A Little Boy's Dreams
"I don't see any monsters." A six-year-old boy with cherry-red corduroy overalls and a sticky face chewed on his candy bar and threw the wrapper on the dock. With his haughty British accent, the boy sounded like he'd come right off the set of a BBC production.
Flynn grabbed the wrapper as it flew into the breeze and stuffed it into his pocket. He crouched next to the boy. "Well, they're not going to just come out and do a dance for ye. Looking's half the fun."
The boy turned back to his mom. "Mommy, do we have to go on the boat? I'd rather play ninja warrior"
"Come on, Ian. It'll be fun. Daddy's gonna take your picture at the helm." She reached into her purse and pulled out a wad of pound notes.
Flynn counted the money quickly. She'd given him a hefty tip. "Thank you, ma'am." Sometimes he made more from tips and selling candy bars than selling seats. He bent down and winked at the boy. "When we get to the center, I'll let you steer the boat."
"Really?" Ian jumped up and down.
"Really." Flynn glanced up the hill and his chest felt like it would burst.
She'd come.
Gail jogged down the mossy greens in a tight lavender sweater and a long floral skirt tapering above black high heels. She'd sure dressed like it was a date. Instead of her bulky equipment, she brought a tiny handheld camera. He tried not to stare as she walked down the dock. His fingers fiddled with the rope that tied his boat to the mooring.
"So, how much is the tour?" Gail's voice caused him to whirl around a little faster than he expected.
"For you, it's free."
She crossed her arms. "I can't have you losing money just to have a marine biologist on board."
"I told you. No one bought the seat. I'd rather have the tour look full."
Gail sighed and dropped her arms by her sides. "Okay, but I'm buying drinks afterward."
His chest tightened. "Drinks?"
"Yeah. I found something at the library yesterday. It's nothing big, but definitely a clue."
"I look forward to talking with you about it." Flynn shouted to the others, feeling more adrenaline rush though him than usual at the start of a tour. "All aboard!"
He helped her onto the boat then untied the mooring. Usually it took him less than a minute to undo the sailor's knots, but today his hands were clumsy and awkward. Could she have such an effect on him or did he drink too much caffeine?
He tried to push thoughts of Gail from his mind. Maybe having her on this tour wasn't such a good idea.
Clearing his throat, he thickened his accent to give the tourists the full Scottish flavor. "Good evening, folks. My name is Flynn Mahoney, and I'm the illustrious captain of the Nessie, the fastest boat on Loch Ness. Today we have a special guest on board, Gail Phillips, a marine biologist from Boston. Everyone say hi to Gail."
Gail's cheeks reddened as she waved to the passengers: the little boy and his parents, two elderly couples and a bunch of teenagers from Australia. Flynn loved making her blush.
"Let me start the boat. I'll be speaking to you along the way on my intercom system, telling you the juiciest tidbits and secrets of Loch Ness."
Flynn maneuvered the boat free of the dock, then took off around the coast on a different route than he took with the research team. Tourists wanted to see the whole lake from close to shore. He saved the middle of the lake for last, because some people got spooked by the black water.
"Loch Ness extends for approximately thirty-seven kilometers southwest of Inverness. Its deepest point is two hundred and thirty meters deep — that's seven hundred and fifty-five feet, for our American friends. That's pretty deep, folks. Not only is it the deepest Scottish loch, but it's deeper than London's BT tower is tall. You've got it, guys. Us Scotts can take the loch prize. Loch Ness contains more fresh water than all the lakes in England and Wales combined. You could say we got lochy."
That joke, bad as it was, made him laugh every time. The British family rolled their eyes and the older couple didn't acknowledge it, as if the joke had sailed over their gray heads. Did Gail think his goofiness was overboard?
"Over here is the spot where Robert Kenneth Wilson took the famous picture of Nessie in nineteen thirty-four, referred to as the Surgeon's Photograph."
Everyone flooded the right side of the boat. Of course they all took pictures, and Flynn could bet none of them would have a beast in it. What were the odds the creature would show in the exact same place seventy years later? Yet on every boat tour the tourists snapped like crazy, all the same.
"To your left is Urquhart Castle. Although it's seen better days, the landmark used to be one of the largest strongholds of medieval Scotland. Near this castle is where the majority of Nessie sightings occur."
Once again, extensive picture taking took place. If only they knew how many rolls of film he'd spent in his day before cameras had gone digital.
"I think I see it!" Little Ian shouted from the stern. Everyone scrambled to join him.
Yup, one of the little ones calls it every time.
Flynn was just about to turn the Nessie back to the dock when Gail rushed in. "Stop the boat. You've got to see this."
The urgency in her voice caught his attention. Flynn cut the engine. She took his arm and led him to where the little boy stood on the stern. Her fingers were as cold as the lake water on his skin. Flynn's heart raced as they cut through the crowd. Can this be it? It almost seemed irreverent for Nessie to just "show up" after all these years he'd looked.
People whispered under their breath around them. One of the elderly men scratched his beard. "I saw it move… it dived under and came back out again."
Gail pointed. "Over there."
A black head protruded from the middle of the lake. It bobbed with the ripples of the boat as if whatever it was connected to rode the swell of the waves.
"It's too big to be a cormorant." Gail squeezed her bottom lip between her forefinger and thumb. "I thought it was farther away, but look at the time it takes for the ripples from our boat to reach it."
Flynn put a hand on her arm. "Stay here and take pictures."
"Where are you going?"
"I'm steering the boat closer." He ran back to the cabin, falling forward as his boots slipped on the wet deck. He fell into the steering wheel and revved the engine, hoping Gail could get a picture before the sound scared it away.
As Flynn turned the boat around to face the black head, the passengers crowded the bow, blocking his view. At first they snapped pictures nonstop and leaned over the railing, but as he drew closer, they froze and stared slack faced.
What was it? Flynn's stomach sank. Had the Loch Ness monster died and floated up from the depths, a dark and rotting corpse?
He stopped the motor once again and joined them on deck. Gail met him first, her face drawn and pale. "I'm sorry." Her fingertips brushed his arm. She stopped at the rail as he pushed through the crowd.
A dark, mold-covered log with a branch pointing skyward bobbed a meter from the point off the bow. Flynn's neck tingled with shame. How could he still be so naive after all these years? Did he really think he'd find it?
Ian tugged on his sleeve. "Does this mean the monster doesn't exist?" His chin twitched as though he'd erupt into a full sob any minute.
In front of his passengers, he couldn't afford to show his disappointment.
"No, son." Flynn patted the boy on the back. "It just means we have to keep looking."