The Sixties were definitely over. Tomorrow would be the last day of 1970 and I was ready to party. I had a date lined up with a girl I'd just met while failing to sell encyclopedias throughout the entire length of Pacific Beach. I was young, healthy, unattached, and unemployed - just the way I wanted it.
It was a warm sunny San Diego morning. I rose late and spent a lazy hour trying to decide how I should spend the day. My roommate Bruce and his girlfriend Martha were in the other bedroom, audibly in no hurry to be up and about. I was sitting at the kitchen table having a first joint when the phone rang.
"Hi, honey, listen to this."
"Hi, Mom. What is it?"
"An ad in the paper."
"Another job, I'll bet." She was always trying to find me gainful employment, but I knew she just wanted me to find something I'd enjoy. She'd had five years to get used to my hippie lifestyle and didn't try to talk me back into college or a career anymore. I think she envied me the freedom she'd never had in her youth in the depression.
"Well, it is in the help wanted column," she replied, "but I think you'll be interested in this one."
"Okay, shoot."
"Listen to this: 'Caribbean Sailing Adventure. Treasure-diving cooperative seeks volunteers to crew a sailing ship to the Caribbean to search for sunken treasure. No experience necessary. Call Quest International.' And it gives a local phone number."
I let the joint go out. "Well, I'll be damned," I said.
I'd always wanted to go to sea. Growing up in Ohio had given me a fascination with the sea and ships. I'd tried to get a job on a freighter, but they wouldn't talk to you if you weren't in the Seamen's Union and you couldn't get in the union without sea experience - the famous Catch-22. A job like this could be my way to break in.
"No experience necessary?" I asked. "They'll take anybody?"
"That's what it says."
"Something's fishy. It must be some kind of come-on. It'll probably end up 'involving some sales.'"
She laughed. I'd always balked at any ad with that phrase. The only one I'd tried had been the abortive encyclopedia episode, and that only because it said "Long hair no problem." The Britannica people had realized that straight Willie Loman-type salesmen didn't have a chance in the young hip communities, so they tried training hippies to sell to hippies. The problem was that hippies had no money for encyclopedias and were too mobile to want anything so bulky. Ever try to hitch-hike coast to coast with a set of the Great Books of the Western World? It was a short-lived and totally unsuccessful experiment, but I had met some cute chicks.
"It's hard to see what it could be a come-on for," she said. "It seems clear enough; it's certainly not one of those 'make a fortune in your spare time' things. In fact, it uses the word volunteer. I suppose that means you don't get paid."
"To sail a square-rigger in the tropics?" I laughed. "What do I care?"
"That's what I thought you'd say. Oh, Brian, it sounds like just what you've been looking for. I think you should give them a call."
"I sure will. I'll call them first thing Monday."
I heard her hesitate, weighing her words carefully. "You know I don't like to push you, honey, but maybe you should call today. I'll bet a lot of young people would jump at a chance like this, and there can't be that many openings on a ship like this. What if they fill the job today?"
"But I've got a date tonight."
"It's only noon. You can at least call them and get some information."
"You're right. I'll call them right now."
She read me the number and I jotted it down on a rolling paper.
"Call me after you talk to them."
"Okay, Mom. Thanks a lot. Bye."
I hung up and lit the joint again, looking at the phone number. It seemed too good to be true. Why would they even have to advertise a free cruise? Surely thousands of people would jump at a chance like that. And why wouldn't they want people with experience? Who would want an untrained crew on a sailing ship? It just didn't add up. On the other hand, it would be stupid to not even call and find out what it was about. I'd formed one guiding principle in my years of wandering: when faced with a decision about what direction to take, always take the one that's more adventurous. You can go wrong either way, of course, but at least you won't grow old wondering what would have happened if you'd taken the chance. The rule was clear on this issue. I dialed the number. A deep, growling voice answered.
"Quest International Film Guild." Film guild? First I'd heard of that.
"Uh... yes. I'm calling about an ad in the paper? Can you tell me someth..."
"You'll have to come to our office. 5250 El Cajon Boulevard, suite 252."
I jotted down the address. "It's a little difficult for me to get away right now. Could I make an appointment for Monday?"
"I'm sorry. The offer is only open today. No applications will be taken after eighteen hundred hours today."
"But can you tell me about..."
"Not over the phone. We're very busy. Everything will be explained to you at our office." They hung up.
Now I was thoroughly curious. What could it be about? I rang Mom back and told her what had happened.
"Are you going to go see them?"
"I don't know. Yeah. Yeah, sure. If it seems fishy I can always walk out, right?"
"Right. And if it is on the level, it sounds like you'd love it. It sounds very mysterious. I just want to hear what they have to say."
"Okay. I'll go out there right now. I'll let you know what happens. Bye."
"Go out where?" asked Bruce, emerging from his room as I hung up. Martha followed him, looking rumpled and sleepy.
"Morning, guys," I said, passing them the joint. "Check this out, man." I told them the story. Bruce was interested. He was a boat buff, too. He was just out of Nam, the Navy, and a marriage, and as free as I was. We'd often talked about sailing and adventuring together in the South Pacific.
"Oh, wow, that sounds great," he said. "I want to go too."
"Great. Grab something to eat and let's go."
Martha wasn't interested and begged off. Bruce and I made some toast and went out to my old battered VW bus with the stained-glass windows. Soon we were cruising down El Cajon Boulevard looking for the address. It was way out, almost to San Diego State.
"5200," said Bruce. "This is the block. Must be on the right."
"I don't see anything that looks like an office building," I said.
"There it is. Shit, it's only a motel."
I pulled into the driveway of the Aztec Motel and we entered a pink stucco faux Spanish courtyard. It was an "economy" motel, the kind you booked for your parents if they only had to spend one night and didn't care what the place looked like. Or where you took a girl if your roommate needed the apartment to himself for a special date.
"Funny place for an office," I muttered as I wheeled into a parking space. We got out and looked around. The place was nearly empty except for a half dozen ragged young people lounging on a second floor balcony. We went up. Sure enough, it was room 252. The door was open and someone was talking inside. We looked at each other, shrugged, and went in.
It was an ordinary motel room, with a pair of twin beds, an enormous swag lamp of wrought iron and thick orange glass, and a formica dresser bordered with cigarette burns. But the room had been redecorated in a nautical motif. On the wall hung a huge oil painting of a clipper ship shouldering through creaming seas. A quavering tape of sea chanteys in manly baritones emanated from the bathroom.
The furniture had been pushed up against one wall and covered with a sheet. Two folding tables had been set up. On one sat an ancient dented diving helmet of polished copper, an anchor, and a brass porthole. On the other, two large photo albums lay open. Behind this table sat three very unusual characters.
The first one reminded me of a younger Mr. Smee from Peter Pan. He was paunchy, with an acne-scarred face and a large red nose. He wore bell-bottom dungarees, a red-and-white striped tee shirt, and a red watch cap. He was talking enthusiastically with some dubious-looking hippies. The second man was also in his mid-twenties, tall and rail-thin, and wore a Navy-blue turtleneck and a Greek captain's cap. He had a dark beard, hard eyes, and a bored and superior look. But the one that caught my attention was a dapper man about forty with dark hair swept back from a pale round face, and a Hitler moustache. He was dressed, improbably enough, in a peaked cap with a gleaming black bill worn low over the eyes, a black leather aviator's jacket with the fur collar turned up dramatically around his face, a white silk cravat, black jodhpurs, and knee-high black leather boots. This strange trio were as out of place in San Diego as a snowstorm. They looked like characters from a high school melodrama about hard characters on a tramp steamer in the thirties. My heart sank. These guys looked like idiots.
Bruce and I joined the others by the table. "Mr. Smee" was flipping through one of the photo albums as he talked. The pictures all showed groups of people, mostly young guys, and all remarkably ragged and dirty. They were engaged in various activities not at all clear to me. Some were working on boats of various kinds. Others seemed to be moving wrecked cars around in a junk yard or operating heavy equipment. Others were in diving gear, floating in blue water and holding up shells. There were many shots of odd-looking characters standing grinning in front of run-down buildings. One showed a small car apparently surfing. Another showed a bright yellow amphibious military vehicle, a "duck," driving down a freeway. Nowhere did I see any square-riggers or palm trees.
"... so if you sign on with us, mates," Mr. Smee was saying, "you'll have free room and board for the rest of your life. No more living on the street. It's a rough and tumble life, but there's camaraderie and adventure and the good salt air. The food's not fancy, but good enough for a sailor man, and there's plenty of it. Nobody goes hungry, do they, Rogue?"
The thin dark one shook his head. "No." Smee shot him a look. Clearly he was hoping for a little help with his spiel, but "Rogue" wasn't about to pitch in.
"But, like, I don't get it, man," said one of the other hippies. "You say we don't get paid? Why should we work for you, then? What kind of job is that?"
"It's not a job," said Smee. "And you don't work for us. We all work together, share and share alike, just like on the old whaling ships. You'll have a share of everything we own, and any profit we make."
"But what is it you do, exactly?" asked somebody else. Clearly I wasn't the only one unclear on the concept.
"Whatever we can to make money for the trip. Right now we're mostly buying and selling military surplus."
"Like tents and canteens and stuff?"
"No. Big stuff. Trucks and bulldozers."
"Minesweepers," added Rogue finally. "PT boats. Submarines."
There was a pause as we all weighed this. This was all completely unbelievable, but I still couldn't figure out the scam.
"Submarines?" I asked with a sarcastic tone.
"Oh, diggit, man," blurted one of the dudes. "Can we go for rides?" The other kids laughed.
Rogue didn't smile. "No. We fix 'em up and sell 'em fast. We keep trading up, getting bigger and better stuff."
The third one, the one in the storm trooper costume, spoke for the first time. His voice was deep and resonant like a Shakespearean actor's. "We've been doing this for almost twenty years now," he said quietly. "At first it was little stuff. Jeeps, trucks. Then fishing boats, then yachts, then the PT boats. Bought 'em in Maine, fixed 'em up a little, sailed 'em around through the Canal. We traded them for the sub. We sold that and got enough for two minesweepers. We fixed them up and sold them and got enough to buy the Fairmorse."
"What's a Fairmorse?" I asked, that dubious tone still in my voice.
He glanced up at me, and I felt a strange shiver. His eyes were a clear blue and seemed to go right through me. There was real intelligence there, and something else I could not name - it was a look a learned man might give an ignorant savage, a perfect certainty that he was superior to all those around him. I had the impression he had sized me up in that one glance and was not impressed. I felt both repelled and strangely drawn to him. Never before had I had such a reaction to a man I knew nothing about.
"The Fairmorse is our ship," he said. "A Bluenose schooner, 147 feet overall, built for the Grand Banks."
"Where is she?"
"Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. We have a crew aboard her now, fixing her up, getting her ready. In the spring we'll send up another group. By summer she should be ready."
"Ready for what?"
"We'll take her south, to Brownsville. We're setting up a base there, with a marine railway, docks, full repair facilities, cargo handling equipment, a library, a museum."
"A museum?" asked one of the other guys. "What for?"
"The treasure."
"Treasure! What treasure?"
"Tell them about it, Don Juan."
"Spanish treasure!" said Smee, the apparently misnamed Don Juan.
"Doubloons!" exclaimed the Captain. "Pieces of eight!" I glanced over at him, half expecting to see a parrot on his shoulder. He wasn't smiling.
"Aw," said someone. "That's kid's stuff. What makes you think you can find any treasure down there?"
"Cap'n Nash knows right where it is, don't you, Cap'n?"
The older man nodded. "I've spent all my life researching the routes of the Spanish treasure fleets. I know what ships sailed when and from what port. I know exactly what they loaded, where they were bound, and the names of their officers. I've read their original letters and logs in the crypts under the Naval Library in Madrid. Spent years learning seventeenth and eighteenth century Spanish. There's some very interesting reading there. The Conquistadors shipped the gold and silver in small coasters from Peru to Panama, then across the isthmus by mule trains. They collected it there until they had enough to fill a whole fleet - six, ten, a dozen, large, heavily-armed galleons. They crammed them full of treasure, then headed for home. But not all made it. Some were hit by pirates, some sunk by hurricanes, others ran aground on unmarked reefs at night. Scores of ships lost, thousands of men. Gone, all gone. But the treasure is still there. And I know where it is. I have a map with a dozen little crosses on it. And every one is a wreck full of treasure."
"So why haven't you gone to get it?" asked one suspicious-looking kid.
The Captain looked sharply up at him, a hard disdainful light in his eye. His look said he did not talk to fools, and he's just met another one. The kid shrank back, his bravado withered. Nash turned to the rest of us.
"Because I needed a ship. You think you can go in there in a rowboat and pick up coins off the bottom? The treasure's been there four hundred years. It's buried in coral. It takes a big expedition, big money, specialized equipment, a trained crew. I could have offered my services to any of a dozen treasure salvors. But I want it to be my expedition, do it my way. I determined long ago that a cooperative was the only way I could do it. I've worked towards that gold all these years, and now we're almost there."
"We just bought the ship this year," put in Don Juan. "We've got all the diving equipment: SCUBA, hard hat, hookah rigs; and people trained to use it. We've got compressors, tanks, regulators, wetsuits, drysuits - everything we need. Most of the hard work's already done."
"So after all that hard work you're inviting us to share the treasure?" I asked. "Why? And what do the guys who've been doing all this work feel about us coming in at the end?"
Captain Nash gave me that condescending look. The corner of his mouth twitched but he said no more, as if he found me beneath his dignity.
