Authors: Joy Connell
Now that she was awake, she knew she wouldn’t fall back to sleep. Instead, she went in search of the coffee. Taking her mug on deck, she sat and watched the marina come alive. Sailors all seemed to rise early and on other boats she could see them moving about the decks, coiling ropes, gathering sails. On the powerboats, they were mopping the decks, checking their fenders. A note stuck to the compass said Anthony and Joe had gone for supplies and would be back mid-morning.
Riley made her way to the navigation station and turned on the computer. Her cell phone might still be working only intermittently but she had discovered this computer and e-mail. There was a brief message from RK saying how busy he was, how hectic the newsroom was, how much he missed her.
She drew a blanket around her shoulders and stared at the screen. The words seemed so distant, so cold. This was the man she had planned her life with, the man she had pictured as her partner in the news business and on the home front. Yet here she was reveling in tropical nights with a man she’d known only a short time. Was this just a fling? Once she was back in Chicago, would she forget all about Joe and
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? Would she plunge right back into reporting and someday look back on this period of her life with a mixture of joy and shame?
Those were questions she wasn’t prepared to answer. Instead, she called up the page she’d been looking at the last time she’d had access to this computer. Joe had said it was off-limits, that it was to be used only for navigation and official boat business. He wasn’t a dummy when it came to technology, far from it, but he didn’t have the “time nor the inclination to waste surfing the web when the world was right here at their fingertips.”
A picture of Scully, with a scruffy beard, his forehead wrinkled nearly squeezing his eyes shut and his mouth set in a hard, straight line, hiding the gold tooth, filled the screen. He still gave her shivers but she huddled into the blanket, which no matter how many times it was washed and air-dried, smelled of the sea, and plunged on. Details of his life were sketchy but he had been mentioned in several news articles as someone wanted for questioning in connection with piracy, theft, and the disappearance of a reporter.
One of the major Sunday news magazines had done a feature on pirates in the islands and Scully’s picture, along with his two cohorts, was used. In the picture they were silhouetted against the sunset so their faces weren’t visible but there was no doubt it was Scully, Mikah with his square body, and Candy, skinny and hunched.
Riley typed in some notes, which she had been e-mailing to Mildred for safekeeping. She didn’t want to keep them on Joe’s computer, in case he accidentally stumbled over them. He remained adamant about her not investigating this story. What he didn’t understand was that reporting was a big part of who she was and she could no more leave this alone than he could tie
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to the dock and never sail again.
“Hey, Miss Sunshine.” Mitchell stood in the galley, hair ruffled. He blinked into the morning sun, which had risen fast and bright. But Mitchell being Mitchell, he wore designer pajama pants in a light silk material. “If Joe sees you using his computer, they’ll be hell to pay.”
“He won’t see me.” Riley logged off and turned in the swivel chair. “And you won’t tell him.”
“Why would I keep my mouth shut about that?”
“Because we’re friends. Because friends keep secrets for each other. And because if you do tell Joe, I’ll let him know you’re using his precious hot water to wash your hair on the boat when he’s not here. Not only that but conditioning it, too.”
Instinctively, Mitchell ran a hand through his hair. In port, the rules were that the crew showered at the marina facilities, not on the boat, to save water. At sea, the crew used cold water or seawater to save the hot for guests.
“All right,” he said reluctantly, “deal.”
“Now why don’t you grab one of those showers and come with me to get Mildred at Rosalee’s.”
“What do you mean, she’s not here?” Riley felt panic rising.
Where could her friend have gone? People just didn’t disappear.
“She’s not in her room, Riley.” Sahara, the desk clerk, had just finished whispering with the bellboy. Sahara was tall, lithe, with beautiful light brown skin. She had been a world traveler, as were her parents, who’d named her for the desert where she was born. She was passing through the islands, working at Rosalee’s to make money.
“Sahara, I’m supposed to meet her here. Mildred is always on time. She never skips out on a meeting.” Riley was trying to paint a picture of the Mildred she knew, the producer who lived and died by the clock and the timing of a piece; the newshound who never stood up a source or blew past a scheduled interview; the pulled-together woman who always kept her appointments. “You have to check her room.”
