to lease to us the pilot cutters that prospected for cold, deep water, and
even the aircraft that carried us to shore. Everything the
Fleet bought cost a little more than it should, and everything we sold went for a little less, and the difference went
to Ben.
And then Ormondo had met May at a party, not by
chance, and whispered in her ear.
And ever since then, for the best part of a year, the
two of them had been searching out records and interviewing people who might know things. Whispers had got
back to Ben, surely. But Ormondo was a careful man.
And they had the pattern almost complete.
"The next step, Jason, she said, "was going to be to
talk to you. I almost asked you to come with me this time.
I'm glad you didn't wait to be asked.
"Of course I'll do everything you want, I assured her.
She smiled sweetly and touched my arm. "Of course
you will, dear Jason. There's one other thing.
She looked embarrassed. She pursed the pretty lips,
hesitating, her eyes gazing at the chipped paint on the
ugly wall as though she were staring over the wide sea.
Then she said, "I need a husband, Jason.
She had caught me unaware. "A husband?
"I need a husband for me, and for help in this fight,
because it will be a terrible one. And most of all I need
one because of Jimmy Rex. He must have a father, Jason.
Not a silly boy. A grown man, wise and kind and sensible.
It doesn't matter if he's older than I am. It only matters
that he be someone I can trust and love with all my heart.
These were the words I had been dreaming of hearing
for all the long years. I could hardly speak. "Of course,
my dearest, I said, and reached out for her, and was
puzzled by the astonishment that sprang into her eyes.
It was a terrible fight, indeed. For months we were
more on Iceland than in our propper home, all of us. That was
a high enough price to pay in itself, for me. Iceland
is where the Law of the Sea is administered, and indeed
it is land that has come from the sea, bubbling up in roaring
steam, some of it within the memory of living men. But
it is still the land, and all the geothermal steam and hot
swimming pools do not make up for losing the warm
breezes of the southern seas.
But we won. Or mostly we won. Bastard Ben might
well have gone to jail indeed, if he had not gone to the
hospital instead and did not come out alive.
So it was Betsy who lost the suit, not Ben, and she
did not lose it all. We could not prove the falsification of
the will. The litigation was long-drawn and savage, and
three of our witnesses disappeared, but the records of the
dummy corporations did not. So May settled at last for
a division. The guardianship was annulled. All Ben's contracts to buy and sell were voided. The Fleet was divided
in two. Half the oaty-boats went to Betsy, the rest, with
half the money from Ben's loot, to May. And Betsy began
at once to build more.. . but we were at ease at last, back
at home on that first old boat, steaming slowly through
the Strait of Malacca, and the Commodore's daughter was
at last the undisputed queen of the grazing isles. She ruled
us happily, along with her child.
And with her husband. Who was not me.
She was the kindest of women, my May, but she could
not be kind enough to allow me to forget how foolishly I
had missed her meaning when she was trying to tell me
that she meant to marry Jefferson Ormondo.
For the sake of her son and to claim her due,
At four and twenty she wed number two.
They battled and won in the struggle to keep
Her fair-owned gifts from the generous deep.
Blest was the respite from worries and trials
In this short happy time for the queen of the isles.
Although I had lost her again, it was a good time. May
was happy. Jefferson Ormondo had the good sense to be
happy-well, what else could he be? Even little Jimmy
Rex became more tractable, since he was away from
Betsy's constant need to spur on his own born-in meanness.
We even made a sort of peace with Betsy herself. It
was not easy or comfortable. Yet she came to pay a visit
to our quaint old thermal grazer, and then there was nothing to do but for us to visit her great new flagship. Though
I took no joy in seeing Betsy, I was glad enough of the
trip. Her Works Captain was a decent enough man-we'd
sailed together under the Commodore-and besides, I
wanted to see some of their engineering.
What we want for the heat exchangers is the hottest
surface water we can get, the top meter if we can get it,
for that's where the sun's heat is strongest. But when you
pump a hundred tons a second, the suction tubes are not
fastidious about what they take. So when Captain Havrila
took me up on his bridge, beaming with pride, I knew
what he was going to show me. I'd seen it from the air.
The boat was surrounded with a screen that lay thirty
meters away from the hull in all directions; I'd seen it,
and realized at once that there was a shallow lip all around.
"You pump direct from the hull, I guessed, ~ and you've
trapped surface water in a moat. The screen's to keep out
fish?
He grinned ruefully. "I knew once you laid eyes on it,
Jason, I wouldn't have to say a word. We pump from a
reservoir ten meters deep, but all that comes in to replenish it is the very top of the sea.
"It's a nice solution. I complimented him. "But doesn't
it cut down your maneuvering, with all that drag?
"It destroys it, he said happily, "but we're not going
anywhere very fast anyway. And we've been getting delta-Ts of twenty and up
-well, most days, he corrected himself. "Tell me, Jason, what are you doing about
organic fouling?
"Same as you, I guess. Reverse fluse every ten days
with little plastic marbles. We lose nearly half of them
every time, though. The sea is full of little living things
that want something to cling to-unfortunately, they don't
care what. The lining of our intake tubes is as good a
place as any. There's not too much trouble with the deep-
water intakes, because the water down there is too cold
for them to be very active. But the surface intakes are
another story.
"We're recovering nearly a hundred percent on the
surface, he boasted. "It's all trapped in the moat, you
see, so we just scoop them up again.
"Good job. But what do you do when the perimeter
screens begin to foul? And he laughed and offered to
buy me a drink, for that was the weakness in the system.
I took his drink, and a lot more than one over the three
days we were there. I had no quarrel with Betsy's captains
or Betsy's crews, but I did not like Betsy's friends. I didn't
like May's liking them, either. The women called themselves actresses or models-polite lies.
The men lied less politely. They called themselves men. There was Simon
Kellaway, Las Vegas-born, slim and quick and temporarily living at sea on
Betsy's charity because there was a murder charge in Nevada that he couldn't hush up.
There was Dougie d'Agasto from Miami Beach, tall and
fair and a pimp's recruiter if I ever saw one. They came
from Chicago and Los Angeles and New Orleans, and
they all had money, or acted as though they did, and I
did not believe that even one of them had got it inside the
law.
The one I liked least was d'Agasto, the handsomest
and emptiest of men. What I liked least of all was that
May did not reject his company. They sat together at
dinner the first night. I assumed he was Betsy's bedmate.
I assumed that of every man I saw her with, for she was
always, and after Ben died openly, available, accessible
and even aggressive about it. Even, to my surprise, with
me, for at two in the morning she knocked on my door
to announce that she wasn't in the mood for sleep. When I told her that I was,
she shrugged and said, "Well, you'd
probably be no good to me anyway, old man, especially
after you've starched your sheets already over May. She
left without protest, and I-I wished we had never come
there.
So I spent my time as far away from Betsy and Betsy's
friends as I could. Captain Havrila fed me in the ship's
officers' mess. We talked shop-openly-pretty openly,
because there were things I did not mention to them, and
I know there were a good many they didn't tell me. A lot
of what we talked about, though, was no secret. I knew
that Betsy was diversifying, because what she sold to the
land became public knowledge the minute she sold it. I
didn't know, but I would have found out shortly anyway,
that she was planning to try total manufacture-refining
steel, even. Electric refining, mostly. "The ships that come
in are in ballast anyway, said their marketing chief, Jim
Mordecai, "so they might as well carry ore-and we've
got the electricity-and we've got a lot of extra oxygen,
because if we keep on expanding L-H-2 production the
way we're going, the extra oxygen's sure to depress the
world market. And then there's pollution.
"Pollution? Out here? I asked.
"Here's the place for it, Jason, at sea, where it won't
make the land worse than it is-although- he grinned-
don't know if the folks in Tahiti are going to agree with
me. He glanced at the captain before he went on, "We
do have a kind of pollution problem, though. The captain
must have signaled it was all right, because he completed
his thought. "We're pumping so much deep water here
that the dissolved CO2 doesn't dissipate right away. We're
up to pretty nearly five hundred parts per million.
"Oh? I didn't notice anything.
"Well, you won't, boomed Captain Havrila. "As far
as we can tell there's no health risk-and actually Miss
Betsy says she kind of likes it. It does make the plants
grow in her garden! Care for a brandy now, Jason?
I did. I had one. I even had two with them, but they
all had work to do, and I couldn't keep them from it. So I vonulteered to take Jimmy Rex for a walk,
and we headed for the gardens so I could see for myself, and indeed it
was true. Bougainvillea and orchids and flowering ginger-everything was lush and beautiful.
Jimmy Rex was being not particularly awful, for he
liked picking flowers. He crushed them as soon as he
picked them, threw them away and picked more, but there
were plenty of flowers. I let him do pretty much as he
pleased, following slowly after him and thinking the unpromising thoughts of an aging bachelor, till I heard voices
and saw him dart into a cluster of dirty-boy shrubbery.
"Come back, James Reginald, I shouted. For a wonder,
he did, looking abashed. I heard someone moving away
out of sight, and in a moment some other someone came
around the shrubs to see who I was.
It was Dougie d'Agasto. He was partly dressed in shorts
and unlaced tennis shoes, carrying a sports shirt slung
over one bare shoulder. "Oh, it's you, Jason, he said,
smiling-at least I give him the credit of saying that he
probably meant it for a smile, though it had a lot of smirk
in it. "I figured if Jimmy Rex was here you couldn't be
far behind. I'm glad you two didn't get here ten minutes
sooner!
Well, I had no interest in his tacky whoring in the
bushes. I put my hand on Jimmy Rex's shoulder-he was
behaving well enough to let me-and said, "We were just
going.'
He nodded absently, stretching, yawning, pulling the
shirt on over his head, but he kept his eyes on us. "You're
smart to keep close to the kid. he said.
I said stiffly, "I don't let him near the rail. D'Agasto
looked at me as though I were talking a foreign language.
"I'm not talking about accident, for God's sake. I'm
talking about snatch. Kidnap, he amplified, and this time
it definitely was a smirk. "Do you know what that kid's
worth for ransom'?
Now, if you'd met d'Agasto on a tennis court, say,
you might easily think he was just another bright and
handsome young sportsman, because he had the wide-eyed good humor
and the trim, strong body of healthy
youth. I had never thought that. Not for a single second,
because before I ever met him I knew he was some sort
of second-rate kin to one of the lesser Mob families in
Florida. Even if I had ever thought it, listening to him
talk would have straightened me out in two sentences.
The way his mind worked!
And went on working. "What is it you've got now,
Jason? he ruminated. "Eighteen boats in May's fleet?