"We need more people," said Don Juan. "We won't try to fool you. It's a hard life. We work from dawn to dusk every day of the year. It's hard physical labor, and there's no money to pay you until we get the treasure. There's no drugs, sex, or alcohol. A lot of guys can't stay the course. They fold up, they can't see that the reward is just around the corner. They run the road and have to be replaced. That's where you come in."
"So how do the shares get divvied up, if we do get the treasure?"
"Share and share alike, just like everything else. Join us today and you'll be part owner of a schooner tonight. Every man who's still there with us the day we find the treasure will get his fair share of it."
"What if we don't find any treasure?"
"We will," said the Captain. "Besides, we have other options. We have underwater cameras, lights, miles of 16 millimeter color film, editing machines. We can make a movie about the search, or do underwater nature documentaries."
"Hey," said one of the guys. "Just like Jacques Cousteau!"
"Of course," said Don Juan. "How do you think he got started? And if that fails, we still have the Fairmorse. If worse comes to worst, we can always charter it and take passengers. Lots of people would pay big money to sail the Caribbean in a classic old schooner."
Several of the kids had wandered out after the mention of working from dawn to dusk. That rattled me too, but it also had a strange appeal. I'd been reading sea stories all my life, about the constant hard work and short rations that were a sailor's lot. I had always admired those hard-as-iron oldtime sailors, and had wondered if I could have done it. Now these guys were offering me a chance to find out, and I didn't want to wimp out before I'd even tried it.
The reference to Cousteau had touched a nerve as well. I'd loved his movies and had always thought how much fun it would be to sail around like that, dreaming up adventures and then just going and doing them. Maybe this really was how he'd gotten started. I saw myself as the new Falco, the expert diver, pilot, and constant companion to Captain Cousteau. What young adventure-loving boy wouldn't jump at the chance?
Bruce and I looked at each other. I could see he was tempted, too. But we had to know a lot more first.
"You say there's a crew at the ship in Nova Scotia?" I asked. "Is that where we would be working?"
"Not at first," said Don Juan. "Some of you would go to the main base in Summerland, near Santa Barbara. Others would be at the southern base in Lemon Grove."
"Lemon Grove?" said Bruce. "That's inland from here. You have boats there?"
"No, we keep most of the military vehicles there. The boats are at anchor off Summerland. Plus we have a boatyard in Santa Barbara."
"I want to work on the ship," I said.
The third guy, Rogue, spoke up at last. "People work where they're needed. There's lots of us would rather be on the ship. But people move around a lot, too. You'll get a chance."
"I don't know anything about fixing army trucks," I complained.
"We'll train you. You'll learn mechanics, carpentry, painting, welding, shipfitting, navigation, sail handling, seamanship. We've got all the equipment and we've got people to train you. And we've got a whole library of books and manuals. You'll learn a dozen trades."
"I still want to be on the boats," I persisted.
"This isn't a democracy," said the Captain. "You'll take orders like everyone else."
I didn't like the sound of that. "Hey, wait a minute. Is this a slave labor camp or something? How do we know you'll let us go if we don't like it?"
"There are no gates and no locks. No one is under any obligation. Any time you decide you're not happy with the way things are going, you're free to leave. No questions asked."
"But," said Rogue, raising a long finger ominously, "once you leave there's no coming back. Everyone's free to run the road any time they want, but it's a one way road. No exceptions."
"So as I see it," said Bruce, "we're free to work for you seven days a week with no pay as long as we can take it, and then we're free to quit? Some deal."
"It's the same deal we all got," said Rogue. "From the Cap'n on down. If you follow orders and work hard, you're one of us - for the rest of your life if you want. No one ever gets kicked out as long as they do their job. You share in all our adventures and any profits when they come. If you leave, you take nothing away but the experience and the skills you gained."
"It's not a bad life," added Don Juan. "You'll have no worries, no problems, no decisions. No hassles with bosses, landlords, cops, or your old lady. All your room and board and clothes are supplied. You won't need anything from the outside world. And it won't need anything from you."
"And you'll feel proud of yourself," said Rogue. "Especially once you learn some trades, start developing your leadership, leading your own crew. You'll find we can do anything we put our minds to. And you won't be cooking fries in McDonald's or selling Fuller brushes door-to-door. You'll be a sailor, an adventurer, a treasure hunter."
There was a silence as we took that in. That crack about door-to-door salesmen hit home.
"What happens if we decide to do it?" I asked, "When would we start?"
"Tomorrow morning."
"Tomorrow?" Bruce exclaimed. "Hey, we can't just up and leave like that. We've got an apartment."
"I've got a date tomorrow night," I added. It's New Year's Eve, for chrissake."
"Okay," said Rogue with a careless gesture. "So don't show up. We won't miss you. There'll be plenty of others to take your place. Just don't come back looking for us, cause we'll be gone."
"Why does it have to be tomorrow?"
"Because that's the way we do things," said the Captain in some irritation. He had clearly had enough questions. "Here's the situation: we need some more troops. We put an ad in the paper, we rent a room for two days. People talk to us, hear our story. If they want to sign on, fine. If not, fuck 'em."
"Fuck 'em," agreed Rogue.
"So will you recruit again?"
"Can't say. If we need to. But we do it in a different city each time. Could be Seattle, could be Boston. No way for you to find out. We're not in the phonebook. Sign up tomorrow, or forget it." He sat back, clearly finished with us.
"So what happens if we do show up tomorrow?" I asked.
Don Juan spoke up again, trying to bring it back to an upbeat sales pitch. "You don't need to bring anything. You sign our crew list and go to work. That's all there is to it. It doesn't even have to be your real name. Most of the guys pick a nickname when they sign on. We're like the Foreign Legion. We don't ask questions. We don't care about your past, or who might be looking for you. We ask you to pay twenty-five bucks to cover our costs in recruiting you. Then we'll take you to one of our bases and put you to work. The first thirty days you're on probation. No shore leave, no visitors, no phone calls in or out. Oh, and one more thing," he added, eyeing my waist-length hair. "New guys get their hair cut."
"What?" I gasped. "What the hell for?"
"To demonstrate to us that you have a commitment to the group," said the Captain. "We're sick and tired of all these hippies signing on and running the road the next day. It's not worth our time and trouble. We thought it might make people think a little more before they sign on."
"What about him?" I asked, pointing at Rogue. His hair was pulled back tight and gathered into a strange, stiff-looking tail that hung down to his shoulder blades. I learned later that he rubbed tar into it, like the old sailors did, to keep it from blowing around.
"The Rogue's my first officer," said the Captain. "He's been with me for years. If you stay with us for thirty days you can grow your hair down to your toes and paint it pink for all I care. But when you sign on with us, your hair goes."
"That's not fair," I protested.
He gave me a withering look. "There's no such thing as 'fair,' boy. Fair is an idea made up by weaklings to keep stronger men from pushing them around. You don't see animals talking about fair. There's just eaters and eatees. There's no fair in nature, and there's no fair in the Pirates. If you can't live with that, don't join."
"The pirates?"
Don Juan broke in quickly with a nervous laugh. "That's what we used to call ourselves, in the old days. Now we're the Quest International Film Guild."
"Classy name," I said. "You sound more like pirates."
"We are more like pirates," said 'the Rogue' with an evil grin. We smiled uncertainly back, not sure how to take any of this. We asked a few more questions, flipped through the photo albums.
One picture struck me. It showed a massive wooden longboat coming in through a heavy surf. Six figures in peacoats and watch caps bent to their oars in unison as the bow was tilted sharply downward, thrown forward by a steaming breaker. In the sternsheets a man was, incredibly, standing up, the tiller in his hand, his eyes coolly scanning the beach ahead. Nothing in the picture was of this century. It could have been a woodcut of Captain Cook landing in Kealakekua. But it wasn't Captain Cook. It was Captain Nash. I think I knew then that I was going to do it.
Another group of guys wandered in and the trio started their spiel again. Bruce and I slipped out. As we drove home we talked about it.
"That's the damnedest job interview I've ever had," I said. "Pretty strange dudes. But it sure sounds interesting."
"Yeah. But I wonder why there's that probation period. No visitors or phone calls for a month. That seems kind of sinister. Sounds like a slave labor camp or something. And what about the hair thing? Would you cut your hair?"
"I don't know. I've gone through all sorts of shit for my hair. I've been beaten up, busted, even disowned by my father because of it. But you know, in all those arguments I was the one who kept saying that it was only a symbol, that it shouldn't matter, that it was my own personal decision."
"So you would cut it?"
"I think maybe I would. This time it would be my decision. I finally have a reason to cut it, other than just conforming."
"Man, I never thought I'd hear you say that. Your hair's like your trademark. Your folks will flip out." We drove along a few more minutes, both of us thinking about it. The more I thought about it, the more sure I was.
"What about the twenty-five bucks?" he went on. "I didn't like the sound of that, either. The whole setup could be just a scam. They could make life really tough, drive you off, and keep your money."
"Yeah, I thought of that. But frankly, I think that's what convinced me they were telling the truth. Con men would ask for more; it wouldn't be worth their trouble for twenty-five bucks. And they'd paint a rosier picture of the group. It would cost a grand at least and look like a holiday resort, not like Stalag 17."
"Maybe you're right."
"But what about the apartment? If we break the lease now we'll lose the last month's rent."
"I can't go now, man," he said. "This thing with Martha is getting hot now. It could really be a good thing. I can't just take off now. But we were thinking of talking to you today about her coming in with us on the apartment. She and I can just take the place now, so it works out okay all around. But maybe later, after things settle down a little, I'll look you up and try to join you."
"Sure, man. I'll put in a good word for you."
"Wouldn't it be great to crew on the ship together?"
"I'll say. Can you dig it, man? Sailing at night in tropical seas, the moon slanting down through the rigging of a tall ship?"
We went on fantasizing about it all the way home. I called Mom and told her all about it. She was very uneasy about the isolation of the probation period, but she agreed I didn't have much to lose by giving it a shot. I think she was impressed by my willingness to cut my hair for it. I promised to stop by and visit that evening. Then I had to call my new girlfriend and cancel our date. She was pissed, and she didn't understand when I tried to explain. I started to sound like one of those "a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do" westerns. I promised I would call her as soon as my probation period was over.
I spent the rest of the day organizing my affairs. There wasn't much to do. I'd only been in San Diego a few months and had few friends to say goodbye to. Since Bruce and Martha were keeping the apartment, I left most of my stuff stored there. Some of the stuff I loaded in a couple of boxes and hauled over to my parents' apartment. We had a nice dinner and evening together and they wished me luck. We exchanged our New Year's wishes.
"Well," said Mom. "This is the end of 1970. I wonder what we'll know next year at this time?" She said the same thing every year, but it struck me more this time. Where would I be at the end of 1971? On a ship in the Caribbean?
I went home late and had another little party with Bruce and Martha. We did a lot of drugs, figuring it would be at least a month before I could indulge again. Not knowing what the security would be, I had decided against trying to take any with me. Bruce promised to bring me a stash after my probation was over. We crashed late after a lot of good talk and musings about the future.
I was up at the crack of nine, then Bruce and Martha drove me back to the motel. A motley crew of about twenty people milled around in the parking lot. We got out and joined the others. There was no sign of Don Juan, the Rogue, or Captain Nash. Room 252 was locked and empty. A bad desert landscape had replaced the nautical painting.
Most of the people were other young hippie guys, but there were one or two older men and two girls. We stood around and talked about the chances of this all being a scam. A half hour passed. Two guys walked off and left.
Finally two trucks pulled into the parking lot. The first, driven by the Rogue, was a big army stake bed, still in camouflage colors. The second was a very battered bright blue pickup with no driver's door. Don Juan got out of it, and I noticed it had no seat either. He was sitting on an orange crate.
"Right," said the Rogue, without any greeting or preamble. "You, you, you, you, and you. Throw your gear in the pickup and sit on it. You girls in the cab. All you other recruits, in the stake truck."
I was in the larger group. I hugged Bruce and Martha goodbye, threw my duffel in, and scrambled in after it. Everyone made a place for themselves on the bags. Rogue and Don Juan talked for a few minutes out of our hearing, then Don Juan came back and got in the cab. The truck started with a cloud of blue smoke, and we were off. We waved at the recruits in the pickup as it turned the other way and disappeared. Passersby stared in wonder at the sight of a bunch of hippies in the back of an army truck.
We sat in silence as we moved through the city and onto a freeway I'd never seen before.
"Anybody know where we're going?" I asked.
"We're going east," said a little guy with a big bush of curly red hair. "That's not Santa Barbara. I'll bet we're going to Lemon Grove."
"Shit. Won't be any boats there."
We rode the rest of the way in silence. Soon we were winding our way through the back streets of a dry dusty little town. We entered a canyon with high mesquite-covered hills on all sides. We bumped along on a rutted road, then pulled up to a big gate covered in barbed wire. Don Juan beeped the horn. A minute later a Mexican guy in unlaced combat boots and greasy shorts came running down to open the gate, and we drove into a compound.
There was a modest house tucked into the shade under a huge drooping pepper tree. Beyond was a large shed or barn with a corrugated iron roof. Several other outbuildings stood scattered around the compound. Most of the rest of the steep lot was covered with vehicles of every imaginable kind: cars, trucks, tow trucks, cranes, bulldozers, a couple of those huge tractors they use to push out airliners. Most of the vehicles were of makes unknown to me: a rounded little Italian Tiempo, a Russian car, an Amphicar with propellers protruding underneath. The steep hill going up behind the house had been cut into numerous terraces, each crammed with yet more vehicles. An immense pile of assorted car parts reared beside the barn, and nearly as tall.
