Evening found them climbing from his speedboat onto the deck of Saniyah II. Valerie sensed that this had not been part of Aaron’s plan for the day, but she had asked to see the ship and he had granted permission.
“Wow! She’s gorgeous,” Valerie exclaimed, genuinely impressed as she stood on the pristine teak deck, looking at the polished railings. The ship was bigger than she’d imagined and blindingly white, with two broad navy stripes on her hull. “A genuine wooden schooner, too. I should have known you wouldn’t settle for fiberglass.”
“Ah, an African-American woman who knows something about boats,” Aaron said, watching her closely.
Valerie didn’t take offense. “Not an awful lot,” she admitted. “But it just so happens that when I was around ten, my father allowed me to spend a summer with friends of his from Rhode Island. That whole family was into sailing, and I learned a thing or two…even how to handle a sailboat alone…a very small, basic one, that is.”
“You weren’t the typical little girl, then.”
Valerie glanced at him, bemused. “What is the typical little girl?”
“One who plays with dolls, has tea parties, and would never sail a boat on her own, or go fishing if she had to touch a worm.”
She laughed. “For your information, I did play with dolls and have tea parties. I was also a better pitcher and a better angler than my brother.”
“Just as I thought. Come. I’ll show you below.”
Like most sailing vessels, the living quarters below deck were tight to maximize every inch of space, but this ship definitely had more headroom than any she’d ever been aboard. The galley was neat, equipped with modern appliances; the salon area was wood paneled and a bit dark, albeit definitely masculine colors. The built-in seating had royal blue upholstery. She noticed that Aaron, at what she guessed to be around six feet, five inches tall, didn’t even have to duck when he moved around.
“Custom designed?” she asked, looking at the shelving containing books, mostly navigational texts. There was also a desk with a computer, fax machine and printer.
Aaron nodded in reply. “Sit. I’ll get some drinks. Does rum and coke suit you?”
“That’s fine,” she said.
He vanished into the galley and she noticed a bunch of art canvases stashed in a corner, facing the wall. Funny, he hadn’t seemed all that interested in art when they were in town. Curious, she wandered over and peeked at one of the paintings. There was something familiar about the colorful island scene depicted—more familiar than just that it was Caye Caulker’s main street with its sandy road and pastel buildings. The painting was similar in style to the one she had wanted to purchase and had probably been done by the same artist.
She selected another canvas, which looked peculiar because it was all in varying shades of aquamarine with a much deeper blue in the center of the painting, like an eye. The eye was in turn fringed by what appeared to be grainy rocks or reefs. She picked up the canvas and held it at arm’s length, trying to figure it out.
Aaron returned so quietly she didn’t realize he was behind her. He set their drinks on the table. “ ‘Curiouser and curiouser,’ ” he said, gently but firmly taking the painting away from her and placing it back where it had been. “What’s your interpretation?”
Though perturbed by the fact that he’d taken the painting away, she decided not to fixate on it.
“Well, it kind of looked like the ocean with a giant hole in it,” she said.
“Correct. That’s exactly what it is. A few miles from here, there’s a place in the middle of the ocean called The Blue Hole. It’s a naturally formed sinkhole that’s also a great diving spot. You can only get this kind of view of it from an airplane.”
“Really?” She noticed something else. On the lower shelves there were paintbrushes, other art equipment, and more empty canvases. It slowly dawned on her—and she felt like a dim-witted child—that he was the artist. She inhaled deeply and then laughed.
“ ‘Curiouser and curiouser,’ indeed,” she said. “That was your work I was looking at in that gallery before. I’m impressed. You’re very good.”
“Just a hobby when I’m bored. No more, no less.” He was about to retrieve their drinks to take them up to the deck when she nudged him, wanting him to comment more.
“Did you study art in college?”
“Not seriously.”
Open and shut. He had no intention of engaging her with detail. Quick, she thought, come up with something else.
“Aaron?”
“Yes.”
“Does Saniyah II have a story? I mean, is this ship named after someone, or some thing?”
“All ships have a story,” he said. “Saniyah means ‘brilliant’ in Arabic. I found her years ago rotting away in some Miami shipyard. There was something about her that spoke to me, so I bought her for a steal.” Aaron continued the story as he reclaimed her drink and his bottle of beer and urged her up the stairs ahead of him. “My son and I rebuilt her almost from the beams up.”
Son? Valerie was glad he was behind her or she would have missed a step and fallen backward, such was her surprise. Had she misunderstood him? “Did you say you have a son?”
