"Somewhat better than you," the oarmaster said sharp- ly. "And what"s the idea of using up my men? You think they"re cheap?"
The Roman captain erupted from the stem castle.
"I"ll castrate the next man who awakens me!" he prom- ised, then caught sight of Joe.
"Why doesn"t a Roman keep his word?" Joe grated.
"And what do you mean by that?"
"I mean everything small enough to hide is hidden.
If you want that ship to run, give it back!"
"What specifically do you want?"
"Everything. At the moment I"m looking for a face- plate."
"A what?"
Joe tried to describe it. The Latin for gla.s.s didn"t mean the kind you could see through. What had they called mica? Lapis specularis! "If I don"t get it your thieving thugs have stolen a ship from you."
The Roman captain sighed. The marines were Ro- mans; if he couldn"t keep them in hand he might as well open an artery. "Fall in!" he trumpeted.
Seconds later he scowled at them. "One article of loot is missing. You will fall out and return with full packs. You will march single file around the capstan.
If this barbarian does not find the article he needs you will all swim home. DisMISS!" the Roman spun sharp-
ly, still at attention. "And you," he said to Joe, "will wait aboard the prize."
To his own infinite surprise, Joe saluted. He turned bemusedly and ambled forward along the catwalk. Gor- son was awake now. Joe caught his eyes but the chained chief"s look was expressionless. Where were the women?
The sun was nearing noon before a work party clumped across the korax and deposited a small pile of odds and ends in the c.o.c.kpit. The faceplate was there.
His watch was not. So be it, he decided-a life for each jewel, a hundred for the hairspring. He turned to the nautae who watched. "Give me a knife."
The stupid act again.
"G.o.d d.a.m.n you all! He rummaged through the pile again, and found one of Cookie"s boning knives. Some- one had apparently been trying to cut wire rope with it. Where in h.e.l.l was the stone? Twenty minutes pa.s.sed before he found it and another twenty in honing. He stripped, tied the knife to his wrist, and donned the faceplate.
The water was warmer than usual, and oddly murky.
Tiny bubbles rose from the bottom. He remembered Dr. Krom and his test tubes. Was the old man still alive?
He pawed his way downward and was shocked to feel barnacles. When had the Alice been hauled out last?
The water was unG.o.dly murky. He could scarcely see his hand before the faceplate. He swam under her keel and swore, blurping a gob of water inside his faceplate as another barnacle snagged his back. He came up on the far side and breathed. No wonder he couldn"t see; the Alice was in the quinquereme"s shadow.
Resignedly, he climbed back aboard and crossed the korax again. The Roman captain was busy with lunch.
"Don"t bother me," he said. "Tell him your troubles."
Joe explained to the quartermaster.
"So what do you want me to do?" the quartermaster asked.
"Put a gang ash.o.r.e. Warp her around until I can see."
The quartermaster considered a moment. "All right,"
he grunted. "Go back aboard so I can raise the korax."
By the time the Alice was relocated, nearly two hours had pa.s.sed. Joe dived sporadically, working by feel.
The tightly wound nylon was not as hard to cut as he had expected.
And now the Alice, at least, was out from under the korax"s iron spike. All afternoon he racked his brains but no plan came to him. The pistol was not among the items returned. He wondered if they recognized it as a weapon or if it had gone overboard. The rifle was gone too. They"d had experience with the weird and wonderful weapons of barbarians. A rifle was not so far removed from a blowgun that Romans could not deduce its purpose.
The water was muddier know. Bubbles rose until each wavelet was capped with dirty brown foam like the dregs of a Bockfest. Dr. Krom must"ve seen something of this in his test tubes. Joe wondered if it were a periodic phenomenon or whether something unusual was abuilding.
From time to time he brought up strands of nylon, mainly to satisfy Roman curiosity and convince them he was not whittling holes to scuttle the yawl. The nautae remained on deck and didn"t help him aboard when he came up for a rest.
Line had whipped round and round the shaft until the ball was bigger than the screw. The outer layers had been easy, for each blind stab had severed a strand.
Closer to the shaft each miss dulled the knife. He tried once to get the nautae to sharpen another knife so he could alternate but they were putting on their stupid act again. Diving in the tepid water had done away with much of his stiffness from rowing but he"d only had that one small loaf to eat in the last twenty-four hours. When would he be fed again? It was late after-
noon before he hacked the final twist and felt the wheel turn free. He surfaced and crawled wearily back into his clothes.
The five nautae watched him silently. Their dirty black headcloths and bloused up, topheavy himations gave them an odd, birdlike look, like hooded vultures.
He went below, mentally running over the engine start- ing procedure again.
The sun had gone down but they would have moon- light in half an hour. He checked the valves again to make sure the nautae"s curiosity hadn"t sabotaged his arrangements. The engine was ready. Or was it? He ran through everything once more and finally, with a silent invocation to Mahan"s ghost, threw the switch.
The engine spun vigorously until he whanged over the lifter bar, then groaned nearly to a standstill. He was reaching for the ether when it suddenly roared into fullthroated life.
A glance at the ammeter showed how hungry the batteries were. He wondered about Rose"s wind charger, then remembered there had been practically no wind inside the sheltered harbor. After a couple of tentative surges the diesel settled down to its steady racketing pound. Joe went on deck and threw in the forward clutch.
The Alice tugged at her stern line. He reversed and was satisfied that no line remained tangled. He pulled the lifter bar. In the sudden silence a sound came clearly from the quinquereme. A girl was screaming.
The hooded vultures regarded him speculatively in gathering darkness. Joe found a length of nylon line.
He made it fast to the mainmast and tailed the strand aft, along one rail, tying it down with marline stops every yard or so. He tailed the line across the stern, up the opposite rail, up and around the mizzenmast on the same side, then back to the rail and almost to the mainmast again. There he tied an overhand knot
before running the line aft through the mooring eye.
A light bobbed on the harbor"s surface. It neared and Joe recognized the galley"s longboat. Still in armor, the Roman captain stumped aboard the Alice. He was backed up by a pair of particularly ugly marines. One of the oarsmen handed up a basket and lit another torch before handing up the one in the longboat"s bow.
"Ready?" the captain asked.
"I can make the ship move. Where were you going yesterday?"
"Piraeus."
"How far?"
"Five hundred stadia."
Eight to the mile, Joe thought, and calculated rapid- ly. To keep the Roman from disbelieving him, he dou- bled his estimated time. "If we leave right now, I can have you docked tomorrow afternoon."
The hooded vultures were gobbling bread from the basket. Joe kicked them sprawling and helped himself to three loaves.
"One apiece," the Roman captain snapped.
"They"ll get their share when they work for it!" Joe snapped back. "Are you ready?"