2
Jack sat on a deck chair and kept his back to
the coastline—so he wouldn’t have to see the lights disappear—while
Tom manned the helm. Ahead, only water… a limitless expanse of
black, gently rolling waves.
It had been full dark by the time they’d
chugged away from the docks, heading south into Pimlico Sound.
After maybe eight or nine miles—or should he start thinking in
leagues now?—they’d passed under a highway arching over a gap
called the Oregon Inlet, and then they were out to sea.
Am I having fun yet? Jack thought. Answer:
no.
The breeze felt cool but Jack was comfortable
in his jeans, flannel shirt, and hoodie. Crying seagulls swooped
and glided between the boat and the starlit sky.
Half of Jack had wanted to wait for tomorrow
and get a fresh start first thing in the morning; the idea of
cruising through the dark sent ripples through his gut, but there
was no way around it: They were going to have to spend a night or
two at sea no matter what time they left.
The other half wanted to get this whole deal
over with, reminding him that the sooner they got going, the sooner
they’d be back.
Tom came aft to the cooler and pulled out a
Bud Light. Jack grimaced. Good movie sense, no beer sense. Maybe
all the vodka he drank had killed off his taste buds.
“Want one?”
Jack shook his head. He’d stocked his cooler
with Yuengling.
“Maybe later.”
Tom stepped below. He returned a few seconds
later with a folded piece of paper, pulled up a chair, and settled
beside Jack.
“Ever see a treasure map?”
“No.” Jack pointed to the helm. “I don’t mean
to be picky, but shouldn’t someone be driving the boat?”
“Like I told you, this thing pilots itself.
It knows where Bermuda is and knows it’s supposed to go there. And
there’s not another boat around, so relax.”
Yes, Jack knew what Tom had told him, but he
still didn’t like it.
He unfolded the sheet and handed it to
Jack.
“Take a gander.”
The sheet was actually four Xeroxed pages
taped together into a large rectangle. A compass rose indicated
that north was toward the top of the sheet. Right of center was a
wedge-shaped landmass with a northward-pointing nipple. A line ran
on a diagonal to a star surrounded by wiggly lines. The star had
been labeled Sombra. The number of
miles—eight and a half—had been written in ornate script along the
line. Readings in minutes and degrees that Jack assumed to be
latitudes had been placed above the nipple and the star.
Ornate handwritten Spanish filled the lower
right corner. Jack’s Spanish wasn’t up to a translation.
“’Splain to me.”
“Okay, Ricky.”
Tom had spotted Ricky Ricardo. But that was
an easy one.
“Translation?”
Tom closed his eyes and recited. “‘The resting place of the Sombra and the Lilitongue of
Gefreda, in the depths near the Isle of Devils, this Twenty-eighth
day of March, Year of Our Lord Fifteen-ninety-eight.’ And then
it’s signed by Francisco Mendes, Society of Jesus.”
Fifteen ninety-eight…
“This is over four hundred years old?”
Tom nodded. “The original is. It’s parchment
and barely holding together as it is. I wasn’t about to take it out
on the Atlantic.”
“What’s “Sombra”? And
what the hell is the Lilitongue of Gefreda?”
Tom held up a hand. “Let me start at the
beginning. When I was in private practice I joined a firm and
inherited this client from one of the partners who was retiring due
to ill health. The client’s name was Allan Wenzel, a sweet old guy
who was a devoted antiquities collector—especially maps.” He tapped
the sheets in Jack’s hand. “This was one of his favorites. He told
me it’d been found in the ruins of a Spanish monastery and had
languished in various antique shops for years before he discovered
it.”
“How did he know he wasn’t buying a Brooklyn
Bridge?”
“He had the parchment dated and it’s from the
late sixteenth century. The details—the distance and the precise
latitude reading—point to someone who was on the spot and knew what
he was talking about.”
“But who is that
someone?”
Tom pointed to the signature on the lower
right sheet. “This Jesuit named Mendes, I’d guess. Wenzel’s guess
was that he must have been a passenger.”
“On what?”
“The Sombra—a Spanish
cargo ship.”
Jack couldn’t help laughing. “Don’t tell me:
It’s a treasure ship laden with gold and jewels.”
Tom shrugged. “Could be.”
“Okay. I’ll bite: Where’s this Isle of
Devils?”
“It’s the old name for Bermuda before she was
settled.”
He and Tom were headed for the Isle of
Devils. Why did that set off a warning bell?
Tom was pointing to the map again, this time
at the tip of the nipple.
“That latitude crosses the northern tip of
St. George’s—Bermuda’s northernmost island. The line runs
three-oh-eight degrees northwest and intersects the latitude of the
map’s star right here.”
“Why no longitude?”
“Longitude was iffy in those days. They were
pretty good at telling how far north or south they were, but the
science of east-west location hadn’t been nailed down yet. But
longitude isn’t necessary here. Run eight-point-five miles from the
tip of St. George’s to this latitude and you’ll find the Sombra.”
“If there ever was such a ship.”
“Oh, there was. I did some research:
Sombra was making a run to
Cartagena.”
“So how’d it end up in Bermuda?”
