Jack squirmed. “Well, at least some more of the batteries.”
“Okay, then. Into the water. Swim for the marina. If they don’t chase me, I’ll come back before you can reach the dock and we’ll think of some other plan.”
“Could we think of that other plan before this one?” Jack asked.
Caine stood in the bow of Quinn’s boat as it plowed through the very light chop toward Perdido Beach.
Quinn had warned him to sit down, but Caine wasn’t worried about falling in the water: he would not fall. He used his power to support most of his weight so that his feet barely touched the deck.
He was not going to arrive hunched over. He was going to Perdido Beach like George Washington crossing the Delaware: standing tall.
He was floating. Almost flying. Physically, yes, but mentally as well. He was filled with a warm sense of perfect well-being.
They needed him. They had sent for him. They had found they could not survive without him. Him, not Sam. Him.
Penny lay crumpled in blankets in the back of the boat. Diana sat staring at empty space. Bug kept starting to whistle and then stopped himself, only to start all over again.
Quinn was at the tiller, looking at Caine’s back. Caine could feel his eyes boring into him. Quinn’s doubt and worry were written all over his open face.
Diana had been completely silent. Caine figured it was dawning on her that he was still in charge, that she still depended on him. That she still needed him as much as the kids in Perdido Beach needed him.
Well, she would get over it. Diana was a survivor. She would get past her disappointment. And together they would be the first couple of Perdido Beach, like king and queen.
The thought made him smile.
“It’s a pity we don’t have a camera,” Caine said. “I’d love to capture the moment of my return.”
“I’m cold,” Penny moaned.
“You’re just not getting enough exercise,” Caine said, then laughed at his own cruel joke. Penny’s sourness wasn’t going to ruin this for him. Not her sourness or Diana’s sullenness or Quinn’s guilt.
This was Caine’s moment.
Quinn maneuvered the boat expertly alongside the dock. He tied it off and then stood waiting to help them up. Caine refused Quinn’s hand. But looked at him hard. Eye to eye until Quinn had to look away.
“What is it you want, Quinn?” Caine asked.
“What do you mean?”
“What would make you happy, Quinn? What do you want above all else?”
Quinn blinked. Caine thought he might even be blushing. Quinn said, “Me and my crews? We just want to fish.”
Caine put his hand on Quinn’s shoulder. Caine looked him in the eye with that simulation of openness and honesty Caine could still manage when the occasion demanded. “Then, Quinn, here’s my first decree: you are free to fish. Keep doing what you’re doing, and nothing else will ever be asked of you.”
Quinn started to say something but stopped in confusion.
Caine spread his arms wide, palms down, and levitated out of the boat and onto the dock. The grandiosity of it made Caine laugh out loud, laugh at his own sheer arrogance.
Behind him, Diana and Bug climbed wearily to the dock. Caine lifted Penny and set her, helpless, on the wooden planks.
“Things will be different this time,” Caine said. “There was too much contention, too much violence the last time. I tried to be a peaceful leader. But things went badly.”
“I wonder why,” Diana muttered.
“These people,” Caine said grandly, sweeping his arm toward the town, “need more than a leader. They need . . . a king.”
It had come to Caine in a flash of insight. Until just a minute earlier the thought had never entered his mind. But with all Diana’s teasing about him being Napoleon, he’d found a screenplay about Napoleon in the mansion’s library and he’d skimmed it.