cookies for me and doggy treats for you,â she told him. âFriends stick together, and thatâs you and me. Thatâs what this six months is all about. Learning that we need nobody else.â
* * *
The wind swept in from the southâa wind so fierce that it took the meteorologists by surprise. It took Tasmaniaâs fishing fleet by surprise, and it stretched the emergency services to the limit. To say it took Raoulâs unprepared little yacht by surprise was an understatement.
Raoul was an excellent yachtsman. What his skills needed, though, was a thoroughly seaworthy boat to match them.
He didnât have one.
For a while he used the storm jib, trying to use the wind to keep some semblance of control. Then a massive wave crested and broke right over him, rolling the boat as if it was tumbleweed. The little boat self-righted. Raoul had clipped on lifelines. He was safeâfor nowâbut the sail was shredded.
And that was the end of his illusion of control.
He was tossed wherever the wind and the sea dictated. All he could do was hold on and wait for the weather to abate. And hope it did so before Rosebud disintegrated and left him to the mercy of the sea.
CHAPTER TWO
T WO DAYS INTO the worst storm to have hit the island since the start of her stay Claire was going stir-crazy. She hadnât been able to step outside once. The wind was so strong that a couple of times sheâd seriously worried that the whole house might be picked up.
âYou and me, Rocky,â sheâd told him, when heâd whimpered at the sound of the wind roaring across the island. âLike Dorothy and Toto. When we fly, weâll fly together.â
Thankfully they hadnât flown, and finally the wind was starting to settle. The sun was starting to peep through the clouds and she thought she might just venture out and see the damage.
She quite liked a good stormâas long as it didnât threaten to carry her into the Antarctic.
So she rugged up, and made Rocky wear the dinky little dog coat that he hated but she thought looked cute, and they headed out together.
As soon as she opened the door she thought about retreating, but Rocky was tearing out into the wind, joyful at being allowed outside, heading for his favourite place in the world. The beach.
The sea would look fantastic. She just had to get close enough to the beach to see it. The sea mist was so heavy she could scarcely see through itâor was it foam blasted up by the wind? She could scarcely push against it.
But she was outside. The wind wasnât so strong that it was hurling stones. She could put her head down and fight it.
Below the house was a tiny coveâa swimming beach in decent weather. She headed there now, expecting to see massive damage, expecting to see...
A boat?
Or part of a boat.
She stopped, so appalled she almost forgot to breathe. A boat was smashed and part submerged on the rocks just past the headland.
The boat wasnât big. A weekend sailor? It must have been trying to reach the relative safety of the beach, manoeuvring into the narrow channel of deep water, but the seas would have been overwhelming, driving it onto the rocks.
Dear God, was there anyone...?
And almost as soon as she thought it she saw a flash of yellow in the water, far out, between the rocks and the beach. A figure was struggling through the waves breaking around the rocks.
Whoa.
Claire knew these waters, even thoughtsheâd never swum here. Sheâd skimmed stones and watched the tide in calm weather. She knew there was a rip, starting from the beach and swinging outward.
The swimmer was headed straight into it. If he was to have any chance he had to swim sideways, towards the edge of the cove, then turn and swim beside the rip rather than in it.
But he was too far away to hear if she yelled. The wind was still howling across the clifftops, drowning any hope of her being heard.
Was she a
Janwillem van de Wetering