"This is the Caribbean?" someone asked as we piled out of the truck.
Several guys appeared out of this junk yard and came down to look us over. They were a dirty, ragged bunch, dressed in tattered, grease-stained clothes. One said hi, then showed us to the bunkhouse. It was a dark plywood shack, lit by a single bare bulb hanging from the sloping ceiling. Four-high wooden bunks lined the walls, some with smelly sleeping bags, others with only thin army mattresses. There was no other furniture, unless you included a large pile of clothes piled in one corner. We looked around dubiously, threw our gear on the unoccupied bunks, and wandered out into the light. We were directed back to the main house.
It was cool and dark inside, cluttered, but not dirty. The living room was lined with books, all nautical. Signal flags hung along the walls. Several more huge photo albums were in a big bookcase. The kitchen was large but Spartan. A big screened-in verandah served as a dining room. Three bedrooms opened off the living room, but each bore a sign saying "Officers' Quarters. Off Limits."
At Don Juan's direction, we all took seats on one of the worn sofas or chairs in the living room. Don Juan stood in the center to address us. He put his hands behind his back and beamed at us, his homely face split in a wide smile.
"My name is Don Juan," he said, "but most people call me D.J. Congratulations. You're Pirates now."
"Pirates?" asked one of the guys. "What do you mean? I thought this was Quest International."
"The Group has existed for many years, with lots of different names. We call ourselves the Pirates. Hundreds of people have been members over that time. We have a long and proud history. Some of it is recorded in those albums. Up at the Base in Summerland, we have the group's archives. If you're interested, you can read some of it when you get up there. This place is called The Ranch. Mostly we work on the vehicles you see in the yard. We fix 'em up good enough to sell, then buy more. Nothing fancy. But you'll learn a lot of mechanics, body work, welding, electrical, whatever you need.
"We get up at six. Breakfast is at 0630. If you miss it, you don't eat. We work from seven till noon, have lunch, then work from one until six. We've got one hour to get everything cleaned up and put away all shipshape, then dinner is at seven. We'll have classes most evenings: seamanship, piloting, navigation, nautical terminology.
"We run our bases like ships, because we want everybody to be ready for life on the ship when we get there. That means we do things differently than you would at home. Notice that all the doors have eye hooks on them. At sea a door left unsecured can kill a man or sink a ship. Every time you go through a door, make sure it's secured, either latched closed, or hooked open. If you lave a door adrift, it's two hours of extra duty.
"The same goes for personal items. Keep your gear in your berth. Any personal stuff found lying around unattended is considered Pirate property. On the other hand, taking anything from someone else's berth is theft. Theft, going AWOL, or striking an officer will result in immediate dismissal.
"You'll each be issued a coffee cup. They're hanging on hooks in the galley. And it's a galley, not a kitchen. Pick one without a name on it. That cup is yours as long as you're a Pirate. Paint your name on it and don't lose it or break it or you'll be drinking coffee out of your hands. Your cup will be in your hand or on its hook at all times. If you left it unattended on a ship, it can come adrift, spill, and burn somebody. If your cup is found adrift, two hours extra duty.
"Now, tools. You'll find we have every kind of tool you'll need, from screwdrivers to bulldozers. Every one has its proper place to be stowed. If you take it out, it's your job to see that it's returned. If a tool is missing when we clean up at night, no one eats until it's found, even if it takes all night. Everyone will be hungry and tired and no one will be happy with the guy that kept them up all night looking for a pair of pliers. When it is found, the guy that lost it gets eight hours of extra duty."
"What if you never find it?" asked a wide-eyed kid who looked about fourteen.
"We always find it," said D.J. He held up a thick wire-bound notebook. "This is the crew list. Everybody signs it. We don't care what name you use, but whatever you write will be your name as long as you're a Pirate, so don't pick anything too stupid. Once you're signed on, you're a Seaman Recruit, with all the rights and privileges accruing thereto."
"Which are?" asked the red-headed guy.
"Absolutely none. A 'cruit is lower than whale shit. If you survive the month's probation, you'll be promoted to Seaman First Class. After that, based on how fast you learn and how hard you work, you could become a Bos'n and be put in charge of a team of 'cruits. If you do a good job and stay with it long enough, you could make Second Officer. There are eight of us Seconds in the Group right now. The Rogue is the only First officer and he runs the Summerland Base. Then there's the Chief that runs this Ranch; you'll meet him soon, and the Captain runs everything. Everybody else here right now is an officer. If they tell you to do something, say 'Aye-aye, sir,' and do it. Insubordination to an officer is twelve hours extra duty the first time, twenty-four the next."
"Then what?" asked a Japanese kid with a smile. "Twenty lashes?"
Some of the guys chuckled, but Don Juan took the question seriously. "No, we never hit a recruit. If a guy is goofing off - we call it perrodiddling, that's Spanish for fucking the dog - well, suffice it to say that we know how to make a guy feel unwelcome. If you're not cutting it here, you'll find that you really want to leave." The smiles disappeared.
"The head, that's the bathroom to you 'cruits, is off the galley where you came in. There's an outhouse up near the top of the yard, and another in those bushes by the lower bunkhouse. We've got a phone for emergencies only, but it's padlocked. Unauthorized use of the phone is twenty-four hours of extra duty. So is passing a message to someone outside. Anyone leaving the compound without permission at any time for any reason is considered to have run the road. All rights are forfeit, and he can never come back. Any Pirate who communicates with a roadrunner gets twenty-four hours extra duty. If you want to run the road, tell one of the officers. We'll escort you through the gate. It's a two mile walk to a bus stop. Any questions?"
We all looked at each other. No one said anything else.
"Right. So everybody sign the crew list, then go out in the yard and report to Jack. He'll cut your hair and assign you to a work party."
We lined up to sign the notebook. When I got there, I saw that everybody had used a pseudonym: Red Baron, Cowboy, Angel, Sansei. I thought for a minute, but couldn't think of a name I wanted to be stuck with, so I just wrote Brian. I followed Sansei, the Japanese guy, out to the yard.
They had some chairs set up in the dirt under the pepper tree and the red-headed guy, the Red Baron I assumed, was already sitting in one. A tall, hard-faced guy with bad acne scars stood behind him. I assumed this was Jack. He was bald on top, but had long stringy white-blond hair around the sides, making him look like a ghoul. He set to work on the Red Baron with a pair of scissors, and soon a pile of flaming red hair was piled around the chair. I tried not to think about it as we waited.
I looked at the Japanese guy. "I see you wrote Sansei. Is that really your name?"
He smiled. "No. It means third generation. My parents were Nisei - born here, but their parents came from Japan."
"Hi, Sansei. I'm Brian."
"Hi. That's a lot of hair you've got there. Been growing it long?"
"All my life. But it's been a while since I've cut it."
Red Baron was done. He ran his hand ruefully over his orange stubble. He looked about ten years old. Sansei was done in another minute, then I sat down, trying not to look as reluctant as I felt.
"Shit, man," growled Jack. "What a mop. I'm going to enjoy this."
I remained stoic during the operation, and in only a minute or two I had a Marine haircut. My head felt lighter and cooler.
"Okay," said Jack. "You three go on up by that dozer on the hill. Carlos is up there. See what he needs."
We wandered up a dirt road to the highest terrace. A rusty yellow bulldozer stood among a mass of wrecked trucks and other equipment. The Mexican guy who let us in was working on it.
"Uh, Seaman Recruits Red Baron, Sansei, and Brian reporting for duty," I said. He looked us over with a grin.
"Man, do you guys look different. I'm Carlos, I'm a Bos'n. This old cat blew one of its hoses. You, Red Baron, take this hose and go down to the shop. Along this side you'll find a bin full of hydraulic hoses. See if you can find one the same diameter and length as this one. You other guys, take the blade off."
"The blade? What do you mean?"
"The blade. This thing." He slapped the pusher blade on the front of the dozer. "We're going to put on the wide blade."
We stared at the immense piece of cast iron dubiously. "How?"
"Oh, man, you guys are harmless. Here, look at it. See these cotter pins here? Take them out. Then get a wrench from the shed and take those nuts off. Knock the bolts out. Do all four of them. When you've got that done, give me a yell and I'll help you change the blades." He walked off to take charge of the next shorn recruits straggling up the hill.
"Some training," I said. "But I guess we can give it a shot."
"Okay." It must have taken us an hour with hammers and visegrips to get those cotter pins out. Then we went to the shop and found a wrench big enough to fit on the nut. It was five feet long and took both of us to carry it.
We worked on those nuts the rest of the day. Carlos stopped by now and then to give us tips. We sprayed Liquid Wrench on the nuts. He showed us how to put a cheater pipe over the wrench handle to increase the torque. Then both of us climbed up on the pipe and bounced on it until the nut broke.
It was slow work, but I found it kind of fun. Each step was a new problem. Carlos knew what he was doing and could help us when we got stuck. It didn't seem to matter that it took us all day to take off four bolts. They weren't paying us, so it didn't matter how long it took.
All around us, other completely unskilled laborers were working away on various tasks. Butts were sticking out of hoods all over the compound. Four guys were dismantling an ancient fire truck for parts, then cutting up the frame with a torch. Two guys were working with Jack in the paint shed, painting some pickup trucks. It was not quality work. They masked the lights, gauges, windows, and tires, then sprayed everything else inside and out, seats and all. The only paint they had was bright royal blue in big military canisters. Carlos told me the Captain had gotten a great deal on four pallets of the paint at an auction in Port Hueneme, so for that year every vehicle we sold was bright blue.
As we worked and talked with the officers, we learned how the Pirates functioned. The Captain had over the years made himself an expert at evaluating the usefulness and value of thousands of different arcane materials, vehicles, tools, and equipment used by the military. Every month or so the government held auctions of unneeded equipment and sent notices to registered buyers. He'd wander around the equipment and submit sealed bids. Much of the stuff was going for ridiculously low prices: a pickup truck for a hundred dollars, a five-foot machine lathe for sixty. These things had cost the taxpayers thousands, of course, but the military wanted them sold quickly. Everything had to go, no matter what the loss to the government. A knowledgeable buyer could make a killing.
The rub was that the government assembled the stuff into lots which could not be broken down. If they had something they knew no one would want, they put it in a lot with something they knew would sell. This, plus the fact that the lots were made quite large, discouraged most individuals from bidding. Lots of people would like to buy a hundred dollar Jeep in good condition, but not if you had to take sixteen broken Jeeps and the left wing of a jet with it.
The Pirates' niche in this market was that their labor was free and they had lots of room to store junk. Also, time did not matter. If it took five years to turn a profit, who cared? Carlos told me of some of their more successful coups. Once a semi-trailer load of grease was offered, nine hundred ten-gallon drums. You had to buy the grease and the old beat-up trailer it was in. The Captain realized it was no ordinary grease, but was Cosmoline, a thick, exceptionally stable olive drab grease looking like military Vaseline and used to pack machinery for long storage. It was rare and very expensive. Not many people ever used it, but when someone needed it they had a hard time finding it and would happily pay $75 dollars a can for it. The Captain bought the lot for a thousand dollars, hauled the trailer out to his mother's ranch in Arizona, dug a huge hole with a bulldozer, and buried the trailer until a buyer came along. Five years later he sold it for $65,000.
Another time eleven International pickups were offered by the Air Force, most in sorry condition. The Captain got them all for five hundred and hauled them to Lemon Grove. By swapping parts from the worst trucks into the best, they eventually got eight of them fixed up enough and sold them for $1000 each. They got another running and used it themselves and sold the other two for $200 as scrap.
So it went. With each profit they were able to buy larger lots and turn them into larger profits. Now the Pirates' inventory of rolling and floating stock was impressive. They had an ad running constantly in the papers and it was a rare week when they didn't sell at least two or three vehicles from each base.
The technical expertise of the officers was impressive. Most of them knew mechanics, welding, painting, electrical work. Some had brought their skills with them, but most had picked it up since becoming Pirates. I learned that, with a few exceptions, most had been members less than a year. The principle was simple. They recruited people in large groups and put them to work at no wages. Some left as soon as they saw the work or the living conditions. Others wandered off after a few days or weeks. Maybe a third stayed at least the first month. Those that kept at it more than a few months often lasted years. The Pirates were never sorry to see someone run the road. It just meant that they had extracted that much free labor. When they needed more troops they ran an ad, rented a room, and brought in another batch. It was an ongoing process. By now thousands of people had come and gone, each contributing days or weeks or months of work.
At noon they rang a triangle and we all trooped back to the galley for lunch. The food was plain but filling, almost exclusively beans and rice. They were bought in huge hundred-pound bags in Tijuana, a truckload at a time, and one of the cook's duties was to separate out the occasional rocks, sticks, and cucarachas that found their way into the bags. The cook, as untrained as the rest of us, quickly learned the six dishes one can concoct out of rice and pinto beans. They can be served separately or together, with or without ketchup.
These uninteresting meals were eagerly awaited by the "troops" as we were called. We all seemed to be perpetually hungry, and as the meals were always "all you can eat," the quantities consumed were enormous.
At lunch we met the Chief, a tall, thin, fortyish Chicano named Art Jiminez. He'd been with the Captain since the beginning. He was a friendly, affable man, totally different from the dictatorial and humorless Captain Nash. I spent many evenings those first few weeks listening to his stories about the Pirates' history.
