Helen continued to roar, uprooting trees and hurling them against the building thump-thump-thump. Rain dashed against the windows as if someone were throwing gravel, while over our heads, the roof moaned and popped. I looked up, convinced we were going to lose the roof, and grateful when I couldn’t see daylight.
I nudged Paul. ‘Move over, sweetheart.’ He stirred sleepily. I squeezed myself on to the narrow lounger beside him, nestling against the warmth of his thigh. I pulled the sleeping bag tightly around us, and as the wind continued to howl like a demented soul, I prayed.
Just as suddenly as it had come, the noise stopped. I awoke to a deadly, silent calm.
Hurricane Helen’s eye.
Sometime during the storm, Alice had made her way over to us. She had sandwiched herself between Molly’s lounger and mine, clutching her blanket and Mr Patches. ‘How much time do you think we have?’ Alice asked. ‘Before it comes back, I mean.’
I consulted with Paul who was wide awake now, too. ‘Thirty-five minutes, give or take.’
Jaime appeared out of nowhere and met Gator at the front door. Together, the two men lifted the hurricane bar and threw the doors wide, flooding the club room with grayish-yellow light. Justice frolicked out, presumably in search of a tree. Considering the intensity of the storm, I thought he’d be doomed to disappointment.
Alice had been watching the dog, but she suddenly said, ‘There’s something I have to do.’ Before I could stop her, she dropped Mr Patches on the floor, aimed a venomous glance at her husband, and ran out the door.
Jaime stared after her, fists clenched at his sides. ‘Alice, you crazy bitch! Come back!’
‘Do you want me to go after her?’ I asked Jaime.
Jaime pawed the soggy carpet with the toe of his shoe. ‘No, I’ll go talk to her.’
I bounced up and down on my toes, shaking the knots out of my calves, watching Jaime disappear through what was left of the garden.
‘Want to go for a walk?’ Paul asked. He’d come up behind me.
‘Are you sure you’re up for a walk?’ I asked, staring pointedly at his bandage.
‘Sure I’m sure. I need to work out the kinks. Been lying down too long.’
Hand in hand, we walked through the open door and into the artificial twilight of the storm.
When I saw the destruction Helen had wrought, I couldn’t believe the building had survived. The Tamarind Tree gardens had been ripped bare of plants – lignum vitae, sea grape, casuarinas, bougainvilla, hibiscus – scoured by the wind off the face of the earth. The few palm trees that had survived were bent double. Others, less resilient, had lost their heads, snapped off about ten feet above ground. One enormous trunk had crashed down on the pool bar, reducing it to rubble. Other trunks lay higgledy-piggledy around the grounds like enormous matchsticks tossed down by an angry god.
We walked down the path, hardly speaking, climbing over limbs, wading through piles of wet debris. When we reached the resort gate, the guardhouse had disappeared. The turnstile pointed straight up, twisted like a strawberry Twizzler.
‘Want to go into town?’ I asked, curious to see how the settlement had fared.
Paul checked his watch. ‘No time.’
Back at the Tamarind Tree, the staff were still policing the grounds. The wind blew hot and gentle as we helped with the cleanup. We picked up fallen coconuts and branches and tossed them into what was left of the golf cart shed where we hoped the wind couldn’t find them.
I was helping Jeremy Thomas check the shutters, securing all the dog downs when the wind began to rise, blowing hot against my neck.
Jeremy banged his fist against a shutter, testing it. ‘Inside.’
I went.
‘Where’s Alice?’ I asked Molly as I pawed through my duffle looking for the Fig Newtons, dreading the return of Helen. We’d already had one hour of hell. Wasn’t that enough?
‘I don’t think she’s back yet.’
I ripped the cellophane off the package and held it out. ‘Cookie?’
‘Thanks.’
‘Where’s Paul?’
‘Bathroom.’ Molly took a bite of cookie and chewed. ‘Said if he wasn’t back in five minutes, send out a search party.’
‘Ha ha.’
Alice Madonna was a two-cookie worry, then a three. ‘Should I go look for her?’ I asked Paul when he came back from the bathroom. ‘What’ll happen to her if they bar the door?’
Paul’s arm snaked around my shoulder and squeezed. ‘Give her a few minutes. She’s silly, but not stupid. She’ll be back.’
Paul was right.
Alice came back, but she was not alone. She scurried through the door staggering under the weight of a purple leather bag, earning a frown from Gator who was waiting at the door, counting heads, to bar it. Alice headed straight for her corner and sat down. I couldn’t see her face from where I sat, but as she passed me, framed in the light at the door, I suspected she’d been crying. Her sneakers, once white, were water-stained and covered in sand.
I wormed out from under my husband’s arm. ‘Let me see what’s bothering her.’
I crossed the room in seconds and popped behind the bar. ‘Hey, Alice, mind if I join you?’
She shook her head ‘no’ which I took to mean yes, so I sat down.
Her legs extended straight out in front of her, she held the bag on her lap.
‘I just couldn’t take it any more,’ she sobbed. She wrapped her arms tightly around the bag, and it was then that I noticed it wasn’t a bag. It was a pet carrier.
‘It’ll be over soon,’ I said, thinking she meant the storm.
She stared at me, tears streaming down her cheeks. ‘He said I couldn’t keep it. I asked him why, why, why?’ She started bawling. ‘He’s such a bastard!’
‘What are you talking about, Alice? The ring?’
She sucked in her lips and looked at me sideways through her long, wet lashes. Slowly, she opened the hatch of the carrier. I started when an exuberant puppy leapt out, a white and gray mop of fur that stood up on its hind legs and joyfully licked the tears from Alice’s face.
No, not a puppy. The dog was a full-grown, brindle Scottish Terrier.
‘Isn’t he darling?’ Alice giggled, her tears vanquished at last. ‘Jaime said I couldn’t bring him into the shelter, that dogs weren’t allowed. What a liar! Gator brought Justice in for heaven’s sake. I couldn’t leave my little sweetie all alone in our cottage. Poor thing was terrified!’
Dread clutched at my innards, but I managed to say, ‘Where did Jaime get the dog, Alice?’
She shrugged. ‘I don’t know.’ She lifted the animal up like a doll, nuzzled his fur and said, ‘Mommy wuvs her widdle Beckums.’
‘Beckums?’
‘Beckham, as in David. I think he’s hot.’
She kissed the dog on the nose. ‘I couldn’t let Jaime take Beckums away, now could I?’
‘Why would Jaime want to take the dog away?’
She plopped Beckham in my lap, picked up my hand and placed it between the little dog’s shoulders. ‘Feel that tiny lump there? It’s a microchip. Jaime said it could be traced.’
I stared at Alice stupidly. Jaime had Frank and Sally’s boat. Jaime had Frank and Sally’s dog. And Jaime had probably given Alice Sally’s emerald ring. I wanted to call the police right away, but we were in the middle of a hurricane, so it would have to wait. I’d have to tell Gator instead.
Alice leaned her head against the bar and said dreamily, ‘If he’d throw a helpless little dog over a cliff, Hannah, can you imagine what he’d do with his own baby?’
The eye had passed, and Helen began to tear at us in earnest. She howled and shrieked like an enraged dragon, lashing the building with the flat of her tail.
My ears popped and my teeth ached as the eyewall swept over us and the air pressure changed. I grabbed Paul’s hand, my anchor. He’d keep me from blowing away.
‘I think Alice is pregnant,’ I said, holding on tight, my lips against his ear.