âWatch your step, please. Please, watch your step. Thank you.â Liz took a ticket from a sunburned man with palm trees on his shirt, then waited patiently for a woman with two bulging straw baskets to dig out another one.
âI hope you havenât lost it, Mabel. I told you to let me hold it.â
âI havenât lost it,â the woman said testily before she pulled out the little piece of blue cardboard.
âThank you. Please take your seats.â It was several more minutes before everyone was settled and she could take her own. âWelcome aboard the Fantasy, ladies and gentlemen.â
With her mind on a half dozen other things, Liz began her opening monologue. She gave an absentminded nod to the man on the dock who cast off the ropes before she started the engine. Her voice was pleasant and easy as she took another look at her watch. They were already fifteen minutes behind schedule. She gave one last scan of the beach, skimming by lounge chairs, over bodies already stretched and oiled slick, like offerings to the sun. She couldnât hold the tour any longer.
The boat swayed a bit as she backed it from the dock and took an eastern course. Though her thoughts were scattered, she made the turn from the coast expertly. She could have navigated the boat with her eyes closed. The air that ruffled around her face was soft and already warming, though the hour was early. Harmless and powder-puff white, clouds dotted the horizon. The water, churned by the engine, was as blue as the guidebooks promised. Even after ten years, Liz took none of it for grantedâespecially her livelihood. Part of that depended on an atmosphere that made muscles relax and problems disappear.
Behind her in the long, bullet-shaped craft were eighteen people seated on padded benches. They were already murmuring about the fish and formations they saw through the glass bottom. She doubted if any of them thought of the worries theyâd left behind at home.
âWeâll be passing Paraiso Reef North,â Liz began in a low, flowing voice. âDiving depths range from thirty to fifty feet. Visibility is excellent, so youâll be able to see star and brain corals, sea fans and sponges, as well as schools of sergeant majors, groupers and parrot fish. The grouper isnât one of your prettier fish, but itâs versatile. Theyâre all born female and produce eggs before they change sex and become functioning males.â
Liz set her course and kept the speed steady. She went on to describe the elegantly colored angelfish, the shy, silvery small-mouth grunts, and the intriguing and dangerous sea urchin. Her clients would find the information useful when she stopped for two hours of snorkeling at Palancar Reef.
Sheâd made the run before, too many times to count. It might have become routine, but it was never monotonous. She felt now, as she always did, the freedom of open water, blue sky and the hum of engine with her at the controls. The boat was hers, as were three others, and the little concrete block dive shop close to shore. Sheâd worked for all of it, sweating through months when the bills were steep and the cash flow slight. Sheâd made it. Ten years of struggle had been a small price to pay for having something of her own. Turning her back on her country, leaving behind the familiar, had been a small price to pay for peace of mind.
The tiny, rustic island of Cozumel in the Mexican Caribbean promoted peace of mind. It was her home now, the only one that mattered. She was accepted there, respected. No one on the island knew of the humiliation and pain sheâd gone through before sheâd fled to Mexico. Liz rarely thought of it, though she had a vivid reminder.
Faith. Just the thought of her daughter made her smile. Faith was small and bright and precious, and so far away. Just six weeks, Liz thought, and sheâd be home from school for the summer.
Sending her to Houston to her grandparents had been for the best, Liz reminded herself whenever the ache of loneliness became acute. Faithâs education was more important than a motherâs needs. Liz had worked, gambled, struggled so that Faith could have everything she was entitled to, everything she would have had if her fatherâ¦
Determined, Liz set her mind on other things. Sheâd promised herself a decade before that she would cut Faithâs father from her mind, just as he had cut her from his life. It had been a mistake, one made in naïveté and passion, one that had changed the course of her life forever. But sheâd won something precious from it: Faith.