As I pieced it together, he and Jim Nash had been penniless friends on the waterfront of Long Beach after the war. They took any kind of work they could find, gradually picking up the skills and knowledge they would later use to train the troops. Both were determined to make a living on the sea. Eventually they saved enough to buy an old boat and set up one of the first abalone fisheries on the West Coast. At that time no Americans were eating abalone but the Japanese craved it and were paying top dollar. The two friends took their boat out to the Channel Islands and used primitive hard hat diving gear to bring up the succulent mollusks. The Chief said that in the fifties two men could bring up six to eight hundred eight-inch abs a day from the rich beds around Anacapa.
I think Chief would have been happy to spend the rest of his life as an ab diver. They owned their own boat, they were independent, they were making good money, and they were living an adventurous, open-air life with few problems. To his mind, they had made it.
Jim Nash, however, was consumed by ambition. He was a voracious reader and had a nearly photographic memory. He was a military enthusiast and had enormously detailed knowledge of the history of war. He was particularly fascinated by those few individuals who by the force of their will had dominated their ages and drawn history along in their wakes. He could tell you the minutest detail about the lives of Alexander, Napoleon, and Hitler. He particularly admired Hitler for his ability to compel obedience, though he thought him a fool as a military strategist.
Jim Nash felt himself superior to other men and he had neither interest nor patience in them. He admired leaders who could whip these sorry creatures into a nation or an army, all fanatically dedicated to working the will of their leader. He saw people as a resource to be exploited, a tool to be used by a strong and determined leader.
He didn't display the racial bigotry of a Hitler, though. There were Pirates of every race, color, and national origin. The Captain assumed all to be equally spineless until proved otherwise. He despised any liberal or humanitarian views as simply unrealistic. The world belonged to the bold, the determined, the ruthless. Democracy and justice were imaginary concepts proposed by the helpless to protect themselves from the strong, completely unworkable in the real world. He had no sympathy for weakness or indecision. I believe he never experienced a moment of doubt in his life.
Fortunately for the world, Jim Nash didn't try to form a political party or establish his own religion. But he was a naval and marine fanatic. I once heard him describe the battle of Midway, complete with its historical context and the personalities involved on both sides, and declare convincingly that that day was the pivot of the twentieth century and the direct cause of all that has followed.
His intellect and his knowledge were impressive. But that was not the source of his power. I have since read accounts by people who knew Hitler personally, and they all attempt in vain to describe the overwhelming personal aura of the man. The sheer force of his personality overwhelmed everyone who met him. Most people find that inconceivable. How could a short, unimpressive, poorly educated, rather comical-looking little man bend to his will experienced generals and political leaders, indeed an entire nation? I don't wonder at it, for I knew Jim Nash.
Whenever he and Art came in from a day of ab diving, there would always be a group of boys and young men hanging around on the docks. They were always eager to take the lines tossed to them. They would watch the unloading of the catch, admiring the diving gear, the boat, the men who led this adventurous life. I think Art and Jim loved this fawning admiration and began allowing some of the more persistent boys to help with the unloading and weighing. Some would be allowed to come aboard to rinse and clean the gear for the next day, happy to be on a boat even at this menial task.
By the late fifties, the partners were taking some of the more promising lads out to the islands with them. They taught them diving, navigation, boat handling. The boys were happy to learn and never asked for pay. They felt lucky to be so selected, and swaggered ashore, greatly admired and envied by their friends. Gradually the Pirates grew out of this strange relationship.
The phenomenon was unique to its time. The country's economy was strong. Jobs were plentiful. Large numbers of young people had the leisure to grow dissatisfied with humdrum existence. They had the time and money to hang around at the docks and watch the working men who made their living miles out at sea and well below its surface.
As the sixties began, their numbers increased. Jim and Art had regular crews they took out every day, boys who worked hard and never asked for any reward but the adventure. Jim Nash knew he had discovered a great resource to be exploited for his own ends, and the Pirates were born.
What his ends truly were I have never known. I'm not sure he knew. I think he saw himself like Captain Nemo, unquestioned lord of a secret domain, immune from the laws of nations. Above all else, he wanted to be free of the laws and bureaucracies of the little men he so despised. Working always vaguely toward that end, the Pirates entered one business after another: diving, marine salvage, military surplus, even tomato farming at one time. It didn't matter. Always there were eager volunteers ready to work for free. And always the group's resources grew. Now they owned a classic Grand Banks fishing schooner, along with two houses, a half dozen vessels, and uncounted vehicles. Jim Nash's nation was growing. And I was one of its citizens.
January passed quickly for me. The work was hard and challenging, but I found it fascinating. I knew nothing of mechanics, but every day I was learning more. I did things I never thought possible. I fixed that bulldozer and a dozen other vehicles besides. I lived in a bunkhouse with twenty other recruits and ate nothing but beans and rice. In spite of the Spartan conditions, I felt strong and healthy. So did everyone else. I can't remember any Pirate ever getting sick in the nearly two years I spent with them. For the first time in my life I felt physically competent.
Part of it was the officers' assumption that I could do something. One day Jack tossed me a set of keys and told me to go get the little bulldozer we kept up at the top of the hill. Now I hadn't a clue how to drive a bulldozer, of course. I thought he must be kidding, and said so.
"It's easy. The levers at your right hand work the blade. Try them until you see how they work. The big levers in front of you are the clutches for the tracks. The gearshift is on the left. The brakes are on the floor. The blade is the emergency brake. Raise it when you're ready to go. If it starts to get away from you, drop the blade down hard and it'll stop eventually. Try not to hit anything important."
It took me nearly thirty minutes to get that dozer down the four switchback turns to the shed, but I made it. My heart was pounding and I was shaking with fear, but I was terribly proud of myself. I felt strong and capable. For the next week or two I drove the dozer every chance I could, smoothing the roads, cutting two new terraces for more vehicles. Where else could I have gotten such an experience? A week later another green recruit got the same opportunity and he pushed the upper bunkhouse off its foundations. He washed dishes for a month but no one was very upset. Thirty of us went up there after dinner and lifted the house back onto its blocks.
The Pirates exuded confidence that they could do anything. They had a unique approach to every job. One morning we were told to move a huge winch from a marine railway, weighing several tons, up the winding dirt road to the second terrace. We tried levering it up between a forklift and the small dozer, but couldn't manage to drive up a narrow dirt road that way. So all hands were called, we lined up as close as we could all around the winch, lifted it, and simply carried it fifty yards up the road. I am no longer puzzled about how the pyramids could have been built.
At the end of my month's probation, I was promoted to Seaman First Class and allowed to make a phone call. I called my parents and asked them to come out and see the place. The next day they arrived with Bruce. They were all most amazed at my shorn head, now grown out to a good half-inch. As they went on about my changed appearance, I realized I hadn't given my hair a thought in weeks. All of us recruits looked the same, so no one made fun of me or even commented on it after the first day. Now it seemed normal. How could you work under the hood of a car with waist-length hair, anyway?
My guests also seemed taken aback at the appearance of the Ranch. "Wow, man," said Bruce. "It's like a junk yard." My mother shuddered when she saw my bunk in the squalid lower bunkhouse.
I saw the place with their eyes. Ragged, dirty boys working on broken-down vehicles; a huge dusty oil-stained yard full of wrecked trucks; a cluster of ramshackle sheds; a clapboard house. But to my eye it was all neat and orderly. My clothes were neatly folded in my berth. Every tool was in its proper place on the pegboards in the shed. The bins of car parts were all neatly sorted and labeled, everything easy to find. Every coffee mug was on its hook, every door latched back. Nothing was adrift anywhere. The Pirates were not clean, but they were orderly.
When Mom and Dad saw how happy I was, and how confident and capable I felt, they warmed to the Pirates. The troops were all friendly and polite. I was obviously accepted and well-liked, and everyone was pleased to have someone from Outside to talk to. They stayed for lunch (beans and rice with ketchup and even onions for the special occasion), and were utterly charmed by the witty and talkative Chief.
After that first visit, they came by every week or so, each time with a bag of fresh fruit or potatoes or a collection of used paperbacks. They became great favorites with the troops and my mother was nominated an Honorary Pirate.
The weeks passed. Recruits came and went, though a higher-than-usual percentage of my "class" stayed on. My closest friends were all of that same group: Red Baron, usually known as "Baron", Sansei, and a Chicano guy, Juan. Usually a class would be twenty-five to thirty guys. One or two would refuse to get on the truck, five or six more would leave when they heard the "articles," as the rules were known. One or two would leave every day for the first week or two. Perhaps eight would survive the probation period. Then the rate would go down to one roadrunner every other week. Most classes would have one or two who went on to stay a year or more, but there were many classes with no survivors after two months.
They Pirates didn't care when someone ran the road. They kept their fees and the fruits of their labors. It cost next to nothing to bring in the next bunch. The usual comment as they watched some dejected or angry figure disappear down the road toward civilization was, "There's always more 'cruits." As I came to identify with the Pirates and their ends, I saw the very hardships and discomforts of Pirate life as a necessary winnowing, the only way to find the few people who would be right for the Pirates.
By March I had been promoted to Bos'n and was well used to the Pirate lifestyle. Recruits continued to come and go, but Red Baron and Sansei and Juan were still there from my class and we were all good friends. We were each leading work gangs, showing the 'cruits what to do. I found I enjoyed leadership, and especially training the new recruits. I read hundreds of books from the Pirate library and became steeped in nautical lore. I started giving evening classes in nautical terminology and the parts of a ship.
In April Rogue came down from Summerland with a half dozen troops. One of the guys had been in the same recruiting class with Baron, Sansei, Juan, and me. We pumped him about what it was like at the Base. We learned it was very different from the Ranch. For one thing, the Base was a big three-story house with an ocean view, and the Captain, Rogue, and the Captain's girlfriend lived on the top floor. For another, experienced troops sometimes got permission to go into town in the evenings, something that never happened at the Ranch. And they had boats. There were three Pirate vessels more or less permanently moored off the Summerland Base, plus several more in a boatyard in Santa Barbara. Clearly, the Base was closer to the center of things. I determined to try to get myself transferred up there.
After dinner, Rogue told us about happenings up north. Two of the larger boats had recently been sold, and together with a few good months of sales from the Ranch, the cash flow had improved. The Captain had bought a large bus and the northern troops had just about finished fixing it up. It was basically a travelling Pirate base, with eighteen bunks, a galley and head, and a huge amount of cargo space. I was trying to visualize how a bus so fitted out could still carry cargo, but I knew better than to doubt. When ready, this bus and another would be used to begin ferrying the troops and the tons of supplies and equipment to the ship in Nova Scotia.
The new directive was to begin consolidating the California holdings preparatory to moving the whole operation to the new base in Brownsville where the ship would be based. The Chief was to make every effort to sell off everything he could. All new recruits from now on would be shipped to the Ranch to help with the work. By summer they hoped to clear the place out and sell the land. By next year they'd sell the Summerland base and we'd be in the Caribbean.
This was heady stuff. We certainly hadn't forgotten the Fairmorse up there in Nova Scotia, but it had seemed impossibly distant and unattainable. Now spring was coming and soon troops would be heading out to ready the ship for sailing. The best news for me was yet to come. Rogue said that the more experienced troops would be transferred to Summerland to sell the remaining boats and ready the buses. All of us from my class would be leaving in the morning! There were high fives all around. The younger troops looked on enviously.
The next day we piled in the back of the stake truck along with our gear and a ton or so of rice and beans, and several crates of Alas cigarettes, the appropriately-named Mexican cigarettes the Pirates supplied to the troops. We said farewell to the Chief and headed north.
We got many startled stares from the "civilians" on the road - fifteen ragged hard-looking young men in the back of a stake truck still in its camouflage colors. I'm sure we looked like revolutionaries on the way to some terrorist action. We were Pirates enough by now to enjoy the effect. We were off on a new adventure, and felt ready for anything.
The trip was long and windy, but exhilarating. For most of us it was the first time out of the compound for three months. The world seemed immense after all that time hemmed between the hills in Lemon Grove. We rolled along I-5, the blue expanse of the Pacific on our left. We waved and whistled like idiots at the girls in the passing cars. These were the heydays of miniskirts and a glorious era for men in high trucks.
Four hours later we rolled into the outskirts of Summerland and turned off highway 101 onto a suburban street climbing steeply above the sea. It was a pretty area of nice homes set among large trees. Nothing could be less like dusty run-down Lemon Grove. Soon we pulled in at a house shielded by huge eucalyptus trees. The yard was clearly Piratical. A large school bus was set into the hillside, buried nearly to the windows on the uphill side. Several other vehicles rusted in the yard amid piles of engine parts. Parked on the street below the house was a huge Greyhound bus. Everything in the yard, including the house and all the vehicles, was covered in the detritus from the gum trees - a blanket of leaves, gum nuts, and dried flowers in a soft blanket half a foot thick, softening all angles and giving it an aura of benign neglect, like a Mayan city disappearing back into the jungle.
We clambered out and entered the house on the uphill side, on the second floor. Like the house at The Ranch, its interior was painted bilious green with maroon trim. I learned later that these colors, known as Pirate Red and Dysentery Green, were specified by the Captain himself for all Pirate houses. He had gotten a lot of this paint cheap. But while the colors were familiar, the atmosphere was very different.
The third floor, known as the Quarterdeck, was off limits to everyone except the Rogue, the Captain, and his very pretty Chicana girlfriend Vera. Even the Second Officers never went up there to my knowledge. In the six months I lived at that house, I never set foot in the Quarterdeck.
