I had to check a couple times to make sure I was seeing right – this was the shoddiest dock in town, which meant it was a good, fine place for me to get day-drunk while looking at the water and imagining I was going to do real work – but no, I was right.
Eleven, maybe twelve years old. Kiddy lisps and mumbles all gone, voice still too high-pitched and squeaky, but talking in deadly grown-up earnest all the same.
“I want a ride,” she repeated, stone-faced. And that just made Angel laugh harder, hands on both knees now, dockmaster’s coat flapping from the wind of her joy.
“I’ll bet you do,” she said. “Oh I bet! Caught some minnows and now you want to go whale-hunting, huh? Get a vouch from someone that isn’t your mommy.”
“I’ll do it,” said the spirits, using my mouth. Damn, I’d had more than I thought. My impulse control wasn’t usually this bad.
“A vouch from someone that isn’t your mommy or halfway alcohol by volume,” said Angel.
“You’ve let me take Charlie-Jetty out when I can’t even talk, Angel,” I argued. “Go on, let the kid be. Worst that’ll happen is she can’t find anything.”
“Worst that’ll happen is she gets them both fed to a damn shark.”
I fumbled around in my jacket until I found the hooks in my pocket – had to fight them out, they’d gotten snarled in the weave – then flung them in the dockmaster’s direction. She took them up with a quickness and a grin that let me know she might have planned on this.
“G’wan then, shorty,” she said cheerfully. “Go catch your whales.”
“Thank you,” said the kid. Teeth not gritted, face still stony. This wasn’t the first time she’d been treated like this. How many docks do you visit before you go to the shoddiest one in town?
Maybe none, if the others aren’t dumb enough to rent out fins to prepubescent. And you’d be out of luck there too if a sentimental and contrary drunk wasn’t on hand to play scapegoat if the kid doesn’t come back.
Those were the cheerful thoughts that filled me as I watched the kid scud away into the early-morning mists atop the low-slung and scaleless back of Charlie-Jetty, short legs dangling from the croc’s flanks so her toes just touched the water’s surface.
“If she doesn’t come back,” Angel said, clicking my (her) hooks against each other thoughtfully, “I sure hope Charlie does.” A cheap ride, but a consistent one, and sensible. “There’ll be some sad old abalone hunters without him – he practically does their runs for them.”
“She’ll come back,” I said. An uninformed opinion, but a stubborn one, and hopeful. “She’ll come back.”
Then I dealt with my anxieties as best I knew how, which meant I wasn’t awake that evening when Charlie-Jetty came back to dock, rider included. But I knew he must have when I slept clear through ‘till morning, groggy and stiff.
Angel’s laugh always woke me up early. Too loud, too sharp, too pleased.
***
The kid was back soon after that, before I’d had time to think about breakfast. Walked right up to me, hand out, fistful of hooks.
“For yesterday,” she said. There was an uncomfortable amount of direct eye contact happening, and I realized I was feeling an old reflex to salute.
“Thanks,” I said. And took the hooks, and thought about other things I maybe should’ve said or asked while she walked to Angel’s post, rang the bell, argued her case.
Like “what were you doing?”
And “should you be doing it alone?”
And “why are you thanking me for letting you do it?”
Then Angel started laughing again and oh I didn’t want to hear that, not without breakfast. So I went down to the rocks and the little shack and bought a bottle of it, came back to sit by Charlie-Jetty’s berth and lie to myself that I’d be taking him out for baitfish in an hour, a few hours, the afternoon, tomorrow.
Angel came to keep me company and took the bottle from my hand, asking for neither. “You have an eye for talent, So’west!” she said cheerfully. Then she took a pull, then she made a face. “No goddamned taste though. Christ, you could clean the birdshit from the boards with this – if you didn’t mind turning the dock into a firetrap.”
“What’d she want?” I asked. I wasn’t going to ask for the bottle back. I wasn’t.
