PAUL MAXWELL WAS STARING out across the light-green sea. He was watching a small white outboard plowing up the water some hundred yards off the end of the pier. Skimming along behind in a golden blur was a water-skier. It was one of those things, Paul was thinking, for which you remember a vacation day when you’re back in the city grind, the color of the sea sparkling green as champagne, the busy sound of the little outboard motor and its foamy white wake, and behind, the little human figure balanced gracefully on water skis that seemed to be flying over the surface of the sea.
Paul rose, and leaned on the railing of the pier to watch the sport. Only then did the yellow-brown halter above the deep-tan midriff inform him of the sex of the skier. Suddenly the outboard skidded to a daring turn and seemed to head directly toward him. It raced for-ward until he was sure it was too late to turn away. But in a last-moment swing of the stick, the small boat veered to safety by inches. But the girl behind, flying toward the pier—how could she possibly veer in time? It didn’t seem real that anything so free, so perfect could come to such a brutal ending, but in his mind’s panic he was already diving in to grope under water for the broken body. Then, close enough to Paul for him to see the smile on her face—more than a smile, a look of exhilaration—she calmly leaned out from her skis, in the opposite direction from what Paul would have thought logical, and shot away from the pier, streaking around the boat in a sweeping arc before coming back into position behind it again.
Twice more the boat and the skier made passes at the pier that seemed to make collision inevitable. But Paul was not to be taken in again and watched in fascination instead of panic as boat and girl dared themselves to see how close to the pier they could come without crashing into it.
“That first time I really thought they had it, General,” Paul said to a little hard nut of a Cuban who looked as if he had been put in to bake and left too long. The General, who took care of renting boats and beach equipment, had won his rank in a now-forgotten South American war.
“Oh, that’s Gerry Lawford. She’s crazy.” He said it as if everybody already knew it.
“What kind of crazy?” Paul asked, as he always did about words that had lost their original cutting edge.
“Real crazy,” the General said. “Bats in the belfry crazy.”
Paul did not have to ask the Cuban to enlarge on this. In these two weeks he had come to know the General.
“Always doing crazy things. Like last year, she tried to sail a dinghy to Cuba all by herself. The Coast Guard had to fish her out of the drink about thirty miles out. That crazy enough for you?”
Paul liked the story. Not being an adventurer himself, he always felt drawn to those who were.
“Who is she? Where’d she come from?”
“Oh, Gerry’s been around Key West for years.” The General’s grin was an amiable slit in the burnt crust of his face. “Calls herself a fugitive from Palm Beach. Her folks have a big home up there. Real rich people, own a perfume business or something. ’Bout ten years ago they had her all set for one of those ritzy Palm Beach weddings. Supposed to marry a Prince Somebody-or-other. He’s still around there, married to an automobile heiress. But anyway, the afternoon of the wedding, Gerry showed up down here. Came into this bar where I was working at the time. It’s gone now. Just about all the old places are gone. Anyway, this girl Gerry, I’m telling you about. I can still remember what she said. ‘Let him marry one of my sisters. They go in for that stuff. And he doesn’t care which one it is as long as it comes equipped with a checkbook.’
“Well, the old checkbook wasn’t much good to Gerry after she landed here. Old man cut her off without a cent. But it didn’t seem to bother Gerry none. She just went on having one hell of a good time.”
“But what’d she do? How’d she get by?” Paul was interested in things like this. In the dark hours he always wondered how he’d manage if he suddenly lost his knack for commercial illustrating.
The General considered a moment. “Gerry did—well, she just sort of did things nobody else could get away with. For a while she was a mate on a charter boat. I know that’s a hell of a job for a girl, but somehow Gerry talked Red Merritt into it. Then she got on this WPA Artists’ Project they had down here when things got so bad the whole town hadda go on relief. She paints real good when she feels like it. Then she came into some money—a trust fund or something the old man couldn’t touch. She bought herself a sloop and just sailed around the islands until the money was gone. The kind of person Gerry is, you never have to worry about her and money. Last year she was a crew member in the yacht race to Havana. Her boat won and she stayed over in Havana with the millionaire and his wife who owned it. They staked her to five hundred dollars at the Casino and she came back here last fall with enough dough for the year.” The General chuckled. “Even a year for Gerry.”
