Chapter 13

Marina

All I wanted was a glass of water. I definitely didn’t get up to sneak a glimpse at Gil, and my heart absolutely didn’t plummet when I realized he’s not where I left him.

Huh?

He could have stepped out for a moment—but then again, when good things come into my life, they disappear.

I really hope he doesn’t turn out to be one of them.

Chugging the glass of tap water, I head to the bathroom, and my breath quickens.

I joked about a gator breaking into my cabin, but I didn’t think it would actually happen. My throat bobs as I stumble backward. Either I’m dreaming, or this is the most Florida thing that could possibly be happening to me right now.

There’s something large and covered in scales … sleeping in my bathtub.

While soap bubbles obscure details, legs stick out from one side of the tub—the same ones I saw under the glass-bottomed boat, I know it.

Which means I’m dreaming.

The scales, in shades of blue and green, awaken something buried deep within me. His limbs are long and muscular with webbed hands and talons that look like they could slash me in half with just a flick.

I stumble backward, bumping into the pages of my diary that are still hanging to dry. There’s a drawing there—stick figures with the shaky letters M + G in a heart.

It’s him.

But then, I notice his necklace—Gil’s necklace—on the edge of the tub.

Gil.

Gale.

Gil.

Gale?

G.

To me, Gil has felt magnetic this whole time. In a strange, uncanny way—seeing him now, everything makes sense. The wide-set eyes, the full lips, they’re still there; they somehow fit now. My eyes flit down his chest, from scale to scale, and heat rushes to my face.

He’s beautiful.

Really, truly beautiful. And totally impossible.

“Gale?” I whisper, reaching out with shaking hands. I’ve always had an overactive imagination. Stories like this turned my adolescent life lonely, painting me into a liar. What if this is a sign and history is going to repeat itself? Will the one genuine connection I’ve made disappear?

Wake up, I beg myself. If this isn’t real, just wake up.

Yellow eyes close in on me. He grips the edge of the tub before rising to his full height.

The fins on his back flare straight up in what I hope is surprise rather than anger.

His lanky form scrambles to the edge of the tub.

Then, all in one motion he leaps, running for the door as I let out a scream. Not because I’m afraid…

I could never be afraid of him.

No, it’s because he is totally and completely naked and I—

“Wait!” I shout, reaching out to grab his wrist, but I’m a second too late. In the flurry of movement, I’m not even sure he heard me. Freezing in the doorway of the rented cabin, the hanging pages have snagged on the points of his fins. In moments, entries from my journals rain down on us.

As Gil moves, he becomes tangled in the strings and a mess of memories wrap around him. Every summer we spent together, every laugh we shared, he was my favorite part—and he’s back.

The words tangle as thick as the string that’s caught on his fins. They splay wide, making him look like a startled porcupine.

Tell him.

Tell him.

I stare, open-mouthed and unblinking.

“You… you’re, you…” I begin, looking at him from head to toe. Oh my God, I forgot he’s naked. I clamp my hand over my eyes. Naked. Why is he so naked?

“I’m sorry, darlin’,” he says. I take a deep breath to compose myself, and laughter begins to pour from me.

“Okay, okay,” I manage, but it’s all giggles. God damn it.

A damp breeze blows across my face. I bite back a grin because what would he have to be sorry for? Well, except for not telling me sooner, obviously. And the naked thing—but he was in the bath. Maybe if I can just find that robe then we can…

Oh no, no, the robe is going to look so much better now. How will I contain myself?

Why is it so quiet?

I open my eyes, and the door is flung wide open with Gil nowhere in sight.

Before I can even register my own movements, my bare feet are running across the rough crab grass, chasing webbed footprints stamped into the damp earth until I hit the edge of the springs.

No, no, no.

I brace myself, catching my breath with my hands on my thighs. “Wait!”

I turn toward the sound of branches cracking behind me.

When a flashlight shines directly in my eyes, I squint at the man holding it—an old park ranger with a weary look. Oh my God, I’m going to get arrested.

“You need some help ma’am?” he asks, his face softening.

“I just…” I glance back at the water, then down the path to my cabin where stray papers have blown out after me—breadcrumbs of memories. “Sorry, my notebook… um, blew away?” The upward inflection hangs at the end, a question neither of us can answer.

“Hmm.” He eyes my pink hair for long enough, I safely assume he thinks I’m a hooligan. I tap my heels, itching to dive into the water, to try to find Gil, but every moment that passes feels like a lifetime, and this man isn’t leaving.

Turns out, the park ranger is helpful.

Too helpful.

He insists on gathering up the papers that have blown across the pathway and gives me a lift back to the cabin. After he leaves, I sit with a hard thud on the ground, realizing Gil is gone for good now.

Was he ever really here at all?

I have to do something, anything. I go inside to splash water on my face, and something sticks to the bottom of my foot. A journal entry.

The page is crumpled and waterlogged but there’s an unmistakable drawing of cheese balls in the corner, alongside the words, “I finally have someone to play with.”

A memory surfaces—sweet and silly. Without thinking, I grab my keys.

The connection I feel with Gil isn’t something strange, random, or too fast. It’s like I already know him because in a lot of ways, I do.

After all this time, I’m not letting him go this easily.

If I can’t catch him, fine. I’ll have to lure him back.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.