By Geoff Steckles
Cinnamon & Almond Hot Chocolate
A strong wind had sprung up off
the sea. The tide was still out, but white plumes were blowing off the waves in
foamy confusion, lining the water’s edge like meringue. In Jamaica he thought,
they’d call it the Doctors Wind,
blowing directly from the sea fresh and clean with that faint salty taste. But
this was South Devon, so it wasn’t called anything except maybe a nuisance. He
thought the Jamaicans had it just about right.
The wind
eddied and blew dry sand down from the dunes, which moved across the beach like
a fine mist, sand blasting his legs with a sharp bite like a faint electric
shock. It kept him company and continued to eddy around his bare feet, playing
with his toes as he walked towards Sand Point, still over four miles away. The
air felt exhilarating and facing the sea, his eyes streamed and his skin felt
like it had been sucked through a vacuum cleaner. He gave quiet thanks that the
beach remained deserted.
He
rested, the sun helping to evaporate his memories. He dreamed of the wind and
ships at sea.
Surprise
shook him when a land yacht went flying by, making a mockery of his tranquil
day, a huge blood red sail at full stretch.
Unexpectedly,
instead of sailing off into the distance, the yacht made a huge gentle turn and
started back towards him, the sails and small boom, swinging into the wind as
it changed direction. A huge almost perfect circle appeared in the virgin sand
as it pulled around and started to lose speed. He half expected the occupant to
throw out some kind of anchor but the machine slowed seemingly of its own
accord. He saw that cleverly, the sails were being used in the wind to slow the
machine and the yacht stopped effortlessly by his side. The red sail flapped
noisily, suddenly redundant. A tiny skull and crossbones flag tied to the mast
fluttered wildly in the breeze, which seemed to match the scene perfectly.
She sat
regally in the single seat, her hair, the colour of straw, blew wildly around
her face although she didn’t seem to notice. She was deeply tanned, with wide
blue eyes and wonderful teeth and she wore small diamond studs in her ears
which caught the sun as her head moved; each ear seemed to wink at him in the
strong light that he found distracting somehow. She wore an old fashioned man’s
white shirt, one of those with a detachable collar, except there was no collar
attached. Her sleeves were rolled up to the elbows and the shirt tail hung
loose. Surprisingly the shirt, unbuttoned almost to her waist still covered her
breasts but she made no move to button the shirt now that she had an audience.
She
looked directly at him, smiling and asked if he flew like a crow, what would be
the quickest way to Sand Point. He remembered silently raising his arm in the
general direction, suddenly unable to speak and feeling particularly stupid
because of it. She asked how far in a voice so soft, he had to strain to catch
it in the strong wind. He leaned closer almost without thinking and was
surprised that even on this wild day, he could smell her body, like lavender
and the sea mixed together and immediately wondered if sunlight could smell,
would it be like this?. Finding his voice at last he managed to croak ' About
four miles from here'. She smiled again and thanked him and made to move off,
then hesitated looking directly at him once more, and asked if he would like a
ride. He nodded, silent again and she invited him in.
He knew
that as a single seater, space would be limited and felt a gratitude to God,
which he hadn’t felt in a while. He managed to squeeze in by her side and had
the satisfaction of having to sit almost sideways facing her with no room to
sit any other way. A small space forward allowed him to stretch out, and being
over six feet tall, he could at least move his legs. But his knees touched her
legs as he wriggled into a more comfortable position and he hoped that she
understood that this intimacy for the moment at least remained accidental. She
released the brake and moved off swiftly, giving no indication that she’d even
noticed that he’d squeezed in next to her. Her face set in concentration and
her eyes moved to the sail as long slender fingers pulled at the rigging and a
strong arm grasped the tiller.
The low
tide had left the sand hard and flat and his eyes closed against the glare.
There was almost no sense of movement, no jolting as they accelerated. The
large red sail filled quickly and he felt power grab the machine like a giant
lung inflating. A sensation of flying over the ground at speed like some great
bird of prey that had just seen lunch awed him. He thought that life should
always be as exciting as this; otherwise it became just a bunch of days and he
prayed that it continued for the rest of today at least.
