Retribution Chapter 2 The autumn afternoon brought with it the most soothing warmth Levi could have imagined. The golden rays washed over his body as he sprawled in an old rickety bamboo rocker. An exquisitely woven piece of furniture willed to him by his late makuahine, who had been his well of endless hope while she lived. Through all the days of his boyhood growing up on the wide open ranges of Malu she had been his strength. Sadness filled his eyes as sweet memories carried him back to the days of his youth when mother had been the great strength of his existence. The lilikoi wine spread it’s warmth through his heaving chest as he sank deeper and deeper into memory. . . . He saw his brother Kalani. Older and seemingly wiser was this tall, lean boy that he idolized. The ease with which he progressed through each day made Levi marvel and smile. He’d of done anything for Kalani who was so much like a man at such a tender age, but then, their makuakane had died so young, leaving his wife widowed and his sons fatherless. Levi felt some anger toward his father for leaving them so soon. At that young age he could not understand why his father had gone and died. He blamed him for the grief he suffered, the same as any loved-one left behind blames those who leave us with such untimely grace. Only time had eased the emptiness that had gnawed at those tender years. A time of happiness that he felt cheated out of. A time when he was powerless to fight back. . . . The sudden high pitched screech of an Io (Hawk) exploded overhead and Levi was thankfully wrenched from the unpleasant digressions that had swallowed his thoughts. Pulled back from the hugging grasp of his youthful memories. His gaze turned skyward and he immediately saw the source of the disturbance. He smiled with instant recognition. “Lani!” he called as he bellowed a sound remarkably similar to the great bird’s own screech. “Come Lani,” he beckoned, and the winged creature gracefully descended in a slow wide arc, finally landing with a firm elegance upon the top post of the wide verenda’s ohia railing. “It’s good to see you my frined,” Levi uttered softly, the magnificent bird nodding and chirping in short clipped resonance. And Levi knew his greeting had been reciprocated. Both sat for sometime in complete and satisfied silence, the other’s company enough to content them both without the need for further verbal communications. Lani had flapped over to the rocker’s side arm and perched silently as Levi slowly rocked in the glow of the aging day. Storm had named this wild creature Lani, meaning Sky. Of course he knew the giving of a name held no significance for the creature, but he had a need to call his aikane (friend) something. Besides, the name seemed appropriate. Levi shrugged and settled heavily into his swaying chair, Lani perched steadfast at his side. . . . Hours before the falling of night, back down at sea level, Neki and his new charge, who’s name was Ilish Downs, found themselves sitting under the flimsy confines of a tin-roof cafe, for lack of a better description, although the description is fairly accurate. The establishment actually consisted of two sides, a back, and the standard corrugation tin roof, which had an overhang twice again the depth of the shed. This gave it the look of a beach-bar, complete with the customary chest high bar-counter with wooden stools standing tenuously along it’s entire length, two of which were presently occupied by Ilish and Neki. Beyond the bar lay the wooden lanai (patio) area that spread out under the extended overhang, which at the moment roared with the splatter of raindrops that cascaded down in a torrential downpour. Seemed to thunder with even greater ferocity than did the locomotive, which by the way, Ilish was extremely grateful to have escaped. Most thankful was she toward Neki. “I cannot begin to thank you enough sir,” she assured he knight in shining leather. “For your bravery on my behalf. And for saving me from the filthy clutches,” she shuddered repulsively, “of that villainous fiend.” She raised her voice to painful heights in order that she be heard over the thundering cloud burst. Neki smiled and offered her some dried fish, which filled a small wooden bowl that sat upon the well oiled bartop. “Have some opelu,” he insisted. “It’s ono, or as you would say, delicious.” Ilish wrinkled her brow and held her delicate fingers to her ample pink lips. “It’s just dried mackerel,” Neki assured her. “Haven’t you ever eaten mackerel before?” “I should say not sir,” came her flustered reply. Neki put the finger pinch of fish back into the bowl. “Why do you keep calling me sir?” he asked expectantly. “Why it’s the proper way for a young woman to address a young man,” she assured him properly. Neki