The Waterman: A Novel of the Chesapeake Bay (21 page)

Read The Waterman: A Novel of the Chesapeake Bay Online

Authors: Tim Junkin

Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #General, #Action & Adventure, #Historical, #Men's Adventure

“Yeah, I heard that. Not right. That's for certain.”

“Think the government would stop it.”

“Too much money in it.”

“Supposed to be a delicacy over there. You wanna get out and walk?” Byron asked.

“Not really. Seen what I wanted to. You?”

“I've had enough of the confusion round here.”

“Yeah.”

Byron turned on the engine and backed the truck out. They worked their way back until they found Route 17 to Gwynn's Island. The citylike surroundings lasted until they crossed the bridge over the York River and, after a few miles, hit the farmlands of southeastern Virginia. They drove through Gloucester and then up Route 14 as the sun began to fall behind the tips of the trees edging the fields of tobacco that receded in the distance, and the light passing through the trees slanted in muted layers. Driving between miles of cornfields, the corn stalks close to a man's height, they reached the turnoff to Gwynn's Island, crossed the bridge, and by driving along several of the back streets, finally found Kate and Matty's address.

Kate came to the door.

She was wearing faded blue jeans, an oversize green sweatshirt, white tennis shoes, and a Baltimore Orioles baseball cap. Her red hair fell in waves out the back of the cap and curled down the nape of her neck. At first she seemed exasperated, as though she were bothered by the knock on the door. When she saw Clay, she was startled. She caught herself, then smiled and drifted into his arms, murmuring his name. After a few seconds she stepped back and then gave Byron an embrace. She took their hands and pulled them inside.

“What a shock, you two,” she said with an effort, as though out of breath.

“Didn't Matty tell you we were coming?” Clay asked.

She let go of Byron, shooing away the question. “He doesn't tell me anything anymore. You're staying the night?” She seemed to plead and then she answered herself. “Of course you are staying the night. Or maybe several?”

“We came to look around a little,” Clay answered. “We're thinking of bringing our boat somewhere down here. Crabbing till the fall, maybe south of the Rappahannock.”

“There ain't no crabs left in the upper Bay now. Not after the hurricane,” Byron added.

Clay let her hand drop. “Byron called Matty, and he said you wouldn't mind putting us up for a night. We need to find a boat slip, and somewhere to sell our catch. I'm sorry you weren't asked. I hope you don't mind.”

Kate took this in. “Mind?” she repeated, turning her head sideways. “I'm sorry about the storm, Clay. But if it brings you down here ... well, of course I don't mind.” She reached for Clay's arm. “Where are your bags? Do you have any? Let's go get them. We will just have to celebrate your arrival, now. Come on—”

“Congratulations,” Clay stammered.

She stopped.

“On your engagement.”

“Yeah,” Byron added. “Likewise.”

Kate looked at one, then the other. “Matty told you?” she said to Clay, studying his face. “He said he'd let me.” She started to say something else but held back. “Oh,” she answered in almost a whisper. “Well. Thank you.” Her eyes dropped down to the floor, then lifted as she held out her hand, showing them her ring. “Nice, huh? Matty's very generous.” She seemed unsure of what else to say. She moved forward and gave them each a little hug. “I've been so emotional lately.” She paused. “I guess we're growing up. Or trying
to.” Then she turned abuptly, as if from shyness, and motioned for them to follow her to their car.

Back inside, Kate picked up the phone to call Matty. “Hello. Yes, is Matty there?” She saw them standing by their bags. She cupped her hand over the receiver. “Clay, I'm sorry. The guest room is at the end of the hall upstairs. Leave your stuff up there if you want. One of you can sleep there, and I'll make up the couch in the living room.” She nodded her head toward the stairs. Clay and Byron walked down the hallway.

A fluted banister ran along the stairway from the hall to the second floor. The walls of the hallway and stairwell were covered with framed photographs. Sunsets and rainstorms, black-and-white shots of watermen and their boats, waterfowl, pictures of bridges and mountains.

“All Matty's work?” Byron asked.

“Appears to be.”

