W
hen the charter boat left the Ventura marina, the seven members of the Tremaine party were its only passengers. Ten miles away, Anacapa Island rose jaggedly from the blue-gray water, a chain of three islets with steep cliffs and jagged faces. The sky burned its brightest blue, and the salty air sparkled with the promise of adventure.
It was a glorious day, but Carly found it difficult to share the enthusiasm spilling off Ryan and the kids. Seated alone in the stern of the boat, on a red cushion that squeaked when she moved, she took in the tableau on the bow. Kyle and Taylor stood on one side, their shoulders touching as they stared across the water. Taylor's older sister, Nicole, stood next to her. Eric, Nathan, and Ryan were lined up on the other side of the bow.
Ryan pointed at something in the distance. Eric jabbed Nathan in the ribs, then called to Kyle and the girls. The boat engine quieted to a burble, and Ryan faced her, his sunglasses in place.
“Carly!” He waved her forward. “You have to see this.”
Balancing against the rock of the boat, she made her way forward, peered into the distance, and saw countless flashes of silver
arching out of the water. Dolphins! They were directly in front of the boat, leaping and shining and so beautiful she caught her breath.
The captain's voice crackled over the PA. “This doesn't happen every day, folks. We've encountered a pod of dolphins, one of the largest I've ever seen. We're going to stick around and enjoy it.”
Carly hurried along the side of the cabin. Ryan walked back to meet her, gripped her hand before she could dodge, and together they moved to the front. “This is incredible,” he said just to her. The boat dipped and threw her off balance. Still holding his hand, she leveraged against the strength of his forearm, acutely aware of both the need to let go and the desire to hold on.
When Eric stepped closer to Nathan for a better view, Ryan guided Carly to the spot at the tip of the bow. Just twenty feet away, a single dolphin broke through the water in a perfect arc, its gray body glistening in the sun. Another dolphin leapt into the air, then another. There were dolphins as far as she could see, swimming and leaping in unison.
The captain cut the engine completely, plunging them into silence, punctuated by the ripple of the dolphin ballet.
Glory to God!
It was all Carly could think. Who could doubt the existence of a creator at the sight of such perfection?
The captain, a man in his forties, called down from the cockpit. “I'm in no hurry, folks. How about you?”
Ryan answered back. “No hurry at all.”
“Anyone want binoculars?” The captain dangled a pair down to them.
Eric tore his eyes off the dolphins just long enough to take the lenses and call out, “Thanks!”
Kyle, Taylor, and Nicole were all on their toes, straining to catch every leap and effortless splash. Ryan laid his hand on the small of Carly's back and smiled at her. He was usually clean shaven, obsessively so, but three days ago he'd announced at dinner he was on vacation and not shaving. The bristle made him rugged and
rebellious, a bit of a rogue, and the pirate who had almost kissed her. When he beamed a smile just for her, she could barely breathe. Their eyes locked until she blinked, then they both turned back to the dolphins shooting past the boat.
They watched in silence until Ryan murmured, “It's astonishing, isn't it? They're in complete sync with each other.”
“What do you mean?”
“They're individual creatures with differences we can't see. But they're going in the same direction. In the ways that count most, they're the sameâlike you and me.”
Carly longed to agree with him, but she and Ryan weren't dolphins driven by instinct. They were human beings capable of moral choices, mistakes, and powerful emotions like the ones coursing through her now. Determined to hide that painful brew, she shielded her eyes and watched the last of the dolphins swim by.
“What do you see in all this?” he asked her.
“I see God's handiwork.”
“Anything else?”
He wanted something from her, but what? Carly didn't know, but when a man began to search for God, the majesty of creation was a good place to start, especially on a day as blessed as this one. Her heart gave a little leap. “I see beauty. And intelligence. Even love, because the dolphins stick together through thick and thin.”
“We see the same things. We just start in different places.”
“I suppose we do.” But that starting place mattered.
Before she could explain, the captain revved the engine and swung the bow toward Anacapa. Gravity pushed her against Ryan's side. He steadied her with an arm around her shoulder, held her close for a stolen moment, then released her and joined Eric and Nathan.
Eric stared at the last of the dolphins through the binoculars, savoring every minute.
“That was remarkable,” Ryan said to him.
“Yeah.” Eric lowered the lenses. “I've read a lot about dolphins, but to see them in the wild . . . wow.”
“We're just getting started.” Ryan pointed to the chain of islets ahead of them. “Keep your eyes open for sea lions. They hang out on the rocks.”
Eric started to raise the binoculars but stopped. “Hey, Carly. Would you like to look?”
She preferred watching Eric enjoy himself, but the proud look on Ryan's face reminded her this trip was about boys becoming men, Eric getting center stage, and Ryan finishing his SOS list.
“Thanks,” she said, reaching for them.
With the lenses pressed to her eyes, she studied the chain of giant rocks, carved by eons of waves, wind, and bad weather. The eastern islet, where they would camp, was flat on top and mostly brown from the dry summer. A lighthouse jutted up from the center of it, and she spotted a couple of white buildings used by the park ranger.
The west and center islands were jagged, accessible only by boat, and eerily gothic in their isolation. The sight of them depressed her, because she felt a lot like one of the rocks, a part of something but not quite connected. The weight of the binoculars tugged her hands downward, but she kept her bare eyes on Anacapa. With her face to the wind, she silently begged God to show her how to love Ryan like He did.