“Andrew,” Aaron said matter-of-factly, oblivious to her shock, or pretending to be. “He was eleven then, but he’s all grown up now and in the navy.”
Valerie’s focus completely evaporated yet she didn’t want him to see that she was truly astonished by that revelation. Neither Jasmine nor Noah had ever mentioned anything about Aaron having a son. If he was telling the truth, and why wouldn’t he be, then there could be a wife…an ex-wife out there. She wondered if he was secretly enjoying the torture he was inflicting on her.
“Drew’s mother and I never married,” he said when they were seated at a table facing each other broadside on deck. “As a matter of fact, I didn’t even know he existed until he was eight years old.”
“That’s a bit odd, isn’t it?” Valerie said.
Aaron made no comment. He leaned forward and extracted a wallet from his back pocket. Flipping it open, he handed it to her. “This is Drew. He’s a Navy SEAL.”
Impressive, she thought, looking at the picture. The SEALs had notoriously high entrance standards. Valerie stared into the face of a young man who was clearly Caucasian and exhibited no trace of his father’s more exotic breeding. Andrew Weiss was in full uniform, gorgeous as a screen idol with close-cut blondish hair, crystal clear blue eyes, a sculpted face, cleft chin—yes, the chin was like his father’s. The longer she looked at him, the more she could actually see an uncanny resemblance.
“Your son looks like a movie star,” she said off the top of her head. She laughed. “Almost like my mother’s favorite actor.”
“Who is your mother’s favorite actor?”
“Paul Newman. He looks like a young Paul Newman.”
Aaron smirked. “You think so?”
“His eyes are so blue,” Valerie said. “Did his mother have eyes like that?”
“No. Hers were—” He shrugged. “I don’t remember. Maybe they were green.”
She handed the wallet back to him, waiting, hoping she wouldn’t have to keep prying, hoping for once that he’d elaborate.
“Things are never as they seem,” Aaron said slowly. He took a swig of beer straight from the bottle, and then he stood up and walked a few feet away from her.
She sat paralyzed, staring at the ice melting in her drink, and then raised her eyes to the glory of the sun sinking low into the azure sea. Aaron sat back across from her again.
“Look at me,” he said.
Her eyes met his and she gave a start. A pair of deep blue eyes stared back at her, not crystal blue like Andrew’s, but a very, very dark blue, much like the color of the ocean besieged by a storm.
Valerie forced a smile. “You so love shocking me, don’t you? Those are contacts, right?”
“I was wearing contacts before,” Aaron said. “Blue is my natural color. In the kind of work that I’ve been doing, it doesn’t pay to have what some might consider odd or outstanding features. I always wear dark contacts, so most people think my eyes are black.”
She shook her head. The ebony-eyed look had captivated her, but the midnight blue was even more mesmerizing and mysterious. She took a deep breath. Midnight blue like the color of the sinkhole he had painted. She felt odd and suddenly chilly, even though the breeze was balmy. He’s scary, Denise had said. Maybe the chatterbox was right.
She toyed with her drink and attempted to sip, but somehow she couldn’t swallow normally. “It’s starting to get dark,” she said. “Maybe I should be heading back to the inn.”
He was doing it, looking at her in that reflective way again. “Of course,” he said, rising, offering her his hand.
She took it and they boarded the waiting speedboat, which he had attached to Saniyah II. Once the bowline was removed, they were slicing through the water at lightning speed. Valerie had never been seasick in her life, but at this moment she felt queasy.
“I’m surprised that you haven’t asked about the investigation,” Aaron said once they’d arrived at the inn and she was unlocking the door to her hotel room. “It’s progressing quite well, and I’m sure you’ll be happy to know that you won’t have to stay here very long at all.”
Valerie smiled at him sweetly—at least she thought it was sweetly—but the expression looked more like it belonged on the face of a piranha. “I appreciate everything you’re doing, Aaron. Thank you and goodnight.”
Before she could step in and close the door, Aaron’s arms encircled her from behind, stopping her in her tracks. Immediately, music from the past started to play in her head as his lips heated up the back of her neck, causing her whole body to flush and tremble like a newborn kitten. Losing herself, she turned slowly in his arms, eyes closed, barely breathing.
But nothing happened. No kiss.
“Goodnight,” he said, thick-voiced, releasing her and stepping back as though she’d requested him to.
