EIGHT

Hope ere long you will be able to test with success the efficiency of your boats, which are now the last hope of closing the river to the enemy’s gunboats.

GENERAL G.T.BEAUREGARD TO GENERAL M. JEFF THOMPSON, RIVER DEFENSE FLEET

Hieronymus Taylor found himself wandering about the decks of the General Page. He had

some tender spots from the previous night’s brawl and he tried not to let them show in the way he moved. He was not bouncing back from the damage done the way he had in earlier years. The fight had not chased away the blue devils.

He climbed up to the hurricane deck, watched the great walking beam go through its teeter-totter motion, driving the side wheels that pushed the ship north against the current.

He climbed up on the platform built on the starboard wheel box, felt the paddle wheel vibrating below him. He leaned on the rail and looked out across the water. The town of Greenville was just going out of sight around a point of land. Taylor knew a girl once from Greenville. Ended up as a whore in New Orleans. He tried to picture her face but couldn’t.

After a while he sighed and stood up straight. The town was lost from sight and the banks were a wild tangle of marsh and forest and swamp. They steamed past wide rafts floating downstream, barely controlled by the long sweeps rigged out astern. In the middle of the rafts, makeshift shelters where men squatted around fires, cooked breakfast, and made coffee. They waved and Taylor waved back.

Tugs with barges pulling astern passed them as well, and paddle wheelers carrying Lord knows what. Two years before it would have been cotton, down-bound, and sundry merchandise coming up-foodstuffs and manufactures that could not be grown or produced on the plantations. But now? There were hardly any manufactured goods coming into the Confederacy through the coils of the Yankee anaconda, and King Cotton for export made it as far as New Orleans, and there it sat on the dock.

No, Taylor corrected himself, not New Orleans. New Orleans was a Yankee-held town now.

Taylor ’s despair became, in his mind, a boiler, steam building inside. The idea of the Yankees at New Orleans made the steam gauge jump, the needle quiver up in the regions of trouble. A good fight was supposed to be a safety valve, blow the excess steam right out. It had failed. It seemed the valve was lashed tight.

He climbed down from the wheel box, down to the main deck, drifted along the side of the deckhouse. From the outside, the deckhouse of a steamship looked to be a spacious affair, running almost the full length of the ship itself, but that was deceptive. The center third of the deckhouse was not a house at all, but a great open space above the engine room, called the “fidley.” The fidley extended from the floor plates of the engine room, which were just below the lowest, or main deck, up through the boiler deck, which was next deck above the main deck, and up to the hurricane deck, two decks above, where skylights provided light to the black gang and air to the engines and boilers.

Taylor paused at the fidley door. The engine room was his domain, but now he felt some invisible force pushing him away, like trying to make opposite poles of a magnet touch.

Ain’t my engine room, he thought. Engineers looked on their engine rooms the way women looked on their kitchens, or dogs on their yards, with a disdain for intruders who might interfere. The message was, “I’ll thank you to stay the hell out of here,” stated verbally or otherwise.

Taylor opened the fidley door, stepped inside. Intruder, perhaps, but Spence would wonder why he was not hanging around, because that was the other thing engineers did on some other engineer’s ship, though they might hate it on their own.

The fidley door opened onto a catwalk above the engine room and a ladder down. Directly in front of him, taking up most of the fidley, was the massive wooden A-frame that supported the walking beam. It rose from its mounting blocks in the bilges below right up through the hurricane deck overhead.

For a moment Taylor stood still as the heat and the sounds washed over him-the dull roar of the fire in the boiler, the pssst, pssst of steam in the cylinder, the knocking of pipes, the creaking of the A-frame, the loud and profane voices of Mike Sullivan and Spence Guthrie as they screamed in each other’s faces.

Oh, hell, Taylor thought. He turned for the door, but Sullivan’s voice caught him before he could escape.

“ Taylor! Taylor, you son of a bitch, come down here, talk some sense into this damn mule-headed…”

There was no escape now. Taylor turned back, climbed down the ladder to the floor plates. Sullivan and Guthrie were near the workbench, standing close to one another. Sullivan had his hands on his hips, Guthrie had his arms folded. Sullivan was sweating profusely, sweat running down his face and staining his river driver shirt. He was a big, angry man, unused to engine room heat.

