|   The Benbow Cafe  looked out on the harbor like an ancient seagull facing the wind.  MaryAnn was the only waitress, been there  since the sea came in from the ocean.   The old cook, Luther, had been a Merchant Marine seaman.  All he could do was flip over eggs and  burgers, so the Cafe wasn't on anybody's healthy eats list.  But then the men who came in liked it that  way - beer and grilling keeps America strong, least that's what Luther said.The harborside was a gathering of boat  designers and small-time builders trying to squeeze out a living where they  wanted to live.  The harbor was beautiful  if you liked overhanging trees and wooden ships and plank walkways along the  wall.  In his wood framed shop Nick  Bukopolis sold tackle, fishing gear, anchors and sails and all manner of ship  stuff hanging from the walls and the ceiling.   Sitting up on the shelves were old dusty models of clippers and  whalers - he would have had a pirate's beard but his wife wouldn't let him.  He could talk to men who worked on the sea,  so they made a passable living.
 Down the street Barclay and Sons still tried  to stay in the wooden boat building trade.   They'd been here since they made Whitehalls and lifeboats for the  whalers and coastal fishing schooners.   Those high masts were long gone except in postcards, so Barclay had to  specialize in tenders and dinghies and prams.   All they could do was dress up these little tubs to look like big  ships.  That seemed to work for the  tourist crowd, but not the working man's lot.   The men who fished only cared for what would make their work easier,  what would keep them out of trouble.  So  in the winter Josh Barclay designed and built fishing boats and an occasional  lobster boat.
 Maury Steeples came in the Cafe around 2 in  the afternoon.  A quiet man, he sat at  his usual small table by the window.  He  did more staring out the window than talking, so MaryAnn knew to bring his hot  black coffee, steaming like a stevedore.   He put down the money for the coffee without looking up.  He was turning over in his mind a new  commission for a yacht, whether he should take the money or not.  Maury was like a few of the old men, he lived  on a 35-footer he had built years ago, so he didn't really need so much money.  It was more about what he wanted to do when  his grandkids were not all over his boat.   He'd often say, 'It's really about what do I want to do last in my  life.'  Nobody answered that, it was  almost a tradition here that you don't get buried, you go out to sea in a small  boat and don't come back  A few of the  men knew he took painkillers for his spine; they didn't want him thinking too  much about what comes last in a man's life...
 Maury unfolded a piece of drawing paper,  thick enough to crinkle open.  With a  pencil he drew a few lines on it, sweeping the pencil along the paper's length  for one side of a boat, then the other side the same.  He stared out the window, like he was looking  through a spyglass to an earlier time.
 Josh came in, sitting a few tables away from  Maury.  They'd known each other for 40  years without being close friends.  Josh  had gone on down to New York to work in shipyards, Maury stayed here to  fabricate metal hardware for the Navy.   Josh liked noise and men all around him working, Maury liked the silence  of thought.
 Josh said looking for MaryAnn to come over,  'What you got, Maury, a boat that'll fly?'   He laughed.
 But Maury didn't.  'Not yet.   A dinghy.  Nine feet, to sail and  row.'
 'You know it's gotta be one or the other, you  know that,' Josh said when MaryAnn came over with Josh's usual split pea soup  with cheese and beer.
 'Compromise,' was what Maury said to himself.
 'Ain't no such thing anymore.  Either it does one or the other.  Especially now that the Coast Guard has more  rules than Carter's got Little Liver Pills.'
 Maury looked straight at Josh.  'That's what folks want.'
 'They don't know what they want, nobody knows  boats nowadays.  They think it's a  plastic toy for your tub.'
 'No argument there, but still they pay  greenback dollars.'
 'You don't need the money,' Josh said,  halfway hoping Maury would turn the job down so he could get it.
 'Gonna do it, anyway,' Maury said with a  firmness in his voice, looking at Josh.   He knew what Josh was thinking.