Somebody had come up to rent a rowboat and the General was climbing agilely over the side to pull one toward the landing. While Paul had been listening to the General his eyes had been panning with the outboard and the tanned figure that soared in its wake. Now the boat was idling and Paul watched how the girl handed the skis up over the side and began swimming in toward the pier. She swam, as Paul had already come to expect her to, a capable Australian crawl, and he was fully prepared to believe that she had been a Woman’s AAU free-style champion, maybe even an Olympic winner. For even before he had looked into her face, Paul was ready to accept her as one of those special people who perform the most amazing feats without breaking stride and for whom the improbable is merely routine.
He was watching her intently, at the same time trying to disguise the directness of his stare by occasionally glancing past her toward the outboard driver who was easing the boat toward shore. She scampered up the ladder to the pier, swinging herself up over the edge acrobatically. As he watched her lift her arms to shake the water from her shining hair, the image struck vividly in his mind: the tall, glistening, honey-brown figure with its long, smooth muscular symmetry, and the wet, gleaming face with the surprising Asiatic cast to the eyes.
He studied her movements with a professional appraisal intensified by the challenge a man always feels when he comes unexpectedly into the presence of a woman who attracts him. But, a shy man in his manners, he would have let her go silently if she hadn’t looked up from shaking her head clear to grin at him. There was no flirtation in it, he could see, no hint of coyness. It was just the sudden hello one person flashes to another when they’re on the edge of the sea, when the sun is warming them and they’re both caught up in that sense of exquisite well-being of a tropical island’s winter day.
“How long have you been doing that?” he heard himself saying.
“The skiing?” Her voice was pitched low, charged with excess energy, and the water was still shining on her face. “I think I was born on those things. At least I can’t even remember learning how to do it.”
He knew everything she had done—all the crazy things—she had always done. She was one of those naturals.
“You make it look so easy.”
“It is, for some people. I’ve seen others try for a month and never even get up out of the water.”
She gave a little laugh that Paul would remember.
The driver of the outboard was climbing up onto the pier now and Paul was just wondering what he could say that would leave things open to further possibilities instead of closing them. But she solved his problem in the most casual way: “If you’re on the beach around ten tomorrow, come out and try it.” She paused, appraising him. “Are you good at things?”
“Well, what kind of … ?”
“Oh, you know, regular skiing, skating, diving,” and then she added for fun, “tightrope walking, high trapeze …”
“Oh, sure,” he replied. “Remember that fellow who crossed Niagara Falls on a high wire … ?”
She laughed, and her lips, still moistened with sea water, made him think of the blood-red bougainvillaea after a sudden shower.
“Probably see you tomorrow then,” she said, and he watched as she strode down the pier with another man. For that was the way it already seemed to him. Even though an unromantic little voice of reason told him this was just one of those vacation reveries. The other man was young, tall, handsomely made, tanned to a color that comes with years of moving in the sun rather than carefully exposing oneself to it for two or three weeks a year. With that sense of inferiority that city men have when confronted by the masculine great outdoors, Paul had to admit to himself that this bronzed Adonis, this sun god, was the perfect match for her. They were the two glorified figures in the cigarette ads, the bathing-suit displays. Good God, he should know them—for ten years he had made his living drawing them!
That evening, for the first time since he had come South, he put on his white linen suit, feeling a little foolish as he fussed with the bow an extra minute to get the ends even and checked the general effect in the full-length mirror of the bathroom door. Then he walked down to the Beach Club dance. His sense of foolishness, of a recapturing of college-prom excitement, increased as he saw the couples swaying slowly together in the open patio while the orchestra played what every orchestra seemed to be playing this season, “Because You’re Mine …”
Gerry Lawford, who came skimming out of the sun and across the sparkling sea, did she really exist? Paul wondered. Or was she merely a city bachelor’s sun-struck dream? And even if he were to find her here, what good would it do him if she were dancing in the arms of the sun god?
Then he saw her, all yellow gold, her hair swept up into a crown of jet topped by a single flaming hibiscus. Paul watched as the tired strains of a worn-out hit tune were finally abandoned for a samba. With her cigarette-ad partner, Gerry danced it as a professional would have, or, perhaps better, as an inspired amateur, with a wild enthusiasm that made all the other dancers on the floor appear to be not so much dancing as pushing each other around.