“Seems your old boy here didn’t hold her appeal.” Angel bucked her chin at Charlie-Jetty, sleeping like a (smooth) log in the way that sea-crocodiles do. “She wanted something bigger. A lot bigger. And well, I would’ve said no, but you gave me a bit of a turnaround yesterday, So’west. I’m a bigger woman now, with a generous, open heart.”
My hands shook a little faster. “Give me the bottle.”
“Huh?”
“Give me the bottle please.”
“Oh of course, no worries.”
I was trying to count the leads tied to the piers and swallow at the same time when she said “I reckon Bruce-Boy will do her fine,” gaze high and tight on the horizon, watching the sun climb out of its sullen grey bed.
I immediately failed at everything I was doing. It hurt worse than the last time, not least because while my throat burned and my heart wrenched my ears were full of Angel’s friendly, good-natured laughter.
***
I stayed up that time. Drank half my breakfast and put the other half in my pocket and took up a place at the lookout post, tucked in the corner where I could get a good view past the breakwater and pretend the young-and-bored postie wasn’t looking at me every five minutes and sharing the same opinion I’d developed of what he was seeing.
Young. He had to be twice the kid’s age.
And she was out there with the meanest near-reptile I’d ever met. Bruce-Boy had nearly six metres of neck and a mouthful of knives and if he was displeased with you he had a nasty habit of letting you know right away and everything from lack of food to early work to the sun in the sky to being ridden at all displeased him, displeased him greatly and thoroughly.
I had a few marks on my arms from Bruce-Boy’s displeasure, and if I’d been slower or had a bit more breakfast at the time I had no doubt I’d be missing fingers. That kid could lose a hand or worse.
The bottle was still in my pocket.
“Hey you want a drink?” I asked the postie.
“Not on watch.” And isn’t it nice to know you’re bringing out the best in people, Southwest? The barely-shaved watchman of the shoddiest dock in town can learn a bad idea when you show it to him.
“Good,” I said. Like that had been my plan. A good influence on all young people I am. This young man will go on to have a bright career thanks to my intervention, and that kid will probably go on to be a layer of gut flora in Bruce-Boy’s duodenum.
Moved by the spirits, I pulled the bottle out and dropped it over the side. It didn’t splash, and the first thought I had (the first EMOTION I had was blind regret and rage) was oh no, I hope I don’t get any of the fins drunk.
Then I thought of Charlie-Jetty drunk and swimming upside down at abalones and laughed. Messy, snorting, snot-dribbling, undignified, giggly and near-hysterical. The postie not-looked at me like I was the worst thing he’d ever seen.
It’d been a long time since I’d heard a laugh from someone that wasn’t Angel. It felt good.
Felt better when – just as the sky was turning red – in came Bruce-Boy, smooth as butter and worryingly traceless – all the froth and motion and force coming from a body only a little bigger than Charlie-Jetty’s, all the eye drawn to a neck twice that long with a malevolent little skull on it, leering at you from just above the waterline.
He looked happy. As far as that goes. And the kid, all things toothed and scaly be praised, looked unharmed. Tired, but unharmed. Well, unharmed by teeth – she had a sunburn fit to murder God and her posture looked more stiff than straight for once, but she had all her limbs and all those limbs looked unbandaged and unbleeding.
I was down from the lookout post before I had time to realize it, halfway through tying a hitch into Bruce-Boy’s lead before I remembered I’d forgotten how. Cinched it, tugged it, shrugged it off, offered a hand.
The kid ignored it – jumped up with a wince and a slap of the palms on the wood, shaky-armed – but nodded to me anyways. As was proper, if she’d been three times her age.
“Good day?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said. And all she had to back that claim up was a foul-smelling fish-pack half her own size, but she said it without a pause or a stall or a thought, so I didn’t doubt her for a second.
“I’m Southwest,” I said.
“Cleat,” she said.
Then she left.
I looked at Bruce-Boy. He gave me the serene look of a cruel and temperamental beast with a full stomach.
