“I know, Andy.” Ceci put a hand on his arm. “But not everyone’s as accepting as you are.”
“Damn fool idiots,” he muttered. “Ain’t got the sense God gave a gopher, or they’d realize if’n they were lucky enough to find someone t’care about them like those two do for each other…” He paused. “Or like I do fer you. What the hell difference does them body parts make?” He was upset and it showed. “I’d like to...” He paused and sighed. “It ain’t right.”
Ceci chafed his fingers. “My crusader.” She lifted his hand and brushed her lips against it. “I’m glad Kerry decided to call you dad.”
He scowled.
“You’re such a good one.”
The scowl deepened.
“C’mon. Let’s go up on deck.” Ceci moved out from behind the counter and tugged his hand. “Where are we going, anyway?”
“Dar’s island.” Andy straightened and followed her. “Nice little place. Sand, few trees ’bout it.” He put a hand on her back. “Had their little joiny thing out there.”
Ceci stopped in mid step. “Their what?”
Her husband paused uncertainly. “Got together, few friends of theirs, and some pastor guy Kerry knew back home. He said a few things.
You know, like a wedding, sort of, but not…um…” He faltered as he saw her expression. “I got pictures if you’d like t’see them?”
The slim woman’s shoulders dropped a little, but she resumed her Eye of the Storm 239
climb. “Sure. I’d like that.” She felt an irrational pang of loss, at missing an event that never in her wildest dreams occurred to her would happen.
“Sounds like it was nice.”
They emerged into the sun, then glanced up to see Kerry standing on the flying bridge next to Dar, one arm draped casually over her and her head resting on a tanned shoulder. The wind whipped dark and pale hair back, tangling it as the boat raced out of the cut, and headed into the Atlantic.
“Yeah,” Andy replied softly. “It was. Kerry said this real nice poem she had. Then Dardar sang something. I liked it.”
“Is she a poet?”
“Yeap. But she don’t talk much about it.” Andy cleared his throat a little. “Hey. Don’t you two fall asleep up thar.”
Two heads turned. “We’re not.” Kerry smiled, detaching herself from her taller companion. “We’ll be out by the reef in about ten minutes.
Time to check gear, I guess.” She clambered down to join them and went to the equipment lockers on either side of the stern. “We keep our stuff on board mostly.”
“It ain’t really pink...” Andy ambled over and looked down. “Oh mah god.” He clapped a hand over his eyes. “You will scare every living thing for a nautical mile with that stuff on.”
“Tch. I do not.” Kerry pulled her BC and regulator out and the thin half wetsuit she used. “Fish love me. I can’t get rid of them, in fact.” She gave Ceci a shy look. “Did you get everything you needed? We’ve got some extra stuff if you didn’t.”
“Ah, no.” Cecilia opened the next locker and tugged at the handles of a new, fairly well stuffed dive bag. “I think Andy covered just about everything. In fact, I’m pretty sure I’ve got enough equipment here to dive the Antarctic.”
“Ah did not.” Andy took the bag from her and swung it over to the deck. “You are surely exaggerating.” He unfastened the grips and unzipped it, exposing a new set of diving gear. “Nothin’ extra there.”
Kerry knelt beside him. “What’s this?”
“Multi range depth gauge.”
“Um. We’re diving a twenty foot deep reef, Dad.”
“That is not the point, young lady.”
“Uh huh.” Kerry poked around. “What’s this?”
“Spear gun.”
“In case of dangerous clown fish?”
“You can not be too prepared in the sea,” Andy stated firmly.
“Uh huh. Mrs. Roberts?” Kerry looked up. “Please. Try not to point it at anything pink, okay?”
Ceci chuckled. “Oh no. I’m not taking that thing. The last time I had my hands on a spear gun…”
“You shot a Kodiak out from under Dad,” Dar’s voice drifted down, a note of amusement in her tone. “Glad the hull’s fiberglass on this one.”
The atmosphere tangibly relaxed, as the sun rose and the ocean’s 240 Melissa Good spray doused them. “That’s right,” Ceci admitted. “And I’m really glad I was far enough away to only puncture the bottom lining and not anything more…um,” Andy’s eyes widened and his grizzled brows rose,
“more sensitive.”
Kerry laughed at the look on Andy’s face. “Okay. So, we’ve got a gauge, we’ve got a spear gun. What else?” She pulled out a large yellow object. “Wh—”
“That is a light,” Andy growled. “And before you go telling me it’s daytime out, young lady, Ah am going to use it to hunt out some spiny critters.”
