The rain just would not stop. I wasnât surprised, since it was October in Southeast Alaska. Actually, it was odd that I even noticed it. I guess it was because I was on a mission not my own that made it stand out in my mind. For those who donât realize it, Southeast Alaska is home to the largest rain forest outside the Amazon. Tourists always ask, âWhere are the monkeys and parrots?â, or âWhere are all the palm trees?â Shows what they know about the planet. Itâs a rain forest, all right, but itâs a temperate rain forest, not a tropical one.
Anyway, what it means for those of us who live here is a whole butt load of rain every fall, spring, and sometimes all summer long. I was hunkering under the broad sheltering branches of a Sitka spruce tree. The branches over my head managed to catch and rechannel most of the water, but I still received the occasional massive cold drip down my collar or into my eye. Occasionally, I had to go and lift up the curtain of evergreen boughs to scan the cabin and its surrounding area. Each time I did, the blocked rain fell on down on me. Each time it did, I cursed my stupid fucking cousin for dragging me into this fiasco.
My cousin, Bobby, and I are almost the same age. He got to celebrate his 21st birthday a month before I did, but I think Iâve caught up to him in hangovers in the twenty-five years between then and now. We have always been more like brothers than cousins. We told each other everything. I suppose that was why he asked me to stand watch instead of somebody else. I could have been home and warm, snuggled up with my dog, Barber, by the fire instead of here in the rain and the cold watching Bobbyâs cabin. I had asked a favor of him when my last wife and I were getting divorced, so he asked this one of me and I had to consent to it.
Bobby was suspicious of his wife. He thought she was getting it on with a guy that worked at the cannery. They worked four tenâs at the cannery, which meant that everybody had three day weekends all season. The season for the canneries ran from May through October, or until the weather on the gulf got so bad that the boats couldnât go out. So far, in spite of the rain, they were still going out and returning with the holds full of cod and halibut. So this guy that Bobby was worried about was still around.
I duck-walked to the edge of my shelter and lifted the branch. So far there was no sign of anything amiss at the cabin. It was only about thirty feet away from the edge of the forest and the tree I was under. Bobbyâs wife, Gina, had driven in around 7:00 and gone inside, carrying two bags from the grocery store. The sun had hit the horizon three hours earlier, so she turned on the lights when she went inside. Nothing had changed since.
Bobby brought Gina back from a trip outside (thatâs the rest of the US to those of you who donât live in Alaska, otherwise known as the âLower Forty-Eightâ) three years ago. He had bought a cruise down Mexico way and enjoyed the shit out of it. He had enjoyed it so damn much that he had fallen victim to a âMargarita Marriageâ. Gina had been a two time loser in the marriage lottery, but he married her anyway. That didnât necessarily make her a loser, per se, as I well know. I have three separate divorce files in my cabinet at home, and donât consider myself a loser, just a bad judge of character. But in Ginaâs case, one of her husbands wasnât absent because of a divorce, but because he was no longer with us, as in deceased. This wasnât necessarily an odd thing, since he was also several decades older then she was, but there were extenuating circumstances.
He had died from an overdose of a prescription drug he was taking for some condition or other. According to Bobby, which was third hand from Gina, the guy had gotten drunk â he shouldnât have been drinking with the medication in the first place â and then took a double dose of the stuff, apparently too drunk to remember that he had already taken it. It was a pretty hazy situation, but the bottom line was that Gina could well afford the cruise she had taken after the funeral. That was the one where she met Bobby.
Bobby was a forty-four year old bachelor when he hit it big. Alaska doesnât have a lottery like other states, even though it should. Anyway, thanks to the internet, Alaskans can buy tickets for any state lottery, as well as for the multi-state games like Powerball and the Big Game. It was Powerball that Bobby hit. He had to split the prize, but only with seven other people. When the prize is 115 million dollars, even a seven way split makes Jack â or Bobby -- a rich boy. It meant that Bobby got a check for over a half million each year (after taxes) for the next twenty years. Even I wouldnât mind splitting that one.
If heâd brought her back before the wedding, everybody would have tried to dissuade him from marrying Gina, at least at the time. But the cruise was a Mexican one, and we all know that itâs easy to marry and divorce south of the border. By the time they hit the tarmac in Juneau to transfer to the puddle jumper for home, the deed was done, for better or worse, as they say.
Okay, nobody except Gina knows whatâs in her mind. Only she knows whether she is only after Bobbyâs money or if she really likes him. She acts like it. I would have said âloves himâ, but Iâm not going there. I probably know less than most people about that subject, and Iâm certainly in no position to judge Ginaâs temperament. Bobby, on the other hand clearly loves his little Italian bombshell.
Sheâs attractive, Iâll give her that. It isnât so much a physical thing as it is in the way she acts and looks at you. She has black, black hair. She even has a little bit of a mustache â a subject that Bobby has to get over, since he has beaten the shit out of two guys so far for even making fun of it. Sheâs short, maybe 5â 6â. Apparently her mother liked her children to eat well, because she is pretty round in a lot of places. Her tits are round; her ass is round, and protruding. Her cheeks are round. Her smile is contagious. Okay, sheâs probably overweight for her height, but she carries it well. To watch her, she has no self-consciousness about her weight. On her itâs attractive.
Minutes after Bobby and Gina got off the plane from Juneau, they were ensconced in a booth at the Iditarod Lounge. She was painting everybody with her grin and passing along a thank you handshake (and sometimes a kiss!) for the congratulations she and Bobby were receiving. Most of those folks still thought Bobby had gotten a good deal and were in the dark about Ginaâs past.
This town is like most other Southeast Alaska towns. These days, the economy is based on tourism, instead of the original trinity: gold, trees, and fish. The environmentalists have choked off most of the first two, and the Japanese and Russians have cut a big hole in the last one. Anyway, we have to depend on the cruise ships more every year to support the town. Maybe it was for show, or maybe not, but Gina got a job as a clerk in one of the shops almost the day after she and Bobby got home. Herk Bledsoe hired her without any sort of application crap, the way things used to be done here. She was Bobby Landsdowneâs wife, and that was good enough for him. Herk is one of the few old-timers here who have held on to their stores. Most of the rest of them have sold or leased their spots to outside corporations.
So, the public view seemed good. Gina and Bobby were all smiles, strokes and kisses whenever they were out to eat or to drink and dance. When Gina lasted through her first winter and neither she, nor the marriage seemed any worse for the wear, everybody just sort of accepted her into the local fold, though on probation. The winter hadnât been all that cold or harsh, so really anybody could have weathered it. Still, Gina was welcomed and invited to sit at the coffee shops when she walked in every morning. The two of them had friends they got together with for dinner and cards frequently.
In other words, Gina had found a way to fit in. I donât know about the previous seasons, but this year she apparently had gotten into a friendship with this guy from Seattle who worked for the cannery. He had made some sizeable purchases from her at Herkâs shop and he was charming as hell. Herk was the one who first mentioned him to Bobby.