At the top of the landing were more photographs, but these were mostly of Kate, some posing and some with family. Clay found himself talking, explaining to Byron the photograph of Kate and her mother standing on either side of a large chestnut mare. Kate's father, astride the horse, was decked out in formal foxhunting attire, derby and all. “Her father hosts a fox hunt every year. It's a big deal.” Clay pointed to another photograph, taken at a debutante ball of some kind, in which Kate stood with ten or so other young women in a semicircle, all of them dressed in long white gowns.

“She hardly looks any older now,” Byron said. There was one more of Kate, playing the piano in a concert or recital. In it her eyes were closed.

The only family picture of Matty was part of a wedding portrait, “his older sister's,” Clay guessed out loud. In the photograph, sepia toned, Kate stood between Matty and Matty's father. The resemblance between father and son was remarkable. The three of them were on a staircase looking down at the bride and groom.

“Where's his mother?” Byron asked.

“She was killed. Car accident. Before Matty started high school. Something we've had in common.”

Byron took this in. Then he whistled. “I see where he got his looks.”

“He used to do his own developing. I assume he still does. Some of these are pretty nice, you've got to admit,” Clay answered.

“Get's around a bit, I'll say that.”

Clay led the way to a small bedroom at the end of the hall. “You might as well sleep here,” Clay said. “I'll take the couch.”

They dropped their overnight bags against the radiator.

“Good plan there, Cap.”

Clay caught the drift. “Forget whatever it is you're thinking.”

“What?”

“You know what. And not a word. I'll be glad to sleep here, if you prefer the couch.”

“Whew. Whoa, now. I ain't said a thing. And I don't plan to, neither.” Byron took out his wallet and set it and his keys on the dresser. “This here's fine. Of course, now that you mention it, it did seem sudden. I mean, I know you're fixed about what you've said. I know that. I don't know what
they're
up to, though. I hope she's in on the program. That's all. Those boundaries, like you talked about.”

“You're thinking cockeyed stupid, Byron. Jesus.” Clay tried to check himself. “Of course she is. She's just sensitive now. She just got engaged.”

“Probably am. Thinking cockeyed again. Won't be the first time. Definitely not the last. You yourself now, I believe you could use a college course on women. Maybe if you'd've finished you'd've gotten one. Anyway, I do know one thing for sure: that you ain't made of stone. She neither.”

“Byron, I wouldn't've come down here if this were even an issue. You might know that.”

“Well, where is Matty, anyway?”

“He'll be here. Meantime, you get your thinking straight.”

“Yeah. Okay, forget it. I won't say another word.”

“Yeah. Don't think it, either.”

“It ain't easy to stop thinking about something you don't wanna be thinking about in the first place.”

“Try harder,” Clay said.

“Yeah.”

Back downstairs, the living room was heavily curtained, dark and soft. The floor was covered with worn, overlapping braided rugs. Against one wall stood an old red velvet sofa framed in sweeping black mahogany, with a white lace antimacassar spread across the back. The unused fireplace had three chairs gathered around it—a pine rocker, and two armchairs in corduroy upholstery.

“Matty is on his way,” Kate said. “We found some of this at auction, down here. It's like playing house.”

“Well, I thought Byron and I might go out and pick up a couple of pizzas or find some Chinese or something,” Clay said.

“Nonsense,” Kate answered. “We'll rustle something up. You're such a good cook, you can help me.” Byron rolled his eyes. “Only we're out of beer. But we do have some wine,” she offered.

“Good,” Byron said. “And I have just a nip of whiskey in my bag.” He rose to get it.

Kate took Clay's two hands and pulled him with her, saying, “Come on, let's see what we can find.” Holding his hand, she walked him into the kitchen. She pulled a bottle of Beaujolais from the pantry and handed it to Clay. “I've wanted so much to talk to you,” she said. “I wish you'd called.” Her eyes were uncertain.

Clay glanced down at the bottle, then looked back at Kate. He tried to read her face. “I didn't know whether I should. I wish you'd told me, though. I mean, I'd have wanted to celebrate for you both.”

“It happened so fast, Clay. Of course, it was something we've both taken for granted since . . . since forever, really. Since we were in high school. Matty's been so jumpy. Preoccupied. I don't know. Not himself. And he needed to, he said. He needed to . . . And I guess I did too.”

Clay stayed quiet for a moment before speaking. “Well, I know he's very happy now. He sounded like he was.”