threw his head back with a sniff. “My name is Neki,” he said softly, leaning over the bowl of dried fish so as to bring his face right up close to Ilish. “And that’s what I like to be called. Because it’s my name. If my parents had wanted me to be called sir, they would have named me so. Besides,” he continued with a growing smirk. “If you keep calling me sir, everyone will think that you belong to me. That you are my servant girl.” He eyed her closely, measuring her reaction. It wasn’t long in coming. “Your servant girl!” she repeated, her whisper filled with a sudden anger. “How dare you!” “I didn’t dare anything,” Neki complained. “I’m merely trying to explain how the local mind works. You are a girl.” “Indeed,” Ilish interrupted. “Yes well...” Neki continued. “You are a girl indeed. A woman in fact, and you insist on calling me sir. This would imply to all locals, myself included, that you were in my employ. My girl, my maid, my servant...Or whatever you would call it.” He waved his hand dismissively. “that’s absurd...!” Ilish began anew, but caught herself before her voice became a roar. She took a deep breath, grabbing at a piece of fish. She hoisted the ocean catch to her mouth in frustration and cringed as the salty flesh filled her mouth. She glanced at Neki and saw his smile stretching wide. In anger she swallowed the interesting mouthful. She reached for and grasped a cup of water that the barkeep had laid before her. She took a great swig of the refreshing liquid, her emerald eyes softening after a few moments. “Forgive me,” she finally relented. “Here I owe you my very life perhaps, and all I can do to repay your act of kindness and bravery is to carry on like a wild woman.” Her flashing eyes held such sincerity that Neki found himself touched by their innocent glow. “Don’t worry about it,” he replied, pinching a piece of fish and swallowing it. “I am often tread upon as if I were a door mat. Only useful for cleaning one’s foot upon.” He stared at Ilish. She was so beautiful. Her red hair. Her green eyes. He wanted to reach over and kiss away the troubled look he himself had just caused to spread across her perfect face. “I’m just fooling with you,” he finally smiled. Ilish stared at him for a few silent moments. His hair was so thick and black she thought. His brown eyes so wide and loving. His hands so big and strong. And that smile, she thrilled, was about to melt her heart. “Y-You, I-I’m...Oh!, I just don’t know what to do with you,” she fumed, the smile on her face wiping the anger away. “Why don’t we just start again. As if this were the very first moment we became aware of one another.” “Fine with me,” he smiled. She melted a little more. “Good!” she responded. “Then let me introduce myself. Which in and of itself is a rather forward thing to do...But under the circumstances...” “Yes, do intorduce yourself. I would truly like to learn your name so I might know what to call you. Besides, Servant Girl,” he quipped playfully, pinching another load of fish from the wooden bowl. “Your impossible,” she giggled, her eyes sparkling like luau torches reflecting off a shimmering lagoon. “My name is Ilish Downs,” she offered shyly. “Ilish...” Neki repeated softly. “I don’t think I’ve ever heard such a name before.” “I should think not,” she answered. “It is of Irish origins, although I was born in America. Have you ever heard of Ireland and the Irish?” she asked. “I’m not an idiot!” Neki retorted sharply, his tone defensive and wounded, immediately regretting the outburst. “I’m sorry,” he professed. “I’m sure you have no doubt been filled to the top of your head with tales about all the natives and savages running about these islands. I cannot blame you for being ignorant of the truth.” “I did not mean to offend you,” she said tenderly. “I only thought that...” “That I, nor any of us savage natives could possibly have any idea at all of the world the lies beyond our shores. That is the way of the haole.” After a moment of rather uncomfortable silence Ilish tried again. “What’s a haole?” she inquired cautiously. “I’ve been referred to as such on two occassions now and I’m growing rather tired of my ignorance, which you have already established as one of my non-virtues. So if you would be so kind as to lessen my ignorance with an answer to my question I would be even more so in your debt.” Neki swallowed another pinch of fish. He glanced at the bartender, a big round Hawaiian man with the biggest face Ilish had ever seen. But a face possessing a smile as pleasant as the early rise of dawn. “Bring us some lilikoi wine,” Neki requested. “We’ll be sitting over there.” He pointed toward a small table at the back of the sandy floored lanai. “I don’t think I should have any wine,” Ilish worried. “It wouldn’t