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Authors: Randy Wayne White

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BOOK: The Man Who Ivented Florida
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"No, they'll never let me have a cat. I tried."

"One person has a cat, the next thing you know, someone will want a kennel."

But most of the men were focused on Tuck now. "You say the tarpon feed right by your house?"

"Only in the spring and summer. This time of year, it's the snook, isn't it, Joe? Gets so noisy at night, it's kinda hard to sleep. All that splashing."

"That's why I like redfish," Ervin said, giving Tuck a look, showing him that he was in on whatever joke Tuck was playing. "They're quieter. Let's you hear the owls at night, so you can go out and look at the orchids growing wild."

Joseph thought, Put two frog eaters together, and they'll fight over who can tell the biggest lie. Back at Mango, all Tuck did was complain about how the fish had disappeared.

John Dunn said, "It sounds awfully nice. I don't think I've ever heard of the place. Mango?"

"Just a run-down old fish camp, most the places abandoned—"

"It took me awhile, but I found it!" The nice-looking woman, Thelma, was hurrying toward them, holding up some kind of paper in her hand. Tuck seemed irritated by the interruption, but he waited politely as she came closer, listening to her say, "I bought it at the supermarket this morning, but Jenny wanted to borrow it, and she loaned it to Mrs. Butler over on Nevada. But here it is! Now I know where I saw you." She was beaming at Tuck. "There's a whole story about you here. The
National Enquirer. "

Tucker said, "The
National
what?"

The lady who had been studying them said,
"That's
where I heard the name."

Thelma held the paper out to him. "You mean you haven't seen it? It just came out. It's brand-new, every Sunday—"

Tucker flipped the pulp magazine open, holding it out at arm's length so that he could see. "Say, now . . . say! Looka that there headline!" He was reading to himself, moving his lips a little. "This paper—many people buy it?"

"Of course, millions. All over the nation. Everyone I know reads it." Thelma was beside Tuck's horse, the others crowded around behind her, trying to get a look at the paper. "You're a celebrity, Mr. Gatrell. And we're not going to let you get away without having some lunch and telling us if it's really true or not. I've always wondered about those stories! Lloyd, don't we have some sandwiches left over from the party yesterday?"

John Dunn said, "I don't care what the story's about, I want to hear more about those fish."

Joseph thought, I could eat three or four sandwiches, and I bet they won't charge us a cent. Tuck swung down off his saddle and held the paper up for Joseph to see. "What you think, Joe. Is that the best damn picture of me and Roscoe you ever seen? And you look pretty good yourself."

In the photo, Tucker stood grinning beneath his cowboy hat, pointing at Roscoe's withers while Joseph, on Buster, looked on. Buster looked nice, Joseph thought. Real handsome, except for the cut mane—and those crazy spots on his butt.

Beneath the photo, there was a line that read: "Native Floridian Tucker Gatrell has proven that an artesian well found on his ranch has amazing regenerative powers."

While Joseph read, he heard Ervin, behind him, say, "Hang on, let me park the truck. Say—you folks like fiddle music?"

 

 

ELEVEN

 

Ford
said to Sally Carmel, "You mean you buy this kind of newspaper? Or, what is it—a magazine?"

They had the new issue of the
National Enquirer
spread out on the table, opened to the full-page story about Tucker Gatrell.

The headline went across the top of the page: FLORIDA'S FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH DISCOVERED!

Standing beside Ford, her arm folded over his shoulder, Sally said, "No, it was like I told you. I was standing in line at the grocery—at Bailey's Store?—and I happened to pick it up and leaf through because there were people ahead of me, everybody writing checks. And there it was. I just started laughing when I saw the picture."

All around Ford's living quarters were sacks of groceries—stalks of celery sticking out, the tops of two wine bottles, Asti Spu-mante. There was a twelve-pack of Coors Light with condensation beads showing on the cardboard as the ceiling fan whirled overhead. Sally had been in such a hurry to show him the story that she and Ford hadn't taken time to put the groceries away yet.

