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Authors: Joyce Lavene

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BOOK: A Spirited Gift
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He wrapped his arm around me as we walked down deserted Duck Road toward the center of town. “Maybe I was right—but so were you. That's one of the reasons I gave up being in the FBI. It does make you see the worst in people. I came to Duck to see the best in people. But old habits die hard. I trust your father because you trust him. Let's leave it at that unless something else happens. See? I'm learning to have faith.”
I hugged him hard. “I'm glad.” I admitted to being tired of lying and sneaking around where my father was concerned. “I'm going to talk to Gramps again too. I'm a grown woman. We have to work this out as adults. I'm going to see my father, and I'm going to tell him who I am. I'm sure we'll all feel better when it's over.”
“Good for you!”
The winds from the ocean and the Currituck Sound were screaming across the open spaces where there were no bushes or buildings to slow them down. We ran through those areas and ended up at the Curbside Bar and Grill. I was surprised to find it open so late.
But Cole and Molly Black, owners of the grill, were feeding whoever came in for free. The place was packed, of course, but Kevin and I managed to find a corner to drink some coffee and warm up.
“This whole thing with Rafe has turned into a bigger deal than I'd thought it would be,” I explained. “That perfume bottle really knocked me over this morning. I'm still amazed at how real those emotions can be.”
He took my hand, his face unusually serious. “I admit to having another reason for finding you besides apologizing,” he said. “I heard about the pistol this afternoon—and a crazy idea to have you get whatever information you could from holding the gun.”
I shrugged. “They haven't asked yet. But I got that drift too.”
“Dae, don't do it. The perfume bottle was nothing compared to the emotions of a killer pumped up with rage and jealousy. Not to mention the terror of a person being killed. Please promise me you won't agree to this.”
“It sounds even worse when you put it like that,” I joked, but he didn't return my smile.
I knew Kevin was overly cautious about these things. He was probably afraid of losing me like he had his FBI partner.
Not that the idea of losing myself completely wasn't scary. Holding the perfume bottle almost made me forget who I was and where I belonged. I was so much a part of Mary that I wasn't me anymore.
But I had to feel like I could control my gift—not the other way around. Otherwise I'd have to walk through life wearing gloves—literally. That just wasn't me.
“You've already decided to help your grandfather, haven't you?” Kevin asked, sitting back in his chair.
“No! I haven't decided anything,” I replied. “I'd like to find out who killed Matthew and Sandi. This is my home town. I don't want to think of it as the murder capitol of the Outer Banks. But I know there are risks. I feel them every day—every time I touch something with an emotional past.”
“You can't let them bully you.”
“I won't.”
“They need you—you can call the shots.”
I grinned. “You sound like Rafe. He was basically giving me the same advice while I was up on the widow's walk. You know, I don't think he's as black as he's painted. Well, not anymore anyway. He was definitely a scourge when he was younger.”
“Are you getting to be friends with him?”
“He's more like some uncle who was in prison but you think he might have reformed, if that makes sense.”
“If talking to a ghost makes sense, anything is possible.” He smiled and kissed my hand. “Just be careful, Dae. Ask for help if you need it.”
“I will. Don't worry.”
Before we could say anything else, Cole Black came to the table and asked us for help. “I never expected so many people, Mayor Dae! Think you could give us a hand? Molly has that bad lumbago. I'm worried she might wear herself out.”
Cole and his wife had retired here a few years back, claiming they were looking for some relaxation—but they worked harder than most people half their ages.
“Sure!” I agreed. “We'd be glad to help. What do you need?”
“See those tables over there by the windows? Could you bus all of them and do some dishes?”
Chapter 40
“Well, that was interesting,” Kevin said when we were done cleaning up the restaurant. “If I'd known we were going to work in a kitchen, I would've stayed home and cleaned mine.”
I laughed at him and gave him a towel to dry his hands. We'd done several loads of dishes, pots and pans and silverware by hand. “But so many people were fed tonight. Isn't it wonderful to see everyone pulling together?”
“Marvelous.” He flicked water at me.
I snapped my towel at him. Cole and Molly found us horsing around in the kitchen as they got ready to close up.
“You two remind me of us when we were young,” Cole said with an affectionate smile at his wife.
“Or that nice young couple who stop in every so often, right?” Molly shook her head. “Not that they were married, we've come to find out. I'd hate to live with that kind of guilt. His wife is dead now, you know. That young lady mayor at the Blue Whale. What a shame!”
“Shawn Foxx?” I asked sharply. “He ate dinner here with someone besides his wife?”
“Regularly,” Cole confided. “He was here the night of the storm. We didn't even know that was his name until we saw his picture and heard his wife had been killed. It was a real surprise that the other woman wasn't his wife. The two seemed very close.”
“What did his girlfriend look like?” I asked.
“Kind of tall,” Cole said. “A real looker too.”
“Never mind him—he thinks everyone looks tall and every woman under thirty is a real looker,” Molly added. “But it seems to me they were about the same height.”
“Did you ever hear him call her by name?” Kevin questioned.
“Nope. Like I said—we didn't even know his name until we saw that his wife had been killed. But they tipped well. I can tell you that,” Molly said. “And always paid with cash.”
“My favorite people!” Cole smiled.
“Was she blond? Have you ever seen her around in Duck?” I asked.
“No, she had long, dark hair,” Cole assured me. “This woman was late twenties, tops. Thin, like a model.”
