asks.
âI was.â
âThen I need to take a look at your vest.â
âAnd I need to know who you are.â
The bearded man looks briefly startled, but he recovers with a smile.
âOh, my apologies,â he says, sticking out a hand. âDr. Michael Frazer, with the Ministry of Environment. Iâm curator of wrecks.â
âCurse of the wrecks is more like it,â says Teddy. âA goddamn plague on us all.â
Frazer ignores him, shaking his head as if to say heâs grown accustomed to being cussed and it doesnât really bother him.
âCurator of wrecks?â I say. âInteresting title.â
Frazer shrugs.
âAnd an interesting job to go with it,â he says. âBut you know that old Scottish curse.â
âMay you live in interesting times?â
âThatâs it.â Frazer smiles. âAnd well applied to what I do.â
He points to my BCV.
âMay I?â
âKnock yourself out.â
He goes through all the pockets.
âThank you,â he says when heâs done.
He steps toward the bench where Teddyâs vest sits.
âMay I, Sir Teddy?â
âWhat is this, some bloody childâs game? Mother, may I?â Teddy says it with a sneer. âJust finish up with it, will you?â
Frazer goes through Teddyâs vest, finds nothing. Sitting next to it on the bench is Teddyâs dive bag.
âThat your dive bag?â asks Frazer.
âYou saw me climb out of the water with it, didnât you? And you saw me put it down. Yes, itâs my dive bag.â
âThen Iâd like to have a look in it, too.â
âYouâve arse-ended everything else on my boat,â says Teddy. âMight as well stick your hands in there, too.â
Frazer picks up the dive bag. He unzips it, removes the ice pick and the Ping-Pong paddle. He casts a suspicious look at Teddy.
âWhat?â says Teddy. âThere a law saying I canât carry the tools of my trade?â
âYou know the law, Sir Teddy. No disturbance of an archaeological site without proper permit.â
âOnly disturbance here is you.â
Frazer lets it roll. He turns the dive bag inside out. Thereâs nothing else in it. He puts it back on the bench.
âSatisfied?â says Teddy.
âYes, thank you,â says Frazer. âWeâll be on our way.â
âDamn right you will,â says Teddy.
Frazer hops aboard his boat and casts off the lines. The young man takes the wheel and fires the engine.
The boat moves slowly away. When itâs at a distance where its wake wonât rock us, the boat throttles up with a loud
va-room
and hits its planing speed.
Teddy watches the boat until it becomes just a speck on the water.
âLetâs haul anchor,â he says. âWeâre heading in.â
23
Â
By the time we return to shore and load into his car for the drive back to Cutfoot Estate, Teddy Schwartz seems to have shaken his sour mood.
I ride shotgun. Boggy takes the backseat. And as we bump along, the conversation soon turns to Michael Frazerâs surprise inspection of
Miss
Peg.
âAh, the bastardâs just doing his job, I suppose,â says Teddy. âStill, I donât see why the government has to interfere with tradition.â
âThe salvaging tradition, you mean?â
âThat exactly,â says Teddy. âGenerations of Bermudians have been going out in these waters to find what they can find. Thereâs hardly an old-time family here on the Rock doesnât have a little trinket of some sort that was plucked from the sea.â
âItâs like having your own personal treasure chest out there, huh?â
âHa!â snorts Teddy. âThatâs what the world would like to believe, anyway. That we treasure salvors just went out for a nice swim and came back rich men.â
âDidnât work like that, huh?â
âNo, the way
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