“Ali was right!” Ireland said. “We’re north of the sun, in the Atlantic ocean! What instincts, Ali.”
I grinned. “Guess I’m a natural navigator.”
By late that afternoon, the sea was calming. The winds were still pretty strong and the Namaste cruised smartly through the smooth sea at about five or six knots, fast for her. Knots, as I’d discovered reading the sailing books John had brought, meant exactly that. A hundred years before, sailors used to tie regularly spaced knots in a string, put a float on the end of it, and toss the float overboard. As the string played out, the sailors counted the knots that slipped through their fingers for one minute, and that would be how many knots they were going. Knots means nautical miles per hour, and we got it by timing ourselves between one position fix and the next. I wanted to try the counting-knots-on-a-string method, though.
Bob had cooked some chicken and rice on the alcohol stove. We had no designated cook. We took turns at irregular intervals, whenever the mood struck us. I cooked often—something Patience would have been amazed to know—because I enjoyed the challenge of making a meal against the adversity of the rolling and pitching boat. In a real storm it could take hours making a meal, but sailing provides lots of hours.
We sat in the cockpit at sunset and watched the sun sink into the sea. The red glow shimmered, a million flecks of red from a million moving facets on the sea. We checked the time when the top of the sun’s disk intersected the horizon, a free sighting we could use. As we ate, sunset became dusk. Night fell. The stars, following Venus’s lead, seemed to pop out of the sky. Before we finished eating, a brilliant dome of stars hovered over us. I stood up and looked around. The faint line of the horizon was a circle around us, the edge of a disk, the edge of the world floating in space. I sat down.
“What the hell’s that?” Ireland said, pointing west.
John and I looked. A green oblong shape hovered twenty degrees above the horizon.
“Hey,” Ireland said, “I don’t believe in these things, but what—”
“Yeah,” John said. “Look at that. It’s moving.”
It was growing larger, looking very much like it was approaching us. I watched it, thinking there was something familiar about it. It suddenly moved back, getting smaller.
“Jesus,” Ireland said.
“It’s not a UFO,” I said. “I mean it is—UFO means it’s unidentified—but it’s not a ship, a spaceship, or anything—”
“Why are you always such a fucking cynic?” John said. “Big, bright green thing, hovering, comes at us, goes back, and you know it’s not a fucking flying saucer. Why?”
“Because it doesn’t act like a spaceship—”
“Oh,” John said, turning to Ireland. “Doesn’t act like a spaceship, Ramon.” Then he turned back to me. “What the hell you talking about?” John said, disgusted.
“She’s coming again,” said Ireland.
The shape seemed to rush toward us, getting huge. You still couldn’t see a surface or a clean edge, but the fact was, it was something coming our way. I really wanted it to be a spaceship. It dropped lower and seemed to be rushing us at low level, like a fighter on a strafing run. Then it changed course and swooped north, disappearing up among the stars in just seconds. I could feel John and Ireland staring at me. “Still,” I said. “There’s something not right about the way it flies.”
“Awww,” they groaned.
“So que is it?” Ireland said.
“I’m not sure. But it started out due west, right over Cape Canaveral.”
“It wasn’t a fucking rocket, Bob,” John said.
“No. But maybe they were testing something. Maybe they let some kind of gas out real high up, to check dispersion or something, I don’t know. But it looked like a gas cloud to me. It wasn’t moving, it was just getting bigger and smaller—”
“And then it rushed us—” John said, laughing.
“And then it got real big and finally collapsed,” I said. “It looked like it shot away, but it would look the same if it was a gas cloud that just shrank to nothing.”
“Awww,” they groaned.
We were listening to the news on a Miami radio station the next morning when we heard that John Lennon had been murdered. That put us all in a funk, pissed that weirdos like his killer were allowed to live at all; made us wonder at the fact that some people weren’t people, they just looked like people. We listened while they played “Imagine.”
A while later, we heard that NASA had released some weird green gas in the upper atmosphere over the cape, causing hundreds of UFO sighting reports. Ireland and John looked at me and said, “Awww.”
“Elephantshit!” Ireland yelled. “That’s what they always say.” We laughed.
By noon the winds were dying. The sea was sagging from riotous mountains to gentle dunes. John spent a lot of time trimming the sails, trying to coax as much energy as he could from the little wind that remained. The Namaste was doing two knots—a slow walk, and slowing.
“This is sailing,” John said. “One minute you’re on the verge of being sunk in a fucking storm, don’t know whether to shit or go blind, the next minute you’re looking for oars.”
As the wind died, Rosalinda became less effective. By sunset, Rosalinda’s wind vane flopped around uselessly and we steered by hand. Watching bits of seaweed crawl by, John said, “Well, fuck it. Let’s crank up the engine. That’s what it’s for.”
We dropped the sails and John started the engine. It ground a bit and finally caught. It was a Cummings thirty-horsepower diesel. The Namaste grumbled. I felt she did not like being pushed by a motor, but she cruised ahead anyway, muttering and vibrating. We could feel the breeze in our faces. It was a relief to be moving.
Under power, Rosalinda was completely useless. The relative wind she used as a reference to steer by was always coming from straight ahead, no matter what direction we motored. Rosalinda would just steer us in random directions, so we had to man the tiller during our watches. Sitting beside that big stick for four hours at a time, moving nitpick left, nitpick right, trying to keep the compass on the mark, made you really appreciate autopilots. John said that if he owned this boat, he’d have an electric autopilot installed for when he had to motor.
I woke Ireland at midnight for his watch. I went back on deck and waited by the tiller. So far, this trip was a pleasurable adventure. But I felt a chill when I thought about arriving at Saint Thomas. End of the cruise; beginning of the raid. Saint Thomas was the initial point, as we called it in Vietnam.
We’d drop low over the initial point, twenty of us—twenty helicopters—each carrying eight grunts. We flew at a hundred knots, but the Viet Cong almost always seemed to know our routes and would be there spraying red tracers into the flight. I heard: “Preacher Six, Preacher Red One. Red Two just went down. Two is down.” And Preacher Six, Major Rogers, said, “Roger. Mark the coordinates.” The pilot called in the coordinates where Red Two lay wrecked and we sped on, dodging palm trees, some of us thinking—me, for one—we were actually dodging the bullets; watching villagers, who we thought we were helping, shooting. Shooting at us.