Authors: Virginia Kantra
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #General
themselves or their abusers. If Maggie knew her attacker . . .
Caleb shook his head. He wanted to trust her. More, he wanted her to
trust him.
“The doctor suspects concussion,” he said. “She may never
remember. Which is why I’d really appreciate your help.”
Reynolds shrugged. “I’m here. I’ll transport your boxes for you. But
I can’t promise we’ll find anything.”
They hauled cartons in the rain, in and out of Caleb’s Jeep, down the
dock and onto the ferry. By the time they were done, Caleb was sweating
under his yellow police slicker and his leg felt as though he’d gone three
rounds with Vlad the Physical Therapist. But it was worth the pain to
save half a day traveling to the crime lab in Augusta.
99
Caleb signed off on the evidence log and drove the two blocks back
to town hall.
“Edith.” He greeted her as he passed her desk.
The town clerk looked up from her filing. “Antonia Barone is
waiting for you.”
Caleb stopped. “In my office?”
Edith looked down her nose at him. “She’s not out here, is she?”
“Right. Thanks.”
Shit.
At least Edith had warned him. Caleb had been a cop for nine years,
a detective for six of them. He knew community relations were as much a
part of the job as public safety. But when he was a kid, Regina’s mother,
Antonia, had scared the shit out of him. Even now, she was intimidating.
She was also his boss.
He limped to his office and found her fidgeting in front of his desk,
wearing an oversized jacket and a red slash of lipstick.
“Mayor.” He greeted her cautiously.
She snorted. “Let’s cut the mayor crap now. The only reason I took
this job was because Peter Quincy wouldn’t serve a fourth term and the
council couldn’t find anybody else to put up against that asshole
Whittaker.”
Caleb’s lips twitched. “Yes, ma’am.” He pulled out the ugly molded
chair and gestured for her to sit. “What can I do for you?”
She plopped down, fixing him with hard, dark eyes. “You can tell
me what the hell is going on. Every idiot who’s dropped by the shop for a
cup of coffee is saying some woman from Away got herself raped up at
the point last night.”
Caleb clamped his jaw. “There was an assault, yes. The nature of the
woman’s injuries hasn’t been determined yet.”
100
Antonia scowled, clearly unsatisfied.
“Summer girl?”
The island population consisted of year-rounders; summer people,
who came back to the island year after year; and tourists. Time and
community service sometimes blurred the divisions, but they were still
felt among the island natives.
“First-timer,” Caleb said.
Antonia nodded once.
“Well, that’s something.”
Caleb swallowed his anger. Antonia didn’t know Maggie, he
reminded himself. An attack on a tourist struck at the islanders’ sense of
safety and their wallets; an attack on one of their own struck at their
hearts.
“But it still doesn’t make us look good,” Antonia continued darkly.
“It doesn’t make us look
safe
.”
And public safety, her tone suggested, was his responsibility.
He happened to agree with her.
“I’m working on it,” Caleb said.
“Hm. I heard you shut down half the island.”
Caleb leaned back in his chair, refusing to be baited. “I limited
access on Ocean View and Old Wharf Roads and the north hiking trail.
Hardly half the island.”
“I had some tourists from the ferry in the shop this morning
complaining they couldn’t picnic on the point.”
He raised his eyebrows. “It’s pouring rain. Sell them some breakfast
and send them to the gift shop until it clears.”
Antonia barked with laughter. “Already did.”
101
He stood again. “Then, if that’s all—”
Antonia didn’t budge. “I like you,” she said unexpectedly. “Didn’t
think I would. I don’t like your father, and I never had much use for that
mother of yours. But at least you understand how we do things around
here.”
“I understand,” Caleb said dryly. Too well to take offense anymore
at comments about his parents. “That doesn’t mean I’ll let it interfere
with how I do my job.”
“Fair enough. What are you going to do next?”
Was she asking as mayor of World’s End, trying to stay apprised of
a troublesome investigation? Or was she merely curious?
“I need to canvass the houses in the area, ask if anybody saw or
heard anything on the point last night.”
“Last night everybody was at the school assembly.”
Not everybody. Not Maggie.
Not the son of a bitch who had attacked her either.
“You could help me out,” Caleb suggested. “Make a list of who was
there that you remember.”
Antonia studied him. “I guess I could do that. You should come by
the restaurant later. Talk to Regina.”
He intended to. He intended to talk to a lot of people. “Did she see
something? Say something?”
Antonia snorted. “You think that girl talks to me?”
“Then—”
Antonia’s face turned an uncharacteristic red. “I just thought maybe
you’d like to see her.”
Was she matchmaking? The possibility left him amused and maybe a
little flattered. Embarrassed.
102
“I do need to talk to her. To one of you,” he amended.
“Are you still hiring for the summer?”
“We’re always hiring. Kids around here can make more money
fishing for lobster, and the ones from Away don’t know how to work.
Lucy looking for a job now that school’s out?”
“Not Lucy, Maggie. The woman who was attacked last night,” Caleb
explained. “She might need something to tide her over for a while.”
“She have any experience?”
“I don’t know,” he admitted.
He knew too damn little about her.
“Hm.” Antonia got to her feet, gathering her jacket around her.
“Well, bring her by. Reggie can talk to her.”
Caleb wasn’t sure if Antonia was pushing off the new hire as a way
of throwing him together with Regina or as a form of punishment.
Antonia had never forgiven her only daughter for leaving the island and
the restaurant. Or maybe she hadn’t forgiven her for coming back
unmarried with a two-month-old son in tow. Either way, Maggie had a
job interview. “Thanks.”
