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Authors: Catherine Coulter

BOOK: The Beginning
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“I'll ask her. Good-bye, Mr. Quinlan.”

She dogged him to the front door, which, thankfully, was still attached to its ancient hinges.

“I'll see you again, Sally,” he said, gave her a small salute, and walked up the well-maintained sidewalk.

The temperature had dropped. A storm was blowing in. He had a lot to do before it hit. He quickened his step. So her husband was off-limits. Was she scared of him? She wasn't wearing a wedding band, but the evidence of one had been in that thick white line on her finger.

He'd really blundered—that wasn't like him. Usually he was very cautious, very careful, particularly with someone like her, someone fragile, someone who was teetering right on the brink.

Nothing seemed straightforward now that he'd met Susan St. John, that thin young woman who was terrified of a dead man who had called her on the phone.

He wondered how long it would be before Susan St. John discovered he'd lied through his teeth. It was possible she would never find out. Nearly everything he knew was in the file the FBI had assembled on her. If she found out he knew more than had ever been dished out to the public, would she take off? He hoped not. He was curious now about those human cries she'd heard in the middle of the night. Maybe her aunt had been right and she had dreamed it—being in a new place, she had every reason to be jumpy. And she had admitted to having a nightmare. Who knew?

He looked around at the beautiful small houses on either side of the street. There were flowers and low shrubs planted everywhere, all protected from the ocean winds with high-sided wooden slats on the western side. He imagined storms off the ocean could devastate any plant alive. The people were trying.

He still didn't like the town, but it didn't seem so much like a Hollywood set anymore. Actually it didn't look at all like Teresa's hometown in Ohio. There was an air of complacency about it that didn't put him off. He had a sense that everyone who lived here knew their town was neat and lovely and quaint. The townspeople had thought about what they wanted to do and they'd done it. The town had genuine charm and vitality, he'd admit that, even though he hadn't seen a single child or young person since he'd driven in some three hours before.

 

IT
was late at night when the storm blew in. The wind howled, rattling the windows. Sally shivered beneath the mound of blankets, listening to the rain slam nearly straight down, pounding the shingled roof. She prayed there were no holes in the roof, even though Amabel had said earlier, “Oh, no, baby. It's a new roof. Had it put on just last year.”

How long could she remain here with Amabel? Now that she was safe, now that she was hidden, she was free to think about the future, at least a future of more than one day's duration. She thought about next week, about next month.

What was she going to do? That phone call—it had yanked her right back to the present, and to the past. It had been her father's voice, no question about that. A tape, just like James Quinlan had said, a tape or a mimic.

Suddenly there was a scream, long and drawn out, starting low and ending on a crescendo. It was coming from outside the house.

She ran toward her aunt's bedroom, not feeling the cold wooden floor beneath her bare feet, no, just running until she forced herself to draw up and tap lightly on the door.

Amabel opened the door as if she'd been standing right there, waiting for her to knock. But that wasn't possible, surely.

She grabbed her aunt's arms and shook her. “Did you hear the scream, Amabel? Please, you heard it, didn't you?”

“Oh, baby, that was the wind. I heard it and knew you'd be frightened. I was coming to you. Did you have another nightmare?”

“It wasn't the wind, Amabel. It was a woman.”

“No, no, come along now and let me help you back to bed. Look at your bare feet. You'll catch your death of something. Come on now, baby, back to bed with you.”

There was another scream, this one short and high-pitched, then suddenly muffled. It was a woman's scream, like the first one.

Amabel dropped her arm.

“Now do you believe me, Amabel?”

“I suppose I'll have to call one of the men to come and check it out. The problem is, they're all so old that if they go out in this weather, they'll probably catch pneumonia. Maybe it was the wind. What woman would be screaming outside? Yes, it's this bloody wind. It's impossible, Sally. Let's forget it.”

“No, I can't. It's a woman, Amabel, and someone is hurting her. I can't go back to bed and forget it.”

“Why not?”

Sally stared at her.

“You mean when your papa hit your mama you tried to protect her?”

“Yes.”

Amabel sighed. “I'm sorry, baby. You did hear the wind this time, not your mama being punched by your papa.”

“Can I borrow your raincoat, Amabel?”

Amabel sighed, hugged Sally close, and said, “All right. I'll call Reverend Vorhees. He's not as rickety as the others, and he's strong. He'll check it out.”

