I was about to mention it to Jyp and ask him where we were supposed to
be going when another shape materialized out of the shadows in the river
beside us, a tall three-masted bulk even bigger than the
Jyp made an enquiring noise. ‘It’s this clash of times,’ I groaned. ‘It’s making me giddy. Do times always get jumbled together like this?’
Jyp shook his head. ‘No jumble. Square-riggers, sternwheelers, tin-plate monitors even – round about the 1850s, 1860s, you’d find ’em all moored along here together.’
I nodded, considering Jyp carefully. ‘Remember that, do you? From when you were young?’
‘Me?’ He smiled. ‘Hell, no! I’m not that old. They’d all gone by the time I was born, ’cept maybe a few sternwheelers. Never saw one, anyhow, nor any kind of ship where I was raised; not a drop of sea. The grain, with its waves, mile on mile, they said that was like the ocean; what’d they know? They’d never seen it any more’n I had. Till I ran away to the coast; then I saw, and I’ve never left it since. Even though I got me my master’s tickets just in time for the war, and the U-boats.’
I was startled the other way now; Jyp hardly seemed modern enough to have sailed against U-boats. Tunisian corsairs, yes; U-boats, no. It made his ageless look oddly more outrageous than Mall’s. ‘Sounds rough. What were you on? The North Atlantic run? The Murmansk Convoys?’
‘Yes, to both. But I was born back before the turn of the century, in Kansas. I was maybe sixteen when I ran off; it was World War One I was talking about.’ He jerked his head. ‘I stuck around, that’s all. In the shadows, just like those ships out there. Just like everything we’re seeing – those songs from the old slave barracoons, the little fishing villages, the whole damn river under us. All part of what formed this place, its character, its image. Its shadow. It’s not gone, not yet. Outside the Core it lingers on, clinging round this place. Felt maybe but never seen, though you lived a whole life long here – not ‘less one day you happened to turn the right corner.’
‘Which place –’ I tried to ask. But the screech of the tug’s whistle
drowned me out, and the sudden explosion of activity around us on the
deck. Jyp yelled out orders and spun the wheel; Pierce came trumpeting
up from below, and turned out both watches. We had come to an empty
berth along the crowded dock, and the
I couldn’t quite remember who the hell Ganymede was and I wasn’t sure I wanted to; but at least it was something I could do. We heaved the long bars from their racks, thrust them through the slots and bent our backs to them.