When 3:30 rolled around, he was ready to leave. He checked his watch and decided to give her five more minutes. Exactly three minutes later, he finally saw her. She came over the sand dunes carrying her towel and sandals, wearing a two-piece bathing suit, shorts, and designer sunglasses. She shook her long, dark hair away from her face and gave Alex a big smile, stepping quickly across the hot sand.
The wait was worth every minute.
“Sorry I’m late,” she said. “My mom’s having a bad day, and I couldn’t leave until almost three. I tried to call your cell phone.”
Alex hadn’t brought his cell phone, but he was no longer worried about starting a few minutes late. Nara looked like she had been born for the beach. Her skin was naturally bronze, and she was tall and lithe with muscular legs that Alex assumed came from skiing. He had not imagined that the daughter of a Muslim imam would look so much at home on the sands of Virginia Beach.
Nara expressed her surprise at how beautiful and secluded this part of Virginia Beach was. They chatted for a few minutes, and then Alex launched into his paddleboard-for-dummies lecture. Nara smiled as he rambled on and finally interrupted. “Let’s just give it a try,” she said. “I’ve done it a few times in Lebanon.”
She took off her sunglasses and shorts, picked up the paddleboard and graphite paddle, and headed toward the water. The paddleboard itself was nearly eight feet long, and Alex was a little surprised at how easily she handled the thing. He expected her to watch him navigate the waves a few times, and then he could help her get out beyond the breakers. Instead, Nara led the way. On that point, Alex was not surprised.
She waded out until the water was thigh-deep, slapped her paddleboard down, and crawled on top of it. The water was cold, but Nara didn’t flinch. She paddled on her knees until she had navigated just beyond the first line of breakers and then stood like a pro, her balance impeccable. She played around in the breakers until she found the one she wanted, pivoted her paddleboard, and dug in on the front face. Alex noticed the slight definition in her biceps and deltoids as she skimmed across the face of the wave, even cutting back to extend the ride. The girl must work out.
After a ride that took her almost to shore, she cut out, using the paddle as a brace while she pivoted toward the next set of waves.
“Not quite Beirut,” she yelled over her shoulder, “but these aren’t bad!”
“You sure you don’t need that lecture?” Alex called out.
He had been standing in the water-at first because he wanted to help her when she crashed and burned, and then because it was a good vantage point from which to watch. He suddenly realized that he was supposed to be surfing with her, not just playing the role of a gawking teenager. He quickly headed out himself.
Though Alex was at home on surfboards, he didn’t paddleboard much and at first felt a little shaky. There was a different rhythm to the sport, standing and paddling as he looked for the perfect wave. His timing on his first ride was a little off, and he bailed when it fizzled behind him.
“You need to be more patient!” Nara called. “Don’t get out in front of it.”
As if he needed coaching from a Beirut girl. Alex grunted and pivoted his board around. This time, less shaky and more determined.
For nearly an hour, they played in the waves. Nara had the slight advantage because she was lighter than Alex and thus her paddleboard had more buoyancy. But Alex was stronger-though not as much as he’d thought he would be-and could pick up speed faster. He was also a little more reckless.
Showing off, he decided to drop in on a wave Nara was already riding. He cut in right next to her, forcing her to lean hard away from him, her edge nearly hitting his board. Unfortunately for Alex, the break on the wave caught the back of his board, throwing him off balance and causing a spectacular wipeout-elbows, knees, and paddleboard tumbling in the surf. He scrambled to his feet, the board tugging at his ankle strap and his paddle several feet away.
Nara had a huge grin on her face. “You okay?” she asked.
“Next time we’re using surfboards,” Alex yelled.
They left the beach at four thirty, paddleboards under their arms. Alex couldn’t remember the last time he’d had so much fun. Nara had on her sunglasses, the sun glistening off the moisture on her skin, her dark hair tangled and probably full of sand. Just another surfer girl at the beach.
“Where’d you learn how to paddleboard?” Alex asked.
“First time out,” said Nara.
“Right.”
When they reached the truck, Alex sprung the second part of his plan. “If you’re hungry, we could rent a couple of Jet Skis and go down the Lynnhaven to a place called Chick’s,” he suggested. “Best seafood at the beach.” He didn’t tell Nara that he had already made reservations.
“You mean like a date?” Nara asked.
“I don’t know. Maybe.” Alex hated this part. “More like a ride on Jet Skis and dinner at Chick’s. Some might call that a date.”
“I’d love to,” Nara said. Her face fell. “But I don’t think it’s a good idea.” She had the look of genuine disappointment. “I think we need to be a little more careful.”
Alex wanted to argue the point, but he knew Nara was right. The two of them had been brought together by a case with relentless media scrutiny. Alex’s first job was to defend Nara’s father. He was not being paid to entertain his client’s daughter. And that was a shame. Under different circumstances, he could definitely see something developing between himself and Nara. After all, how many women this beautiful and this smart also knew how to surf?***
He had been staring at the two surfers all afternoon through his telephoto lens. He must have taken more than a hundred shots, but none of them was exactly what he needed. It wasn’t until this final moment, just before they parted ways, that Nara stepped in and did exactly what the photographer had been urging her to do under his breath all afternoon.
She gave Alex a quick hug.
In real time, it looked rather harmless, the soft embrace of friends. But through the still lens of his camera, and after framing the picture from the waist up, it would look like something entirely different. Except for Nara’s bathing suit top, it was bare skin against bare skin. It could be interpreted a hundred different ways. It was not exactly a passionate kiss, but it wasn’t a sterile handshake either.
He squeezed off three quick shots and checked the digital images on his camera.
Perfect. The paparazzi couldn’t have done it better.
58
The ringing of his BlackBerry woke Alex out of a sound sleep Sunday morning. Without opening his eyes, he patted the nightstand to locate his phone. Success. He cracked open an eyelid and looked at the caller ID. Why was Shannon calling at 7:30 a.m.?
“Remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy,” Alex said when he answered the phone. His voice was hoarse and gruff. “Tell me you’re not calling about work.”
“What were you thinking?” Shannon asked, her voice in midday form. And the energy… It sounded like she’d already chugged three cups of coffee.
“About what?”
“Have you been on the Internet?”
Alex dropped his legs over the side of the bed and ran his hand across his face. “I was sleeping,” he said.
“Alone?”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” He was waking up now and getting a little perturbed.
“There’s a picture of you and Nara on the Internet.” Shannon’s voice was cold. “Lots of bare skin. Doesn’t look like it’s been Photoshopped. You’re definitely in some kind of embrace.”
Alex grunted. “We went paddleboarding yesterday. That photo was probably taken at the end of the day-late afternoon. She gave me a sympathy hug after rejecting my dinner invitation.”
“ She gave you a hug?” Shannon said, as if she was certain that Alex had mauled Nara instead. “She’s the daughter of a Muslim cleric, and she gave you a hug?”