The Dragon Delasangre (21 page)

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Authors: Alan F. Troop

BOOK: The Dragon Delasangre
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Elizabeth's appetite amazes me. By mid-December, she takes to consuming her human prey each evening, as well as two twenty-four-ounce steaks upon awakening and another two each afternoon. She catches and eats so many of our younger dogs that I have to ask her to stop, lest our pack declines so much it no longer represents a threat to outsiders.

“The child must be fed,” she says. “I have to maintain our strength.”

I nod and take my swollen bride in my arms, smile when she accepts and returns my embrace, holding me longer than she used to. Pregnancy has softened her, made her more needful of my affection. I find I like her wanting more from me than sex and food. We often spend hours sitting side by side in the great room, watching the waters outside, silently enjoying the warmth of each other's company. Other days we walk on the island's beaches, holding hands, discussing our future.

Elizabeth provides no argument about the child's first name. “Henri,” she says, “is a fine name, a strong name. Could we give him my father's name too?”

“Of course.” I smile at the weight of such a name—Henri Charles DelaSangre—for such a small, yet-unborn presence. I wish he could be born sooner. I possess no doubt that Elizabeth will be a good mother. Already she has begun to prepare a birthing chamber in one of the other bedrooms, helping me scrub down the walls and floors, reminding me
again and again that we'll need fresh hay when her time nears.

I no longer wonder about our relationship.
“If you demand perfection from your mate,”
Father taught me,
“then you must learn to expect loneliness in your life.”

As much as I would like Elizabeth to share more of my likes and dislikes, I find myself cherishing the time we spend together. She may not care for books, but she seems to enjoy sitting at my side while I read them. She may not love music, but she tolerates my listening to the stereo. We both smile at each other's presence, both reach out to touch each other whenever we're near and, I think, if it never gets any better, it still can be more than enough for me.

Even Santos no longer seems to bother her. When his boat comes into view, she no longer leaves my side. We discuss the water conditions and his sailing technique. “After the baby's born, I'd like to learn to sail a boat like that,” she says. “Will you buy me one?”

“Sure,” I tell her.

 

The first true winds of winter arrive a few days before Christmas. For the first time since summer, the sun fails to warm the midday air. Outside, the wind beats against our closed windows, moans when it can't force its admittance. I take one look at the gray skies, the frenzied, frigid waves leaping on the bay and call the office, tell Emily to cancel my weekly meeting with Gomez and Tindall. Then I build a fire in the great room for Elizabeth and me. “This is Florida,” I say. “It's not supposed to get this cold.”

Elizabeth grins, shakes her head at my discomfort. “The weatherman says it's only sixty degrees. At home it grows colder than this every night,” she says. “You're acting as if a blizzard has attacked us when we both know it will be warm again in a few days.”

I leave her laughing in the great room while I go below
to light a fire in our bedroom. Elizabeth mindspeaks to me a few minutes later.
“He's here again.”

“Santos?”
I say.
“In this weather?”

Elizabeth joins me at the window, watches with me as the sailboat fights its way through the water, one hull rising and lowering with each wind gust, the boat almost going airborne as it races from wave to wave. “He's crazy,” I say.

“They're both crazy,” Elizabeth says and I nod when she points out Casey Morton standing, busy working the jib lines, helping keep the boat from flipping by leaning out away from the Hobie, supported only by her feet against the trampoline and a wire suspended from the top of the mast, connected to a canvas sling beneath her rear.

“It's called being out on a trapeze,” I say to Elizabeth, pointing to the other wire that supports Santos in the same way.

In their full black wetsuits, they look to me like two shadows sailing. “No life jackets,” I say, shaking my head. But I have to admire his control, the Hobie leaping and bucking, slicing the tops off waves as it overtakes them.

Santos amazes me by turning and zigzagging north, battling the vicious north wind until he finally reaches the channel between my island and Wayward Key. The boat turns toward the channel, slows for a moment, wallows in the rough sea, then shoots forward. Santos and Morton lean back, away from the boat as the windward hull rises, Morton shifting position, her left foot slipping.

She shouts, reaches for Santos, her body pivoting away from the Hobie, only her right foot remaining in contact with the trampoline. He grabs for her with his right hand, his fingertips touching hers.

A gust of wind hits the sails and the boat speeds ahead, burying both bows into the wave to its front. The Hobie stops as if it's hit a wall, the stern rising, Morton flailing her arms as the momentum launches her in an arc controlled by
the trapeze line attached to the mast. Santos follows, their forward momentum and the wind beneath the trampoline combining to somersault the boat, the man and the woman colliding as they wrap around the mast, their heads crashing together—mast wires tearing their skin, the boat settling over them, floating, bottom up.

I breathe in deep, watch the disabled boat drift forward, and shake my head.

“Aren't you going to save them?” Elizabeth asks.

“No,” I say. “They're under the boat. They'll drown before I can reach them.” I turn, look at her. “Anyway, I thought you'd be relieved to see them out of the way.”

She shrugs, and continues to watch.

A head emerges from the water. I stifle a celebratory shout. Instead, I calmly say to Elizabeth, “I think it's Santos.”

The man holds on to the capsized catamaran, fumbles with the lines attached to him and, once they're free, dives under the boat. A few moments later he surfaces, pulling Morton with him. He has to almost throw half her body onto the overturned boat before she tries to hold on, slipping a little as he undoes her lines, staying in place only with his help. When he lets go of her for a second, to get a better grip on the boat himself, she slips away, and sinks into the water.

I almost moan when she does, hoping that Santos has enough sense to stay with the boat, thinking it better that one of them, at least, survives.

Santos shouts at her, but the current whips Morton away. He pauses a moment before leaving the safety of the boat, pushes off when she surfaces, treading water, twenty feet from him.

