Product:
Bahama Breeze ||
ISBN:
978-1-61116-125-0 ||
Page Count:
270
Chapter One
Sonny hooked his forearm around the thin braided
wire attached to the sailboat mast, and blinking rain
from his eyes, looked up. Somewhere above his head,
caught in a black pulley he couldn't see was the end
of the rope he'd been warned not to lose--the one
boat part that, if retrieved, would allow him to abandon
ship and return to his motel room.
But his recovery of the wayward rope was hampered
by strong winds and heavy rains from Bert, a slow
moving tropical storm that had spent the past few
days wandering around the Bahamas like a dog looking
to do its business. Circle once, circle twice, and
squat. Now the storm had settled over Cockroach Cay,
prompting Sonny to conclude that renting a sailboat
during hurricane season, while exciting and dangerous,
was too much fun for him.
He was glad they were still at the dock.
"You're a goober, Joe, you know that? What was the
last thing I told you to do before I crashed into
the dock?" Sonny said.
"Hold on to the rope."
"Halyard. The big rope that raises the sail is a
halyard. Now it's up there and I'm down here and you
can't raise the main.'"
"Who cares? Why would anyone want to go sailing in
this, anyway?"
Good point, Sonny thought. Gale force winds had whipped
the tiny harbor into a foaming froth of whitecaps.
Across the cove, trees tipped sideways, bending like
inverted beach umbrellas, littering the sand with
palm fronds and coconuts. Tourists huddled on motel
balconies, pointing at the dark storm clouds rolling
over the island.
"I say we leave the rope up there and go back to
the room," Joe added.
"Hey, now that's a bright idea. Then, when the boat
rental boy checks on his boat and sees the halyard
flapping around he'll know I broke his boat."
"You don't think he's going to figure that out when
he sees the dock line wrapped around the motor?"
"Just need to untangle it."
"You going in the water?"
"You got a better idea?"
"Just looks nasty, is all. And deep. I watched a
National Geographic special about these guys who went
swimming in a river in the Amazon jungle. This worm
swam up his"¦you know. Started having baby worms onto
his intestines. Had these hook like probes that""
"Would you shut up? I need to think."
"Yeah, like that's ever worked in the past."
Sonny thought back to a night on his cousin's farm
in Pender County when he'd gotten his pickup truck
stuck in a ditch. He remembered how he'd managed to
get the truck moving again by shifting it back and
forth between forward and reverse.
Maybe he could do the same thing with the outboard.
Maybe by reversing the prop at low speeds he could
untangle the rope. But there was something about that
night on the farm that bothered him. Something about
the way it had ended that made him think he was going
to have to get in the water, anyway.
It'd been raining that night. He'd gotten out of
his truck and walked around back, running his hand
down the crumpled bumper caked with dirt and grass.
The headlights were pointed up the embankment, illuminating
the muddy ruts of his tire tracks. He'd hopped back
inside the cab and worked the clutch and accelerator
until the front tires gripped a patch of firm soil
and began moving forward. But the muddy sole of his
boot slipped, popping the clutch and causing the truck
to accelerate. It bucked across the gravel road and
fell down the other side, flattening a fence post
before dropping hood first into an irrigation ditch.
A tow truck operator (his Aunt Effie) drove past
a few minutes later and pulled the truck back on the
road.
Because Sonny was family, she only charged him $79.95
for the thirty-minute job. She wouldn't have charged
him anything at all, she'd kept saying, if he'd just
come to visit once in a while. But Sonny knew that
the $79.95 towing charge was a bargain compared to
an afternoon of conversation with Aunt Effie and her
husband, Bernard, "who has a plate in his head."
Whenever Aunt Effie mentioned her husband's name it
was always followed by "who has a plate in his head,"
even though no one could remember why Uncle Bernard
"who has a plate in his head" actually had a plate
in his head. Certainly not Uncle Bernard "who has
a plate in his head" since he thought his name was
Malcolm.
Sonny leaned over the back of the boat and stared
down. The water did, in fact, look nasty. And dangerous.
