Chapter 4
Up on the foredeck, the seas kicking up and the wind blowing like cold snot, Taggart held onto the forestay as the Bandit worked up the face of another eight-footer -- then he cried out in joy as she surfed down the face of the wave, slamming into another trough and sending blue water up to his knees again.
Rolf, behind the wheel and enjoying this little storm, smiled as Henry yelled at another breaking wave, this time shaking a fist at the sky and laughing like a madman.
"He really enjoys this -- almost like a little boy," Rolf said, shaking his head.
"Yes," Dina snorted, "but more like a child."
"I did not mean that, Grandma-ma. It is more like an innocent pleasure, I think."
She nodded. "The innocent pleasure of a lunatic."
"You really do not like him, do you?"
"On the contrary," Dina said, "I think I am beginning to love him very much."
Rolf seemed shocked at that: "Seriously? No way!"
When she turned and looked at her grandson he saw that she was very serious indeed, then she looked down at the chart plotter, noting their position was now about a mile west of Herdla, their course set for Vatnet and the entrance to the Bergen-Stavanger Channel. Almost home, he thought sadly, already at the end of their special journey...and he still couldn't put into words his feelings for Henry.
'He is almost like my father sometimes, then a minute later he acts like an old friend from school. But then, he is my teacher, too...'
Most of all, Rolf seemed in awe of Taggart's ability to attract attention, and he'd watched several women fall under some kind of magic spell after they had been around Henry for just a few minutes...
...but now...Grandma-ma? What was this nonsense?
There were rocks in the channel around Bekken, but Henry had already plotted these, placed guard zones around every one of them, and Rolf admired Henry's thoroughness...
Then in an instant the wind fell away and just minutes later the inside passage had turned smooth, almost mirror-like, yet Taggart remained glued to the foredeck, his eyes apparently locked onto something that had interested him...
And then Taggart was down on the deck, one arm reaching down to the sea, then banging on the side of Bandit's hull. Rolf scanned the water and soon he smiled too...
"Look! Grandma-ma! The whales are back!"
The gleaming black dorsal fins were hard to see against the gray-black water, but yes, there they were, and Dina already had the binoculars in hand, scanning the markings she could see.
"Yes, they are the same ones," she said a moment later. "This seems very unusual to me..."
"Oh really? You mean you are just realizing that?"
"What do you mean, Rolf?"
"He is like the sun, Grandma-ma. Everything is attracted to him...even these whales..."
One of the smaller calves surfaced just ahead of Time Bandit's starboard bow wave, and as the little fella started surfing Taggart laid on his side with his head propped up on one hand, watching -- and waiting...
...until the big male surfaced alongside, his soulful eye looking into Taggart's...
Taggart held onto a lifeline and leaned out, still waiting.
The male came close, close enough to touch, but just then the old male sounded and was as quickly gone.
More calves came alongside and surfed for a while, then the pod moved off towards a rock loaded with sea lions. With that, Taggart stood and came back to the cockpit...
Dina saw that he was freezing, probably hypothermic, but he waved her off. "I feel fine," he mimed to the look in her eyes.
"Your hands, Henry. It is past time for your medication."
He nodded and ducked below, and when he came back he was wearing dry clothes, including his new black sweater.
'Funny,' he thought. 'I always put this on when I'm about to see Britt.'
"Feel like some Indian food tonight?" he said, looking at Rolf.
"Yes!"
"Alright! You want to take her into the dock, right?"
Rolf shook his head. "No way!"
"You're ready. Dina and I will handle the lines, but why don't you go get something warm to drink while you can?"
"Okay."
"He's a great kid," Taggart said to Dina after Rolf dropped out of earshot.
"You are a good teacher."
"It's the only thing I really know, I guess. It's what I remember most when I think about my dad."
"You would've been a good father."
"Me? You gotta be kidding. Once I'm on land I don't know up from down."
She smiled but was generally intolerant of self-deprecating humor, even from Taggart. "So, I have called Britt and she has secured a place for Bandit very close to the clinic."
"Excellent. Better call her back and tell her about dinner."
"I think tonight should just be between you and Rolf."
"Nonsense. We'll have plenty of time for all that."
"How long do you want to stay in Bergen?"
"A few days. Bandit will be ready to go in a few days."
"I'll just need to fill out some paperwork..."
"No, you don't. There's no need for you to do this."
"I told you I want to. In fact, I think I need to."
"I set out to do this alone."
"And you did not set out with cancer."
"I'll be fine."
She did not want to argue with him, especially during these next few hours, as that would only upset Rolf, but she could see the stubborn set of Henry's jaw and knew him well enough to know what that meant. She took out her phone and checked signal strength, then dialed Britt at the clinic. She left a message to expect dinner at the Indian place and rang off, then looked at the sun trying to break through the low scudding clouds. "It will be a lovely evening," she said gently. "Let's not spoil it for anyone."
