Photo: silvervoyager
It was the view that caught his heart when they’d first visited Tortola. The twins had just turned ten. He’d gotten a miserable case of traveler’s diarrhea and spent two days cocooned inside Aunt Essie’s cottage while everyone else was at the beach. He’d initially felt sorry for himself, but then the quietude enveloped him, and he found himself cherishing the time away from chit-chatter and the demands of the children, love them though he did.
He’d recovered sufficiently by the third day, and the shore was fabulous. Still a piece of him remained on the cottage’s porch, gazing into the horizon, sipping bland tea, and feeling a calm he hadn’t known possible.
They’d visited several more times over the years and when Aunt Essie died, she left him the cottage to sell, “for a nest-egg.”
The boys were in college. Bernice had moved on. He decided to move in.
For What Pegman Saw: British Virgin Islands
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