trysail
Catch Me Who Can
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2005
- Posts
- 25,593
A decade ago, while cruising the Leeward Islands aboard a chartered sailing vessel, we anchored for the night in a harbor on the west side of the French Antilles isle of Guadeloupe. As night started to fall, my cousin, sisters and I dinghied ashore for dinner. After walking nearly a mile to an isolated "restaurant" that had been recommended by a passerby, my sister (never noted for possession of an enormous reserve of common sense) was exhausted and her feet bloody from a blister ("sensible shoes," anyone?) When we finally arrived (and it turned out to be not so much a restaurant as a family home), we were informed that they weren't open that night. Needless to say, we were crestfallen (as well as starving) and daunted by the prospect of another mile-long walk back with no guaranty that we'd be able to find a place to eat.
Noting our long faces, the pater familia took pity on us and offered to check to see if his cousin's "restaurant" could accomodate us. After a protracted telephone call to his cousin, he told us we'd be able to eat there and volunteered to drive us. By this time it's twilight and my cousin is very, very, very nervous that we're going to be taken for "a ride into the jungle" where we white folk are going to be cut up into very small pieces and never heard from again. It was, to say the least, a disquieting situation. On the one hand, our putative "Good Samaritan" seemed genuine and earnest; on the other, we're isolated, in the midst of a completely alien culture and don't speak Creole French. In life, there are times when we all have to make snap character judgments. Observing that, "If these guys are bad, they're very, very good" we decided to throw caution to the wind and piled into the automobile.
Arriving at our "Good Samaritan's" cousin's house after a fifteen minute drive through the pitch dark, we were on tenterhooks, looking at each other with glances that betrayed our thoughts: "So this is where we're going to die."
We were ushered into the family's house and directed to their dining room table. Our host and his family could not have been more gracious. It turned out to be an absolutely magical evening. We were treated to a Creole bouillabaise that was the most incredible soup I've ever tasted, followed by a meal so succulent that we regretted it didn't go on forever.
It was a night that restored our faith in humanity. On our return to the States, we all made a point of writing thank-you notes to our benefactors. It was a night all of us will remember as long as we live.
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