“Do you suppose he meant anything by that? Was it a symbol of something?”
Vann had a faraway look in his eyes, reliving his research I supposed. “You know, I thought about that too, a lot really. At the time, I guess I was trying to derive some bigger meaning from it. Did he see himself as part of a game? Was there some kind of meaning to him about his relative power in the area?”
“Power?”
“It’s a chess piece value thing. You know, how folks that play rate the value of one piece against another?” Vann’s hands were waving in front of his crossed legs, moving invisible chess pieces around in the air. Although I knew how to play, or supposed I did, I had no idea what he was talking about.
“This get complicated, huh?”
“A bit, not too much, but you probably don’t want to hear a gaming lecture from me.” His eyes twinkled a bit at that, and I took it that he would have been happy to give me one.
“Not really. Let’s just leave it at my understanding that people have values attached to them.”
“Ok then.” He sighed and reluctantly continued. “So, maybe it was a value thing, or any of another whole mess of potential analogies relating to even more obscure chess information. The history of the pieces and such. A person could get, did get in my case, lost in that for a bit.”
More details I was ignorant of no doubt. “You researched the history of chess pieces?”
“Yes, kind of fascinating actually. You know, in ancient versions that piece, the one we call a rook, was actually a chariot. Or in some other cases berserker warriors. Plenty of room there to put meaning into the name of Tom’s boat, but in the end I just decided he liked playing chess.”
I was quiet for a moment and Vann seemed content to take a break from the story. It did not seem logical to me that this piece of information meant so little. After all, Tom had not named his boat in the usual way but had instead chosen to put a picture of a chess piece as a nameplate.
“That seems like one hell of a loose end you left there, I mean there has to be more to that than the fact that he liked to play chess. Did he really actually play?”
My question snapped Vann out of what, from his facial contortions anyway, seemed to have been a troubled reverie.
“Ah, yes, at least it seems so. It’s mentioned quite a few times in his journals and a set was recovered from the boat.”
“Why did you decide to leave that one alone?” My query sounded harsher than I meant it to. Perhaps the night air was adding malice to my words.
“Leave what?” He replied quickly but with an undertone of understanding.
“Leave this idea of what or how he named that boat with such a lame explanation. You dug up plenty of other information and certainly drew plenty of critical conclusions, but then you leave this with your, ‘liked to play,’ chess solution?”
Vann was still sitting cross-legged and now propped his chin up on his hand, elbow resting on his right knee, the thinker pose I thought.
“Well, somethings aren’t for me to figure out I guess.” Several seconds of silence and then he began again.
“Tom left and cruised off into the fading light. His journal mentions that he didn’t think anyone would follow him into the darkness, giving him at least a little bit of a lead on his likely pursuers.”
“I’m no sailor but isn’t travel on the water fairly dangerous at night?”
“Of course it is, but Tom knew that area really well and figured he could disappear safely. Although this boat was new to him, he had spent plenty of time on that water in others ones.”
“Did he have a plan, some place that he was going?”
“He definitely planned to go north, although how far initially is hard to say. Me myself, I probably would have given some consideration to the group of islands that is across the bay from where Tom left, might have been a good place to disappear. Not Tom though, his journal states, ‘need to head away from Duluth, up toward the more empty parts of this great wilderness.’ He had enough supplies, like I said before the boat was well provisioned, enough to survive for a good amount of time on his own. I think maybe he just planned to head north and see what happened, maybe find another place like what Agate Bay had been when he first arrived. Pristine and empty, ya know?”
I nodded and shook my head, wishing that I had some water as the after effects of the Thunderbird were starting to hit me, leaving me with a rapidly approaching headache and a tacky feeling in my mouth. I looked at Vann’s bag, hoping this somehow alerted him to my condition, however he was still just starting at me after his last sentence. I decided it was not that important.
“Yeah, I guess he liked places like that. So he headed north. How far did he get?”
“Not far actually, although he certainly wanted to. After about thirty minutes on the lake he started to notice that the boat was taking on some water, not quickly but steadily, enough that he decided he did not want to be any further off shore than he was. He had turned north almost right after leaving and was out of sight of his cabin, so I figure he took some small comfort from that anyway. It was not dark when he discovered this problem so he spent some anxious hours, bailing, trying to stem the flow of water and waiting for the light to fade. A few times he thought he had it fixed up, however within a few minutes the water would start to accumulate again. Once night fell, he kept bailing and hoped he would be able to fix the problem once the sun came back up.”
“That couldn’t have been a fun night.”
“I doubt it was, however the situation did not require him to work constantly. He did have time to write his final journal entry.”
“And that’s the last thing we know about him?”
“It is certainly the last bit of information that he provided. Everything else is speculation.”
I could not take it any longer.
“Do you have any water in there?” I said, pointing at Vann’s bag.
He grinned back. “No way. But I have this,” and he reached into a pocket of his jacket and pulled out a pack of gum. That was going to have to do at this point. I took it gratefully and popped it into my mouth, tossing aside the wrapper which Vann reached over and picked up, giving me a look of admonishment. I waved an apology and asked a question.
“Is this journal in the archive up there? Is it something a person could go look at and read?”
“Interested, huh?”
“Well, it’s a long way to Minnesota from here but who knows…and yes, it’s interesting. Do you know what else it said?”
“Of course I do.”
“So,” and I made the come-on motion, feeling as though I were dragging information out of an uncooperative prisoner.
“Calm down. It’s easier to just read it.”
“I will, hopefully I guess, someday. Just tell me what it said.”
“Read it for yourself.”
My headache was stronger now and my patience was even less than usual.
“Seriously, just,” at which point I stopped because Vann had reached into his bag and produced a black presentation folder, the kind that people use to keep certificates or award letters. He opened it to reveal a plastic bag that enclosed a yellowed set of pages.
“I don’t even believe this. You stole the journal too?”
Vann looked offended. “Just the last entry. Here, read it for yourself.”
…to be continued