Chapter One
July 1971
Malin Hatch was bored with summer. He and Johnny had spent the early
part of the morning throwing rocks at the hornet's nest in the old
well-house. That had been fun. But now there was nothing else to do.
It was just past eleven, but he'd already eaten the two
peanut-butter-and-banana sandwiches his mother had made him for
lunch. Now he sat crosslegged on the floating dock in front of their
house, looking out to sea, hoping to spot a battleship steaming over
the horizon. Even a big oil tanker would do. Maybe it would head for
one of the outer islands, run aground, and blow up. Now that would
be something.
His brother came out of the house and rattled down the wooden ramp
leading to the dock. He was holding a piece of ice on his neck. "Got
you good," Malin said, secretly satisfied that he had escaped
stinging and that his older, supposedly wiser, brother had not. "You
just didn't get close enough," Johnny said through his last mouthful
of sandwich. "Chicken."
"I got as close as you."
"Yeah, sure. All those bees could see was your skinny butt running
away." He snorted and winged the piece of ice into the water. "No,
sir. I was right there."
Johnny plopped down beside him on the dock, dropping his satchel
next to him. "We fixed those bees pretty good though, huh, Mal?" he
said, testing the fiery patch on his neck with one forefinger.
"Sure did."
They fell silent. Malin looked out across the little cove toward the
islands in the bay: Hermit Island, Wreck Island, Old Hump, Killick
Stone. And far beyond, the blue outline of Ragged Island, appearing
and disappearing in the stubborn mist that refused to lift even on
this beautiful midsummer day. Beyond the islands, the open ocean
was, as his father often said, as calm as a millpond.
Languidly, he tossed a rock into the water and watched the spreading
ripples without interest. He almost regretted not going into town
with his parents. At least it would be something to do. He wished he
could be anywhere else in the world-Boston, New York-anywhere but
Maine.
"Ever been to New York, Johnny?" he asked.
Johnny nodded solemnly. "Once. Before you were born."
What a lie, Malin thought. As if Johnny would remember anything that
had happened when he was less than two years old. But saying so out
loud would be to risk a swift punch in the arm.
Malin's eye fell on the small outboard tied at the end of the dock.
And he suddenly had an idea. A really good idea.
"Let's take it out," he said, lowering his voice and nodding at the
skiff. "You're crazy," Johnny said. "Dad would whip us good." "Come
on," Malin said. "They're having lunch at the Hastings after they
finish shopping. They won't be back until three, maybe four.
Who's gonna know?"
"Just the whole town, that's all, seeing us going out there."
"Nobody's gonna be watching," said Malin. Then, recklessly, he
added, "Who's chicken now?"
But Johnny did not seem to notice this liberty. His eyes were on the
boat. "So where do you want to go that's so great, anyway?" he
asked. Despite their solitude, Malin lowered his voice further.
"Ragged Island."
Johnny turned toward him. "Dad'll kill us," he whispered.
"He won't kill us if we find the treasure."
"There's no treasure," Johnny said scornfully, but without much
conviction. "Anyway, it's dangerous out there, with all those pits."
Malin knew enough about his brother to recognize the tone in his
voice. Johnny was interested. Malin kept quiet, letting the
monotonous morning solitude do his persuading for him.
Abruptly, Johnny stood up and strode to the end of the dock. Malin
waited, an anticipatory thrill coursing through him. When his
brother returned, he was holding a life preserver in each hand.
"When we land, we don't go farther than the rocks along the shore."
Johnny's voice was deliberately gruff, as if to remind Malin that
simply having one good idea didn't alter their balance of power.
"Understand?"
Malin nodded, holding the gunwale while Johnny tossed in his satchel
and the life preservers. He wondered why they hadn't thought of
doing this before. Neither boy had ever been to Ragged Island. Malin
didn't know any kids in the town of Stormhaven who ever had, either.
It would make a great story to tell their friends.
"You sit in the bow," Johnny said, "and I'll drive."
Malin watch Johnny fiddle with the shift lever, open the choke, pump
the gas bulb, then yank the starter cord. The engine coughed, then
fell silent. Johnny yanked again, then again. Ragged Island was six
miles offshore, but Malin figured they could make it in a half hour
on such a smooth sea. It was close to high tide, when the strong
currents that swept the island dropped down to nothing before
reversing. Johnny rested, his face red, and then turned again for a
heroic yank. The engine sputtered into life. "Cast off!" he shouted.