Ryan was worried about Carly. She wasn't herself, a surprise considering Brie had found Allison and how well the kids were getting along. He expected her to rejoice and celebrate, even praise God, but her occasional smiles didn't reach her eyes.
Maybe that upcoming visit from her father would chase away the gloom. Paul Mason had grunted a lot when Ryan spoke to him yesterday, but he didn't seem surprised by the call. Either he was good at masking his reactions, or he wasn't very articulate.
Either way, he told Ryan he would do some planning and get back to him with dates.
At Ryan's request, they agreed to wait to share the news with Carly. If Ryan told her now, the call would raise the question “why,” and he wanted to romance her a little before he proposed to her. The island was the perfect spot for a walk at sunset, maybe that first kiss. Or maybe not. He needed to set high standards for his sons, and that meant holding himself back.
Sighing, he dug his hands in his pockets and peered into the rectangular cove where the boat would dock. The captain slowed the engine to a chug, steered past the kelp beds, and navigated between the thirty-foot sheer rock walls. The cove was dark and chilly, silent, and preternatural in its mood.
Carly looked up at the patch of sky and shivered. “I'll be glad to get back in the sun.”
“Me too,” Taylor said.
Ryan couldn't put his arm around her without raising eyebrows, so he settled for his second choice. “I'll get your hoodie from the cabin.”
“I'll do it.” Before he could protest, she slipped away.
The captain backed the boat against the dock. A worker from the charter company greeted them and unloaded the gear that included two tents, a camp stove, a cooler, sleeping bags, duffels, food, and waterâall for just one night, and it had to be carried up the hundred seventy-eight stairs zigzagging across the face of a cliff.
As much as he wanted to focus on Carly, he and his sons had a job to do. “Okay, guys. Let's get this stuff up the stairs.”
Kyle lifted the ice chest, then told Taylor to put her duffel on top. She insisted she could carry it herself, along with two sleeping bags. Nicole picked up her things; Eric and Nathan grabbed the tents; and Ryan took the two five-gallon water jugs. Carly did her part with her duffel and a sleeping bag, but several items remained to be carried up the stairs.
“Looks like two trips,” Ryan said. “Ladies, why don't you wait here?” The females didn't need to be coddled, but Ryan wanted to give his sons a lesson in gallantry.
Carly must have understood, because she made a show of looking up at the stairs as if they were Mt. Everest. “That sounds good to me.”
“Not to me!” Taylor lifted the two sleeping bags like dumbbells. Before Kyle could say anything, she sprinted for the stairs. He stumbled after her with the clunky ice chest, and Nicole followed them. Eric and Nathan passed the others at full speed.
With a shake of his head, Ryan turned to Carly. “At that pace, they'll be winded halfway up.”
“They're enjoying this,” she said, smiling a little.
“How about you?”
“I'm good.”
“Are you sure?” He set the water jugs down with a thunk. “You're kind of quiet.”
“I'm all right. I just need to get my land legs back.”
He'd given her a motion sickness patch, but they didn't work for everyone. “How's your stomach?”
“No problem at all.” To prove it, she gave him a big thumbs-up. “Go on now. Be with your sons. This is the last thing on the SOS list.”
Not quite.
But the last itemâ
Marry Carlyâ
had to wait until he met her father. If Ryan was going to live Carly's way, he wanted to start off on the right foot. Leaving her on the dock bothered him, but he needed to set up the campsite. “Are you sure you're okay here?”
“Positive.”
Eric's voice shot down from the middle of the staircase. “Hey, Dad. You better hurry. The last one up the stairs is the loser!”
Looking up at Eric, Carly shaded her eyes with her hand in a salute of sorts. “Y'all have come a long way.”
The “y'all” told him she was tense, maybe as concerned as he was for their future. If she married him, she'd be leaving her home and family. There was always Skype and air travel, but it wasn't the same as sharing a meal now and then, or taking a loved one to a doctor's appointment. In one of life's ironies, joining his family would take away her own. He wanted her to know he understood. “You've made a huge difference here, Carly Jo.”
She tipped her face up to his. “You've never called me that.”
“There's a first time for everything.” A first kiss . . . a first date. And for Carly, a first night with her husband. He loved her for her goodness and strength, even her faith, and he wanted her to know. Maybe he'd kiss her, just a peck. But he didn't want a peck. He wanted the kiss to be special. For that, he was willing to wait.
He picked up the water jugs and adjusted his grip. “I'll be back for the rest.”
“Don't rush.” Her eyes twinkled, but just a bit. “I'll stand guard against the pirates.”
Ryan smiled at the joke, then climbed the first flight of stairs. When he reached the landing, he stopped and gazed down at Carly waiting on the dock. The only pirate she needed to worry about was him, and he had every intention of taking her captive for the rest of their earthly lives.
As soon as the campsite was set up, the group hustled down to the cove for snorkeling. Kyle and Taylor paired up, and Ryan joined Eric and Nathan. That left Carly to swim with Nicole. They enjoyed seeing the orange Garibaldi and smaller fish, but the biggest thrill was a sea lion circling through the cove. As tame as Anacapa was compared to the big blue Pacific, it was still beautiful and wild.