Paul Levine
The Deep Blue Alibi
One
'Forget it, Steve. I'm not having sex in the ocean.'
'C'mon,' he pleaded. 'Be adventurous.'
'It's undignified and unsanitary. Maybe even illegal.'
'It's the Keys, Vic. Nothing's illegal.'
Steve Solomon and Victoria Lord waded in the shallow water just off Sunset Key. At the horizon, the sun sizzled just above the Gulf.
'In this light, you're really magnificent,' he said.
'Nice try, hotshot, but the bikini stays on.'
Still, she had to admit that there was something erotic about the warm water, the salty breeze, the glow of the setting sun. And Steve looked totally hot, his complexion tinged reddish bronze, his dark hair slick and lustrous.
'It'll be great.' He slipped his arms around her waist. 'A saltwater hump-a-rama.'
'We can't. There are people around.'
Twenty yards away, a young couple with that honeymoon look-satiated and clueless-peddled by on a water bike. On the beach, hotel guests carried drinks in plastic cups along the shoreline. Music floated across the water from the hotel's tiki-hut bar, Andre Toussaint singing 'Island Woman.'
Why couldn't Steve see she wasn't in the mood? How can someone so good at picking a jury be so oblivious to the ebb and flow of his lover's emotions?
She pried his hands off her hips. 'There's seaweed. And sea lice. And sea urchins.' She'd run out of
'Bor-ing.'
'So you find our sex life a big yawn?'
'I didn't say that.'
She sharpened her voice into cross-exam mode. 'Isn't it true that after a few months, all your girlfriends start to bore you?'
'Not the ones who dumped me.'
'Do you realize you have relationship attention disorder?'
'Whatever that is, I deny it.' He pulled her close, and she could feel the bulge in his swim trunks. 'I love our sex life. And the room's fine. Clean sheets. A/C. Nice view. Why don't we go in now and get started?'
'You go. Start without me.'
'C'mon. We can catch the sunset from the balcony.'
She looked toward the horizon, where thin ribbons of clouds were streaked the color of a bruised plum. 'We won't make it in time.'
No way she was going to miss the orange fireball dip into the sea. She loved the eternal rhythm of day into night, the sun rising from the Atlantic, setting in the Gulf. Day after day, year after year. What dependability. She doubted Steve understood that. If he had his way, the sun would zigzag across the peninsula, stopping for a beer in Islamorada.
She had another reason to postpone the lovemaking.
She'd been thinking about it all the way to Key West. A pesky mosquito of a thought, buzzing in her brain. She hated to ruin the evening, but she had to tell him, and soon.
'Okay, I give up,' Steve said. '
She brought her legs up and floated on her back. Looking toward the horizon upside down, the sun floated at the waterline, connected to its reflection by a fiery rope. 'Nine o'clock. And I told you-he's not really my uncle.'
'I know. Good old Hal Griffin. Your father's partner, the guy who bought you fancy presents when you were a spoiled brat.'
'And you 'The Princess.' '
So Steve had been listening after all, she thought. 'You think the name fits?'
'Like your Manolo Blahniks.'
She started swimming, heading out to sea, toward the setting sun. Smooth strokes knifing through the water, now glazed a boiling orange. Steve swam alongside, struggling to keep up. 'What I don't get is why Hal Griffin called you after all these years.'
The same question had been puzzling Victoria. She hadn't seen Uncle Grif since her father's funeral when she was twelve. Now, without warning, a phone call.
'All I know, he has some legal work for me.'
'You mean for
'He didn't know about you.'
'But you told him, right? Solomon and Lord.'
'Of course.'
God, she hated this. She had to tell Steve the truth. But how?
He was flailing away, kicking up a storm, trying to catch her. Except for swimming-all splash, no speed- Steve was an accomplished athlete. He'd run track in high school and played baseball at the University of Miami, where he was a mediocre hitter but a terrific base runner.
A good primer for lawyering, Victoria figured. Conning the pitcher, pilfering the catcher's signs, then
A hundred yards offshore, she started treading water, waiting for him to catch up.
'So where are we eating?' he asked, breathing hard.
So very Steve. He would plan dinner while still eating lunch. 'Uncle Grif made reservations at Louie's Backyard.'
He made an appreciative
Sex and food, she thought. Did he ever think about anything else?
'And we'll be back in the room in time for
Yes, of course he did.
Was it his imagination, or was something bothering Victoria? Steve couldn't tell. She'd been quiet on the drive down the Overseas Highway, occasionally glancing toward the Gulf, where red coral heads peeked through the