Read Aground on St. Thomas Online
Authors: Rebecca M. Hale
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #International Mystery & Crime, #General, #Cozy, #Travel, #Special Interest, #Literary
St. Croix, US Virgin Islands
The Lucky One
A HAZY INLAND
swelter sank into a low valley on St. Croix’s southern flank, the location for the largest incarceration facility in the US Virgin Islands.
The Golden Grove detention center occupied a flat field that had been scraped down to bare dirt and the occasional patch of short weedy grass. Concrete walls stood behind ten-foot fencing topped with looped barbed wire, an intimidating but ineffectual barrier that enclosed an underfunded, overcrowded prison dormitory.
The center’s squalid living conditions had been the subject of multiple investigations, lawsuits, and court orders, but as yet none of the issued legal remedies appeared to have improved the physical infrastructure, stemmed the violence among the inmates, or slowed the notorious influx of drugs.
An electronic buzzer pulsed, followed by a blinking red light, signifying that a prisoner was about to be released. The screech of sliding metal sounded across the front courtyard.
The guards manning the entrance stepped back from their posts. Their heads dropped in a show of respect for the man in the orange jumpsuit who strode casually through the gate.
The facility’s administrator slid a paper bag across the checkout counter to the departing inmate. The bag’s top third had been folded over and stapled shut, but the paper was crumpled along the edges and had obviously been opened and restapled. A few items had been added to the prisoner’s possessions in the thirty minutes since the center received the call ordering his release.
“Here you go, Nova. Everything should be in there.” Tentatively, the administrator held out a pen and a sheet of paper. “If you could just sign the form.”
The exiting inmate scooped up the sack and tucked it under his arm. With his free hand, he grabbed the pen and scrawled a barely legible signature—not his birth name, but the moniker by which he was known throughout the island.
Casanova
.
He took far more care in his parting smirk, a superior gleam that confirmed his dominance over the administrator and everyone else who worked at the correctional facility.
His brief stint at Golden Grove hadn’t diminished his confident swagger. His stance was that of a triumphant prizefighter.
No one could touch him. He was invincible.
In his thirty-three years of life, Nova had seen plenty of death. He had smelled its rank finality, tasted its thick splatter on his tongue—and wielded its force with his bare hands.
But he had never once feared it.
This wasn’t his first stay at Golden Grove. It wouldn’t be his last.
“See ya next time, Larry.”
Nodding casually at the guards, Nova turned for the walkway leading out through the barbed wire fencing.
The morning sun streamed across his smooth brown face, illuminating the amber flecks in his eyes. High cheekbones, perfectly parted lips, and a nose with a delicate bridge that, despite numerous fistfights, had never once been broken, completed the picture. His muscles were sculpted into the type of toned physique artistically emulated by the ancient Greeks.
The effect was one of unnerving physical beauty.
True to his nickname, Casanova had no problem attracting female attention. Countless Crucian women had fallen for his handsome looks. They found him irresistible—despite his bad-boy reputation, his violent temper, and the menace behind the mask.
•
SWINGING THE STAPLED
paper bag, Nova sauntered onto the main road outside the detention center and headed toward a beat-up taxi van parked on the gravel shoulder.
He pulled on the handle of the van’s side passenger door and deftly slid it open.
“Nevis, you’re right on time.”
The driver looked anxiously over his shoulder as the man in prison garb climbed into the van. Reaching into his shirt pocket, the driver pulled out a cell phone and silently passed it back.
“You seen those Coconut Boys around lately?”
Still mute, Nevis shook his head.
The two homeless men had been missing for weeks. No one had seen the hapless fugitives since Nevis dropped them off on St. Croix’s rugged northwest coast. In so doing, the taxi driver had inadvertently aided in the pair’s escape from Nova’s clutches.
During Nova’s incarceration, his extensive Crucian network had learned of the taxi driver’s role in the getaway. As punishment for this offense, Nova had sent word to Nevis that his taxi would serve as his personal transportation until the two runaways showed up and Nova exacted his revenge.
Leaving the driver to fret behind the wheel, Nova squeezed around the first two bench seats and flopped onto the third cushioned row. Ripping open the sack, he changed out of the jumpsuit and into the clean clothes that had been added by the prison administrator. He had just zipped up a pair of brand-new designer jeans when the cell phone dinged with an incoming text message.
“Nevis, it looks like I’ve got a call coming in. You don’t mind if I take it back here, do you?” With a snide chuckle, he answered his own question. “No, of course you don’t.”
The phone rang seconds later. “Hey there, lovely lady. How are things in Charlotte Amalie . . .”
The driver kept his attention fixed on a metal charm hanging from his rearview mirror. The chicken-shaped trinket pivoted on its string, glinting as the tooled surface reflected the bright sunlight. He had no wish to overhear any aspect of the one-sided conversation taking place in back of the van.
Despite the driver’s efforts to tune it out, Nova’s voice carried to the front seat.
“I figured you had me bailed out for a reason. What’cha got in mind?”
The inaudible reply generated a rumble of laughter, a maniacal sound that made the driver cringe.
“I’m on my way.”
Nova pushed a button, severing the connection.
“Get this bus moving, Nevis. We’ve got some errands to run.”
Drumming his fingers across the second-row seat back, Nova began mentally assembling the crew he would take with him north to St. Thomas.
Still organizing his thoughts, he reached into the paper bag for one last item. The shiny black semiautomatic pistol had been well maintained by its previous owner, who likely hadn’t yet noticed its theft.
A broad smile spread across Nova’s face as he checked the ammunition chamber. Reinserting the loaded magazine, he caressed the handle.