Sahara had another whispered conversation with the bellhop. “We did check. She left, Riley, early this morning, with a man. That’s all we know.”
“My God.” Riley turned to Mitchell, gripped his hand so tightly he winced. “Someone’s taken her.”
“I’m sure that’s not true.” Mitchell unwound his fingers, flexing them. “Thanks, Sahara, we’ll be in touch.” Mitchell steered a shell-shocked Riley outside.
“You have to listen to me.” Riley grabbed for him again but this time Mitchell was ready and he dodged the grip that was headed his way. “Mildred just wouldn’t disappear for a lark. She’d never up and leave just because she felt like taking a break. I’ve worked with this woman for almost five years. She’s as tough as nails, more focused than anyone I’ve ever encountered.”
“The island does strange things to people. Look at you.”
“Not Mildred.” Riley was adamant. “Something’s happened to her.” She scanned the surrounding hills and the contour to the sea as though her friend might be spotted at any moment. “I think Scully might have her.”
“Now you’re really off the deep end, letting your imagination get the better of you. Why would he want her? Good God, she has the worst fashion sense in the world.”
“This is not about fashion. Have you seen what Scully wears?”
“Actually, I don’t think it’s as bad as everyone says. He has kind of a defiant, scruffy pirate thing going on.”
“Enough about the fashion.” Riley paced. “If he took her, it was to warn me off the story. I should have been more careful, taken more precautions. I should have listened to Joe.”
“Don’t say that where he can hear it or you’ll never live it down.”
“We need help. We need to go to the authorities.”
“Are you forgetting where you are?” Mitchell smoothed out his hair. “The authorities here will probably throw us in jail just so they don’t have to listen to us.”
“Then what will we do?” She hated that she sounded so desperate, hated the sense of weakness and uncertainty that it implied. In Chicago, she was decisive, in charge, on top of things. Here, she had turned into a mushy, clingy woman she wouldn’t have given the time of day to in her old world.
“Let’s head to the boat. Maybe Anthony and Joe will be back. We need to start with them.”
Reluctantly, Riley let Mitchell lead her away from Rosalee’s, toward the dock and
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.
Riley knew she was babbling, she couldn’t help herself. For the past hour, she had been pacing the deck, and when that got too small, the dock. Visions of Mildred and Scully filled her brain, no matter how hard she tried to squelch them. She pictured her friend in trouble, needing her, crying out for her, and being unable to help. About every 10 minutes, she stalked below and insisted to Mitchell they go to the authorities.
He would calm her down by putting his hands on her shoulders or rubbing her back.
We decided
, he would remind her,
that we’d wait for Joe and Anthony
.
Page them, call them, e-mail them
, she demanded, stamping her foot.
They don’t have a pager or a cell phone on them
, Mitchell explained. The first few times he was very patient but by the fourth time, he barked “No!” when Riley set foot on the ladder, then he went back to turning the pages of the medical journal he was reading.
Riley was so involved in her thoughts and plots that she didn’t see Joe and Anthony coming down the dock. Only when
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rocked with their weight did she turn from her place gazing out the entrance to the harbor. As fast as she could, she went to him, dodging coiled ropes and cushions piled high to air out. She was in his arms, blathering out the story and crying when a motorcycle roared down the dock and stopped at the entrance to
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. It was so noisy that they had to stop talking and wait until the driver turned off the engine. Riley was annoyed at the interruption until she saw the passenger on the back take off her helmet and shake out her long, dark hair.
Mitchell was staring open-mouthed and Joe was staring at her. That left Anthony to unhook the lifeline and invite Henri and Mildred aboard.
Uptight, button-down Mildred bounded onto the boat laughing. Her signature black was gone. She wore a splashy pair of flowered crop pants, a loose gauze island shirt over a bright pink camisole, and what could only be described as cute canvas shoes. She was laughing and gesturing, touching Henri’s arm or his shoulder about every two seconds.
Feeling for the settee behind her, Riley sat down hard and reminded herself to close her mouth and keep it that way. Mitchell recovered enough to grab a bottle of rum, some fresh fruit juice and glasses from below. Mildred plopped down next to Riley and began to talk about her morning, how they had watched the sun rise, and then had breakfast in a little place Henri knew that was right on the beach.