“How can I help you gentlemen?” Taylor drawled. His eyes darted to the steam gauge on the boiler. Eleven pounds, well within specs. The safety valves were untied.

“You can help me stuff this fat bastard back up the fidley,” Guthrie said.

“Hieronymus, talk some sense into the man,” Sullivan said. “He’s got the damned safety valves tied down, which is fine when we really need it, but there ain’t no call all the time!”

“Look at this!” Guthrie held up a fistful of old twine. “This son of a bitch comes down here on my watch below, cuts them away! Like he got a right to make decisions here!”

Taylor had to agree with Sullivan. He was not as enthusiastic as he once had been about tying safety valves shut. On the other hand, it was an offense against nature for the captain to come down to the engine room and interfere, particularly when the chief was not there.

He held his hands up, a gesture of surrender. “I ain’t got a dog in this here fight,” he said.

“What would you do, was you engineer?” Guthrie asked. The question was part challenge, part accusation.

“I would do as my heart commanded me,” Taylor said.

“Well, Guthrie here gonna do as I command him,” Sullivan said with finality. “You keep them safety valves free unless I say otherwise, or by God you’ll be on the beach in Memphis.” For emphasis he poked Guthrie in the chest with a sausage finger, then stormed off, leaving the engineer to hurl obscenities in his wake.

“Son of a bitch, big fat bastard, coming down here telling me what to do. To hell with him, the lazy… No, sir, he can go to the devil…”

Taylor was surprised. He would not have expected such good sense from anyone who called himself Mississippi Mike.

As Guthrie ranted and cursed-his verbal storm was his own personal safety valve, fully functional- Taylor ’s ears sorted out the various sounds of the engine and boiler rooms. He could not help it. He was not really even aware that he was doing it.

“… ain’t nothin but a chicken, thinks his whole damn boat’s gonna blow up…”

“You got a fire tube broken,” Taylor said.

“Huh?”

“I think you got a broken fire tube on the starboard boiler.” The fire tubes ran through the interior of the boilers, from one end to the other. The searing hot vapors of the coal fire in the firebox passed through the tubes and brought the water to a boil. Taylor could hear the irregular hissing and popping of spurting water on hot iron. When a tube was broken, water leaked from the boiler into the tube and into the firebox at one end, the smoke box at the other.

“Oh, horseshit, broken…” Guthrie said, with momentum still on his tirade, but he paused, cocked an ear, shut his mouth for a moment. “Well…”

With a scowl and a spit into the bilges he stepped over to the starboard boiler and threw open the door to the firebox. The coal was laid out in an even bed, glowing white hot, the heat shimmering and rising and hitting Guthrie and Taylor like a solid thing. No smoke. The shirtless, black-smudged fireman knew his business.

Taylor peered over Guthrie’s shoulder at the black circles that were the ends of the fire tubes. Third row down, second tube inboard, he could see the water dancing and sizzling and the gray vapor rising off it as the steam condensed. He opened his mouth, shut it, waited. A second later, Guthrie said, “There’s the son of a bitch… three rows down, second in from the starboard side…”

“Oh, yeah, sure enough.”

Guthrie straightened. “Well, I guess we’ll have to plug the bastard. Not like we got any spare tubes. Maybe when we’re tryin to get up steam with one tube left, someone’ll think to get us some more.”

Taylor nodded his understanding. He could see that four other tubes were already plugged. “I’ll get the other end,” he said.

“Huh?”

“The plug at the forward end. I’ll get it.”

“Why? You don’t even work on this bucket, and you better thank Jesus you don’t, son of a bitch rotten…”

“I know. But I reckon I best earn my keep.”

Guthrie shrugged. “Have it your way, pard.” They went over to the workbench. Taylor shed his frock coat, pulled on heavy leather gloves. They assembled wrenches, plugs, nuts. Taylor took a lantern, knowing the feeble light of the engine room would not extend to the far end of the boilers. “Let’s do it,” Taylor said.