Paul wondered what it would feel like to dance with her, and whether cutting in was a breach of Club etiquette, and while he wondered the music stopped and Gerry and her cigarette ad were on their way from the patio to the parking lot. Paul had no idea how nakedly his eyes must have been following them until the General, now doubling as a buffet waiter, mumbled to him, “That’s the way she always is—comes in for one dance, maybe two, then she’s off again, always on the move.”
“Think they’ll be back, General?”
The General chuckled. Gerry and her restless ways obviously served him as entertainment. “A crazy one like that, who knows? Right now she’s probably on her way to the casino at the Casa Marina. Win a thousand, lose a thousand, who knows where she’ll wind up tonight? Maybe flying to Cuba. Maybe trolling around the Keys with a kicker.”
The General was amused. But Paul, with nothing to go on but a romantic imagination that was working overtime, knew he had to go on to the casino.
He walked around the tables until he found her at the craps layout. There were only a few people playing, so it was easy to edge in behind her. “Hi,” she said when she saw him, as if it were perfectly natural that he should be there, “bet with me. I’m hot.”
She had the dice and her point rolled ten. The odds were with the house, but she bet a hundred on herself and made the point on her third roll. Paul had backed her for five. She made three more passes, dragging all her winnings until she had run a hundred up to almost three thousand. Betting with her each time, but conservatively, Paul was around fifty ahead. The reckless way she played seemed to mock his conservatism and he felt suddenly depressed, as if this was a surer sign than any he had had before that this was a will o’ the wisp.
She was still running the game, the dice doing everything she asked of them, when she suddenly lost interest. “I’m going to cash these in. Let’s play roulette.”
At the roulette table Paul watched with an amazement lined with admiration as she plunged on hunches, betting the limit on single numbers, all or nothing, 35-1, while he was putting five on red or black or settling for the short odds on groups of numbers. The wheel wasn’t rolling for her and in less than ten minutes she had managed to throw away the big win she had taken from the other table. It hadn’t been money at all, just little colored chips to fling across a board.
“That’s tough luck,” Paul said. “You should have quit when you were out there in front.”
“Oh, what difference does it make?” Gerry said. “I’d just as soon lose it as win it.”
That was beyond him, that kind of recklessness, that kind of wildness. Maybe that’s why it attracted him so strongly. “Time for a drink,” she said, and she led him into the bar, full of laughter, full of hell, full of something Paul had never had to cope with before and he remembered the General’s answer, “What kind of crazy—bats in the belfry crazy.” Well, what kind was that? It came in all sizes, from you and me to the straitjacket and the chair.
She drank the way he had seen her do all these other things, doubles, fast, ready to go further than anybody else, closer to the pier. And then, as abruptly as she had lost interest in the dance, the dice, she said, “Oh, the hell with this drinking. Who wants to go swimming?”
The cigarette ad, who had been at the bar when they reached it, said, “Oh, God, that again? I gave up moonlight swimming about the time I had my first hangover. Once a season holds me fine.”
Paul was wondering if he could make his voice sound casual enough when he said it. “I’ll go swimming with you.”
“Swell. Are you a good swimmer?”
“Oh, good enough to paddle around.”
“I feel like swimming tonight. I think I could swim to Cuba tonight.”
Remembering the General’s joke about Gerry and her impulsive night flights, Paul wondered about that last one. He wondered too if her escort was objecting to this improvised shift in the evening’s pairing. Paul even started to mutter something about it, but the sun god was ahead of him. “Good God, I’m glad she’s found a sucker she can entice into those inky waters. Otherwise I might have had to go myself.”
Paul and Gerry sat on the end of the Club pier. The water was black and uninviting as it sloshed up under the pilings. It should have been moonlight, Paul was thinking.
“I never win long shots,” he was saying. “And this afternoon, when I first saw you out there, it was an easy hundred to one against our ending up alone together like this.”
“I like people who are ready to do things without planning them ahead,” she said.
“Isn’t Bob the ready kind?” he asked, meaning the sun god left standing on his clay feet at the hotel bar.
“Oh, Bob …” The way his name trailed off told practically everything. “Bob is something like me. Only he isn’t quite up to me. So he bores me. And anyway, I like people who do something. All Bob did was inherit money. He …” Then she swung the rudder on the conversation. “What’re we talking about Bob for? Bob’s always around to talk about. How about you? You aren’t just a rich kid. I know you do something.”