Neither has a life jacket and I know the current will carry them into the ocean within minutes. Do I have enough time to rescue them? I look at Elizabeth, try to calculate how angry a rescue attempt would make her.

“I think you should save them,” she says.

I stare at her, my mouth open until I regain my voice. “Why?” I ask, not about to admit my own desires in this.

“Go now! Bring them back here. I'll explain later.”

 

The Yamahas thunder to life the moment I turn the ignition key on the Grady White. I throw off the dock lines and speed out the harbor, smashing into waves as soon as I leave the island's protection. The cold wind lashes me, salt spray soaks my clothes as I negotiate the channel, twisting and turning, the boat battering its way through the swells.

“Elizabeth!”
I mindspeak when I reach the open bay and turn north.
“Can you still see them?”

“He reached her. . . .”
she says.
“He's been trying to swim holding her. Their boat floated past him a minute or two ago. . . . He's trying to catch up to it, but I think it's moving too fast.”

I push the throttles forward, fight the wheel as the boat takes a glancing blow from one roller, then goes airborne over another.
“How far are they from the ocean?”
The Grady White leans on one side as I turn into the Wayward channel, salt spray coating the windshield, turning it opaque, nothing in view around me but churning water.

“Not far at all.”

“Where are they?”
I cut back on the gas, slow the boat, and search the waters in front of me.

“To your right . . . about fifty yards. Look toward the corner of our island, just offshore.”

I turn the boat in the direction Elizabeth says, stare at the waves, catch a glimpse of a black wetsuit, a flash of yellow hair.
“I see them!”
I say, keeping my eyes on them, speeding up, going past them, then returning, so the current will bring them to me, looking for a way to rescue Santos and his woman without the boat crashing over them.

Santos backstrokes with one arm while he holds the girl
with the other. He doesn't look up until I reach beside him and put the boat in neutral. “Take Casey first!” he says, making the girl raise her left arm. I reach for her just as a swell lifts us, and carries her out of reach. We come together after it passes, the boat almost drifting over the floating couple. Before another swell overtakes us, I bend over the side of the boat, grab her by her wrist and yank her out of the water.

She yowls at the sudden shock of having her entire body weight suspended by one arm. I pull her in, ignoring her groan when her body accidentally strikes the side of the boat, dropping her on the cockpit floor where she collapses, gasping, coughing, retching. Another swell lifts the boat and I rush to the side looking for Santos. Seeing nothing, I race back to the wheel, reach for the throttle.


NO!
” Elizabeth mindspeaks.
“He's at your stern.”

I find Santos clinging to the bottom of one of the outboard motors, seemingly oblivious to the idling engine's grumble, vibration and exhaust—trying to gain enough purchase to climb into the boat. Unaware of my surveillance, he struggles on, maintaining his grip around the motor shaft with one arm while he tries to grab the cowling with the other, the boat smashing up and down, his body colliding again and again with the still propeller.

“Not a very smart place to put yourself,” I say.

Santos looks up. “I didn't think you'd be stupid enough to put the motors in gear.”

“It wouldn't have been a very pretty sight if you were wrong.” I extend my arm, help him clamber over the stern. He drops to the floor next to Morton, holds her in his arms.

“She'll be fine,” Santos says. As much for her benefit as mine, I think.

I throw the motors in gear and concentrate on turning the Grady White, working my way back to the safety of my harbor.

Santos feels us turning, and says, “Wait! What about my Hobie?”

“It's already out there.” I tilt my head toward the ocean. “It will probably drift to shore, somewhere up the coast, in a few days.”

“No.” Santos stands, steadies himself against the back of my chair and looks out to sea. “Look, I appreciate your help. God knows I didn't expect it. But we don't need you to bring us all the way back to shore. If you can take us to my boat and help me right it, I'm sure I can get us home safely.”

I shake my head. “It's just a boat,” I say. “Anyway, don't worry—I'm not taking you to shore, I'm bringing you to my island.”

 

Elizabeth meets us at the dock, three, large white-cotton bath towels in her arms. She waits while Santos and I help Casey Morton out of the boat, then hands towels to both of us. She unfolds the third one and stares at the woman—Morton shivering, barely able to stand. “You poor dear,” Elizabeth says, shaking her head at Morton's blue lips, the purple bruise on the woman's forehead and the numerous cuts and tears to her wetsuit. “We'll get you inside and warm right away.”

I raise my eyebrows at my bride's newfound solicitude, watch as she tenderly wraps the towel around the woman.
“Elizabeth,”
I mindspeak.
“You wanted me to save them. I did. Now what
?”

She glares at me, puts one arm around Morton's waist and guides her toward the house. “Come,” she says over her shoulder. “Let's get all of you by the fire.”

 

After the wind and cold and spray on the water, the warmth in the great room borders on oppressive. Still, I sink to a seat not far from the fire and sigh, delighted to let the heat overwhelm me. Elizabeth guides Santos and the woman
even closer, clucking over their wounds. Casey Morton ignores her, stands by the fire, shivering, her eyes glazed, her arms folded around herself. Santos wraps his towel around her, holds her and repeats, “Don't worry, baby. You're okay now.”

“You'll both feel better once we get you some dry clothes,” Elizabeth says. “And some warm food inside you. Peter, would you go downstairs to the freezer and bring up some steaks?”

“Aren't we being a little too solicitous?”
I mindspeak.

Elizabeth flashes me a false smile.
“Humor me.”

I nod, head for the door. As I leave the room, my bride turns her attention back to our guests. “Oh, where's my hospitality? After all that time in the water . . . you must be dying to get the taste of saltwater out of your mouths.”

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