Karen Demanded My Boat Be Removed. The Owner’s Reply Broke Her-Ginny

I was kneeling on the dock at slip 37 when Karen decided my boat was the problem.

Morning at the marina usually starts gentle.

The tide nudges the pilings, ropes creak in short little sighs, and the smell of salt mixes with old wood, fuel, and coffee drifting from the office.

Image

That Saturday began exactly that way.

I had a socket wrench in one hand, a rag stuffed into my back pocket, and engine grease worked so deep under my fingernails that soap had stopped negotiating with it.

My fishing boat rocked beside me, ugly to some people and perfect to me.

It was not a showpiece.

It had chipped paint, patched railings, sun-faded trim, and a motor that started every time because I knew every bolt in its body like an old friend.

That boat had carried me through bad weather, worse grief, and fifteen years of trying to keep my uncle Ray’s marina alive after he left it to me.

Uncle Ray never cared whether a boat was pretty.

He cared whether it was seaworthy, whether the owner respected the dock, and whether people understood that the water did not make room for ego.

A marina is only peaceful when the loudest person does not get to rename everyone else’s patience as permission.

Karen had spent six months testing that sentence.

She arrived at slip 35 in a yacht so polished it looked allergic to real work.

White hull, gold trim, designer deck chairs, and a name written in cursive so elaborate nobody on staff could say it without sounding like they were reading a wedding invitation.

She stepped onto the dock as if the boards had been installed to complete her entrance.

Pete, my dock manager, handled her check-in.

Pete is a former Coast Guard man, calm in the way only people who have seen actual danger can be calm.

By the time Karen finished her first conversation with him, he had the same face he wears when the weather report says a squall is turning inland.

She said the slip was too tight.

It was not.

She said the dock boards looked old.

They were wooden.

She said some of the neighboring boats lowered the atmosphere.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *