Read Lucy: Daughters of the Sea #3 Online
Authors: Kathryn Lasky
Had he ever worn a tie? Lucy wondered. Did he own a frock coat? A straw boater hat, so fashionable these days in the summer? She watched his movements, which seemed at one with the yacht’s, so balanced and steady as he leaned into the gusts and braced himself against the swells beneath the keel — but had he ever danced a waltz?
He turned to her now. “Come on, give it a try. I know you got your sea legs. I saw how you were standing there by the rail not even touching it when we came through that chop a bit ago. And when we heeled — you just leaned into it natural as can be.” He smiled. “Most girls start screeching like banshees when a yacht heels a bit.”
“Well, I’ll try, but I don’t want to be the one to wreck the Bellamys’ brand-new yacht.”
“Doncha worry,” Captain Sprague said. “Give
Lark
a woman’s touch.”
“I’ll stand right behind you,” Phineas said. “If you get nervous, just tell me and I’ll take over.”
But Lucy did not get nervous. The moment she touched the wheel, she knew exactly what to do. And she barely held the lovely mahogany circle. She let the wheel glide through her hands like a silk ribbon. There was no need to grip it. She wasn’t aware of steering at all. It was as if she was in a complete and perfect communion with the yacht, the wind, and the sea. From the keel that sliced through the water to the vast expanses of snowy white sails held by slender spars and taut halyards, to the lisp of the seas as they parted to make way for this lovely craft, she sensed a beautiful conspiracy of sorts — a conspiracy of wind and water, stick and string, canvas and shroud. A calm stole through her. Here was something created by man that had achieved a perfect balance in this universe. Behind her stood the young man who had built this ship.
“What’s it like to build a yacht?” Lucy asked. “I mean, how do you imagine the beautiful lines? The breezes her sails must catch?”
Phineas was silent for a minute. “You know, no one ever asked me about shipbuilding and designing in quite that way. But, yes, I do dream about it — her lines, how she puts her shoulder to a wave, the water streaming by her keel. I dream about it all.”
Lucy leaned a bit as she turned the wheel just ever so slightly to come off the wind a degree.
“Look at that!” Captain Sprague said as he watched Lucy. “She was about to get headed by the shift and she came off just a fraction. You’d think she’s been doing this all her life.”
“Indeed.” Phineas paused. “All her life.” The fine hairs on the back of her neck rose, for she could actually feel Phineas Heanssler’s breath on her skin as he spoke.
H. She has come! But not crossed. Not yet.
M
Hannah whispered the words to herself. It seemed impossible, yet there were three carved mer infants on the sea chest that May had discovered hidden in the lighthouse. But more than that was the inexplicable, shadowy space they sometimes felt beside them as they swam. Neither Hannah nor May had spoken of the spaces until long after they met, but then they speculated endlessly on how nothingness could have such a presence. “At first,” May said, “I thought it was our parents, but now that there is just one, I think it must be our sister, because one space certainly disappeared when we met.” Hannah nodded in agreement, for she had experienced the same sensation when she had finally met May.
Hannah was waiting for May when she returned to the cave. She’d taken down the scallop shell and was looking at it, when she heard May swimming through the entrance. She turned to greet her as her sister pulled herself up onto the slope of granite rock. “I told you I’ll show you where to get one of those scallops!” May Plum said as Hannah came to the edge where the tide lapped onto the rock. She saw the serious look on Hannah’s face. “What catastrophe has beset the Hawley household now?” May asked as she lifted herself onto the rock and let her tail rest in the water.
“No catastrophe,” Hannah replied. She was still studying the scallop shell. “Just the usual confusion.”
“Did you read my note?”
“Yes!” Hannah said with her eyes still on the scallop.
“She’s here. She came. It’s like we always thought.”
Hannah looked up now and flashed a broad smile. “It’s more than we thought.” Her voice had a conspiratorial tone.
“What are you talking about?”
“May, she’s been here,” Hannah exclaimed with unbridled excitement.
“Here?” May asked, slightly bewildered.
“Yes, here, right here! In this cave! Look at your comb!”
Hannah held out the scallop with the pale strand of hair laced between the tines. May gasped.
“That’s certainly not my hair,” Hannah said with a smile that just bordered on being smug. Although both Hannah and May had red hair, Hannah’s was a much brighter red. May joked that her own was as rusty as a bag of old nails. But this strand of hair was the color of pale fire, more gold than red.
“Well, this makes sense in a way,” May said as she glanced around the cave, looking for other evidence.
“What do you mean?” Hannah asked.
“She’s the preacher’s daughter.”
“The summer preacher?” Hannah asked. “Chapel by the Sea?”
“Yes, the old fellow, the bishop, fell ill. The new preacher and his family are staying in the rectory.”
May tipped her head up and pointed toward the rock ceiling of the cave. “She must have gotten down the cliffs by the rectory cottage.”
Hannah stared at May. “Do you think she … swam?”
“No, I’m sure she hasn’t crossed over,” May replied confidently.
Hannah rolled her eyes. “You’re always so sure about things. Nobody goes down that cliff path. It’s treacherous.”
“Well, she did. You have the proof. Her hair is in the comb,” May said. “We have to get out of here. Look, the tide’s ebbing. She might come.”
“What’s wrong with that? Don’t you want to meet her?” Hannah smiled. “Or are you ’fraid she’s too fine for us?”
May stared at Hannah. It still gave her a thrill to see her own green eyes looking back at her. It was hard to believe that, just a year earlier, she had felt so alone. “No, Hannah, we can’t. Not yet.”
Hannah crossed her arms and regarded her sister. “I don’t understand. She’s our sister, May.” She paused. “Our family!”
“I knew you were one —” It sounded so cold the way May said it, but she could not help herself. Hannah had to understand. “I couldn’t just come up to you. I had to wait for you to cross.”
The color rose in Hannah’s cheeks. She had dropped her legs over the edge into the water and the mysterious transformation began fusing them into a tail. She stroked the glittering scales. There was a truth in what May had just said that she did not want to admit. “I hate it when you call her ‘one.’ We’re sisters. I can’t see how you justify this.”
“I don’t justify it.” May leaned forward and put her hand softly on Hannah’s. “It’s not me.”
“Then what is it?”
“The Laws of Salt.”
Hannah winced at the four innocent-seeming words. She had never heard May say them before, but someone else had. Stannish Whitman Wheeler — America’s foremost portrait painter and Hannah Albury’s secret beau, who once upon a time had been a mer. No longer, however. For the Laws of Salt were harsh, and after a time, one could never turn back. One had to choose between two worlds. May might think she understood the Laws of Salt, but she did not know them in the painful way that Hannah knew them.
H
E DREAMS OF SHIPS
.
It was such a lovely notion. Lucy smiled to herself as she tried to imagine what Eldon Drexel dreamed of.
Coffers?
Despite her best efforts to forget him, Phineas Heanssler continued to hover around the edges of her mind all week. She almost cowered when she thought of what her mother would say about all this. Not that anything had happened. Nothing would happen. He was an islander, a “native,” as Isabel Schuyler had so kindly pointed out. And though Lucy was not an heiress, she was a reverend’s daughter, a reverend who someday soon might become the bishop of New York.
Yet, she couldn’t help but wish Phineas hadn’t insisted on calling her Miss Snow. To him, she was probably just another rich summer person who spent the season flitting between parties and sailing trips. He most likely lumped her together with all the other summer people, just as Isabel Schuyler lumped all the natives together.
Nevertheless, when she went into the village, she kept hoping for a glimpse of him, even though she knew he must spend all his time at the shipyard. She even had, on occasion, taken a roundabout route to the Quoddy Club, where she was diligently taking tennis lessons, in order to walk by the yard. She wasn’t sure if she dared to actually enter the yard itself. Summer people did not wander around there unless they were like the Bellamys, discussing plans for their yacht. Too bad she didn’t have the money to order one; then Phineas Heanssler could dream about
her
ship! And maybe even dream of her.
However, it was not just Phineas and the lure of the boatyard that occupied her thoughts. It was the cave. She went when she could, hoping to find something, or perhaps someone — the writer of the mysterious note. She was careful to go at low or mid tide; the power of the sea frightened but at the same time drew her near. She could see the tidal currents just off the beach, swirling eddies and once a riptide that had torn loose a dinghy from the harbor around the corner.
On calm nights, she would dip her feet in. Her bad foot had improved so much that she barely limped, so she’d agreed to take tennis lessons, which pleased her mother immensely but gave Lucy little joy.
As she returned from her tennis lesson one morning, she began her circuitous route but when she rounded a corner, she nearly crashed into Phineas coming the other way.
“Oh!” she said. A feeling of absolute glee flooded through her.
It’s him!
There he was, not two feet from her — the red hair, the sparkling blue eyes that put the sky to shame even on this bright day.
“My apologies, Miss Snow,” he said, glancing around. “I didn’t mean to run you down.” He didn’t say this with a smile, or any trace of humor.
“Oh … oh. No. N-n-o. It’s fine,” she stuttered. Why was he speaking to her like this? They were both quickly sinking into a swamp of incoherence. She had to do something to save the situation. She’d had no trouble speaking to him before. Why weren’t the words coming to her now? Had she imagined everything that had happened on the
Lark
?
“I had a very nice time sailing that day.” She paused. “With the Bellamys.” She dared herself to say it: “And with you.”
“With me?” he said slowly.
“Yes. I enjoyed listening to you talk about your shipbuilding.” A woman she recognized from the Quoddy Club walked past them and shot Lucy a strange look. She saw Phin flinch and drop his gaze. Lucy felt her cheeks start to burn, but something compelled her to continue. “You’re the first person I’ve met up here that has anything interesting to say.”
Phin raised his eyebrows. “Are you mocking me, Miss Snow?”
Lucy’s stomach plummeted. “No, of course not.” Was she destined always to say the wrong thing?
“Where are you going?” he asked quickly, as if he feared his voice might give out. Then he looked at the racket she was carrying and blushed. “Kind of a foolish question. I guess you’re playing tennis.”
“Hardly,” Lucy said. She wanted to shout,
I am not a summer person!
The last thing she wanted to look like was a lifetime member of the Quoddy Club. “I think it’s an incredibly stupid game,” she said almost breathlessly.
“I’m not sure I agree,” Phineas said.
Oh God, did I offend him? Is he a great champion tennis player?
Although she didn’t believe natives played tennis.
“It’s not stupid?”
“It is, but there’s a stupider game.” He smiled for the first time. “Golf.” He shook his head. “I’d rather watch paint dry. In fact, I
do
watch paint dry down in the yard.”
“Where are you going?” she asked, feeling herself relax.
“To the boatyard.” He hesitated.
“It must be an interesting place to work.”
“It is…. I mean, if you like sawdust and varnish, that is.” The way he pronounced
varnish
with his Maine accent almost sounded like
vanish
to Lucy’s ears.
“Those are good smells, I would think,” she replied.
“Would you like to come with me?” He shrugged his shoulders. “You can see it and smell it for yourself.” He laughed self-consciously.
Lucy hesitated. She could only imagine what would happen if they were spotted. The Bar Harbor summer residents might dress more casually than their New York counterparts, but they were decidedly old-fashioned when it came to rules of decorum. Walking with a boy unchaperoned was frowned upon. Walking with a
local
boy could cause a real scandal. But as she thought about the alternative, an afternoon at the Quoddy Club, the decision became clear. “Thank you. I would really like to see the boatyard.”
“Well, follow me,” he replied.
She pulled down her straw sun hat a bit farther to shade her face and fell into step beside him. He had long legs and he was walking quickly. She dipped her chin a bit and, keeping her eyes down, smiled to herself as she spotted his sea boots. There was something delicious about walking with someone who’d look so wonderfully out of place in the Ogmonts’ drawing room.
Lucy loved the Heanssler yard the moment she set foot inside. Phineas took her on an extensive tour, beginning with the shed where the shipwrights worked. She loved the smell of the wood and the varnish, and the sounds of the caulking hammers pressing oakum between the planks to make a craft water-tight. The boatyard was an orderly little universe in which the tasks of building a fine, swift craft assumed the beauty and sanctity that was as holy as any church ritual.
Phin led her up the stairs to the sail loft, where both men and women cut and sewed the long strips of canvas for the sails. Most fascinating of all, however, was the drafting room, where Phineas and his father worked, drawing the lines of the hulls and the sail plans. It seemed to Lucy that the business of boatbuilding, although mysterious, was one of the most honest endeavors in the world.
Then he led her into a smaller room where, against the wall, were models of every boat they had ever designed, from coastal fishing boats to steamers to the brilliant New York Yacht Club “one-design” boats and the large sleek yachts like the Bellamys’. She walked up to one that was a deep reddish color. “What kind of wood is it?” she asked.
