Authors: Virginia Kantra
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #General
gloom. But she could feel the upper floor pressing down on her, the
surrounding pines closing in.
Caleb’s mother had lived
here
?
For thirteen years.
Margred shivered and walked to the front of the house.
“Where are you going?” Lucy demanded.
“I need air,” Margred said and swung the door wide.
107
The wind poured in, wet with rain and the smell of earth and pine
and, faint and faraway, the scent of the sea. Margred breathed in.
“You’re getting the floor wet,” Lucy said.
Margred ignored her.
Holding the sea air deep inside her lungs, she began to cast again,
her seeking thought like a golden hook spiraling down and down. The
rain misted her face and dampened her bare arms. She held them up to the
clouds, reaching beyond the fat, wet drops and freshening breeze to
where the rain swam on the currents of air like a shoal of bright fish. This
was only a small, localized storm. Well within her power.
If she had power.
If she were still selkie.
If her head didn’t hurt quite so much.
Frowning in concentration, she tested the flow of the air, the
gathering condensation. She felt power gather heavy in her loins until she
was pregnant with it, until it rippled in her stomach and pushed at her
lungs, until it surged and filled her. She opened her mouth, panting.
Water was her element, she reminded herself. The rain streamed
down her face and saturated her gown. All it would take was a push here,
a breath there, a tiny adjustment in temperature . . .
Ah
.
Something gave, in her chest and in her loins and high in the air
overhead. The power rushed to fill the breach, spilled from her into the
sky.
There. Now
.
Ow, ow, ow
.
Pain—flashing, slashing—shattered her head and left her empty.
Aching. Margred swayed, grabbing the door jamb for balance.
Lucy rushed to her side. “Come on. Come inside. Sit down.”
108
Margred allowed herself to lean on Lucy’s shoulder; allowed Lucy
to support her, hollowed, limp and dripping, to a chair. Had she . . . ?
“You’re all wet,” Lucy scolded as if she were addressing a child.
“What were you thinking? It’s raining.”
Margred blinked. Her head pounded. But through the fog in her
brain, she could feel the change in the skies overhead, the shift in
pressure, the flow of water vapor.
The alluvium of magic.
Half blind with pain and triumph, she raised her face and smiled.
“Not for long,” she said.
109
Nine
CALEB’S CELL PHONE VIBRATED ON HIS BELT. HE reached
for it, one hand on the wheel and his attention on the wet road.
Edith, calling to report some minor trespass that required the chief’s
attention?
Or Antonia, with another complaint?
He glanced at the display and recognized the number on the tiny
screen. His pulse quickened.
Lucy
, he thought.
And then, with another surge of adrenaline,
Maggie
. Visions of brain
bleeds and abusive ex-boyfriends flashed through his head.
He thumbed the speaker button. “What’s wrong?” he barked.
“Nothing’s wrong,” Lucy said hesitantly. “I just, um . . .”
Nothing was wrong
. He loosened his grip on the wheel.
As a detective, he knew better than to jump to conclusions. Or to
jump down his sister’s throat. His lack of sleep must be getting to him.
No, Maggie was getting to him.
“Sorry,” he said to his sister. “What’s up?”
“I, um— It’s stopped raining.”
He looked through the rain-spotted windshield to the east, where the
clouds were beginning to break. “I can see that.”
“Yes. Well. Maggie wants to know when you’re going to the beach.”
110
He couldn’t let his personal life interfere with his investigation.
Although a little beach trip could serve both. Maybe a return to the crime
scene would trigger memories of Maggie’s assailant. God knew he didn’t
have anything else to go on at this point.
“Soon,” he said. “How are you both holding up?”
“I’m okay. Maggie’s head still hurts. I made her go lie down while I
put her dress in the dryer.”
“What?”
His sister sighed. “It’s complicated.”
“Right. Later, then,” he said, and ended the call.
He didn’t need complicated. He’d come home to World’s End in
search of a simple, normal life, to put down roots, or return to them.
Maggie was a stranger without ties to the island. Without home ties
at all. She didn’t even remember her past.
Or maybe she was running from it. He couldn’t dismiss the
possibility that she knew the man who attacked her.
Either angle was a complication Caleb hadn’t bargained for.
And yet she drew him.
He had always been a sucker for strays. Lost dogs, feral cats, even
sea creatures stranded by the tide . . . Not that his father had ever allowed
him to keep the baby birds that fell from their nests, the dogs that
followed him home.
He wanted to keep Maggie.
But even dazed and bloodied, homeless and naked, Maggie was
more than a victim. She was stubborn, courageous, and vibrantly, vitally
alive. He admired her. Wanted her.
Which meant things were about to get a lot more complicated.
111
Bruce Whittaker’s house perched on a hill above the point like an
island cottage on steroids. Caleb parked at the bottom of the driveway,
noting the late-model Lexus SUV in the carport, the half-closed blinds in
the middle of the afternoon.
Most of what he needed to know to police his town he could pick up
over a morning cup of coffee at Antonia’s or a beer at the Inn after the
boats came in. Amazing what people would confide in a casual setting to
their local cop: bad feelings at home or a kid in trouble at school, a
mailbox or a dog gone missing, items lifted from the gift shop, tourists’
cars blocking residents’ driveways. Caleb nodded and listened and filed it
all away.
It sure beat the hell out of canvassing the projects. Or waiting on
unreliable Intel from terrified Iraqis.
The downside of the island grapevine was that his pool of potential
witnesses had shrunk to a mere puddle. In the city, a canvass of the
neighborhood involved thousands of windows, hundreds of doors, dozens
of passers-by and man-hours.