Guthrie stepped over to the after end of the boiler. “Daniels, English,” he called to two of the firemen, “git some fire hoses rigged an charged. English, you go an help Taylor, there.”

Taylor went forward, skirting around the long, low iron tank, tons of iron of unknown integrity containing within it enough scalding water and steam to kill every man in the engine room- boiler explosions, the great terror of the steamship, to be feared like the wrath of God and defended against with a similar religious zeal. Taylor once had looked on the possibility of a boiler explosion the way most men looked upon sin-as something to worry about unless it was inconvenient. But no more.

His feet crunched on bits of coal spilled from the bunkers up against the starboard side of the ship. He walked sideways, through the narrow space between boiler and bunker, leaning away from the hot iron. He could feel the sweat on his brow and hands and recognized that it was not the sweat made by engine room heat, even though it was one hundred degrees at least in that space. His hands would be trembling if he had not been gripping his tools hard.

He skirted around a stanchion and the wrench slipped from his hand, clattered on the iron floor plate. Hell… He bent over, awkward in that narrow space, the burning metal of the boiler right beside him, picked the wrench up with slick fingers. He continued on, came out around the forward end of the boiler. In front of him there was only the black void of the coal bunker.

He found a hook in an overhead beam and hung the lantern, then applied the wrench to the nuts that secured the access plate to the smoke box. He was aware of the quiver in his fingers. He could smell the sweat from under his shirt.

He paused for a moment while English dragged the charged fire hose forward and opened it, letting the water gush into the bilge. While Taylor was actually plugging the tube, English would play the water over his hands. Otherwise the heat would be unbearable.

Most… goddamn routine… fucking simple job… Plugging fire tubes. It was a common enough task. He could not begin to recall how often he had done it in the course of his career. But that was before he had seen the power of the beast steam let loose.

He took the nuts off, dropped two, had to fumble around to find them, cursing.

“You done, there?” Guthrie called from the other end of the boiler.

“Hang on, hang on, got a froze nut,” Taylor shouted back. He was surprised by the anger in his voice. He pulled the plate free, opening up the smoke box and the end of the boiler, with its rows of tubes.

Water hissed and spit, jetting from the broken tube, steam condensing into swirling gray clouds. Ah, shit… The boilers were tipped forward, ever so slightly. It might have been the way they were mounted, or the trim of the vessel, or any number of factors. But the majority of the water leaking into the broken tube was running down toward Taylor, dancing and flying in the heat and with the motion of the ship.

Taylor felt the sharp insect bites of boiling water droplets lashing his face. The heat from the fire tubes was overwhelming. He took a step back, turned his head away. His breathing was becoming fast and shallow. He did not have to do this. It was not his engine room.

But he knew he had to do it. Especially now, after his great show of casually volunteering for the job. And it was not a hard job, not a dangerous job. Routine. But here he was, standing in the jaws of the beast, approaching it, laying hands on it, and the hardest part was to resist conjuring up the image of what was left of the scalded James Burgess right before he shot him.

“What the hell you doin up there?”

“Hold your goddamned horses… I got it now!” Taylor shouted back. “All right, English, go on.”

The fireman raised the stream of water until it was rushing over Taylor ’s hands and hissing and popping against the boiler. Taylor tried to breathe deeply but the breath wouldn’t come. He stepped into the grip of the heat, blinking water from his eyes, trembling, flinching from the steam and the spattering boiler water.

He heard something clang, as if someone had hit the boiler, and it made him jump. English jerked, and the stream of water from the fire hose went wide. Water jetted from the fire tube, gushing out the end, falling on hot metal plates, sizzling, steaming. Boiling water splashed over Taylor ’s arms and chest, burned him right through his shirt. Steam whistled by his face. He felt his stomach convulse, he thought he might piss his pants.

“Oh! Oh, son of a bitch! Git that goddamned water on here!

Git it on here, you stupid bastard!” He was shrieking at English, shouting like a madman. The fire tube had cracked more, perhaps cracked clean through. Guthrie had the plug in on the other side-the added pressure might have done it, or the jostling by Guthrie’s wrench. Whatever. The smoke box was filled with jetting water, steam, vapor, and heat.