The main floor consisted of the galley with its long dining table, the head, a library/archives room lined with a wonderful nautical book collection, and the common room. The walls of the common room were hung with a formidable array of weapons, from cutlasses to some very modern and scary-looking automatic weapons. Pictures and memorabilia of past adventures filled the room. A TV was in one corner, an unheard-of luxury at the Ranch.
The ground floor consisted of the yard head (a small toilet for use by those working in the yard), a garage containing all the tools and power equipment, and two tiny bedrooms for officers. The crew's quarters were in the buried bus, which incredibly enough contained twenty-eight bunks stacked four-high.
We moved our gear in and went up for dinner. The food was definitely better here. There was powdered milk, butter, and even canned fruit cocktail, all labeled as U.S. Government Commodities. I assumed it was military surplus, like everything else. The Captain never ate with the troops, but dined upstairs with Vera - on lobster and champagne, we imagined, though we never saw any evidence of it. Indeed we saw little of the Captain at all, and his orders were always relayed to us by Rogue.
The rules and routine were much the same as at the Ranch, though Rogue ran a tighter ship than the Chief. Rogue was a sharp-eyed, sharp-tongued man of about twenty-five. He had been in the group more than two years and had risen to his position by his iron will and his loyalty. He had taken the Captain's teachings to heart and believed that the way to train recruits and to achieve our goals was to drive the men to their limits, physically and psychologically. Those who couldn't take it would leave, and the ones that survived would be the stronger for it. He had no sympathy for slackers or whiners, both of which we saw a lot of as eighteen-year-old hippies, fresh from dropping out of school, encountered hard work and strict discipline for the first time in their lives.
Rogue was a great believer in discipline. I never saw him (or any other Pirate) strike one of the troops, but I winced many times as I watched him reduce some poor terrified kid to tears with a verbal dressing down. Contempt dripped from his barbed sarcasms, and when truly angry he could be terrifying. He also handed out onerous extra duty hours with a casual wave. Still, if you worked hard and followed orders without complaining, he treated you with some respect. I came to like and trust him. I believe he liked me, though he would never have said anything about it. Still, I tried hard to avoid his displeasure.
But as careful as I was, like everyone else I occasionally made some mistake and incurred extra duty hours. These extra hours could be a real burden. When you rise at six and work until after dark, then have an hour or two of required classes in the evening, it is disheartening in the extreme to have to spend two more hours washing floors, sweeping the yard, or scrubbing the heads. I know, I worked enough of them myself. If I had a lot of hours, I would try to work them off as quickly as I could, though it often meant working eighteen or more hours every day of the week.
One of the major differences about Summerland was that shore leave was occasionally permitted. No one ever left the Ranch, perhaps because it was a long walk to town and who wanted to go to Lemon Grove anyway? But we privileged few who were no longer recruits could now apply, at Rogue's discretion, for shore leave. I well remember the exhilaration of walking down the hill to the freeway one night, a free man for the first time in six months, free to do whatever I wanted until reveille the next morning.
The problem of course, was that I had no clothes but my grubby work clothes and had not a dollar to my name. Nevertheless, with dreams of love, or at least cheeseburgers, I hitch-hiked the three miles into Santa Barbara to see the bright lights. Santa Barbara was not famed for its night life, especially its free night life. I ended up spending the night folk-dancing at a local junior college. It wasn't thrill-packed adventure, but I was talking to, and even occasionally touching, live women. I would leave the wild sexual adventures to be related when I got back.
These outings became the highlights of my life at Summerland. Once when I was hitch-hiking into Santa Barbara I was picked up by a beautiful girl in skin-tight jeans and an American flag tee-shirt over no bra. Fantasies flying, I jumped in with her. We struck up a friendly conversation. She said she was going to a party at UCSB, and invited me to come along. She drove through Santa Barbara and miles beyond, to a large mansion full of students. I took it to be a fraternity house, though I never learned any more about it. The drinks were free, so I partook heavily and it went straight to my head after so many months of abstinence.
I thought I was being perfectly charming, but my goddess clearly thought otherwise and took up with a beefy, no-neck, Rugby type. I was as out of place at this fashionable party as a fart in church, and after an hour or two I found the girl and asked her when she planned to leave. She said she'd decided to go off with no-neck and I'd have to find my own way home. This at one AM and at least ten miles from Summerland. I thanked her profusely for her kindness and set out walking. I have a clear image of her standing in the brightly lit doorway, screaming "I'm sorry" while the Neanderthal stood there with his sweaty arm around her lovely waist.
It was a good thing I was so drunk, because it took me five hours to walk home along unknown streets. The trip remains hazy, but I do remember walking along a pipe suspended high above the beach somewhere in Santa Barbara. I stumbled into the yard just as the speakers mounted in the trees started blaring out our traditional wake-up music: Burl Ives droning out sea chanteys. I went straight in to breakfast and work.
Other outings were more successful. One time Bruce and Martha drove up in my old VW bus and we went out for a night on the town. We had a very heavy smoke and lay in the car and talked all night. They were solidly together now and seemed very happy. But I found I wasn't very interested in the usual talk of drug deals and Vietnam, new records and new bands, and who was sleeping with whom. I rattled on about the Pirates until Martha fell asleep. I could see that Bruce was still intrigued, but he wasn't ready. He'd gotten a job on a fishing boat and wanted to see where that would lead. We ended up all sleeping in the bus outside the Pirate compound.
Work at Summerland was much the same as it had been at the Ranch, although the ocean views and air were infinitely more pleasant than the dry dust of Lemon Grove. Then, too, there were the boats. The small fleet that had been moored off Summerland for so long were now reduced to two. One, a forty-foot albacore boat called the Sea Witch, we soon moved to the boatyard in Santa Barbara.
The remaining boat was a Marine surplus landing craft known as the R-boat (for ramp boat). It was about thirty feet long, shaped like a shoe box, and had a large square bow ramp that could be lowered to a few inches above the water. It had been decked over and had a small cabin. It was not lovely, but it made a superb dive boat. The compressors and tanks were kept inside the bow. When the ramp was lowered, divers could step right from a level platform into the sea. The Captain often talked of taking the crew out to the Channel Islands to show us how to dive for abalone, but it never happened. The closest I ever came to diving was being the demo dummy in one of the evening classes on diving gear.
One of our regular duties was to go out to the R-boat every day, pump her bilges, top up the batteries, start the engines, and scrub off the sea gull poop that had accumulated. This involved loading a very heavy twelve-foot dory on a flatbed truck, driving down to the beach, launching the boat, and rowing out through the sometimes heavy surf with the boat full of boxes of tools and spare parts.
My first time out I went with Jack, the Second Officer I had worked with at the Ranch. He and I didn't like each other. He was a skilled mechanic and carpenter, but a stupid and cruel man, an officious martinet. He enjoyed harassing those under him, and had taken a particular dislike to me. I think he sensed my lack of respect for him. I knew better than to talk back to him directly, but on several occasions uncomplimentary things I had said about him had reached his ears. Now he directed most of his petty hostility toward me, and he found every possible opportunity to do me dirt and assign me extra hours. I hate to think how many weeks of useless, menial tasks I did simply because that jerk loved to piss me off.
That first trip out to the R-boat, Jack rowed. When we reached the boat he clambered aboard and I heaved up the huge tool box. While he was down below working on the engine, I pumped the bilges and checked the anchor rode. Then it was time to wash the boat. He passed up a bucket on a rope, and I began dipping up seawater and scrubbing off the guano with a broom. The whole time Jack kept up a tirade about my personality, skills, intelligence, and ancestry. Each time I threw a bucket of water I imagined dumping it on his shiny bald head.
Still grinding my teeth in angry silence, I dipped up another bucket of water and started forward along the port side, on the narrow deck beside the cabin. Then a larger-than-usual sea tilted the boat to port. Walking as I was with a full bucket in my left hand, I listed slowly to port, toward the sea. I reached out to grab hold of something, but there were no grab rails along the edge of the cabin, just a smooth rounded wooden surface. I scrabbled wildly at it, but there was nothing to grab. For at least a half a minute I stood balanced on the edge of the boat, knowing that I was about to fall. I could have dropped the bucket and thrown myself across the cabin, but I was well aware that losing Pirate property was an offense punishable by at least a month's extra duty, and Jack would love nothing better than the excuse. Determined not to give him that pleasure, I ever-so-slowly toppled over the side.
The water in the Santa Barbara Channel is never warm, and in March is positively frigid. It felt like fire all over my skin, but I didn't cry out - nor did I let go of the bucket. Jack was working aft, so I swam around to the anchor chain and shinnied up it, the bucket painter in my teeth. If you've never tried climbing an anchor chain, you won't know what I mean. Suffice it to say it's harder than it looks, and it looks hard.
I dragged myself aboard, stripped, dried myself off, wrung out my clothes as best I could, put them on again, and continued scrubbing the boat, my teeth chattering like castanets. I hoped Jack would be busy long enough for my clothes to dry. An hour later he came out on deck and looked at me.
"You're all wet."
"Yessir," I said. "I got a little sloppy with the bucket."
"You asshole. Eight hours extra duty for being such a clumsy bastard."
In spite of this initial visit, I liked the R-boat. Not everyone was anxious to do R-boat duty, but I volunteered every chance I could. At least I was outside the compound and on the water, messing around with boats. This was why I had joined the Pirates in the first place. I also figured that the handier I was with boats, the more likely I would be chosen to be sent to the ship.
So every other day or so I found myself in a huge heavy wooden boat, pulling madly at oars longer than I, trying desperately to keep the bow into the waves before the next breaker capsized me. I knew nothing about rowing, but it was the Pirate way to let a man learn by trying, no matter how long it took.
As often as not, I arrived at the R-boat half-submerged and spent twenty minutes bailing out the dory, but gradually I got the hang of handling it and could take it out alone in all but the worst conditions. The winter storms that rip through the Santa Barbara channel occasionally throw up some awe-inspiring surf on the south-facing coast.
One such day Rogue stood at the galley window after breakfast, gazing out at the whitecaps stretching away to the line of oil rigs on the horizon, like giants slowly emigrating to Japan. I had become accepted as the best at getting the dory out in rough conditions, and I swelled with pride when Rogue asked me if I thought I could take it out that day. I wasn't about to be cautious when I had such a chance of proving my Piratical bravado and skills.
"I wouldn't want to see anyone else try it, but I could do it," I heard myself saying with considerably more confidence than I felt.
"Right. We have the new cylinder head back from the shop and I want it on by tomorrow. Take four of the 'cruits and load the dory."
I hurried down to the yard. I soon had a work party together, the dory loaded onto the flatbed, and I drove us down under the railroad trestle to the beach.
It was late in the spring now, and there were people strolling on the beach. I enjoyed the sensation we made as we drove our noisy little utility vehicle out onto the sand. The Piratical way to do things in public was to ignore the stares of the yokels and just do our job with confidence and aplomb as if the staring crowds didn't exist. I always tried to give the impression that it really was the nineteenth century and that the startled observers were the anachronism, not us. It was great fun.
On this trip I had taken four new recruits just arrived the day before, so they had never seen a surf launch. I directed them in unloading the dory and carrying it down to the surf. They looked startled and reluctant when I told them to wade out into the water, but they followed orders. They stood there chest deep, holding the dory while I loaded it with the two huge rubber bags containing the mechanics tools and the new cylinder head for the engine. I threw in the oars and clambered in.
"Take the flatbed back to Base and wait for my signal," I told the oldest-looking recruit as I shipped the oars. I trusted that he would eventually figure out the tricks of driving the little truck, with its six straight-cut gears and rear-wheel steering.
Leaving them staring after me in wonder, I leaned on the oars and drove the dory as hard as I could straight into the first breaker. The bow flew skyward as white water enveloped me. I was just thinking what a heroic figure I must make to the admiring eyes ashore, when I realized the bow wasn't plummeting down the back of the wave. In fact it was still going up. I realized that I had caught the wave perfectly for surfing and was now hurtling back toward the beach. The bow continued to rise until it was nearly vertical. I found myself staring straight down past the transom at hard dry sand. Then things rapidly became confusing. I was flying, then swimming, then bouncing on the sand in swirling sandy water.
The wave left me lying on the sand, but everything was dark. At first I thought I was either unconscious or dead. Then I realized I was under the capsized dory. Its bow and stern were driven into the sand and I was in some danger of drowning as the surf slammed me back and forth inside the swamped boat.
"Get me out of here, you damned fools," I roared, and saw the legs of the recruits gather around the boat. It's difficult to direct a rescue such as this from under a boat, especially with each wave washing all the rescuers away, but eventually I managed to get all of them lifting on the same side and I crawled out from beneath the dory. We dragged it unceremoniously to shore and righted it.
The waterproof bags were of course missing. Knowing that losing so much as a socket wrench could cost me eight hours, I could see every free hour for the rest of my life floating away with the outgoing tide. I shouted to the recruits to find the bags and plunged back into the surf.
Not quite as motivated as I, they wandered along in knee-deep water, idly scanning the sand as I plunged and blew like a dolphin out in the deeper water. Eventually, however, both bags were located further down the beach, stranded by the tide. In true Piratical spirit, I did manage to get out to the R-boat that day and installed the new head.
I was the butt of many jokes about that venture, but I think my stock went up in the officers' eyes because I got the job done anyway. Not long after that, I was promoted to Second Officer, ending for a time the constant harassment by my nemesis, Jack, who was also a Number Two.
