Ā© 2021 by Gene Majors
To the reader:
This Novella comprises 18,000 words (33 book-pages) in 4 Chapters (all 4 published here).
Chapter 1
Ah, yes! A quiet evening among British Columbia's Inner islands.
From the splash-rail of my Catalina-25, I slid down and leaned against the back of its port cockpit seat, stretching my legs from the twenty miles of being scrunched-up while sailing over from Crandell River to the Barely Islands. The local mosquitoes had yet to discover the sun had slipped behind the trees on the pair of Barely Islands to my west, and the mid-August temperature still held warm and comfortable. The evening promised to be wonderful. The faint, evening breeze carried tiny ripples to splash them against my boat's fiberglass hull. Yes, wonderful.
Now, if I could only keep my mind off the four, earlier annual vacations I'd spent here. Or off Molly, if she were here as she had been those four previous, precious years. Oh, Molly! Why did you have to kill yourself by skidding into the path of that eighteen-wheeler on Northway Pass last winter? I still had nightmares of her SUV tumbling two hundred feet into that bolder-filled canyon.
"Come on, Lance," I told myself. "Get a grip, Boy! She's gone and nothing can bring her back."
Like telling myself? That was going to help?
I tidied up the main sheet and lashed the mainsail around the boom. Molly would have already done these things by now. She would also have bagged the Genoa and secured the lot to the deck, almost before I got the anchor set and its rode perfected so it was safe for the night's stay. She was handy that way. You could tell she loved sailing, loved my little boat, loved this tiny bay formed between two small islands that became one at low tide. But best of all, she loved me, 'Captain Lance' she insisted on calling me, and left no doubt about it.
"Stop it!"
All right, already! Get down in the galley, heat up a can of wienies and beans, and slug down a couple cans of Fosters. Maybe they would help. I reached over the transom, turned on the galley's propane supply, then clambered down the companion way into the cabin.
The stove. Yes, I knew how it worked. I'd converted it from alcohol and installed it, but the only time it got used was on our vacations. And Molly had always been our chef.
"Stop it, Lance!"
Find your can of supper and the can-opener. There. Yesāin the sack where you left that can while readying the boat for departure from Crandell River. And the can opener, in the drawer below and forward of the stove, where Molly always stowed it. Stop it, Lance, before you get that butcher knife from the drawer next to the can opener and put yourself out of your misery!
***
I wasn't in much better condition the following morning. On top of missing Molly, I was stiff from nightmarish lack of sleep, and it was cold, as temperatures always were here mornings, even in mid-August. Dew on the cockpit surfaces made it seem even more so, but I hauled myself up the companionway and gazed at the sun just peeking over the trees atop the larger island to the east of my little bay.
At least that much seemed promising. Maybe more of a stretch would help.
What was that? What
is
that? Someone else high on the strip of beach connecting those two islands to the west side of Barely Bay? Never before had Molly and I come upon anyone else out here, twenty miles of salt water away from town.
Too far away to see well, but it must be a woman. In a teensie swimsuit this early in the morning? Before the sun warmed everything up? Even a little?
I gave the shoreline a quick check to either side: No other boat anchored and no dinghy pulled up on the beach. Nothing. She must have come across from the other side of the island. I mean, this whole pair of islands couldn't cover sixty acres; I always figured there was a reason this was called Barely Islands. Molly and I had given their whole land mass a fair hike-around one evening last year. Sixty acresāat the most. We did find the tumbled-down remains of a one-room shack, but they were the only signs habitation had ever occurred hereāand those remains looked to have been abandoned maybe a hundred years ago.
I watched the shape stop, stand there as if scoping-out my little boat, then disappear behind an indistinguishable bush near the upper north end of the gravel/sand strip of a beach. I watched a while, still trying to get my eyes to work better than they could, but all I achieved was a clearer impression that not only had that been a woman, but she looked near-naked in a flesh-tinted swimsuit.
I kept an eye out the whole time I heated water for cocoa mix, fried a couple eggs, and made one of those man-hole-cover size pancakes my bachelor hunting buddy used to make. But over that half hour, the sand strip remained uninhabitedālike the rest of the beach and shoreline.