“What’s wrong?” Guthrie shouted.

“Tube’s… son of a bitch tube… is ruptured!” Taylor went in, blinking, squinting, face turned away, hands shaking, tears running down his cheeks. There was water gushing everywhere, coming from the fire tube, from the stream English was directing at him. The heat and the smoke filled his eyes. He went in with the cone-shaped plug held out like a sword, lunging at the spurting tube. He heard himself make a low, whimpering sound but it seemed like it was someone else making the sound. He jammed the plug in the end of the tube. The water and the steam stopped.

The heat from the fire tubes was overwhelming, a searing, clawing agony, even with the stream from the fire hose. Taylor knew he had only seconds to get the nut on before he would have to step back. And then the plug would fall out and the water and steam would come and he would have to do it all again.

Don’t drop the nut, don’t drop the nut, don’t drop the nut… Taylor held the plug with his left hand, the nut in his right. The water from the fire hose tried to jerk it from his grip. Squinting in the terrible heat, like being pressed against a griddle, he worked the nut on the threads, worked it around, waited for the threads to catch.

Come on, come on, come on… And then he felt the threads take, felt the satisfying action of nut and bolt working together. He cranked it down, hand tight, stepped back with a gasp of relief.

For a minute, two minutes, he just stood there, hands on hips, gasping air, hot air, but not the burning air of the smoke box. At last he stepped forward, put the wrench on the nut, tightened it down. “All right,” he said to English, trying to sound as reasonable as he could, to compensate for his earlier hysteria. English directed the stream back into the bilge. Taylor put the access plate back on the smoke box, replaced the nuts. The heat fell off perceptibly.

“There you are! Hell, I thought you’d fainted from the heat!”

Guthrie started around the boiler toward Taylor. Taylor nodded, could not talk for a second. “That… was a son of a bitch,” he said. “Real spouter.” “All right. Well, it’s done. Thanks for the help.” There was a grudging sound to Guthrie’s thanks.

“You’re welcome.” Taylor had a sudden and overwhelming need to get out of the engine room, to stand on the deck, let the cool breeze run over him. To get away from the beast. “I got to get some fresh air,” he said, following Guthrie back around the boiler.

“Fresh air?” Guthrie exclaimed. “What the hell kind of engineer are you?” he asked, but that was yet another question that Taylor did not care to explore.

The General Page was twenty-eight hours from Greenville to Memphis, steaming upriver

against a one- to two-knot current, negotiating the wild, serpentine bends of the Mississippi River. Small towns and huge plantations slipped past, but the Page did not belong to the land. She was a citizen of another place, the riverborne community of the paddle wheelers and rafts and tugs and canoes that moved as languidly as the current on the wide brown water. The Mississippi River was like a whole other nation, with different geography, different customs, different history than the land through which it ran-one single, narrow, twisting nation smack in the middle of another.

Bowater was beginning to appreciate this unique quality of the river, to understand how the riverboat men came to be a separate breed from the deepwater sailors. During his long confinement at the naval hospital in Norfolk he had come upon and read a copy of Charles Darwin’s new Origin of Species, and though he viewed the work as predominantly a bunch of irreligious claptrap, there had been a few ideas that he fixed on, and found intriguing.

He wondered now how natural selection might have led to the species of men who worked the river. Certainly, he thought, the environment of the river community would have weeded out his own species, or any species of man with any sort of refinement or sensibilities.

These pointless and meandering thoughts drifted through Bowater’s head as he in turn drifted around the side wheeler, trying always to avoid Mike Sullivan, but still Sullivan hunted him like a hound dog on the scent of coon. Mississippi Mike was in a literary frenzy, so taken with the artistic merits and genuine originality of Bowater’s ideas on plot and character that he seemed unable to concentrate on anything else.

Sullivan finally caught him on the fantail, caught him alone. A moment before, Bowater had been talking with Ruffin Tanner about allocating crew on the new ironclad, the Tennessee, once she was under way. As long as he was with someone else, Bowater knew he was safe, because Sullivan wanted to keep his literary aspirations secret, and would not approach if a third party was there.