 'It don't matter what you design, folks  nowadays'll slap a motor on the stern, toss the bow up in the air an' take  off.'
 Maury knew this, but he didn't care.  He didn't do motorboats unless they were 25  footers with a cabin and such.  He drew a  few more lines.  Just then another one of  the boys, Ned String came walking between Maury and Josh, leaning over to see  what Maury had, then he took his usual seat down there by the other  window.  The afternoon was getting  on.  Ned had gone over to fiberglass,  even though it was as messy as a syrup factory.   Still Ned said he could cure up a boat in three or four days, be off for  the weekend, and still make his payments.   Ned had been a boy in the old shipyard days when men worked six days,  then came in after church to clean their tools, making practically nothing for  their effort.  He'd never go back to  that.
 Ned sat down.   'New one, Maury?'
 'Yep.   New one, sail and row dinghy,' Maury said.  'About 9 feet.'
 Ned could be cantankerous but he knew Maury  had never left the old days.  He said  without inflection, 'You know at 10 or 11 feet they're twice as good  performing.'
 'The guy specified 9 feet,' Maury said, a bit  irritated.
 Ned said, 'Must be a tender.  Trouble is, you can't draw the bow you want  to, ain't no room for an afterrun, an' you have to have a long skeg - you end up  with a tub.  Part this and part  that.  Might as well build a box with  sloping ends.'
 Josh laughed.   'Now you know a box with sloping ends ain't gonna get any rave  reviews.  But you can always find some  sucker an' say, 'Oh she'll do it all - row, sail, and motor - the perfect dinghy  right here at your disposal.' '
 Ned said, 'You'd say that Josh.'
 MaryAnn laughed at them, sitting off in her  own corner.  She knew these three weren't  gonna eat much.
 Josh countered, 'I like a beautiful boat, no  matter what it does or can't do.  If I'm  gonna look at it all day, I want it to be worth looking at.  To me, that's all sheer.'
 Ned said, 'But what's a sheer?  We're not dragging nets over the side, you  know.  A little 8 footer looks just as  good with a straight sheer, more buoyancy when you heel, more room, more  comfortable in bad weather.'
 Maury finally spoke up.  'If you've got some flare you oughtta have  some sheer.  But Ned's right, some height  to the topside makes the crew more comfortable, so they'll use the boat  more.  No flare and no topside means the  boat'll just sink in the waves too much.   You'll be touching Davy Jones Locker with your whisker pole.'
 'An' in a dinghy,' Ned said, 'you can see the  whole sheer at once.  Bad sheer, bad  career, I say.'
 Then in came David Somerset.  He designed yachts for the wealthy, so he was  wearing a suit and tie.  He liked to  listen to the talk in the cafe, sometimes leaving a few hours later without  saying anything.  He was consummately  polite, but no personal touch.  He'd  never worked with his back like Ned and Josh.   He spent his life at a drawing board or in drawing rooms.  He came to the counter where MaryAnn stood  for him.
 'I'll have the cheese sandwich,' he said  smiling with that absent manner.
 MaryAnn gave the order to Luther, who turned  to get to work.  Soon Somerset heard the  crackling of the cheese and bread on the grill.
 Josh turned to Somerset, several tables away.  'Say, have you ever designed a little  dinghy?'
 'Not of my own.  I always look at previous ones, adjust them  to the client and be done with it.  It's  too hard to make a little boat look good and move well at the same time.'
 Josh and Ned didn't answer that right  away.  What Somerset said made sense,  even if they weren't expecting it from a yacht club dweller.
 Maury looked up at Somerset.  Maury was a practical man but an independent  one; Somerset knew his own crowd and he was loyal to them.  They envied each other secretly.  They had exchanged letters without ever  saying so.
 'He's right,' Maury said looking down at his  drawing.  'Hard to do.'
