Read A Gentle Rain Online

Authors: Deborah F. Smith

Tags: #Ranch Life - Florida, #Contemporary Women, #Ranchers, #Florida, #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Heiresses, #Connecticut, #Inheritance and succession, #Birthparents, #Fiction, #Domestic fiction, #kindleconvert, #Ranch Life

A Gentle Rain (27 page)

Curl left. Curl right. Kick, one two three, the show's director, a retired mermaid named Josie, from Alabama, directed me in a heavy drawl, via my earpiece. Don't forget to smile, Karen. Sweetie pie? Relax. You gotta make it look easy.

Easy? Nothing about being a mermaid was easy. Of the twenty women participating in the show, I was the only rookie, the only amateur who needed coaching to stay in sync. An ingenue. That's how I preferred to think of myself. All the other performers, including Miriam and Lula, were at least sixty years old, veterans of the mermaid glory days at Weeki Wachee Springs. The audience was there to see them, not me.

I had some large flippers to fill.

But I also had a family. Or rather, this dual entity, Karen Johnson and Atar-who, had one. Only Kara Whittenbrook was an orphan.

Emotions got the best of me. My contributions to the night's show were modest. I performed as a mere member of the chorus, achieving only background status, not a star performer. Several times I dropped my oxygen line, fumbled my watery pirouettes, bumped into fake coral, and was sideswiped once or twice by passing bass. I cast furtive glances at the impenetrable glass wall between us and the world of dry spectators, wondering what the New York Times reporter thought of our quaint show.

During pre- show interviews I'd judged her an aloof, cynical person, attired in dull earth tones and workable leathers, as if her mission included perpetuating cool, New York, urban style in the midst of sweaty, gaudy Florida.

She has no idea what she's missing, I thought. This show is spectacular. Perfect. A nostalgic hit. An homage to every quirky roadside attraction that ever lured a wood-paneled station wagon filled with all-American nuclear families on their way to a heady week at a beach motel with a kitchenette and a charcoal grill. A salute to American kitsch.

Then, the alligator arrived.

Perhaps the ten-foot reptile visited the spring that night in hopes of finding a mate, or was simply curious. Or perhaps it was sad fate. At any rate, as the underwater lights swept a rainbow of pastel hues over us during the show's finale, I undulated my arms in the background while Miriam, Lula and the other veterans lip-synced the words to Bali Ha'i, from South Pacific-how magical. The words bubbled underwater. Music, underwater, becomes a glorious effervescence, as if the song were a glass of champagne.

Meanwhile, the ten-foot alligator glided, stage left, into the fizzing water.

And headed straight for me.

Ignore him, keep goal', Josie ordered in my ear. He's just nosy. He'll leave in a second.

Nosy? Try hungry and murderous. Somewhere in the alligator's walnut-sized reptilian brain, neurons transmitted a simple message: Open jaws. Shut jaws. Swallow the redheaded mermaid.

He clamped his prehistorically designed teeth on my shimmering tail fins and refused to let go. All he had to do was drown me, then drag my carcass somewhere convenient for his dining pleasure.

As a child in the rainforest I'd often played with tiny, exotic lizards, letting them clamp their soft, resolute mouths on my shirt fronts or even my ear lobes. The lizards held on with single-minded obsession, which amused me and the local tribal children no end. And I had never been afraid of their larger cousins.

Until now.

Most of the mermaids swam to safety with no thought of rescuing me, their ingenue mer sister, but Miriam, Lula and Teegee swam to the alligator and slapped him on the head. He didn't even blink.

I'm not certain alligators can blink.

I took a quick suck of oxygen from my air hose then tried to dolphinkick until the alligator let go. But he simply settled on a sandy shelf among the fake coral, pulling me down with him. I fumbled my air hose and dropped it.

I was going to drown. And then be eaten like a sequined fish stick.

A huge swhoosh of human energy plunged beside me, and another behind me. I looked down through a veil of bubbles.

Mac. And Lily.

Lily, her cheeks bulging with air, grabbed my arm and pulled.

Mac latched his big hands onto the alligator's snout, trying to pry its jaws open. At the same time, Ben leapt into the water behind me. He unzipped my tail from waist to knees and pulled me out of it. Thank goodness, I was wearing panties.

Ben, Lily and I shot to the surface, coming up under the same walkway that had been my undoing before. This time, however, an errant nail was the least of the problem. I shoved Lily up the ladder and Ben shoved me up behind her. The other mermaids helped us out.

Ben took a deep breath then dived down to rescue Mac.

"Mac!" Lily screamed, huddling on the platform alongside me. We stared into the swirling water-filled with bubbles from deserted air hoses-and then blood. Lily screamed again. I put an arm around her and held her tightly. Ben and my father were in danger. All that blood in the water.

My father.

And Ben.

Finally, Mac and Ben speared the surface, gasping. Mac flailed like a child; it was only later I learned he couldn't swim. Ben pulled him by the shirt collar and the rest of us helped him out. Lily burst into tears and flung herself at him. He held her and they sat on the platform, rocking. As Ben climbed up the ladder after him, I saw blood oozing from his left hand.

He stretched out, gasping. I studied the gash. A small wound for so much blood. I bent over him urgently, searching his soggy shirt and pants for torn cloth, for evidence of worse wounds. He was covered in blood. As my hands prodded his thighs I said loudly, "Ben, where does it hurt the most?"

Through ragged inhalations he answered, "Right where you're ... poling ... my ball-"

The alligator's body floated to the surface. The handle of Ben's pocket knife protruded from one corner of its jaw. Ben had slit its throat.

Ben sat up wearily, streaming bloody water over the platform. I looked from the dead alligator to Mac and Lily, who had calmed down. Mac smiled at me. This big, simple man had once again come to my rescue. Mac did not hesitate. He did not weigh the risks. He was, simply, my protector.

