Authors: David Poyer
They found the room, unpacked, and went down to the pool. She'd brought a swim-team suit that covered everything he was interested in, but still she looked good. Slim as a branch of willow, fast as a porpoise. She showed off, doing somersaults and back twists off the board. Her parents had a pool.
When she backstroked to the ladder, he put his arm around her. Her flesh was smooth and cold. “Tired yet?”
“What's the alternative?”
“Piña coladas.”
“I'm tired.”
“Me, too.” They laughed. Beneath the water his hand found her thighs, round and goose-bumped. They clung to each other, and he wondered whether she could feel him through his shorts.
In the room, he made a pitcher of drinks and they sipped them from hotel glasses, leafing through a guidebook. The rum cleared his head, unwound the tension that guarded speech and thought when he was in uniform.
It didn't take long to get undressed. He kissed her shoulders, still hard from the swim, her nipples, her belly. He wanted to do things he'd read about. She said no. But he was beginning to know, he thought, when she was being modest and when she meant it. When she spread her thighs at last, he gazed for a moment, curious. Not much hair there, brown rather than black; hardly any around the lips. They reminded him of the lining of a conch shell.
He took a breath and lowered his face to her, to the salty flower between her thighs. Her hair tickled his nose.
“Jesus. I feel drunk. I don't drink that much ⦠Oh!”
He raised his head. “You like?”
“I'm not sure. I don't think so. Let's do something else.”
“Okay. You do it to me.”
He didn't know the right way, but the way she did it didn't seem to be it. Maybe it took practice. At last he rolled over her. Her eyes slid closed, and she turned her head. He felt himself sharpening as he touched her there, wet, warm, opened.
“Dan ⦠are you going to use something?”
“You want me to?”
“I really like you. You know that. But I don't want to get pregnant. Not right now.”
“I'll pull it out when I have to come.”
“Do they teach that at the Academy?” she murmured, but a little frown appeared at the corners of her eyes. “I guess it'll be all right.”
He felt a great surge of tenderness at her trust. Wetness and warmth opened beneath his probing fingers. She gave a faint cry as he entered.
“Hurts?”
“Not anymore.”
She wasn't tight; he could feel no resistance; yet every centimeter of him wasâ
caressed,
was the only word he could fit to it. “Pinch me, Betts?” he murmured, lost.
She tightened obediently. “Nice?”
“Delicious.”
“You won't forget?”
He didn't answer, lost in the heat. At first she lay passive, absorbing his thrusts. Gradually her hips began to rock, too, and her hands came up, cupped his back, tightened around him. Her breathing matched his, short, fast, shorter, faster. She began thrusting against him, with him, in step, in rhythm. He clung to her shoulders, feeling it begin deep down in his belly.
He closed his lids on a blaze of light. Then pushed away, crying out as wave after wave burst free and ebbed out onto the sheets.
When he was done, she laid her cheek to his. She left little kisses on his neck, his chest, his stomach, and, after hesitating, on the slippery skin of his still-erect penis.
“Oh. Betts. That was tremendous.”
“I liked it too. I was almost ⦠Why'd you stop?”
“I couldn't hold it in any longer. You were just too nice.” He stroked her back. His head felt light, as if he'd just finished a calculus final. It came to him suddenly that they hadn't had dinner. But she hadn't come yet. “Do you want me to do it with my mouth, some more?”
“Hmmm ⦠Is this worn-out? Still feels good to me.” Her tongue moved lightly along the shaft, tentatively, then her mouth engulfed him. When he looked down, her eyes were closed and her hair lay like a shining blanket over his thighs.
They made love twice more that night, and again between breakfast and a tour of the White House. By Sunday afternoon they were experts, and she was talking about seeing the school doctor for the Pill.
But by then, he now thought, trembling spent in the hot dark of his upper bunk, it had been too late, though neither of them knew it.
He'd been speechless when she told him. They'd talked it over, her plans for graduate school, his going to sea, and cried together. It would be tough. She'd have to postpone her career. But he promised to help all he could, and put in for shore duty at the first opportunity.