 Ned said, 'But you know what, if you're a  fisherman with 100 pounds of catch an' your own weight, a flat-bottomed dinghy  will get you home through the chop...round bilged won't do that.  They look classy but if your livelihood  depends on it, a thick flattie will do the job.   What you'd want is buoyant ends, long waterline, wide at the beam, lift  at the stern.  But you don't get any of  that in a dinghy; if it isn't 12 feet.   You just can't do it.'
 Maury said, 'A dinghy has to have full ends,  rocker, and stability.  Otherwise you'd  get tossed.  Deadrise came about so you  could get volume without adding width or length.  It makes a dinghy sit deeper, but you get a  safe boat that'll still fit on the deck of a ship.'
 Ned said, 'That's why they have prams; plenty  of volume with square ends without too much length or width.  A pram won't win a beauty contest or a race,  but it'll give you stability in a small size.   Beyond that, all you can do is change the bottom.'
 Everybody knew Josh was gonna talk about  flat-bottoms, which he loved.  He said,  'Thing is, with a flat-bottom you can beach her, get out of her without  swimming lessons, and row in shallow water.   Just the thing around here.  I  don't see how Somerset or anybody would ever want a lapped dinghy, anyhow.'
 David turned to Josh.  'It's only because I'm getting paid to give  the client what he wants.  I don't see  that as a compromise.  My designs are  strictly pleasure and racing, anyway.  My  clients, they don't work for a living but they have the funds to keep  boatbuilders working.  I see it as the  rich creating the demand so good men can work and take care of themselves.  It's a circle of benefit.  What's wrong with taking care of your family  the way that you can?'
 Maury got between Josh and Somerset.  'You can approximate the turn of a bilge  somewhat with rocker and flare.  On a 10  foot waterline, performance would be about the same, anyhow.  But you have to have some rake to the  stem.  If you do, the flare takes care of  itself.  I like to think I design from  the stem along the waterline to the stern.   By the time I get there, the thing is done.  Still you have to have freeboard, you have to  have room for thwarts and seats and such.'
 'Yeah, well,' Ned said, 'that sounds all very  cute but I've seen some of your dinghies with the thwart too low and the  oarlock too far back.  That one Cutie  Pie, only an octopus has arms long enough for that oarlock position.  I say oarlocks 9 inches behind the thwart,  an' that skeg was so small a mouse couldn't hide behind it.  You can't tow a dinghy without a skeg at  least two feet long and one foot deep, otherwise it ain't a skeg it's a  midget's nose.'
 Well, Maury got up.  He put his drawing in his pocket so no one  would see what he had.  When he stood up,  it was like time to turn the record over.   Everyone took to eating what they had, not talking.  Josh left, mumbling he had work to do.  David then finished his cheese sandwich,  leaving his usual tip and returning to the yacht club.  The sun was coming down, casting long shadows  upon the harbor like a blue watercolor.
 The next Monday,  MaryAnn saw the boys coming in.   Snickering to herself she thought, they loved a pile of lumber more than  they do people.  She couldn't understand  this.  That lumber, it doesn't talk, it  can't make you dinner, it can't love you back.   Such fools, no wonder the young girls go off to college.Maury was there at the Cafe.
 MaryAnn said, 'You ol' boys, I bet you love  boats more than your own kids.'
 Maury said, 'I won't deny it.'
 MaryAnn and Luther and a few of the regulars  at their tables chuckled.  When David Somerset  came in, he didn't know what they were talking about so he just laughed with  them like he did.
 Maury was smiling, so everyone in the cafe  knew he'd finished the dinghy and sold the plans to some younger fella.
 David thought about dinghys, saying, 'The  trouble is that nowadays my clients don't want the 100 foot yacht any  more.  They seem to like 40 feet, as if  they were in love with the number, not the yacht they took.  I suppose it's a matter of not having enough  crew, today.  Yachting has gone from the  rich man's sport to the loner's enclave.'
 Maury mused, thinking about the smaller space  on smaller yachts, 'The shorter the dinghy, the wider and fatter is has to be.'