When Reverend Hal Vorhees arrived at Amabel's house, he had three other men with him. “This is Gus Eisner, Susan, a fellow who can fix anything with wheels and a motor.”

“Mr. Eisner,” Sally said. “I heard a woman scream, twice. It was an awful scream. Someone was hurting her.”

Gus Eisner looked as if he would have spat if there'd been a cuspidor in the corner. “The wind, ma'am,” he said, nodding, “it was the wind. I've heard it all my life, all seventy-four years, and it makes noises that sometimes have made my teeth ache. Just the wind.”

“But we'll look around anyway,” Hal Vorhees said. “This here is Purn Davies, who owns the general store, and Hunker Dawson, who's a World War Two vet and our flower expert.” Sally nodded, and the reverend patted her shoulder, nodded to Amabel, and followed the other men out the front door. “You ladies stay safe inside now. Don't let anyone in unless it's us.”

“The little females,” Sally said. “I feel like I should be barefoot and pregnant, making coffee in the kitchen.”

“They're old, baby, they're just old. That generation gave their wives an allowance. Gus's wife, Velma, wouldn't know a bank statement if it bit her ankle. But things balance out, you know. Old Gus is night-blind. Without Velma, he'd be helpless after dark. Don't mind their words. They care, and that's a good feeling, isn't it?”

Just as she opened her mouth to reply, there was a third scream, this one fast and loud, and then it ended, cut off abruptly. It was distant, hidden, and now it was over.

Sally knew deep down that there wouldn't be another scream. Ever again. She also knew it wasn't the damned wind.

She looked at her aunt, who was straightening a modern painting over the sofa, a small picture painted in patternless swirls of ochre, orange, and purple. It was an unsettling painting, dark and violent.

“The wind,” Sally said slowly. “Yes, no more than the wind.” She wanted to ask Amabel if Gus were night-blind, what good would he be out searching for a victim in the dark?

 

THE
next morning dawned cool and clear, the sky as blue in March as it would be in August. Sally walked to Thelma's Bed and Breakfast. Mr. Quinlan, Martha told her, was having his breakfast.

He was seated in isolated splendor amid the heavy Victorian furnishings in Miss Thelma's front room. On the linen-covered table was a breakfast more suited to three kings than one man.

She walked straight to him, waited until he looked up from his newspaper, and said, “Who are you?”

FIVE

It had never occurred to him that she would confront him, not after he'd seen her huddled on the floor when he burst into her aunt's living room. But she had tried to knee him and she'd also punched him just below the ribs. She had fought back. And here she was today, looking ready to spit on him. For some obscure reason, that pleased him. Perhaps it was because he didn't want his prey to be stupid or cowardly. He wanted a chase that would challenge him.

How could she have found out so quickly? It didn't make sense.

“I'm James Quinlan,” he said. “Most people call me Quinlan. You can call me whatever you want to. Won't you sit down, Sally? I assure you there's enough food, though when I finish one plate Martha brings in another one. Does she do the cooking?”

“I don't know. Who are you?”

“Sit down and we'll talk. Or would you like a section of the newspaper? It's the
Oregonian,
a very good paper. There's a long article in here about your father.”

She sat down.

“Who are you, Mr. Quinlan?”

“That didn't last long. It was James yesterday.”

“I have a feeling that nothing lasts very long with you.”

She was right about that, he thought, as he had a fleeting image of Teresa laughing when he'd whispered to her as he'd come inside her that if she ever had another man she would find out what it meant to be half empty.

“What other feelings do you have, Sally?”

“That you love problems, that you get a problem in your hands and shape and mold and twist and do whatever you have to do to solve that problem. Then you lose interest. You look for another problem.”

He stared at her and said aloud, though he didn't realize he was doing so, “How do you know that?”

“Mr. Quinlan, how did you know my husband is a lawyer? That wasn't on TV. There was no reason for it to be. Or if he had been shown, they certainly would have had no reason to discuss his profession or anything else about him.”

“Ah, you remembered that, did you?”

“Delaying tactics don't become you. What if I told you I have a Colt forty-five revolver in my purse and I'll shoot you if you don't tell me the truth right now?”

“I'd probably believe you. Keep your gun in your purse. It was on TV—your good old husband escorting your mother to your dad's funeral. You just didn't see it.” Thank God he'd heard Thelma and Martha discussing it yesterday. Thank God they hadn't really been interested. Washington, D.C., was lightyears from their world. “If you think there's anything private about you now, forget it. You're an open book.”