"You oh-oh-oh-okay, little girl?" he asked.

Nearly crying, I nodded. "Yes. Thank you."

"What about me?" Ben drawled. "Huh?"

"Benji," Joey cried. Bigfoot and Cheech had rolled him to the scene.

"I'm okay, baby bubba. You breathe easy, now. It's okay. Turn up his oxygen, Cheech."

"Si, Boss."

Joey looked at me tearfully. "I knew the gator wouldn't eat you. They don't eat mermaids."

So much faith. So much love. I nodded again, my throat working. "I'm glad you think so."

`Ben wouldn't let `em."

"No, he wouldn't, I'm sure."

I looked at Ben with a tearful smile. Ben had killed a ... a dragon in my honor. Even though I didn't blame the dragon, and, in fact, felt sorry for the dragon, I was relieved.

Every compassionately civilized lobe of my brain regretted the alligator's death, while every luridly uncivilized tingle in my body wanted to cling to Ben and whisper, `My hero. You saved me from the marauding beast.'

The New York Times reporter walked out onto the platform with her miniature tape recorder, a notepad, and a very pale face. "Is this a common problem at your mermaid shows?" she asked. "Alligator attacks?" Miriam and the others assured her it was not, but they looked dazed and disappointed. So much for luring investors, other than the producers of reality TV shows. Maybe we'd get an offer from those.

Smack down: alligators versus mermaids.

"Just bad luck," Miriam said dully.

The reporter scribbled some notes then dropped to her heels beside Ben and me. She held out her tape recorder. "As a native Florida rancher and an expert on local wildlife, Mr. Thocco, what are you going to take away from this experience?"

Ben, unlike the rest of us, wasn't fazed. He watched the dead alligator float past. "I'll take a new, gator-skin hat band for me, some gator-skin boots for Mac, and a mess of fried gator tail for everybody else. Roy! You and Bigfoot grab hold of that carcass `fore it floats downstream. Possum, you get a skinnin' knife outta my truck."

"Okay, Ben," they chorused.

I smiled. Here was a knight who slayed beasts in his lady's defense.

And then recycled them.

That's when I realized I loved him.

"Five stitches, some antibiotic ointment, and he's good to go," said Gloria at the Fountain Springs ER clinic that night. "Maybe you and Ben aren't cut out for mermaid shows, ya think?"

"It was another freak accident. Can I see him now, please?"

"Sure."

I knocked and went in. He sat on my personal exam table, wearing nothing but a large mermaid towel around his waist and legs. After all, his clothes had been soaked with bloody water.

El Diablo's bare chest.

My heart fluttered. It really did.

His chest was ten years older than the one I'd adored. That only made it better. It was broader, fuller, a mature crown for a very masculine torso. Fine black hair curled down the center and disappeared beneath his towel.

His skin was tanned atop a natural olive tone inherited from his father. He had scars and briar scratches, a few freckles and a number of small, healing insect bites. The back of his left hand bore a clear bandage over a sewn gash.

El Diablo had always been groomed and tanned. Blemish-free. Ben had imperfections. But they made him sexier, to me.

I sat down on the same stool he'd sat on when I was a patient, there. "I promise you some delicious fried alligator kabobs for dinner," I said. "I'll batter them in whole wheat flour and soy milk. With a dip of hearty Dijon mustard and saw palmetto honey."

"Yum."

"You're welcome."

"You okay?"

"Me? I'm not the one who needed stitches. Nor am I the one who pried an alligator's mouth open with my bare hands. The kudos go to you and Mac. And to Lily, who would have drowned alongside me rather than let me drown alone."

"You look kinda pale."

I had been worried about him, but I didn't say so. "I'm a failed mermaid. My name is Atar-who. It might as well be Atar-who-cares? The reporter will write some amusing, cynically sophisticated and ironic piece about the vagaries of `old Florida's' attempt at nostalgia, a vain attempt at recalling the innocence of a time before giant shopping malls and six-lane interstates and casinos and Disney parks, a time when a long beach weekend at a tiny pastel motor court was a luxurious family vacation despite a leaky window air conditioner and sand in the carpet, and she'll never understand that it's so much more than that."

"You understand pretty good, for a Yankee," he said gently. "Like you were born here. Like it's in your blood."

"I ... appreciate all authentic places. And all authentic people. And-" I stood, my heart pounding-"all true heroes." I leaned over and kissed him. Lightly and quickly, on the mouth. He reached for me but I backed away. "Everyone from the ranch is outside that door. Listening." I pointed from my lips to his. "This is the only thing they can't hear. Kissing is like crying underwater. A silent joy."

He held out his wounded hand, palm up. "Our secret."

"Fair enough," I said. And I kissed the palm of his hand, in promise.

A week later, everyone at the ranch sat around the big kitchen table while Miriam read the New York Times feature aloud.

"The mermaids of Kissme Woomee Springs are older, heavier and slower than your average svelte mermaid of lore," she read through pinkrimmed glasses with rhinestone mermaids at the temples. "And then there was their young protege, the somewhat zaft q redheaded mermaid, who had to be rescued from a hungry, ten-foot alligator by a bluejeaned, Seminole cowboy. Who didn't bring along his seahorse. All in all, the quaint show proved that not all nostalgic tourist attractions are worth saving, and, in the case of the alligator attack, some retro entertainments depend more on trauma than drama."

"What's a young pro ... pro ... prote-" Mac tried.

"It's a student," I supplied.

"What's zaftig mean?" Lily asked.

"It means sweet," Ben said quickly.

"It means overweight," I corrected, but gave him a grateful look.

Lily studied me solemnly. "What's overweight mean?"

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