There's probably construction loans against every one of
them, but, say, ten million dollars apiece average net
worth? And that's only pocket change, because when old
lady Appermoy kicks off, there's no heir left but the kid.
Why, you've got your hand on a billion dollars, pal! What
say you just quietly sneak him on the plane when I leave
and don't say anything until I'm in San Francisco-we'll
split the ransom fifty-fifty!
He was watching my face, so he winked and turned
away and left without waiting for an answer. Jimmy Rex
stared after him with scared delight. "Was he just making
a joke, Uncle Jay'? he asked.
"What a stupid question! Of course it was just a joke!
But it wasn't.
I was glad to be back on our own ship, and the first
thing I did was have a talk with the security chief. From
that moment on there was somebody near Jimmy Rex
every minute he wasn't with me or his parents.
I didn't stop worrying, but after a while I didn't worry
as much. For May and Jefferson Ormondo it was the best
time of their lives. When they walked about the boat, they
were hand in hand. He was a good husband to her, for
all he was no beauty, and would have been a good father
to Jimmy Rex if the boy had been capable of being a son.
The money grew and grew. The more fuel we made,
the more hungrily the land people clamored to burn it.
We could not fix nitrogen fast enough to meet the demand
for fertilizer, and so the price went up and up. We weren't
The only boats on the sea anymore - now and then we'd catch sight of Japanese ones, or
Australian. We built more
of our own, and bigger ones, and yet there was plenty for
all.
When Jimmy Rex was three years old, we moved us
all to the newest and hugest oaty-boat on the sea. Two
million eight hundred thousand tons. We could have run
a nation off the power we produced. It was well along in
the shipyards before Jefferson Ormondo ever saw it, but
he cherished it as his own, for the last of the fitting, and
most of the owner's country, was his own design. May
encouraged him to plan on a grand scale. And grand it
surely was-but I had been happy enough on the old one.
"You're a sentimental man, Jason, said May when I told
her as much, "and a very dear one to me. But it's such
an old boat. And little-why, it doesn't even have a decent bridle path!
She was trying to tease me cheerful-she knew I'd
never ridden a horse. "So we're going to sell it for scrap
metal, then?
"No! Then less emphatically, "I don't think so. What
can we do with it, Jason? The Gulf of Mexico?
I'd thought of that myself, but it wasn't good sense.
There was good grazing in the gulf for smaller boats, but
it didn't seem to me there was enough sea room for an
aging oaty-boat to get out of the way of bad weather.
"Maybe the Brazil Triangle, I said-that was good, too,
from the eastern coast of South America to the African
Gold Coast-but how did you get it there? It would never
go through the Canal, of course, or even the Straits of
Magellan, and the seas south of Cape Horn would probably sink it.
"I'll think of something, I said, and after a
while I did. I sold it to May's old in-laws. They moored
it for a fixed OTEC station in the straits off Lahaina, for
the gray whales to stare at. It was no joy dealing with the
old witch, but she made us a fair price, and even sent
May a wedding present into the bargain-a year late and
a lot too little, but May took it kindly and even offered
to let Jimmy Rex visit his grandmother now and then out
of gratitude.
But I missed the old boat. The big one wasn't just
bigger. It was better designed. We put in a new cold-
water intake system, with a single pipe five kilometers
long and six meters wide. The thicker the pipe was, the
better the surface-to-volume ratio, so the water didn't
warm up as much on the way up. It does warm a little,
of course. But the dissolved gases expand a little, which
tends to cool it-in fact, we had to install relief valves
along the pipe to bleed out the excess pressure; otherwise
it would have ruptured. We were reliably getting a delta-T
of 26 or 27-once even 29 for five days in a row. But the
damn pipe was so long it wanted to curl up like spaghetti,
and so we had to divert scout subs from prospecting for
cold-water lenses to pushing it back into shape almost
every day. And because we were bringing up so much in
the way of nutrients, the fishing fleets from Korea and
Peru followed us around. I didn't begrudge them the fish,
but I liked it better when we couldn't see other ships on
the horizon.
May just laughed at me when I said as much. "You
just don't like to change anything, she told me, halfway
between teasing and tenderness. We were on a lower
deck, Jimmy Rex pretending to shoot the dolphins that
were larking around our moat. Naturally, I'd installed the
same sort of warm-water trap as Betsy's flagship, and
naturally, the dolphins weren't going to let a little two-
meter-high screen keep them from jumping over into a
new playpen.
I said, "I like things to get better, not just different.
She sighed and pulled Jimmy Rex back from the rail.
"And isn't this better'?
"It is in some ways.
"Name one it isn't!
I pointed over the screen, at the open ocean waters.
"We didn't see dead squid floating around the old boat.
"Jason, be fair! That's not the boat's fault. There are
fish kills all over this part of the Pacific- And then, out
of the corner of her eye, she saw that the boy had climbed
up onto the rail to get a better make-believe shot. "James
Reginald Appermoy! she yelled, and dragged him back
just as he was about to go over.
Well, it wouldn't have hurt him much, a twelve-meter
fall into a warm bathtub, but he wouldn't have liked it,
either. He was good for almost a minute, and even let me
put my arm around him for almost that long. But I was
still worrying about the squid. A dead fish at sea is a
curiosity; as soon as anything slows down enough to be
dying, something else is sure to eat it. "I hear they're
worse off on Hawaii, I said, and May said:
"Oh, that reminds me. Jimmy Rex is going to see his
grandmother next week.
I said nothing, but I didn't have to. "It's all right, she
reassured me.
"It's all right if he can take Pan and Jeremy along, I
bargained-they were the two security men Jimmy Rex
hated least.
"Well, if you don't think Grandma's feelings will be
hurt- She saw my eyes and dropped it. ~They'll go,
she promised. "But after all, the Appermoys are family.
And so's Betsy, and when Jimmy Rex comes back from
Hawaii, I'm thinking of inviting some of her friends over.
"Betsy's family, I admitted, "but the trash she keeps
around her are not.
"But they're amusing, Jason. With all the space we've
got now, it's no trouble to have a few guests.
"That, I said, "is another way the old boat was better.
But I could not really argue against family. And if we
entertained Betsy and her friends, then Betsy must entertain
us and ours, so May and Jeff and the boy and the
four Mays and I flew over to visit good queen Betsy. Our
flagships were not usually very far apart-I speak geographically.
With the scouts for both our fleets getting
better at finding the best delta-Ts and the hydrologists
improving their predictions about how stable they were
and the navigators getting more skilled at plotting courses
that would graze where the deltas were greenest- well,
there are only so many optimal solutions to a problem,
especially as we each copied the other's technology as
soon as it was proved. It was no wonder that we often
came to the same solutions. And the same problems, for
looking over the side of Betsy's flagship with Havrila by
my side, I said, "I see you've got dead squid, too.
"The fishing fleet's complaining, too. He nodded
gravely and then laughed. "Best thing we ever didn't do,
he said, "was diversify into fishing.
"We thought about it for a while, too, I said, "and
decided to stay out of perishables. There are plenty of
other fields!
And there were. We were getting into dozens of them.
Mining the hot heavy-metal brine from the springs of the
East Pacific Rise. Scooping up manganese pellets from
the ocean bottom. The only "perishable we got into was
fresh water-we built two experimental sailing tugs, huge
devils with revolving masts to catch the winds, and used
them to tow icebergs from Antarctica to the Persian Gulf.
All the ventures prospered-though nothing more than
the ocean-thermal that was our core money spinner-
even the icebergs. They were Jefferson's own pet. He
was land-born and land-oriented, and he could not resist
something that would make things better for people on
land. He went off to supervise the project now and then,
a week at a time. I didn't like his leaving May alone. I
liked it least when it began to be so that, as Jeff was
leaving, some of Betsy's giddy friends would arrive. The
one who came most often was Dougie d'Agasto.
There was bound to be trouble, and it came. Dougie
stayed a day too long. Jeff came home, and he must have
been looking for his family with field glasses as the plane
came in, for he didn't bother to go to their rooms. He
dropped his bags with a deckhand and headed straight for
the pool. May. looking ethereally ravishing in her skimpy
suit, was watching to keep Jimmy Rex from drowning
himself-heaven knows why. Dougie d'Agasto was
standing beside her, whispering in her ear. His arm was around her waist,
and his fingers were toying delicately
with the elastic of her trunks. Jeff did not look like a
fighter. His bald head gleamed sweatily in the Pacific sun,
and he was shorter and fatter. But he spun d'Agasto around
and decked him with one punch. Into the pool went Dougie
d'Agasto, and came up screaming and fingering his bloody,
but not broken, perfect nose. He was off the boat in an
hour, and what May and Jefferson said to each other about
it I do not know.
I know what I said to May. First chance I got her alone
I said, "You're a fool to risk Jeff for that little pimp.
Was it any of my business? At least she didn't tell me
it was not. She said seriously, "I am not risking Jeff, Uncle
Jason. Dougie's flattering, though. He's such a beautiful
boy.~~
"He's a louse.
"He's almost family.
"He's some kind of poor relation to your former mother-
in-law, yes, and that's Mob family. Those people are criminals.
Drug pushers. Arm breakers. Murderers.
She laughed good-humoredly and pecked my cheek.
"Dougie never murdered anybody, Jay, except maybe a
few women he loved to death. But you're right. I shouldn't
let him think he's being encouraged. And I won't.
So for six months I saw nothing of Dougie d'Agasto,
but long before that he'd written both May and Jefferson
most abject letters of apology. Jeff relented-he didn't
ask my advice. Then Betsy came over for a party, and
she brought d'Agasto with her.
We were competing in earnest then, and actually the
visit was partly so that we could talk over some business.
There's a lot of ocean, but only narrow bands of it, and
short, where the temperature difference between surface
and chilly deep is enough to run the turbines at full speed.
We both were sticking pretty close to the equator, too.
It wasn't so much for the solar heat, although there was
plenty there. It was for protection from the storms. Our
boats were getting a lot too big and clumsy to risk in a hurricane.
You don't get hurricanes on the equator, or
anyway very rarely. The equator isn't north and it isn't
south, so there's no Coriolis force to speak of. The funnel
doesn't know which way to turn, so the big funnel storms
don't develop there.
So more often than not the ocean wasn't empty anymore. There were
other oaty-boats in sight, often ours, more often hers--or
Russians or Japanese or Norwegians. The time was coming
just beyond the horizon when
there might be more grazers than forage for OTECs. So
there was some high-powered arguing between Betsy's
nav chiefs and ours before the party started, and I can't
honestly say the question ever really got resolved. Still,
the guests had a good time at the party. It was New Year's
Eve, and we'd given everybody any time off that could
be spared at all. The guests were all over the boat, the
crews were welcomed in owners' country; I saw Betsy
and May singing "Auld Lang Syne with the kitchen staff
and Dougie d'Agasto slapping the back of an assistant
pipe fitter, and if we were out to cut each others' throats
in the marketplace as soon as the party was over, the
swords were sheathed while it lasted. And the next morning,
while most of the ship was nursing hangovers, Jefferson Ormondo
was inspecting intake gauges on a
hydrogen freezer-ship line.