She had seen it, she'd forgotten, just plain forgotten. She'd made a mistake, and she couldn't afford to make any more. She remembered eating that wonderful ham sandwich when she'd first arrived, sitting with Amabel, watching her black-and-white set, listening and watching and knowing that Scott was with her mother. She hadn't watched TV before or since. She prayed she wasn't an open book. She prayed no one in The Cove would ever realize who she was.

“I forgot,” she said and picked up a slice of unbuttered toast. She bit into it, chewed slowly, then swallowed. “I shouldn't have, but I did.”

“Tell me about him.”

She took another bite of toast. “I can't afford you, remember, James?”

“I sometimes do
pro bono.

“I don't think so. Have you discovered anything about the old couple?”

“Yes, I have. Everyone I've spoken to is lying through their collective dentures. Marge and Harve were here, probably at the World's Greatest Ice Cream Shop. Why doesn't anyone want to admit it? What's to hide? So they had ice cream—who cares?”

He pulled up short, staring at the pale young woman sitting across from him. She took another bite of the dry toast. He lifted the dish of homemade strawberry jam and handed it to her. She shook her head. He'd never in his life told anyone about his business. Of course, old Marge and Harve weren't really his business, not really, but then again, why had everyone lied to him?

More to the point, why had he said anything about that case to her? She was a damned criminal, or at least she knew who had offed her father. If there was one thing he was sure of, it was that.

Whatever else she was—well, he'd find out. She had come to him. Confronted him. It saved him the trouble of seeking her out again.

“You're right. That doesn't make any sense. You're sure folk lied to you?”

“Positive. It's interesting, don't you think?”

She nodded, took another bite of toast, and chewed slowly. “Why don't I ask Amabel why no one admits to remembering them?”

“No, I don't think so. I'm the private investigator here. I'll do the asking. It's not your job.”

She shrugged.

“It's too early for the World's Greatest Ice Cream,” he said. “Maybe you'd like to go for a walk on the cliffs? You look pale. A walk would put some color in your cheeks.”

She gave it a lot of thought. He said nothing more, watched her eat the rest of that dry toast that had to be cold as a stone. She stood, brushed the crumbs from the legs of her brown corduroy slacks, and said, “I need to put on my sneakers. I'll meet you in front of Amabel's house in ten minutes.”

“Excellent,” he said, and meant it. Now he was getting somewhere. He'd open her up soon enough, just like a clam. Soon she would tell him all about her husband, her mother, her dead father, who hadn't called her on the phone. No, that was impossible.

She also seemed perfectly normal, and that bothered him as well. When he'd found her hysterical and frightened yesterday, it had been what he'd expected. But this calm, this open smile that, to his critical eye, held no malice or guile, made him feel he'd missed the last train to Saginaw.

When he met her in front of her aunt's house, she smiled at him. Where the hell was her guile?

Fifteen minutes later she was talking as if there wasn't a single black cloud in her world. “…Amabel told me that The Cove was nothing until a developer from Portland bought up all the land and built vacation cottages. Everything went smoothly until the sixties; then everyone simply forgot about the town.”

“Someone sure remembered, someone with lots of money. The place is a picture postcard.” He remembered old Thelma Nettro had told him the same thing.

“Yes,” she said, kicking a small pebble out of her path. “It's odd, isn't it? If the town died, then how was it resurrected? There's no local factory to employ everyone, no manufacturing of any kind. Amabel said the high school closed back in 1974.”

“Maybe one of them has discovered how to tap into the Social Security computer system.”

“That would only work in the short term. The fund only has money for, what is it? Fifteen months? It's scary. No one would want to count on that.”

They stood on the edge of a narrow promontory and looked down at the fierce white spume, fanning upward when the waves hit the black rocks.

“It's beautiful,” she said as she drew in a deep breath of the salt air.

“Yes, it is, but it makes me nervous. All that unleashed power. It has no conscience. It can kill you so easily.”

“What a romantic thing to say, Mr. Quinlan.”

“Not at all. But I'm right. It doesn't know the good guys from the bad guys. And it's James. You want to climb down? There's a path over there by that lone cypress tree that doesn't look too dangerous.”

“I don't want you fainting on me, if you get too close to all that unleashed power.”

“Threaten to knee me and I'll forget about fainting for the rest of my life.”

She laughed and walked ahead of him. She quickly disappeared around a turn in the trail. It was a narrow path, strewn with good-sized rocks, snaggled low brush, and it was too steep. She slipped, gasped aloud, and grabbed at a root.