Phin glanced at the model. “Pine, mostly. It’s soft and easy to work. That’s an old model. Pine turns red over time.” He turned to face Lucy. “Kind of like your hair color, isn’t it?”
The sudden intensity of his gaze made her shiver. “I’m not that old,” Lucy said, trying to hide her nervousness. “This was carved in 1870!” She laughed. “So how does the model help you?” It was amazing to Lucy that they were both conversing so easily now. Something about the boatyard seemed to put them both at ease.
Phin walked over toward her and picked up the model. “First, we make a preliminary sketch, on a small scale, and try to predict all the values, like weight, flotation, center of mass. Then I carve a study model.” He replaced the model on the shelf and patted the holster on his belt. “Though not this one; 1870 is a bit before my time as well.”
“But where does the shape begin?” Lucy asked, running her hand along another nearby model.
“Up here.” Phin tapped his head. “It’s like you said. I dream it.” A thrill ran through her. She couldn’t believe he had remembered her words from that day.
“Just dream? Is that all it takes?” she asked.
“No. There’s plenty of math. We have to do a lot of calculations after we draw the lines.”
“It sounds a good deal more complicated than tennis.”
“It’s just what I do. Born to do, I guess you could say.”
“Born to do,” Lucy murmured. What exactly was
she
born to do? For some reason she thought of the cave. “I’d better be on my way. My mother will be worried.” The anxieties she had so willfully dispatched twenty minutes before suddenly rushed through her. What if her mother saw her leaving the boatyard? What excuse could she make up? She twirled the tennis racket in her hand.
“Come back anytime, Miss Snow,” Phin said, returning to his formal demeanor. “I’ll show you out.”
Say when. Don’t be so vague!
she wanted to scream. She felt utterly stupid standing there, twirling the tennis racket. When it clattered to the floor, she blushed to her roots. “I told you I couldn’t play.”
“I thought you were just standing there, not playing.”
“You’re right.” She laughed.
“Hey, listen. Don’t take up golf, all right?”
“You can count on it,” Lucy replied as she began to walk away.
“Uh … hey.” His voice seemed to break. She turned around and saw him looking down and scuffing the floor with the toes of his sea boots. “Can I count on seeing you again?” He didn’t look up.
Lucy inhaled sharply. “You mean it?”
“Ayuh. Wouldn’t have said it if I didn’t.” He was still looking down, dragging the toe of a boot in small circles.
“I would be really happy to see you again.”
He lifted his head now and a smile broke across his face. “You’re welcome anytime.”
Lucy was nearly giddy by the time she came up the path to the cottage.
But then she heard her mother’s voice. It was high pitched, as if she were in a nervous state about something. The words floating out of the open windows of the cottage were quite distinct.
“Oh, Stephen — the Bellamys’ summer ball! You know I was so worried when we went on that sail, because Lucy and Gus barely exchanged a word. He was so absorbed with his photography. But then he came up to me at the club to deliver the invitation. It’s for all of us, of course. And it’s white tie! It’s in celebration of — oh, what do they call it — the longest day —”
“The solstice.”
“Yes, that’s the word. Oh, dear, sometimes I really wish you could put your clerics aside. You’d look so handsome in white tie, but Lucy will look stunning in that green faille that Mrs. Simpson made up for her. You know, with her eyes.”
Lucy couldn’t stand to hear another word. Balls, gowns — it was the exact opposite of the boatyard she had just visited — that honest place. The thought of having to make forced conversation with those superficial people made her ill.
She had until now confined her visits to the cave to nighttime. It was late afternoon, but it seemed even later, as if a premature twilight had thickened the air and cast a bluish light through the woods. Her parents would expect her home soon. But she simply could not stand talking about the Bellamy ball.
The tide was coming in when she got to the small crescent of beach. She knew she could not stay long. She only needed to stay a bit, just long enough to collect her wits. The cave always seemed to soothe her.
However, on this late afternoon, it would not calm her. At least not at first. There had seemed to be such a presence there, and yet at the same time a haunting emptiness.
It was not always possible for Lucy to come at the same time, for the tides were constantly changing. It had now been two weeks since their arrival on the island, and low tide was pushed back to the late morning hours. To come in the secret of the night had been impossible because that was high tide. She had missed the place dearly, and now, as she walked the beach, she had to pull up the hem of her dress to step carefully from rock to rock.