We roll in the surge, all of us standing there, limp with shock, watching the stern of the ship dwindle into the distance. We were very very close to death while we sat and idled away the time.
Freddy turns on Lowell and growls, "It was your watch! It was your duty to look around the horizon every twenty minutes! You damn near killed us all!"
Lowell's face is white. So is mine. I should have realized Lowell was not watching. We are all tired. There had been nothing visible on the horizon when we started lunch. But it only takes twenty minutes for a ship to appear from behind the horizon and reach a point of collision.
CAIRNS, NORTH QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA
The Australian Customs patrol boat Vigilante intercepts us close abeam Green Island. It roars past, throwing a huge wake, spins around behind us and neatly nips off the fishing line we have been trailing astern. She settles down in the water about 20 meters astern.
"What's going on?" I call. No answer. They don't hail us, just tail us. We are sailing along nicely, doing a trim 7 knots.
"Maybe they are just on a joy ride," Freddy suggests. "If they want us to stop they'll tell us so."
We keep sailing and they keep almost exactly 20 meters behind us, right behind us. "Nice of them to welcome us," Lowell observes.
"That was a $20 lure they cut with their prop," I grumble, but landfall after a long passage is always such a good feeling I am soon happy again.
It has been an excellent passage, the wind right on the beam or slightly aft of the beam. We've averaged 6.8 knots. As we tie up at the yacht clearance wharf in Cairns, I say, "Thanks Daniel. The winds were just perfect." We have, except for the morning after we left Buma, had perfect sailing conditions since our evil spirit was exorcised.
The Customs boat ties up directly astern of us. Nobody gets off. They just sit there watching. I go aft and ask what the procedure is for clearing in and an officer tells me, "Wait." So we wait. Finally the yacht clearance crew shows up; quarantine, customs and immigration troop aboard.
Quarantine is interested in Walter the Cat and our Aloe vera plant. We sign a bond assuring Walter will not go ashore in Australia. There is a $500 fine if he does. No problem. Walter is happy aboard. Alina, our plant, however must be confiscated.
"Fine," Freddy snaps, "When it gets off the vessel by itself you can confiscate it. Until then it is part of the official medical supply cabinet and stays exactly where it is."
If I said that there would be hell to pay. But Freddy pulls it off without a hitch. Everyone is polite and the formalities are over quickly.
Exactly one hour and thirty two minutes later Patty is off the Moira. Lowell follows close behind. For most of the crossing she stayed locked in the forward cabin. Their relationship went from bad to worse to terminal. Not much fun for Patty but Lowell maintained his casual good humor through it all and Patty kept to herself and did not make life terrible for the rest of us. We never inquired and were never told what the problem was.
And now, here we are. Alone. In Australia. Nothing to do, nowhere to go, no plans, no ideas, nothing. Just here. Reinhard and Arlene on Ganesh are anchored just next to us and Maxene and Patrick Price on Rozinante are just a bit further inside the harbor. They also have nothing to do, nowhere to go, no plans.