But no sooner had Tanner left, and Bowater begun considering with whom he could speak next, than Sullivan appeared around the corner of the deckhouse. So quickly, in fact, that Bowater had to imagine he was lurking there, waiting for Tanner to leave.

“Cap’n Bowater, there you are! I been working like a sum bitch, wrote it up the way you said.” Sullivan was smiling wide, holding a sheaf of paper in his hand. “Here, let me read you some-”

“Ahh…” There was no escape. Samuel Bowater had seen enough combat to know when there was nothing you could do but stand and take it. “All right…”

Mike, grinning harder, held the papers in front of him. “‘The Adventures of Mississippi Mike and the Murdering Dogs,’ ” he read.

“ ‘Chapter One-A Ghostly Tale. On the whole of the Mississippi, there ain’t no one who dare cross Mississippi Mike, best of the riverboat men-’ ”

“Isn’t anyone.” “What?” “There isn’t anyone who dares cross Mississippi Mike. That’s

how it should read. Or better yet, there’s no man who would dare cross Mississippi Mike.”

Mike nodded. “Yeah, that sounds real sweet, like the way them fancy French whores talk. All right, we’ll fix that up.” Mike licked the end of a pencil, scribbled awkwardly on the page.

… no man who would dare cross Mississippi Mike, best of the riverboat men. And of all of them, you’d reckon it was his kin would know best that the hardest drinkin, hardest fightin man on Western Waters was not a fellow to be done dirty. So Mike, being generous of spirit and not a fellow to think bad of another fellow, especially his kinfolk, never even thought that when his pa died it might have been at the hands of a murdering dog.

“What do you think?” Mike asked.

“Good, good,” Samuel said. “A little foreshadowing. Some nice alliteration. Is there much more of this… ah… introductory material?”

“No, no, I get right at it. Even used the names you come up with, for the other fellows. Here, listen up.” Mike cleared his throat and read:

This was in the early days, when Mississippi Mike had not yet got command of his own riverboat, but was mate on board the Belle of the West, which his pa was captain on. Paddy Sullivan was the best riverboat man there was, until his son inherited that mantle and even surpassed the former.

“I read that thing about ‘inheriting that mantle’ somewhere, don’t recall where, and I always liked it,” Sullivan explained. “Is that all right-you know, borrowin’ from another writer an all?”

“Generally, no, but I think we can let that stand. Go on.”

When Paddy Sullivan died, gentle in his sleep, it was a sad day on the river, and a sadder day for Mississippi Mike. But it was not for two months more, on a foggy morning watch, that Mike would find out the dirty deed that was done his pa.

The Belle of the West was anchored just south of Natchez and waiting for the fog to lift, when Horatio, a free Negro and Mike’s longtime pard, was on the deck watch.

“You seen it? Two times you seen it?” Horatio asked his shipmates, Barney and Mark, who had the watch with him. “That’s right. We seen it twice. And if you don’t believe in ghosts, pard, you best bet you would if you seen this.” Horatio’s eyes was like saucers. “Oh, Lawd, I surely do believe in ghosts, and I surely hope we don’t see one now!” “Look, y’all!” Mark shouted. The three men looked up. Right out of the fog, like a man-shaped cloud, and all shiny, stepped a spirit from another world, a world of the dead!

“Oh, Lawdy, Lawdy! Dat surely is de ghost of ol’ Paddy Sullivan! An don’t it look jest like him!” Horatio held tight to his shotgun, his ebony finger on the trigger, his eyes bulging from their sockets.

“Talk to him, Horatio!” Barney whispered. “No, suh, I ain’t talking to no ghost!” “Go on!” Mark said next, pushing Mike’s sable pard toward the apparition.

Horatio held the gun in front of him and the barrel trembled like a leaf in a breeze. “What you want, Paddy Sullivan?” he shouted in a hoarse voice. “What you coming around here for, scaring decent folk?” Horatio spoke bravely, for even though the Negro race is more afraid of ghosts and such than regular folk, Mike’s old shipmate was no coward. But the ghost would not talk to him, but instead floated free across the deck.

Sullivan looked up. “What do you think?”