There was a leak. Any leak was dangerous, but it
shouldn't have been a disaster for two reasons. The first
reason was that hydrogen in the open floats quickly up
and away. Anyway, as soon as they heard the shriek of
escaping gas, Jefferson and every body else broke for the
rail-it was only a twenty-meter drop, and the water in
the moat was calm and warm. The second reason was
that there was no reason for a spark to ignite it. Nothing
that could make a spark was ever on a hydrogen ship's
intake stage.
Except this time. I had guarded the wrong member of
the family.
Even if there had been an explosion within a few meters
of jeff, he should have survived. But he was within the
explosion. He was inside a mass of mixed hydrogen and
air, and the same mixture was inside his lungs. When the
explosion came, it exploded outside him and in. He lived
an hour. The whole time he kept trying to scream in agony,
but he hadn't lung enough left to scream with anymore.
The only damage to the oaty-boat was some scorched
paint and a few fittings. That didn't matter to May. She
didn't want to live on it anymore. Jimmy Rex needed a
good school, she said, and so she was taking him and
herself off to live in Florida. What it was that May needed
I only guessed. Did not want to guess. Could not helping
guessing when, a few months later, she phoned me and
said, "I have news for you, Uncle Jay.
That sweet, sad face on the phone, it melted my heart.
All I said was, "Who's the lucky man?
Pause. "Please don't say anything against him when I
tell you, promise?
My mouth was dry and my heart was pounding, but I
managed to smile. "It's Dougic d'Agasto, right? And
you've made up your mind?
"I have, dear Jay. He's a nicer man than you think he
is.
"I hope so.
"Oh, Jay, please! Try to see it my way. I married one
husband because Ben insisted, and another hecause I
needed his help. This one's for me, Jay. Please say it's
all right!
"May, I said to my lifelong love, "whatever you do
is all right with me, always. Twice a widow at her age--
could I blame her?
No. It was easier to blame myself. And bastard Ben
had been right. He said she would marry a rich boy and
a sensible boy and a handsome boy. He never said they
would all be the same man.
Consort the first was slow to learn.
Consort the second was quick to burn.
The higher her worth, the meaner her fall,
And consort the third was the worst of them all.
Sweet Truth despises and high Honor reviles
The last man to king the queen of the isles.
They made their home in Miami. Miami! I could not
imagine how my May could be happy among land people,
especially those land people, but her letters were cheerful
enough. They were short, yes, and infrequent. But the
only news they ever contained was good. Dougie, she
wanted me to know, had buckled down and was studying
ocean-thermal engineering! It was too bad that it kept him
away from home so much, but he was very clever at
learning it. May herself was swimming, golfing, riding-
always busy. And Jimmy Rex was happy to be back in
his school. There was no word of whether the school was
happy to have him. So there was some kind of a bright
side for me. If I didn't have May, at least I didn't have
Jimmy Rex, either.
So owner's country was all mine, and I rattled around
in it lonesomely. I was in no mood for parties, and if
Betsy wanted to be invited, she had the good sense not
to tell me so. I kept busy. We were in a dozen big industries by then.
We were selling liquid gases-oxygen,
nitrogen, hydrogen; solid C02 ammonia, methanol,
chlorine, caustic soda; small quantities of argon and helium, too,
when we could find anyone to buy them. I was
toying with the idea of microwaving energy to a low satellite and
beaming it back to, say. Australia or Japan.
Betsy's steel industry wasn't going anywhere, but I'd taken
a tip from what Captain Havrila had said about the ships comming in in ballast:
I had ours syphon sand up from the port
bottoms for ballast, and then we used the sand to make
a slurry to scour out the fouling organisms in our deep
intake pipes-no need to try to recover it! Of course, I
wasn't the owner of the Fleet, and everything I did I had
to ask permission of May for. But she gave it, every time.
Because I had plenty to do, I should have been happy-
or as happy as I could be expected to be, with my May
married to a rodent that walked like a man. If I wasn't
happy, part of the reason was that I got the letter I had
been expecting for weeks. No return address. No name.
Just the message:
The Commodore's orders are still in effect. I didn't
know whether it was time for me to carry them out
or not, so I flipped a coin. You won this time.
I almost wished the coin had come up the other way-
better, I wished that my unknown pen pal would come
and talk to me about it. If he decided to kill me afterward,
well-I didn't want him to, but there were some bad
nights when it seemed like a way out of a place where I
didn't want to be. But God knew I needed advice-even
from my assassin.
And then May's weekly letter said, "Please come and
visit us, and enclosed with it was one from Dougie
d'Agasto:
We have some important business to talk over,
Jason. You'll come out of it rich. Besides, it's what
May wants.
Even when the man was trying to be ingratiating he
raised the hackles on the back of my neck. I had not
forgotten the last deal he had offered me! I did not for
one second think that he wouldn't have made the same
offer again-except that he'd found a better one for himself.
You don't have to steal the child when you can capture the mother.
I certainly did not want to talk over anything with
Dougie d'Agasto, no matter how rich he proposed to make
me. But it was May who'd asked me to come.
It is not a long flight from Papeete to Miami, but it
uses up a whole night-you cross over five time zones.
And so I arrived at ten in the morning with no more than
an hour's sleep and my disposition cranky. I took a taxi
from the airport to the address Dougie had given me. What
I wound up in looked like a warehouse district and smelled
like the city dump. A couple of gasoline-burner cars, half
dismantled, rusted along the curb. We were only a block
or two from Biscayne Bay-that accounted for part of
the smell. At least two of the low-rise buildings on the
block had been burned out and boarded up. An elderly
black woman was throwing a bucket of hot, soapy water
on the sidewalk in front of a little grocery store and attacking
it with a broom. I walked up to her, carrying my
overnight case. "Excuse me, I'm looking for Douglas
d'Agasto, I said.
She straightened up. "Round back, she said. I thought
there was some hostility in the way she looked at me, but
she added, "You want me to help you with that bag?
"Thank you, no. But it's kind of you to offer: I gestured
at the soapy sidewalk. "I didn't really expect to see
anybody doing that around here.
"I ain't from around here, she said, dismissing me.
At least there seemed to be one decent person in the
neighborhood to keep May company, I thought-but could
d'Agasto really have May living in this wretched slum?
Well, of course he could, if it suited his purpose-but
not himself!
Of course, I had made a wrong assumption. Neither
of them lived there. It was an office, not a home, and
once you got to the inner courtyard, obviuusly a luxurious
one. A slim black man appeared from a vined trellis and
circled a marble fountain to ask what my business was.
When I gave my name, he passed me on through a door-
there was a very thick frame around it; weapons detectors, I realized-
and into a handsome, huge waiting room.
There a handsome small woman with rose-red hair conducted me
to the very office of Douglas d'Agasto himself.
I've seen pictures of a bigger office. It belonged to that
old dictator, Mussolini. "Uncle Jason, d'Agasto cried
welcomingly, rising to wait for me to cover the fifteen
meters to his desk before he stretched out his hand. "Glad
you could come! Sorry to make you come to my office
first, but I figured we might as well get the business out
of the way so you could relax when we get to the house.
I let him shake my hand. "What's the business we're
talking about?
He nodded approval of my directness. He was just as
direct. "May wants to own the Fleet free and clear. No
more trustee. No other owners. So we want you to turn
the trust over to her and sell her your stock. We'll pay
you fifty million dollars for it, Uncle Jason.
He had not invited me to sit down, but I sat down
anyway. "I'm not your uncle, I said, "and my stock's
not worth that much. Fifteen or twenty at most. It doesn't
matter, though, because I don't want to sell.
"May really wants you to-
"What May wants me to do, May will tell me to do
herself.
The look he threw me was instant anger on top. That
didn't bother me a hit. Underneath was a cocky confidence,
though, and that did. "In that case, he said,
spreading the dimples on the sun-tanned face with a wide
smile, "we better just get our asses out to the house so
she can do that little thing. I think you're going to like
our place.
If what Dougie meant was that I would think it very
luxurious, I knew that sight unseen. I had been signing
the fund transfers into May's account to pay for it. The
luxury started long before we got there. We were only a
block or two from Dougie's boat dock on the bay, but
there was a chauffeured car waiting in the courtyard to
take us there. As we pulled out into the street, I saw the
old black woman pause in shining her cracked store window
to glare at us over her shoulder. I appreciated that;
at least now I knew who the hostility belonged to. We
got in a hydrofoil with a three-man crew and screamed
down the waterway, under causeway bridges, past small
islands, until we came to a large one. We coasted along
it for a while. There were lavish estates along the shore;
then there were none, just mangroves and cypress, until
we came to a dock that could have handled an oaty-boat.
Well, not really. I exaggerate. But the dock was an exaggeration, too.
There was no vessel he might want to
own that would need that much space.
The house was as grand as I could have expected, but
the grandest part was May running down the green, green
lawn to meet me. She hugged me twice as tightly as I had
expected, then leaned back to look at me. And I at her.
It was my veritable sweet May, as ever was, the clean,
clear face, the thoughtful, wide-set eyes, the silky hair-
"You look tired, I said. I hadn't meant to, but it was
true. It was not polite, so I added, "Too much golf, I
suppose.
The smile flickered, but it came back fast. "It's more
like too much not seeing you, Jay. Come on in! Oh, Jason-I've missed you so much!
If consulted by the tribunal when it is time to decide
how long Dougie d'Agasto should roast in hell, I will say
on his behalf that at least he let us alone to talk. He
excused himself at once. He went up to his "study for
an hour, came down for lunch, and immediately took off
in the stiltboat for most of the afternoon-it was for his
tutoring in thermal engineering, he said. So I had May to
myself. I saw the house. I heard how Jimmy Rex was
doing. May told me that the secessionist mobs were pretty
worrying when they rioted, but maybe they were right
and this part of Florida should anschluss with Cuba. She
wanted to know if I'd seen much of the big new Chinese
boats that were being launched, or any more dead fish. I
even had time for a nap before dinner; and not once did
she bring up the trust, or I.
Dinner wasn't grand-just very good, with all the things
in it that May had known I liked all her life. When the
coffee was on the table, Dougie chased the servants out
of the dining hall and leaned back.
"So tell him, honey, he said with that smile that was
on the very verge of curdling into a smirk.
