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there was another problem.

      I suppose I could walk all the way if I had to, he thought to himself, but not now, not on these feet. He hoped that Wheelhouse Bay, as he’d dubbed his camping site, was far enough from Langebaan to keep him safe for one more night so that he could rest and bathe his feet throughout the day.

      He stepped back into the wheelhouse and surveyed his options. The best place to sleep would be on the smooth sand just right of the entrance. He spread his blanket out there and hung his fishing bag over the hole in the wall. That was about as snug as he could make it. He knew that the wind would blow up later in the day.

      A tremendous rumble issued from his stomach. Beans or bokkom? By the time he’d opened the can with his knife – painful millimetre by painful millimetre – and eaten the beans from it, the sun had risen quite high in the sky and it was beginning to get hot in the wheelhouse. He longed to go outside and let the slight breeze play over his face, his body, but he was reluctant to leave the cover of his sanctuary. He looked about him. Nothing but sand and bits of rusted metal; not even a shell or a crab to amuse himself with. Not even a piece of wood he could whittle with his knife.

      Grant lay down on the blanket and before long began to feel extremely tired. He was contemplating whether or not he should allow himself to fall into the soothing, narcotic arms of sleep, when he was startled by a most unwelcome sound.

      A dog was barking, and quite close too.

      “Hey, Hond, wait for me,” a voice called.

      Before Grant even had time to jump up and look for a hiding place, a big, brown dog scrambled down the dune and into the wheelhouse followed closely by a small, brown boy.

      The boy’s eyes widened in astonishment, then they narrowed in suspicion. His cheeks grew taut. There was silence as the two boys sized each other up. Then the small boy spoke fiercely, “Dis my skip hierdie en ek is die skipper!”

      “Captain! Ship!” Grant snorted, and then he remembered his own mistake the night before and said no more. Instead he stared at the boy in what he hoped was a fierce, uncompromising way.

      The small boy was unfazed. “Well, it is a ship, and it’s my ship, and that means you get out.”

      “I won’t.”

      “You will.”

      “I will not!” Grant scrambled to his feet, planted them firmly about half a metre apart and crossed his arms. He was tired of running away. He may be no match for Oom Daan, but this little boy he could deal with if he had to.

      “Then I’ll throw you out,” said the small boy valiantly, “and I’ll skop you into the sea. Come outside and fight like a man,” he yelled, leaping out of the ragged doorway and beginning to dance about with raised fists.

      Ordinarily Grant would not have allowed himself to be goaded into such a mismatched fight by the obviously idle threat of being kicked into the sea – but these were no ordinary days. He lost no time in leaping out of the doorway and lunging at the boy. The boy, though smaller than him, was wiry and fast and he side-stepped smartly. He dodged this way and pranced that. He made a lot of whooping noises and scattered punches in the air.

      Grant lunged after the boy repeatedly – gingerly, because of his feet – but he always seemed to end up with handfuls of sand. Eventually he managed to grab hold of the small boy’s arm.

      The boy let out such a piercing scream that Grant let go at once.

      “Ha, ha, ha!” the boy crowed, and was off again, leaping from rock to rock, pulling faces. The dog seemed to think that the fight was a game, because he too skidded about on the sand, barking and spattering saliva on Grant from his long, foam-flecked tongue as he jumped up at the boy and Grant in turn.

      Grant was getting more and more frustrated and was toying with the idea of ending the whole thing with the help of a rugby tackle, when the small boy stopped dancing abruptly and let out a long whistle.

      “Hey!” he exclaimed. “You’re Sharkey’s son!”

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