 David said, 'That makes it less attractive,  in my estimation, less worthy to be designed.'
 Just then Josh came in, kinda snorted at what  David was saying, and sat at his table waiting to pounce at whatever was being  said.  MaryAnn knew them all enough to  stay away while they were like this - it was like getting out of an ambush.
 'What I like to do with a dinghy,' Josh said  as if he were talking to himself, 'is get down on a sheet of plywood, bend my  chines as much as they can, draw the lines right there for what the wood will  allow.  If the chines don't bend much,  it's a pram; if they bend more, it's a skiff.   I let the wood tell me what it will be, like the boat's in the wood  trying to climb out into my imagination.   That's how I do it.'
 'An admirable method, I'm sure, but not for  me,' David said softly.  'I can't see any  boat less than 12 feet.  The yacht owners  I deal with want a three panels per side, a miniature ship.  They like one that looks like their yacht,  even to details inside the hull.'
 'Vanity, vanity, all is vanity, saith the  preacher,' Josh said.
 David turned away.
 Maury looked at Josh, wondering how he could  enjoy insulting people.  Maury knew,  whatever a man has been given in life he isn't to be blamed or praised.  It's just what you're given.  Somerset never hurt any of these guys, he  never took a commission away from them, and to be honest the wealthy probably  made work possible for everyone.  These  days, those old yachts and coastal schooners stay alive as windjammers for  vacations - what's so wrong with that?   Keeps the designs alive, keeps skills going, and no creation on God's  earth as beautiful as a schooner on a reach under the morning sun.
 Ned came in, sat down where he always  does.  He saw Maury didn't have the  drawing paper he had before, the job was done.   Ned said, 'Feels good to get a job over with, don't it,' he said to  Maury, with a nasty twinkle in his eye.   'When it's done, it's done; but with wood boats you never finish the  upkeep'.  Ned was always saying, If  you have a wood boat better learn the skills or pay for 'em.
 'It is,' Maury said, not thinking of any of  that.  'I gave it a bilge panel with some  tuck to the stern quarters to keep the man out of the stern bench.  Better trim, that way.'
 Ned nodded.   'Does he sail it?'
 Maury then turned to him, 'I drew a sprit  sail, but he only motors it - electric motor.   In fact, it ain't a motor at all.   He puts this big fan in the stern, then he whirls the boat around to  fish from it.  Goofiest sight I've ever  seen, he stands astride the midframe fishing while that fan goes a-blowing.'
 Ned chuckled, 'Well at least there's not  gonna be an oil or gas spill in our harbor.   Is it stable?'
 'I guess it's stable enough for him.  I showed him the stability curve, but he said  nothing, so there it is.'
 Josh came into the cafe,  hot and sweaty, tired and loose-lipped.  He turned to Maury, 'You finish that dinghy?'
 'Yeah,' Maury said, holding to a slight  smile.  'Customer liked it, paid cash on  the barrel-head.'
 'Best kind,' Josh said.  'What was it?'
 Maury knew once he said, all the armchair  analyists would toss in their two cents.   'He wanted a three panel skiff, like a dory with a bilge panel.  So I got out the plans to a Thomson skiff,  took out one strake, adjusted it for his weight and fishing tackle and there it  was, waiting for me.'
 But he didn't get the usual dad-blamed  insulting chatter he expected.
 David said kindly, 'I've noticed that.  To be a good designer you have to know the  lines from the past.  That's how you keep  from spending your best years discovering what has already been solved.'
 But Josh didn't like that.  'That ain't right, gov.  What that means is you're taking someone  else's idea, someone else's way of thinking.   In the end, it ain't you.  You  have to be yourself, 'cause everyone else is taken.'
 Now that sounded through the cafe.  But still, David kept to his own method.
 'That may be true, but you can burn plenty of  paper and someone else's money with a design that doesn't work.  I believe in following along with what has  worked in the past.  If I can give it my  own alteration, so much the better.  The  point is, a boat should be safe, enjoyable, and available.'
