has happened in the past few days Iâm surprised you havenât heard the Rolling Stones bawling at the top of their lungs. Thereâs nothing, Sally. It was a nightmare, nothing more. Donât forget, this is The Cove, dear. Nothing ever happens here. If you did hear something, why it was only the wind. The wind off the ocean can whine just like a person. Youâll learn that soon enough. You didnât hear anything. Trust me. Go back to bed.â
Sally went back to bed. She lay stiff and waiting, so cold she wondered whether the tears would freeze on her face if she cried. She could have sworn that she heard a door quietly open and close, but she didnât have the guts to go see.
She would relax, then stiffen again, waiting to hear that awful cry. But there werenât any more cries. Maybe Amabel was right. She was exhausted; she had been dreaming and it had been hideous and so very real. Maybe she was paranoid or psychotic or schizophrenic. They had called her all those things for six months. She wonderedâif she saw the person actually cry out would that be a delusion? Just a fabrication of her mind? Probably. No, she wouldnât think about that time. It made her hurt too much. She fell asleep again near dawn.
It was a dreamless sleep this time.
3
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J AMES R AILEY Q UINLAN had more energy than heâd had just twenty minutes before. His body was humming with it. That was because she was here. He was sure of it now, he could feel her here. Heâd always had these feelingsâmore than intuition. The feelings just came to him suddenly, and he had always followed them, ever since he was a kid. The time or two he hadnât, heâd gotten himself into deep shit. Now he was out on a very long limb, and if he was wrong heâd pay for it. But he wasnât wrong. He could feel her presence in this very charming and well-manicured little town.
Dreadful little place, he thought, so perfect, like a Hollywood set, just like Teresaâs hometown. He remembered having the same reaction, feeling the same vague distaste when heâd traveled to that small town in Ohio to marry Teresa Raglan, daughter of the local judge.
He pulled his gray Buick Regal into a well-marked parking place in front of the Worldâs Greatest Ice Cream Shop. There were two large plate-glass windows, painted all around with bright-blue trim. He could see small circular tables inside, with old-fashioned white wrought-iron chairs. Behind the counter an older woman was talking to a man while she scooped chocolate ice cream out of a carton set down into the counter. The front of the shop was painted a pristine white. It was a quaint little place,just like the rest of the town, but for some reason he didnât like the looks of it.
He stepped out of the sedan and looked around. Next to the ice cream shop was a small general store with a sign out front in ornate type that could have come straight out of Victorian times: PURN DAVIES : YOU WANT IT â I SELL IT .
On the other side of the ice cream shop was a small clothing store that looked elegant and expensive, with that peculiar Carmel-like look that the rest of the buildings had. It was called Intimate Deceptionsâa name that for James conjured up images of black lace against a white sheet or white skin.
The sidewalks looked brand-new and the road was nicely blacktopped. No ruts anywhere to hold rain puddles.
All the parking spots were marked with thick white lines. Not a faded line in the bunch. Heâd seen newer houses on the drive in, apparently all built very recently. In town there was a hardware store, a small Safeway barely large enough to support the sign, a dry cleaners, a one-hour-photo place, a McDonaldâs with a very discreet golden arch.
A prosperous, quaint little town that was perfect.
He slipped his keys into his jacket pocket. First thing he needed was a place to stay. He spotted a sign reading THELMA â S BED AND