The Sea Runners - Ivan Doig [46]
"Moonbeams must have got into me," Karlsson offered, vastly embarrassed.
"I can believe this place sends a man lopsided," said Melander. "Let's get back to the beach before I go chasing raindrops myself."
Melander discovered from the summit that the arc of beach continued some miles northeastward, to Hecate Strait. This intelligence turned into taunt, however, by the time he and Karlsson returned to the campsite. Wind was pushing in off Kaigani. Not wanting a repeat of the crossing they just had endured, the canoemen sat to wait out the bluster.
***
And the wind stiffened. By the afternoon, there were roars of air, A sky-filling sound like that of vast flame. The wind itself seemed cross-purposed, now in great speed to one direction and the next moment whooshing hack. Kaigani meanwhile turned ice-gray, with slopes and pools of foam everywhere on it.
When firewood was needed the men went out from the shelter in pairs, one to gather, the other to watch against widowmakers flying down out of the shore forest. Often a gust slammed so hard a man had to bend his knees to stay upright.
For three days of this blow they held to the site—gaining no distance, which Melander knew was the same as losing it.
During a lull, Braaf scuffed a boot against something in the sand, close by where the other three sat sheltered. A dead loon, its bill thrust ahead like a bayonet, one checkered wing stiffly cocked a bit as though readying to fly, the rest of the body beneath the beach surface.
"Buried as Bering," said Melander.
"Means what?" queried Braaf.
"It's something the Russian navy men say. Bering was a skipper, an old sir, first one into the islands up where the Aleuts come from. He was sailing in the tsar's hire, a ship called the Saint Peter. A true Russian vessel, leaky as a basket. Somewhere up there among the Aleuts they got themselves wintered in. Those islands haven't a whisker of timber, so Bering and bis crew dug into sandhills, pulled over sail canvas for roof, Lived in burrows like lemmings, aye? Lived till they died, at least, and then, the Russians tell it, foxes would come into camp and gobble the bodies. Bering himself took frail and they laid him in one of the dugouts. Sand caved down over his feet, but he wouldn't let the crew dig it away. Said it kept him warm. Then sand over his knees. Still wouldn't let them dig. Then up to his waist. Next his belly, just before he died. Very nearly all in his grave before the last breath was out of him. So, buried as Bering, a Russian'll say to feel sorry for himself."
"How about melon-headed as Melander?" Wennberg suggested. "Do the Russians say that one, too?"
Melander cut a quick look at Wennberg. His sarcasm notwithstanding, the broad man did not seem to be in the brownest of his moods.
"Wennberg, Wennberg. Always ready to bone the guff out of me, aye? Tell me a thing, how do we come by this honor of having you in our crew? What sugar was it that kept you on at New Archangel past your years?"
Wennberg studied the tall leader. Then he spat to one side and muttered: "Serving for Rachel,"
Melander tugged an ear. "Lend us that again?" Karlsson and Braaf also glanced over at Wennberg.
"'Laban had two daughters: the name of the elder was Leah, and the name of the younger was Rachel. Leah was tender-eyed, but Rachel was beautiful and well favored. And Jacob loved Rachel, and said, I will serve thee seven years for Rachel.'" Wennberg broke off his recital and spat again.
Melander and Braaf and Karlsson stared at him.
"Never heard Genesis before?" Wennberg resumed. "Doesn't surprise me, you'd all be off diddling squirrels instead of—"
"Wennberg a Bible-spouter!" Braaf looked genuinely shocked.
The blacksmith shifted uneasily. "My family were church-strong. So's I, when I was a young fool."
"This Rachel matter," Melander pursued. "It sounds more like a sweetmeat for Karlsson than for you."
"Judas's single ball, Melander, can't you tell a goddamned saying when it comes out anybody's