He mostly owned them. Each ship, designed with his insistent and detailed assistance, had been built by Bethlehem Steel Shipbuilding in Baltimore, and had cost $3.4 million. The monthly payments on his research vessels alone ran to $28,000 a month. Crew, maintenance, and supply costs for both ships was $225,000 a month. The luxury of owning his own cabin aboard the Gemini amounted to $4,200 a day. So he called it a guest cabin.
In the first starboard guest cabin, he rummaged through the canvas duffle he always kept packed and in the trunk of his car. He never knew where he was going, for sure, so he was always ready to go.
He found a clean pair of chinos, a pale blue sport shirt, and dark blue, soft-soled loafers. Setting them aside, he stripped out of his light blue jumpsuit — an MVU uniform of sorts — then headed for the attached head. He drank the rest of his coffee while standing under the steaming water. One of the details that had slipped by him during the design phase for the ship was the height of the shower head. It was not quite high enough. Brande was six-four, and the spray hit him directly in the chest.
He weighed 215 pounds, but it would take a major expedition to locate any fat. His wide shoulders and barrel chest were direct descendants of Henning Sven Brande — once Brandeson — his grandfather. Antecedents to Henning Sven, in the Swedish tradition, were confused by differing surnames. Svenson. Petterson. There were others that he had forgotten. Henning Sven Brandeson, at any rate, was the first to land in Minnesota, in 1867. He had dug into the ground, planted wheat, and expected all those that followed him to do the same.
Brande had respected his grandparents, Sven and Bridgette, especially since they raised him from age eight, after his parents were killed in an automobile accident, but digging in the earth had not come naturally to him. What had come naturally was his attraction for, first, Tenmile Lake, then Leech Lake, then Lake Superior. He kept hunting for larger bodies of water. Working the summer wheat harvests and gathering scholarships wherever he could, Brande managed to accumulate the cash he needed to get him to the University of California at San Diego. His graduate schools were also completed by funds from a variety of sources.
As he stood at the basin and shaved for the second time that day — not knowing what was coming later in the day — he realized that most of his life was devoted to raising funds from various sources. He was always hitting up endowments and charitable organizations for contributions. Grant-writing for federal funding was now second nature. Infrequently, he entered into contracts for private ventures, as he had just done with George Dawson. It seemed as if half of his life was spent finding the funds necessary to fulfil the other half of his life.
The effort had brought early crow’s feet to the corners of his blue eyes. The lines from the outside edges of his nose to the corners of his mouth had deepened. The responsibility of providing for eighty-four — he knew more of the details of his business than he let on to Kaylene Rae Thomas — employees had settled into his face, though he tried not to let others share his concerns. Additionally, the sun and the saltwater had bleached his blond hair to near-white and weathered his face into ruggedness. In the mirror, he could see his hand dragging the razor through the lather. His large and blunt fingers, those of a Minnesota wheat farmer, showed the little scars incurred by contact with coral reef and sharp equipment.
Brande felt as if he were fit, but he was less sure of the health of MVU. If the Dawson find proved plentiful, it would help immensely. He would not count on it, however, and in the meantime, he had to mount another fund-raising campaign. He was acutely aware of the payrolls and notes coming due, without Rae Thomas’s prompting.
After dressing and repacking his duffel, Brande carried it out to the bridge. Okey Dokey was waiting for him, and he had abandoned his colorful T-shirt. Wearing an open-collared white sport shirt under a pale blue sport coat, he looked more like the graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology that he was. Dokey’s title was Chief Robotics Operations Engineer, and since the primary thrust of Marine Visions was robotics, Dokey was not often far from Brande’s side.
Dokey flipped a thumb over his shoulder, toward the port side. “There’s an Albatross just now putting down, Chief. What’d we do to get Navy attention?”
“I’m not sure I know, Okey, but it’s courtesy of Avery Hampstead.”
“Good. Maybe he’s got a job for us. Or at the least, he’ll buy lunch.”
They left the bridge by way of the exterior ladder and descended to the main deck. Jim Word had the launch over the side, waiting for them, and George Dawson had come aboard to say goodbye.
“Keep careful count, George,” Brande told him.
“Damned sure, I will. There’s a chip out of that ingot we just got up, and I thought I’d better search Dokey before he got away”
His grin belied the accusation, and Dokey grinned back at him.
“Captain, you don’t want to search where I hid it.”
“You gonna play that way, I guess I don’t.”
Brande went down the gangway and stepped into the launch. He tossed his duffel on the stern seat. Dokey followed, and the seaman manning the helm shoved in the throttles, pulled away from the Gemini, and headed toward the seaplane.
The Grumman Albatross idled its engines a quarter-mile away. A Navy seaman stood in the open waist door, and when they drew alongside, helped them aboard.
Brande and Dokey settled into the canvas sling seats provided in the utilitarian aircraft, and moments later, the twin radial engines were roaring, and the plane was skipping along the wave tops.
The banging in the fuselage hull quit abruptly as the airplane lifted off. Brande watched the Gemini get smaller. Someone on the foredeck of the Justica, probably Curtis Aaron, was waving his arms wildly. Brande could not tell who he was waving at, so he waved back at the man.
“I don’t think that was a cheerful farewell, Dane,” Dokey said. “I think he was casting a spell on you.”
“On us.”
“Sure, spread the blame.”
“You brought the ingot up, Okey. You know Aaron doesn’t like that”
“What good is all that gold doing anyone, buried on the bottom? Tell me that.”
“You know I tend to agree with you,” Brande said.
“You agree with Aaron, too.”
Brande was pretty schizophrenic on the matter of deep sea recoveries. He admitted that to himself. Where the historical significance of artifacts was involved, he did not often go as far as, say, Robert Ballard, who had located the Titanic and photographed and mapped the shipwreck. Ballard’s philosophy saw the Titanic’s grave as historically important, but not archaeologically important. Salvaging the wreck would not have a scientific purpose. The subsequent 1987 French expedition — with American help — caused physical damage to the Titanic’s structure and appendages when they sought out and raised almost a thousand artifacts to the surface.
Brande had watched the telecast in which Telly Savalas supervised the unveiling of many of those artifacts, including the opening on live TV of the second-class purser’s safe. Ballard’s earlier expedition had learned that the back of that particular safe was missing, due to rust, and it was empty. The contents pulled from it for the benefit of the television audience had come from elsewhere. It was staged for dramatic effect, no doubt, but was still fraudulent, as far as Brande was concerned.
In twenty years of diving on wrecks, Brande had let some go by photographed but untouched, graves for those who had died. In many cases, he had brought goblets, china, buttons, belt buckles, and helmets to the surface and turned them over to the authorities with jurisdiction. He preferred to have artifacts of that nature placed in museums, where many people could view and marvel over them. Frequently, expeditions shared the spoils among museums, universities, and salvagers. And state and federal tax collectors, of course. The governmental accountants were always one step behind them. Incan gold on its way to Spain gave up a percentage to Uncle Sam.