“Hello, Governor.” He pointed the pistol down the middle of the van, aiming it at the back of Nevis’s head.
“Nice to meet you.”
Departure Lounge for the Last Preraid Flight to St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands
The Mojito Man
“MOJITO! MOJITO, PLEASE!
Does anyone know where can I get a mojito?”
A feeble but persistent voice hollered into the otherwise quiet boarding area for the day’s first flight from Miami to St. Thomas.
The surrounding passengers pretended not to hear the thirsty man in the wheelchair. As the appeal continued, a college student turned up the earphones for his mobile music device. Farther down the row, a businessman hunched over his laptop computer, staring at a spreadsheet while purposefully ignoring the clamor. The rest of the crowd migrated to the opposite end of the seating area.
After several more minutes of the haranguing mojito plea, the flight attendant working the check-in counter hurried over and crouched beside the wheelchair.
“Sir, it’s eight o’clock in the morning.”
The Mojito Man beamed up at her with a crooked grin that revealed swollen gums and whittled-down teeth.
“Is it, now?” he replied. His gaze dropped pointedly to the attendant’s chest and the unhooked buttons at the top of her blouse. Despite the woman’s admonishing tone, he was clearly enjoying her attention.
Lifting an anemic arm, he waved his hand at the wheelchair, gesturing to his thin frame and spindly legs. His muscles had atrophied from lack of use, and the skin sagged from his bones. His narrow ankles looked as if even his diminished weight might cause them to snap should he try to stand.
The back of the man’s head had been rubbed bald from weeks spent lying in a hospital bed. He wasn’t old, at most middle-aged, but his body had worn out. The warranty had expired, and the pieces were falling apart.
“The doc says I have less than a month to live. I can’t be worried about social protocols.”
Self-consciously tugging at her shirt collar, the attendant issued a placating smile. “Just try not to disturb the other passengers,” she said before scurrying back to the counter.
For a brief spell, the frail figure remained quiet. He watched the people milling about the gate. Then he rotated his chair so that he could observe the pedestrian traffic in the main corridor. His eyes began to glaze over, as if he might fall asleep.
But it was only a temporary reprieve.
An unwary author entered the waiting area and, oblivious to the previous outbursts, took one of the many open seats near the wheelchair. She removed a travel magazine from her backpack, flipped through to an article she had started earlier, and resumed her read.
Instantly wide-awake, the man leaned toward the hapless woman and whispered loudly, “Excuse me, miss. Do you know where I can get a mojito?”
The Call of the Mojito
THE DEPARTURE LOUNGE
outside the St. Thomas gate filled to capacity as the time drew near for the plane to begin boarding. Several passengers milled about the entry lanes, maneuvering for position, eager to get space for their carry-on luggage. Others slumped in the rows of floor-anchored seating, yawning as they waited for the next intercom announcement.
There wasn’t an open spot to be found—except in the space immediately surrounding the ailing man’s wheelchair.
“Mooooo-jito?” he called out pathetically, his parched voice rasping.
For those trapped in the departure area that morning, the popular Cuban cocktail would never be the same. The classic image of a narrow glass filled with muddled mint leaves, light-colored rum, sugarcane juice, and a splash of lime was now inextricably linked with that of the alcohol-obsessed cancer patient, for whom any public sympathy had long since dissipated. For years to come, mere mention of the sweet drink would bring to mind the sight of the pestering man, disconcerting in both his overt ogling of every passing female and his corpse-like appearance.
As for the unwitting author who had drawn his attention, her mojito misery was just beginning.
•
WITH A VULNERABLE
target identified and pinned within reach, the Mojito Man refined his approach. His plea was no longer directed to the departure lounge as a whole. Instead, he focused his efforts exclusively on the woman seated next to his wheelchair.
The author had missed her chance to find another place to sit. If she moved now, her only choices were to stand on the crowded floor space or to lean against a wall. Given the limited options, she’d decided to remain next to the wheelchair.
She had tried without success to shrug off her neighbor’s pleas. She avoided eye contact with him, even shielding the side of her face with her hand. At one point, she lifted the magazine she’d given up trying to read, propping it like a fence between them.
This too proved an ineffective barrier.
The raised magazine resulted in a verbal pause from the wheelchair, accompanied by a strained shuffling sound. Seconds later, a twenty-dollar bill folded in the shape of a paper airplane flew over the magazine’s top edge.
“
Mo
-jito! I beseech thee, beautiful lady. Please, bring me a mojito!”
The author checked her watch, estimating the minutes remaining until boarding would commence. She had just enough time to circle through the nearest food court. Capitulating, she slid the magazine into her backpack.
She suspected she was being sent on a futile mission.
While mojitos were commonly served throughout south Florida, she couldn’t imagine where the man had come up with the idea that the drink would be readily available inside the airport. It wasn’t the type of item served by the many fast-food burger joints and coffee kiosks that operated within the terminal.
She figured her best bet was to try one of the airport restaurants, but it seemed unlikely she’d find a bartender serving cocktails during the breakfast hour—or that she would be allowed to purchase an alcoholic beverage in a to-go cup.
She shrugged her shoulders. Given the harassment she’d endured during the past forty-five minutes, she didn’t much care one way or the other.
She was, however, feeling a tad hungry. Maybe I’ll get something to eat for myself, she mused.
I’ll take a bacon, egg, and cheese biscuit plus a mojito—to go, she thought wryly.
“Keep an eye on my seat,” she said out loud, in what she knew to be an unnecessary request. Wearily, she hefted her backpack onto her shoulders and grabbed the handle for her roll-around suitcase. “I’ll see what I can round up.”
The man gave her a crafty grin.
“You’re so kind. Thank you, love.”