accident.â
âIâm sorry to hear that,â Valerie said softly.
âHe was drunk,â Danny added wryly. âSoon after that I quit school and started hanginâ out with guys selling drugs. I got arrested and went to jail for a year. When I got out, no one would hire me, so I started getting in trouble again. Then Drew and his dad came back. Drew looked me up, and the Captain told me I had to turn things around and if I was willing to work and go back to school, heâd help me out. Thatâs when I found out that he owned Avian International, and he got me a job as a freight handler at the airport. He paid me more than I was worth, but that opportunity saved my life.â
Valerie liked that part. It felt good to hear confirmation that Aaron wasnât as stone cold as people seemed to think. âSo obviously you didnât remain at the airport. What happened next?â
âOn weekends, Drew and me and our girlfriends would go hiking through the rainforest and canoeing on the river. We started inviting the cruise ship tourists alongâ¦taking them out to the caves and all that stuff. The tourists loved it and were willing to pay.â
âNice,â Valerie said. âAnd this was something you actually enjoyed doing.â
âYeah. And since Belize is my country and a lot of its economy is from tourism, the Captain said I could probably make a living doing this, and I liked the idea. He then taught me a lot of important stuff about running a business, and he loaned me the capital to get started. I also ended up studying about Mayan culture and ecology, which was tough, but worth it. Now Iâm sort of known as an environmental expert and Iâve got two of my brothers and ten people working for me.â He smiled. âBusiness is good.â
âSounds like youâve got a lot to be proud of,â Valerie said.
Danny was about to say something else when someone called him. He excused himself, rose slowly, and flashed a crooked smile. âDonât ever let anyone tell you differently. The Captain is a good man, the best.â His eyes twinkled. âAnd just in case you happen to be his girlfriend, donât let the tough guy, I-donât-need-nobody bull scare you off.â
Way too late for that advice, she thought wryly. She felt more attracted to Aaron than ever and scared, not of him, but of what she might do if she kept seeing him.
***
Cadmium orange, yellow, a mixture of burnt umber, and purple. Aaron preferred acrylic paint to oil these days because it wasnât as messy. Shirtless, wearing only a pair of shredded jeans, he stood on the terrace of his former room, now Valerieâs, and stepped back to study the canvas. The beach at dusk had not taken long to create at all. He had capitalized on the present Belizean sunset, a mélange of smoky mauve and red fire, but the darkened sandy shore heâd created from his head, since there was no significant beachfront on Caye Caulker.
The painting seemed to have almost conceived itself, and as he studied it he realized there was an aberration apparent in the silhouetted form of a lone woman strolling by the sea. Normally he did not paint peopleâpreferring vast landscapes undefiled by human bodiesâbut this subliminally sketched woman was not disturbing or defiling anything. This shadow of a female who distinctly reflected Valerieâs proportions blended right in with the landscape, accepting her environment and her solitude.
He sat down on the edge of the lounge chair and rubbed his eyes. There had been only one other time he had painted a woman, a girl actually, and that was when both of their lives had been driven by youthful passion and no foreknowledge of what tragedy lay ahead.
Slowly the room and the painting blurred into a kaleidoscope of muted shadows and light, careening wildly through days, and months, and decadesâdecades that led to the memory of a more recent
Lauren Baratz-Logsted
Joy Dettman
Edward George, Dary Matera
Jessica Gadziala
Evan Currie
Caroline Linden
J.T. LeRoy
Tantoo Cardinal
Blanche Knott
Ray Mouton