Lying on the sand were coral encrusted soda bottles,
beer cans, conch shells, a flair gun shell, starfish,
and a long, dark, cylinder-shaped object that, to
Sonny, looked like whale poop.
Sonny straightened. "Maybe I'll deal with the outboard,
later."
"Good. Now can we go back to the motel?"
"Right after we get that rope down."
"I'm not going up that mast and you're too big."
"I've lost weight."
"Not that much."
"They have a special thing for it."
"For losing weight?" Joe asked.
"Going up the mast. It's a swinging seat. Saw one
in Caribbean Sailing Magazine."
"When have you ever read a sailing magazine?"
"Oncologist's office. And I didn't say I read it.
Said I saw it. There was an ad in the back for a swinging
seat."
"You see anything like that on this yacht?"
The comment was a dig at Sonny and his "sticky note"
agenda: the one the doc had told him to make. At the
top of the list was, "go sailing in the Caribbean"
(which the Bahamas weren't) "on a yacht" (which the
rented sailboat wasn't) "with his high school sweetheart"
(who hadn't arrived,yet).
Sonny wasn't sure when a sailboat became a yacht,
but he was pretty certain it happened when crew and
women came aboard. There were lots of women on boats
in the sailing magazine"all in skimpy swimsuits.
This seemed to please the skipper, who looked like
Mark Hamill. Or maybe he looked like Mark Harmon.
Sonny wasn't sure which Mark he looked like, because
he was really bad with Hollywood actors' names. But
he knew the man on the yacht didn't look anything
like Luke Skywalker, even though the woman pressing
her boat fender-sized features against the man's arm
did look a little like Princess Leia.
Sonny didn't have any women on his rented sailboat.
He only had Joe, and Joe was no Princess Leia. Joe
looked more like a skinny Yoda with ears mounted like
a satellite dish. His bug eyes appeared too large
for his face because of the thick, black-framed glasses
he wore. Joe was a packaging specialist who liked
to dress, talk and act like an industrial engineer
from the 70's. He thought that by dressing this way,
real engineers would think he was one of them and
buy more box-sealing tape. Sonny knew from selling
2-ply toilet tissue to engineers who doubled as purchasing
agents that they didn't really look like nerds anymore,
and didn't appreciate packaging specialists thinking
they did. This was one reason Joe wasn't very successful
at selling box-sealing tape. There were other reasons,
as well.
Sonny lifted the lid to the storage area and while
tossing out boat cushions, life jackets, ropes and
paddles, wondered if he should apologize to Joe. Joe
was, after all, Sonny's best and last friend. But
Joe had already let go of one rope and Sonny didn't
want him letting go of another one with Sonny attached
to it.
On the other hand, at six-foot four, there was no
way Sonny could climb the mast himself.
Then again, a scrawny guy like Joe wasn't strong
enough to crank Sonny up to the top of the mast. But,
if not Joe, then who?
This mental match of pong might have continued until
Tropical Storm Bert reached hurricane status, except
just then, Sonny found a canvas sling harness with
the words "Bosun's Chair" stitched across the seat.
Only Sonny didn't call it the bosun's chair. He called
it the swinging seat.
"Hey, look! I found the swinging seat!" Sonny tossed
Joe one end of a muddy rope. "Run up to that golf
cart and tie your end off to the back bumper."
"I don't think golf carts have bumpers."
"I didn't mean literally to tie it off to the bumper.
I meant tie it off to something sturdy."
"Why didn't you say that, then?"
"Because I didn't."
"You got mad at me for letting go of that other rope
because I didn't know what you meant when you said,
"Don't let go of the halyard,' and now you're asking
me to tie this rope off to something that isn't really
there."
"Would you just hurry up before someone sees us?"
"I still say this is a bad idea."
"Renting the sailboat?" Sonny asked.
"Coming down here. Twenty bucks says your girl doesn't
show."
"She'll show."
"How can you be so sure?"
"I got connections."
"You got grits for brains, is what you got." Joe
had only gone a short ways up the dock when he called
back. "What kind of knot do you want me to use?"