"I can't believe he'd pull a stunt like this. No, I take that back. Of course I believe it. Vitamin water, that was hard enough to believe. Now it's the Fountain of Youth."

Sally touched a finger to the paper, reading. She said, "Maybe he didn't tell them that. You know how these papers exaggerate. Maybe he said vitamin water, and they just blew it up to make a better story."

The story read:

 

Why is native Floridian Tucker Gatrell smiling? Because he has discovered the long-sought and legendary Fountain of Youth, that's why. Gatrell is a Florida cowboy and he and his best pal—his horse, Roscoe!—found the little artesian well bubbling on a forgotten corner of his own cattle ranch in the bayside village of Mango on Florida's southwest Gulf Coast.

According to Gatrell, he and his best pal, along with several other of Gatrell's friends, started drinking the water months ago. All of them have noticed amazing changes in their health.

"I know what it's like to be young again," Gatrell told the
Enquirer.
"Not only that, but I had Roscoe gelded years ago. Now his reproductive organs have grown back. You would have to be a man to understand what news like that would mean to someone my age!"

 

Sally said, "See? That's not the way Tuck talks. He'd never say something like that. 'Reproductive organs?' Come on."

"No, I see what you're saying. But that's Tuck. This is exactly the sort of thing he'd do. Do you remember me saying how tricky he was? That's why I didn't want to have any part of it." Ford stepped away from the table and began to put away groceries while Sally continued to read.

"Don't be mad at him, Doc. The old guy's trying so hard."

"Uh-huh, that much is true." He looked over at her briefly. Pretty woman in her go-to-the-grocery jade blouse and Land's End slacks that were pleated, belted up around her lean waist. Brown toes sticking out of her sandals, and that hair of hers, bright as liquid copper, swinging in the light as she bent over the table to read. It made him smile, looking at her. Knowing he could go over to her if he wanted and put his arms around her and hold her, touch her if he wanted, and that it would be okay . . . and it also made him a little uneasy, knowing they had become much more intimate than he had planned, far faster than he had hoped. Ford told her, "I'm not saying I would change anything."

She looked at him, a soft expression on her face, her eyes moving to his eyes. "Thanks, Doc. Me, neither."

That's the way it had been. For four days? Five days? No, it was Wednesday, so it had been more than a week now. Since . . . the night after he'd driven to Mango and she'd fixed dinner. Nice dinner, with a candle on the middle of the tablecloth, her face and hair flickering in the shadows, sitting across from him. Moving her food around but not eating much, holding the fork in her long fingers. Ford had had no appetite, either. Being that close to her alone in the same room. They had talked but didn't say much because of that feeling. Like something pressing on his abdomen every time he tried to breathe. Then they were standing over the sink, washing the dishes, talking about something, and the next thing Ford knew, his hand was on her's, then she was in his arms, soapy or sweaty—he didn't know or care—and then they were kissing, their faces wet.

It had almost happened that night, but not quite. Sally had said she wasn't ready yet, because of the marriage. The divorce, she meant. But then they were holding and kissing again, touching, yet it still didn't happen because of something she said they had to talk about.

"I don't know how to ... what I'm trying to say is ... we should talk about our backgrounds. It's so terrible even to have to worry about it. . . . Do you understand what I mean?"

Ford had understood. He and Tomlinson had spent enough time talking about it. "The Modern Specter," Tomlinson had called it. "The Dark Gift. Because of it," Tomlinson had said, "the human race will never again know total spontaneity. Never again will we know a moment free of the knowledge of our own vulnerability. Or our own mortality. The last retreat has been taken from us."

Which, Ford had thought at the time, was just more spiritual wailing in the face of a serious biological anomaly: a fatal virus, sexually transmitted. But in that instant, in Sally's arms, Ford realized that Tomlinson was close to being right.