May looked reluctant, but she didn't put it off. She put
her elbows on the table and her chin in her hands, and
she gazed at me. "You've been as good a father to me as
my father ever was, Jason.
Those were not the words I most wanted to hear from
her, but under the circumstances they were about the best
I could expect. I reached across and patted her hand.
"So don't think I'm not grateful to you, dear, because
I am. I always will be. But I'm not a child anymore. I'm
a grown woman, married- Three times married, I
thought, and she was thinking the same because she hesitated-
married, with a child. As much of an adult as
I'm ever going to be, Jason. So I'm asking you to dissolve
the trust. Dougie pursed his lips and nodded judiciously,
as though he had just heard the idea for the first time and
thought that by and large it might be sound. He didn't
say anything. That was just as well, for I might have said
something in return that could never be unsaid. "You
don't have to sell your own stock if you don't want to,
Jay, she went on. "Dougie thought that might be a good
idea for you, but it's up to you. But, please, will you do
the other'?
I didn't look at Dougie again. I didn't have to, for I
could feel the temperature of his smile.., and I could feel
it drop to zero as I said, "If I do that, May, I will be
killed. It's your father's orders. And I spread before
them the nineteen letters I had received from my unknown
assassin. And I told them what the Commodore had said
to me.
Dougie slammed his fist down on the table. It was thick
teak, but it shook. I didn't look at him, and he didn't say
a word. May, with tears in her voice, said, "You mean
my father paid someone to have you killed? But that's
horrible!
I touched her hand again. "No, love, it's not. He was
right to make sure of me. If I'd failed you, it would be
fair punishment. And wished I were more sure that I
hadn't failed her already.
May was crying openly now. It was her husband's
place to comfort her. but her husband was studying the
nineteen letters, their envelopes, their postmarks. I got
up and went around the table, knelt beside her, and put
my arms around her. No one said anything for a while. I
would not have minded if that while had gone on indefinitely,
with May warm and unresisting in my arms, hut
at last Dougie had finished his chain of thought. He swept
the letters in a fan across the table and sat back. "I guess
you're not lying, he stated.
In my arms May stirred and detached herself. "Jason
doesn't lie to me, she told him, "ever!
"I don't think he could have cooked up all these letters,
he said, "so let's say you're right. What about it,
Jay'? Don't you have any idea who this person is?
I hesitated, but it was too late to do the person any
harm. "I thought for a while it might be Captain Havrila,
I admitted, "but he died six months ago, and I've had
letters since.
"Never tried to find out? See where they were mailed
from? Find the people who mailed them?
"How could I? For that matter, why would I want
to? I had accepted the situation as just when the Commodore had laid it on me.
He nodded. He wasn't agreeing, he was only recognizing the fact that
I didn't have the guts or the determination to do anything about
the situation. "What we
can do, he proposed, "is get you the best damn guards
you ever saw in your life. Twenty-four hours, round the
clock. As long as you live. And forget about fifty million,
I'll go to-
"Dougie, stop it! cried May. He blinked at her, but
she stared him down. Then she turned to me. "What you've
said changes everything, of course. So that's out. We'll
go on the way we are for the present.
And I expected an explosion from Dougie. I didn't get
one. I was slow to learn that the only safe expectation
about Dougie d'Agasto was that he would never do what
I expected him to do, but always something worse. He
nodded, and picked up the letters and stuffed them in a
pocket and gave us both a sunny smile.
"In that case, he said, "anyone for a game of billiards?
If Dougie d'Agasto did not get what he wanted out of
our meeting, he got quite a lot in other ways. He got the
right to tell me what to do. Every one of his letters of
instruction was countersigned by May herself, but there
was no doubt who had written them.
His instructions were not all that wicked or dumb, to
be honest-perhaps there had been worse ones that May
refused to sign. Cancel the plans for another ore pumper-well,
the manganese nodules were a drug on the
market these days, with so many boats fishing for them.
Kill the iceberg project and sell off the tugs-it had
become a running sore in our cash-flow accounts anyway.
He never attempted to keep me from spending any sum
on keeping the Fleet seaworthy and comfortable for its
crews, but he did veto almost every plan for expansion.
He was hoarding capital, it seemed. No doubt there was
a plan, and no doubt I would find out about it sooner or
later.
Meanwhile I followed his orders, and life was not all
that bad. The officers and crews liked me, I think. Not
just on the flagship. When I flew to Dubai to sign the sale
papers on the sailing tugs and pay off the crews, they took
me out for a night on the town. I could not have expected
that from forty men and women I had just fired, and they
weren't angling for other places in the Fleet-they were
all fine sailors, and there were plenty of jobs. They were
simply saying good-by to a friend, and I was touched. I
was also very, very drunk, and when at last I got back
to the flagship I was still parched and headachy, but not
unhappy-at least not until I saw that Betsy's private VTO was parked on the landing deck.
"I thought, she said, "it was time I paid you a visit,
since you don't ever come to see me.
She was not a person I wanted for a friend, but I didn't
particularly want to offend her. "You are always welcome
on May's fleet, I told her, with a great deal of politeness
and not nearly as much truth, and I called the housekeepers'
section chief to tell them that they were to prepare suitable
accommodations. Of course, they were way
ahead of me. They had put fresh flowers in the vases and
ice in the bowls in the suite that sheikhs and sovereigns
occupied when they were our guests. For a wonder, Betsy
didn't pout when I told her I had to work for a bit- "I've
been away quite a while, I said, "and I really need to-
And she put her finger against my lips, with a smile that
under any other circumstances I would have called flirtatious.
"May I try your pool out, Jay? she asked, quite politely,
and she occupied herself with swimming and lazing
around the big waterfall that sheeted down the glass of
the owners' suite and into the pool, while I did what I
had to do. Which was only partly business. Mostly it was
sucking oxygen out of a bottle and swallowing aspirin,
because if I had Betsy for a guest I wanted a clear head.
She had asked that dinner be served out in the garden,
and when I came out to see her, she was wearing something
long and filmy and white, with white hibiscus tucked
into a diamond tiara on her hair. "How very nice you
look, I said, as required. She smiled dreamily, watching
the butler pour the wine.
"To us, she said, and then, when we had each taken
a sip, "How fresh and clean the air is here, Jay.
"I hope it stays that way, I said, because there had
been rumors of Betsy's next plan for expansion and diversification.
She gave me a thoughtful look, but she was
too busy being sweet to follow it up. All through the meal
she was all sweet prattle and gossip about rich friends
and reckless doings. It was quite a meal. The chef had
had time to do his best, and so it was mahimahi and rack
of lamb from our own flock, and a compote of mostly
ugly-fruit for dessert with enough kirsch in it so that I
didn't require an after-dinner brandy. Or, after the previous
few days in Dubai, at all want one. Betsy had no
such restraint. She ate every scrap and drank all that was
poured, and when it was done she sighed, "I wish I had
your cook, Jay! I guess I can tell you that I've tried to
hire him away.
"I know, I said. I also knew the reason he had told
me for turning her down-young Betsy was a terror to
her servants.
"You know a lot about my business, don't you? she
purred, watching me. "I think you meant something by
that remark about the air pollution.
I shrugged. "I have heard, I said carefully, "that you
are contracting for large amounts of Australian coal. The
only thing I can think of you wanting to do with it is
pyrolize it into gasoline, so we'll have a floating Galveston
out here.
"You have very good sources of information, Jay. I
do too. You were a fool to turn Dougie down, you know.
She was sitting between me and the setting sun. I moved
to get the sun out of my eyes so that I could see her
better, and she laughed and hitched her chair closer to
me. "You're always a surprise to me, Jason, she said.
"Those nineteen letters coming in all these years, and
nobody knew but you.
I had finally puzzled it out. "You've got a spy in May's
house, I said.
"My dear Jason! Of course I'm always interested in
what's happening with my sister.
"She's not your sister.
"I think of her as my sister. She hitched her chair a
bit closer, and our knees touched. "Would you like to
know how I think of you?
Now, the advancing years had not made me any more
handsome. I was older than Betsy's father. I could not
think of any reason why she would be after my body, but
her eyes were half closed, and her lips were half smiling,
and her voice was husky.
I got up to replenish her drink, and when I was seated
again, we were no longer touching. "Why was I stupid,
Betsy?
"Accidents happen, she whispered over the rim of her
glass. "You've got a few good years left if you're careful,
Jay. I moved restlessly, rejecting the implication. "May
has more than that, she went on, "unless there was an
accident. Why, do you know, Jason, under the terms of
the Commodore's will, if May died your trusteeship would
terminate? And then you'd have nothing to say about what
happened to her stock.
"It would just go to Jimmy Rex.
"And if something happened to Jimmy Rex?
I was getting angry-it was not because she was putting new
thoughts in my head, for what angered me was
that these same thoughts had occurred to me long since.
Fortunately for my peace of mind I had reasoned out an
answer to that. "May's money, I said, "is a lot, but it's
nothing compared to what Jimmy Rex is going to inherit
from his grandmother. The Appermoys have billions, and
Jimmy's the only heir.
And Betsy laughed out loud. "To think, she marveled,
"that you were the one who got us interested in the dead
fish!
I nodded as though I understood. I doubt that I fooled
her. I did not understand at all, and to make time to help
puzzle it out I poured myself a brandy after all. I dawdled,
savoring the Courvoisier. Either she was being deliberately
mystifying, or I was more tired and hung over and,
yes, already slightly drunk all over again than I thought.
Perhaps I had not made myself clear? The logic was very
simple. Nothing would happen to Jimmy Rex-at least
nothing that Dougie might arrange-as long as his grandmother was
alive, because Dougie would not endanger
his chances of somehow getting his hands on the Appermov fortune.
What dead fish had to do with all this I did
not know, and Betsy was not helping me think. She leaned
forward, with her eyes as close to sparkling as she knew
how to make them, and licked the lobe of my ear. "You're
an exciting man, Jason, she whispered.
"For God's sake, Betsy! I protested, not quite sure
whether it was the sense of what she was saying that I
objected to, or her warm, moist tongue in my ear. I was
getting to be an elderly man, but I wasn't dead. I didn't
like Betsy at all. She was not beautiful. But she was young,
and she was healthy, and she was wearing at least a
hundred dollars' worth of French perfume in the folds of
the clinging gossamer gown. I tried to redirect the
conversation. "Will you please tell me what you're trying to
say?
She smiled mistily and leaned back-it was not a way
of putting space between us, it was only so that she could
throw her breasts out. I did not fail to notice them.
"Jason, she murmured, "I think better when I'm lying down.
In bed. With a nice warm body next to me.
