This story was written at the challenge of my friend classicrock2. He mentioned that my stories are mostly happy and that life isn't necessarily like that. Mine has been, but he suggested that I stretch my literary muscles and write a story that could happen to one of my characters, but take away the safety net. I could still give them a happy ending, but rainbows do come after storms. I took the challenge and here is the result.
Thanks to my team. Harddaysknight is my mentor and gives me critical review. SBrooks103x also gives me a pre-post read. My editors are Girlinthemoon, Hale1 and GeorgeAnderson. I must also thank Stef2244 for his input. Thanks to the classic one for the idea.
It was a beautiful spring day; the wind about fifteen knots and a pretty good chop on the water. Dad and I were having a blast. The boat was running smoothly and I was taking in some sail. We were hissing through the chop at a pretty good clip and I got the line tied off. I went to the cooler and got out one of my strawberry sodas and a Stella Artois, for Dad. We were maybe five miles out. The coast was just below the horizon, and when I looked at Dad, I saw his face turn white, even whiter than usual. He sprang toward me and I turned to look in the direction he had been looking. All I saw was a wall of water. It was about fifty yards away and it was speeding toward us like a freight train. I felt Dad grab me by the waistband of my shorts and I just froze, looking up twenty feet to the top of that impossible wall. It fell on us and I knew nothing.
When I woke up my head was throbbing like a bass drum at a Slipknot concert. I was in the water and there was an arm around my neck. Dad had somehow managed to hold onto me when all those tons of water fell on us. There was no sign of the boat. I was on my back with his arm under my chin and he was towing me.
"I'm awake, Dad," I told him. "What happened?"
"I think we just got hit by a rogue wave," he said. He was breathing pretty hard.
"Turn me loose; I can swim now," I told him.
"Are you sure, Collins?" he asked. I could hear the concern in his voice. "We've got a long way to go, baby."
"I'm sure," I told him. "I don't want to hear any 'black people can't swim' jokes, either. "We both knew we were in trouble, big trouble, but it was our way. I could still feel the panic bubbling behind my brain, but his presence calmed me and I kept it at bay with humor.
He laughed, but he turned me loose and we swam side by side for a while. There was enough chop to make it very frustrating. We kept getting hit in the face and choking on sea water. It's a particularly bad choke. Ocean water tastes awful, and making any headway at all was so hard that our mouths were open as we panted. We were both in pretty good shape and it was a good thing. We ran every morning, five times a week. I was doing track and he was my coach. At seventeen, I was in the best shape of my life and I think he was, too. The drawback to that was both of us were pretty muscular. That meant we were denser than fat people would have been and had to exert more energy just to stay up than most people would.
Ocean water is pretty dense, too. If it had been fresh water we'd have been in even more trouble. We swam for two hours and I started getting very tired. Dad could tell I was getting gassed and he made me roll over and he towed me for a while. I got some energy back and we swam on. I was praying for a boat, but I guess the gods weren't listening. I figured if there had been any boats out, they were in the same trouble we were. I ran out of gas pretty quickly and he towed me again. I could see land. I swam again and we made slow progress. Dad was moving very slowly and I could tell he was wearing out. I was exhausted, myself.
"Go, Collins," he gasped. "We can make it. Go, baby; I love you."
"I love you," I told him.
I put my face in the water and swam for the shore. This was the last bit of effort I was going to make and my only thought was moving my leaden arms and legs. I had zero energy for any other thought. I swam until I couldn't take another stroke. I was just going to have to put my feet down. If I was close enough to stand, it would be good; if not, this was it for me. I could see people running toward the water and I never felt anything as good in my life as I did when I felt sand under my toes. A guy was splashing through the water toward me and he grabbed me by the hand. Two more people, another man and a woman were pulling on me. I looked around and I was alone. "Alone, alone, all, all alone, alone on a wine dark sea." The words of the Ancient Mariner ran through my mind for some reason, and I screamed.
"Dad! My Dad's out there!"
I tried to pull away from the people holding on to me. They wouldn't let me go.
"There's no one there," I heard the man shout in my ear. "You weren't with anyone."
I fought like a wildcat. I kicked them and scratched them and tried to bite the man holding my arms. I was going back! I got away for a second and started swimming back out. They caught me and the man who got to me first punched me in the jaw and everything went black.
When I woke up, I was in an unfamiliar room. I was lying in what I realized was a hospital bed, and I tried to sit up. I couldn't and I realized that I was restrained. My wrists and ankles were strapped down and there was a strap around my waist.
"Good, you're awake," I heard a voice say. I turned my head and it all came flooding back. It was the man from the beach. I screamed again.
"Daddy!" I wept harder than I ever had in my life. A nurse came in and gave me a shot. "Call my aunt, Vivian Drake," I managed to get out.
"I'm so sorry I had to hit you," I heard the man say as I drifted away.
I don't know how long I slept but when I woke up, I heard Vivian's voice. "What the hell have you done to her? Get those restraints off of her right now!" She was very angry.
"We had to sedate her," I heard a woman's voice. "The restraints were for her safety. She was hysterical and she kept pulling out her IV and trying to leave."
"I'm responsible for her safety now," Vivian said. "Get those fucking things off her, now!"
I opened my eyes and she looked at me. When she saw that I was awake she ran across the room and threw herself on me. I cried and she held me.
"Ma'am, I can't get to her wrist," the nurse who was taking off my restraints told her.
She lifted up, but she didn't let me go. As soon as my arms were free, I clung to her as tightly as I could and we cried like babies. I couldn't stop crying.
"He saved me, Aunt Vivian," I sobbed. "He towed me and it made him too tired. He died so I could make it."
"I know, baby," she said. "That's how much he loved you. I would die for you, too. I would have died for him. He would have done anything for you. Just remember that. It would have made him happy for you to live, even if he had to die."
My arm hurt badly from where it was bent holding her. I knew it was the IV but I didn't care. I couldn't let her go! We cried together, just holding on to each other, until I fell asleep. When I woke up, she was holding my hand and the IV was gone.
"I want to go home," I told her.
"They're going to keep you one more day," she said. "You were badly dehydrated and exhausted and you had a concussion. Then we'll go home."
The TV was on and we were all over the news. Aunt Vivian had talked to a reporter and my story was what their lead. They talked about how Dad adopted me. Dad had been working with a charity in Kenya when he found me. My mother, from all accounts, was a prostitute and had abandoned me. He took me home with him and fed me. His sister, Aunt Vivian, was an attorney and she flew down the next day and they worked for six months getting it fixed so he could adopt me. Dad knew a lot of people and he and Aunt Vivian were pretty well off. As soon as they got the papers filed, we flew home. He got a job teaching high school and eventually, they got the adoption done.
They told that story on TV and talked about Dad being a hero. I couldn't stand it. I felt like I was suffocating, and Aunt Vivian noticed. "Turn that shit off," she told the nurse. "What the hell is wrong with you people? Hasn't this girl been through enough?"