The wind rose to a scream and the bunk dropped away and he seemed for a moment to float, free of the ship, free of sea and earth.
I love her so much,
he thought. And it was as if she heard him, as if she were God, and he was praying to her.
I love you, Susan.
He wanted it to be good and true and beautiful, and he wanted it to last for the rest of his life.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
MABALACAT had set the fiddleboards and wet the tablecloth. Confined by the wooden grid, the dishes only stirred uneasily when
Ryan
took one of her savage leans. Dan and Evlin and Reed began without waiting for the captain, who'd called down for a covered plate.
“How the runs going, Aaron?” Evlin asked.
“Getting data.”
Dan said, “Can you hold a submarine in this weather?”
“Sure. The surface return degrades the ducting, but we've got a thermocline at two hundred and a solid channel under that. Storms aren't all bad. You get a lot of surface mixing.”
“So you're getting what you need?”
“Oh sure. The idea's to wring it out. The rougher it gets, the better, far as we're concerned.”
“I'm still not sure I understand why,” he said, tentatively, because Reed never seemed to want to explain things, the way Evlin did.
“Why what?”
“Why, uhâwhy we need to test it way up here.”
“Well, see, the hull-mounted sonars, they were okay down south. But up here, this is just too freaking rough. You can use the twenty-four, our hull-mounted dome, maybe one day out of three. You can fly a helo maybe one day out of four. Unfortunately, this is where the war's gonna be fought. So the thirty-five, the new fishâit's a big deal, all right.”
Dan nodded, picking at his omelet. He felt sleepy and his arms and legs ached from bracing himself. He was hungry, but food appealed to him about as much as fried sawdust.
He planned to spend today, what there was left of it when he was off the bridge, interviewing his men one by one. Not just about the marijuana; it would be a chance to get acquainted. I've neglected that, he thought. But it was becoming more and more evident that there was something wrong in the division, and to fix it, he had to find out what it was.
“Thanks, sir, that clears it up. Excuse me, please.”
“See you later.”
Bloch was standing by the door of his stateroom. “Morning, sir.”
“Hello, Chief. Come on in. How's the
Constitution
going?”
“Slow, sir.” Bloch sat, glancing around. He asked whether he could smoke.
“Those King Edwards?”
“Yessir. Good cigars for the price. Though the Tampa Nugget's nice, too.”
“Maybe I'll try one.”
They lighted up. Bloch hooked the trash can toward them with his foot. “How you like this weather, Chief?” Dan asked him.
“Okay by me, sir. You roll like this for a while, it knocks your brains out. Then you're a real destroyerman.”
“How's work going?”
“Isn't. I had to pull the men off cleaning and send them up on the oh-two level with chippers. If we don't get some of this ice off, stability will go to hell. Traven says we've picked up a hundred tons already.”
“Who's he?”
“Leading damage controlman. Uh, sir, I understand the XO found some grass in number-one berthing.”
“How'd you know that?”
“Come on, sir. Hopper and me go back a ways.”
“Okay, you're right. BryceâCommander Bryceâwants me to find out whose it is. What do you think? Is it someone in our division?”
Bloch trickled smoke like a broken steam line. “Right off, I'd say Lassard, but then I'd think. It's easy to blame him for everything. Maybe too easy. Way I see it, there's always going to be troublemakers. Deck gang's not the best-behaved bunch aboard, or they wouldn't be where they are.
“But things have changed since I was a seaman. Specially the last couple years. I was their age, guys'd drink and fight and go UA, but there wasn't this anti-American shit. Burnin' the flag, sit-ins, riots ⦠What I was going to say, suppose we caught Slick with it and fired him off the ship. After a while, somebody else'd take over selling it. There's always the ten percent that fouls things up for everybody else aboard.”
“You're probably right. But we've got to try. How about performance? Have you noticed any of the men acting like they use drugs?”
“Hell, sir, how would I know? Brute Boy, he was born that way, I guess. Gonzales, Greenwald, Hardin, they're not real alert a lot of the time. They act fucked-up a lot. That mean they're using it? Or are they just naturally fucked-up? I don't know. They don't do it in front of me.”
