That he could quite easily kill Hammond occurred to him. He was emotionally capable of it.
Their eyes met.
Hammond shrugged. "All right. I wasn't trying to defer it. It was a duplication of the usual routine. I'm trying to present everything exactly as it happened." He turned to the boys. "Stay here. There's no point in your coming too."
The companion-way was short and steep. Fleming followed behind Brannigan and Hammond. The rail was wet under his hands, whether from the other men's sweat or his own he didn't know. The smell of the deck was of tar and carbolic.
Hammond explained, "There are three hatches. The one forrard is beamed. The tarpaulin was on this one as it is now. The other – where David fell – is just below the poop deck." He led the way.
His attitude was almost casual. "That's the one. There's no cover on it. There wasn't then and there isn't now. You might be able to screw damages out of the Maritime Museum for not covering it." He noticed Brannigan's expression and didn't care. The right words eluded him. A speech of sympathy at this point would be like offering milk to a cobra.
Fleming went over to the hatch and looked down into the darkness of the hold. It went down about fifteen feet.
David had stood here – or hereabouts – wearing a blindfold. The edge of the hatch would have come up to his thighs. An unwary step wouldn't have toppled him over. He had either climbed over or been pushed over.
The words that had been battering at the back of his mind for days came out as a whisper. "I don't understand." He repeated them to himself. I don't understand. Brannigan, as grey-faced as he was, looked at him in silence.
Only Hammond appeared cool. "After the accident, I climbed down into the hold – down that iron ladder. It's not well lit, but I have a torch. Do you want to go down?"
Fleming turned to him. "Accident? Did you say accident? Look at the height of the hatch side. I only have your words his hands weren't tied."
"His hands were -not tied. He could have rested them on the side of the hatch – perhaps have been doing handstands. Small boys don't have a sharp sense of danger – they're full of bravado. He could have been acting out some scene of daring from his imagination. He was imaginative."
"Was he? What else was he?" Very quiet – very level.
"I don't understand you."
"Was he sick? Disturbed? Unhappy? Frightened?"
"You're referring to the sketch?"
Brannigan said quickly, "I explained about it. I think, perhaps, its significance…"
Fleming interrupted him. He went on addressing Hammond. "I don't know what happened to my son – but I mean to know. Imaginative, you say. A circus act on the edge of the hold. Do you honestly believe that? Can you stand there now and look at me and say you believe that?"
Hammond made a helpless movement with his hands.
Anything I believe won't carry any weight with you at all.
You're determined to think the worst. I'm sorry David died.
I've said that before. If I say it a hundred times again it won't shift your prejudice against me."
"Too right it won't. His safety was your responsibility. Where the hell were you when you should have been right here?"
"I was looking after three small boys and trusting the rest to do as they were told."
"And David was told to do what?"
Hammond indicated the poop deck. "To get up there and make notes on the rudder machinery."
"That's asking a lot of a twelve-year-old."
"A twelve-year-old, an eight-year-old – they produce according to their ability."
"The sketch showed a regression to six. At what age level was the work you set him on the rudder machinery?"
Some of Hammond's aggression left him. "It wasn't done. He made no attempt to do it. I suppose you'll suggest now that he made a suicidal leap because I set him an impossible task."
"So you've dared use the word suicide at last. Be careful – you might become indiscreet."
Brannigan interrupted with some forcefulness. "We're not gaining anything by this. None of us knows what happened to David. We're here to try to reconstruct the scene – as far as we know it – and with the help of the other boys. Shall we get on with it? Or do you want to go down the hold?" • "I want to go down the hold." He added, "On my own."
Brannigan held Hammond's torch while he made the descent. Hammond went over to the rail and looked down at the water. The sun was edging the waves with silver. There was a sour sickness in his mouth and his chest felt tight as if Fleming had kicked him in the ribs; but still he was aware that the sun shone and the shadowed waters at the harbour edge were a deep cobalt.
He tried not to think of Fleming in the hold.
He tried not to think of Fleming's child.
The hold smelt of salt and seasoned timber and rope. The hatch above was a square of light. The light, like spilled water, flowed thinly and trickled off into a deep darkness.
Fleming bent down and touched the timbers almost directly under the hatch. His mind refused to see David lying dead. Complete identification with him wasn't possible. His own id protected him from what he couldn't take. He had reached the limit of his own separate existence and he couldn't over-step that limit. David had died. He himself was inexorably alive. As an act of contrition for his own limitation he wanted to lie on the timbers where David had lain, but he stopped himself. Brannigan was up there somewhere in the light. The private agony had to be contained in the mind.
When he climbed up the ladder again he surprised Brannigan by appearing so calm.
Brannigan helped him over the edge of the hatch. "Are you all right?"
"Yes." "Then let's get back to the boys."
The boys, like abandoned guests at a macabre party, stood uneasily where they had been left. Brannigan felt a twinge of conscience that he had let them in for this. An interview up at the school would have been less traumatic. There, in their own environment, they had appeared adult enough and tough enough to be here – now he was less sure of them.
Hammond looked to him for a lead and when one wasn't forthcoming took command himself. "You all remember where you were on the day that David fell. We'll start with you, Stonley. The engine-room, wasn't it?"
"Yes, sir."
"Take Mr. Fleming there."
Brannigan said that he would go along, too. "You don't object?" This to Fleming.
"No. The boys are your responsibility." It came out heavy with innnuendo.
Brannigan's lips tightened and he said nothing. Stonley skipped down the steps into the engine-room with some ease, but once there seemed to freeze into stillness.
Fleming with sudden compassion tried to get it over quickly. "How long were you down there?"
"I don't know. I didn't notice the time. I was making sketches."
"Did you see David at all?"
"Not since we arrived. We had our different jobs to do."
"Did you hear him call out?"
"No."
"Did you hear anyone call out?"
"No."
"When did you know that David had fallen?"
"I heard voices up on deck. I guessed something was wrong."
"Did you go anywhere near the hold yourself?"
"No." Stonley's hands were in his pockets. He took out his handkerchief and a half-smoked cigarette fell out. He put his foot over it.
Brannigan saw, but didn't comment. Stonley hadn't set the Maritime Museum ablaze – yet. One crisis at a time was sufficient. He looked enquiringly at Fleming. "Is there anything else you want to ask?"
Fleming thought – yes, but he doubted the wisdom of asking it. Stonley would probably freeze even further into the machinery and find no words to answer him. He tried the question: "If you had to describe David in a word or two – how would you describe him?"