itâs how Adam and Eve must have felt. Surely they looked back at Eden, donât you think, as they started barefoot down the path to where we are now, in our glum political world of bullets and bombs and satellite TV? Looked past the angel guarding the shut gate with his fiery sword? Sure. I think they must have wanted one more look at the green world they had lost, with its sweet water and kind-hearted animals. And its snake, of course.
ii
Thereâs a charm-bracelet of keys lying off the west coast of Florida. If you had your seven-league boots on, you could step from Longboat to Lido, from Lido to Siesta, from Siesta to Casey. The next step takes you to Duma Key, nine miles long and half a mile wide at its widest, between Casey Key and Don Pedro Island. Most of itâs uninhabited, a tangle of banyans, palms, and Australian pines with an uneven, dune-rumpled beach running along the Gulf edge. The beach is guarded by a waist-high band of sea oats. âThe sea oats belong,â Wireman once told me, âbut the rest of that shit has no business growing without irrigation.â For much of the time I spent on DumaKey, no one lived there but Wireman, the Bride of the Godfather, and me.
Sandy Smith was my Realtor in St. Paul. I had asked her to find me a place that was quietâIâm not sure I used the word isolated, but I may haveâbut still within reach of services. Thinking of Kamenâs advice, I told Sandy I wanted to lease for a year, and price wasnât an object, as long as I wasnât getting skint too bad. Even depressed and in more or less constant pain, I was averse to being taken advantage of. Sandy fed my requirements into her computer, and Big Pink was what came out. It was just the luck of the draw.
Except I donât really believe that. Because even my earliest pictures seem to have, I donât know, something.
Something.
iii
On the day I arrived in my rental car (driven by Jack Cantori, the young man Sandy Smith had hired through a Sarasota employment agency), I knew nothing about the history of Duma Key. I only knew one reached it by crossing a WPA-era drawbridge from Casey Key. Once over this bridge, I observed that the northern tip of the island was free of the vegetation that tangled the rest. Instead there was actual landscaping (in Florida this means palms and grass undergoing nearly constant irrigation). I could see half a dozen houses strung along the narrow, patchy band of road leading south, the last one of them a huge and undeniably elegant hacienda.
And close by, less than a football fieldâs length from the Duma Key end of the drawbridge, I could see a pink house hanging over the Gulf.
âIs that it?â I asked, thinking Please let that be it. Thatâs the one I want. âIt is, isnât it?â
âI donât know, Mr. Freemantle,â Jack said. âI know Sarasota, but this is the first time Iâve ever been on Duma. Never had any reason to come here.â He pulled up to the mailbox, which had a big red 13 on it. He glanced at the folder lying between us on the seat. âThis is it, all right. Salmon Point, number thirteen. I hope youâre not superstitious.â
I shook my head, not taking my eyes off it. I didnât worry about broken mirrors or crossing black catsâ paths, but Iâm very much a believer in . . . well, maybe not love at first sight, thatâs a little too Rhett-and-Scarlett for me, but instant attraction? Sure. Itâs the way I felt about Pam the first time I met her, on a double date (she was with the other guy). And itâs the way I felt about Big Pink from the very first.
She stood on pilings with her chin jutting over the high-tide line. There was a NO TRESPASSING sign slanting askew on an old gray stick beside the driveway, but I guessed that didnât apply to me. âOnce you sign the lease, you have it for a year,â Sandy told me. âEven if