 
                
                  |  | The Docksider in Northeast Harbor ME Northeast Harbor |  'So,' Maury said, suddenly interested, 'how  do you work?'
 David said, 'As I design for yachts, I begin  with the interior and wrap the deck around it.   The sails come, and the construction method goes on it last.  I can do this because my clients all end up  with carvel or fiberglass.  They want the  cabin to feel like they're on land while someone else does the sailing or  motoring.  To them, a boat is simply a  floating living room.'
 Maury said, shaking his head, 'I can't do  that.  For me the cabin comes last, since  I'm interested in how it sails.  I fit  whatever cabin will fit the waterline, and the waterline is based on the  client's budget and purpose for the boat.   My first question is, how are you going to use it?  My second question is, how much can you  afford...right now?  And then, I  ask, how will you maintain it?'
 Then David got serious.  'I have to say, my clients aren't so  practical as that.  To them a boat is a  source of pleasure and beauty, like a Winslow Homer.'  He was proud he'd said that, surrounded by  all these wood-choppers.
 Ned said, 'I draw a waterline.  The topsides might have more deadrise  underneath, less, they might have hard bilges or soft, laps or carvel but I see  the waterline first.  Then I see the  forefoot and afterrun together.  Then I  just fill it in, laps or joints, whatever, long or short, it's the waterline  I'm interested in.  It's about how I want  the water to go underneath and around.'
 Josh said, 'Like Bolger.'
 Ned said, 'Yeah.  I don't know about his pea dream, but when I  was a kid I watched water come off ships.'
 'That Bolger, the interior of his square  boxers had practically nothing inside,' Josh said, nearly spitting the words  out.  He'd had customers come back at him  for the lack of comforts in the Bolger boxes.
 Maury said, 'Maybe he got that from Francis.'
 David interrupted, 'That's what I mean about  knowing what's already been done.  It  might even help you find your own style.   Usually, the solutions of the past are simpler than they are now.'
 Josh said, 'Well, whatever you geniuses do is  all right with me, but I still know a dinghy is all about the bottom.  If it ain't got rocker, you might as well  lock 'er.  You look at the prams from  Scandanavia, you see that.  They were  meant to be used, to be rowed, that's why they originally were round bilged.'
 Ned said, 'Never could stomach  lapstrake.  They make too much noise.'
 'Yeah,' Maury said, 'but the laps keep the  water from building up friction.  Bad  designs build up friction near the midframe, then release it, tipping the bow  up and down.  If you sit on the midframe  you can mitigate this some, but it'll still make a slow boat in light air.  A fiberglass does the same thing, but you  can't detect it so much.'
 Josh was not satisfied with that.  'So I guess you say a square ender is just as  good as a pointed bow, eh?'
 'Not exactly,' Maury came back.  'A pointed bow with flare might be a bit  dryer and slightly better under sail, but the real difference is in rough  water.  In light air, it might even sink  more than a pram bow.  The best  compromise I ever saw was a 6'8" Murray Peterson pram or the Petey Dink from Atkin.  No snap to build, but what a  little miracle.  You finish it the way it  was designed, you think you've seen a glimpse of heaven.'
 'Not so, Daddy O.  I seen a Fenwick Williams pram, 20 inch topsides,  more rocker than a duck's back, 3 feet abeam on the waterline, a beauty.  Flat-bottomed with runners, flare-sided, rows  in a glide.  I'll take it any day.'
 Maury couldn't resist.  'Aren't you Mr. Fiberglass?'
 'That's how I make my living.  But for somehow, folks don't take to  fiberglass in little boats like they do wood.'
 MaryAnn said quietly off to the side where  she was, 'I like little wood boats, they're cute.'
 They all heard her, she knew they thought she  was silly.  David said, 'That's what I  mean about a boat giving pleasure before anything else.  Of course the days of the workboats are long  passed.'