One of the attractions of being at Summerland was that there were women
there. Besides Vera, the Captain's unthinkably off-limits squeeze, there were
two Seapersons First Class. They were as different in appearance as possible.
Tokay was a short brunette with an innocent little-girl look and a shy manner.
She had what the lingerie ads call a "full figure," quite round and busty. The
other, Gina, was tall, blonde, and as thin and flat-chested as an ironing board.
In spite of her androgynous figure, she was blessed with a dirty mind and the
sex drive of, well, of a male Pirate. She was always teasing and flirting and
telling dirty jokes.
As different as these two were, they became good friends, which was lucky as they shared one tiny room in the house. They were both assigned domestic duties - cooking, laundry, and cleaning - and complained bitterly about unfair sexist role-typing. Their complaints elicited the usual response: there's no such thing as fair.
Having the girls in the house all day made it a place of intrigue and mystery. The house was off limits during working hours, but the guys in the yard would dream up any excuse to have to go inside. The only good excuse I could ever come up with was to go in to consult the immense collection of Chilton's auto manuals in the library. These could not be taken into the yard, so as Second Officer, I made it my special responsibility to consult the manuals whenever required.
Gina would give me a wicked grin when I came up the stairs. Tokay would stand guard while Gina and I consulted the manuals together. Whatever else went on, of course, I had to return with the correct answers from the manuals, so we usually did it standing up while I read the manual over her shoulder. Fortunately, Gina was a primal woman, not needing the romantic preliminaries. It was great fun, but I still get aroused when I see an exploded diagram of a slant-six engine.
One of the jobs I liked least at Summerland was the putt-putt detail. Putt-putt was the Pirates' catch-all term for any small internal combustion engine, and they had hundreds of them - everything from lawn-mowers to cement mixers. One area of the yard was a huge heap of broken engines and assorted parts, and if nothing more pressing was required, we were detailed off to try to get a few working. I found it frustrating work, but some of the guys became experts at cannibalizing parts and getting them running. Most of the more colorful swearing could usually be heard from the putt-putt pile, but also many a cheer when some long-dead machine roared back to life.
The putt-putt pile was taller than a man and wide and heavy to match; a particularly dreaded punishment was to be ordered to sweep under it. It took a full day.
The other unpleasant job was boatyard duty. The boatyard was little more than
a crowded marine junkyard in a tough warehouse district in Santa Barbara. The
front gate of the boatyard was marked only by a hand-lettered sign reading
"Caribbean."
I assumed that some long-gone recruit had done it, figuring it was
the closest he was ever going to get to the Caribbean with this outfit.
By the Captain's orders, the boatyard was never to be unguarded day or night; so someone had to be there, chipping paint all day and serving as unarmed night watchman all night. The facilities were primitive even by Pirate standards: a four-by-six plywood shack for a house and a post-hole digger in the yard for a bathroom. The food was even worse. The Pirates had a long-standing contract with an industrial catering company. We steam-cleaned their trucks and in return every morning they dropped off a box of day-old packaged burritos at the boatyard. These stale and rubbery items, eaten cold, were the entire diet of the lucky man on boatyard duty.
Unable to stand the smells and vermin in the shack, I spent many of my nights high up on the flying bridge of the forty-foot albacore boat Sea Witch, imagining myself at the helm of a ship at sea.
Our enforced celibacy was a constant source of frustration and the most often cited reason for guys running the road. It did provide one amusing episode, however. One night as I slept in the buried school bus with twenty other guys, I was awakened by a gentle shaking of my bunk. I assumed that one of the other guys in the bunk was relieving his sexual tensions. We had all become adepts at doing this in the dark without disturbing the others. I figured this guy was just getting a little carried away. I lay there, politely waiting for him to finish so I could go back to sleep. But he went on and on, until the whole bus was rocking. Still no one else seemed to be awake or to have noticed the commotion. Finally there came a voice from the dark: "Is one of you guys jerking off, or is this an earthquake?" It turned out to be a heavily damaging temblor in San Sylmar. We must have been the only people in central California who were awakened by it and pretended to be asleep through the whole thing.
As rough and ramshackle as nearly all Pirate property was, they did have an excellent set of tools. Everything you could possibly need was available; tools for mechanics, carpentry, welding, and painting. The tools were kept in the shop under the house, and each one had a specific place. Every hand tool, down to the smallest screwdriver, had a labeled spot on the peg board that lined three walls. Each power tool was numbered and had to be checked out and returned through an officer.
At quitting time in the evening, every tool had to be cleaned, oiled, and returned to its proper place before anyone could go in to dinner. Paint brushes were carefully examined by one of the officers, and if he could tell what color paint had been used, the recruit had to clean it again.
One night when all the tools had been returned, a 12mm socket was missing from the board. Now this is a very small tool, worth about twenty cents in a second-hand store. But no one was allowed to go up to dinner until it was located. Grumbling, all thirty of us were turned back out into the yard to find that socket.
Twilight was falling, and everyone was tired and hungry after ten hours of hard work. The yard was a big place filled with a dozen vehicles, several outbuildings, and numerous miscellaneous heaps such as the putt-putt pile, the tire pile, the battery pile, and so on. The ground had been worn by so many feet for so many years that it was covered with two inches of flour-like dust that could swallow a wrench without a trace.
We checked all the obvious places first, then the unlikely places, then the impossible places. Some of the guys rigged a strainer box and started sifting all the yard dirt. By now it was fully dark. Gasoline-powered construction lights were set up in the corners of the yard. Four 'cruits sat at the putt-putt pile, picking up each engine, shaking it upside down, and placing it in a new pile. Feet were sticking out from under every vehicle, as guys ran their hands along each piece of the undercarriages. We went through that place as if we had lost the Hope diamond.
Finally at midnight, Rogue called off the search. The assumption was that one of the guys had long since discovered where he had left the socket and, unwilling to take the heat, had thrown it as far out of the yard as he could. The issue was resolved by assigning twelve hours of extra duty to every man jack there. We sat down to congealed beans and rice at one AM, and staggered off to bed at two, dreading the rousing choruses of Burl Ives bellowing Blow the Man Down at six. As far as I know, this was the only time one of these searches was ever abandoned.
One day at breakfast it was announced that we were going on a field trip. This was great. Not only a break in the monotony of seven-day weeks, but a chance to go somewhere. The Captain had often said someday we'd take one of the boats out to the Channel Islands for some abalone diving. Was this it?
Our hopes were soon crushed. It turned out that the "commodities" we were eating were not surplus, but were welfare allotments. When supplies ran low, all hands turned out and did the tour of all the regional welfare offices. We were to present ourselves one at a time and ask for food for our large families.
I and several others objected immediately. The Pirates bent every paragraph in the statutory codes every day, but this was outright fraud. Who would believe us? What would happen if we were caught?
We were assured by the Captain and the older hands that there was nothing to fear. They'd been doing it for years. This was the era of Johnson's Great Society - everyone was on welfare. It was surplus food, overproduced by subsidized grain and dairy industries. The government wanted you to take it.
Many of the troops had been more or less living on welfare commodities in the outside world, and everyone said it was as easy as could be. We'd be in and out of the office in five minutes. They never checked on your statements. Then you picked up your food and left.
It sounded easy enough, and I was Pirate enough by now to be up for a shady adventure. Besides, we were given no choice. So we all piled into the back of the biggest stake truck and drove off to the Santa Maria Welfare Office. The place looked like a DMV office, with lots of windows and hundreds of people in long motionless lines. We joined them, and after a wait I was ushered into an office to be interviewed. The clerk was a young woman not much older than I, and I was wracked with guilt as I poured out my false name, address, and the names of my six lovely kids. She looked mildly dubious, but was tediously bureaucratic as we filled out the forms together. She told me I could pick up the food out back.
Easy as that! Elated at my success, I rejoined the guys. Not one had been hassled. We drove the truck around to the loading dock and loaded the food for our hundred kids, and were on our way in an hour. We drove to Oxnard and did the same thing. If the guys on the loading dock thought it strange that the truck was already half full of commodities when they started loading, they didn't say anything. We got back to the Base in late afternoon with enough food for all of us for six months.
My assignment for a month or two was to get the Great White working. This was a huge forty-four passenger city bus built by the White Motor Company, intended to accompany the Pirate bus on trips to Nova Scotia. It was powered by an immense "pancake 12" gasoline engine under the floorboards. It leaked oil, gas, water, and compression and could never get more than 1 mile per gallon. It had no gas tank - legend said that it had been blown over the house by a troop attempting to weld a leak. To work on the engine I had to take up the floorboards, remove fifty-six extremely tight bolts, and rig a rolling crane and a chain hoist to lift off the eight-foot-long intake manifold. I gave it a valve job and replaced the rings and bearings, which required spending many days crawling in the gravel underneath the bus. All this without a shred of knowledge or experience except what I could pick up from the other guys.
Each time I put the thing together I would invariably shear off one or two of the head bolts, requiring long hours of drilling out the bolts, pulling them with the mis-named EZ-Outs, and re-tapping the holes, working with a heavy electric drill directly over my face. Every week or so I would put it together and take it out for a spin. Two or three of us would thunder down highway 101 followed by an immense cloud of blue smoke and many puzzled stares. We had a five-gallon can rigged up like an IV to drip fuel into the carb, but we never made it further than the next exit before we had to come back and wheeze up the hill to the house. Then I'd strip it all down and start over again.
The only thing I did like about the "Fucking White," as it was known, was that occasionally Gina would slip away from the kitchen and we'd spend an uncomfortable fifteen minutes screwing in the gravel under the bus. I was unchivalrous enough to let her be on the bottom in the gravel, but she never complained. She was just as horny as I, and seemed to delight in doing it right in the yard, directly under the Captain's window. Sometimes Tokay came down to watch us and stand guard.
One morning as I was pulling the manifold for about the sixth time, a suit I didn't know climbed into the bus. He was as clean and un-Piratical as anybody I'd seen in a long time. I figured he was a customer here to buy a vehicle. I got up and smiled at him, ready to direct him up to the house. He didn't smile back. I saw his eyes flick to the electric drill in my hand, like he thought I was about to draw on him. His hand went to his coat. He whipped out a wallet and flipped it open, showing me a badge.
"Sheriff's Office." he said. "You're under arrest. Come with me."
"Okay, but I have to put this drill away first."
"Leave it."
"Are you kidding? If I leave this drill adrift the Captain will have my hide."
"I'll put it away for you, kid. Move it." Against every Piratical instinct, I put down the drill and was led up to the house.
The place was crawling with cops. The troops were milling around in confusion, surrounded by at least a dozen armed guards. Scores more were examining every item in the place. Four guys were loading the commodities food onto a truck. A line of cops was carrying out boxes of files and documents from the house. The Captain, Rogue, and Vera were being questioned in the driveway.
We had become so accustomed to our life there that nothing seemed unusual. But as we watched these strangers going through the place, we started to see it though their eyes. Just why did we have all those automatic weapons? Why did we need an armored halftrack? Why did twenty-four men live in a buried school bus? And why were we all so damned dirty?
I watched the Captain. He looked so out of place standing in the hot sun, surrounded by cops and suits. He didn't even have on his peaked cap. He had always seemed so aloof and superior, sneering and disdainful of anyone lesser than he. I wondered how he was going to deal with these jerks.
In the end of course, he did what sensible people do when faced with large numbers of armed men - whatever they told him to do. He and Rogue and Vera were put into a car and driven off. The rest of us were loaded into a couple of Black Mariahs and whisked off to Ventura County Jail.
At the jail the girls were led away. We were booked, stripped and bathed, issued bright orange jail coveralls, and admitted to a single large holding tank. I figured we were goners. It would be hard to deny a semi-truckload of food at the house, and equally hard to produce the two hundred kids we'd claimed - certainly not in the time provided. What to do? I did what I always did when confronted with serious trouble. I called on a higher authority. I used my government-issued dime to call Mom.
My parents drove up the next day. Mom was by now the unofficial den mother for the Pirates, renowned at both bases for her frequent deliveries of goodies and her friendly acceptance of our strange ways. In the nearly two years I was with the Pirates, I don't believe another parent ever visited anybody else, let alone have lunch and swap stories with the troops. I think even the Captain looked forward to her visits. Now she was here to see that the authorities didn't mess with her Pirates.
There was nothing anyone could do until we were arraigned the next day. That was a show. They apparently thought we were lunatic terrorists or something, because we were put in leg irons and handcuffs and were chained together to be taken into court. We looked ridiculous, of course, and no one can walk around in leg irons without stumbling, shuffling, and looking like a very dangerous character. Mom and Dad sat in the court. I'm sure they were shocked as we were led in, but they waved bravely. Half a dozen of the guys yelled, "Hi, Mom."
Then the girls were led in. They looked scrubbed and shapeless in their baggy jail dresses, but they waved cheerily when they saw us. Gina gave me a lecherous wink and flashed me some leg. Then the judge came in and we all sat down.
They started by reading the names of the accused with the charges against each one. This took a long time, because there were a lot of us and we had a lot of names. As each name was read we all looked around to see who they might be talking about. None of us knew each other's real names, of course.
"Michael Craig Jennings, also known as The Rogue," droned the clerk. "Presenting a fraudulent claim, unlawfully taking county property, receiving stolen goods, and conspiracy. James Adelburt Hauser, also known as Fidel, presenting a fraudulent..." Fidel hung his head in shame to a few low whistles. I mean, Adelburt? The names droned on.
