by Lowe, Tom
The Tiki Bar was a restaurant on stilts, a place that appealed to bikers, babes, fishermen and vacationing families. Beyond the food and drinks, it evoked a 1950’s picture postcard atmosphere addressed from a Florida of simpler times. Fifty percent of the customers came from the marina neighborhood of live-a-boards and transients, mariners with seafaring gypsy blood in restless genes. They were men who worked the shrimp boats for a paycheck and the distance the sea could place between them and their troubles anchored to land bound conflicts. The Tiki Bar’s hardwood floors were stained into a piebald splatter of spilled beer, grease, and more than a few drops of blood. Bar art.
This Saturday morning all the isinglass windows were rolled up, the sea breeze delivering the smell of the grilled fish across the marina. One person sat at the rustic bar. A dozen sunburned tourists and charter boat deckhands were seated at the tables made from large wooden spools that, in a former life, were used to wrap telephone cables around them. The big spools were shellacked and turned on their sides. Three chairs to each spool. The hole in the center great for tossing peanut shells.
Kim Davis beamed when O’Brien and Max approached. Kim’s chestnut hair was pinned up. Her caramel colored eyes were bright, like morning sunlight shining through amber stained-glass. She stood behind the bar, rinsing a beer mug and timing a slow-pour of a draft Guinness.
“Sean, you ever notice Miss Max is always leading you? She’s the only female that can get away with it.” Kim smiled, dimples appearing on her tanned face. She handed the Guinness to a charter boat captain who sipped it before returning to his table. “Hold on, Max” she said, picking up a piece of popcorn shrimp and walking around the end of the bar. She knelt down, Max almost jumped in her lap. “Hi, baby. Here’s one of your favorites.” Max took the treat, tail wagging, and sat to eat.
O’Brien said, “She’ll be back for cocktail sauce.” He leaned in and kissed Kim on the cheek.
Kim smiled, standing, pressing her open palms against the blue jeans that accentuated her hips. “It’s about time you get back to your boat here at the marina. Were you getting a little lonely out there on the river?”
“A little.” O’Brien smiled. “My old house is a lot like owning an old boat. It always needs a coat of paint or wax.” He held up a tin of boat wax.
“I’m off at four, if you’re still at it, I’ll ice down a few Corona’s for you.”
“Sounds good, but you’d first have to sneak them by Nick’s boat.” O’Brien could feel someone staring at him. He glanced over his shoulder and locked eyes with an older man sitting by himself at the very end of the bar. The man wore his white hair neatly parted on the left, ruddy thin face, polo shirt, and khaki pants.
Kim said, “He’s been waiting for you.”
“Who is he, and how did he know I was coming here today?”
“I didn’t get his name. He’s been sipping black coffee for two hours, and guarding that folder in front of him like a hawk. He asked at the marina office whether or not you lived aboard. Nick was in the office paying his rent and overheard the man. Nick told him he knew you and that you had plans to work on your boat today. So the gent’s been waiting your arrival.”
“I wonder what he wants.”
“Maybe you should find out. On second thought … oh what the hell, Sean. He’s just a harmless, elderly gentleman, right? But what if something in that folder isn’t so harmless? I’ll keep an eye on Max for you.”