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He looked between Rebekah and the pictures of his mother and whispered to himself, “I wonder what she’ll look like holding our child.” Before he could answer the question he set the photographs back in the duffel bag. He dressed in a hurry and left the suite with his coat in his hand.

Overnight the winds had strengthened and now were barreling from the northeast. The lake came up with the wind and as he reached the canal breakwater to await the gondola, the piers were suffering heavy seas. It was snowing, too, and cold now. Odd turned his collar up.

He reached the boat club fifteen minutes later. Dawn was up but the sky with the clouds and snow was hunkered in grayness. In the boatyard he found two men standing under his boat.

“Good morning,” Odd said

“How do?” the one in a Duluth Boat Club uniform said. “This your boat?”

“She’s mine.”

“Fitz told me you’d be stopping by.”

Odd nodded, stepped back, and looked at his boat hanging from the davits. She looked a hell of a lot larger out of the water than in it.

It was the other man who spoke next. “Where’d you find her?” His voice was gruff, his eyes the color of the concrete sky.

“Find her?” Odd said. “I built her.”

The man bunched his lips up, nodded.

Odd read the man’s expression as skeptical, said, “She took her maiden voyage yesterday.”

The man nodded again and ducked under the boat so all Odd could see was his feet. He walked around the stern and came back to face Odd. “I’ve never seen a keel like that.”

“I dragged a piece of white pine from the woods, cured it, whittled it down. Now it’s backboning my boat.”

“You come from where?”

“Gunflint.”

“You got lucky with the weather.” The man looked up into the snowfall, harder now than even a few minutes before.

“No arguing that.”

The man with the eyes settled them on Odd. “How’d she go?”

“I’d take her to war,” Odd said.

“I believe it.” He stepped forward and offered his hand. “Name’s Harald Sargent.”

“Odd Eide.”

“What kind of name’s that?”

The question took Odd aback.

“I mean no offense, I’ve just never heard of anyone called Odd.”

“My mother came from Norway.”

There’s some folks can build boats,” Sargent said.

“I’ve heard that said.” Odd turned now to the man in the boat club uniform. “I need to fetch a couple things before you cover her.”

“Give me a half hour to get her on the rack, then you can go aboard.”

“All right.”

Sargent said, “Come inside, have a cup of coffee with me while you wait.”

Again Odd said, “All right.”

They walked into a grand dining room. Thirty tables under white tablecloths, fine silverware, and napkins folded to look like swans. Sargent chose a table at random and hung his coat over the back of a chair and removed his hat. He sat down and motioned for Odd to join him. It wasn’t more than a minute before a waiter appeared before them.

“Gentlemen,” he said.

“I’d take a cup of coffee,” Sargent said.

“Two,” Odd said.

The waiter nodded and left.

“I’m a boatwright myself,” Sargent said. “Sloops and cutters, once in a while a runabout or skiff. Build a lot of boats for members here.” He spread his hands before him, suggesting the boat club.

“Is that right?”

“For more than ten years now,” Sargent said. He coupled his hands on the table in front of him, leaned in. “I’ve never seen a boat like that one out there. What’s it for?”

“I’m a fisherman,” Odd said, the half truth of it caused his stomach to drop.

“A fisherman from Gunflint wintering up in Duluth?”

“My wife and I, we’re honeymooning.” He felt his voice falter.

“I might have chose Key Largo,” Sargent said.

“I never even heard of Key Largo.”

“I suppose not.”

The waiter brought a tray with two cups of coffee. He set one before each of the men and then set a bowl of sugar cubes and a creamer between them.

Sargent said to Odd, “You want a Danish? Some eggs?”

“I’m fine with the coffee.”

Sargent turned to the waiter. “How about a couple of Danishes?”

Again the waiter nodded and left. Sargent doctored his coffee with the cream and sugar. He took a cigarette from his shirt pocket, offered the pack to Odd, who took one. Sargent struck a match on his boot sole and lit his cigarette and offered the match to Odd. They both took long drags and sat back in their chairs.

“Mostly it’s yachtsmen and rowers belong to this club. You’re paying ten dollars a month for what would cost ten dollars for the whole winter upriver.”

Odd looked through the cigarette smoke at Sargent, whose eyes were even more forbidding inside the boat club.

“It was the first place I saw entering the harbor last night.”

“I see,” Sargent said. He took another long drag from his cigarette. “Where are you and the missus staying?”

“The Spalding Hotel.”

“Nice place.”

“Awfully so,” Odd said.

They sat in silence until the waiter brought the pastries. Sargent took an enormous bite, took a long drink of his steaming coffee.

“What kind of motor’s running that boat of yours?”

“A Buda. Company out of Illinois.”

“Six-stroke?”

“Four. She don’t speed along, but usually the fish are waiting for me in the nets.”

Sargent smiled. “Most of the fishermen I know between here and the Soo fish in skiffs. What you got is more like a lobsterman’s boat.”

Odd took a final drag from the cigarette and stubbed it out. He leaned back in his chair and looked at Sargent. He was feeling defensive, as though Sargent suspected him of something. “I’ve been a herring choker almost as long as you been building boats. Spent enough time soaking wet to want a little dryness. So I built a bigger boat with a cockpit. Here I am.”

Harald Sargent only nodded, took another bite of his Danish.

Now Odd shifted in his seat, leaned forward instead of back. “I’m not sure I understand you, Mister Sargent. I’ve got the feeling there’s something you’re wanting to say.”

“You should come take a look at my shop.”

“I’m not really in the market for a new boat.”

Odd felt pierced by the boatwright’s gaze, by those eyes as heavy as granite seeing right through him. In a way it was a relief. Sargent stubbed out his own cigarette and finished his Danish. “Son, you’re spending money faster than you could throw it into the lake. On a fisherman’s wages — if fisherman is what you are — you’re going to need a job. I make no judgments. I don’t even want to know what you’ve left behind or where you think you’re heading. But if you honestly built that boat, then I’m in some sort of company. I got a crew of seven and I need eight. Even if it’s only for a few months, through the winter, I could use the help. I’ve got two dozen boats to deliver by springtime.

“Now"—he leaned forward again, knocked the tabletop with his big knuckles—"you steal one single screwdriver, one drop of paint thinner, I’ll throw you right out the back door.” His look softened. “But if you’re ready to live an honest life, making an honest buck, and if you can be up this early every day, then come see me.” Sargent reached into his coat and withdrew his wallet and from a pocket in his wallet took a business card. He handed it to Odd. “We’re the last stop on the Oneota-Superior line, on the west end, out at the mouth of the St. Louis River.”