“Eleven months a year I’m a commercial artist. A pretty good one. The other month, I go away somewhere, Tehuantepec last year, Key West this time, and try to paint for myself. A sailor rowing in Central Park. Awful one-sided compromise.”
“But better than nothing,” she said, and they talked a little about painting, nothing too flossy, about actual techniques, and the local problems with light and dampness, and the things she said were more businesslike and practical than he would have expected.
“You must have been painting a long time,” he said. That WPA thing was a long way back now.
“I don’t really paint,” she said. And then after a moment of silence, “I don’t do anything.”
“But I thought you didn’t like people who don’t do anything?” Paul said. He had meant it for banter.
“Maybe I don’t like myself.”
Then, abruptly finished with conversation, she said, “The hell with it. Let’s swim.”
He saw her poise for a moment on the edge and then arch and knife cleanly into the dark water. He plunged in after her, expecting to tread water and splash around in the dark. But she was already moving off from the pier, her head bent low into the choppy sea as she executed her rapid crawl. Paul, an average swimmer, had to exert himself to keep up with her. Before they were fifty strokes out from the pier this swim had taken on a disconcerting quality. When they passed the first marker a hundred yards beyond the landing Paul knew this was no hilarious midnight escapade. There was an intensity about this swim out toward a dark, far horizon that made Paul realize he had gone beyond his depth into waters measured in other ways than merely in fathoms.
The sea water poured down his throat when he gasped for breath and his body ached to turn back. But he feared doing this might lose everything he had gained this evening, this strange, wonderful girl, this water-gypsy who had risen for him out of the sea. Yet there was a limit to his endurance and he was beginning, for the first time in his life, to reach the edges of it. His stomach tightened with the panicky feeling that his next stroke would double him up in a cramp of exhaustion. Alone with all the salt water, he was going to have to swallow his pride and turn back, slowly work his way into shore. Just then Gerry’s face bobbed up close to his.
“Hello,” she said. She looked fresh and impish, and the sight of her so close to him revived him a little.
“I’m hungry,” she announced. “Let’s go back.”
His stomach felt too full of ocean water for an appetite, but when he finally managed to get back to the pier and climbed up beside Gerry he was suddenly exhilarated. Of course he was hungry. He was starved. He had kept up with Gerry Lawford, crazy Gerry Lawford, and he was ready for anything.
They went skipping down Duvall Street, actually skipping like a couple of crazy kids, and when they reached the all-night Cuban place, they both had two helpings of black beans and yellow rice, washed down with beer Gerry drank from the bottle. “An oral regression to infancy,” she called it, and they both laughed. They were laughing at things that were funny only to them and Paul felt sorry for anyone who didn’t have a Gerry Lawford in his life. The years before Gerry fell away to a flat, arid desert of monotony.
He walked her back to her hotel, the Southernmost House, it was called, an intriguing Victorian mansion of towers and great porches that dominated the point where the Atlantic met the Gulf. He stopped in for a nightcap at the old oak bar that looked out on the sea, and when they paused for a moment on the great balcony and listened to the waves, the night and what they had made of it suddenly gave him the courage, and he kissed her, feeling the recklessness, the restlessness passing from her lips to his. Then, with her kind of suddenness, she broke away.
“Let’s go conching in the morning. Call for me early—say between eight and nine. I’ll show you how the real conchs do it.”
Her door closed him off from her so suddenly that he was left with the effect of her having vanished from his side in some metaphysical way. He could almost have believed this hadn’t happened at all and that their evening had been simply an extension of his daydream. He walked back slowly to his hotel with his mind still flooded with the vision of that afternoon’s golden sweep across the sunlit sea.
Every morning since he had come to Key West, Paul had slept late, counting that one of his chief vacation pleasures. But this next morning he was up in time to see the clouds opening up for the early sun to pour through. Even the pelicans were still asleep, drifting idly in small groups, rocking gently with the tide. Paul pulled on some ducks and a sport shirt and went down to the beach. Suddenly, as if by signal, all the pelicans rose together and went flapping out to sea on some urgent pelican business. Paul realized this was the first day since he had come to Key West that he was really alive. He thought about Gerry, and, for the first time, about her always being with him. The only trouble was, he couldn’t quite see her in his tailored New York apartment. It was a little like bringing home to captivity some wild bird whose home is the open sea. He was in love with her, though, in a way he had not imagined a man of his temperament could be.