"Gerald Alan Jackson, also known as Jack. Gary Arthur Niwa, also known as Sansei. Josephine Tait, also known as Tokay..."
I'd never realized how suspicious and silly our Pirate names would sound when read in court. Surely anyone with an alias must be guilty of something. I was suddenly glad I'd never taken a Pirate name.
"Brian Kenneth Crawford, also known as Brian." Hey, could they do that? I'm not also known as Brian. I am Brian. Perhaps I could file for a mistrial?
The facts were soon told and we were promptly arraigned. Trial was to be in two days. Bail was set and my parents agreed to bail me out, but I decided to wait in jail with the others. Not one of them could post bail, and it seemed disloyal to stay in a motel while they were all in the slammer.
The jail stay was interesting and educational, as always. For one thing, it gave me a chance to talk with the Captain. He was having trouble trying to maintain his dignity and his distance in jail. There's nothing better for taking a guy down a peg than dressing him up in silly orange coveralls and making him take his dumps in front of twenty other guys.
By the second day he had recovered his aplomb. If he had to be stuck in the tank with us mere troops, he could at least set himself apart by telling the best stories, and he did that. I heard dozens of wildly improbable stories about the early days of the Pirates. In each story he'd drop a reference or two to something even more incredible, tossed off with "But that's another story."
In answer to someone's question about where the Pirates lived before they got the Summerland house, for example, he launched off on a four-hour story about how the Pirates had been hired by a European Count to guard him against his Mafia creditors. He'd invited the whole Group to live in his fortress-like villa on the cliffs at Montecito, where he and his lovely but debauched countess gave lavish perverted parties. The house was surrounded by a high wall and various electronic defenses, so the Pirates just had to keep a guard posted in the tower over the front gate.
"God damn!" Fidel exclaimed. "Did the Mafia try to get in?"
"Oh, once or twice," said the Captain airily, "but they were quickly sent packing by the twenty-millimeter air cannon in the tower."
"Air cannon? What's that, some kind of compressed air thing?"
"No, the cannon from a jet fighter. Awesome thing, eighteen feet long. The whole tower had to have steel reinforcing so the cannon didn't knock it down when it was fired."
"Jesus! Where'd you get something like that?"
"Well, for a while we had a few military planes out at the ranch in Nevada, but that's another story." What ranch in Nevada, I thought, but that was only one of the questions that was never answered.
"Did you ever have to use it?" asked Sansei.
"Well, one night the guard saw a rubber boat landing on the beach and figured it was the boys from the Family."
"What did he do?"
"He squeezed off a warning shot, but he didn't hit anybody. They left in a hurry."
"Was it the Mafia?"
"No, just some surfers sneaking onto the private beach for a party. Lucky for them they were spotted before they got up to the mines."
"Mines? You had the beach mined?"
"Tricky things to work with. Damn deer kept setting them off. Shrapnel ruined the meat. But that's another story."
"What did the surfers do?"
"Damned fools called in the sheriff. Of course by that time we'd buried the cannon in the courtyard and put down a new layer of blacktop. Still there, as far as I know. Soon after that the Count and Countess took a bunk to South America and we had to move out of the house. They hadn't paid us yet, so I had to send some of the troops to The Argentine to find them. But that's another story."
I assumed most of this was crap, of course, but it sure kept the troops entertained. Only later, when I became the Pirates' archivist, did I see the actual newspaper clippings of the "unexplained explosions" and pictures of the Count and Countess with the Captain at the Villa.
It quickly became clear that the welfare charges were merely an excuse to raid the Pirate house. The Summerland Pirates had been a thorn in the side of the authorities for decades, and they finally had us in their clutches. As we sat there listening to the Captain's stories the house was being strip-searched for anything illegal. Fortunately the Captain had long anticipated a raid, and every one of those terrifying-looking automatic weapons was legally documented. He had a government bill of sale for every boat and vehicle in the yards.
"We have nothing to fear," the Captain assured us. "We have done nothing except break one of their petty rules. But the rule of law is contrary to the evolutionary process. Laws are made to protect weak and stupid people, and such people do not deserve protection. The Eskimos put such people out on the ice. Americans abandoned that sensible practice, and now all those worthless people have become lawyers and seized power. But their rules do not apply to us. One day soon we will be free of them all."
He turned out to be largely right. For all their searches and investigations, no further charges were brought against us. At the trial everyone but the Captain got a suspended sentence on the grounds that we were under his Svengalian influence when we committed the crimes. As the mastermind, Captain Nash was sentenced to a month in county jail. The rest of us got our clothes back and drove home in the commodities truck. When I finally got back to the house, I found the drill right where I'd put it down in the Great White. I'd always known the cops couldn't be trusted.
Surprisingly, none of the troops who had been busted ran the road. It seemed that the experience had bound us together even more. The Captain's absence didn't have much effect on our daily lives. Rogue gave us our orders as always. With no more commodities food, we were back to the huge sacks of pinto beans and rice that Chief drove up from Mexico every few months. Other than that, life went on as before.
In the spring there was a revolution of sorts among the troops at the ship. I never got the whole story, but apparently the guys who had spent the winter fixing up the Fairmorse had decided they didn't need the Captain any more. The ringleader was a former Hell's Angel named Red who bore a disturbing resemblance to Charles Manson. One of their troops got scared by some of their wilder plans (such as taking over a small Central American country), fled the ship and hitchhiked back to Summerland to spill the beans.
Rogue and three of the senior officers left at once for Nova Scotia. Rogue returned two weeks later to report the revolution crushed. The rumor was that Red and at least one other rebel had been thrown overboard into the freezing water. Rogue was tough, determined, and unwaveringly loyal to the Captain. I would hate to see him coming after me in cold fury. His abusive and sarcastic dressings-down of his officers made me work hard to avoid them and I usually succeeded. But one time it was not possible, as I had committed the unforgivable sin - I had gone AWOL.
The Chicano family which had the misfortune to live next door to the Summerland Base included two well-developed and precocious girls of fourteen and fifteen. There was a picture of these girls in the dictionary under "nubile." They spent many an afternoon staring and giggling at all the dirty gringos working next door. With remarkable feminine intuition, the girls somehow knew we were celibate and in continual heat. They delighted in sunbathing in miniscule bikinis on their back deck, rubbing lotion on their golden skin in full view of the tormented eyes of the Pirates working in the yard. Sometimes they came down to the fence and flirted with the guys. They were only a pleasant diversion until my good buddy the Red Baron one night told me he had arranged an assignation with one of the girls. They had arranged a signal - a piece of white paper tucked into the fence meant their parents were away for the evening. I elicited his promise to take me along if the signal were given.
A few days later he came to me after dinner and showed me a slip of paper with the word 'Tonight' on it. We waited impatiently for lights out, then the two of us slipped out of the bus. We crept into the girls' yard and tapped at the door. After a few anxious minutes, the door was opened a crack and we stepped into a pitch dark house.
Oh, the joy and terror of that moment. Those young girls had been magnified in our minds, transmuted into goddesses of desire, guardians of delights we had almost forgotten. I was nervous about the meeting, as it had actually been made between the older girl and the Red Baron. I had no idea if the younger girl even knew I was coming. My fears were soon put to rest. A soft young body pressed against mine and our lips fumbled together. She led me to her room in the back of the house.
We had a delightful hour or so of petting and playing, accompanied by storms of stifled giggles and sighs. Then we were naked. It was a hot night, and our sweaty bodies slid together like wet silk. After being deprived so long and being deliberately teased and tormented by these accomplished flirts, it was heaven to actually have her perfect firm little body in my hands. Any qualms I might have felt about her age were quickly dispelled by her expert ministrations. I longed to have the lights on so I could see her.
Then the lights were on, at least in the front room. She sat up, her face white with horror. "Papa!" she hissed.
As often as we encounter the situation in travelling salesmen jokes, this was my first and only encounter with the enraged husband/father/brother. I did what so many of my forefathers have done before me. I grabbed my clothes and leaped out the window, crashing through the shrubbery to the ground. A minute later Baron was beside me. Above us we could hear angry Spanish shouting. Pants flapping over our shoulders, we ran down several blocks and threw ourselves down breathless in the high weeds of a vacant lot.
How we cursed our fortune. We were both bleeding from a hundred cuts. On comparing notes, we found that neither of us had actually consummated the act, as they say in the old books. Baron thought the girls had just been teasing us all along. My opinion was that we were victims of our generation. We had been taught that a gentleman concentrates first on the lady's pleasure. Alas, the evening was all foreplay that never did become fiveplay, for the paper never again appeared in the fence.
To make matters worse, we found when we got back that our absence had been discovered. We were brought up before a court martial the next day. We told the truth and were shown mercy for carrying out a truly Piratical raid. Nevertheless, we lost all our privileges and were assigned months of the most odious extra duties. Worse, we were busted back to Seaman Recruits. This was a particular blow to me, as it meant that Jack resumed tormenting me.
I volunteered for more-or-less permanent boatyard duty to get away from his constant petty indignities. But my plan didn't work. Activity at the boatyard was now at a high pitch and Jack was frequently in charge there.The Captain wanted both the Sea Witch and the R-boat sold by the time he got out of the slammer.
The R-boat was finally hauled out and trucked to the boatyard. Jack assigned me and some of the new recruits to clean her bottom. As she had been moored for several years, the marine growth on her bottom was several feet thick. Jack told us the stuff was easier to get off when it was fresh, so we spent twenty-four hours crawling around underneath that slimy, dripping mess, hacking at it with scrapers, hoes, and rakes. The dying mussels, barnacles, and weed dripped down over us as we worked. Soon we and the whole boatyard stank as only rotting sea creatures can stink. We buried two truckloads of the stuff. Then we scraped the R-boat down to the bare wood, primed her, and gave her two coats of bottom paint, a toxic and noxious substance that made for another nasty job.
Jack did all the interior carpentry on the boats, and I had to admit he was a wizard with wood. Boat carpentry is entirely different from land carpentry (levels and straightedges are useless, for example), and he could make the most complex three-dimensional curves with nothing but an adze and an expert eye. Soon both boats were sold, along with various whaleboats, lifeboats, buoys, anchors, and marine hardware.
The big push now was to get the Pirate bus and the big six-by-six truck ready for another trip to Nova Scotia. Work on the Great White and many other borderline vehicles was stopped. Orders at both bases were to sell as many vehicles as possible so we'd have the cash to leave as soon as the Captain got out. Every effort was made to get the ship under way during the summer. Apparently no one wanted to spend another winter in Nova Scotia. I had great hopes I would be included in this next contingent.
We were working even harder than usual, but there were fewer troops running the road. There was an air of excitement - we were finally going to be going out of the junk business and into the adventure business. The Pirate bus was finished and it looked beautiful. A bulkhead had been built right across it about halfway back. Aft of the bulkhead a half-deck or orlop had been built. Beneath were fifty-five gallon drums of fuel, oil, paint, and so forth. On top were cases of food, clothes, blocks and tackle, diving gear, and film equipment. The forward compartment had twelve very tight berths stacked four high. A galley and head behind the driver isolated the fo'c's'l, as we called the little dinette area, and made it rather snug and comfy. The bus was painted a metallic sky blue, with Quest International Film Guild painted in ornate gilt letters across the stern. We dubbed it 'Ol Blue.
Finally the long-awaited day came. The second expeditionary force was named and I was included, along with Baron and Sansei, my best friends in the Group. The down side was that Jack was to be in charge. I had worked my way back up to Bos'n now, but he continued to torment me in small aggravating ways. I was determined to get back to Second Officer and achieve immunity to his hazing.
Unlike our arrest which had made headlines all over central California, the Captain was released without fanfare or publicity. He resumed command as before. I don't know if the experience had changed him or if it was only my perception that had changed, but he never seemed to regain that air of arrogant superiority which had so struck me at first.
The last few weeks were a flurry of activity. I was constantly on the road, ferrying vehicles, troops, and supplies between Summerland and Lemon Grove. Most of the vehicles at the Ranch had been sold, with only patches of oil-stained sand to mark their passage. I brought back with me the last few members of the party that would be going to Nova Scotia.
After some creative packing, the bus was finally loaded. I think no one could have fitted so much as a playing card into the hold of that bus, so wedged was it with nautical bric-a-brac. We put aboard our ragged bedrolls and duffel bags and our grungy old coffee cups. Then we rolled down the steep hill for the last time, our comrades giving us three hearty cheers as we disappeared in a cloud of blue smoke.
We intended to drive non-stop, taking the southern route through Arizona and Texas. We cooked and ate aboard, stopping only for fuel. The bus was overloaded and it lugged appallingly when climbing hills, so we often drove on the shoulder to allow even the slowest big rigs to pass us. We covered only six hundred miles in the first twenty-four hours. At this rate it would take another week to get there.
In the afternoon of the second day the engine started to make a nasty rumbling sound. We checked what we could, but couldn't confirm what it was. Some thought it might be the transmission, others said it was the bearings. The noise continued to increase until it was a roar, then the engine coughed, jerked, and died, just outside the tiny town of Two Guns, Arizona.
There was nothing to do but pull the oil pan. When we did it was full of melted and twisted bits of metal. All the bearings were completely gone. Two of the guys walked into town to try to find some bearings and to call the Captain. The rest of us pulled the crank and cleaned it up. It didn't seem to be damaged. Jack said he'd heard that in an emergency you could use leather for bearings. We spent a day cutting up our belts, marinating them in oil, and fitting them into place. We put it all back together and started slowly.