So they had talked. Talked all night, nearly. Coyness couldn't be tolerated; discretion became a necessary casualty—one more ghost of romance that had to be abandoned to hard reality. In ways, that kind of complete disclosure seemed to Ford as demeaning as being marched naked through a crowded laboratory. To betray so many past confidences ... to impose upon the privacy of other women he had known. Even though their names were never mentioned, it seemed an intrusion upon the essential privacy of whatever time they had shared, and Ford felt diminished by it. Even so, there was also something oddly sensual in that kind of total honesty. It demanded a complete letting down of facades that at once mocked their frailties but also brought them very close in a very short span of hours.

The next night, after a sunset boat ride at Ford's place, it had happened. The next morning, too. And the late morning. Then again in the early afternoon, the late afternoon, and most of the next night. Once they started, it had seemed, they couldn't stop.

Their first joinings had been enthusiastic but wary, a little self-conscious, and slightly mechanical—he and the woman trying to do everything just right. But then their couplings escalated into a strange kind of binge behavior. They couldn't get enough of each other. The touching, the exploring, the freedom of being naked and alone, just the two of them, free to please the other in any way at any time. Lying spent, sweating, all Ford had to do was look for a moment at her breathing form, the slow lift of abdomen, the pale blue veins of her breasts, the slow pulse of color in her nipples, her deep-set eyes holding him . . . and his body stirred, ready again.

"You're going to think terrible things about me. The insatiable woman. The way I'm acting."

"No. Never that."

"I'm not like this. I'm really not. I just. . . feel like I've known you for such a long time—"

"You have."

"And now. To finally let go. I don't know what it is. . . ."

Ford had thought,
Lust is what it is,
but at odd moments he too had wondered about their behavior. It had, he thought, the flavor of revolt. A kind of wild insubordination in the face of the Dark Gift. Like captives who flipped hand signs through the bars at their captors, the two of them had lunged around, bare-skinned, in an insurrection against the latex shield that ultimately separated them. And it always did. It was always there, the subject of many bawdy jokes that unfailingly brought laughter because the only alternative was to weep—or so Sally had said. The blood and bones make-up of their own bodies could not be trusted. No human's body could ever be completely trusted again.

"We should both get blood tests. I mean ... if you think ... or would like the relationship to continue."

Ford had almost said something about already driving vials of water to Tampa for testing (he had; a buddy of his would drop the results back in a couple of days) and now she was asking for blood. But he didn't. The subject was too serious. He had answered, "Of course. It's something we should think about," because any less evasive answer would, to him, have seemed like a commitment.

And he wasn't ready for that. . . and he hoped to hell she wasn't either.

They had split their time together, staying at Ford's place then at Sally's, then back at Ford's again. On Sunday, though, she had arrived with a flight duffel of clothes and her big camera-equipment bag, telling Ford that she had arranged for her neighbor Mrs. Taylor to feed her cat. And Mr. Rigaberto had agreed to take care of Tucker's dog and cattle. Having sold most of his chickens, he had little else to do.

"If you don't mind," she had said. "This way, we can both get some work done."

Ford had thought, She already wants to live together? but he had said, "Great, stay as long as you want," convincing himself that it would be a mistake not to at least give it a try. She was an attractive woman; he enjoyed her company . . . and hadn't he spent the last few months damning his own loneliness and wallowing in self-pity?

So, for the last three nights, she had stayed with him. She used his skiff to probe the rookery islands in Pine Island Sound, shooting rolls of film. He worked in the lab, shipping off specimens and doing research for his paper on the effects of turbidity and nutrient pollution on sea grasses. Every other day, he checked his sea mobiles, weighing the dripping mass of growing sponges, tunicates, and sea squirts.

They made love. They talked a lot. Each morning he made breakfast for her. Eggs with mango slices. Fish poached in coconut water.

BOOK: The Man Who Ivented Florida
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