As soon as the rope was uncleated, Johnny shoved the throttle all
the way forward, and the tinny little eighteen-horsepower engine
whined with exertion. The boat surged from the dock and headed out
past Breed's Point into the bay, wind and spray stinging Malin's
face delightfully. The boat sent back a creamy wake as it sliced
through the ocean. There had been a massive storm the week before,
but as usual it seemed to have settled the surface, and the water
was glassy. Now Old Hump appeared to starboard, a low naked dome of
granite, streaked with seagull lime and fringed with dark seaweed.
As they buzzed through the channel, countless seagulls, drowsing
one-legged on the rock, raised their heads and stared at the boat
with bright yellow eyes. A single pair rose into the sky, then
wheeled past, crying a lost cry.
"This was a great idea," Malin said. "Wasn't it, Johnny?"
"Maybe," Johnny said. "But if we get caught, it was your idea."
Even though their father owned Ragged Island, they had been
forbidden to visit it for as long as he could remember. Their dad
hated the place and never talked about it. Schoolyard legend held
that countless people had been killed there digging for treasure;
that the place was cursed; that it harbored ghosts. There were so
many pits and shafts dug over the years that the island's innards
were completely rotten, ready to swallow the unwary visitor. He'd
even heard about the Curse Stone. It had been found in the Pit many
years before, and now it was supposedly kept in a special room deep
in the church basement, locked up tight because it was the work of
the devil. Johnny once told him that when kids were really bad in
Sunday School, they were shut up in the crypt with the Curse Stone.
He felt another shiver of excitement.
The island lay dead ahead now, wreathed in clinging tatters of mist.
In winter, or on rainy days, the mist turned to a suffocating,
pea-soup fog. On this bright summer day, it was more like
translucent cotton candy. Johnny had tried to explain the local rip
currents that caused it, but Malin hadn't understood and was pretty
sure Johnny didn't, either.
The mist approached the boat's prow and suddenly they were in a
strange twilit world, the motor muffled. Almost unconsciously,
Johnny slowed down. Then they were through the thickest of it and
ahead Malin could see the Ragged Island ledges, their cruel
seaweed-covered flanks softened by the mist.
They brought the skiff through a low spot in the ledges. As the
sea-level mist cleared, Malin could see the greenish tops of jagged
underwater rocks, covered with waving seaweed; the kind of rocks so
feared by lobstermen at low tide or in heavy fog. But now the tide
was high, and the little motorboat slid past effortlessly. After an
argument about who was to get his feet wet, they grounded on the
cobbled shore. Malin jumped out with the painter and pulled the boat
up, feeling the water squish in his sneakers.
Johnny stepped out onto dry land. "Pretty neat," he said
noncommittally, shouldering his satchel and looking inland. Just up
from the stony beach, the sawgrass and chokecherry bushes began. The
scene was lit by an eerie silver light, filtered through the ceiling
of mist that still hung above their heads. A huge iron boiler, at
least ten feet high, rose above the nearby grass, covered with
massive rivets and rusted a deep orange. There was a split down one
side, ragged and petalled. Its upper half was cloaked by the
low-lying mists.
"I bet that boiler blew up," Johnny said.
"Bet it killed somebody," Malin added with relish.
"Bet it killed two people."
The cobbled beach ended at the seaward point of the island in ridges
of wave-polished granite. Malin knew that fishermen passing through
the Ragged Island Channel called these rocks the Whalebacks. He
scrambled up the closest of the Whalebacks and stood high, trying to
see over the bluffs into the island. "Get down!" Johnny yelled.
"Just what do you think you're gonna see in all this mist? Idiot."
"Takes one to know one-" Malin began, climbing down, and received a
brotherly rap on the head for his troubles.
"Stay behind me," Johnny said. "We'll circle the shore, then head
back." He walked quickly along the bottom of the bluffs, his tanned
legs chocolate brown in the dim light. Malin followed, feeling
aggrieved. It was his idea to come out here, but Johnny always took
over.
"Hey!" Johnny yelled. "Look!" He bent down, picking up something
long and white. "It's a bone."
"No, it isn't," Malin replied, still feeling annoyed. Coming to the
island was his idea. He should have been the one to find it.
"It is, too. And I bet it's from a man." Johnny swung the thing back
and forth like a baseball bat. "It's the leg bone off somebody who
got killed trying to get the treasure. Or a pirate, maybe. I'm gonna
take it home and keep it under my bed."
Curiosity overcame Malin's annoyance. "Let me see," he said. Johnny
handed him the bone. It felt surprisingly heavy and cold, and it
smelled bad. "Yuck," Malin said, hastily handing it back.