“Excellent, Sullivan. Perfect,” Bowater said. He was impressed. It was not nearly as awful as he had imagined it would be, with a few bits that seemed genuinely inspired. He could see his enthusiasm reflected on Mike’s face.

“Really?”

“Oh, yes. You captured the mood of the thing very nicely. But see here, I had another idea, something that might really give the book some bite, you know.”

“Yeah?” Mike took a step closer, a conspiratorial move. “Here’s what I was thinking. How about if Mississippi Mike’s

uncle, along with becoming captain of the Belle of the West …” “Yeah?” “How about if he marries Mike’s mother!” Mike stood up straight, his eyes like saucers. “Marries his

mother?”

“Yes. Just think on it. Wouldn’t that get Mike hot for revenge?”

“Yeah, it would do that…” Mike looked away, trying to absorb the enormity of it. “But… the way I wrote it, Mike’s pa ain’t been dead but two months.”

“I know. Shocking, isn’t it?”

“Shocking? It’s damned indecent is what it is.”

“Of course.” Bowater lowered his voice. “You think people want to read about decency? Why don’t you write a book about a cloistered nun, see how many people buy that?”

“You got a point…”

“Just think about it,” Bowater encouraged. “That’s all I ask.”

“All right…” Mike muttered. He wandered off, his eyes on the deck. His lips were moving, but Bowater could not hear what he was saying, and he guessed-he hoped-he had bought himself a few hours of peace.

As it turned out, the notion that frailty’s name might be woman so rattled Mississippi Mike that Bowater had little discourse with him for the rest of the afternoon and evening, until he was safely ensconced in his cabin with the door bolted. The next morning he stepped onto the side deck carefully, looked fore and aft to see the way clear.

“Captain Bowater!” Mike’s voice was like a thunderclap, and like a thunderclap it came from overhead. Bowater turned and looked up. Mike was standing on top of the wheel box, leaning on the rail, looking down. “Come on up to the wheelhouse! Take your breakfast up here! This is your big day, Captain!”

Bowater trudged wearily, grudgingly, up to the hurricane deck and across to the wheelhouse. Mississippi Mike was outside the wheelhouse, grinning, shouting, flying back and forth. It was not the Mississippi Mike who sheepishly asked Bowater’s advice on writing. It was hard drivin, hard drinkin, most dangerous son of a whore riverboat man on the Western Waters Sullivan, the preliterary Mississippi Mike.

“Good morning, Captain,” Bowater said. His every cell was crying out for coffee, hot and black.

“Coffee, Captain?” Sullivan said, and without waiting for a reply turned to the deckhand polishing the bell and said, “Berry, light along to the galley and get the captain here some coffee!”

Berry took off, returned, and Sullivan had the decency not to speak until Bowater had taken at least two good sips.

“Outskirts of Memphis here, Captain,” Sullivan said, nodding toward the shore. It was a gray morning, overcast and humid. Bowater could see that the shoreline was more crowded than it had been downriver: docks, warehouses, clusters of dilapidated shacks. Riverboats were tied up at various angles to wharves and to the shore itself. He could see wagons moving along like tiny models in a diorama.

Memphis… The voyage had been so wild he had almost lost sight of the destination. Life like the chapters of a book-one ends, move on to the next.

The Adventures of Samuel Bowater, Naval Officer.

Chapter the Thirty-fourth, In which our hero is shed of Mississippi Mike Sullivan at last, and sees his new command for the first time, and comes to understand into what new nightmare he has been plunged…

Bowater stared over the brown water and played with the idea.

“Just a couple miles or so upriver’s the yard where your ship’s a’buildin, Captain. Mr. John T. Shirley’s yard. That fella’s a whirlwind, don’t get in his way. Got a wharf there, we can drop you and your men off right at the shipyard.”

“Oh…” Bowater had not thought that far ahead. “That would be marvelous, Captain Sullivan.”

“Least I can do.”

Bowater was silent for a moment, finished his coffee, felt much restored. “I’ll go and alert my men to be ready to disembark,” he said.