Jack was right about one thing - leather bearings would work for a while. About one mile. Then they disintegrated, getting into the oil and plugging everything up. Now we didn't need new bearings, we needed a new engine. We spent two days at a Navajo gas station, waiting for reinforcements. Finally help arrived in the shape of Rogue and Chief, driving the Pirate Six-by-six.
The Six-by was a huge six-wheel-drive military truck with those big square fenders and the lowest gears known to man. The low end was unstoppable. In granny gear with three axles driving ten huge knobby tires, it could nearly climb a telephone pole. The high end, on the other hand, didn't exist. Fully wound out in eighteenth gear, it could barely do forty. It had formerly been a radar truck - stationary, I can only assume, and carried a big square metal box on the back with walls like a safe. Since it could carry less than half of the bus' contents, it was towing a huge green military trailer with a canvas top. It looked exactly like one of those vehicles you see grunts pushing through the mud in Burma in old war newsreels. Perhaps it was, it was certainly the right vintage.
It took fourteen men a full day to unload the bus and load the Six-by and trailer. We had no equipment at all and had to muscle the heavy stuff like fifty-five-gallon drums of fuel up over our heads into the trailer. Finally everything was stowed and secured and we were off again, leaving Rogue to wait for one of the tow trucks to come haul the bus back.
We were off again, but the days of comfort in Ol' Blue were over. The truck box was completely full and had more gear lashed on top. Four guys squeezed into the cab and six more sprawled on top of the junk in the trailer, right out in the weather. No more head or galley, either. From now on it was gas station restrooms and vending machines all the way.
We travelled like that for five more days, non-stop. We crossed the country in a long diagonal, attracting alarmed stares the whole way. It seemed that we attracted more attention the further east we got. What had been a curiosity in California became a terrorist invasion by Michigan. We intended to cross into Canada in Detroit, but the Canadian authorities didn't like the looks of us at all. To our unbounded vexation, they made us unload every item out of the truck and the trailer and open every case. We explained over and over that we were going to Nova Scotia to pick up the ship we'd bought, but it clearly made no sense to the customs men. After a day of unloading, arguing, and loading, they flatly refused to let us into the country. We packed everything back up again and returned to Detroit. This was our first experience of the warmth of Canadian official hospitality.
We circled around the southern end of the Great Lakes to try again in Maine. When we got to New England, we resolved to avoid the main roads where the authorities would be more likely to bother us. We saw some beautiful country and some fall colors going up on small roads along the coast all the way. We drove up to a small rural border crossing, just a small shack and no other houses in sight. A customs man came out of his hut, looked at the piles of barrels and crates, and waved us through without a question. We were in Canada at last.
We thought we were nearly there, but it was a long drive from Maine through New Brunswick to the northern tip of Nova Scotia. But eventually we neared our destination. Cape Breton island is connected to the mainland by the Canso Causeway, crossing the sound of the same name. One evening, ten days after leaving Summerland, we crossed the causeway, turned east along the sound, and entered the sleepy fishing village of Port Hawkesbury just at dusk. We turned into an alley and bumped down a rutted road to the waterfront. A rickety old wooden L-dock thrust out into the sound. And there at the end of it was our ship, the Fairmorse.
I'll never forget walking out onto the dock that evening. It was late, but the long lingering twilight of the north still glowed in the sky. The Fairmorse wasn't a stately tall ship, but after all we had been through to get there, she was a beautiful sight to us. She had a definite Piratical look to her - long and low and sleek, with a high bow, a low waist, and a long overhanging counter at the stern. Her hull was flat black, with a gilt sheerline and ornamental carvings around the hawsepipes. Jack swung aboard and hammered loudly at the scuttle door.
"Roust out there, you swabs," he shouted, "and pipe us aboard."
A half-dozen scruffy men tumbled up the ladder and we all stared curiously at each other. One or two I had met, but most had been on the ship most of a year, ever since the putting down of Red's mutiny the summer before. We newcomers were physically and mentally exhausted from the long drive, and we also felt uncomfortable with these men who had been living and working on the ship all this time. Even though I'd been in the Pirates over half a year, I felt like a new 'cruit again. They welcomed us aboard civilly but not warmly. I wondered if they resented us coming aboard to sail the ship after they'd spent so long working on her.
We all went below. When we reached the foot of the wooden ladder, it took a few minutes before we could see anything in the gloom. Forward was a low, dark, smoky room, the fo'c's'l, lined with a double tier of bunks on either side of a long triangular table that occupied all the floor space. Just abaft the ladder was the galley, dominated by an immense Diesel stove. We threw our gear into unoccupied bunks and sat down at the table. We drank some scalding black coffee from a big kettle steaming on the stove. We yarned for a while, we newcomers listening avidly to these seasoned hands talking about the work they'd accomplished, and we told them of our adventures on the drive out. Finally, exhausted, we climbed into our berths and fell asleep listening to the ripples lapping at the hull. I was on the ship at last.
I was awakened by the same dolorous Burl Ives sea chanteys that had awakened me every morning for the last six months. A door banged open and a heartless voice bellowed. "Drop your cocks and grab your socks, boys, there's work to be done!" As I lay there with eyes still closed, savoring the last wisps of erotic dreams, I suddenly remembered where I was. It wasn't just another day in the yard, fixing putt-putts and changing tires. I was on the ship! I sat up, eager to get started, and thumped my head on the bunk above, only twelve inches away. I peered aft down the long dark tunnel of the fo'c's'l. A dozen men grunted and swore and clambered over each other, trying to pull on grease-stiffened jeans while standing on one foot on the glassy varnished bench. Their writhing figures were silhouetted against a ruddy glow - the massive twelve-foot long stove was glowing red as forty pancakes sizzled together. Steam and rank Diesel smoke filled the galley, twisting up the ladder to be sucked out into the square of brilliant white sun framed by the scuttle. I joined the dance and soon we were all elbow to elbow at the long triangular table. It was so narrow where I sat at the forward end that the heavy boots of the man opposite rested directly on my stocking feet. Plates heaped high with pancakes kept appearing from the clouds of steam in the galley, but too many were empty by the time they reached me. I watched my neighbors wolfing down pancakes soggy with corn syrup (Welfare commodities, I noticed with a shudder). It occurred to me that already I had learned two valuable lessons about life on the ship: always sit at the galley end of the table; and do not lie abed of a morning. One more minute with Sophia Loren cost a man a lot of pancakes.
Then we all turned in our plates to the KP detail and filed up the ladder. As I came blinking into the sun, Jack beckoned me over. I stepped forward smiling, eager to get started at last on the ship. "Brian," he said, "I talked to the Captain last night. He wants the Six-by and trailer back as soon as we can get 'em unloaded. We'll leave tomorrow."
My smile vanished. After that trip out, I had to do it all over again while everybody else got to stay on the ship? By the time I got back, they'd all be veterans and I'd be the new guy all over again. But a Pirate did not question orders, and it wouldn't have done any good anyway. So I went about organizing a crew to begin the unloading. As Bos'n, I was nominally in charge of cargo handling and stowage, but I let one of the experienced hands run the winch. I supervised the crew in the hold, stowing and lashing the gear into place.
In daylight, the Fairmorse was not quite as romantic as I'd first thought. She was rough and dirty and showed the scars of fifty years of hard use and five of total neglect. Her sides were scored and peeling and streaks of rust ran down from every metal fitting. In spite of her sailing heritage, she was now only a very small run-down wooden freighter, left from an age that had died before we were born.
But she was clearly a thoroughbred. She'd started life as a Grand Banks fishing schooner and still had the beautiful flowing lines of a working sailing ship. The original after cabin protruded only two feet above the deck to allow for the swing of the mighty eighty-foot boom, now long gone. Her immensely long foredeck swept up and up to a high prow, but the deck was crowded with huge pieces of ancient rusty machinery.
It took us the whole day to unload the truck and trailer and stow the gear. The next morning, I started back to San Diego at thirty-five miles an hour. The trip was uneventful in the extreme, and when I thankfully rolled through the gate at the Ranch, I had lived in that Six-by longer than I had in several apartments. Then we had a frantic week of shuttling back and forth to Summerland, assembling the second load of gear. 'Ol Blue had been repaired, and a crew of eager volunteers was already packing her to the gills again. Her Destroyer Escort, as it were, was to be Da Chevy, a massive '61 V-8 Impala with a serious skin condition. We loaded it up until the fenders occasionally scraped on turns, said our farewells, and headed out.
A half hour out, Da Chevy had a flat in Ventura and we had to go back to Summerland and start over. It was an inauspicious start to another ill-fated trip. That evening in El Centro 'Ol Blue went comatose when the generator blew up. We spent the night outside a junk yard, bought a roughly similar generator in the morning, and started off again. Fifty miles later it too burned up. We put in a brand new alternator system and got to the snow country near Flagstaff. Then the propane stove system started leaking and I spent several wretched hours lying in a freezing puddle under the bus, dropping crescent wrenches on my face and working on my language skills.
I was the only one aboard who had been on the Fairmorse, and they all pumped me endlessly about what she was like. I played the old salt the best I could from what I had seen in one day. My descriptions were accurate but restrained. I didn't want to discourage them, but I didn't want them all running the road as soon as they clapped eyes on her either.
The brakes ceased to exist while driving in city traffic in St. Louis, leading to a careening bus, no doubt amusing for those bystanders not leaping for their lives. We got it stopped and spent a half a day fixing the brakes. They went soft again in Columbus and we worked on them all night in a truck stop in the rain. Da Chevy's hood blew off on the Pennsy Turnpike and we secured it with a very nautical lashing of new sisal line around the front end of the car.
The season advanced rapidly as we wended north. The autumn glories of New England only reminded us that time was wasting for a passage to the Caribbean this year. Finally, seven days out on a stormy passage, we rattled down the cracked pavement to the Fairmorse, as strange a procession as Port Hawkesbury had seen. It was October 22. After a month of driving, I was aboard ship again.
I took the bus to Tyler, Texas, and spent some time on the ashram with Jim and Mary Ann, then they drove me to San Diego. We got jobs working on heavy equipment and I made enough to go to Tonga to see my brother Gary. There I met and fell in love with Linda Brooks, now my wife. I sailed from Tonga to Fiji and the New Hebrides, then on to Australia and down the coast to Tasmania. Eventually Linda and I returned to the States and settled down.
My parents died in the collision of two jumbo jets in the Canary Islands in 1977.
My old buddy Bruce had gone to sea on his own and was a sort of hippie Indiana Jones. For some years he had been second mate on a schooner engaged in furthering international commerce, mostly between Thailand and certain out-of-the-way coves on the California coast. He spent some time living in Tierra del Fuego, flying an ancient DC-3 to Antarctica, followed by an interesting stint in a Chilean prison ("medieval" was how he described the conditions). Now he's docking oil tankers in Long Beach.
Tokay and Gina, the Pirettes from the Summerland Base, visited me at my parents' apartment in San Diego where we had a very memorable threesome. Tokay later wrote my parents a very polite bread-and-butter thank you note for letting them both ball me in their guest room. I saw Gina at her place in Los Angeles a year or two later. I never heard from any of the other Pirates.
Many years later Linda and I passed through Long Beach and stopped in to see what remained of the Pirates. The Chief was there, supervising a gang of a dozen dirty-looking street kids working on wrecked cars, boats, and marine salvage in a sun-baked, oil-soaked lot. It looked like any of a thousand other run-down marine hardware yards along the grimy industrial streets of Long Beach. They weren't called the Pirates anymore, but Packard Enterprises (the Chief had always been partial to Packards - he loved the hood ornaments). He greeted us warmly but hurried us away from the boys in the yard. He took us into his office and closed the door before we talked. We reminisced for a while, but it was clear that he didn't want me regaling his employees with tales of the old Pirates, certainly no mention of the shadier activities. They knew nothing of the group's history.
None of the other Pirates I had known remained. Russ had stayed with the ship a long time, much of it tied up in a bayou in South Florida, but then he too had left. Rogue had taken a job in Mexico as captain of a ferry running tourists from Cozumel out to a dive resort at Glover's Reef. The Chief didn't know what had happened to all the others.
The Captain was dead, shot by an irate roadrunner on the street outside the Summerland house. The Pirates were a unique organization because Jim Nash was a unique man. Without his leadership the group had lost its driving force. I had the impression that the Chief was carrying on only because it was the only thing he knew how to do.
And the Fairmorse? They had reached the Caribbean at last and gotten her all fixed up. One clear calm day they were motoring north a mile or so off the east coast of Cozumel in Mexico. Suddenly there was a crash and the ship came to a violent stop. Everyone poured out on deck, but there was nothing to be seen. The engines were still running and the wake still boiled out astern, but there was no bow wave. She was motionless in the water, as if an invisible hand had seized the ship. Then the water in the bilge started rising. They opened the hold and found a steel mast protruding through the bottom.
She had struck at the very top of a swell and come down right over the unmarked wreck of a shrimp trawler. She was settling slowly, just faster than they could pump. They couldn't plug the leak, cut off the wreck's mast, nor run her ashore. Eventually they loaded their belongings and the electronic gear into the boats and rowed to shore. They reached the beach safely and soon struck a road. Many hours later a truck came along and offered to give them a ride into a town, and all the driver demanded in exchange was the boats and all their contents. The Pirates were forced to accept the offer.
As they piled the last of their gear into the truck, someone called out and they all turned and looked out to sea. All alone and far from her home on the Grand Banks, the impaled Fairmorse settled beneath the azure tropical sea.