“Now that you mention it, Mayor Dae,” Molly added, “I have seen her before. I think she might work at the skee-ball place. I've seen her smoking outside there. Or it was someone who looked just like her.”
“Thanks.” I hugged them both, not wanting them to feel we were interrogating them. “See you later. And thanks for sharing with so many people.”
“Please! We didn't want all that defrosted food to go to waste,” Molly said. “And it's a tax deduction. Don't make us heroes.”
Kevin and I said good night and walked back out into the cold early-morning air. “So Shawn had a girlfriend.”
“It sounds like it.” I wrapped my jacket closer around me. “Someone who probably lives in Duck.”
“If you're thinking she could be the killer, that would mean she had to be in or around the Blue Whale during the storm.”
“That's true. Although Game World isn't that far to walk from the inn. I guess that's why Shawn had such a lame alibi about spending the night by himself in his car. He might have been here in Duck—with his girlfriend—at the time Sandi was killed. I can see why he wouldn't want anyone to know about that.” I yawned after I told him about seeing Shawn at Game World. “But I don't know if I'm thinking at all, to tell you the truth. I think my brain stopped working about an hour ago.”
“Maybe that means we should call it a night.” He wrapped his arm around me, and we headed down Duck Road—again.
I hated to say good night once we reached the house. He kissed me, and we clung to each other for a long time while we stood on the front porch. I was freezing, but I didn't want the moment to end.
“Call me if you need me,” he whispered. “I'm good at reinforcing ‘no' if that's what you decide.”
“I will.” I kissed him one last time. “It'll be okay, Kevin. However it works out.”
Gramps met me on the way into the house. I didn't even make it to the stairs. “Dae, we need to talk.”
“Not right now, if you don't mind. Maybe tomorrow.”
“This is important, honey. Chief Michaels needs your help.”
“I know. But I'm tired, and I don't think I can make a decision about the gun tonight.”
He raised his eyebrows, his only sign of surprise. “Are you reading minds now?”
“Gramps, I knew when I heard the three of you talking in the kitchen. Kevin knew too. You aren't very good at keeping secrets.”
He sat down in his chair, ignoring his favorite dancing show on TV. “But you'll do it?”
“I think so. But not because it's my duty. I'd like to know who killed Sandi. And this might be the best way to find out.”
“I understand.”
“And while we're talking”—I squared my shoulders like a prizefighter preparing for a bout—“I've been spending time with Danny—my father. He doesn't know yet that I'm his daughter. But I plan to tell him.”
“I think that's a mistake.” He shook his head. “But you'll have to make that call—and live with the consequences.”
“I know. I really think he's changed, Gramps. And I'd like to have him over for dinner one night.”
“I suppose you would.” He stroked his white beard. “But I don't think I'm ready for that yet. Maybe someday.”
“It's been thirty-six years, Gramps. That's a long time to hold a grudge.”
“You didn't see the look on your mother's face when he abandoned her. Or know that he killed your grandmother as sure as if he'd held a gun to her head. I know I had my part in all this too. God knows I'm no saint, and maybe I was wrong about what I did. But he could've stayed. I wouldn't have left you because someone threatened me. Or he could've led a decent life that was fit for your mother and you. I don't know if I can ever forgive him for taking your mother's innocence and leaving her to suffer. Not even for you, Dae.”
Well, I'd wanted the truth out between us. I realized Gramps had his own truth about things too. Just because I wanted to know Danny—as my father—didn't mean Gramps wanted to know him at all. I had to respect that.
I hugged him to let him know it was okay. “You took that news way too well, you know. You'd already heard about me and Danny, right?”
He shrugged. “Duck is a small town, honey. A lot of people around here have long memories.”
I knew that was true—and had no doubt that Chief Michaels had told Gramps what was going on, for my own good. “Good night. Have someone bring the gun to Missing Pieces tomorrow. I'll look at it there.”
“Thanks, Dae. I love you, honey.”
I went up to bed, but my dreams were restless. I was again that cabin boy who had been ordered to swim for his life.
He was lying on a beach—washed up after so long that he wasn't sure he was going to make it. He opened his eyes and looked around, surprised to find that he was alive and that he had managed to escape Rafe.
He had no idea where he was or where he would go. His parents were long dead. There was no one to care if he lived or died. That was what had taken him to the pirates in the first place. He sat on the sand, his clothes crackling with dried saltwater, his skin puckered like a briny pickle.
The sun was hot overhead. He knew he had to find shelter, something to eat and drink if he wanted to stay alive. He already felt sick and weak. If he was going to survive to get his revenge on Rafe Masterson, he had to get up and find somewhere to recover.
He stumbled to his feet, and as he did, a huge black horse raced past him, knocking him down. He coughed into the sand, not knowing if he could get up again.
To his surprise, the horse turned around and a woman dressed in a lavish blue velvet riding habit with flowing white lace at her throat and wrists jumped down to check on him.
She was beautiful—like an angel with her crystal blue eyes and black hair. She ran her hands over his arms and legs with a serious frown on her face. “Are you all right?” she asked. “Poor thing. You look nigh starved to death.”
Another horse came up behind them and a man climbed quickly down. “You shouldn't stop for rabble, your ladyship,” he told her. “These urchins are everywhere. They call themselves Bankers, and they prey on anything that moves. You're not safe here.”
BOOK: A Spirited Gift
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