This is episode fifty, the final episode, of the fifth book in the Trace Troy Adventures in Paradise series. The Title is A Cult in Paradise
. It has been featured in episodes over the last few months. It will eventually be published in full on Amazon. All of the Trace Troy books, as well as my other novels, can be purchased on Amazon by clicking the Bookstore tab above. I hope you have enjoyed this adventure. And thanks for stopping by.
A Complete Crew
After a good meal, Trace and Tom visited a clothing store. Trace bought Tom a couple of changes of clothing. They tossed the robe away.
Walking on the sidewalk away from the store, Trace asked, “Where have you been sleeping?”
“Here and there,” Tom said. “I found an empty shed for a couple of nights. Any place I could find that was out of the way. I thought about getting arrested so I could, at least, sleep in jail and get a meal.”
“Come back to The Tramp Islander tonight,” Trace offered. “You can stay in one of the cabins.”
“I’m not going to pretend to be too proud,” Tom said. “I’m going to jump at it.”
“Good,” Trace said. “You’re at risk of becoming sick without proper food and rest. It looks like we’ll be in Pago Pago for a couple more days. My dad married someone from the island. I don’t know if that means I have any influence, but I’ve met a few people related to my dad’s wife. Maybe we can put something together for you, a job, and a way back to The States.”
“I’ve lived five years not making any decisions on my own,” Tom said. “It’s like being institutionalized. I’m not used to doing things on my own.”
They reached the dock and walked across the gangplank and onboard The Tramp Islander.
Trace opened the hatch to the front companionway. “Go all the way through, past the galley, to the very end of the hallway. The last room on the left will be yours. Get some rest.”
“Appreciate it,” Tom said.
“I’ll tell Makani you’re onboard,” Trace said. “He always has snacks on the bar; help yourself.”
Tom ducked down the companionway and made his way forward to his cabin.
Sage rested on the lid of the forward hatch. He watched the sun cast its final glow below the green vegetated hills laying lazily west of Pago Pago harbor. His thoughts bounced from one situation to another; the future, the past, and the wide gulf in between. Adam, his dad and trusted advisor, was long gone, enjoying life with Talei in Hawaii. Coyote, the straightforward, honest friend of Adam, was likely in Texas, conjuring up stories about the last few months in the South Seas. Sage is here. That is why he is here; for times like this.
He climbed below, using the forward companionway. He walked to Sage’s room and rapped on the door.
Sage opened the door. “What’s goin’ on?”
“Come up to the pilothouse,” Trace said. “I want to talk for a while.”
“Sure,” Sage said. “Let me get my shoes on.”
Trace climbed up to the pilothouse. He sat in the chair at the chart desk and waited for Sage.
Sage arrived a couple of minutes later. He carried two cups of coffee.
“I could tell you have something on your mind,” Sage said, handing a cup to Trace. “I wasn’t sure it was coffee or whiskey. I thought we’d start with coffee.”
“Good choice,” Trace said.
“You know I was reading The Sea-Wolf when you knocked,” Sage said as he sat on the bench.
“Let me guess,” Trace said, sipping the coffee, “I’m Wolf Larsen and you’re Humphrey Van Weyden?”
“You’ve read it?” Sage said.
“Required, the ninth grade,” Trace said.
“Oh, yeah,” Sage said, “you told me all about it so I could give a book report. I knew the story sounded familiar. I can’t remember how it ends—don’t tell me!”
Sage sipped his coffee while he looked beyond the cup at his lips toTrace. He pulled the cup away and asked, “So what’s up?”
“Sage, you and I have roots in this world,” Trace began. “We’re going to be ranchers. We’ve been raised that way. But if we decide to do something else, we have something to fall back on.”
“You mean like take off and sail the South Seas,” Sage said.
“Exactly,” Trace said. “This is a quest, an adventure, a diversion. We’re serious, but this is not a serious endeavor. It’s going to college and taking all the easy courses.”
“I follow you,” Sage said, “but where does this lead?“
“Remember Tom?” Trace asked.
“The guard who took a cane to your head and you kneed him in the coconuts,” Sage said. “By the way, if you ask me, he still had something comin’ to ‘im. Like a for real knee in the balls.”
“He’s in the last crew cabin on the left,” Trace said.
“What!”
“Yeah,” Trace sipped. “Let me tell you what happened to me today.”
Trace told him about how he found Tom eating from a garbage can, all the way to him taking the cabin.
“So that’s it,” Trace concluded.
“You left out something,” Sage hesitated. “Your feelings.”
“Yeah,” Trace said, “you know my feelings, maybe better than anyone.”
“So we just hired a deckhand who’s some sort of brainy-ack and never worked anything harder than the Pythagorean theorem Sage said. “And now you want to hire a sick, emaciated former cult member who eats out of garbage cans and snitches on his friends.”
“That sums it up,” Trace said.
“I say go for it,” Sage said, and reached his cup out to toast Trace.
They clinked cups.
“Let’s get ‘im up here,” Trace said.
“I’ll go below and tell him to come up to the pilothouse,” Sage said. “You handle it. I’m going back to The Sea-Wolf.”
Tom climbed up the aft companionway and into the pilothouse. He looked intensely at Trace, trying to read why he called him to the pilothouse.
“Have a seat,” Trace said, nodding to the bench.
Tom sat on the bench.
“How’s your cabin?’ Trace asked.
“Cozy and nice,” Tom said. “I really appreciate it.”
“Sage and I have been talking,” Trace said. “You really don’t know what’s next, do you?”
“Do any of us?” Tom said.
“No,” Trace said, “but a week from now, chances are, I’m on the seas heading to Fiji. On the other hand, what can you say?”
“I really don’t know,” Tom said.
“Here’s what Sage and I have come up with,” Trace said. “We’d like to take you on as a deckhand.”
“I know nothing about being a deckhand,” Tom said.
“Neither does Paul Purnell. He has the cabin next to yours,” Trace said.
“Paul?”
“Yes,” Trace said, “he’s going to be a deckhand.”
Tom looked around the pilothouse as if looking for someone to provide an answer.
“There’s no one here to help you,” Trace said. He reached across to Tom and jabbed his finger on his chest. “The answer is there. It’s inside you. It’s your choice.”
Tom clenched his jaw. “I’ll try.”
“That’s not good enough,” Trace said.
“I’ll do it,” Tom said.
Trace stood and grabbed the mic. “All hands in the mess. All hands in the mess.”
Trace hung up the mic. “Do you know what the mess is?”
“I know what it sounds like,” Tom said.
“Follow me, you’re in for a surprise.”
Trace introduced Tom to the rest of the crew. Paul was pleased to be reunited with Tom. Trace cautioned everyone that everyone was new on The Tramp Islander at one time and that working and learning had challenges.
Trace concluded by saying, “Tom and I had a confrontation with a three-hundred-pound gorilla back at a restaurant. I know his breed. Revenge is in his genes. So let’s get out of port before he storms onto The Tramp Islander at midnight with a dozen of his goons. Sage, show these landlubbers how to toss the lines, and let’s get out to sea.”