“Be careful!”

“Yes, I will be. No, don't say it. I don't want to go back. We'll both be very careful. Just another fifty feet.”

The trail stopped. From the settled look of all the brush and rocks, there'd been an avalanche some years before. They could probably climb over the rocks, but Quinlan didn't want to take the chance. “This is far enough,” he said, grabbing her hand when she took another step. “Nope, Sally, this is it. Let's sit here and commune with all that unleashed power.”

There was no beach below, just pile upon pile of rocks, forming strange shapes as richly imagined as the cloud formations overhead. One even made a bridge from one pile to another, with water flowing beneath. It was breathtaking, and James was right, it was a bit frightening.

Seagulls whirled and dove overhead, squawking and calling to each other.

“It isn't particularly cold today.”

“No,” she said. “Not like last night.”

“I'm in the west tower room at Thelma's Bed and Breakfast. The windows shuddered the whole night.”

Suddenly she stood up, her eyes fixed on something off to the right. She shook her head, whispering, “No, no, it can't be.”

He was on his feet in an instant, his hand on her shoulder. “What is it?”

She pointed.

“Oh, no,” he said. “Stay here, Sally. Stay right here and I'll check it out.”

“No, I won't stay put.”

“Yes you will.” He set her aside and made his way carefully through the rocks until he was standing five feet above the body of a woman, the waves washing her against the rocks, then tugging her back, back and forth. There was no blood in the water. “Oh, no,” he said again.

She was at his side, staring down at the woman. “I knew it,” she said. “I was right, but nobody would listen to me.”

“We've got to get her out before there's nothing left of her,” he said. He sat down, took off his running shoes and socks, and rolled up his jeans. “Stay here, Sally. I mean it. I don't want to have to worry about you falling into the water and washing out to sea.”

Quinlan finally managed to haul her in. He wrapped the woman, what was left of her, in his jacket. His stomach was churning. He waved to Sally to start climbing back up the path. He didn't allow himself to think that what he was carrying had once been a living, laughing person. It made him sick. “We'll take her to Doc Spiver,” Sally called over her shoulder. “He'll take care of her.”

“Yeah,” he said to himself, “I just bet he will.” An old man in this one-horse town would probably say that she'd been killed accidentally by a hunter shooting curlews.

Doc Spiver's living room smelled musty. James wanted to open the windows and air the place out, but he figured the old man must want it this way. He pulled out his cell phone and called Sam North, a homicide detective with the Portland police department. Sam wasn't in, so James left Doc Spiver's number. “Tell him it's urgent,” he said to Sam's partner, Martin Amick. “It's really urgent.”

He watched Sally St. John Brainerd pace back and forth over a rich wine-red Bokhara carpet. It was fairly new, that beautiful carpet. “What did you mean when you said you knew it?”

“What? Oh, I heard her scream last night. There were three screams, and at the last one I knew someone had killed her. It was cut off so quickly, like someone hit her hard and that was it.

“Amabel thought it was the wind because it was howling—no doubt about that, but I knew it was a woman's scream, just like the one the first night I was here. I told you about that. Do you think it was the same woman?”

“I don't know.”

“Amabel called Reverend Vorhees and he came with three other men and they went on a search. When they came back they said they hadn't found anything. It was the wind, they said. Reverend Vorhees patted me again, like I was a child, an idiot.”

“Or worse, a hysterical woman.”

“Exactly. Someone killed her, James. It couldn't have been an accident. I heard her scream the night I arrived and then last night. Last night, they killed her.”

“What do you mean, ‘they'?”

She shrugged, looking a bit confused. “I don't know. It just seems right.”

James's cell phone played the first bar of “Fly Me to the Moon.” He answered it. It was Sam North calling him back. Sally listened to his end of the conversation.

“Yes, a woman anywhere from young to middle-aged, I guess. The tide washed her in, and she'd been battered against the rocks for a good number of hours. I don't know how long. What do you want to do, Sam?”

He listened, then said, “A little town called The Cove about an hour or so southwest of you. You know it? Good. The local doctor is looking her over now, but they have no law enforcement, nothing like that. Yes? All right. Done. His name is Doc Spiver, on the end of Main Street. You've got my number. Right. Thanks, Sam.”

He said as he punched off, “Sam's calling the county sheriff. He says they'll send someone over to handle things.”

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