be proper for a young woman to partake in public.” Her expression was absolutely sincere. “Young ladies from your part of the world sure have a great deal of improper behaviors to keep track of, don’t they?” Neki inquired teasingly. He winked playfully as he took the two cups of wine from the bartender, who had made them with such efficient speed that here he was even before Neki and Ilish had sat themselves down. “Sit please,” Neki gestured as he nodded his thanks to the retreating barkeep. He sat himself across from Ilish, his eyes glancing for a moment at the lapping waters that nibbled at the sandy shoreline just a few yards from where their table stood. The salty breeze clung but was far from unpleasant. In fact it’s heaviness was rather relaxing. Neki immediately drained his cup and gestured for the bartender to bring another. “Take a swallow,” he cajoled, smacking his lips as he locked gazes with the beauty of Ilish. “The taste and warmth of it will fill your chest.” “Why sir!, I mean Neki...” Ilish flustered. “Such suggestive words shall make me blush.” Her emerald eyes danced as she began to enjoy the vibrant company of this most striking young man. His easy manner was most alluring. “But not improper I hope?” Neki pleaded. “If I, for whatever reason, must endure another improper situation I shall be forced to...to...” He looked out at the ocean. “Cast myself into the arms of Moana Wai and never set foot upon dry land again.” He shifted his gaze to Ilish, his infectious grin stretching wide. She stared at him for a long moment, then took a sip of the sweet, heavy wine, it’s warmth immediately filling her chest just as Neki had promised. “My...” she cooed. “But that is most delightful indeed.” “Of course it is,” Neki agreed as he stood to take his second cup of wine from the barkeep. “Thank you sir!” he exclaimed. “And another for my most proper lady friend, if you don’t mind.” He glanced at Ilish fully expecting an immediate protest. There was none. The bartender had already turned, heading for the bar in pursuit of more wine. “Bring the whole skin,” Neki called after him, the barkeep waving his hand in positive response. “I really shouldn’t,” Ilish finally managed half-heartedly. “What would father think of me?” “I should like to hear more of your father. I do not understand a man who would allow his daughter. His most beautiful daughter.” Ilish blushed again. Was it because of the compliment or perhaps the wine. Neki continued. “I cannot understand how he could allow you to travel to such a remote, although magnificent, place as our island. And by yourself no less.” “Fisrt of all,” Ilish instructed. “I’m a grown woman and can make decisions for myself. Secondly...” she continued, her voice rising ever so slightly as her sharply featured face took on a reddish glow. “Secondly,” she repeated. “My poor father passed-on two years ago.” “I’m very sorry,” Neki offered immediately. “I didn’t know. I had no idea.” “Of course you didn’t,” Ilish smiled. “How could you have known...” “Stil,” Neki offered. “I’m very sorry.” “Thank you,” she replied, eyes cast downward in quiet reverence. “Thirdly,” she exclaimed suddenly. Perhaps the wine began to work it’s magic. “And thirdly,” she repeated again. “Who are you anyway that you should feel compelled to question the validity of my visit to this island of yours?” She took another sip of wine, her eyes meeting those of Neki. “I do no so much question it as thank the gods for it,” he explained smoothly, his irresistable grin back in place across his handsome face. Ilish took a deep breath. This wonderfully brave and funny man was sweeping her off her feet. “Tuck that grin away,” she ordered with a quick smile of her own, her eyes glinting with affection. “And tell me more about this person. What did you call her, Moana Wai? This being into who’s arms you wish to cast yourself.” “Ah...” Neki moaned approvingly as the barkeep returned with their skin of wine. “Just what we need,” he beamed. “Thank you sir.” He took the skin and immediately refilled his glass and moved to refill that which Ilish had surprizingly drained. To his delight she did not protest. “So..?” she prodded. “What of this Moana Wai?” “Well,” he began, lowering the sloshing cup from his lips. “To understand at all you must first know the english meaning of the name Moana Wai.” He took another sip of wine, smacking his lips noisily. Ilish smiled. “Moana is the ocean, and Wai is the water. Ocean Water, you get it? That’s what Moana Wai is, Ocean Water. But it’s all just a legend,” he concluded with a dismissive wave of his hand. “But I want to know the legend,” Ilish pleaded, grasping his hand with her smooth, delicate fingers. Chicken-Skin shimmied up his spine at her touch. It excited every nerve