 Maury said, 'Gone but not forgotten, and I  think I know why.  It's because a boat  comes out of yourself.  When you see  something of yourself out there in real life, it makes you feel less  afraid.  When you never see anything of  yourself in the world, you feel alone, lonely in the way that no one else can  alleviate.  Maybe that's what David means  by looking at designs of the past, seeing where a man like you has come  from.  Everything else gets mixed with  stuff that smells.  Life ain't what it  used to be, your life didn't turn out to be all you wanted, your wife ain't  like you at all, an' what they're showing at the drive-in don't mean a thing to  you.  But when you design a boat and put  it together out of wood, something of yourself shows up.  And it can't be changed.'
 Josh said, 'Well, dad-blamed it, that stuff's  too deep for me, I'd need a shovel for it.'
 With that everyone laughed, stood to pay  their bill and made their way out the door.
 Now this was one  of those dawns fog came creeping in along the rooftops.  Some of the fishermen didn't go out until  nearly midmorning, so MaryAnn and Luther knew the boys wouldn't be around until  late in the afternoon, near dusk.  And  she was right.'Here they come, right on time, just when I'm  putting new napkins out an' filling the salt shakers an' got the tables  spic-and-span to go home,' she lamented, wiping her hands on her apron.  'They couldn't at least wait until tomorrow.'
 'I had 'em do it that way,' Luther said  grinnin' crooked teeth through his moustache.
 'You would,' she tossed back at him, popping  her hand towel.  She knew all of these  neat and sparkling tables wouldn't last an hour  now that Maury and Josh and them were coming  in the door.  They were as dirty as a kid  in a pig pen.  She wondered if men liked  being dirty, you know like it was the curse of Adam - you are dust and to dust  you shall return.  Luther laughed at her  getting put out by them all.  She said,  'Just look at Josh, he looks like he spent the day swimming in sawdust.'
 'Why don't you welcome them in,' he said at  her, grinning sarcastic.
 She spun around, her apron twirling.  'Why don't you do an honest day's work, you  fat old geezer.'  Pointing at Luther's  belly, she said,  'I think I'll call you  Watermelon Man, 'cause you look like you swallowed it whole.'
 'Dinner muscle, that's what this belly  is.  Took years to build it up to  this.  Majestic, I say, that's what I  am.'
 MaryAnn laughed, turning away.  She went to the door to hold the little door  bell quiet as Maury and Josh and David came in together, Maury holding the  morning paper, looking glum.
 Josh sat in his usual spot.  He was a mess.  Maury and David came in together, talking  about some boat thing.  MaryAnn went to  get the coffee for them all.
 She said barely loud enough for them to hear,  'I was just about to get on home.'
 Josh said, 'What for?  You ain't got no husband to be home for.  You belong to us, to this nightspot of  glamour.'
 Luther laughed.  Then Ned and Nick came in, humming some  hippie tune out of the '70s.  Ned was  always humming something.  He put a  quarter in the juke box, for Get Together by the Youngbloods..  Luther didn't like that hippie stuff, he  turned away to his kitchen, tossing a pan around, banging those long spoons he  had hanging from the ceiling.  He was a  Merchant Marine vetern, he hadn't gone out into the Pacific to die so some  hippie could lay around in a spray-painted van playing a guitar, no sir.  But these guys kept Luther in business, so he  had to turn his back.
 Maury said to himself - even though he knew  they all were hearing - 'I heard about that guy, Stayer, who nearly drowned  trying to get out to his yacht in a dinghy through rough water.  Guess even that needs some experience, like  Slocum.  Here it is in the paper,  happened last night.'
 'Tough, I'd say,' Josh said, looking at the  paper on Maury's table.
 'Working on the sea is dangerous work, my old  skipper used to say that,' Maury said, pointing to the story.  'Paper says Stayer'd owned his yacht for 10  years, but still the sea will do what it will.'