“What’s she finding out there, eh?” I asked him.
He turned his back on me with more dignity than the postie had.
***
I skipped breakfast. My stomach rebelled and rejoiced all at once.
The air at the dock helped both. Dead fish and salt spray and the thick cool coating of a foggy day, inside and out. I could almost imagine I was a fish myself.
Angel was in a bad mood. She stared at the fog as if it had jimmied her brother then skipped town, the smoke of her pipe aggressively encroaching on its space.
“Unless you’re hunting harbour eels, no go,” she told me shortly. “Wait ‘till it burns off. Maybe a little noon traffic.”
“Fair enough,” I said. “Might take Charlie-Jetty for a spin. Get my fins back on.”
“Didn’t know you had the means for a pleasure spin, So’west.” The bite was there, but the cheer was forced.
That mixed mood of my stomach spread to my tongue, and this time I couldn’t blame it on the spirits. “Well, Cleat paid me back. Reckon I’ll be set for a little.”
Muscle crawled on her jawbone like a lizard on a rock. The pipe twitched and I heard a little crunch.
“I’m going out,” said Cleat.
We both jumped. She wasn’t that quiet for a kid, but damn the fog ate noise.
“I’m going out,” she repeated. “And I need a big one.”
“Nothing doing,” snapped Angel. “Not in this fog.”
“I’m going out,” said Cleat. No change in tone; not impatient, not annoyed. All business. “The biggest one you can send.”
“Go hunt frogspawn in the crick.”
“I’m going out,” said Cleat. She held up both hands, opened them.
It’d been a while since I’d seen that many hooks. Some of them were doubles. I thought one might have been a triple.
“The biggest one you can send,” said Cleat.
Angel’s face moved through a few expressions, which was pretty funny if you didn’t see that her eyes didn’t change once. “Fine,” she said, as flat as Cleat had. “Let’s roll out Jenny-Regina.”
I choked on the fog and my own tongue. But Cleat didn’t say anything, just nodded, and I couldn’t put the words together right, not as they walked out to the security pier, not as they raised the gate and pulled the anchors loose, not as Angel held out the ammonite-shell chime that would hang from Cleat’s waist and remind Jenny-Regina that the tiny thing on her back existed, and the foul-smelling sack of nudibranchs that would dangle from Cleat’s neck and remind Jenny-Regina that the tiny thing on her back was not edible.
I couldn’t say a single word as Cleat leapt down – still a little stiff from yesterday if I wasn’t fooling myself – and seated herself on the saddle and smacked the goad against keeled scales and she was off.
Off atop Jenny-Regina. Fifteen metres of Meuse-lizard, finned and tailed and massively jawed. Indifferent to anything that didn’t threaten it, unthreatened by anything.
I couldn’t relate, especially when I found my tongue again after the two of them had passed beyond the breakwater, and all I could manage was “what the fuck, Angel?”
“Her hooks, her funeral,” said Angel. She sucked on one cheek and bit down. “Going to get early lunch. Go suck a bottle or kiss a harbour eel, I don’t care.”
A flip of the hand, a hook bounced off my forehead, and I was alone.
Then I was at the little shack by the rocks. Then I had a bottle.
But my stomach felt worse whenever it came out of my pocket, so I left it there and went back to the dock and tried not to think about why or what I was trying to do.
The fog was still so damned thick. Which is why I almost walked into Angel, and why she didn’t hear me do that (biting my tongue when I stumbled helped).
She was at the end of the dock, untethering something.
Then she was in the water. Barely a splash, head still level with the dock, and then moving off.
I ran to the end and caught the end of the tail.
Thomas-Clock. The old timeeater himself. The other end of the security dock. Short tail, long paddles, short body, long jaws. A mouth to rival Jenny-Regina’s.
I thought about what was going on, which was worryingly easy, and then about what I should do about it, which was a lot harder.