There was no possible doubt in my mind that it was
Betsy's intention to add me to her already outstanding
collection of lovers. I am embarrassed to say that at that
moment I could almost believe that it was for my own
aging body's sake-almost. I croaked. "Why are you doing
this, Betsy?
"Aw She pouted. Then she shrugged. "Because I
want everything that belongs to May. But I promise you
it'll be worth it. I'm really good, Jason. And I also promise
you, she added, getting slowly up and tugging me to my
feet, "that in that nice big bed that you sleep in, that used
to be May's, after the important stuff has been taken care
of, I will tell you everything you want to know, and it
will truly fascinate you.
On that promise she cheated me, though not on anything else.
I did not sleep much that night. When I woke
at daylight and remembered who I had for a bedmate, she was gone.
I pulled myself raggedly out of bed and threw
a robe on, and while I was puzzling over what had happened,
I heard a jet scream. I went to the lanai and there
was Betsy's plane, a bright blue-white trail streaking across
the pink morning sky. She had gotten what she wanted,
and gone.
She spoiled my sleep for more than one night. I could
not get out of my mind what she had said and hinted. The
worst was the implication that Jeff's death had not been
an accident. Dougie was filth, of course. I had not thought
he was a murderer, at least in my conscious mind; but
now that Betsy had made me think about it, I could not
doubt it anymore.
I called in the security chief again, and from then on
I was never without a couple of huskies within call.
But that protected only me. What could protect my
May? Logic told me that it would not make sense for
Dougie to harm May as long as the boy would simply
inherit-nor would it be reasonable for him to want the
boy out of the way as long as Jimmy Rex stood to inherit
the vast Appermoy billions. It would surely pay Dougie
to bide his time, at least until the old lady died.
But the stink of dead fish showed me there was something
wrong with that chain of reasoning. Betsy knew
what it was but, typically, had not told me. So I started
other inquiries into motion.
They weren't necessary. Before my agents had a chance
to report, a morning came when I was awakened by the
Fleet bursar pounding at the door, bursting with news.
The dead fish had done the Appermoys in.
For old man Appermoy had not been able to resist one
more villainy before he died. The glassy pellets he
dissolved the radionuclides in for disposal were not
expensive. It was not usually worth his while to steal in so
trivial an area. But there was a strike in a settling farm
that he had not been able to buy off, and an accident to
one of the vitrifying plants that put him behind schedule,
and so he had eight hundred ton lots of high-level radio
active waste with no legitimate place to put them. He had
dumped them, raw, into his seamount. Of course, they
had begun to dissolve into the sea almost at once.
Appermoy had not killed the Pacific Ocean, for it was
too big for even him. But he had so polluted three million
square kilometers that fish were dying. The family had
been able to keep the lid on-it is cheaper to bribe than
to comply-until the weather betrayed them. For a solid
month the Hawaiian winds blew the wrong way. They
swept the waters out of the west, and washed radioactively hot waves onto Oahu and Maui and the Kona
coast.
The damage was too immense for bribes to work anymore, and they were a land-based conglomerate.
So the land law could reach them, and that meant something like
twenty billion dollars in damage suits already, with more
in the offing, and the lax government agencies forced at
last to stir themselves. "I'm sure, said the bursar gleefully,
"that the old lady's tucked a few million away in
pocket change here and there. But the company's bust!
So Jimmy Rex had lost most of his legacy. . . and May
had lost her insurance.
Since I no longer believed that Jeff's accident had been
an accident, I had to believe that an accident could easily
happen to May and her son. What could I do to prevent
it? I ruminated a thousand plans. I could confront Dougie
with my suspicions and warn him that he was being
watched-foolish idea! The one thing you could not do
to Dougie d'Agasto was frighten him off. I could warn
May. I could tell her what I believed and beg her to leave
him. But that was almost as foolish. If she had been willing
to listen, she would never have married the creature in
the first place. The best plan was the one that I rejected
most positively and at once. I could, I thought out of my
anger and despair, do to Dougie himself what I feared he
would do to May.
But I could not stoop so low, though for many years
I have wished I had.
And while I was stewing over whether to call May,
and what to say to her if I did, I got a call from her. She
looked troubled and very weary, but she was trying to
sound happy. "Good news, Jason," she cried, though her
eyes made liars of her words. "Dougie says we won't
have to worry about that-that letter problem, anymore.
He says he is certain of it. He has gone to get documentary
proof, and he'll bring it to you. But she added, although
I could see that it cost her, "But you're the one who has
to decide if the proof is enough, Jay. I'll abide by whatever
you decide.
And two days later, before dawn, Dougie's plane
screamed in. It woke me from my sleep. By the time I
got to the landing strip he was gone, the pilot waiting by
the ship to pass on his instructions for me. Mr. d'Agasto
had had the deck crew take his materials down to the
scavenging deck. Mr. d'Agasto would wait for me there.
Mr. d'Agasto asked that I join him at once.
Mr. d'Agasto was getting on my nerves. Why the scavenging deck?
It was not much more than a sewer head-
when we built lips around the oaty-boats, we could no
longer throw our garbage over the side, so there was a
well that opened out under the hull. It was a tiny, dirty
chamber down near the waterline, not a place where anyone
went for choice. I didn't like Dougie's choice of a
place, I didn't like getting orders from him-most of all,
of course, I didn't like Dougie himself. But I went. And
all the way down on the hoist, and all across the wide,
hissing, rumbling of the boat's workings as the tram carried
me through the low-pressure turbine decks, I was
wondering if this was a scheme of Dougie's to kill me and
dump me down the scavenging well. I had not forgotten
what he was.
I also had not forgotten some of the other things Betsy
had told me. They were not useful things. They were what
she thought were sexually stimulating things. They had
to do with Dougie's tastes: How he liked to do that, she
said showing me that and also this, demonstrating this,
and most of all he likes to do these others... But some
of those others I would not allow at all, and my stomach
turned as the images formed in my mind of what went on
between Dougie and my May in their private hours. So I
did not want to see the man at all. And if it was his plan
to kill me-well, then at least I would never again be
troubled with these poisonous thoughts.
He did not have any such plans, it turned out.
He was alone in the scavenging chamber. It reeked,
for he had opened the main access hatch and the oily,
warm water was only a few meters below, with all its
leftover stinks. Dougie had a great packing ease at his
feet, and he was smoking a joint to combat the stench.
"Close the door, he ordered.
I did as I was told. Dougie could see that I was ill at
ease. It amused him. "This won't take long, he promised.
"Help me open the box.
I did that, too, very obedient to his instructions. The
box was very heavy, and there was waterproof sacking
around it, a metal container nearly two meters long. It
was sealed and locked. "You take good care of your
documents, I panted as I lifted one corner so that Dougie
could unlock the strapping.
He laughed-I did not then know why. It took him
some time to get the lid open-
The lid of the coffin.
"You don't have to think of her anymore, chuckled
Dougie. "You're really pretty dumb, old man. It stood to
reason that the Commodore would have arranged for your
guard dog to get some money. All I had to do was get a
look at his private bequests-you know how that's done,
don't you? I flinched, but didn't meet his eyes. "Once
I found her, it wasn't hard. She even had copies of the
letters in her safe deposit box.
I could not speak. I could only stare at poor Elsie, who
had loved the child she had cared for and at the last paid
the tariff on that love.
"You've seen enough? You're convinced? And Dougie
shoved the box into the scavenging chute. It was a two-
meter drop, splash, gone forever into the secret deeps of
the ocean. "So you don't have any excuse anymore, old
man, said Dougie, "and I've had the papers drawn up
for you. Here they are. Sign.
And of course, as soon as he could get back to Miami
with the signed papers, May turned over all her stock to
him. I had begged her not to. She wouldn't meet my eyes
on the phone as she said, "I feel-anyway, I hope-that
once he has what he needs, he won't have to-
She stopped there and shook her head, not wanting to
name what he "had to do otherwise. And Dougie d'Agasto
was crowned king of the grazing isles.
Toll the bell, sound the knell,
My lady she married the lord of hell.
Her life she gave as wife and slave
To a treacherous, lecherous, blood-soaked knave,
An impudent villain whose touch defiles
The sweetness and woe of the queen of the isles.
The oaty-boats had a long run for their money, but
there were clouds on the horizon. There was a new land-
based energy source, deep methane from far under the
crust; there was a new sky-based one, with MHD generators
in orbit beaming down floods of microwave power.
And every month a new huge oaty-boat appeared, or more
than one, to add to our fleet or Betsy's or some
foreigner's. They all had five-kilometer intakes now, and we were
all huddling in the same patches of ocean, sucking out
the delta-Ts. It was not just that the sea was never empty
now, it was worse than that. The sweet Pacific reeked of
oil. My suspicions about Betsy's plans were correct
though it wasn't just gasoline she was making. She bought
cheap coal from Australia, pyrolized it to make liquid
hydrocarbons, and reacted them with her electrolysis gases
to turn the waste char into fuel alcohol. It was cheap fuel
to ship and cheap fuel to store, for it needed no liquefying,
and she sold every drop of it back to the Australians, or
to the Americans or the Europeans or the Japanese. And
left the stink of her oil and the smudge of her filth far
beyond the horizon.
Half the other fleets were beginning to do the same,
and Dougie called me on the carpet to find out why I had
not proposed it for ourselves. They were back in the
owner's country now, he and May and the boy, for he simply
had overruled her objections to living in the place where
Jeff had died. He kept me standing before his huge teak
desk for ten minutes while he punched out data sets to
study, face impassive, head twisted back to avoid the
drifting smoke from the joint he never took out from
between his lips, and then he confronted me: "Well? Can
you explain why we missed the boat on this?
Dougie d'Agasto's opinion of me didn't matter at all,
but I didn't want him convincing May I was an old fool.
"The market has peaked already, I said. "There's too
many boats doing it.
"Because we're getting to it too late!
I shook my head. "Because hydrogen's a cleaner
fuel- I saw that wasn't registering with him- and will
always get a higher price- that did- and this little
boom won't last long enough to amortize the cost of the
pyrolytic converters. All it will do is turn the Pacific into
Los Angeles. And indeed, there were days when my
eyes stung out in the open sea wind.
"Well, he said, as though he were giving me one more
chance and begrudging it, "we'll say no more about it.
Anyway, I've got plans of my own.
