no evidence of that. In fact, when I tried to free it from the screw, I found this was not hard to do. I saw no reason why the diver could not have freed himself, and I was suspicious his hose had gotten snagged after death.
âHis air hose was caught.â I got on the radio again. âOn one of the ships. I donât know which.â
âNeed some help?â It was Jerod who spoke.
âNo. Iâve got him. You can start pulling.â
I felt the hose move.
âOkay. Iâm going to guide him up,â I said. âYou keep pulling. Very slowly.â
I locked my arms under the bodyâs from behind and began kicking with my ankles and knees instead of my hips because movement was restricted.
âEasy,â I warned into the microphone, for my ascent could be no more than one foot a second. âSlowly. Slowly.â
Periodically, I looked up but could not see where I was until we broke the surface. Then suddenly the sky was painted with slate-gray clouds, and the rescue boat was rock ing nearby. Inflating the dead manâs BC and mine, Iturned him on his belly and released his weight belt, almost dropping it because it seemed so heavy. But I managed to hand it up to rescuers who were wearing wet suits and seemed to know what they were doing in their old flat-bottomed boat.
Jerod, Ki Soo and I had to leave our masks on because we still had to swim back to the platform. So we were talking by buddy phone and breathing from our tanks as we maneuvered the body inside a chicken-wire basket. We swam it flush against the boat, then helped the rescuers lift it in as water poured everywhere.
âWe need to take his mask off,â I said, and I motioned to the rescuers.
They seemed confused, and wherever the transducer was, it clearly wasnât with them. They couldnât hear a word we said.
âYou need some help getting your mask off?â one of them shouted as he reached toward me.
I waved him off and shook my head. Grabbing the side of the boat, I hoisted myself up enough to reach the basket. I pulled off the dead manâs mask, emptied it of water, and laid it next to his hooded head with its straying long wet hair. It was then I knew him, despite the deep oval impression etched around his eyes. I knew the straight nose and dark mustache framing his full mouth. I recognized the reporter who had always been so fair with me.
âOkay?â One of the rescuers shrugged.
I gave them an okay, although I could tell they did not understand the importance of what I had just done. My reason was cosmetic, for the longer the mask caused pressure against skin fast losing elasticity, the slighter the chance that the indentation would fade. This was an unimportant concern to investigators and paramedics, but not to loved ones who would want to see Ted Eddingsâ face.
âAm I transmitting?â I then asked Ki Soo and Jerod as we bobbed in the water.
âYouâre fine. What do you want done with all this hose?â Jerod asked.
âCut it about eight feet from the body and clamp off the end,â I said. âSeal that and his regulator in a plastic bag.â
âI got a salvage bag in my BC,â Ki Soo volunteered.
âSure. That will work.â
After we had done what we could, we rested for a moment, floating and looking across muddy water to the johnboat and the hookah. As I surveyed where we had been, I realized that the screw Eddingsâ hose had snagged on belonged to the Exploiter. The submarine looked postâWorld War II, maybe around the time of the Korean War, and I wondered if it had been stripped of its finer parts and was on its way to being sold for scrap. I wondered if Eddings had been diving around it for a reason, or if after death, he had drifted there.
The rescue boat was halfway to the landing on the other side of the river where an ambulance waited to take the body to the morgue. Jerod gave me the okay sign and I returned it,
Janwillem van de Wetering