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"On what?"

"How hard you want to work."

"As hard as I know how, for as long as it takes."

"Might take a long time," Bone said. "Might take more time than you or I got."

"Meaning I might never be a sailor?"

"Some men born to it, some not."

"It's in my blood, Bone. I honestly believe that. I just never had the opportunity until now."

He almost smiled. "We'll find out," he said.

* * *

I could not have hooked up with a better sailor or better man than Bone.

He didn't just live on that ketch of his; he treated her the way I tried to treat Annalise, as a friend, a lover, an extension of himself. He pampered her, handled her with great care and gentleness. Growled at her now and then when she didn't cooperate, but never with any real anger. He knew more about sailing and the sea than any man I've ever met; now and then he'd surprise me with such obscure facts as the origin of the term starboard (a corruption of the Norse word steerboard, from the days when Viking dragon ships had right-side rudders). And he had an aptitude for practical instruction. He taught me more in a week than the others had in two months.

I spent full days with him once or twice a week when he was in port and not working at one of his other sources of income. Every now and then he'd sail off by himself—"going out," he called it, the real meaning of the ketch's name—and stay away for a week or two, one time for more than a month. He never said where he'd been or what he'd done on these trips. Long, solitary cruises, probably, and visits to his native Nassau. But I never asked him. It was his business, not mine or anybody else's. His own man, Dick Marsten had said. That was Bone in a nutshell.

Some days we'd go out on a sail. Short practice runs around some of the little islands like Thatch Cay and Hans-Lollik Island that surround St. Thomas; longer trips to Great Tobago or Jost Van Dyke or around St. John. In all kinds of conditions except for heavy-weather seas. Other days we'd stay in the harbor and work on the ketch—sanding, painting, reeving new main and mizzen halyards, cleaning the head and the bilge, checking oil, gas, and water lines, doing a hundred other small chores that go into the maintenance and smooth operation of a sailboat—

He was doing what? Using me as a workhorse and taking pay for it?

No. Hell, no. You couldn't be more wrong.

After the first couple of weeks he wouldn't accept a dime for the dockside days, even though I kept offering—and he did most of the chores himself, with little enough help from me. He let me pay him the going rate for lessons on sail days, and buy gasoline and other provisions, but that was all. Money didn't mean much to Bone. Almost all of what he got from me or from his other labors went into the ketch, and what was left over into the few small creature comforts he allowed himself.

Mostly, he taught by example rather than words. He'd perform this or that task, or series of tasks, and he expected me to watch carefully and internalize what I was seeing and understand the reasons for it and be able to perform the same task on my own when the time came. The Red Hook boatmen had insulted my intelligence; Bone accepted it and counted on it. He didn't talk down to me, or look through me. From the first he treated me with the same respect I accorded him.

Over a period of several months I learned the proper way to rig and trim sails and the fine points of docking and anchoring. How to read geodesic charts and tide tables, how to use compass roses and track a course—easy for me because of my mathematical turn of mind. How to read water depth and gauge the weather and navigate by shooting sun and stars and by dead reckoning. How to whip the ends of manila line to prevent raveling, make an eye splice, tie a clove hitch. The right and wrong ways to dock a boat under power and under sail. All the running rules and safety rules. All the little things that could go wrong on a boat and how to safeguard against them. What to do in this or that type of emergency. What essential tools and repair materials to keep on board. These and a hundred, a thousand more.

Often he'd spring a question on me, by way of a test. Is a jib the strongest pulling sail per square foot of area? (No. A jib's main function is to increase the power of the mains'l.) If you're running downwind, how do you prevent a dangerous jibe? (Rig a secure boom vang.) What's a long fetch? (The fetch is the distance the wind blows over unobstructed water; a long fetch can create dangerously high waves.) Why should a sail be set smooth and at the same time as stiff as possible? (The wind doesn't just flow onto the sail, it flows off it as well. Every little wrinkle or hard spot sets up eddies on both sides that break up the wind flow and reduce the sail's efficiency.)

Bone also taught me about sharks. He had a thing about them, an odd mixture of hate and reverence. "A shark, mon, he's all stomach and never full. He don't care what he eats and he's always hungry. Sailor falls into deep water and can't get back on board, chances are he'll be some shark's supper." Another time he said, "Sharks, they like to race a boat sometimes. Some mon keep a rifle on board, every time he see a fin he shoot at it. Think it's fun to watch other sharks tear up a wounded one. Don't you do that. Bad luck to kill a shark for fun. Bad luck to kill anything lives in the sea you don't plan to eat."

He had amazing patience to go with his fierce dignity. When I made a mistake, as I did often enough in the beginning, he'd shake his head or growl in the same mild way he growled at the ketch. That was all. He never once raised his voice in anger. Not even after the worst of my screwups, the day I was responsible for blowing out the ketch's mains'l.

That day we were over in the Virgin's Gangway, the narrows between St. John and Tortola, and a squall began making up to eastward. Bone decided not to shorten down any more than we had to, so we left all the sails on and turned in a couple of reefs in the main and mizzen. Just as we were finishing the main, the squall hit us and Bone ran back to the wheel to keep her into the wind. My job was to tie in the last few points and raise sail again, and I had the halyard taut and was throwing it on the winch. The wind and drumming rain kept me from hearing Bone's shouted order to slack off. I slid the handle into the winch and took a turn, and all of a sudden the mains'l split all the way across. I realized what I'd done wrong before Bone had to tell me. I'd mixed up a pair of reef points, tied one from the first row to another on the opposite side in the second row; that had pulled the sail out of shape and put all the strain in one place.

One growl and a quick hard glare was all I got for my stupidity. Bone had another mains'l on board, fortunately, and the squall passed and we didn't have any trouble getting the new one up. Afterward, ashamed of myself, I kept trying to apologize, but he wouldn't listen to it. All he said was, "You'll never do that again, Mr. Laidlaw." It was a statement, not a question. And he was right, I never did anything that sloppy again.

After each day with Bone I wrote out a list of what I'd learned, to make sure I didn't forget even the smallest detail, and on the days I didn't see him I pored over the lists and star charts and geodesic charts that I'd bought myself. I plotted courses and made increasingly complex calculations—a whole new set of equations—and then embarked on imaginary voyages and dealt with various kinds of situations. I approached these studies with the same intensity as I had my accounting courses at Golden Gate University and the Amthor crime. The only difference was that this time, what awaited me on graduation wasn't a well-paid job or $600,000. It was a boat of my own.

Day-to-day living on a tropical island is not the same as it is on the mainland. Time slows down. The heat and humidity induce torpor and indolence. You don't keep regular hours or eat balanced meals. You have a tendency to drink too much, lie around too much, and when you play, to play too hard. Routine translates to boredom, unless it involves something you're passionate about. So you make an effort to see new places, develop new interests. And in my case, to be more social.