We were so intent in our preoccupations that we did not hear the screams coming from outside. Even though it took us a while for the childrens cries of distress to reach our consciousness, the moment they did, we were out of the cabin and running to the stern of the boat in milliseconds. There we saw my daughter in the water, valiantly holding on to the side of the dinghy, while her brother desperately tried to get her back into the dinghy. (Note: they both had life vests on).
I did a Baryshnikov leap from the boat into the dingy, scooped my daughter up on the way over and pulled the dinghy closer to the boat before anyone could say boo. My mother immediately took my daughter down to the aft cabin for a hot shower (the Pacific Ocean is cold!). My father comforted my son. I went and got my daughter a set of dry cuddly clothes.
Five minutes after the incident, my father was back on his computer, the children were sitting in the main cabin watching their allotted hour of cartoons (a wonderful collection of Mickey Mouse), and my mother and I were discussing what we were going to make for dinner.
My daughter was allotted extra Brownie Points because she was the first one in the family that summer, including the older grandchildren, who had braved the cold Pacific waters. Albeit involuntarily.
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