* * *
KAT HEADED ALONG the shoreline with the children running ahead. When the tide began to rush in, she settled them safely on the rocks to watch.
“It’s called the bore,” she told them. “It’s a wave that rushes around the outside of the bay just as the tide starts coming in. Unsuspecting people who have gone out too far can get trapped by the water on the sandbank in the center.”
Ben looked up with interest. “Will we get caught?”
She shook her head. “No, because we understand the dangers. Eventually the tide will rise, almost to the edge of the track if it’s a high tide. Today, though, it will probably be lower than the flotsam and jetsam that we’re going to look at in a minute.”
“What’s flotsam and jetsam?” Tammy piped up.
Kat gave what she hoped was a mysterious smile. “It’s things cast off from life,” she said. “Things that people have let drift out to sea.”
“What kind of things?” asked Ben, obviously intrigued by the idea. He looked at her with his father’s eyes and her heart tightened. How come Luke Travis always managed to rattle her, even when he wasn’t here?
“Who knows,” she said. “Bottles, perhaps, from the other side of the world, maybe even with messages in them. Or toys or pottery, just objects from people’s lives. You can depend on the sea. It comes in every day and goes out again right on cue. No matter what’s going on in the world, the tides never change. You can depend on lots of things in nature—trees and animals and plants just do what they do, year after year. Grow, blossom, bear fruit...and have babies if they’re animals, of course.”
“Can we see the flotsam and jetsam now?” Ben asked.
“Of course you can.” Kat smiled. “As long as you promise not to try and go for a swim this time.”
“He’s not here this time, though, is he?” Ben said quietly.
For a moment, Kat felt a flicker of sympathy for Luke. He may have done wrong by Ben, but maybe it wasn’t right of her to judge him too harshly. She didn’t know all the details. He was Ben’s dad, after all, and it must hurt to see that the little boy wanted nothing to do with him. “Come on, then,” she urged. “Let’s go see what treasures we can find.”
She watched in delight as the three children searched for treasure among the rubbish and seaweed that made up the flotsam and jetsam. It was Ben who found a bottle; he picked it up carefully, holding it out to catch the rays of the sun. Despite its time spent being battered by the sea, the glass sparkled.
“Where do you think it came from?” he asked her, turning it to and fro.
“Could be anywhere in the whole wide world,” Kat told him. “Spain, perhaps...or France or Scotland.”
They all peered at it with excitement in their eyes, as if expecting the bottle to suddenly reveal its secrets.
“No message,” Ben announced sadly.
“Maybe not,” Kat said. “But it does have a picture on it.”
The sailing ship embossed in the glass immediately caught the imagination of all three children.
“What if it came from a pirate ship?” Ben suggested with awe.
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