Death on a Vineyard Beach (2 page)

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Authors: Philip R. Craig

BOOK: Death on a Vineyard Beach
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From the tables came the sound of corks popping. I glanced over and saw John Skye and Manny Fonseca pouring champagne.

“Come on, you two,” I said, taking Zee's hand. “I'll buy you both a drink.”

The chief glanced at his watch. “One glass, then I got to get to work back downtown.” He allowed himself a smile. “Crime never sleeps, you know. Not even in Edgartown.”

“Well, maybe it'll doze until you get back on the beat,” I said.

We went up to the tables and got glasses. Somebody dragged Zee off to join other people. Around us, the sound of voices filled the air. People seemed happy. I was happy, too.

“Got the boat ready to go?” asked my sister's husband, Mike.

“Ready to roll. You and Margarite will have our house and the cats to yourselves while we're gone, and you'll have both trucks, so you can get down the beach and back.”

“How romantic,” said Margarite. “A sailing honeymoon to Nantucket in your own catboat.”

“It'll be romantic as long as the weather holds. If it breezes up or starts to rain while we're out on the sound, an eighteen-foot catboat won't be an amorous conveyance.”

“I'm sure everything will be wonderful,” said my sister, whose own romance was with Mike and the mountains and deserts of northern New Mexico. She squeezed my arm. “Your Zeolinda is about the most beautiful woman I've ever seen. You're a lucky guy!”

“I consider it skill,” I said, knowing she was right. “It took time and work, but now I've got her in my clutches.”

“And I've got you,” said Zee, coming out of the crowd. “It's a high price to pay to finally get to go to Nantucket, but I've always wanted to see the place and this is the only way I could swing it.”

The chief had his glass in his hand and was looking around at people in that way that some cops do, even when
they're off duty. I noticed his eyes stop moving and focus toward the driveway, which was lined with cars. I turned and followed his gaze.

A man was walking casually away. I couldn't see his face, and wondered who he was. Someone else from the hospital where Zee worked, maybe. Maybe a friend of Zee's, or the husband or boyfriend of a friend. Was there something familiar about the way he walked? The chief was still looking at him when I turned away.

On the porch, the band was tuning up. A glass and a half later, they started off with a country-and-western tune, and people began to dance on the lawn. Ties were stripped off and coats were piled up on the porch. Women kicked off their shoes and tossed their hair.

“Come on, Jefferson,” said Zee, and led me away from the bar. We danced, which is to say she danced and I walked around and kicked up a heel now and then, hoping that I was stepping to the music. I do my best dancing standing still since somehow rhythm doesn't reach my feet very well. Still, we danced fast, then slow, then alone to the “Tennessee Waltz” while everybody else watched.

“You and Fred Astaire,” said Zee, nimbly escaping one of my shoes. “You're a matched pair.”

“Fred and I are twins,” I said. “People can't tell us apart.”

After a while, someone in the crowd said, “Enough of this. A round of applause for the bride and groom, then let's get dancing ourselves!” The applause came and the lawn filled again with dancers, all of whom were better at the sport than I was.

John Skye took Zee out of my arms and whirled away with her. I went to a table and ate some pumpernickel with mustard and sliced salmon on it, washed down with champagne.

Iowa, Walter, and Dick Dirgins, three of the island's dedicated fishermen, were ahead of me, enjoying the fare.

“Not a bad party,” said Dick. “You should get married more often.”

“I'm going to try to make this one last,” I said.

I looked down the driveway. At the end, under a big oak
tree, I could see a man standing. He was leaning lightly against the tree, looking back at the crowd. He had a hand on his chin and was wearing dark glasses, so I couldn't make out his features. He was wearing a light blue summer suit and a dark tie. He was thick through the shoulders and chest, and long-waisted, but didn't have much in the way of hips. His hair was black and straight and a bit longer than was fashionable that year. Maybe he saw me looking at him, for something seemed to pass between us. Then he straightened, turned, and walked out of sight beyond the corner of the farmhouse.

“Jeez, J. W., I never been to such a good party before. I think it's really good, don't you?”

I turned and found Bonzo beaming at me, champagne glass in hand, gentle eyes smiling emptily up at me.

“It's my wedding,” I said. “It's supposed to be really good.”

“Yeah,” said Bonzo. “You and Zee are gonna be married. That's good, J. W. You and Zee are good friends.” He nodded approvingly.

Bonzo had once been a promising lad, they tell me, but some time in the past he'd gotten some bad acid that had touched his brain. Now he worked with a broom and bar rag in the Fireside Bar in Oak Bluffs, and lived with his widowed schoolteacher mother, who adored him and treated him like the little child that he would always be.

“Are you having a good time, Bonzo?”

“I sure am. Look, I got champagne. I don't get that much. Usually all I get is a beer. This champagne is good.” He smiled his sweet smile.

“I'm glad you and your mom could come and help us celebrate. I wouldn't have wanted to get married without having you as our guests. And Zee feels the same way.”

“Say,” said Bonzo, sidling nearer and beginning to blush. “Do you think it might, maybe, be okay if I have a dance with Zee? Would that be okay, do you think? I mean, I never hardly dance, but today is special. What do you think? Do you think she'd let me have a dance?”

“Wait right here,” I said, and walked out and found Zee and John. I told them what Bonzo had said.

“Allow me,” said John. He took Zee's arm and led her to Bonzo.

Zee smiled her dazzling smile at Bonzo, and Bonzo stared at her with awe.

“I'd love to dance with you, Bonzo,” she said. “Let's go.”