But he didn't tell me what they were. I didn't ask. I
confess to curiosity, though, because to give the reptile
his due, Dougie had not entirely wasted his time in "studying"
oceanthermal industrial processes in Miami. He hadn't
wasted much time doing any actual studying, either; I do
not believe more than one hour a week went to his tutoring,
and where the rest of it went I could guess-and
so could May, for the lines on her face were not all due
to too much golf and sunshine. He found that there was
a simpler way, though. He simply bought the school. He
hired away twenty of the expert instructors and flew them
to the Fleet. He knew enough to make good choices,
anyway. All of them were skilled, and one or two I knew
myself-Desmond MacLean had worked as a junior engineer
on the Commodore's first boat, before going back
to school and winding up a teacher. But even Desmond
did not volunteer what Dougie's plans were.
I must give the devil one more measure of due. He
was a worker. He worked as hard as Jeff Ormondo even,
though how he found time for it all I could not guess.
When they were aboard the boat, he was everywhere,
looking into every hold and engine room and control point;
but he and May lived jet-set lives, parties everywhere,
on all the seas and on the land. He took May away from
me for three weeks out of four. It was not only May he
took. Dougie was grossly and tastelessly-and after a
while almost openly-an addicted womanizer. I could not
forgive him his infidelity, for was there any other man
alive in the world who would have wanted more woman
than May'?
I understood at last what Dougie wanted: Everything.
He wanted it all. He had grown up as a very junior poor
relation in his mob family. Now he was almost the richest
of them-but that "almost was the iron in his soul. He
wanted Betsy's half of the Fleet back to add to May's. If
he had twenty thermal engineers on the payroll, he had
ten times as many lawyers-but so did Betsy. When they
met, which at one ball or race meet or another was often,
they joked with each other about their lawsuits, and both
would have pointed the jests with steel if they had dared.
"Mr. d'Agasto, said Desmond MacLean, "says I can
tell you now. Come up on the weather bridge. And he
only grinned at me without a word as we rode the hoist
up to the snug cabin on top of everything. He punched
in his present location to the ship's circuits and waved an
arm in a half circle. "What do you see, Jason? he asked.
What I saw was what I had seen every day. The great
mass of the vessel stretched out for hundreds of meters
in every direction, and beyond our decks was the sea with
its dozen vessels steaming slowly through the sooty air.
1 see stink, I said.
"So you'll be glad to see us making more hydrogen
and cheaper, won't you? he asked cheerfully.
I shrugged. "Where are you going to get the delta-Ts'?
"That's the problem, right. He punched in the commands and
displayed on his intercom console a map of
the Pacific Ocean. "Here's where we are- pointing-
"in the middle of this shaded green oval here, stretching
from New Guinea to Hawaii. There are now four hundred
oaty-boats grazing it, and each one pumps nearly a hundred
tons a second average. That's- he punched out the
calculations- "eighty billion liters a day, thirty trillion a
year. Every year we move thirty cubic kilometers of water
from the deeps to the surface!
"There are plenty of cubic kilometers in the Pacific,
I said, unwilling to believe that our puny pipes could
change anything in the majestic mass of the ocean.
"But not plenty that we need at the five-kilometer
depth, he said.
"Well, of course. That's why we stay out of each other s wakes-or try to.
"We do, he agreed, "as long as we can. But either we
settle for coming close to another boat or we work lenses
that aren't quite as cold as we'd like. Look at the arithmetic.
When we have deep water at six degrees and surface water at
thirty-two, which is what our turbines are
designed for, we've got a delta-T of twenty-six. The efficiency
goes up with the cube of the temperature difference. So the figure of merit for those
temperatures is twenty-six cubed- 17,576.
"We've not had a twenty-six degree delta-T for some
time, I admitted.
"And we won't for a while longer, because we're competing
with the heart of the oaty-boat fleet. We're cooling
the surface water and sucking up the best lenses of cold.
So most of the time we're dealing with top water that's
as much as three degrees cooler than it should be, and
bottom water sometimes three degrees warmer. Delta-T,
twenty. Cubed figure of merit, eight thousand. Which
means just about half the energy we should be getting.
"As bad as that!
"And going to get worse, he said, but cheerfully, so
that I asked irritably:
"All right, come on! Tell me what you've got up your
sleeve.
"We go deeper! he said triumphantly. He shook his
head when I started to object, and keyed the map back.
This time it was featureless. "Here are unexploited areas
with a surface temperature of thirty or more- He displayed
areas hatched in red lines, and as I peered at them
I began to object again- "Wait a minute, Jason! And
here are huge lenses of three-degree deep water. Three degrees,
you understand me? And look-there's a patch five
hundred kilometers across where we've got both. Thirty-
three degrees on the surface, three degrees at depth-
delta-T, thirty-cube that for a figure of merit, Jason!
I didn't have to. It was an oaty-boater's dream. "Shit,
Des, I said contemptuously, "you're talking about bottom water.
"Damn near. Ten kilometers down, most of it.
"And I know those charts. What you don't show there
is that there are mid-depth warm currents. You try to
drop a suction intake down through them, and they'll
curve into spaghetti!
He grinned smugly. "Right, he said, "and wrong. I'm
not talking about a rubber hose. I'm talking about steel tubing,
bouyed along it's length to keep it neutral, dynamically
positioned by its own engines. Of course, those
figures of merit aren't all profit. A hell of a lot goes into
energy to keep the currents from tying the tubes in knots,
and a hell of a lot of capital into building them in the first
place. But I did the feasibility studies myself! With a
figure of merit of twenty-seven thousand you can afford
a lot.
I only had one question left. "When? I begged.
"It's already started, Jason! The contracts have been
let out for the new gear, deliveries will start in sixty days.
Mr. d'Agasto has started hiring construction crews and
they'll be coming aboard next month-
"Aboard? Here?
There was a shadow on Desmond's happy face as he
said, "Well, yes. The conversion's going to be done at
sea. That's Mr. d'Agasto's plan. I really think, he said
wistfully, "that we'd do better taking the boats in one at
a time to some nice deep harbor, maybe in the Sunda
straits, and refit there. I showed him the figures. It'd be
cheaper and faster. . . but he's the boss, Jason.
I nodded. He was. He was showing it. He hadn't said
a word to me-hadn't even allowed Desmond MacLean
to whisper it to me until now, when the work was already
begun and the secret would be no secret anymore. He
was the boss. And I-was superfluous.
Prophecies fulfill themselves; a man who thinks himself
useless becomes so. The best estimate I could make of
myself was that I was an old fool who was in the way.
So I got out of the way. I took myself off to New
Zealand.
It could just as easily have been Okinawa or Iceland.
There was no place on the Earth where I was particularly
needed, or had any particular reason to be. I thought I
might like to see geysers before I died, so New Zealand
won the toss. There were one or two people there I had
some sort of friendly relations with-shipping agents and
freight forwarders, and a banker named Sam Abramowitz
whom I had known for forty years. I was shy of meeting
Sam, for I had known him first while I was a scared kid
in the accounting department of the bank, and he was one
of the few people in the world who knew I had juggled
the books to give the Commodore his start. But he made
me at ease when I hinted at the subject. "Ah, Jason, he
said, "that was a hundred years ago in another world.
That was back in America, and we've both gone a long
way away from what we were then. For he'd been personal
banker for a lot of Mob money, until his stomach
wouldn't take it anymore and he emigrated. "Forget it.
Have a drink. And in the morning I'll take you to see all
the damn geysers you want. .
So I dawdled away a month, and then half of another.
The geysers didn't keep me interested that long. Neither
did New Zealand, for when all was said and done it was
still land, though only a fairly small piece of it and remote.
I longed to be back on the sea, but more than I wanted
that I wanted to be wanted there. And so when at last
May phoned me, it was all I could do to keep my voice
calm and my face bland. "A party'? I said. "Well, I'm
not much of a one for parties, my dear.
"Oh, please. Jason! The Mays are going to be here,
and a lot of our other friends-it'll be the biggest party
we ever gave.
"I would like to see the Mays, I admitted.
"Not as much as they want to see you! I don't know
if they'll even come if I can't tell them you'll be here.
And, Jason- there was real sweetness in her voice and
in her half-fearful smile- I've missed you so.
Well, of course I went! I was getting pretty sick of
sheep, anyway-and even sicker of being on the land.
May had kept my rooms for me, but there was going
to be a crush of guests. I gladly vacated them for May
Bancroft and Tse-ling Mei to share, and I moved in with
the crew. There was not much more room there. The work
crews were coming aboard for the refit. When I looked
them over, they were the sorriest, meanest bunch of
roughnecks I have ever seen. If I had not been told they
were deep water construction workers, I would have
guessed them to be knee breakers for the Mob. Every
one of them was allowed a hundred and fifty kilos of
personal luggage, and I did not believe that any of it was
musical instruments or books.
They did not help morale on the boat. Dougie cleared
six hundred of our own people out of their quarters and
put the new ones in one whole section together. They ate
together, they talked together, they kept together. The
rest of us were doubled up and excluded. In the first day
the boat's security staff arrested a couple for hard drugs,
but Dougie was having none of that. He ordered the charges
dropped, and then ordered the security forces to stay out
of the construction workers' area entirely. Not just the
security forces. All of us were told to stay away, and
hard-nosed types that had come aboard with the new work
crews stood guard at the passages to keep the rest of us
out. The new ones all wore a new kind of uniform-
scarlet sea jackets and crash helmets-and they looked
as much like an invading army as anything else.
They felt that way, too. There was a meanness in the
air on our boat that I had never felt before, not even when
bastard Ben was king triumphant. I tried to talk myself
out of it. Old man Jason, I said to me, although I was still
not yet sixty and not really old at all, old man, you are
seeing ghosts and worrying without cause, for how can
things get worse than they are already? They can't, I said,
to reassure myself. But at sixty I had a lot still to learn.
I went to May and told her I didn't like the new people.
She was trying on her new party dresses, with two of her
maids fluttering around and admiring her and them, and
indeed she was as beautiful as she had ever been-a little
thinner, a little sadder, but the most beautiful woman in
the world-and the dresses nearly did her justice. "These
people are only for a little while, Jason, dear, she said.
"As soon as the new intakes are installed, they'll be gone.
"I'd hate to be the one that had to throw them off the
ship, I grumbled. She didn't look at me for a moment.
She stood there, staring out over the gardens towards the sea,
as she used to stare when she was two years old.
Then she said, "Perhaps you ought to talk to Dougie about
them instead of me. She had made up her mind not to
interfere with her chosen love's way of running the empire
she had given him. I had to respect her wishes.
So I did talk to Dougie. He laughed at me and told me
to get lost. He was busy, he said.
That was what he said, and that, in fact, he was, for
the refit was a huge task, and there was the party coming
up. The party was to celebrate the public announcement
of what everyone in the trade had known for weeks, that
we were going deeper and finding more. He had invited
people from the Russian and Japanese fleets. He had invited
a few of our principal customers from even the land.