"Maybe the skull's around here somewhere," Johnny replied. They
poked among the rocks, finding nothing but a dead dogfish with
goggle eyes. As they rounded the point, a wrecked barge came into
view, left from some long-forgotten salvage operation. It was
grounded at the high-tide mark, twisted and pounded onto the rocks,
buffeted by decades of storms.
"Look at this," said Johnny, interest rising in his voice. He
scrambled out on the heaved, buckled deck. All around it lay rusted
pieces of metal, pipes, busted gears, and nasty snarls of cable and
wire. Malin began looking through the old junk, keeping an eye out
for the gleam of a pirate doubloon. He figured that the pirate, Red
Ned Ockham, was so rich he'd probably dropped a whole lot of
doubloons around the island. Red Ned, who'd supposedly buried
millions and millions in gold on the island, along with a jeweled
weapon called St. Michael's Sword, so powerful it could kill any man
who even looked at it. They said Red Ned had once cut a man's ears
off and used them to make a bet in a dice game. A sixth-grade girl
named Cindy told him it was really the man's balls that Red Ned cut
off, but Malin didn't believe her. Another time Red Ned got drunk
and cut a man open, then threw him overboard and towed him by his
guts until the sharks ate him. The kids at school had a lot of
stories about Red Ned.
Tiring of the barge, Johnny motioned for Malin to follow him along
the rocks that lay scattered at the bottom of the bluffs on the
windward side of the island. Above them, a high dirt embankment rose
against the sky, roots of long-dead spruce trees poking horizontally
from the soil like gnarled fingers. The top of the embankment was
lost in the clinging mists. Some of the bluffs were caved in and
collapsing, victims of the storms that slammed into the island every
fall.
It was chilly in the shadow of the bluffs, and Malin hurried on.
Johnny, excited now by his finds, was bounding ahead, heedless of
his own warnings, whooping and waving the bone. Malin knew his
mother would throw the old bone into the ocean as soon as she found
it.
Johnny stopped briefly to poke among stuff that had washed up on
shore: old lobster buoys, busted-up traps, pieces of weathered
planking. Then he moved toward a fresh gash farther up the bluffs. A
bank had recently caved in, spilling dirt and boulders across the
rocky shore. He leaped easily over the boulders, then disappeared
from view.
Malin moved more quickly now. He didn't like having Johnny out of
sight. There was a stirring in the air: it had been a sunny day
before they disappeared into the Ragged Island mist, but anything
could be happening out there now. The breeze felt cold, as if
weather was coming on, and the sea was beginning to break hard over
the Ragged Island ledges. The tide would be close to turning. Maybe
they'd better start back.
There was a sudden, sharp cry, and for a terrible moment Malin
feared Johnny had hurt himself on the slippery rocks. But then the
cry came again-an urgent summons-and Malin scrambled forward,
clambering over the fallen rocks and around a bend in the shoreline.
Before him, a huge granite boulder lay at a crazy angle, freshly
dislodged from the bank by a recent storm. On its far side stood
Johnny, pointing, a look of wide-eyed wonderment on his face. At
first, Malin couldn't say a word. The movement of the boulder had
exposed the opening of a tunnel at the foot of the bank, with just
enough room to squeeze behind. A clammy stream of stale air eddied
from the tunnel mouth.
"Cripes," he said, running up the slope toward the embankment. "I
found it!" Johnny cried, breathless with excitement. "I bet you
anything the treasure's in there. Take a look, Malin!"
Malin turned. "It was my idea."
Johnny looked back with a smirk. "Maybe," he said, unshouldering his
satchel. "But I found it. And I brought the matches."
Malin leaned toward the tunnel mouth inquisitively. Deep down, he'd
believed his father when he said there never was any treasure on
Ragged Island. But now, he wasn't so sure. Was it possible his dad
could be wrong?
Then he leaned back quickly, nose wrinkling against the stale smell
of the tunnel.
"What's the matter?" Johnny asked. "Afraid?"
"No," said Malin in a small voice. The mouth of the tunnel looked
very dark.
"I'm going first," Johnny said. "You follow me. And you'd better not
get lost." Tossing his prize bone away, he dropped to his knees and
squirmed through the opening. Malin knelt also, then hesitated. The
ground was hard and cold beneath him. But Johnny was already
disappearing from sight, and Malin didn't want to be left on the
lonely, fogbound shore. He squirmed through the opening after his
brother.
There was the snap of a match, and Malin sucked in his breath
unconsciously as he rose to his feet. He was in a small antechamber,
the roof and walls held up by ancient timbers.
Continues...
Continues...
Excerpted from Riptide by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child Excerpted by permission.
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Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Copyright © 2002 Dr. Joel Palefsky
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