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He whistled again, louder. A peeled-back strip of steel from the shell hit had been pushed between two links of the flexible armor the hydraulic line wore. You couldn't see that from above, because the hasty repairs to the deck hid it. And you might not be able to see it when you came down here, either, because you literally shut the door on it. But when the gun moved to that particular position, the line moved and the steel pinched off the flow of hydraulic fluid.

"Lucky it never pierced the hose in the armor," Sam muttered. He opened the door again. "Lou, you want to come down here and take a look at this?"

"I'll be a son of a bitch," Lou Stein said when Carsten showed him what he'd found. "Jeez, I wish it had pierced the line. Then we would have found out what the hell was wrong. Well, we can fix it, anyhow."

A cutting torch made short work of the offending metal. Mordecai used it with as much assurance as if he'd had ten fingers, not eight. He said, "Sam, we get back to Pearl, everybody on this-here repair crew will buy you a beer. This one's been makin' us crazy for a while, let me tell you. Look behind the goddamn door. What do they call it? Hiding in plain sight?"

"Yeah." Sam chuckled. "Hell, any sailor who doesn't want to work knows how to do that." He and Mordecai grinned at each other.

13

"What's the matter, Ma?" Edna Semphroch asked. "Lord, you ought to be dancing out in the street at how bully things are, but you've done nothing but mope the past month." She dried a last cup and set it in the cupboard. "We've got more money than I ever thought I'd see in all my born days, and we haven't seen hide nor hair of that awful Bill Reach since the Rebs hauled him off. I don't miss him, neither. He gave me the horrors." She shuddered.

"I don't miss him, either," Nellie Semphroch answered. She was drying silverware, and threw a fork into the drawer with unnecessary violence. "I wish to God I'd never set eyes on him."

She waited for Edna to start prying again about who Reach was, who he had been, and what he'd meant to her. She'd fended off those questions for months now. What Edna would learn if she got the true answer would not only make her wilder, it would also probably make her despise Nellie.

But, for once, Edna took a different tack tonight. She said, "Is Mr. Jacobs across the street all right? You ain't been over there for a while now, and you were going every few days for a long time."

If Edna had noticed that, had some alert Confederate intelligence officer noticed it, too? Nellie grimaced; she wondered if she even cared. She dried a teaspoon. "As far as I know, he's fine," she answered, doing her best to sound unconcerned, indifferent.

Edna looked at her out of the corner of her eye. "Were you sweet on him, Ma?" she asked in a tone that invited woman-to-woman confidences. "Is that what it is? Were you sweet on him and you had a quarrel?"

"We've never had a quarrel," Nellie snapped, all pretense of indifference vanishing before she could try to keep it. The irony was that she had discovered she was sweet on Hal Jacobs-and he on her-bare moments before she discovered he was working for Bill Reach, whom she still loathed with the deep and abiding loathing that clung to every part of her life before she'd met Edna's father.

Too clever for her own good, Edna noticed the hot denial at once, both for what it said and for what it didn't. "It's all right, Ma, it really is," she said tolerantly. "You know I wouldn't mind if you found somebody. Pa's been dead so long, I don't hardly remember him anyways. And Mr. Jacobs seems nice enough, even if-" She stopped. "He seems nice enough."

Even if he's old and not very handsome. Nellie could read between the lines, too. She sighed. Edna wanted license for herself, and was consistent enough, maybe even generous enough, to grant the same license to everyone else, even to her mother. That Nellie might not want it never occurred to her. But then, she didn't know Nellie had had far too much license far too young. Nellie hoped she would never find out.

"You really ought to make up with him, Ma," Edna said. "I mean-" She stopped again. This time, she didn't amend anything. She didn't need to amend anything. Nellie could figure out what she meant. You're not getting any younger. You're not going to catch anything better.

"Maybe I will," Nellie said with another sigh. She hadn't brought Hal Jacobs any information gleaned at the coffeehouse since she found out to whom he'd been giving it. One reason-one big reason-the place flourished as it did was that his connections helped it get food and drink hard to come by in hungry, Confederate-occupied Washington, D.C. If she didn't do anything for him, why should he do anything for her?

I'll do this for you, and you'll pay me off, Nellie thought. How was that different from the sweaty bargains she'd made in little, narrow rooms back when she was too much younger than Edna? "Damned if I know," she muttered.

"What did you say, Ma?" Edna asked.

"Nothing." The coffeehouse had become so popular with the Rebels, they'd probably help keep her in supplies if the shoemaker across the street didn't. But that felt like an illicit bargain, too. They hadn't been the kindest nor the gentlest occupiers, and a good many of them frequented her place for no better reason than the hope of seducing Edna. Nellie was sure of that, too.

And, to make matters worse, who could guess how long the Confederates were going to hold on to Washington? If she aligned herself with them now, what would the reckoning be when the United States reclaimed their capital? She thought that was going to happen, and perhaps not in the indefinite future. Oh, the Confederates bragged about and made much of what a submersible of theirs had done in the Chesapeake Bay, but was that anything more than a pinprick when you measured it against the hammering U.S. forces were giving the Rebs in Maryland? She didn't think so.

"You ought to go over there, Ma," Edna said. "He's a nice man."

"Tomorrow." Nellie didn't often yield an argument to her daughter, but most of their arguments were about what Edna was doing, not about what she was doing herself. She turned off the gaslight in the kitchen. "It's late. Let's go on up to bed."

The next morning, she did cross the street to Mr. Jacobs'shop. Dirt and gravel had been shoveled into the hole the U.S. bomb made in the street; the Rebs weren't going to be bothered with proper pavement. She kicked at the gravel. Watching the little stones spin away from her shoe, she wished she could kick a lot more things.

It was early. She tried the doorknob anyway. She wasn't surprised when it turned in her hand. Hal Jacobs didn't sleep late. The bell above the door chimed. The shoemaker stood behind the counter, a hammer in his hand. His eyes widened a little beneath bushy eyebrows. His smile showed teeth not too bad, not too good. "Hello," he said, and then, more warily, "Widow Semphroch."

That he didn't use her Christian name said he'd noticed how she'd not been in lately. "You can still call me Nellie, Hal," she said.

He nodded. "Good morning, Nellie," he said. He coughed a couple of times. "I was afraid I had offended you the last time you were here."

Afraid he'd offended her by kissing her, she meant. "No, that's all right," she answered. As she had with Edna, she spoke before she'd fully figured out what she should have said. Claiming offense would have given her the perfect excuse for having avoided him. Now she couldn't use it. She found a question of her own: "What have you heard about Bill Reach?"

He made a face. "In prison. In a Confederate prison as a burglar. This had to do with you, didn't it?" She found she didn't like him scowling at her. But after a moment, he went on, "But you knew him some time ago, is that not true?" He looked at her with mixed kindness and suspicion.