And of course he had invited Betsy. Because May asked
me to be, I was polite to her-as polite as to Captain
Tsusnehshov or to old Baron Akagana when they came
aboard. I greeted her politely and offered her a drink and
helped her get settled in her rooms; and I did the same
for the Japanese and the Russians, and then went off to
see the Mays. If they were a little older than the last time
I saw them, they were at least that much more charming
and beautiful, too. Tse-ling Mei was one of the world's
most loved movie stars. Maisie Gerstyn, who had once
been Maisie Richardson, had brought her handsome husband
and her two fair, bright twin boys. We all sat around
the lanai that was part of my suite-theirs now-gossiping
and enjoying one another's company until the sun was
low and it was time for them to dress for the party.
I was in no hurry to dress, or to go to the party at all,
for that matter. I was ambling slowly toward my room
when the pager called my name. Desmond MacLean
wanted me to join him in the high bridge, and his voice
sounded strange.
The principal reason his voice sounded that way was
that he was half drunk. He wasn't alone, either. He was
sitting there with his face flushed and his tongue tripping
over the hard words, and there with him, matching him
drink for drink, was Betsy Zoll. "You idiot, I snarled at
him, you re out of your class! Can't you see she's pumping
you for information?
He shook his head stubbornly. "Other way, he mumbled.
"Y'unnerstan me? It's the other way. She's doing
the talking.
I had no patience with the man-or with Betsy, either,
who sat there serene and smiling. I called for a medic
with a tank of oxygen and some black coffee. "You'd
better stay away from the party, I said bitterly, "for
you'll disgrace the boat. He shrugged hopelessly. "Damn
it, I cried, "what's the matter with you? Don't you see
what a fool you are? And what did you call me for, anyway?
He pointed to Betsy. "Tell'm, he mumbled, and submitted
himself to the attentions of the medic, who had
just arrived.
While MacLean was choking down coffee and inhaling
as much of the 02 as the medic could force into him,
Betsy stood up. I'm sure she'd had as much to drink as
Desmond, but the only sign was that she moved very
carefully, as though the floor were rocking. There was
nothing wrong with her speech. "What I told him, old
man, she said, "was nothing you couldn't have seen for
yourself. Just look around you.
"At what? I demanded. She pointed out the window.
But there was nothing to be seen that I didn't already
know was there. True, Betsy's own flagship was hull down
on the horizon, and two others of our own fleet and one
of hers in sight-but I'd known that, for some reason or
other, we'd been steaming closer and closer to other boats
for the past few days. The only other thing that was in
any way unusual was the flotilla of stiltboats and fast
hovers in the water just outside the lip. And that was
easily understood. It was to ferry our guests back and
forth, of course-though it was, I thought as I looked
closer, a touch strange that the crews manning them all
owre the scarlet seas jackets of the new construction crews.
"I don't know what I'm looking at, I admitted stiffly.
Betsy laughed and turned to the medic. "Out, she
ordered. The woman glanced at me, then left, her expression
resentful. "Have you looked at the landing strip?
Betsy demanded.
"Why should I? But I did, and then I looked again.
There were a dozen aircraft parked at the side of the strip,
and instead of bringing them down to the hangar deck,
more were coming up on the elevator.
"Old man, she said contemptuously, "what you won't
see, you can't see. I knew this was happening weeks ago.
I only came to make sure.
"Sure of what'?
"Ah, Jason, what a fool you are! Can't you recognize
an invasion force when you see one?
"There's no need, I said, misunderstanding her, "for
Dougie to invade the boat, since May has given him the
whole fleet.
"Not her fleet, you old fool! Mine! He wants to steal
my ships!
"You stole them yourself in the first place, I said
stubbornly, not quite taking it in, "or your bastard father
did.
She stared at me with scorn. "Everybody steals everything;
how else can anybody ever get rich? How did the
Commodore get them in the first place, but with you to
help him in the stealing? God help you, old man, you've
blinded yourself. If you won't believe me, ask your drunken friend,
she cried, grinning, and left the bridge.
By then Des was nearly coherent. Still, it took him a
long time to get the story out. Betsy had plied him with
drink and got him babbling, and what he had babbled was
what I should have known for myself. He had poked
among the incoming stores for the new "work crews and
found that there were pumps and engines and tubing, all
right, but there were also rifles and grenades and bigger,
worser weapons than that. It was true. The reconstruction
was a ruse to import his storm troopers; the party was a ruse, too,
to get Betsy aboard as hostage.
God knows how long Dougie had planned this madness. God knows
how many of Betsy's people he had
offered bribes or how many fortunes he had squandered
to buy arms and hire his battalions. God knew-but I
should have known, too! If I hadn't let myself fling off to
New Zealand in a fit of pique, I might have seen it happening
in time to prevent it. But even so, I should have
known. I should have realized months earlier that Dougie
would never settle for half of anything. He wanted all of
the Fleet, not just May's boats.
And he wound up with nothing. For God knew, and I
should have known-but Betsy did know. People who
take a bribe will take a bigger one. As I was scrambling
down the ladder to Dougie's command bridge I heard the
distant scream of a stiltboat and saw Betsy's boat rising
on its skis. She was on her way back to her own ship,
and Dougie was caught with egg on his face. For by the
time I got past his uglies to confront him, she was home
free and talking to him on the intercom. "Give it up,
sonny! she taunted. "You missed your chance!
He roared obscenities into the microphone, and finished with
threats, but she cut him off. "It's too late,
she said. "Look to your starboard! He did. I did, too-
we all did.
And wished we had not.
I had never seen a mininuke at work before. The oatyboat next to
us in the grazing comb was a sister ship to
our own. Two million tons, and most of ten thousand
people aboard. You would not think to look at that vast,
slow juggernaut that anything could halt it, or even slow
it down, much less do it harm-you might as well try to
sink Gibraltar! But a hundred-K nuke into its engine room
was too much weapon for even an oaty-boat.
It was God's grace for us that the explosion was inside
the hull, for we were spared our eyes. Even the secondhand
radiation that bounced off the water and made a
bright haze of the smoggy air blinded me, and the concussion
shook our boat. When the wave came. it swamped
Dougies floatilla and drowned hundreds of his thugs,
but then it was over. The only real change was that our
sister boat was not there anymore. All that remained of
it was a glowing, rising cloud of steam.
Dougie did not know when to give up. He actually
thought, I believe, that his hired killers would be loyal to
their pay. When he tried to get them to attack Betsy's
boat as planned, no matter that the same torpedo tubes
that had just disintegrated one oaty-boat were now trained
on ours, the mercenaries did what mercenaries do best-
changed sides-and told him they were arresting him. He
would not submit. That didn't help; they only killed him
instead.
The Russians and the Japanese ranted and raved, but
what could they do? There was no law left on the sea.
And no peace, either. When Betsy came aboard again, it
was as a conqueror, with twenty armed hoodlums at her
back, and she demanded that May sign over every vessel
in the Fleet to her.
My May was poised and lovely, but very pale. She
looked at me for strength but, chained and gagged in a
chair, I had none to give her. "The world will not condone
piracy! she cried, but Betsy only grinned.
"The world, she said, "has troubles of its own, and
besides, who would lift a finger to help a murderess?
I groaned and struggled, for I could guess what was
coming. May could not. It was her greatest weakness,
that she could never gauge what evil really was. "You
murdered your husband, Betsy announced. "The second
one, anyhow-I don't know about the others! May didn't
bother to tell her she was lying; she only waited to hear
what form the lie would take. But it wasn't all lie. For
Betsy said, "I have a confession from the oiler who helped
Dougie d'Agasto murder Jeff, and proof that it's true.
And the confession says that you were as guilty as Dougie.
Planned it together - she grinned -"for everyone knows
that you and Dougie were lovers long before you killed
Jeff to get him out of the way!
And all I could do was groan.
Later, when the papers were signed and May was taken
away, Betsy got around to me. "Well, she said when the
gag was out of my mouth, "what shall we do with you,
old man?
"Whatever you want to, I said. "But you know May
was no part of that murder! You have no evidence that
will stand one second in court!
"But the only court there is, old Jay, is me. No land
court will try her. She'll never be on land again, you see,
because I'm going to keep her near me as long as she
lives.
"Treat her kindly at least, I begged, abject at last.
"Why not? In fact, she said, in high good humor, "I'll
let you be her jailer, old man-providing we can make
an agreement on what your other duties are! And then
you can treat her as kindly as you like.
And so all the years of peace were over, forever.
Thrice widowed was wasted her beauty fair.
Her son, no son, was her only heir.
Her sister, no sister, pent her there,
In a cage on the grazing isles.
I did it for a year, and three months, and a week, and
how I did it that long I do not now know. Then I went
to Betsy. "You'll have to wait, said her butler. "Miss
Zoll is engaged just now.
"I'll wait, I said, and I did, for an hour and more in
her "morning room. It was a bright and cheery place,
high over the foredeck and its gardens. May had no gardens.
May had four comfortable rooms all to herself, and
whatever she liked to eat and all the video disks and books
she asked for, but except for me and the servants she had
them all to herself. Three visitors were allowed. I was
one. Betsy was another, but she had the grace never to
go there, and the third, who would have been the most
welcome of all but never came, was Jimmy Rex. Betsy
had designed May's jail herself. It had bright, large windows,
but they looked on nothing but the sea. It had one
door, and there was an armed guard outside it always. At
a push of a button the door would lock and steel shutters
would slam across the windows, but there was never any
need for the button. There was nowhere for May to go.
So I waited the time in Betsy's morning room as patiently
as I could, and then she emerged in a robe, drowsily yawning
and stretching, absently petting the hairy
shoulder of the scoutship pilot who was her favorite of
the moment. "Well, old man? What do you want now?
Isn't May happy in her home? Would she like a little trip
to relieve the monotony-say, a week or two in Miami
with her drug pushers and arms runners'?
I would not let her anger me. "I've come to sell you
my stock, I said.
She frowned at me in silence for a moment. Then she
slapped the pilot's rump and pointed to the door. When
he was gone, she said, "What's the trick, Jay? There
was no feeling to her voice at all. It might have been a
machine talking, with a machine's requirement for more
data on which to base the emotionless, compassionless
decision of a machine. I felt myself chilled.
"I don't like what you do, I said. "I can't stop you,
but I don't have to be an accomplice.
She rubbed thoughtfully at her lips, which were bruised
and swollen, and then clapped her hands. At once her
maid appeared in the door, peering through with an armed
guard looking alertly over her shoulder. Betsy gestured
drinking from a cup of coffee, and the maid produced a
service for her at once. "You're not lying to me, I think,
she said then. "but there's some kind of truth you're not
telling me. What do you want to do with the money'?
