playing figurines spilled out, wizards and sorcerers clattering across the cobbles at his feet. Fluttering after them came a pack of gamer's witching cards: pentagrams, spells, reverse prayers, devil's circles. With a cry and a curse, Wopner stooped to pick them up.
Clay stepped outside, once again shutting the door carefully behind him. He stepped off the porch and into the street, took one long look at the plastic figurines and the cards, then hurried up the lane without another word.
Chapter 22
The following day was cool and damp, but by the end of the afternoon the drizzle had lifted and low clouds were scudding across a freshening sky.
As usual, Neidelman had come up with a simple, but elegant, plan. While the cargo vessel was dispatched to Portland for cement and building materials, Bonterre had mapped out the exact lie of the ancient pirate cofferdam, taking samples for later archaeological analysis. Next, divers had poured an underwater concrete footing directly atop the remains of the old foundation. This had been followed by the sinking of steel I-beams into the footing. Hatch stared at the enormous beams, rising vertically out of the water at ten-foot intervals, forming a narrow arc around the southern end of the island. From his vantage point, he could see Streeter in the cab of the floating crane, positioned near the barge and just outside the row of steel beams. A massive section of reinforced concrete dangled from the crane's sling. As Hatch watched, Streeter maneuvered the rectangle of concrete into the slot formed by two of the I-beams, then slid it home.
Once it was securely in place, two divers unhooked the slings. Then, Streeter deftly swung the crane around toward the barge, where more sections of concrete were waiting.
There was a flash of red hair: Hatch could see that one of the deckhands on the barge was Donny Truitt. Neidelman had found work for him despite the delay in draining the Pit, and Hatch was pleased that Donny seemed to be working efficiently.
There was a roar from the floating crane as Streeter swung it back toward the semicircle of beams, slotting a new piece of concrete into place beside the other.
When the cofferdam was finished, Hatch knew, it would completely enclose the southern end of the island and the flood tunnel exits. Then, the Water Pit and all its connected underwater works could be pumped dry, with the dam holding back the sea—just as the pirates' cofferdam had done 300 years before.
A whistle sounded, signaling quitting time; the crew on the barge began throwing tie-downs over the stacked sections of cofferdam, while the waiting tugboat came in out of the offshore mist to tow the crane toward the dock. Hatch took a final look around, and turned back down the trail toward Base Camp. He stopped in at his office, collected his bag and locked the door, then headed toward the dock. He'd have a simple dinner at home, he decided, then head into town and look up Bill Banns. The next issue of the
The mooring at the safest section of the reef had been enlarged and Hatch given a berth. As he started the engine of the
'Need a lift?' Hatch asked.
'How did you guess?' Bonterre replied, tossing her bag into the boat and jumping in. 'I am already sick of your ugly old island.'
Hatch cast off and heeled the boat around, easing it past the reefs and through the inlet. 'Your tummy healing up?'
'There is a nasty scab on my otherwise beautiful stomach.'
'Don't worry, it's nothing permanent.' Hatch took another look at her dirty coveralls. 'Making mud pies?'
Bonterre frowned. 'Mud . . . pies?'
'You know. Playing in the mud.'
She snorted a laugh. 'Of course! It is what archaeologists do best.'
'So I see.' They were approaching the thin circle of mist, and Hatch throttled down until they were clear. 'I didn't see you out among the divers.'
Bonterre snorted again. 'I am an archaeologist first, a diver second. I've done the important work, gridding out the old cofferdam. Sergio and his friends can do the labor of the beasts.'
'I'll tell him you said that.' Hatch brought the boat through Old Hump Channel and swung it around Hermit Island. Storm-haven harbor came into view, a shining strip of white and green against the dark blue of the ocean. Leaning against the fantail, Bonterre shook out her hair, a glossy cascade of black.
'So what is there to do in this one-horse town?' she said, nodding toward the mainland.
'Not much.'
'No disco dancing until three?
'I admit, it's a difficult problem,' Hatch replied, resisting the impulse to return her flirtations.
She looked at him, a tiny smile curling the corners of her lips. 'Well, I could have dinner with the doctor.'
'Doctor?' Hatch said, with mock surprise. 'Why, I suppose Dr. Frazier would be delighted. For sixty, he's still pretty spry.'
'You bad boy! I meant