“Right,” Kerry agreed, with an impish smile.
“Do you not have your own stuff to check out?”
She took the hint. “Okay. I have to put the batteries in my flippers anyway.”
Andy sighed. “Lord. Ah will never live this down,” he grumbled. “If any of the guys saw me down there with that glow in the dark getup…”
“I’d distract them for you, honey.” Ceci planted a kiss on the top of his head. “I’ll tell them about your silk undies,” she whispered in his ear.
A deep, aggrieved, sigh. “Might as well get me one of them pink wetsuits.”
THE BOAT ROCKED very gently on the surface as Dar leaped over the railing and landed in the shallow water with a splash. She waded through the hip deep sea and tied the boat off securely to the wooden pylon she’d brought out there so many years before.
A seagull watched her from the sandy shore and she flipped a bit of wood at him before she turned and started back, stretching her arms out into the warm sun. On board the boat, Kerry stood in her phosphorescent glory, pale head cocked to one side as she watched Dar’s parents suit up.
She turned as Dar approached, and went to move the ladder over the side, but Dar waved her back, grabbed the railing, and pulled herself aboard. “Nice day.”
“Boy, is it.” Kerry smiled with enthusiasm. “Nice and calm, no clouds. It’s going to be gorgeous down there.” She hefted her newest toy, an underwater camera, then set it on the bench. “Help me get this on?”
Dar lifted her tank and BC as she got into it, then adjusted the hoses as Kerry wrapped the waist strap around her and buckled the front stays.
“Whoops. Forgot the weight belt.”
“I’ve got it.” Dar picked up the web belt studded with pink weights and circled Kerry with her arms, handing her the ends in front. “There you go.”
“Thanks.” Kerry buckled the belt and hopped up and down a bit, shifting her shoulders to settle the weight of the tank. It was heavy, of course. Fully charged with compressed air the tank weighed close to thirty pounds and, added to the seven or eight pounds of her BC and regulator and the twelve pounds on her weight belt, it felt like she was an Eye of the Storm 241
argonaut of old, in their metal shoes, waiting to descend into the depths.
Dar slipped on her own belt and tightened it, then crouched and got her arms into her BC and buckled it, then stood, leaning forward a little until she had all the straps fastened. Then she straightened and watched her father fussing over her mother’s new gear. “Dad, this isn’t a Cousteau expedition.”
“Aw, put yer head in the water, Dardar.” Andrew adjusted a gauge for the fourth time.
Cecilia patted her side and gave him a faintly amused look. “Andy, I really do remember how to do this.” She edged away from his tinkering and sat down on the back bench and looked down. “Oh…look, a barracuda!”
“Wh—?” Andrew moved his wetsuited body over and searched the water. “Lemme check that out.” He vaulted over the end of the boat and disappeared under the water with a remarkably small splash.
Dar regarded the ripples, then picked up her father’s gear and set it on the wooden platform she’d had built on to the back of the boat, making it easier to enter and exit the water. She flipped the diving ladders down into the surf and gave her mother a look. “Barracuda, huh?”
Cecilia pushed her silver blonde hair back. “Mmhmm.”
“C’mon, Ker.” Dar held back a chuckle, as she fitted her mask on and picked up her fins. “Let’s get wet.”
Kerry joined her at the back of the boat. “Don’t you think we’d better wait for your father to check out that barracuda?” She watched Dar go to the platform and slip her fins on, then put a hand over her mask and step off into the water. “I guess not.”
“There wasn’t really one,” Ceci volunteered, with a wry smile. “I just wanted a few minutes to put my mask on.”
Kerry blinked. “Oh.” She held her camera and put a hand over her own mask. “Overprotective huh?”
“Just a little.” Dar’s mother smiled. “In a nice kind of way.”
“I know.” Kerry nodded. “It’s hereditary.” She took a step off the boat and entered the water, the pleasantly cool shock quickly fading to a familiar, comfortable weather.
Another reason not to dive in Michigan. Even in summer it didn’t come close to the eighty-five degrees she was now descending in.
Kerry released her mask and looked around, adjusting to the always odd sensation of being completely underwater quickly. The sun cut through the waves and the visibility was very good, providing her with an excellent view all around her at greens and blues, and ochres, cut through by fish and the irregular surface of the sea bottom under her. She spotted Dar floating nearby, reclining in the water with her knees half bent and her hands folded on her stomach. Periodically, a small stream of bubbles emerged from her regulator, and behind the silvered glass of her mask, Kerry could see the blue eyes roving with interest around her.
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