The good news was that while I was wasting my time thinking my body – uninfluenced by the spirits and feeling enthusiastic about that – ran down to Charlie-Jetty’s dock, stuffed fish in his mouth so quickly he almost bit me in surprise, and cast him off.
The water was up to my thighs. I hadn’t taken out fins in… god. A year? More.
But you couldn’t forget.
***
Following Tommy-Clock was easy. Charlie-Jetty’s nose was good and he knew his distant dockmate’s smell well. All I had to do was keep him pointed in the direction he was most uncomfortable.
Damn, I owed him more than a few fistfuls of bait.
We went out past the breakwater, swaddled hard in dead fog, and for a while we went straight out. Downcoast and out, towards where the shoals would be if the season were better. But a big fish-pack-full of plain food didn’t bring in a fistful of hooks and then some, and I wasn’t surprised when we took a sharp turn.
Near back to shore. Nearer. Nearer. A long way from town now, closer to the headland. Ragged and rocky. Charlie-Jetty slipped through with ease but steering Bruce-Boy would’ve been tricky and Jenny-Regina would be like pushing a cork back into a bottle.
The rocks were getting closer. One bad wave I couldn’t see coming and I’d be a bag of broken bones held together with meat glue. At least I’d give my fins his snack, assuming he didn’t end up worse…
… then a wave came – no, not a wave, a current – and slid us closer, and under, and THROUGH – oh, oh, there’s your secret.
Cleat had found a sea cave. Barely above the water, barely below it. I crouched low over Charlie-Jetty’s back and breathed between the cold wet slaps of the current against my face, and when the light came again – fogbound though it was – I blinked it away until things made sense.
The roof had collapsed long ago; I was inside a gigantic bowl, tall-walled, invisible inside the cliffs of the headland.
I was also next to a gigantic carcass, which explained why I vomited.
God, the smell – overwarm, overrotting.
Cleat HAD been whale-hunting. Or the sea had done it for her. The carcass alternated between dark barnacle-studded hide and pale half-rotted bloodless flesh, riddled with reeking decay. It was a wonder I wasn’t up to my armpits in sharks.
A splash. Violent. The water ahead of me moved against the current – then back again. A gigantic scaled flipper broke the surface and smacked it, sending up a sheet of water that could’ve soaked a house roof to floorboards.
Jenny-Regina.
No wonder she’d wanted a big set of fins. And from the lunge and the ripple and the sudden stone-still hesitance of Charlie-Jetty to proceed, Tommy-Clock was here too. But the riders were either off or dead; they wouldn’t let them dive in a fight, not both at once – too risky being a loose fleck of meat between two apex predators, even with the nudibranchs and the chimes, so-
“Back off!”
There they were. And that was the first time I heard Cleat’s voice raised. No wonder she kept herself monotone: level enough and you could forget her age, but when she yelled it came out shrill and made you think of refusing to go to bed or complaining about dessert.
Angel laughed because of that. Genuine in a way her face hadn’t been all morning.
“Why? It’s a free salvage. Else what? You threatening me, kid? That’s a crime, you know.”
“I’m not stupid!” and oh that was the wrong thing to say in that voice, it just made Angel laugh harder and that’d make Cleat angrier, and she’d feast on that like a warm dinner.
I took that sick heat of worry inside me and let it distract me from my gooseflesh as I slid off Charlie-Jetty. He was used to the abalone hunters; he wasn’t fussed.
“Sure, kid. Sure. You just thought you’d take advantage of my generosity because I run a poor dock at a good price and you’d use that to sneak twenty kilos of ambergris a day past me without so much as a thank-you, good-bye, or by-your-leave. You’re not stupid, kid. You’re an asshole. And a toll-dodger.”
“I paid double fare today!” Like fairness or facts would help. It wasn’t fair this was happening; and the fact was I was swimming like a drunk false-lizard, trying to paddle with my shoulders instead of my arms, splashing too much.
“And what was that compared to your take? Going to bring home two bags today? On my fins? Do you know how to do percentages yet?”
