This is a work of fiction. All characters depicted are over the age of 18
Part 2... Beck and Watson meet the Braggs and lend a hand, none of them knowing where this act of kindness would eventually lead...
*
The boat was riding lazily at anchor in the lee of a small, palm-fringed cay, two hundred meters from the beach at the edge of the coral. A black-hulled, cutter-rigged sixty-footer, new or nearly so, with a fully-furling main and dual helm. Beck scampered around Aurora's deck, reeling-in the headsail and lowering the main into its blue canvas cradle. Standing at the port helm, Watson pressed the rubber-capped starter and the diesel whinnied into life down below. A figure appeared on the deck of the sixty-footer, then was joined briefly by another, as Watson clunked the saildrive into gear and motored sedately towards a rendezvous.
The figure on the deck- a shapely young woman- waved as Watson brought his boat around and dropped the gearbox into neutral. She stood there, hands on hips, watching the forty five-footer wallow in the languid swell twenty meters to starboard. "Hi there!" she hailed with a big, beaming smile.
"Nice day for it." Watson nodded.
"I guess it would be." she said. "As long as you weren't broken down."
The second figure reappeared- a tall, dour-looking male, clutching a coffee mug. He dipped his head. "G'day."
"Had a spot of bother?" Watson asked as Beck padded barefoot to his side and stood, hand to her brow shielding her eyes.
"It's our motor." the woman explained.
"What happened?"
"Don't know. The silly thing just stopped working."
It was a million dollar boat. Seemed unusual that the silly motor would just stop working. "That's bad luck." Watson replied. "What's the problem?"
"No idea." the man shook his head. "There's plenty of fuel, we've already checked. But it just... you know... sort of stopped working, just like my wife said."
"That's odd..." Watson frowned. "What sort of motor is it?"
The man and the woman exchanged a puzzled glance. The man shrugged. "A boat motor?"
Watson nodded. Sure enough, clueless.
"Do you happen to know anything about boat motors?" the woman asked.
"Oh, don't go bothering them." the male chided, in no mood for hobnobbing with the peasantry.
"No, no, that's okay." Watson said. "I've done a bit of work on mine so I've got a bit of an idea. What do you reckon? Should we take a look?"
"Well," the male hedged, looking reflexively at his big gold watch, "if it's not too much trouble."
"None at all." Watson shook his head. It would be a chance, if nothing else, to check out the beautiful boat, not to mention its gorgeous female occupant.
"Err..." the man frowned, "How should we..."
"Standby with a couple of lines fore and aft and I'll come alongside." Watson replied. "Beck, throw out the fenders and get up to the bow. Let's get ready to make fast."
Beck rummaged around in a cockpit locker and extracted four stiff, inflated, white plastic bumpers. Slinging them over the side one by one and tying them off, she perched on the bow while Watson brought them around. As the two boats came together, squashing the fenders, the woman lobbed a rope into Beck's waiting hands. With the rope secure, Beck worked her way aft, to the cockpit, where Watson was busy with a second mooring line.
The old man could sense the couple giving him a surreptitious once over. Dressed in faded blue Billabong board shorts and sagging green T-shirt, with close-cropped grey hair and four day's growth on his jaw, he was a degree on the shabby side of ruggedly handsome. An academic by the looks, or retired professional, on the wrong side of fifty but still tanned and fit. Moving from point to point, he checked their handiwork, then looked up, brushing his hands. "Well, that should do the trick."
The dead boat's owner leant over the side. "You're not going to scratch my paintwork, are you? This thing is brand-new."
"That's what the fenders are for." Beck announced dryly and the neighbours both looked at her. Knee-high to a shrimp, somewhere in her teens, she was clad in salt-starched pink- and grey-board shorts and a threadbare pink singlet. Her breasts were hardly more than two little bumps, but her nipples were standing proudly erect, punctuating the fabric stretched over her chest. Bleached platinum by saltwater and sun, her bountiful blonde hair was trussed up in a ponytail, and her perpetually sun-kissed skin was the colour of honey. She stood, undaunted by the neighbours' frank scrutiny, her sky-blue eyes holding their gaze with calm equanimity.
"Fenders." the male rumbled, "Of course."
"We're kinda new at this." the woman admitted.
"That's okay." Beck shrugged. "Everyone's gotta learn."
"Amen to that." the woman nodded.
"I'm Rebekah." Beck announced for want of something to say.
"Hello Rebecca, nice to meet you."
"No. Rebe-kah. With a 'k' and an 'a' and an 'h'."
The woman smiled. "Well, it's nice to meet you Rebekah, with a 'k' and an 'a' and an 'h'. My name's Tanya, with an 'n and a 'y' and an 'a'."
Thirty-something, with short dark hair and straight white teeth, Tanya with an 'n and a 'y' and an 'a' was barely clad in a tiny one-piece swimsuit, with high-cut sides and plunging neckline. Her body bespoke countless hours in an expensive gym, pounding the treadmill under the watchful eye of a personal trainer. From her full round breasts to her hard, flat belly, her tiny waist and broad, canted hips, her figure was centrefold perfect and she knew it.
Her male companion had obviously been taking care of himself in much the same manner. Forty or so, he had ample brown hair, greying at the temples but otherwise perfectly groomed. He stood behind the woman looking slightly embarrassed, wearing the smile of a career know-it-all suddenly out of his depth. "Boats." he said ruefully with a shake of the head.
"You'd have to be nuts!" Watson affirmed.
"Been here long?" Beck asked.
"Since last night," the woman grinned, "when we got shipwrecked."
Her husband curled his lip. "Hah, hah."
"Oh, lighten up." The woman gave him a playful nudge. "He's been like a bear with a sore head since he broke his new toy."
The bear with a sore head looked Watson up and down. "The name's Bragg," he announced loftily, "Roger Bragg, Senior Counsel. And you would be?"
Watson quickly considered several wry comebacks, but the woman was so drop-dead gorgeous he feigned deference. "The name's Watson." he replied, "Damon Watson, moth-eaten layabout."
"And what about your day job?" the male asked, as Beck snorted with laughter and quickly covered her mouth.
"Script writer." Watson replied, "So same thing really."
"Rebekah and Damon." Tanya smiled. "There you go, just like old friends."
"Just the two of you, is it?" Bragg asked, craning his neck in search of the other parent.
"I'm actually solo." Watson replied. "I just keep her around in case I run out of food." It was their private joke. Because he was always eating her. "Umm..." he gestured vaguely at the side of their black-hulled boat. "Should we?"
The upmarket castaways stepped aside. "Of course." Tanya said, "Please. Welcome aboard." Looking at Watson, she wrinkled her nose. "You know I've always wanted to say that."