“No, no need, Captain,” Sullivan said, then leaned into the wheelhouse, shouted, “Come right, you stupid son of a whore! Do you see that raft? Are you blind, you dumb bastard?” and from inside the wheelhouse, unseen by Bowater, the helmsman replied, “I see the raft. Shut your mouth, you fat bastard!”

The General Page swung slightly to starboard, and Sullivan grinned as if the helmsman’s reply had been part of some witty repartee. “No need, Captain, I’ll have one of my boys do it,” and with a shout, Sullivan dispatched the put-upon Berry to gather Bowater’s men.

“Nothin like gettin the first sight of a new command, huh, Captain Bowater?” Sullivan said. “I would be honored to share that moment with you.” It wasn’t sincerity in his voice, but something meant to sound like it.

“Yes, indeed…”

They steamed on, the shipping and the buildings, the wharves and the traffic growing thicker as Memphis opened up around them, and the General Page inched her way toward the eastern bank of the Mississippi River.

They were less than two hundred yards off when Sullivan shouted, “Here we are, Baxter, come right, now!”

The General Page swung across the river, her bow pointing at a makeshift shipyard sprawling along a landing near a desultory-looking fort that Bowater had been told was Fort Pickering. A great brown earthen plot of land, scattered with stacks of blond, fresh-cut wood, piles of iron with a patina of rust turning them ruddy brown, carts and men and huffing steam engines. There were two sawmills spitting out clouds of dust, several buildings that might be ironworks, black smoke roiling from forge chimneys, a dock with a small tug tied alongside.

There were two ships on the stocks, sister ships, around one hundred and seventy feet in length, thirty-five feet on the beam, and perhaps twelve feet in depth. Bowater could see elegant curved fantail sterns, a shallow deadrise, a nice run fore and aft. The casemates rose straight up from the sides, nearly vertical like the sides of a house. Only the fore and aft ends of the casemates were slanted, the way he had come to think an ironclad’s casemate should be.

They were good-looking vessels, identical in proportion, very different in their state of completion. One of them was finished in her planking, her casemate covered in thick oak, pierced for guns, two aft and three on the broadside that Bowater could see. The shafts of her twin screws were in place, parallel to her waterline, the big propellers already mounted on either side of the barn door rudder. She had her first few runs of iron on as well, the plating covering her sides nearly to the level of the main deck.

She was far from complete, but she was well on her way, and a month or so of diligent effort might see her launched and commissioned, an operational man-of-war.

The other ship was not nearly so far along. She was no more than a wooden frame, the skeleton of a ship, with the first few runs of planking along her bottom. The stacks of wood on either side of her would no doubt become the rest of her planking, but as it was they were just stacks of wood. Through the space between frames Bowater could see there were no engines, no shafts, no boilers.

“There she is, Captain, the ironclad Tennessee!” Sullivan made a wide gesture, taking in the entire yard.

“I see two vessels, Sullivan. Which is the Tennessee?” As if he had to ask.

“It’s the one with the good ventilation.” He pointed to the ship in frame. “You’re a lucky man, Captain. Ventilation’s real important in a hot climate like we got here!”

Sullivan was enjoying himself. He turned, shouted orders at the helmsman, grinned, and stuffed a cigar in his mouth as the helmsman cursed him and spun the wheel. Sullivan rang up turns astern and with a creaking protest the paddle wheels stopped, then thrashed astern, and the General Page settled against the dock, the barge of coal trailing away downstream at the end of the towrope.

The brow had just gone over the side when the horseman rode up, hard pounding across the shipyard, making the yard workers pause and look up. He dismounted in a flourish, ran the length of the dock, and leaped aboard. A minute later he was standing, breathless, on the hurricane deck.

“Captain Sullivan, a good job you come now,” the man said when his breath returned. A young man, he had the look of the river on him.

“What’s up?” Sullivan asked, cigar in mouth.

“Captain Montgomery says best get your hide upriver! Council of war for the captains tonight. Most of ’em are hot to go after the Yankees at dawn!”

“Well, damn! That’s some damned good news!” Mississippi Mike was wearing his dime-novel grin. “What say you, Captain Bowater? You and your men want to join us in the fun?” His eyes flickered toward Shirley’s yard. “Or do you want to take your own boat to the fight?”

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