Jake switched on his shoulder-mounted lights, the beams cutting through the particulate matter like headlights in a blizzard.
The hull of the Ostrava appeared before him as a wall of red darkness coated in a thick layer of barnacles and slime that explained the ship’s fuel inefficiency.
He began his work, a rhythmic, grueling process.
He wasn’t using a high-pressure cava blaster today.
The port had restrictions on noise due to a nearby manatee migration zone.
So, he was doing it the hard way.
pneumatic scrapers and raw muscle.
He worked his way aft toward the stern, his breath hissing in his ears, the sh clack sh clack of the scraper becoming a hypnotic rhythm.
This was the reality of commercial diving.
It was an adventure.
It was underwater construction and janitorial work combined, performed in an environment that constantly tried to kill you.
He checked his depth gauge.
35 ft.
Shallow enough to stay down for a while, deep enough that a mistake with the ship’s active systems could be fatal.
He approached the massive rudder, a piece of steel the size of a barn door, and the towering bronze propeller blades that sat silent and still.
Lockout, tag out procedures were in place, meaning the engine room couldn’t turn the screw.
But Jake still felt a primal shiver of respect whenever he drifted near the meat grinder.
He was working on the starboard side of the rudder housing, clearing a patch of stubborn tube worms when his scraper hit something that didn’t feel like the ship.
Usually, when metal hits the hull, it’s a dull, solid thud.
steel absorbing the blow.
This sound was different.
It was a hollowower, sharper clank, followed by a metallic vibration that traveled up his arm.
Jake stopped.
He floated in the suspension of the water, his fins kicking gently to hold position.
He brought his light closer to the hull.
The bofallin was thick here, a carpet of green and brown fuzz, but there was a shape protruding from the steel that didn’t match the architectural drawings of a standard freighter rudder assembly.
He scraped away a handful of algae.
Under the green slime, a patch of bright orange paint revealed itself.
It wasn’t the red antifouling of the ship.
It was industrial orange, the kind used on high visibility safety gear.
Jake frowned, his heart rate picking up a few beats per minute.
He switched his scraper to his left hand and used his gloved right hand to wipe away more of the grime.