"You really are a son of the Ancestors, ain't you? That'll be sore."
He looked at her in offense and never said a word.
"I know," she said, "they don't teach you about fish uptown, you just eat 'em, My fault. Never thought you'd grab it on the back. Behind the fin and by the line. Least it didn't have teeth. Redfin, now, I wouldn't have had you grab that. Bad fins and they got teeth besides. You use a glove with that, that's all. Same with yellowbellies. Take a nice nip out of you. And deathangels, they're just what they say, they got poison'll kill you dead quicker'n you can turn around. Nice eating, but one of them spines can kill you three days after that fish was supper."
"I know that," he said somberly; and she remembered about assassins and deathangels; and the high bridges; and got another chill in the daylight. She rebaited her hook and turned and cast again. A flight of seabirds landed out by the Ghost Fleet, and raft-dwellers began a slow, drifting stalk. She watched them till the flock took flight.
By noon it was fish cooking on her little stove; and full stomachs and a nap afterward, herself on one side of the halfdeck, himself sleeping sitting up, where he had fallen asleep after lunch, down in the well. On a good slug of Hafiz's cheap whiskey and a bellyful of Dead Harbor fish.
She woke from time to time, looked over her pillowing arm to have a look at the shore, which was bare brown rock and yellow shingle; and at the passenger, whose only move had been to lie down on his side on the slats with his head on his arm. There he stayed, tucked up like a baby, one bare foot engagingly lucked behind the other knee.
The sun was warm, the night had been hard, and she blinked out and let her head down to her arm again, too sleepy to do otherwise.
By late afternoon she fried some pan-bread to have with cold fish; and Mondragon-whatever came up and looked at the proceedings. "Have you got a razor?" he asked.
"Got a good knife," she said, thinking about it. "She's razor-sharp." She had the boathook in reach, and it was an honest question: he had a good stubble by now. She ducked aside and handed him up her ribbon-thin sheath knife, not the one she beheaded fish with. He looked doubtful till he tried his thumb on the edge and then he looked respectful of it.
"What do you use, whetstone?"
"Bluestone and you be damn careful." She drew the stone from her left pocket and handed it up.
"Soap."
"'S in the can. There first as you go in the hidey. Little black can. You wait. We got supper coming."
"I reckoned to be clean for dinner."
"Lord, you got a bath last night."
He looked at her with such dumbfounded offense that she shut her mouth outright while he bent down and got the soap out of the can. A bath. After near drowning. With soap.
He went off to the rail and pulled off his sweater.
"I bet you hope I got clean clothes, too!" she yelled in derision.
He turned around. "I wish you had," he said fervently. And turned again and stripped off the too-large breeches, gathered up the knife and soap-cake in one hand, and launched himself in a shallow dive off the side.
"Damn!" It was not particularly deep at that side of the boat. She sprang up and ran to see if he had broken his neck, but there he was, swimming quite nicely. "You ever look where you are?"
"I'm all right."
"Damn, you lose my knife I'll make you find it before you get aboard."
He stood up, water at mid-chest, and held it up. Along with the soap. He wrinkled his nose. "Is something burning?"
"Damn!" she yelled, and ran back.
It was burned. She turned out the black-bottomed bread onto the cold fish, put out the fire and sat there staring at the mess.
Then she pulled her sweater off, unfastened her breeches and went off the other side of the boat.
Second bath in a day. If he could be clean, she could be cleaner. She came up and kept the boat between them.
"You all right?" he asked from his side.
"I'm fine. Dinner's already burned. Might as well be cold too." She ducked again. The bottom was silty sand and felt awful. She tucked her feet up, swam a few strokes out and flipped and started to swim back.
He came round the edge of the boat, "You want the soap?"
She trod water, not standing up; and swam to his outstretched hand and got it. He went back around to his side. She scrubbed and spat and swore, and when she had scrubbed enough for ten women she laid the soap up on the half-deck and swam round to the side, came up over the rim on her belly and slid over into the well.
Back in possession of the boat. He had a good view out where he was. She refused to notice that or to look his way. She walked up on the halfdeck and put her breeches and her sweater on, stowed the soap, and sat there and ate her dinner with her hair dripping onto her shoulders.
So he had to come back aboard. She stared mercilessly, while he turned his back to dress and pretended quite as well that she was not there. He had come back with the knife. She saw that. And when he came her way with it she had the barrelhook down by her foot just in case. She looked up as he sat down with the bluestone from his pocket and caught a little grease up from the skillet; he proceeded to care for the blade (she had to admit) right properly.
"You can eat," she said.
"I'm taking care of your property."
"I can do it fine. Eat."
He kept working at it. A long while. She finished and went to the side and swept the bones of her portion off; wiped the plate off to stow it.
Then he ate his own and took the skillet to the side. Dunked it.
"Damn, what are you doing?"
He looked back at her. "Washing. Does wash ever—?" He cut that off before it went too far, but she caught it well enough.
"You don't wash an iron skillet, Mondragon. You wipe it. Just gets better. And you go washing your plates in the harbor, you get sick. You go wash too damn much you get sick. I don't like being dirty. But there ain't no damn place to wash, Mondragon, till it rains, and then it's too damn cold!"
She screamed it at him. Realized she was screaming, and shut it down with an exasperated heave of breath.
"I'm sorry," he said.
"Hey, you do all right for a landsman. You didn't even lose the soap."
"What do I do with the skillet?"
"Here." She took it and wiped it with a rag and stowed it. "First heat-up'll kill the germs. Skillet's the safest thing you could dunk."
"Bread wasn't bad."
"Thanks." She put the number two droplid down on the dishes and sat down on the halfdeck rim, bent down and got the whiskey bottle. She wanted a drink. Lord and Ancestors, he made a body want a drink.
She held it out to him then, figuring she might make him want one too. "Trade you for my knife."
He passed it and the bluestone, and took the whiskey and drank.
The bottle went back and forth several times; and she sighed then and looked at the bottle. An inch of amber fluid remained. "Oh, hell," she said, and passed it to him. He drank. She finished it.
Then she went back and fished some more, finding tranquility in the business. Across the water lights showed from Merovingen, a scatter of gold above the darkening waters. The water lapped and slapped and glittered, broken reflection of the fading sky. The float bobbed away, untroubled.
He moved up beside her on the deck, sat crosslegged. Silent. Water-watching. Thinking mist-thoughts, maybe, how old Det had tried for him and lost.
"You're real lucky," she said finally, out of her own. "Drink that old canal water, you get fever. You must've drunk a liter of it. Kept waiting all night for you to fever up. Maybe the whiskey killed the germs."
"Pills," he said. "I took a lot of pills against the water."