The Boat Who Wouldn't Float (6 page)

BOOK: The Boat Who Wouldn't Float
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“Never mind the name. What's
in
it?”

“Well, basically it's a mixture. You take hard bread or ship's biscuits and soak them all night to make them soft and to get rid of the weevils. And you take some shore-dried salt fish and soak
it
all night, ‘watering it' is the term. Then you boil the fish and the hard bread and when it's all nice and mushy you pour a cup of spitting hot sowbelly fat over it, and then….”

I never finished my explanation. Jack was already on his way back to visit the sculpins and the eels.

 

Later that morning when, with the aid of the jeep and several tough but tiny horses, we had extricated the Buick and towed it back to the top of the hill, I felt compelled by some latent trace of honesty to tell Jack the truth about our situation. I explained that even with the best of luck we could not
hope to get the boat fit for sea in less than two weeks. I told him that, even then, sailing her would be a most uncertain venture.

“If you want to call it off, Jack, I'd never blame you. Not after what you've been through and, I'd better say it, what you'll have to put up with until we go to sea. You say the word and we'll leave the damned boat lying where she is and head back to St. John's. There's a freighter service running to the Caribbean once a week and the next boat sails tomorrow. We can be aboard her tonight.”

Jack was silent for a moment. He looked out across the harbour, past the stages and the fish stores, past the brooding barrier headlands to the grey void of the waiting fog and the dark sea-then to his eternal credit he replied:

“Not a chance! I expect I'll have the worst case of constipation known to medical science. My back is never going to recover from what happened last night. Probably we'll drown when we put out in that fantastic pile of junk you've bought. But, Farley,
we are going to sail her out of here if we both have to die for it
. Now, let's get down to work.”

 

6.
A pounce of pirates

J
ACK PROCEEDED
to take charge. He concluded that our major problem was lack of organization and the first thing he did was hold a conference in Enos's kitchen. This was attended by Obie, Enos, myself, and an unidentified passerby who said nothing but who spat little geysers of tobacco juice that sizzled on the hot stove top.

In his best board-room manner Jack explained that we had been wasting too much time. The almost daily trips to St. John's were not necessary, he said. Instead, we would make up a detailed list of every item of gear and equipment needed to complete the boat, then he and I would go to the city and in one day of intensive shopping would obtain everything we required.

Upon our return, the four of us, working to a carefully scheduled list of priorities, would pitch in and complete the vessel in a hurry.

“Well, gentlemen, do you agree?” He looked brightly at us for approval.

I looked at Enos, who looked at Obie, who looked at his rubber boots. Nobody said anything. It would have been unkind to have attempted to dampen such innocent enthusiasm.

Jack and I drove to St. John's the next day with the battered Buick in tow behind
Passion Flower
. When we reached
the city we parted, each with his own list, agreeing to meet again at six o'clock at a waterfront bar. Jack took the jeep but I, who had had quite enough experience with the incredible traffic tangles in St. John's, preferred to walk.

I arrived at the bar a little before six. Jack appeared a few minutes later and I hardly recognized him. His blond, usually impeccable hair was a tangled mop. His eyes glared bloodily. There was a spasmodic twitch to his left cheek muscles and his breath was coming and going in sharp, hard whistles.

It required three double rums before he was able to describe his day and then he only told me the highlights. He told of entering shop after shop, most of them empty of customers but full of salesclerks, and of seeing every clerk immediately vanish as if he were the carrier of bubonic plague.

“That's because,” I explained sympathetically, “in St. John's it's considered socially demeaning for a clerk to wait on a customer. It isn't done if it can possibly be avoided.”

Jack nodded grimly. “That was the least of it. I finally cornered a clerk in a hardware store just as he was making a break for the cellar. I backed him up against a rack of pitchforks and asked him, politely mind you, for five pounds of two-inch nails. And, my God, Farley, you know what he said?” Jack's voice rose to an almost falsetto register. “He said if I would care to leave my order they would try to fill it and I could pick it up next week!”

“You were lucky.” I replied soothingly. “Usually they just tell you they don't have what you want, or they may have it next year, or the year after that, or the….”

“But that's not all,” Jack interrupted, the twitch in his cheek growing more pronounced. “After searching for two bloody hours I finally found a liquor store and there was actually someone at the counter and I asked him for a case of rum. You know what he did? He made me fill in an application for a special permit and then he sent me to the head office of the Board of Liquor Control to get the permit. It took me an hour to find the place and when I got there everyone was gone for lunch, even though it was half past three. I waited until half past four and finally some scruffy little character came along and told me the goddamn place only processed permits on Wednesdays!”

“That's it, Jack. You see, in St. John's all the store and office people need a lot of rest. It's because they work so hard. But there's another problem too. The merchants have so much money they don't
want
any more. Haven't got any
use
for it. It's an encumbrance to them. You can see how they must feel when a fellow like you comes along and shoves a pile of money at them. Unless they can think fast they might have to take it. Anyway, what
did
you manage to get?”

Jack ground his teeth, thrust his hand into his jacket pocket, fished out a piece of paper and flung it on the table.

It was a parking ticket.