“Don’t thank me, it’s business. Speaking of which, I need to get
back to my kitchen.”
“I’ll see you out,” Caleb said.
Antonia waved him off. “Don’t bother. It’s raining.”
“I’m going out anyway. Those calls,” he reminded her.
At least the rain would keep people home, where he could find them.
“You’ll get soaked,” Antonia predicted with dour anticipation.
Caleb locked his office door. “I don’t mind a little rain.”
103
In Iraq, he’d lived with dust. Dust and heat. From May to September,
the shamal blew from the northwest, kicking up clouds of sand that found
their way through every chink into every crease and canteen. Each day
he’d felt his soul dehydrating, bits of himself withering and blowing away
like dust. At night he had dreamed of the rain. Of the rain and the sea.
Caleb grimaced as he descended the town hall steps. So pulling
twenty-four-hour shifts hadn’t been part of his dreams. He was back,
wasn’t he? He was home, doing the job he was trained to do in the
community he was sworn to protect.
He just hoped it was enough.
* * * *
He wasn’t coming.
Margred ran her hands over her hips, chafed by the elastic of her
unfamiliar undergarment and an even more unfamiliar disappointment.
He was coming
later
. Because it was
raining
. She sneered at her
image in the mirror. As if a little rain would make him melt.
“Don’t you like it?” Lucy asked beside her.
“It” was the dress Lucy had pulled from her closet for Margred to try
on.
Margred smoothed the blue material over her thighs, inspecting her
reflection in the glass above the bedroom dresser. She had washed the
blood and sand out of her hair last night. Her face was pale, her eyes
looked bruised, and the swollen purple bump on her head was bisected by
a line of ugly stitches.
Still, if she must wear clothing, this garment was certainly more
flattering than the oversized shirt she had worn all morning.
She offered the girl a smile. “It fits. The other—those jeans—made
me look like a haggis.”
Lucy picked up the discarded jeans from the floor and folded them.
“That’s because I’m tall and skinny and you’re, um . . . you’re—”
104
Margred narrowed her eyes. “Short and fat?” she inquired sweetly.
Lucy exhaled on a laugh. “No! God, no. It’s just that you have, you
know, a figure. Curves. Anyway, you look great in that dress. A lot better
than I do.”
Very likely. On the hanger, the simple sleeveless dress had
resembled a sack. It probably hung from Lucy’s angular shoulders the
same way.
Margred eyed her consideringly. “You are attractive. You look . . .
strong.”
This time, Lucy’s laughter bubbled out. “Yeah, that’s what I always
wanted to hear. I ran track in college,” she volunteered.
“Ah,” Margred said, as if she had the faintest idea what the girl was
talking about.
She turned back to the mirror. The blue fabric poured over her
curves like water over rocks. Only the elastic cutting into her hip spoiled
the flowing line. Reaching under the skirt, she tugged the panties down
her legs.
“Much better,” she pronounced.
Lucy goggled. “Yes, but—”
“What?”
“Don’t you feel a little, um . . .”
“Comfortable?”
“Naked.”
Margred looked in the mirror again. She didn’t see the problem. All
the parts that humans kept covered were covered. “No.”
“Well . . .” Lucy’s grin transformed her face. “Caleb’s going to
swallow his tongue when he sees you.”
Margred tossed her head and then winced. “If he ever gets here.”
105
She was not accustomed to waiting, for Caleb or any other man. She
was not used to depending on others for clothes, for food, for
transportation.
For survival.
“It’s not like you could go to the beach now anyway,” Lucy pointed
out in a reasonable tone that made Margred’s hackles rise. “Not in this
rain.”
“I do not mind the rain.”
Water was her element. She could turn the current and control the
waves. She could warm the surface of the sea to create fog or cool the air
to make the rain fall. She could . . . The possibility bloomed and quivered
inside her like a pink sea coral.
She could make it stop raining.
Or not.
What else had she lost, along with her pelt?
Her head throbbed.
“Are you all right?” Lucy asked.
“I . . . yes,” she said slowly.
Maybe
.
Tentatively, she sought the glimmer deep within her, sinking down
through levels of awareness like a shell tumbling to the ocean floor, gold
to blue to green to gray. Her breathing slowed. Pressure built in her chest.
Maybe there . . .
Or there, a buried gleam gone too quickly to identify. She opened
her eyes to find Lucy staring at her with worried gray-green eyes.
Caleb’s eyes
, Margred thought. Her breath hitched. “I need to be
outside.”
“I don’t think so,” Lucy said. “It’s raining. And your head—”
“My head is fine,” Margred said firmly.
106
Her pulse pounded behind her eyeballs. She dismissed the pain. Her
head was probably going to hurt a lot worse before she was done.
She descended the narrow stairs, one hand on the banister for
balance.
Lucy trailed behind her, complaining. “My brother told me to take
care of you.”
“Your brother is not here.”
That was the problem. Part of the problem.
One she intended to remedy.
Margred had never been much of a weather shaper, any more than
she was a magic handler. Why bother? As she had told Lucy, she did not
mind a little rain. And messing with the water cycle was generally not a
good idea.
But if she could . . . Her heart beat faster.
She had to try. Not simply because Caleb refused to take her to the
beach, but because she needed to know her own limits.
Downstairs, the house felt even darker and more cramped. Unlike
the tourist boxes built along the beach with wide windows to admit the
view, this cottage had been constructed and positioned to withstand the
worst that winter and the sea could throw at it. The darkness did not
bother Margred. Even in human form, her eyes adjusted easily to the