It was the first time he'd seen Bloch on the defensive. “Well, let's try it another way. If it was you, where would you go to smoke it?”
“Topside, probably. You couldn't smell it then.”
“On watch?”
“Christ, I hope not. That could screw us royal.”
“Ali X. did a good job of steering for me yesterday.”
“Who? Oh, Coffey. Yeah, he could be a good man, get him away from Lassard and them. There's good and bad, his color.”
“Which kind is Isaacs?”
“Lemond didn't do too great on the first-class test, sir. He got advanced on some special selection deal. Make the statistics look good, I guess. I been trying to train him. He knows what he's supposed to do.”
“That's not much of a recommendation, Chief.”
“Sorry, sir. He don't mean to screw up. It just happens.”
“How much do you think there is aboard? A lot, or do they just smoke it once in a while?”
“Like I say, sir, I could tell if they were drunk, but⦔
“I see. Well, my idea's to have a one-on-one with the men, see if any of them want to talk in private.”
“I don't know, sir. Don't expect too much. The guys stick together when they talk to zerosâto officers. But you might get something out of the older ones.”
“Thanks, Chief. Let's start with Isaacs, okay?”
While he waited Dan worried it through again. The search had gotten him zip point nothing. If he didn't come up with something soon, he'd have to go back to Bryce empty-handed. That wouldn't be pleasant. “Get me somebody to hang,” the XO had said. But then, just knowing the brass was on the alert might make people cool it. If he put the pressure on, maybe they'd ditch what they had, throw it overboard.
“Mr. Lenson?”
“Come in, Petty Officer Isaacs.”
The leading petty officer slid into the room and snatched off his hat. He had on a new set of dungarees and his inspection shoes, shined. Dan told him to sit down. They talked for a few minutes about the broken davit, then he said abruptly, “Isaacs, you ever smoked grass?”
“Nossir, I never done none of that.” He looked frightened.
“Didn't think so. Don't worry, nobody's after you. Anybody you know in the division who does?”
“No, sir. Don't know no one that does. Sure not in my section. That stuff probably belong to them signalmen; they stay up all night smoking, playin' cards up in the shack.”
Dan studied the weathered, anxious face, the scarred fingers nervous on the white hat. What was going on?
“Ikey, I need your help. Do you have any problems with the men? Do they threaten you, or anything like that? If so, it's your duty to tell me.”
“Oh, it isn't nothing like that, sir. These boys is no angels. They bitch at me, sure, but they don't mean anything by it.”
“They shouldn't âbitch at you.' Do they bitch at the chief?”
“No, sir.”
“You've got to come down hard on that. That's why you've got those stripes. You write up a man for disrespect, I'll take him to the captain. When they start losing pay and liberty, they'll come around fast.”
“Yes, sir, I sure will do that. I sure appreciate your advice.”
“You're sure no one's threatened you?”
“Nothin' like that, sir,” Isaacs repeated, looking at his cap.
Dan gave up and let him go. The next two interviews were no more helpful. Rambaugh had nothing. Pettus said he'd smoked pot in high school but stopped when he got to boot camp.
When the third-class was gone, he glanced at his watch. The odor of cigars, the continual motion of a confined frame of reference were suddenly too much. He decided to skip lunch, skip staring at Packer and Bryce and the others over greasy soup, and went up on deck.
He emerged into a blizzard. Snow clung to his eyelids, flicked by his instantly numbed cheeks without melting. It filled the air like fog, driven horizontally by the wind. Though it was near noon, the sky was almost dark, and between that and the snow he could barely see twenty yards. The bow was a white blur. So was the fantail. The snow whirled beneath the ladders. His bare palms stuck to the rails. He noted, climbing, that the sleet of the night before had frozen to it. He kicked at it, exposing layers, accretions, like a geological formation. There was more on the 01 level, inches thick on the deck, shoaled up in the corners.
A hundred tons ⦠He crossed the Asroc deck, checked the boat. Empty. Ice sheathed the lowering cables like rock sugar on a string. He climbed to the signal shack, looked around the flying bridge, and, on impulse, began climbing the ladder leading up the mast.