He walked down the beach to the Southernmost and when he didn’t find her on the downstairs porch, he went up and knocked on her door.
“Come on in, Paul,” she called and he entered to find her in white ducks with the legs rolled up to her knees, and an old sweatshirt. But somehow these had the effect of heightening rather than smothering her beauty. She was squatting on the floor finishing a hurried water color. Strangely, it was the scene Paul had been watching from the beach, the pelicans rising in formation from the rose water of the morning sea. It was done in swift, fluid strokes, and the rose color was redder, stronger than it had been. The peace and tranquillity of the scene that had impressed Paul on the beach was translated into disturbing colors and broken lines. Thumb-tacked on the walls were half a dozen other seascapes, all blurs and sudden strokes of color, suggesting rather than representing, all catching some of the recklessness and vitality that Gerry brought to everything she did.
“These are all yours?” It wasn’t really a question, merely an opener.
“Just splashing around.”
“But they’re damn good.”
“My God, Paul, I was only playing. Don’t look so serious.”
“But they’re—they’re big league. You should do something with them.”
“I will, darling. I’ll give them to you.”
She jumped up, and with a little mock curtsey handed Paul the one she had just finished. “To remember me by.” She laughed.
He took the picture, beginning to say something serious, trying to make it sound not too pompous, but she cut him off. “Hell with it. Let’s go conching.”
They walked down the street to the Negro “beach,” a narrow, rocky promontory where the rowboats were pulled up. They carried the one they were going to use out over the rocks and pushed off. She showed him how to pole it, and then, when they were out a little way, she said, “Let’s see if we can catch ourselves some crawfish first.” He held the boat for her while she poised the long three-pronged spear over the surface and peered down through the single fathom of light-green water to the edge of the shoal at the bottom. Suddenly the spear shot into the water and when she pulled it up the prongs were fastened to a small speckled brown lobster. Paul tried it after that but even after he spied one on the bottom, the deceptive angle of the spear beneath the surface made him overshoot the target. It was much harder than it looked.
She tried it again, and when she brought up a larger one, lost interest in the spear.
“Conching’s more fun,” Gerry said. “I’ll show you how we dive for them.” Fixing a large circular glass to her eyes, she dived nimbly over the side. Paul was fascinated to watch her glide down through the twinkling green water to the rocks below. Watching her move along the bottom with slow-motion grace, he was reminded again of his earlier vision of her as a mermaid called up from the depths by his imagination.
But just then she popped up through the surface, crying, “Eureka!” triumphantly holding up a good-sized Queen conch.
She slithered over into the boat and handed Paul the goggles. “I know what let’s do. Let’s see who can stay down the longest.” She said it as a child might, as a spur-of-the-moment dare. But Paul, remembering last night’s swim, feared it might develop into more of an ordeal.
“But we haven’t got a watch, Gerry.”
“Oh, we can count, one-and-two-and …” She gave him the beat. “Oh, come on. It’s beautiful down there. It’s fun to stay down.”
Paul adjusted the goggles, inhaled until his temples began to pound, and dived. As Gerry had promised, he found himself enveloped in a shimmering green world more beautiful than he had imagined. He gripped a rock at the bottom to hold himself from rising and groped along, pleased with his unfolding ability to measure up to Gerry’s adventures. He wondered how much time had passed. He had begun keeping track but a large octopus that turned out to be a massive undersea growth had frightened him off his count. Water was slowly seeping in under the rubber rims of the goggles and his eyes were beginning to smart. Then his ears were aching and he had a sense of being squeezed within green walls that were pressing down and in and up at him. He thought he saw a conch a few feet ahead of him, but that was too far now. His lungs were ready to explode. Why, a man could die, die down here to prove something. But what? What did it mean to Gerry? He was shooting up toward the surface now, flailing his arms with mounting frenzy as he wondered if he could make it in time.
Then his head was above water at last and he was breathing, breathing, that first and last of luxuries.
“Ninety-three,” Gerry called. “Paul, I’m proud of you.” The praise, the smile, the warm camaraderie completely erased his choking panic of a moment before.
“Now count for me …” She could hardly wait to get the goggles on and be over the side again. She was gone in a swift little dive that hardly disturbed the calm surface.