So? What else did I have to do that day? I was on vacation, and as my only goal for the day, I wanted fish for supper this evening. So maybe later I'd pull my anchor and try jigging the bottom in the narrow channel just outside my little bay. I'd caught a nice rockfish out there last vacation.
But then again, that could well wait until this afternoon. Curiosity was getting the better of my male hormones, I'll admit. I'd go ashore and have a look around. And if I ran into whoever that had been up there? So what? I'd run into her.
Half hour later, over the side I went and rowed ashore, skidding my Livingston dinghy's twin hulls onto the sand/gravel beach. There I tied a fifty foot extension onto it's painter, took this extension up the shore with me and tied it to a rock hefty enough it appeared it would stay put, even if the tide came in faster and earlier than I expected.
Then I hoofed it on up the gravelly beach to where I'd last seen the interloper.
Now, that was interesting: Barefoot tracks. Made me wonder what else was bare. A guy can hope, can't he?
I knew about where we'd found the remains of that cabin last year, so I headed that direction. Not long after my start, I came across a barely used trail that went the direction I wanted, so I followed it. Yes, there were bare footprints on it, too.
At the cabin's remains, I found questionable evidence whoever had been out on the beach above Barely Bay had been here, too: Decaying wooden rubbish uprooted from where it had lain over the years, sunken into the pine needles, remains of a small fire (an old one), a couple rusty tin cans strewn around.
What? More barefoot tracks, and what appeared to be a ground nest for an animal of some sort. What again? No deer would bed down there, not on this little island.
So, I wandered off to the south, coming to the end of the islet and finding nothing more except a smattering of barefoot tracks. I circled around the west side of this island, came again to the sand and gravel neck connecting this bump of land to the slightly larger island to the north, and continued on around that, too.
At my guess of mid-afternoon, I reached the north end of that one, finding nothing except a few more bare footprints above the high tide line. Time to cut across the island, find my little boat, paddle out, and make some lunchāand maybe snag a couple herring to gut and fry up for supper. Not great, but they'd be quick and filling.
This island was more a rock pile than the smaller one, so by the time I reached the north end of the sand and gravel neck, I was keeping my eyes more to the ground to save tripping over rocks. More barefoot tracks, but nothing beyond that. Back at the bay, I shuffled down the beach to my moorage rock, rescued my extended painter from the rock, and rowed back to my Cat-25. But why the profusion of barefoot tracks around my anchor rockāas if the owner of those felt a quandary as whether to set my dinghy adrift or not?
Oh, well. Supper here I comeāwhen the sun quit for the day. And maybe tonight, with the exercise I'd gotten today, I'd get some sleepāif Molly didn't keep me awake all night again.
My evening fishing attempt was good to me. I caught a very nice rockfish so I wasn't forced to catch herring for supper. I rowed ashore once again, walked to the end of the sand/gravel neck to several promising rocks, and proceeded to gut and skin my rockfish. Because I was out of practice, I kept my eyes on my work, not wanting to skin away any morsels of rockfish by accident. But when I did look away, in the distance at the top of the sand/gravel neck, was that the swimsuit girl again? Almost hidden at the edge of the woods and boulders? Again?
I washed the filleted rockfish and scooped it into my pan with a little clean saltwater to keep the bugs off my supper, put the panāfish, water, pan and allāin the dinghy and headed up the neck at a good pace, watching to see what happened to the swimsuit.
It disappeared.
When I arrived where I thought it had been, I found nothing but bare footprints. So I headed up the trail again, the one toward the ex-cabin. Although I've hunted a bit, I'm not much of a tracker. But I did see something in those tracks that led me to think: 'Crippled.'
So? If that swimsuit was crippled, what was it doing out hereāhere with no boat (I had seen none during my all day hike), on an island with no drinking or fresh water of any kind, apparently no food, and nothing I'd seen that would keep her (or it) warm during the night?
I kept up my pace and soon came in sight of the cabin's remains.
What surprised me was the naked woman collapsed on the ground in what I'd before figured was an animal bed. She came to and cowered as I approached.