 David hadn't heard of this.  'That happened last night?'
 Josh said, 'Yeah.  The guy was up here on vacation.  His Peterson ketch was anchored out in the  bay.  He came to shore in an inflatable,  he was going back for the night.  But  weather came in last night, tossing waves on the tide. I guess he never had  much experience with inflatables before.'
 'Maury said, 'Never did like  inflatables.  They're like pillows  waiting to be punctured. He should have stayed ashore.  Dinghies are only for getting you out to your  boat, not roughing a storm.'
 Maury knew what Josh would say.  'Naw, old man, it might not matter what  dinghy it was if the waves are reaching for the sky.  But I agree, dinghys are for gunkholing,  gliding around, lazy afternoons.  You  don't launch a dinghy from the shore when it's blowin' 20 or 25 knots.  The only way to make a dinghy seaworthy is to  have some ballast and some experience with it.   The guy had a motor, he was sitting in the stern seat, tipping that  inflatable out of the water.  Maybe if  he'd been rowing..'
 'Maybe so.   It's always good to make friends if you cruise in a new place, if'n you  need help.'
 'Yeah, I'll go with that.  Something to be said for heavier small  boats.  Works for me,' Josh said.
 'Still, I don't like it.  I'd rather have a wider bow out of the water,  more buoyant, no diving in and leaping up when you're gettin' pushed,' Maury  said.  'Look at the best dinghy ever, Columbia.  Bow just on the waterline, stern just out,  little skeg, an' a daggerboard forward out of the way.  It's got a fairly wide forefoot, beam right  on the rowing seat, nice soft afterrun longer than the entrance, perfect  design.  That's old Captain Nat for you.'
 'Maury,' Josh said, spinning his straw around  in his coffee, 'you is always in the past.   Nowadays, Ned is right to go for fiberglass; folks don't care if a  dinghy can outsail another one by a few feet around the harbor.  They want what they want, a boat they can  have.  With that long boom goofy sail,  your damn Columbia looks like a porpoise.'
 MaryAnne laughed, even though she didn't know  what they were talking about.
 'Ever noticed,' Maury said, 'how close that  sail is to a lateen Sunfish sail?  Just  lace the boom to the mast with two feet of boom before the mast, an' you've got  a Sunfish sail.  The old captain got it  again, 50 years before any of us.  With  the board before the thwart, plenty of room, too.'
 'Yeah, but 10 strakes per side, too much  work, too much,' Ned said.  'I'll take  something like a Michalak Mixer, three paneled bottom, simple topsides,  easy boat to build.  The trouble with  sailing a dinghy is you have to add so much gear, spars, a sail lacing, pintles  and gudgeons, cleats and such - too much cost, too much stuff.  An' then if you don't catch your skin on some  screw, the boom tatoos your skull.'
 'Tell you what, ol' man, we'll borrow the Columbia from the Museum, you can take her helm.   She's at 11 1/2 feet; I'll build a Bolger Teal at 12, an we'll  have a race.  Planks against plywood,  wha'd ya say?'
 David had been listening to all this quietly.  'All right, then.  To be fair, sail area will have to be the  same, how about a loose-footed sprit rig?   I tell you what, the perfect sprit sail is off the Atkin Little Peter,  about 45 square feet with a high peak and no boom.  I'll borrow sails and sprits from the yacht  club members, we'll have ourselves a little race around the buoys and  back.  Tacking out to Buoy 7, on the beam  to Buoy 5, and then back downwind to the dock.   Herreshoff against Bolger, planks against plywood, now this might be  something worth braggin' about.  Next  Saturday morning, dueling at dawn.'
 MaryAnn said, 'I'll make a poster with  Dueling At Dawn on it.'  She giggled.
 Maury then thought.  'What about a prize?'
 Luther chimed in, 'No prize, but what about  punishment for the loser?'
 'Like what?' they all asked at once.