As for me, I had enjoyed a reasonably successful day. Out of the eighty-odd items on my list I had been able to purchase six. They were in a bag at my feet. Six bottles of rum. I had
found a bootlegger who was not yet rich, and who didn't mind demeaning himself by dealing with the public. There were not many businessmen like him in St. John's.

 

Because most of what we needed for the boat was not to be had in St. John's or could not be pried loose from the merchants, we learned to do what outport Newfoundlanders have done for centuries-we improvised. Enos was a master at this. When we needed chain plates for our rigging he got some scrap iron out of an ancient steamship wreck and
cold
hammered the rusty metal on a rock until he produced four very serviceable sets of plates. Smaller items of hardware he improvised from whatever might be found in the innumerable greasy boxes that cluttered every fisherman's store, and in which, over the generations, every piece of scrap that had ever come to hand had been carefully put by against the hour of future need.

Occasionally we had to go further afield. The cavernous coffin Enos had built over the deck of the schooner was in
tended as a cabin trunk, but it lacked any means of letting in the light, so that the cabin itself was as dark as the inside of a molasses barrel. After a long search I did find a ship-chandler in St. John's who grudgingly admitted he could supply portlights-at seventy-five dollars each
—if
I was prepared to wait six months until they could be ordered from England. Since I was not so prepared Obie came to the rescue.

Obie had relatives far down the Southern Shore on the Cape Pine Peninsula. Cape Pine is a bleak, forbidding thumb of rock jutting out into the steamer lanes. It is rimmed with reefs and walled against the sea by sheer granite cliffs. It boasts two settlements, two tiny clusters of humanity that somehow cling to the rock walls. How the people make a living seems, at first glance, to be a mystery, for they have no harbours, and it is seldom they can launch their open boats off the tiny beaches because of the tremendous seas that rack those coasts. But the people of St. Shotts and St. Shores (originally St. Jacques and St. Georges) do very nicely. They have gainful employment although they don't talk about it much to strangers. In fact strangers to their coves are not only unwelcome, but may be in some personal jeopardy.

The fact is that the people of St. Shotts and St. Shores have been professional wreckers for generations past. During less constrained times they practised the wrecker's art as a full-time occupation. A vast number of ships fell on their coasts, owing to a lamentable failure on the part of their captains to realize that the light they were steering by was
not
Cape Race (twenty miles to the eastward) but an excellent imitation thereof.

“In death there is life,” as a priest upon that shore used to intone as he stood on the cliffs, directing his parishioners in the salvage of cargo from some ship which had foundered with the loss of all hands on the wicked inshore reefs.

Nowadays, of course, the glorious free enterprise practice of using false lights has been curtailed. Nevertheless there are still vessels that make their own fatal errors and end up against the Cape Pine cliffs. Such vessels and their cargo be
long, by law, to the underwriters who have insured them, but the people of St. Shotts and St. Shores do not subscribe to this particular law, nor I suspect, to any others either.

Obie and I drove down there in
Passion Flower
and we would never have reached the place in a lesser vessel for there was no road at all most of the way. Our arrival created a sensation. Not only did people peer at us from behind the curtains of every house, but so did the round black eyes of a number of swile guns—long-barrelled, smooth-bore guns intended for killing seals but adaptable to any number of uses.

Obie got out first, was identified, and immediately we were surrounded by masses of hulking great fellows who spoke a language that baffled me completely, even though by then I had developed some skill in dealing with Newfoundland dialects.

However language is not always important. When we off-loaded several bottles of rum we found we were speaking a universal tongue. We stayed the night at St. Shotts, with a brief excursion to St. Shores, and it was all a dream; a magical transportation back through time to a rougher and wilder age. At one point an old woman showed me a small mahogany case crammed with gold coins, some of them of early Spanish vintage. I was told that almost everybody in the two settlements had a similar cache hidden somewhere on the rocky barrens—insurance against the day when modern navigation aids finally deprive these people of their traditional means of making an honest living.

When we headed home the next morning
Passion Flower
was deeply laden. We had eight portlights, one of which was twenty inches in diameter and, with its bronze setting, must have weighed close to a hundred pounds. We also had enough bronze and brass deck and cabin fittings to meet all our needs.

There are those who speak of the St. Shotts people as pirates. Maybe they are. However if it comes to a choice between the pirates of St. Shotts and the pirates of St. John's I know
my
choice.

Most of the residents of the Southern Shore were equally helpful. They and their ancestors had lived for centuries at the mercy of the merchants so they knew exactly what we were up against and they felt for us in our almost continuous need.

Foremost amongst them was Monty Windsor, a soft-spoken, thoughtful man who lived in a rambling house on a tiny, almost insular, peninsula in Aquaforte Harbour. The house had been both imposing and handsome when the Windsors built it nearly two hundred years earlier but it was now grown grey and sad. Monty Windsor was almost the last of that name in Aquaforte. He showed me the family Bible in which were recorded the births and the deaths of generations of Windsors dating back to 1774. Few of the men had died in bed. Most of them perished at sea, some as fishermen, some as sailors, some as whalers, some as privateers. It was a strange old book whose margins had been used for a variety of non-religious, but equally significant purposes.

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