Unbelievable. Valerie quickly turned on her heel, entered her room, and shut the door. Already she could hear his footsteps moving down the hall.
She threw herself on the bed, trying to figure out exactly why she was so upset. “You’re crazy,” she muttered to herself. “Every bit as crazy as he is.”
It made no sense to be angry with him for not kissing her when she’d warned him in the beginning about taking liberties with her unmarried state. He was in a no-win situation. If he had kissed her passionately, she would have savored the moment and then been upset later on, because illusions of romance could not cover over her disturbed feelings that were prompted by his revelations onboard Saniyah. No, what had happened was not strange. Aaron had simply been his usual enigmatic, dismissive, and detached self. What she’d learned about him was simply too much to contain in one day, that was all. He was like putting together a challenging jigsaw puzzle and then realizing too late, after much time had been invested, that pieces were missing.
***
The phone rang. Valerie seized it.
“Where have you been?” Jasmine asked. “I’ve been trying to reach you all day.”
“Sorry. I forgot to take my phone with me. I was out. You know, exploring the island.”
“Alone?”
“No. I was with—” She clenched her teeth. “Aaron.”
A long silence followed. “How is he?” Jasmine asked.
“Oh, he’s just fine.”
“Valerie? What? Why aren’t you talking?”
Valerie laughed in an attempt to keep from screaming. “Don’t read too much into this. I’m just tired and…and…Go on, say you told me so. That man is truly a piece of work.”
“Oh, God. What has Mr. Weiss done this time? Did he completely shatter the illusion you had of him?”
Valerie thought seriously about what she was about to say and chose her words carefully. “No. He didn’t exactly shatter any illusions. He’s actually gone and enhanced them even more. He’s such a frustrating enigma, Jas. I ask him one thing and the conversation somehow turns to something else. Trying to nail him down is like walking through a maze loaded with mines.”
Jasmine sighed. “Yes, that’s somehow very Aaron.”
“He has a son named Andrew, who’s a Navy SEAL. Did you know that?”
“A son?” Jasmine echoed. “I never knew. Wow…what’s up with that? Noah never said anything about this son of his.”
For a second, Valerie felt relieved. At least her best friend hadn’t been keeping that tidbit from her. “Do you think Noah knows?”
“Yeah. He probably does. It would have been nice if he’d told me, but I don’t find it strange. I mean, they’re friends and business partners. I guess Aaron has a right to his privacy, if that’s what he wants.”
“I don’t know, Jas, this is so crazy. I mean, he revealed a lot and then nothing at all. What’s crazy is why I find the whole thing upsetting. He did tell me that he was never married to his son’s mother, and certainly if he couldn’t even remember the color of her eyes he couldn’t have been in love with her.”
“The color of her eyes?” Jasmine repeated, confused.
“Never mind. I’m tired and deranged.” And jealous. “Let’s forget about Aaron for now.” She took a deep breath. “Have you seen my mother?”
“Yes. Your mother’s fine. Just think, pretty soon this whole mess will be over and you can come home. I assume Aaron told you that they have a definite suspect and they’re setting a trap so they can prove it.”
“I know,” Valerie lied. She didn’t know that at all, and lying about it was even stranger. The truth was she’d been taken down a rabbit hole, or more accurately a sinkhole, and she was suffering from some kind of diver’s euphoria. Part of her wanted to escape but another part wanted to remain. The crazy person who’d invaded her body didn’t want to leave Caye Caulker and return to her own life until she unraveled the mystery of Aaron.
***
Lying flat on the deck floor, staring up at the stars and listening to the gentle whispers of Saniyah talking to the waves beneath her, Aaron focused on a particularly large twinkling star in the velvety expanse. The subtle flickering seemed to be transmitting an encoded message.
He was annoyed with himself, no question about that. Not in many years had he even remotely felt the urge to really talk to someone other than Noah. His art, his boat, his life, and his son were his business, and there was no clear reason to discuss them with anyone else, let alone her. But this woman actually seemed to care. She genuinely wanted to know what lay beneath his surface, and in prying, she’d probably discerned her truth about him—he was a cold, dark, uncompromising person. If indeed that was the truth, he was grateful that the evening had terminated so abruptly because he had uncharacteristically gotten way out of control and revealed more than he intended and might have revealed even more. It was not a performance he planned to repeat, and there was no reason to obsess over the lapse of judgment because the investigation would probably wrap up in a day or two and she could go back home. He wouldn’t have to think about her anymore.