 Luther had this twinkle in his eye.  'The loser has to spend the night in the  jail.'
 MaryAnn laughed, 'But that's too cruel.  How about the loser has to serve the winner  dinner right here, this coming Saturday?'
 David said, 'Now that's only fair.'
 So they all agreed.
 The fateful day  came like D-Day.  Everyone was up early,  before dawn down at the restaurant.  The  town had seen MaryAnn's poster in the window, talk was all over the harbor,  bets got tossed around, kids came out, and even the high school cheerleaders  with their pom-poms and saddle loafers lined the dock.  You'd think there was going to be speeches by  chubby politicians, or something.  And  the mayor, Stubby Dunkimin, did come out to see if he could get some votes by  passing out chocolate doughnuts.  He did  get the cheerleader vote, after they told him they had a union, so they had to  vote to see if they wanted to vote for Stubby.Just then Maury drove up with the Columbia on  his trailer.  He backed in into the  harbor water while Ned had his Teal on his cartop. Probably in violation  of some code, but who cares when you've got money floating around like this.
 The excitement caught on with everyone.  The cheerleaders made up some cheer like,
 'Two, four, six, eight, which boat looks like  a crate?'
 But then Ned's gang from the yard started  doing a kind of Old Folks Wave - arms only, no bending the back with this  crowd.  They chanted, 'Planks make you a  crank, but Teal's the Real Deal!'  Or  something like that.
 Ned and Maury rigged their boats.  The sun peeked through the harbor masts,  stirring a reflection on the water, a quiet ripple of time coming.  Now the tension mounted.  Ned and Maury maneuvered their skiffs toward  the starting pier.  MaryAnn, sitting by  the bay window in the restaurant saw out at sea hints of fog coming.  Rarely was the wind ever from the west, but  she could see it coming.
 The mayor guffawed.  'On your mark, get set, be off gentlemen!' he  barked out, even though the cheering drowned him out.  Maury got Columbia off the mark easily,  gliding over the chill water until both boats could catch a breeze.  Then Teal's bottom, so slightly in the water,  caught up with Columbia near the first buoy.   They turned across the wind till their sails filled on a reach.  Teal tilted slightly in the crosswind,  Columbia merely rolled on her arched bilge.   They paced side by side with Teal moving slightly ahead.  Then they reached the last buoy.  MaryAnn saw the fog coming down upon both  skiffs.  The wind had freshened, booms  flung up as the skiffs got around the mark, Columbia burying her bow till Maury  had to get aft, balancing her.  Ned  laughed.  He thought he'd catch Columbia.  Teal's flat bottom didn't bury but it did  roil somewhat.  Their bows were nip and  tuck.
 Then that grey twinkling fog caught them  both, curling over both boats.  Ned and  Maury yelled at each other - 'Where are you - don't aim to starboard - I'm right  on your beam!'
 Suddenly, in the deepest fog, MaryAnn heard a  crack of wood!  They'd hit each other,  right at the finish line - but who hit who - and who was first?
 The crowd on the dock leaned into the fog,  straining to see whose bow might emerge first...but they didn't see a bow - they  saw two old men swimming for shore.  They  were sloshing, they were spewing water out of their mouths, they were slapping  water, nearly drowning, but finally the cheerleaders threw them life preservers  with a rope to pull them ashore.  They  sat there breathing heavy when the two skiffs came drifting out of the fog, one  on top of the other.
 The mayor yelled, 'Who won?'
 Maury spitted out, 'I swam further than you!'
 Ned spitted right back, 'That's because you  had to - you rammed my bow!'
 'No, you did!'
 They went on like this till the crowd left.
 Luther and MaryAnn stood at the window,  laughing at this ridiculous scene.
 'See,' Luther said, 'it ended just like I  knew it would.'
 'How's that?' MaryAnn asked, her hands over  her laughing mouth.
 'They're just like two blind penguins eating  either end of the same hot dog - they just had to meet.'
   
 |