"Right," he said, visibly relaxing. "Right you are, as always."
+++++
"Okay...slip her into neutral and let the wind take her a little..."
Rolf was backing Time Bandit up slowly to the quay; Britt was waiting there, ready to take a line.
"A little right rudder...now a little left on the thruster...that's it, let her drift...okay -- Now! -- into forward and a little throttle to stop our momentum, then back into neutral..."
Taggart tossed one line to Britt and jumped ashore and tied off the other. Dina tied-off between pilings on both sides of the bow...and that was it. Rolf ran the power cord ashore and made the connection while Taggart shut down the diesel and set the ship's systems to run off shore power. Everything else had already been secured so the Bandit's crew jumped ashore and, in stony silence, they made their way to the restaurant.
Once seated, Rolf was the first to speak. "I do not want this to be over. It has been the best month of my life."
Henry nodded. "I don't know how to say this, but if I'd had a son I'd have wanted him to be just like you. I think even my dad would approve of the job you did out there this afternoon."
Britt smiled, Dina turned away.
"Mom, I have four more weeks of vacation. Could I not go on to Oslo with Henry?"
Britt shook her head. "We have much to do around the house, and summer will be over soon enough."
Dejected, the boy looked down.
"And mother?" Britt said, looking at Dina. "What are your plans now?"
"She's staying here," Taggart said -- and Dina glared at the ceiling.
"I will go with Mr. Taggart, at least as far as Oslo. Then, we'll see how he's doing after our visit to the University Hospital."
"I think I should go with you, Henry," Rolf said.
Henry nodded. "I understand, but that is entirely up to your mother."
"And Henry," Dina injected, "there is the matter of placing the port."
"What's involved with that?"
She shook her head, meaning it was not fit dinnertime discussion material. "It will take a day."
"You want to do it here, not Oslo?"
She nodded.
"Can we do it..."
"It is scheduled for the day after tomorrow at six in the morning. You will then need to take it easy for a few days."
"Uh-huh. I see."
Rolf knew exactly what that meant and suppressed a knowing grin. But then again, he'd already decided what he was going to do, his mother's feelings notwithstanding.
There were no theatrics at dinner that night, no capsaicin overdoses, and no dances to the bathroom because everyone seemed to be hovering over the edge of a vast, unknowable decision...a razor's edge, if you will.
Henry had made up his mind...he would slip away from the dock in the middle of the night -- such as night was at this latitude -- and make good his escape.
Rolf would sneak aboard because he'd already figured everything out.
While Dina was feverishly trying to figure out how to stop Henry from leaving during the night.
Leaving Britt, who was trying to figure out the best way to tell Henry that she was pregnant, and not coincidentally that he just happened to be the father.
+++++
They left him to pay the bill and when he left the restaurant he felt a little disoriented, then more than a little light-headed. He sat on a bench near the fish market and held on until he felt a little better -- then he saw a dog wandering along the waterfront begging for food. He, or maybe it was a she, looked like a Golden Retriever, but this thing was, Taggart saw, emaciated. Beyond emaciated, really. It looked sick, on its last legs.
"Come here, fella," Taggart said, and the dog looked his way, wagged its tail once and, with its head and tail down walked almost sideways to Taggart's bench.
"Don't feed it," a passerby warned. "He's a pest."
"Does the pest have a name?" Taggart asked, but his question was met with a vacant shrug. "You hungry, boy?"
The tail wagged a little, so he walked over to one of the open fish stalls and bought some salmon scraps, then went back to the bench. He fed the old boy and then noticed two milky-white cataracts and an almost solid white muzzle, and he saw what had to be a pretty hefty tumor on the old boy's back, right above one of the shoulder blades, and he shook his head.
"You've had a rough time, haven't you, old boy?"
The pup looked up, still waiting for the next bite of fish, but he was smiling a little now.
When he had run out of fish Taggart stood and began making his way to the Bandit -- only he noticed he had company now. The old boy was hanging back, pretending he wasn't following Taggart, but Henry wasn't fooled...
He patted his leg. "Well, come on if you're coming."
They made their way down the long ramp to the water and walked along to Time Bandit's stern, and Henry stepped across, patted his leg once again.
The dog appeared terrified -- until Henry stepped back across and lifted the dog into his arms, then he carried the old boy across the gap. Once on the aft deck the dog circled once and crapped, leaving Henry feeling more than a little abused.
A half-hour later Dina arrived, flashlight in hand.
"What's this?" she said when she saw the animal.
"I believe it's called a dog."
"I can see that..."
"Which begs the question -- why did you ask?"
Exasperated and with her hands on her hips, Dina scowled as she spoke: "Where did it come from?"
Taggart pointed to the dock. "Right over there, I think."
She walked over and looked at the creature and her scowl deepened. "He's very sick."
"That makes two of us."
"He has a tumor..."