Kate turned and pulled down some glasses from the shelf. She polished one, holding it up to the light from the window, and then looked through it, squinting.

“He's seeing life through rose-colored glasses,” she answered. “Or maybe I should say through Rosa-colored glasses. And a Polaroid. He's already found a fast crowd down here.”

Clay wondered at this, but they heard Byron returning. He found a corkscrew and opened the wine.

“That's a sound I like,” said Byron, walking in with a bourbon bottle, half full, in his hand. He took a glass from Kate and poured three fingers, then clinked his glass against the wine bottle. “And that one too,” he continued. He raised his arm high. “To beautiful young women,” he offered, and swallowed his drink down.

“Pour some for us, Clay,” Kate asked. She tilted her head at Byron. “And I'll drink to naked men diving off boathouses.” She lowered her eyes. “And to swimming in the moonlight.”

“And to you and Matty,” Clay added. “To your engagement.”

They found pasta, olive oil, and garlic, and Kate and Clay cooked while Byron, and soon Matty, who had come home, sat at the kitchen table sipping whiskey. Matty pulled out the contact sheets of the photographs from the regatta and passed them around. He promised them prints. Byron started telling them about how Agnes hit them, and they wanted to know all about Clay's being on the water in the storm. Matty opened a window, and the salty night air, warm from the summer sun and the sea, washed through the house and over the conversation.

Next morning, Clay and Byron were up and out early. They had a chart of the lower Bay with several of the dock areas circled. They drove through the small watermen towns along the western shore and down the coast, trying first Hudgins, then New Point and Mobjack, and finally Bavon, jutting out on the westernmost edge of the Gloucester peninsula at New Point Comfort and just inside Mobjack Bay. Bavon was just a smattering of white and ocher-colored houses, a public town dock and parking lot, and wharfs and dock slips for watermen and small pleasure boats, which ringed the head of Davis Creek, horseshoe fashion. On one of the wharfs skirting the town dock, which was laid out down a long, bottleneck crushed-gravel drive, stood a gray two-story building with a blistered white railed porch and a sign reading the waterman's hole. A marine supplies store was on the first floor, and the second housed a small bar and restaurant, which opened early but closed at nine, according to the sign on the wall. Adjacent to this building was a loading dock. The loading dock, they discovered, was operated by a white-haired man who introduced himself as Calvin. Calvin bought crabs from the watermen and trucked them daily to Richmond. From the dock, the view south was down Davis Creek, bordered on both sides by wide swaths of sharp-bladed spartina and bog, and out toward the wide water of Mobjack Bay. Clay studied the chart. He liked the remoteness of the place and being surrounded by so much water. Calvin had a slip available and offered it to Clay for eighty dollars a month. “I'll take your crabs,” Calvin said. “All you can catch. At a fair price. And you can get your alewives here too. I keep 'em boxed and frozen in my cooler.” Calvin chewed tobacco and gave off a brown glob of spit as he pointed to a refrigerator unit inside a shed on the loading dock. “Yeah, and don't fret the channel there. She got ten foot all the way out.”

“How many crabbers pot around here?”

Calvin pondered this. “We got quite a few. Lay around the inside
of Mobjack. Not as many as there was, of course. Fore the oil spill year before last. Put a damper on it. Put a stain there. There's several buyers still. But I'll welcome your crabs.”

Clay accepted and gave him a twenty-dollar down payment to hold it. He didn't have many twenties left.

“Hell,” Calvin said. “Most are leavin' the trade. You're the first new one I seen in a time.”

Clay thanked him and they drove back to Matty and Kate's to tell them the news. Clay then got on the phone and started making calls to find out how to get their Virginia commercial-crabbing license while Byron sat in the kitchen talking to Matty and Kate. It took Clay several calls and he was put on hold at one point, but he got the information before hanging up.

“I need a resident address to get a license,” Clay told everyone, returning to the kitchen. “We'll need to find a place to rent.”

“Not necessary.” Matty said. “This will be your resident address.”

“It's the least you can do for us, your friends, Clay Wakeman,” Kate admonished him. “We want to board a waterman.” She crossed her arms. “Don't you say a word, now. It's all settled. Just feed us that crab soup. Now and then.”

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