ending in his body. He continued his explanation after a moment of trembling bliss. “Moana Wai is the goddess of the ocean water. She is said to be a most beautiful temptress who can lure men, willingly, to their deaths within the green blindness of her cold, cold depths.” He had slowly leaned forward as he spoke and was now scantly an inch away from pressing his lips to hers. Ilish did not back away, her face flushing as red as her flaming hair. “You...I, I mean she certainly could,” he replied stutteringly. “Could she then?” murmurred Ilish as their lips pressed together, her green eyes closing in deep appreciation, shocks of excitement racing through her body. The wine, the salt air, and Neki’s magneficent presence all conspired toward the sickedness surging deep inside her until she could take no more and broke away with a startled gasp. “I...”” she gasped as she stood, her hands clamping over her mouth, her eyes flaring wide with utter despair. “I should never have allowed such a thing to happen. Oh..., the improperness of it all.” “That’s it!” roared Neki as he stood and made for the sea. “I’m casting myself...” he taunted. “I mean it. I’ve had all the improperness I can stand.” He stopped and returned to the little table where upon he lifted his still half full cup of lilikoi wine to his lips and drained it dry. “There...” he sighed. “Now I’m ready...” He turned toward the sea again. “You are the most exasperating man I’ve ever met,” Ilish complained. “Please sit down. You are causing a scene. It is most improp..I mean,” she waved her hands apologetacally, “most unseemly for us to be acting as we are. Especially in such a public place.” “Well...so long as it’s not improper I guess I could...” He sat and refilled his glass. Ilish stood staring down at him. She had truly never been in the company of a man whose manner was so uninhibited. She was afraid it might rub-off on her, this free willing spirit that Neki seemed to possess. And what scared the most was the fact that she would not have cared. She could well learn to embrace such an open and unhampered attitude. Of course that gun he wore around his tapered waist did suggest another, darker side to this man that se delighted her senses. And how could she ever forget that truly dark soul aboard the train that would surely have ravaged her or worse had it noe been for Neki. She smiled at him sweetly and sat herself back down. Neki instantly offered her more wine. “No thank you,” she assured him. “No more wine for me. Although it is the most delicious elixir I have ever tasted.” Her eyes were still dancing with excitement. “Do you still want to know about Moana Wai?” he asked. “Not to mention that I’ve yet to explain what it means when someone refers to you as a haole.” He paused for a moment his eyes wandering playfully. “You do ask a lot of questions,” he smiled, flashing sparkling white teeth. “Tell me as we walk along the beach,” Ilish answered suggestively as she stood and walked out of the lanai and onto the soft hugging sand of Hilo Bay. “Take off your shoes,” urged Neki as he called to her from the bar where he paid the bartender, swinging the sloshing wine skin over his shoulder. “It’ll make walking much easier.” He rushed to catch up with Ilish. All around them the seaside town stretched out in a cluster of wooden and tin structures full of people haggling and laughing, swearing, drinking, and of course fighting. Pilikia (trouble) was the town’s unofficial name, it’s real name being Hilo of course. Having been named after a famous polynesian navigator by the mighty Ali’i of a bygone era. But it was Pilikia town that stuck, mainly because of the rowdy bands of paniolo that rode in every pay day, heading straight for her sandy shores when the cattle drives had found their final destinations at the local slaughter houses and docks at the far southern end of the town’s outer limits. The saloons were plentiful. The brothels legendary for their exotic offerings. And everywhere there was fish for sale. Fish of every conceivable kind. Fresh fish, dried fish, salted fish, spiced fish, raw fish, steamed fish. Fish, fish, fish... The streets were filled with horses and wagons. Crying children and their mothers gasps tangled in the gentle trades. Merchants plying their wares. Palm tress swaying in the tropical breezes like sentinels from another more peaceful time. The sun had sliced through the clouds again and beamed down over the bustling cow town. The ocean sparkled blue and mighty canoes stroked past Neki and Ilish, just off shore, as they walked together upon the beach, away from the pushing crowds in the noisy market place. “It’s strange,” Ilish offered, “how a day which I will remember as one of the worse I have ever spent will also count as one of