Fifty … He could see her gliding leisurely along the bottom. Seventy-five … ninety … Soon she had passed his record and he waited for her to pop to the surface, chortling over her triumph. But she was staying down. One hundred … one hundred-and-twenty-five … He peered down anxiously. She wasn’t moving any longer. Just seemed to be sitting there—the mermaid again—at home on the bottom of the sea. One hundred-and-fifty … sixty … seventy-five … And this count slower than seconds—that was three minutes! The pulse of panic began to thump in his throat … No one could stay down that long … Suddenly he remembered those nightmare stories of giant shellfish that clamp down on a swimmer’s hands … Somewhere he had read how a Marine had been lost that way in the South Pacific …
In this same moment he dived, reached her, groped for her and they shot up to the surface together.
“Gerry—Gerry—are you all right?”
“Of course.” She laughed. “I was just getting ready to come up. How high did you count?”
“One hundred-and-seventy-five.”
“Dare me to stay down for two hundred?”
“Frankly,” Paul said, “I’ve had enough diving for one morning. You won’t be satisfied till the Coast Guard drags the bottom for you.”
“Okay,” she said, completely unconcerned. “Do you like conch? The couple who run the Southernmost are friends of mine. We can take these right in their kitchen and start working on them. I lived on these things one season down here when you could’ve turned me upside down and shaken me and never found a nickel.”
That day Paul felt as if he were gliding through life on skis the way Gerry had skimmed the surface of the sea. The lunch on the sun porch of the Southernmost, the walk through town to the fishing docks; the long talk on the beach; the cocktails at sunset, the fun of drinking together and the marvelous sense of growing intimacy; and finally the moonlight dance in the patio and Gerry Lawford, this crazy, unpredictable, magical girl, in his arms at last. His lips were against her golden cheeks and even the smell of her was of some fresh wild berry that one finds on the hills. Later tonight, or perhaps tomorrow, he would ask her. He was already trying it, phrasing it, like a stage bit player with one line to perfect: Gerry, you said you never turn down a dare. So, I dare you to marry me.
The song was still “Because You’re Mine,” only this time Paul was much more tolerant of its sentimentality. Her lips were brushing his ear—his skin tingled with the pleasure of it—she was going to kiss him. Only instead, she was whispering, “Darling, feel like going swimming? Let’s go swimming again.”
“Gerry,” he said. “I’m still water-logged. Why don’t we skip it tonight?”
“I want to go swimming,” she said. “At night I love to go swimming.”
“Baby, I—I just can’t tonight. I love you. I’m lost in you. I want to marry you. But if we start swimming out tonight, you know what’ll happen, you’ll dare me to see which one of us can swim out the farthest. I’ll bust a gut trying to keep up with you and …”
“All right, don’t swim with me. I’ll swim alone. I like to swim alone.” She was glaring at him and the wildness was a new kind, and he thought he knew for the first time what the General meant.
“Gerry, why get so angry? Tonight let’s just dance and have some drinks. Maybe tomorrow night we can swim.”
“I don’t want you to swim with me,” she said. “I’m going swimming alone. I’m going now.”
For a moment Paul considered following her. But then he thought, she’s high-strung, she can’t stay up at that pitch all the time without having these moods. I’ll let her work her way out of it and send her flowers in the morning. By lunch time she’ll be thinking up some new crazy stunt and daring me to follow.
The next morning Paul reverted and slept late. When he went downstairs to breakfast, everyone was talking about it. The Coast Guard was still searching for the body, he heard people say. But she was such a wonderful swimmer, he heard people say. She was always such a happy-go-lucky, such a high-spirited girl, it doesn’t seem possible she’d do a thing like that, he heard people say.
He walked slowly out to the edge of the point and looked across the sea. The sun was high and the waters were smooth. He had no idea how long he had stood there, or when the truth first flashed for him, but when it did he was sure he had known it from that first moment of fear and wonder when she had seemed bent on crashing into the pier. It was so simple now. Gerry’s courage had been fool’s gold, not really courage at all. Only the wish to die. When he cupped his hands to light a cigarette he saw how they were trembling. He stood a long time that morning at the sea wall.
By the time the sun was lowering toward the horizon, the first shock was easing off into a kind of numb submission, a sense of inevitability, of having entered for a few stolen moments into a shadow-world. For he was no longer sure whether Gerry Lawford and their first day, their second, and their last, had really happened. Or whether a mermaid, a water-gypsy, turned mortal for a day, had merely swum home to the green depths out of which she had come.