Tom shrugged. “No one knows. She left Cadiz
on March sixth, 1598, and that was the last anyone ever saw or
heard of her. Maybe a storm blew her off course, maybe she caught
fire, maybe an onboard emergency forced her to seek land. But
whatever the reason, the Sombra hit the
northern reef—those wavy lines around the star indicate reefs—and
went down, probably like the proverbial stone.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Her class of ship had a deep draw—six feet.
The reef out there is about three feet deep. If the Sombra was making decent speed, she probably traded
damage with the reef: carving a path through the coral as the reef
tore her open. She broke up and sank, and that was the end of
her.”
Jack waved the sheet. “I don’t get the
point.”
“Simple: Someday I’m going to find
her.”
“If she hasn’t already been found.”
Tom shook his head. “The Sombra is not on any map of Bermuda wrecks, and
believe me I’ve checked them all.”
“So you’ve got a map of a wreck that isn’t
there.”
“No, I’ve got a map of a wreck that no one
else knows exists.”
“How can you be so sure?” Jack tapped the big
sheet. “The map maker knew. And if there were any survivors,
wouldn’t they talk up the wreck?”
“To whom?”
“I don’t know—the Bermuda government?”
“The island wasn’t inhabited at the time. The
Brits didn’t colonize it until 1612, and even then it was
considered part of the Virginia colony.”
Jack was confused. “Then how…?”
Tom smiled. “How did the map wind up in a
Spanish monastery? Good question. That’s what makes the Sombra so interesting. Someone drew the map, then
hid it away.”
“Doesn’t make sense.”
“Does if the Sombra
went down with something valuable—very valuable—that you someday
wanted to go back and retrieve. And here’s another little tidbit:
Sombra means shadow. Isn’t that cool?”
So cool it gave Jack a chill.
“Did you find a manifest or anything like
that?”
Tom rose and went to the cooler. “Want one
while I’m up?”
“I’ll take a Yuengling.”
Tom returned and handed him a green
bottle.
“No… no manifest.”
Jack sipped and considered how little sense
this made.
“Without a manifest, what makes you think the
wreck holds anything of value?”
“Because of another ship of the same class
named San Pedro that went down two years
before the Sombra. It was discovered back
in the fifties and yielded gold bars, emerald-encrusted jewelry,
and a couple thousand silver coins.”
“Which must have kicked off a massive
treasure hunt.”
“It did. The gold rush turned up three
hundred fifty different wrecks. And those are just the documented
ones.”
“But not much treasure, I’ll bet.”
Tom shook his head. “Not a whole hell of a
lot. Most were just rotting wood.”
Jack sighed. He didn’t get this.
“What makes you think you’ll find any more
than that?”
“Wenzel. He did a lot of research and learned
that the Sombra was carrying a very special
cargo—the Lilitongue of Gefreda that Mendes mentioned.”
“Which is?”
Tom’s brow furrowed. “He didn’t know, and
couldn’t find out. All his research yielded only a few veiled
references. But apparently it was considered something of great
value.”
“Just what is a
Lilitongue?”
“Haven’t the foggiest. I Googled it and came
up empty.”
“Think it’s shaped like someone’s
tongue?”
Tom made a face. “The word ‘tongue’ has a
load of meanings besides that incessantly wagging muscle in your
mouth. It can be anything from a spit of land to the pin on a belt
buckle to the clapper inside a bell to the pole that runs between
the horses on a stagecoach.”
“So which is it?”
“I have no idea.”
“And Gefreda?”
“Same thing. I assume it’s either the name of
the maker or the town where it was made. But I’ve got my own theory
about the Lilitongue of Gefreda. I think it’s some sort of jewel,
or a unique piece of jewelry, and I’ll bet it’s worth a
fortune.”
Yeah, right, Jack thought. And I’m Captain
Hook.
A lost jewel. Sheesh. Had Tom really bought
into this?
The reefs Tom had mentioned, however, were
apparently real, and they worried him.
“Three hundred and fifty sunken ships. Maybe
those stories about the Bermuda Triangle are true.”
“Don’t tell me you believe any of that
balderdash.”
Jack had come to believe a lot of things he’d
once considered “balderdash.” He didn’t want to add Bermuda
Triangle lore to that list. At least not while he was sailing
through it.
“Well… easier to believe in than the Lilly
Lips of Gandolfini.”
“The Lilitongue of Gefreda. And forget the
Bermuda Triangle. No one can even agree as to where the ‘triangle’
is supposed to be. But the wrecks are real. All three hundred and
fifty of them have been mapped, but not one of them is called
Sombra. And not one location matches the
location on my map.”
“So what’s that tell you?”
“That it’s waiting to be discovered!”
Jack shook his head. “Tells me it’s probably not there. Or it was there once and
the tides carried it off.”
Jack refolded the sheet and tapped it against
his thigh.
“I don’t get it, Tom. This treasure map
thing… where’s it going?”
“Nowhere at the moment. But someday I’m going
to dive that wreck and find the Lilitongue of Gefreda.”
“When? I thought you were going to
disappear.”
He shrugged. “Maybe someday I’ll sneak
back.”
Yeah, right.
“Speaking of disappearing, it’s no easy thing
these days. You’ll need help.”
“Like who?”
“Me. I can put you in touch with folks who
can fit you for a new identity.”
Tom looked touched. Maybe even a tad
guilty.
“You’d do that for me?”
“Yeah,” he said, but knew he was really doing
it for Dad.