Caleb had covered the entire point area in three hours. Stiffly, he
climbed from the Jeep and approached the porch.
More damn steps
.
And so far he had nothing.
The houses here were few and set back from the ocean. Islanders
didn’t build on the point. Anyway, most of them had spent the evening at
the school assembly. The tourists wouldn’t recognize unusual activity on
the beach at night if it bit them on the ass. Whittaker, with his view of the
point and his constant complaints, was Caleb’s last, best hope.
The lawyer hadn’t answered his door or his phone the first time
Caleb came around. The shiny vehicle beside the house didn’t mean
anybody was home. The island was small enough that folks could walk
most anywhere.
In the rain
?
Caleb knocked again.
A shadow moved beyond the leaded glass.
112
Out of habit, Caleb stepped to the side of the door, his elbow
pressing the butt of his gun.
The door opened. Whittaker, pale-faced and clean-shaven, stood
framed in the shadows.
“Sorry to bother you,” Caleb said easily. “Do you have a moment?”
Whittaker blinked, as if the light pained him. “Is someone hurt?”
Something clicked in Caleb’s head like the safety release on a gun.
“Why do you ask?”
“Well, I— Isn’t that what anyone asks when the police show up on
their doorstep at . . .” Whittaker winced. “I’m sorry, it’s hardly the wee
hours of the morning now, is it?”
“Three o’clock,” Caleb said. “Can I come in?”
“Of course.” Whittaker stepped back, opening the door wide. “Make
yourself at home.”
Not likely. Outside, at least, the gray shingles and crisp white trim
made some concession to the New England setting and the neighbors’
sensibilities. But the open floor plan inside didn’t look like any home
Caleb had ever lived in. A massive stone fireplace dominated one end of
the great room. A six-foot-long aquarium full of fish occupied the other.
In between, wide plate glass windows overlooked the point.
Caleb hooked his thumbs into his front pockets. “Nice view,” he
commented.
“I like it.”
“Unless it’s raining.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Your blinds are down.” Caleb touched the blind cord, raising one
eyebrow. “May I?”
Caleb opened the blinds on a clearing silver sky. From where he
stood, he could see trees and rocks give way to a curve of sand and shale.
113
Tumbling gray waves rolled into shore. The rain had beaten out all trace
of his activity on the beach that morning. The fire debris was gone, along
with the yellow crime scene tape.
But a blackened smudge still stained the sand where the fire had
burned last night.
He turned from the window. “Seems a shame to block this out.”
“I have—had—a bit of a headache this morning. The light bothers
my eyes.”
“Sorry to hear that. Your head hurt last night, too?”
“As a matter of fact, it did. What’s this about, Chief? I hardly think
you dropped by to inquire after my health.”
“I was wondering if you noticed any unusual activity on the beach
last night.”
“Three weeks ago, you told me dealing with kids and tourists was
your
job. Or have you changed your mind?”
Public relations, Caleb reminded himself. “Why don’t we sit down?”
Whittaker shrugged. “Be my guest.”
He led the way to the room’s two massive leather sofas.
Caleb sank down with a sigh of relief, stretching his leg in front of
him. The cushions of the couch released a pleasant tang of wood smoke
and whiskey. “So you didn’t see the fire?”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“Maybe you could just talk me through your evening. Do you mind
if I take notes?”
“I can’t imagine why you need a record of our conversation, but if it
will help . . . I fixed dinner around six, six thirty. Grilled fish and polenta,
if you’re interested. I washed up and then settled down with a book and a
drink until I went to bed.”
114
Both the answer—and the attitude—were pretty much what Caleb
was expecting. “Alone?”
“Unfortunately.”
“And what time was that?”
“I really didn’t notice. Early. I told you, I had a headache. Now, if
you’re finished—”
“You didn’t look out the window? Take out the garbage? Check the
locks before you turned in?”
Whittaker’s face pinched. “I may have done.”
“Which?”
“I probably checked the door.”
“Front door?”
“Yes. Is there some reason you are questioning me like a common
criminal?”
“A woman was attacked on the beach last night. It’s possible you
saw or heard something that could help me identify her attacker.”
“Not with a migraine. And not in the dark.”
Right
. Like you needed daylight to spot a bonfire.
“Do you remember turning on a porch light?” Caleb asked.
“I told you, I was alone. I don’t turn on the outside lights unless I’m
expecting company.” Whittaker stood. “Look, Chief Hunter, I appreciate
your diligence, but it’s too late. If you hadn’t let those kids go a few
weeks ago, perhaps last night’s incident would never have happened.”
Asshole
.
“There’s a big leap between underage drinking and assault, ” Caleb
said, keeping his tone even. “Unless there are some steps in the middle
you can share with me.”
115
“You’re the one who mentioned fire. I naturally
assumed
—”
Caleb’s cell vibrated. He checked the caller ID.
Lucy
. Again.
“I have to take this,” he said to Whittaker.
The lawyer shrugged. “Go right ahead. As far as I’m concerned, our
conversation is finished.”
“Could be,” Caleb said. He turned, facing the clearing sky beyond
the windows. “Lucy. What’s up?”
“Caleb, I’m so
sorry
.”
Tension gripped the base of his neck. “What’s wrong? How’s
Maggie?”
“She— I . . . I was only gone a little while, fifteen minutes, I swear,
I—”
“Take a deep breath,” he advised, though his own pulse was
pounding in his ears. “Tell me what happened.”
Lucy gulped. “I had to go out. Just for a few minutes. Maggie said