the best.” She hels Neki’s gaze for a long moment. “Memorable on any count,” she added, gathering her wind blown strands of red hair and pulling them together at the back of her head, deftly applying some kind of pinning device which Neki had never seen before. She was even more beautiful in the fullness of the bright sunshine. “I regret only that my uncle was the first of my ohana to cross your path.” “If it had to be, in order that I meet you, then it was worth it,” she replied shyly, her eyes sparkling in the beaming glow of the breezy day. “I would have thought such bluntness improper,” he teased, his eyes fired by the compliment. Ilish smiled her wonderful smile. “Inded,” she agreed. “But I feel a freedom here I’ve never felt before. Maybe it’s the warm weather. Or perhaps it’s being in your carefree presence. Whatever it is, I like it. And I like you.” She twirled gracefully, her bare toes carressing the nibbling grains of sand that massaged between them. “I feel like a caged bird set free!” she proclaimed. “And my first inclination as would be fiiting is to fly and fly and fly!” She spun again as they walked slowly forward, her arms flailing in a show of unbridled liberation. And for the first time Neki noticed what she wore. A long pink dress so perfectly cut to her exquisite shape that every tantalizing curve could be admired. Not tight by any means, was this garment, but it hung from her delicate frame like a rippling skin. It dazzled him to see her in such glory. But there was something else. The glory was tinged by a thin shroud of what could only be described as sorrow. He could see it reflected in her eyes. He soaked-in her strange melancholy beauty for a few more moments before he forced himself to shake-off the prospect of her pain. He didn’t want to deal with it at the moment. He just longed to be with her. He broke away from the dark path and steered the conversation and thus his thoughts to an earlier subject of conversation. “Moana Wai,” he began, intent on focussing on a subject other than the pain he still saw lingering in her dancing emerald eyes. “Moana Wai is said to have fled to the sea when her lover was killed in a bloddy battle between warring camps of kane warriors.” He took Ilish by the hand as they walked. She did not object and a smile filled his face. He continued the tale. “Her despair was so consuming that life held only agony in it’s cup of existence, for her anyway. At least that’s what she thought, and she wanted. No she craved death.” Ilish’s eyes widened as she stared into Neki’s glowing brown windows of illumination. “She actually prayed for the silent peace of death, so she could be with her slain lover. But her beauty was an obstacle.” They went on for a few steps without any further conversation, then Neki started again, his eyes heavy with sorrow. This particular tale always did this to him. “You see,” he continued. “In our culture beauty hampers the coming of the final rest. So much that is ugly lingers with no relent in this world.” He flailed his arms as he sunk deeper into the grip of the story. “And beauty. The kind that Moana Wai possessed transcended the physical. Yes, physically she carried a beauty as radiant as any star. But her true beauty went much deeper than that. In fact her’s was a beauty that permeated to the soul, and thus the gods forbade her death as they concluded her goodness was needed on earth.” “But they felt her pain and realized that mortal existence would be to much for her to endure. And if forced to remain in her present state, her beauty, inside and out, would manifest the pain into ugliness, destroying yet more precious beauty.” “So the gods, in their infinite wisdom, made her a goddess and gave her dominion over the ocean. Although it is said that sometimes, when she misses the land that she loved so dearly in better times, that she ventures upon the solid earth in search of her lost lover.” He fell silent for a long moment and watched as a water spout lifted itself on the waters surface. “You see,” he gestured. Ilish gasped as her eyes caught sight of the swirling funnel of water. Neki chuckled playfully. “It’s only a water spout spurred by the winds,” he laughed. Ilish snaked her arm through his and held herself close to his warm body, the bulging holster at his side nudging a little reality back into the pleasant situation. But even it’s presence seemed to add to the contentment of the moment. A contentment that washed over Ilish, along with the sun and the breeze and the salty shore. It was improper to feel this way this quickly about this man that she hardly knew. That she knew not at all in fact. But in the soothing afternoon sun she did not care. End of first section of Chapter 2 (see homepage) Unpublished Works © 1997 GJB