A great
roaring filled his ears, which made talking difficult, but he couldn’t resist
the inevitable question. ‘How fast are we moving?’ he yelled into her ear. She
placed her face next to his and he heard the words ‘about sixty’ faintly in the
roar. He suddenly had an almost irresistible urge to rub his nose gently on her
cheek. So close yet so far he thought, but instead he just nodded whilst she
was busy being captain again. He relaxed resigned to his fate and perhaps
another moment.
They tore
across the sand like two lovers escaping from a vengeful father, until she
spotted a group of Gulls on the beach ahead of them and he felt the yacht
gently turn in their direction. They took flight well before the vessel reached
them and he could hear their calls and mews above the roar as they scattered
effortlessly like rag dolls in a blizzard of wings. Two birds remained
stubbornly, gliding above the mast keeping up with the yacht and he wondered if
they thought there were fish on board. Looking up at them it seemed like they
were standing still, wings outstretched, floating above like two guardian angels.
Both
birds disappeared suddenly when without warning, she veered again, this time
into the shallows and a huge spray flew into the air and blew across them both.
In seconds they were soaked and his breath left his body with the shock of the
cold water. She threw back her head and laughed out loud. He suddenly forgot
the cold and joined in and soon they were both caught up in the wind and the
spray and given a choice this felt right and he suddenly didn’t want to be
anywhere else.
He tried
to speak again but the wind caught his throat and he nearly choked. Deciding to
keep his mouth closed seemed like a good idea so he just relaxed and enjoyed
the sensation. His eyes streamed once again and the sail towering above them
sang as the gale played with the rigging. She suddenly yelled at him to lean in
to her and he didn’t need telling twice as she turned the yacht once again in a
full circle. So sharp was the turn however that they were suddenly partially
off the ground and in danger of going over and he leaned away from her body
trying to prevent them from capsizing, one hand on the hull and the other
gripping her arm like a vice. Did he scream, he couldn’t remember but she
yelled something and laughed and when he next opened his eyes they were back on
course and she seemed serene, as though nothing had happened. Her face calm and
relaxed and he noticed freckles across her nose, which he hadn’t seen before.
All too
soon Sand Point came into view and he knew they could go no further. He saw his
house on the point and the yacht slowed, the sails deflating suddenly. They
pulled into the end of the beach nearest the road and stopped. The silence
deafening, his face felt as though it had been in a mould and set.
She
didn’t look at him but simply sat letting the sun warm her face. Salt had begun
to crystallise on her cheek and it made her tan seem the colour of age like old
newspaper dipped in time. He felt unsure, afraid somehow and reached across to
touch her face, to reassure himself. But before he could, she turned to him and
smiled and he immediately knew it all. She had allowed him to see it again from
the beginning. He didn’t know why. She was the same and that was all that
mattered.
That was
the start of it, their life. He remembered everything now, their love, their
life together. She was not afraid of gentleness, although passion made her
unkind sometimes. He never minded any of it though and thought it a good thing
and revelled in her company. He never dominated her, preferring the journey
instead. He was never afraid of her, only of losing her. They lived and loved
and the land yacht became their centre, their escape. The beach below the
house, their playground. Like two wild children their summer never ended. But
three years after they met their summer did end and she died as excitingly as
she had lived, in the land yacht. Out alone one day the wind had capsized the
machine at speed and she had been flung onto the sand, her neck broken. The
beautiful red sail covered her body like a shroud.
There had
been a shadow deep in his soul that had threatened to destroy him and he knew
that her beauty and his loss were one and he could not help himself. He forgot
to remember to forget and he walked aimlessly up and down the beach, not
knowing why, afraid to ask, aimless and lost.
'Thank
you' she said.
'What
for' he whispered,
‘For
remembering me, for loving me'
’That was
easy'
‘It’s
been hard for you I know' her voice was in his head.
‘Yes’
‘Not any
more'
She moved
her hand towards his face and he felt a whisper, a sigh that released him
suddenly. He slept then.
He woke
on the beach in front of the house, not knowing how he’d got there. The sand
virgin again, blown clean by the Doctor’s
Wind, his shadow, his grief lifted. But at his feet was a child’s
sandcastle with a tiny skull and crossbones flag stuck in the top. He smiled
and remembered.
Bio.
I'm an amateur
creative writer who just enjoys trying to tell a story.
I live in
Somerset and love everything about the sea.
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