Spartina Read Online Free Page B

Spartina
Book: Spartina Read Online Free
Author: John D. Casey
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single shell. He’d been a single-sculler in college, Dick had seen the engraved cups in Joxer’s office, and a picture of Joxer with a lot of Japs on board a fishing vessel. But Joxer knew his stuff. Dick had heard how Joxer had gone into the water with his scuba gear to cut loose a propeller fouled with a stray piece of polypropylene. The boat had tied up at Joxer’s dock to unload crabs and got fouled as she was pulling away. Joxer had another boat standing by to unload and didn’t want to wait around. So in he jumped.
    Dick understood that. What he held against Joxer was his paying his crab workers piecework instead of an hourly wage. And then breezing through the plant jollying up the pickers, patting the women on the back. “That’s the ticket, ladies!” As though it was a little-league game and a lot of fun. And his Jap foreman who never talked but just reached over the picker’s shoulder and showed her how to do it faster.
    Joxer was out to make his million. Didn’t have time to come look at the boat Dick was building.
    Joxer’s wife. You couldn’t tell she’d had two kids. Striding around in a tennis outfit or a bikini with a beach robe that just came to the tops of her yard-long thighs. Dick saw her waterskiing around the salt ponds and out on the ocean on calm days. She and Joxer were good at things like that.
    The other couple were smaller versions of the Goodes. Same healthy good looks, but scaled down, and more willowy too—the pair of them.
    Dick began to work his tongs.
    The couples were in a huddle, pointing to parts of Sawtooth Island and back up to Sawtooth Point. Dick had heard there was some buying and selling going on. Dick wouldn’t mind having Joxer Goode as a neighbor, that would give Dick a bit of a claim onJoxer. Dick had always been a handy neighbor during snow, flood, power outage. But the only landowners left on Sawtooth Point were one old couple—every other house was now a summer rental—even the Wedding Cake, completed in 1911 by Dick’s great-uncle. Dick’s part of the family had never lived in it. When his great-uncle died, his son, who’d moved away, sold it, along with a narrow right-of-way from the Post Road. Dick’s grandfather got the rest of the point, Dick’s father sold off two house lots—the Buttricks’ and the Bigelows’. Then Dick’s father had sold off his house and the rest of the point, except for the acre Dick now owned, when he went to the hospital. He thought he’d leave Dick some money after his bills were paid. There was so little left, Dick had to use up his own savings from his Coast Guard tour to build his little house. Dick had tried to shut his mind to all the ifs. If his father had held on a little longer, the land prices would have doubled, tripled. If the old man had had health insurance. If the old man had deeded over some of the land to Dick. If, if, if. The old man had paid his debts. He probably held the record at South County Hospital for biggest bill ever paid by an uninsured patient. Dick had been away at sea, helicoptered off his cutter when his father died, was buried. Dick’s hitch was up eight months later and he was back in time for the final accounting after probate. He’d figured there might not be a lot, but he hadn’t been prepared for next-to-nothing. He’d thought of using the money—he’d hoped there would be ten thousand at the very worst—to send himself to the Merchant Marine Academy. He’d had a plan: by age forty he would be master of a ship. Here he was at age forty-plus in an eighteen-foot skiff. Here he was tonging quahogs. Here he was watching four beautiful people in swimsuits so small that all four of them wouldn’t make a single shirt.
    There was a small part of Dick that recognized that his dream of working his way up to master wouldn’t have been a piece of cake.He hadn’t done so good in the Coast Guard, and that was before he could blame his bad temper on his bad luck. Even his friend Eddie

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