"Go away.
"Leave your precious May?
I kept my voice steady. "I have to get out of here for
a while, Betsy. I'll come back later and go on being a
prison guard, but I need some time off. And I need to
plan for my future. She looked unconvinced. I said the
rest of it: "You're' the tyrant here, Betsy. It has pleased
you let May live, but some day you'll be drunk, or
doped, or in a rage at whoever is sharing your bed that
day. And you'll take it out on her. When I can't help May
anymore, I want to see what I can do for me.
She sipped the coffee, studying me over the lip of the
cup, and then shrugged. "I'll accommodate you, Jay. I'll
give you ten million dollars for your stock.
When I had turned down fifty! "Twenty-five, I bargained,
and she shook her head and said:
"Nine.
And nine it was.
May could see at once that I had something to tell her,
but she played the hostess and asked after my health and
inquired wistfully after Jimmy Rex. She let me come to
it in my own time. So, with a glass of wine in my hand,
I said, "I'm going to New Zealand for a bit.
"Oh?
"Just for a while, May. A few weeks maybe. Then I'll
be back, I promise.
"Of course you will, Jay, dear. But you're absolutely
right. You should get out of this for a while. And New
Zealand's a lovely place-I remember, the skiing is first-
rate! And then, her eyes longingly on the open window
and the emptiness beyond it, she said in a tone that wanted
to be light, "I'd love to be there again. I couldn't do Betsy
any harm there. She knew that every word was heard
as well as I did, and I suppose she was talking to Betsy
as much as to me, though she knew how little good that
would do. "I would give my word not to, she said, "and
I've never broken it.
I left her before the tears began to trickle down my
cheek. I knew that May's word was good. I also knew that Betsy, the mother of lies,
would never believe it.
And, oh! my Mary, oh Mary, my May,
Blest was the hope and accursed the day,
Curst was the day when I brought you away,
Away from the grazing isles.
New Zealand was not an idle choice. It had three things
going for it. First, it was lightly populated and far from
rest of the miserable landlocked world. Second, their
geothermal springs made them poor customers for the
Fleet, and so less likely to want to keep in Betsy's good
graces. Third, I had a friend there.
Betsy's eyes did not stop at the hull of the oaty-boat.
So on the first day in Auckland I visited six different banks
to talk about investing my nine million dollars. On the
second day I toured the sheeplands by air, on the pretext
of buying a ranch, and that night I allowed myself to have
two or three more drinks than usual in the guests' lounge
at the little hotel. To anyone who would listen I explained
what a vindictive bitch Betsy Zoll was, and how I had at
last given up hope that my sweet May would ever be free
again. I did not know which of the ranchers or barmen
or guests would be passing the word on to Betsy, but I
had no doubt she would know everything I said.
And on the third day I went to visit an offshore oatie
and there, in the low-pressure turbine room, I met Sam
Abramowitz, as we had arranged on the first. "No one
can hear us here, he said over the hiss and groan of the
generators. "What do you want me to do? And then,
when I told him, "You're insane!
I agreed that it was an insane world all over. "Still,
I said, "what I need is a scout vessel with a pilot, and an
aircraft willing to take the chance of being fired on, for a
million dollars.
He pursed his lips. He didn't answer at first, but turned
and gazed around the booming, gasping turbine room as
though he were suddenly less sure that we couldn't be
spied on. Then he said, "I couldn't set it up overnight,
you know.
"I don't want it overnight, Sam. I want some time to
pass, so Betsy will relax a little. At least a month. Six
would be better. Just send me a message when you've
got it set up-something about investing in a new sheep-
shearing machine, maybe-and the pilot must wear something
I'll recognize, so I'll know he's there.
He shook his head slowly, not to refuse, only to say
it was an outlandish idea. "A million dollars, did you say?
It may cost more.
"I've got more, I said. He sighed. It meant yes. I
reached out and grasped his hand in both of mine. "You're
a good friend, Sam. It's not just for me, you know. It's
for the finest lady who ever drew breath.
He looked away and didn't answer. There was a strain
in the set of his jaw that I didn't understand and didn't much
like. But the important thing was that he had agreed. Then
and there I wrote a power of attorney for him, to draw what
he liked and spend as he chose. If there was nothing left of
the nine million when he was done, well, then I would be a
penniless old man. But I would be free, and so would May.
And so should May have been, for it was a good plan and
Sam Abramowitz a better friend than I deserved. He was
also careful and cunning. When at last the signal came and
the scoutship showed up, it was from one of the new Argentinian
boats, and the pilot came to Betsy with a fine,
false tale of locating unsuspected patches of deep cold that
he was willing to sell for a price. And the pilot wore the
green scarf that identified him. I could not talk to him, for
he was closeted with Betsy, driving his bargain and delivering his
goods, but I went down to the sternways and studied the vessel with
care. A scoutship has no more beauty
of line than an egg. Speed is not important, nor looks. What
is important is the strength of hull to withstand whatever
pressures it may encounter as it dives deep and sends its
probes deeper still to measure the bottom water. It looked
solid. Once in it and well away, we had our chance. It would
be a run for the bottom to hide under the thermoclines and
the scuttering layers, and then away, well out of reach of
any of Betsy's eyes or guns. We had range enough to make
it to Australia or Hawaii or Japan, or anywhere between. I
had settled on Manila. Of all destinations that was the most
dangerous for us, since the islands were small and sea visitors
frequent, but therefore the one where Betsy would be
least likely to look while we did what we had to do to change
our appearance and find our way to a new home.
All that was needed was the aircraft.
And so, as soon as it was dark, I went down to May's
room. She was sewing as interminably she did, pausing
to read for a while and then to return to the needle. "It's
a hot night, I said, stepping to the port and gazing at the
warm sea, twenty meters below. By leaning out and craning my neck
I could see the scoutboat moored to the
sternways, just past the gate in the mesh. There was a
man in a long green scarf where he was supposed to be.
He was paying for the fuel he had bought, and his orders
were to stall until the aircraft arrived.
Which would not be long.
I said, ~ I wish we could go for a swim. May gave me
a sharp glance. "Look, I said, catching her hand and
drawing her to the port. "It's not much of a dive. And on
a night like this we could swim to Hawaii if we chose,
and see the palms and the black beaches again. It was
foolish talk, and I was grinning foolishly as I raised her
hand to my lips and kissed it. When I let her hand go, it
was curled around the scrap of paper I'd written out before. It said:
"When I say jump we both jump, and there will be a
boat to take us free.
"Have a drink, dear Jay, May said gently, nodding
me to the bar. And a while later she excused herself to
the bathroom, and when she came out she went back to
her sewing, only looking up to gossip about the fine fresh
pineapple they'd served her for dinner and the strange
dream she'd awakened with that morning.
Half an hour later we were still chattering away, when
the first-level aircraft-warning bells began to ring. I
assumed an expression of surprise and curiosity, and pulled
May toward the port to look out.
And May's door opened, and little Jimmy Rex walked
in.
He was eight years old then, spoiled rotten by Betsy
for the past three, and for that matter born with his
father's family's rotten blood in him. You must know that
in three years the boy had visited his mother just twice.
It was Betsy who had sent him, of course. His eyes were
bright with an eight-year-old's deviltry. "Are you going
to do something foolish, mother May? he asked, the
voice clear, the face pure, the heart made up of equal
parts brat and bully. I stood between them.
"What makes you ask a question like that? I demanded.
He pouted up at me. "Betsy says it's very strange,
he complained, "that you've become a drunk, and sold
your stock, and stopped asking me to visit here. And
there's a plane from the Soviet fleet that showed up on
our screens a few minutes ago, claiming that they've lost
their electronics and don't know if we're their home boat
or not.
I had not expected Betsy to make so quick a connection.
But outside the door the guard was paying no attention to
us. He was listening to the ship's intercom, his
scarred, mean face envious as he heard the challenges to
the Russian VTOL. The Russian was earning his pay, for
he knew as well as I that the boat's surface-to-air missiles
were homing in on him at that very second. I opened my
mouth to answer Jimmy Rex, but May caught my arm.
"Can't we take him, Jason? she begged.
"We can not, I cried. "And we have no time to argue!
For if Betsy was suspicious enough to send him here, we
had minutes, maybe seconds, and the diversion of the
aircraft would not puzzle her for long.
There was no weakness in May's brain. She understood me well.
She knew I spoke the truth. But she was also a mother, whose only
child had been lost to her. She gazed
on him one moment more before she sobbed and turned
to the port.
That was one moment too many. "No! shrilled little
Jimmy Rex, and did the only thing he could do to stop
her. He darted out into the corridor and jerked the handle
that would seal May's cabins off and keep her from getting
through.
He did not keep all of her inside.
The door slammed.., and the terrible strong shutters
slashed closed upon my May.
There I was, alone with what was left of May. And
minutes later the steel outer door grudgingly slid open
again, and there was Betsy storming in, with Jimmy Rex
crowding behind her. Betsy looked furious and triumphant
and outraged all at once. . . and then, when she saw
that it was only May's headless body that lay bleeding in
my arms, more than anything else, relieved.
For Jimmy Rex I will say this much. He wept beside
his mother's decapitated corpse. He screamed and sorrowed,
and I believe he truly grieved-for ten minutes
or so.
Even Betsy was shaken, though not as long as that,
for he was still shrieking when she turned to me with an
expression of awe and delight. "You old fool, she said
admiringly, "I knew you'd do something dashing and
stupid to solve all my problems. I ought to thank you.
"if you do, I said as steadily as I could, "there'll be
two dead women in this room. And there would have,
though by then her goons were holding me fast.
The room was mad, with medics covering May's poor
body and a guard leading Jimmy Rex away and blood
everywhere-everywhere! But Betsy looked only at me,
and this time I could not read her expression at all. If I
had not known her so well, I would have thought there
was pity in it.
At last she sighed and shook her head. "Old man, she
said roughly, "keep your lonely illusions. Get off my boat."
She nodded to the guards, and twenty minutes later the
great OT was disappearing behind me as the scoutship
that should have carried May to freedom instead carried
only me to-I am not sure what.
And so the queen she met her end.
The axe was raised by her dearest friend.
Her son, no son, made the blade descend
To finish the queen of the isles.
The fair, sweet queen, the sorrowful queen,
Oh, pity the queen of the isles!
For more than a year after that I woke shaking every
night from a dream of the great steel shutter chopping
May's dear head off. It was bad, and what I woke to was
perhaps even worse. What "illusions made nasty Betsy
pity me?
I never found an answer to that question. Perhaps I
did not want one.
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