"How about a square knot? Think you can tie one of
those?"
"Is that a boating knot?"
"I guess. Probably used them on those square-rigger
ships."
"Bet you're right," Joe said. "Square knot it is."
Sonny knew there were better boat knots for tying
ropes to things, but he had no idea what any of them
were. He just knew that real sailors, like the ones
who were members of yacht clubs and boating organizations
and U.S. Power Squadrons, were proud of the way they
could lash a pair of shoelaces together to haul a
drowning man back aboard a sinking ship. He'd read
a story like that during his last visit to the VA
hospital.
"When I give the word," Sonny yelled over the roar
of the wind. "Ease forward. Got it?"
Ignoring him, Joe slid in behind the wheel of the
golf cart. He tensioned the slack out of the line
and glanced up the dock toward Sonny.
"Ready!" Sonny yelled.
Joe stomped the accelerator.
The golf cart leapt forward, speeding across the
lawn, across a gravel walkway and towards the patio
deck behind Mama Pearl's Bait and Tackle Shop. The
sudden acceleration compressed Sonny's buttocks into
the shape of a canned ham, jerking him off the deck
and flinging him skyward, past the first set of spreaders
and toward the top of the mast.
Sonny let out a loud, "Whoa!" hoping Joe would hear
him"hoping anyone within earshot would hear and tackle
Joe. But Joe just kept speeding away, racing across
the soggy grass before crashing headlong into a rack
of garbage cans. The cart stopped.
Sonny wrapped his bare legs around the mast, wincing
as the swinging seat pinched the meat on the back
of his thighs. Suddenly he remembered the other boat
part the boat rental boy had warned him not to forget.
"Whatever you do, mon," the boy had said. "Don't
forget de centerboard. Dis boat don' have a "kill'
wit'out de centerboard."
Sonny had no idea why the boat needed to "kill"
anything. But Sonny liked the boat rental boy's accent.
"Dis boat, mon,' Sonny would say to his toilet paper
customers back home, "it didn' "ave a kill wit'out
de centerboard. And dere was dis tropical storm dat
de locals said wuz just a Bahama breeze."
He hoped no one would ask him what a centerboard
was, even though now he wished he knew, because the
boat was leaning. Or maybe it was listing. Sonny couldn't
remember if a boat had to be sinking to be listing,
but it had definitely reached a tipping point. The
boat rolled, dumping Sonny into the rigging of the
large schooner parked in the next slip. He skidded
down the schooner's metal wires, cutting chunks from
his sunburned skin. He crashed onto the other boat's
boom and tried to extract himself from the swinging
seat, but as he did, Joe slammed the golf cart into
reverse and pressed the accelerator.
The golf cart bucked backward as Joe retraced his
route. The sudden shift in direction wrenched the
sailboat back into an upright position, catapulting
Sonny up and over the mast. Just then, the rope reached
its limit; Joe continued, trampling manicured lawn
plants and brightly painted conch shells before finally
ripping the golf cart's roof off its frame. Bits of
fiberglass, aluminum tubing, and shards of windshield
flew past Sonny's head. Joe's end of the rope, suddenly
liberated from the golf cart, was free to fly"and
it did, dropping Sonny like the 240-pound weight that
he was.
Sonny plunged back to earth like Neil Armstrong.
Or maybe it was Lance Armstrong. Sonny could never
remember which man had ridden around the moon seven
times. But he knew he was headed for a splashdown.
He hit the water and dropped into a tan and sandy
soup. Fumbling with the square knot, he tried to wiggle
free but became distracted by the whale poop that
was now nervously darting back-and-forth in front
of him. The dark, cylinder-shaped object stopped a
few feet from Sonny's face. Even in the nasty and
silt-filled waters, Sonny could see that the whale
poop had very long and very shiny teeth. And it seemed
to be grinning at him.
***
Eddie is a North Carolina-based writer, writing coach,
and book consultant. He is Acquisition Editor of Lighthouse
Publishing of the Carolinas and has written over a
hundred articles that have appeared in 20 different
publications.