That only made it worse.
In the morning, Martin puttered in the kitchen even though they had no guests, making himself a cappuccino and sitting at the dining room table beside the double-hung windows facing the lake. An ore carrier moved sluggishly away from the island, heading past Put-in-Bay for the Ohio shore.
A tall, silver-haired man in gold pants and shirt-their neighbor, Bill-walked along the shore with a little girl about four or five years old. Martin’s heart began to skip. He set his cup down so fast it splashed and ran through the screened-in porch, the door clapping shut behind him.
Sunrise glinted off the water. He shielded his eyes with his hand as he walked barefoot over the dew-damp grass. "Hey, neighbor!”
“Good morning, Marty,” Bill replied. He gestured at the little girl. "This here’s our granddaughter, Kelsey. Say hi, darling.”
The little girl looked up at Martin. Panic flashed across her eyes, and she spun away from him to look at the lake.
“Hi, Kelsey,” Martin said. He noticed the cappuccino running down his arm, and absent-mindedly lifted his wrist to his mouth to lick it off.
Bill shrugged. "Kids, huh. Folks don’t teach ‘em any manners these days.” He pointed to the pumphouse, a squat block of concrete that sat on the edge of the lake. "When did you block that up?”
“Oh.” The farmhouse was over a hundred years old. Before the island built its water supply, the farmers pumped it in directly from the lake. "A couple days ago.”
“I thought you were going to turn it into a sauna.”
“That’s still the plan. But one of our guests was poking around in it after he came back from the winery. Fell and cut his head. Pretty big gash. He didn’t need stitches, but we figured-”
“Liability?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s a shame, people not being responsible.” Bill looked up to the porch. "Say, where are your guests? Isn’t it about breakfast time?”
“We had to cancel all our reservations,” Martin said. He watched Kelsey closely. She poked around the rocks, searching for a way into the pumphouse. "Lucy’s been sick.”
“Gosh, I’m sorry to hear that. What’s wrong?”
“She came down with this fever-”
“Hey, there she is.”
Martin turned. Lucy stood outlined in the attic window. The glass caught the sun, casting it in such a way that she was surrounded by a corona of jagged, golden light.
Bill waved to the attic window and cupped his hands to his mouth. "Get well soon, Lucy!”
She returned the greeting.
“You have an awful pretty wife there,” Bill said.
Martin frowned. "Some days she’s more awful than-”
Kelsey pounded on the side of the pumphouse with a rock. Martin hurried toward her, hand outstretched, stepping carefully in his bare feet across the stones. "Hey, Kelsey, come here. I want to show you something neat.”
The little girl looked to her grandfather, who nodded permission.
“Shhh.” Martin pressed his forefinger to his lips. With exaggerated tiptoeing, he led her onto their other neighbor’s property. It was a small cabin, seldom used. Its lake pump had been more modern, an eight-foot square of concrete that jutted out from the shore like a single tooth in a child’s mouth. Algae-slick boulders, driftwood branches, and other debris heaped around it.
The two inched slowly out on the slab until they reached the edge and saw the snakes-a dozen or more of them ranging in length from one to three feet. Their scales glistened black as they sunned themselves on the rocks.
Kelsey gasped and clung to Martin’s leg, pressing her face against his thigh and peeking out. Martin wrapped his hand around the top of her head and pointed out to the water, where a new snake sinuated across the rippled surface toward the shore. It lifted its nose, turning it like a submarine periscope.
Bill crept up behind them and stomped his foot on the concrete, chuckling as they jumped. The snakes immediately disappeared among the rocks and driftbrush. The snake in the water dived beneath the surface.
Kelsey lifted her head. "Grampa!”
Martin straightened, letting her go. "They’re harmless,” he said. "Lake Erie water snakes. Endangered.”
Bill wrapped his arms around his granddaughter. "Just ‘cause they’re endangered don’t mean they’re not dangerous. Tigers are endangered too, but they’re still dangerous.”
Martin smiled and stepped off the slab. "You come back any time you want to see my snakes now, Kelsey.”
They said goodbye to one another. Martin watched until they were off the property, then went inside and watched out the window to be sure they didn’t come back.
The setting sun sheened off the windshield, causing Martin to slow the car as he passed the black-clad teenagers strolling down the road, trading cigarettes. A pink-haired boy sneered at Martin and Lucy, shaping his hand into a claw and gouging at them. The other kids laughed.
“Are you sure you feel well enough to do this?” Martin asked Lucy.
She ran her fingertips over her face to smooth the skin. "It’s been long enough. We have to get back to normal some time. And I do feel better.”
“Good.” Martin pulled into the lot of the Limestone Island Winery, tires crunching on the gravel. He jumped out and opened the door for her.
They walked up the steps. The winery sat on the waterfront, within walking distance of the docks. The terrace faced the lake so that’s where the tourists gathered. A Jimmy Buffet song started over the speakers, an impromptu singalong shaking the walls as Lucy and Martin went into the pub.
Martin traded nods with a few locals watching the TVs and waved to the fortyish woman behind the bar. She wore a tight T-shirt, logoed with a bottle of Two Worms Tequila, a picture of a lemon, and the slogan "Suck this.”
She waved back as Lucy and Martin took their usual booth in the corner. Then she yelled something into the kitchen, threw the towel over her shoulder, and came to join them.
“God, Lucy,” she said, sliding in across the booth. "You’re
radiant. You look wonderful. You sure you’ve been sick?”
An enthusiastic chorus of "wasting away again" came through the wall from the terrace outside.
“Hi, Kate,” Martin said above the singing.
“I don’t look nearly as wonderful as you,” Lucy answered, smiling. "Is that a new perm?”
She struck a pose, vamping the hairdo for them. "What do you think, Marty?”
“Looks terrific.”
Kate’s daughter, Maya, a high school senior, stepped to the kitchen door, looked around, and then carried over a bottle of red wine and three glasses. "Thanks, honey,” Kate said. "Now don’t serve anyone else. Make Mike do it.”
“He hates coming out of the kitchen, Mom.”
Kate wagged her finger. "I’m not kidding.” As Maya stepped away, Kate snapped the towel at her butt. She twisted around, frowning. Martin winked at her.
“Now don’t go making eyes at my daughter, Mr. Marty Van Wyk,” Kate said, threatening him with the towel.
“Here, give me the bottle,” he said. "I’ll open it.”
“What happened to Christie and Boyko?” Lucy asked, looking around. All summer long, Christie had waited tables while Boyko worked the kitchen.
Kate curled her lip dramatically. "The Vulgarians?”
“Bulgarians,” Martin corrected.
“You ever notice the way they pawed each other all the time?” Kate asked.
Lucy leaned her head on Martin’s shoulder. "They’re in love with each other. It’s very sweet.”
“It was out of control.”
The cork popped out of the bottle. Martin poured the dark red liquid into their three glasses. He slid the first one over to Kate. "Why are you talking about them in the past tense?”