John and I stood and watched them.

“Well, I'll be damned,” said John a moment later. “Will you look at that.”

I looked and felt myself grinning, for Bonzo—kind, mindless Bonzo—was a beautiful dancer. He and Zee seemed to be floating over the lawn, swirling and striding, riding the air. Zee's long, blue-black hair glinted in the sun, and her skirt swirled as they stepped and spun to the music.

I glanced down and saw Bonzo's mother beside me. She was looking with wonder and joy at her son.

“He's terrific,” I said. “I had no idea he could dance like that.”

“Yes. He's beautiful,” she nodded. “Very beautiful. Look at them!”

Others were looking, too, and soon everyone else stopped dancing and watched Bonzo and Zee weave and spin over the lawn. When the song ended, Bonzo listened to the applause and grinned and ducked his head, and led Zee back to me.

“You were a lovely pair,” smiled Bonzo's mother. “Just lovely.”

Bonzo shook Zee's hand, and smiled shyly. “Thanks, Zee. That was fun for me. I hope it was fun for you, too.”

“It was a lot of fun, Bonzo.”

“Maybe someday we'll all go to another wedding, and there'll be music again, and you and me can dance another time. What do you think? Would that be okay?”

“That will certainly be okay, Bonzo. Thank you for dancing with me. You're a fine dancer.”

He nodded solemnly. “Dancing is good, you know. It makes you feel good when you do it, not quite like you feel good doing other things like, maybe, fishing or listening to the birds, but real good.” He nodded his head. “Yeah, it's good, all right.”

The justice of the peace came up to Bonzo. “Hey,” she said. “You can really trip the light fantastic! How about dancing with me?”

She and Bonzo went off together as the next tune began. And when that dance was done, another woman asked to dance with Bonzo. And after that, another. He danced with Maggie Vanderbeck. Bonzo danced and danced.

We all had more champagne. The band took a break and joined the guests at the bar and food tables. Then we danced some more, and partied until mid-afternoon. Then people began to fade away. By four o'clock, my sister and Mike and Zee's family were helping John and Mattie Skye and their twin daughters clean up the wreckage.

“We'll help,” said Zee.

“No, you won't,” said Mattie slapping at her hands. “Time for you two to be off.”

And off we went, trailing good-byes as we drove out of the yard. We went to my house—our house now—and got out of our wedding duds and into our summer clothes: shorts, tee-shirts, and Tevas. We fed Oliver Underfoot and Velero the last cat food meals they'd get from us for a while, then I called a taxi and had it take us down to Collins Beach where I keep my dinghy chained to the bulwarks so the summer yachtsmen won't steal it. We rowed out around the Reading Room dock and fetched the
Shirley J.,
which was swinging on her stake halfway between the Reading Room and the yacht club.

I had provisioned the boat the day before, but also found an iced half-case of champagne, along with some caviar, in a Styrofoam container in the cockpit. A welcome gift from some anonymous donor.

The wind was still gentle from the north, so we raised the big sail and reached out against the incoming tide, through the narrows where the On Time ferry links Chappaquiddick and Edgartown. Clear of the lighthouse, the wind seemed fresher.

Boats were coming in for the night, and among them I saw the
Lucky Lil,
the nice conch boat that had once been the pride, joy, and livelihood of Jimmy Souza, but now belonged mostly to Albert Enos, but also partly to me, since
Albert had needed a couple thou more to swing the deal, and I, at that moment, had a couple of thou to loan.

For being sharp, Albert had shortly afterward gotten a black eye from Jimmy's angry son, Fred, who, already mad about his father's decline, figured that sodden Jimmy had been suckered once more.

But the sale had stood, and where once Jimmy had been captain, and his testy son had worked as his sometime crew, now Albert was captain and red-nosed Jimmy was his crew.

There were different stories about why Jimmy had gone belly-up. He and his boy claimed it was because the draggers and trawlers had destroyed too many of his pots and other gear; others claimed it was because Jimmy had succumbed to the fisherman's traditional companion and enemy, the booze. Whatever the case, I hoped that Albert would have better luck, and was once again grateful that I was only part-owner of the boat, and not a real fisherman or farmer, the two chanciest professions that I knew of. On the other hand, I didn't have a profession of any kind. Was that better? I decided to follow Scarlett's advice and think about that tomorrow.

“There's my retirement plan,” I now said to Zee. “The
Lucky Lil.
If I go first, my share will all be yours.”

“A big spender from the East,” said Zee. “A shipping tycoon. My favorite kind of husband.”

We passed through the boats and headed for the Cape Pogue Gut.

The tide and wind carried us smoothly into Cape Pogue Pond, around John Oliver Point, and down to the south end of the pond, where I dropped the hook.

There, ignoring Edgartown's regulation forbidding overnight anchoring in the pond, Zee and I spent the first night of our married life on the cockpit floor, since the bunks in the cabin were singles, too narrow for two.

Sometime during the night I drifted half awake, and found myself wondering who the man in the driveway had been. But then Zee sighed in her sleep and curled a long,
sleek leg over mine, and the man went out of my mind. Until morning, when the explosions came down into my dreams, and I woke with Zee shaking me and saying, “Wake up! Wake up! What is it?”

  
2
  

I don't often have the dream, and when I do it's more surrealistic than real, but it's real enough. There's blood and noise and splintering trees and breaking earth, and I'm filled first with paralyzing fear, then the cold certainty that I'm going to die. I start dragging myself through the explosions and bodies toward the radio, but I never get there. I wake up making the kind of sound that frightened Zee that first morning of our married life.

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