“Hey, Sunshine.” Charlie strolled over to my lifeguard stand. My heart did its usual flip-flop. Darn it, I wished it would stop doing that.
“Would you do me a favor?”
Anything, especially if it involved lots of kissing. That thought deserved a mental slap. “Sure. What do you need?”
“I have a private client coming up from Houston for a lesson this afternoon and Colton’s busy so I’d like you to drive the boat.” Charlie and his brother made money team-teaching water-ski lessons. One of the twins would drive and the other one would get in the water to assist the student.
“You might remember the guy. His parents own a house out on the island. In fact, I think you dated him a couple of times.”
“Are you talking about Stuart Redding?”
“Yeah.”
Boy, did I remember that jerk! “I had one date with him.” And a team of wild horses couldn’t have forced me back into a car with that pervert. He was one of those rich kids who thought a country bumpkin would be an easy lay. One quick jab, and that notion was dispelled!
“He’s not very nice.”
“What did he do?” Charlie was about to segue into his white-knight routine. No telling how he’d react if I told him about my Stuart encounter.
“Oh, nothing much.”
“Are you positive?”
“Yeah. What time do you want me?” I’d been driving a ski boat since before I had a vehicle license, so this would be a no-brainer—plus Stuart was afraid of me.
“Let’s say three o’clock.”
“Okay.”
Later, as I looked back on our conversation, it struck me as ironic that a simple little request could have such a profound impact on my life. My shift was over and I was sipping a Coke when a flashy new Corvette roared up and screeched to a stop. The driver was Stuart “I’m nothing but trouble” Redding.
We’d been on the water almost an hour and Stuart still hadn’t managed to get up on the skis. It usually took a six-year-old kid about three tries before he was up and away. I wasn’t positive, but I suspected Stuart was a pothead and that affected his coordination.
I’d made the boat stop and start about two dozen times and the guy still couldn’t do it. Billy Tom, who happened to be our spotter, and I were placing bets on how soon Stuart would give up.
I felt terrible for Charlie. He’d been in the water so long he probably looked like a California raisin. And that wasn’t the worst of it. Even over the rumble of the motor I could hear Stuart cursing. From the snippets I overheard, I knew he’d disparaged Charlie’s teaching methods, my driving, the river, the weather and God only knows what else. Yep, he was something, all right.
“Charlie’s swimming back to the boat,” Billy Tom said.
I cut the engine so Charlie could hoist himself safely onto the rear platform. He heaved his skis aboard and sat there for a few minutes with his head in his hands. Then he grinned at me, brightening my day.
“Hey, Sunshine. You up for one last try?”
“Sure.” If he’d asked me to jump off the bridge I would’ve done it. I would’ve run with scissors if he’d suggested it.
“I suspect he’s a lost cause, but I’m gonna try one more thing. If I get him up, give it enough gas to keep him in an upright position, okay? Go down the river where it’s not quite so crowded. I’m leaving my skis here, so after he goes down help him into the boat and come back to get me. I don’t think he’ll stay up very long. Is that okay?”
“Uh-huh.”
Charlie jumped back in the water and paddled over to his student in preparation for another try. When he gave the thumbs-up, I hit the gas and much to my surprise whatever Charlie did worked.
“He’s up,” Billy yelled.
“Thank goodness,” I muttered. The whole thing was getting old.
“Give it more gas. He’s a pretty big guy.” Billy said. “I want to keep him up as long as possible.”
“I do, too.” I made a wide, gentle arc into the river. Our passenger did not need to get fancy. Experienced skiers preferred the smooth water outside the wake. Novices, on the other hand, were safer within the confines of the boat wave.
“How’s he doing?” I shouted to be heard over the roar of the engine.
“Fine,” Billy said, and then amended his assessment. “Uh-oh. He’s out in the smooth water. I wonder how he managed that?”
Yeah, how did he do it? It took some measure of control to jump the slight swell created by the boat, and control wasn’t his forte.
I decided the derelict Two Mile Bridge would be a great turning-around place. We could go under the bridge and I’d slow down to allow our student to sink into the water. Then we’d retrieve him and this fiasco would be over.
Too bad it didn’t happen that way. Not even close.
“Stop, stop, stop!” Billy screamed. “Stop! Oh, God. Oh, God. Oh, God!”
It was the desperation of his last “Oh, God” that prompted me to jerk back on the throttle, stalling the engine.
“What?” I launched myself from the driver’s seat and ran to the rear of the boat.
I looked toward where our student should’ve been, but there was no one in sight. The only thing I could see was the yellow nylon ski rope stretched out behind us.
“He hit the bridge pillar.” Billy put his hands on his head and rocked back and forth. “Oh, my God! Shit! He hit the bridge!”
“He did what?” I wanted to smack Billy. “What? What did he do?” Surely Billy was wrong.
“He hit the bridge,” Billy Tom moaned. “He smacked into the concrete!”
My heart flapped around like a landed bass, but I somehow maintained enough awareness to know we had to do something.
“Pull in the rope, Billy! Right now!” My tone of voice must have penetrated his building panic, because he did as I instructed.
I turned the boat around and slowly motored back to the bridge. Please, God, please, God, please, please, please—Billy had to be wrong.
“There he is.” Billy spotted Stuart’s orange life vest. “Damn! Damn! Damn! Look at his neck.”
One glance at the unnatural angle of his head and I about lost it. He had to be dead. With all that blood in the water, he had to be dead.
Dead!
I motored up next to the body and Billy was in the water almost before I cut the engine. He was now issuing orders. I, on the other hand, was but an inch from pure terror. “I’m going to take him to shore,” Billy called. He had Stuart in a rescue hold and was swimming to the riverbank.
“Drive over to that dock and see if someone’s home. We have to call the cops,” he shouted.
I wanted my Daddy. He could make everything better, I told myself. But could he really?
I barely had the boat stopped before I was out of it and sprinting up the hill, praying that someone would be home.
“Help us,” I screeched, beating on the door. My guardian angel must’ve been working overtime. Thank you, God!
Mrs. Thompson was a tiny woman with steel-gray hair. “Take a deep breath and put your head between your legs,” she told me.
After she was sure I wasn’t going