masthead where he was perched on the old automobile seat that served as a lookout. He was scouring the ocean for telltale signs—a surface break, or a darkened patch, like the shadow of a cloud, indicating a school of baitfish.
‘What do you say we anchor up and try chunking them?’ called the Senator to the bridge.
They’d come prepared with a tub of mashed menhaden chum, but Chase wasn’t ready to start heaving it over the side.
‘They’re out there, I can smell ‘em. And the troll bite’s been holdin’ up good all season.’
‘Did he say he can smell them?’ asked Penrose senior.
Manfred Wallace blew out his cigar smoke. ‘He doesn’t mean it literally.’
‘Don’t be so sure,’ said Conrad.
Manfred Wallace didn’t appreciate the comment, or the tone. It rankled him, though not enough to warrant a response.
‘I don’t know,’ called the Senator to the bridge. ‘My guess is they’re settled in.’
Chase didn’t reply. He didn’t need to. The fish did the talking for him. The water just behind the Senator’s bait erupted in a blur of blue and bronze.
‘Holy shit…’
The Senator’s reel came to life, whirring to a mist as the tuna made a blistering run to starboard. Chase eased the throttle forward to set the hook, then spun the wheel hard and opened it up.
Conrad seized the back of the Senator’s chair, turning it to keep the fish lined up. The others gathered round, staring, mesmerized by the sheer speed of the fish—a hundred yards, two hundred…
‘Look at it go,’ said Manfred.
‘It’s not going anywhere,’ said the Senator.
The bluefin stripped two hundred and fifty yards off the reel before sounding.
‘You get a look at it?’ asked the Senator. ‘All I saw was the hole it left.’
‘I don’t know,’ said Conrad. ‘Not a giant. Maybe fifty pounds.’
‘Seventy,’ called Chase.
Either way, the Senator was right—it wasn’t going anywhere, not attached to a hundred-pound test line. It was simply a matter of cranking it in, something the Senator was clearly quite capable of doing. Twice Conrad spotted him back off the drag on his reel, allowing the fish to make another rush. This was done for the benefit of the spectators, to make him look good—man and fish locked in battle.
It was all over in ten minutes, the fish alongside the boat. Conrad gaffed it under the chin and Rollo secured a strap around its tail. Together they hauled it up over the gunwale. It flopped on to the deck, its flanks flashing iridescent blue in the sunlight, grading through bronze to the silver of its belly.
‘Poor thing,’ said Gayle Wallace.
‘It’s your daddy I’m after,’ said the Senator.
‘Bait off the port bow,’ called Chase.
Conrad hurried aloft. In the distance, birds were flocking, with more arriving by the second.
‘Big school of bait comin’ up fast.’
‘What do you think’s driving them?’
‘Well, it ain’t lobsters,’ grinned Chase, edging the throttle forward.
As they drew closer Conrad said, ‘Jesus.’
‘Even he couldn’t walk on that lot,’ muttered Chase.
The surface of the ocean was churning with life. And death. Gannets and gulls swooped and slammed on to the water from above, snapping up sparkling baitfish, while hundreds of frenzied school tuna flashed to and fro, their distinctive sickle fins scything through the chop. Every now and then one would break clear of the water in its eagerness to kill, jaws snapping at the silver mist of baitfish leaping before it. There were other fish present too, striped bass and bluefish, both fearsome hunters, and also ready to take to the air for their prey, but no match for a speeding bluefin. A couple of sharks lazily patrolled the fringes of the melee, biding their time, allowing the tuna to tire themselves out.
It was as if two invisible hands had corralled all living creatures from the surrounding waters into five acres of ocean and ordered them to fight it out amongst themselves. Conrad had once seen a school of large stripers rip through a pod of menhaden—and a shocking spectacle it had been—but he had never witnessed anything on this scale, the whole savage cycle of life in the ocean laid bare for human eyes.
And in that moment, staring down from the flying bridge, Conrad saw himself reflected back: blind, raging, unmerciful. Inhuman, but not unfeeling. That was the worst of it, what marked men out, their curse—the clean, sweet taste of vengeance, the deaths of those you had known atoned for on the altar of the battlefield, their lives memorialized in the letting of yet more innocent blood.
‘Well?’ said Chase.
‘Huh?’
‘I said best go ready them rods.’ He spat a stream of tobacco on to the boards at his feet. ‘And the idiots what’s holdin’ ‘em.’
The