Do you know if that yank at your left foot is the current, the shearing force of a ten-metre-plus reptile shooting by, or a three-metre skull snipping your foot off at the knee?
“There is no cargo toll!”
“Not if you announce the cargo,” happy as a clam. Never as happy as when someone else is miserable. Always happy to see me. Had she ever paid me for that? “Without doing that it’s smuggling. Smuggling and threatening a dockmaster…” Sharp, clear, slow tisks. “And we’re on the water. So the justice is summary. But you’re young and I’m generous – tell you what, kid: give me back the dock’s property and you can swim home. You’re good at what you do, I’m sure ol’ Jenny’ll treat you like a fellow queen, chime or no. Deal?”
I had my hands on the corpse now. Spongy where it shouldn’t be and thick in ways it hadn’t been when alive. A bruise in the shape of a body, half septic.
Cleat wasn’t talking. Sensible. Saving her lungs. Mine ached with strain as I hauled myself clear of the water, face nearly buried in semisolid flesh. I clawed upwards through the consistency of sticky pudding.
“Deal,” agreed Angel with herself. A slight stir, metal and leather slapping on a palm. “Put the knife down or I take your doggypaddlers off before I throw you in.”
I’d love to say I planned to grab her leg right then. The truth is, I was blinded by some of the foulest-smelling glue I’d ever imagined, I was groping blind, and when my right hand gripped Angel’s ankle my first thought was it was a rib.
Then she yelled “What the FUCK,” kicked, slid and fell over – cling-cling went the chime at her belt, cling-cling! – catching herself with a hand that sank down to her elbow in melting blubber.
The arm with the axe wavered in midair, ready to come down but not sure of what her target was.
“So’west?” she half-said. I think she might have just mouthed it. My eyes weren’t any better, and her face was a lot closer to the corpse than it had been a second ago. Her mouth was twisted in a half-retch and I wasn’t sure if it was the whale or me.
Then I lost my footing, scrabbled at thin air, slid loose belly, chest, and arms, and down we went.
Cling-cling, cling-cling!
Splash!
Splash!
I went under first, Angel on top of me, between me and air. Feet and arms windmilling.
Hatchet just missing me, free hand shoving at the water. Cling-cling!
I ignored both of them, grabbed the bag at her waist, and tore as hard as I could. It slid free and I followed it, grabbing before it could sink out of sight into the dark, then turning for the surface.
Sharp pain in my shoulder. Cling, cling, cling-cling. I’ll give Angel this much: she kept that axe sharp. Even underwater it stung. I rolled around, leaving a little red trail between me and the light, between me and the blacked-out silhouette of Angel, hand groping for me, other arm rearing back for a second strike.
I blinked, and when I opened my eyes, it was still dark.
Cling-
I blinked again. Still dark.
Then the mass that had blotted out the surface moved on, propelled by a fluked tail taller than I was, and I could see all the way up to the surface and the sun.
I swam to it. Sore-shouldered, leaking a thin line of red.
Not the only red in the water now.
Cleat was watching when I broke surface.
“Hand up?” I gasped.
“By the tail,” she said, pointing with her chin. “It’s too steep here.”
“I noticed.”
She did her best, eleven-ish as she was, but getting me out took time. When I finally laid on my back, bloated whaleflesh beneath me, a just-clearing sun above me, I felt like I would never be dry again.
“Are you okay?” asked Cleat.
“Maybe,” I said. My shoulder hurt – and something was jabbing my side. I shook out my jacket and watched, neck craned, as broken glass slid its way onto the shark-bitten meat below. “I lost my bottle,” I observed.
“I’ll buy you a new one.”
“No thanks,” I said. I leaned back and thought about how we’d get two of the meanest sets of fins in the docks home without eating each other, how long it’d take before poor Charlie-Jetty found the courage to walk himself home. Last time he’d had to do that was when a shark took his abalone diver. “You’ve given me quite enough.”