The Bourne Identity Page 0,2

brother shouted, grinning at him. 'Vas te coucher! Je suis tres capable!'

'Yes, you are,' he answered, throwing his cigarette over the side and sliding down to the deck on top of a net. 'A little sleep won't hurt.!

It was good to have a brother at the wheel. A member of the family should always be the pilot on a family boat; the eyes were sharper. Even a brother who spoke with the smooth tongue of a literate man as opposed to his own coarse words. Crazy! One year at the university and his brother wished to start a compagnie. With a single boat that had seen better days many years ago. Crazy. What good did his books do last night? When his compagnie was about to capsize.

He closed his eyes, letting his hands soak in the rolling water on the deck. The salt of the sea would be good for the rope burns. Burns received while lashing equipment that did not care to stay put in the storm.

'Look. 'Over there'

It was his brother; apparently sleep was to be denied by sharp family eyes.

'What is it?' he yelled.

'Port bow! There's a man in the water! He's holding on to something! A piece of debris, a plank of some sort.'

The skipper took the wheel, angling the boat to the right of the figure in the water, cutting the engines to reduce the wake. The man looked as though the slightest motion would send him sliding off the fragment of wood he clung to, his hands were white, gripped around the edge like claws, but the rest of his body was limp - as limp as a man fully drowned, passed from this world.

'Loop the ropes!' yelled the skipper to his brother and the crewman. 'Submerge them around his legs. Easy now move them up to his waist. Pull gently.'

'His hands won't let go of the plank!'

'Reach down! Pry them up! It may be the death lock.'

'No. He's alive ... but barely, I think. His lips move, but there's no sound. His eyes also, though I doubt he sees us.'

'The hands are free!'

'Lift him up. Grab his shoulders and pull him over. Easy, now!'

'Mother of God, look at his head!' yelled the crewman. 'It's split open.'

'He must have crashed it against the plank In the storm,' said the brother.

'No,' disagreed the skipper, staring at the wound. 'It's a clean slice, razorlike. Caused by a bullet; he was shot.'

'You can't be suite of that.'

'In more than one place,' added the skipper, his eyes roving over the body. 'We'll head for lie de Port Noir; it's the nearest island. There's a doctor on the waterfront.'

The Englishman?'

'He practises.'

'When he can,' said the skipper's brother. 'When the wine lets him. He has more success with his patients' animals than with his patients.'

'It won't matter. This will be a corpse by the time we get there. If by chance he lives, I'll charge him for the extra petrol and whatever catch we miss. Get the kit; we'll bind his head for all the good it will do.'

'Look!' cried the crewman. 'Look at his eyes.'

'What about them?' asked the brother.

'A moment ago they were grey - as grey as steel cables. Now they're blue!'

'The sun's brighter,' said the skipper, shrugging. 'Or, it's playing tricks with your own eyes. No matter, there's no colour in the grave.'

Intermittent whistles of fishing boats clashed with the incessant screeching of the gulls; together they formed the universal sounds of the waterfront. It was late afternoon, the sun a fireball in the west, the air still and too damp, too hot, Above the piers and facing the harbour was a cobblestone street and several blemished white houses, separated by overgrown grass shooting up from dried earth and sand. What remained of the verandas were patched lattice-work and crumbling stucco supported by hasI'lly implanted piles. The residences had seen better days a number of decades ago when the residents mistakenly believed lie de Port Noir might become another Mediterranean playground. It never did.

All the houses had paths to the street, but the last house in the row had a path obviously more trampled than the others: It belonged to an Englishman who had come to Port Noir eight years before under circumstances no one understood or cared to; he was a doctor and the waterfront had need of a doctor. Hooks, needles, and knives were at once means of livelihood and instruments of incapacitation. If one saw le medecin on a good day, the sutures