“How beautiful this island is,” Mildred said, “especially the back parts that aren’t accessible by car.”
Joe sat down on her other side, poured her a glass heavy with rum and light on juice, and handed the drink to her. She took a healthy swig.
“Riley was looking for you this morning,” Joe finally said as Riley drained the rest of the glass.
“Oh.” Mildred did something Riley had never seen her do in all the years she’d known her. She blushed. It wasn’t sun and it wasn’t the rum. It was the good old-fashioned blush of someone who was embarrassed and proud at the same time. “Sorry, Riley. Henri and I talked into the night. Actually, until just before dawn. He wanted to show me the sunrise, and we were both starving, so we just took off.”
“It’s okay.” Riley waved her hand. She was on her second rum punch and it wasn’t even lunchtime. She hoped her words weren’t slurring but she wouldn’t bet on it. “We can get together this afternoon. No problem. On island time now.”
“Well . . .” Incredibly, Mildred blushed again. “Henri and I were going to the other side of the island this afternoon. The part tourists never see. He says there’s an incredible beach there.”
Riley stared. Who was this person? She looked like Mildred, but what had happened to her friend? In such a short time? She wanted to ask this version of Mildred where the original had gone and what alien life form had possessed her body. She wanted to rise up and shake her friend until the loose strands of hair coiled themselves back into the bun she had never been without in Chicago. The rum and the strain had dulled her senses and she couldn’t get the words out or make her limbs move to take action.
“Millie, we should go if we want to have lunch on the beach.” Henri stood, relaxed, leaning against the cabin, his hands in the pockets of his white canvas pants. He looked like an advertisement for the islands, tan, with a hint of exoticness to his features, strong and confident, his skin shining, his smile white and sparkling.
Mildred did another surprising thing. She reached over and threw her arms around Riley. Then she took Henri’s arm and they were off on the motorcycle. Riley was left to sit in the cockpit and gaze out after them as they roared back down the dock, Mildred’s hair flying out from beneath the helmet.
Riley held up her glass to be refilled but Joe took it away from her.
“Millie,” she said. “Did you hear that? He called her Millie? And she let him.”
Three pairs of male eyes were watching her.
“What? What is it?” she demanded of them. “Don’t I have a right to wonder? He’s cast a spell on her. That’s what it is. How else can you explain this?”
“It’s called love,” Mitchell said.
“Don’t be ridiculous.” Riley stood up, a little too fast. “Sure are some swells in this harbor today,” she said and grabbed for the boom to steady herself. “Mildred doesn’t fall in love. She’s dedicated. She’s professional. The newsroom is her life. She lives and breathes a good story. She’s the best in the business.”
“Darlin’, the best in the business is on the back of a motorbike heading for an isolated beach with one of the most eligible hunks on the island,” Mitchell said.
“It’s a fling. They barely know each other. Less than a day ago they couldn’t stand each other.”
“Sometimes it happens that way,” Anthony said and they all looked at him. He spoke so rarely that when he did it was an event. “Two people feel a connection but they fight it because it’s so strong it scares them.”
“Whatever it is, your friend seems happy.” Joe was hovering near her, watching her sway.
“Geez, did it get hot all of a sudden.” Riley mopped at her forehead with one of the napkins. “You guys don’t know Mildred.” Her voice might have been louder than she realized because a worker on the dock and a charter captain on a boat two down stopped and turned in their direction. “She would not just fall in love.”
“So she’s fallen into strong like.” Mitchell said, being catty. “Whatever it is, it looks damn good on her.”
“I feel sick.” Riley lurched for the side where she threw up.
On the dock, a couple of tourists passing by made noises of disgust. One of the marina workers turned and ran back the way he had come.
It was Mitchell who handed her a towel, who insisted she stand under the deck shower in her clothes, holding her at arm’s length to avoid soiling his own clothes. He was also the one who waited outside the cabin door while she donned a dry T-shirt and shorts and was the last person she saw as he spread the covers over her and let her sleep the afternoon away.