At five the next morning Taggart slipped the dock lines from their cleats; he hopped back on board and into the cockpit, and once there he put the transmission into reverse. Using the bow thruster, he kept Time Bandit centered in the slip as he backed-down into the marina's entrance channel, then he pointed the bow upriver and motored towards Gothenburg's city center, running at 1900RPM and making almost seven knots through the water. Running with the tide and an hour before slack water, he hoped to be free of the city -- and its heavy shipping traffic -- before the morning crush.
And once again he didn't wake Dina or Rolf. Truth be told, he admitted to himself while standing at the wheel, he liked being out here alone in the early morning. He usually sailed while listening to Gregorian chant, but he'd picked up a new CD by Tony Banks and listened to a new track -- Prelude to a Million Years -- as he looked at the old town and its ancient church spires as they drifted by.
A few minutes later Dina came up the companionway steps carrying two cups of cinnamon tea and some orange and walnut scones she'd baked late last night.
"You are a miracle and I love you," he said as she handed him a cup.
"I should take that as a compliment, you think?"
"Yeah, but don't let it go to your head."
"I'll do my best," she sighed. "It seems very quiet out this morning."
"Yes, it's lovely out."
"What is this music?"
"Tony Banks -- he was the keyboardist for Genesis. He seems to be writing classical music these days."
"It's peaceful...I like it," but she stopped speaking as she saw he was looking at something ahead.
Because he was scanning the river, watching a small freighter backing into the main channel. "Damn, I forgot to set the radar to stand-by," he said, shaking his head and flipping a switch, then pinching off a bit of scone and sipping some tea. "I heard a weather forecast an hour ago; it's going to be very hot as we move inland, but it should be cooler on the lake."
"After the last few days, I think hot weather will be most welcome. There is a chill when the air is damp that makes me feel wretched."
He nodded. "I feel it here," he said, pointing to his surgical incision and his left armpit.
"Have you taken your medications yet?" she asked.
"Not supposed to until six."
"I'll go get them..."
"No...sit with me, please. It's gorgeous, you know..."
"What?"
"The city...you...all of it."
"I love you too," she said, rubbing the top of his hand before she turned to watch over the world beyond the walls of Time Bandit's little cocoon.
There was enough wind to dapple the surface of the water, and even a few gulls were flying along above their wake, crying for fish, he assumed as he gauged the conditions around him. He turned the radar on and checked the way ahead for unseen traffic; the freighter was turning into the river but keeping to the correct side of the channel, and that was it...
"How far to the first lock?" she asked.
"About 50 kilometers, at a small town called Lilla Edet."
"Do you plan to go all the way there today?"
"Not if I can help it. The first cute village we come to I'm shutting down the engine and tying off to a tree..."
She smiled, shook her head. "Stop and smell the roses, I think. Isn't that the expression?"
"It is, indeed."
They approached a massive bridge and Taggart eyed it nervously -- as his mast height was almost 17 meters -- but as the bridge was 22 meters he motored on. Still, both he and Dina stared at Time Bandit's masthead as she went under the bridge, and he felt a moment of stark terror that passed as soon as they cleared the span.
"It always looks so close, closer than it really is," he said.
"I guess you learn to trust the charts," she added.
"There's another big one just ahead, supposedly lots of cruise ships dock there."
"Yes, the GΓΆtaΓ€lvbron. The bridge over the GΓΆta Γ€lv river. Many tourists visit here in the summer."
Rolf's head popped up in the companionway; he was yawning and still wiping away the night from his eyes. "Where are we?" he asked.
"Coming up to the center of the city," Dina said. "Get some clothes on and come rejoin the human race!"
He nodded and disappeared below.
"God," she moaned, "they were at it all night again."
"You should get some headphones. Music blocks it out nicely."
"I swear that girl is insatiable, Henry."
"Good for him. Valuable training for all life's adventures."
She shook her head. "Incorrigible. He will be ruined for life."
"I think I need more coffee."
"I have cherry scones in the oven," she said, smiling.
"You're assuming Rolf hasn't already eaten them all."
Her eyes went wide and she scurried down the companionway steps.
The GΓΆtaΓ€lvbron's height was 18.3 meters so even lower, and this time he was sure the Vhf radio antenna scraped along the underside of the steel latticework. He visibly shuddered just as Dina came up the steps...
"Do you need your medicine?" she asked -- then she saw the bridge and how close it was and her eyes went wide again. "That was much closer, wasn't it?"
He nodded. "Close enough to just about make me shit my britches..."
She passed up his cup, then she came up with a platter loaded with hot scones and put them on the cockpit table. "Well, I am happy you did not do this."
"Me too. No better way to ruin the day."
"Are there many more such bridges?"
He shook his head. "Most are so low we have to radio ahead so they can be raised, even a few railway bridges. The next one is a railway bridge, the Marieholmsbron; I have to call them soon."
They had to wait for several trains to pass, then the bridges swung on a center-pivot to let them pass, and then the way ahead was clear.
"Is there a speed limit?" she asked.
"Ten knots for now. Which is a lot faster than we can go. Pretty soon it drops to five."
"How fast will we go?"
"Five or so, maybe slower."
"I saw a control below for air conditioning. Does this boat have that?"
"Sorry, but yes, it does. I used it in Florida a lot."
"How hot is it supposed to get today?"
"High 80s, Fahrenheit. The next several days could see low 90s."
She scowled. "This is unheard of so close to the sea."
"The shape of things to come, I'm afraid." He picked up a scone and held it under his nose. "Smells a little like heaven, ya know?"
"How warm is it out here now?" she asked.
"78F. Why?"
"It is stuffy down below."
"Well, we can open some hatches or fire up the a/c."
"I will try hatches first."
Clyde stepped into the cockpit and barked twice. "Sorry, boy...you gotta use the Astro-turf this morning...Dina, can you take the wheel?"
He led the pup forward and pulled out an Astro-turf door-mat from its hiding place and tossed it down in the deck. Clyde looked up at him with disgust clear in his eyes, but he dutifully circled twice and dumped a load on the 'grass', then peed for good measure before he walked back to the cockpit. Taggart cleaned up the mess, scooping up the brown and washing away the yellow, then he went back to the cockpit. Clyde was eating his breakfast by that point, when he finished eating he jumped up onto the seat next to Taggart and fell asleep.