In the back Neely dished up a bowlful of vegetable-beef soup and grabbed a basket of soda crackers in individual wrappers. She set the food down in front of Doris, along with a spoon, and proceeded to the milk machine.
She was just putting the glass on the counter when the little bell over the door jingled and Ben came in. He’d been shoveling snow from the walk over at the motel, and his cheeks were red from the cold.
It seemed providential to Neely, his showing up at the perfect moment like that. “Ben, this is Doris Craig,” she said. “Doris, my brother, Ben Wallace. Doris is looking for work.”
Ben’s ever-ready smile flashed instantly; he took off his plaid coat and came over to greet Doris, one hand extended. Neely poured him a cup of coffee, then grabbed her purse, said goodbye to Heather, and hurried out.
As far as she could tell, glancing back through the frosty café window, Ben hadn’t even noticed that she was gone.
Neely was deep in thought as she crossed the parking lot. Maybe the fates were trying to tell her something, sending Doris along when they had. Perhaps it was time she got on with her life; she was only marking time in Bright River, and she could no longer overlook the fact that she represented a very real danger to her brother and nephew.
Because of her distraction, Neely all but collided with the dun-colored rental car that was parked just on the other side of the hedge, motor running. There was a whirring sound, and the window on the passenger side disappeared into the door. Senator Dallas Hargrove himself leaned across the front seat and said, “Get in, Neely.”
In spite of all the senator had been a party to, and all she had done to ensure his intense dislike for all eternity, Neely still couldn’t believe he would actually hurt her. She’d seen him with his wife, Elaine, who suffered from a degenerative muscular disease, and knew there was no violence in him. She drew a deep breath, let it out in a rush, and got into the car.
The senator was handsome, with well-cut blond hair and a square jaw, but there had never been an attraction between them. “That was pretty stupid,” he said, steering the car onto Route 7 and away from Bright River. “For all you know, I might be planning to knock you over the head and dump you in some lake.”
Neely relaxed against the seat and closed her eyes for a moment. She was so tired all of a sudden, so full of a longing she couldn’t begin to understand. “You’ve made some terrific mistakes in your life, Senator,” she said, “but you’re not a murderer. Not a direct one, at least.”
She could feel his tension; he was like tightly coiled wire, ready to come unwound. Still, she wasn’t afraid.
“What do you mean, ‘not a direct one’?” he demanded. “We both know you’ve fixed it so that certain drug dealers can bring their wares into the country without the usual inconveniences,” Neely answered with a sigh. “What do you think is happening to that garbage after it hits the streets? Real people are using it—kids, pregnant mothers, people who get behind the wheels of semi-trucks and school buses.”
“If I didn’t cooperate, someone else would.” Hargrove’s knuckles tightened on the steering wheel, relaxed again.
Neely reflected that her decision to get into the car with the senator might have been a bit rash after all. “That’s a load of horse crap,” she replied calmly. “Let’s not waste our time debating the subject, since we’ll never agree. What are you doing in Bright River? You can’t be stumping for votes, since this isn’t your district.”
He turned the car off the highway onto a bumpy, unplowed road that snaked in behind a large Christmas tree farm. He stopped the car beside a weathered old mill spanning a narrow, silvery brook. His blue eyes were tormented as he looked at Neely. “Look, I came here to warn you. The people I deal with know you tried to bring the FBI down on their operation, and they want you dead. You’ve got to get out of here as fast as you can.”
Neely regarded him in pensive silence for a time, her arms folded. “There’s something I don’t understand,” she finally said. “I gave the government hard evidence of your involvement in a major crime syndicate. If your man on the inside hadn’t managed to turn the tide—at least, that’s what I think must have happened—you would have lost everything and gone to prison, maybe for the rest of your life. Why are you trying so hard to save me? How come you don’t hate me and want me dead, like those hoods you’ve been hanging around with?”
Hargrove gave a despairing rush of a sigh and leaned forward, letting his forehead rest against the steering wheel. “I’m not a killer, Neely—I never meant for things to turn out this way. I needed money—there were so many debts— and then I was in too deep to get out.”
“Debts? For Elaine’s medical care, you mean? Come on. Thanks to the long-suffering taxpayer, you have a more than respectable salary and excellent health insurance.”
The senator sat up straight, gazing out at the snow-laced mill wheel. The weathered building supporting it seemed about to cave in on itself. “There were all those special treatments, in Europe and Mexico,” he said. “None of them worked, of course.”
Impulsively Neely reached across the seat to touch his arm. She liked Elaine Hargrove, a brave and smiling person, liked the man the senator became whenever he was in his wife’s presence.
“It wasn’t just the treatments, though,” Hargrove confessed wearily. “When Elaine was first diagnosed, I went a little crazy. I don’t know what it was—the fear, the stress— I can’t say. In any case, I was involved with a woman for a while, and then there were some gambling debts….” Neely had known about the woman, but the gambling was a new element. She closed her eyes for a few moments while she assimilated everything. “And I thought I was in trouble,” she said.
“We’re both in trouble,” Hargrove replied. “Don’t forget that for a moment, Neely. Get your things together and get out of here before they come after you!”
She nodded slowly. Although Neely wanted fiercely to live, just as she always had, it wasn’t self-preservation that pushed her over the line, causing her to make the decision she’d been putting off. It was the knowledge that Ben and Danny would be in terrible danger as long as she stuck around.
From out of nowhere, like a careening vehicle, came the thought that she might never see Aidan Tremayne again. She tried to sidestep the realization, but it crashed into her full force, and she gave a soft cry of despair on impact.
Hargrove had turned the car around and was on the way back to the highway again before she could speak.
“You’ve got to turn yourself in,” she said. “Sure, the sky will fall in, and there will be hell to pay, but at least you’ll be alive—and free of those awful people.”
The senator was shaking his head even before she’d finished the sentence. “No,” he told her. “The publicity, the scandal, would be torture for Elaine. She’d never survive it!”
Sadly Neely thought of the once-vibrant Elaine Hargrove. She’d been a famous television journalist, still active and vocal about her opinions even after her sudden immersion into political life. Then, just two years before, she’d started feeling tired and having episodes of unusual awkwardness. The diagnosis was grim, the prognosis, terrible. Elaine had been going downhill, physically at least, from the very first. Neely looked out the window for a few seconds, struggling with emotions of her own—horror, pity, and, yes, God forgive her, a certain savage gratitude that she hadn’t been the one to be struck down that way.
“I think your wife is a whole lot stronger than you give her credit for,” she said.
“She’s had to endure enough suffering as it is,” Hargrove said. “Once it’s all over, and she’s—she’s at peace, then I’ll go to the authorities with the truth.” The rental car bumped onto the highway and fishtailed slightly on the ice-coated asphalt. The senator’s attention was fixed on Neely. “I’ll do anything to protect Elaine,” he told her. “Anything.”
Neely understood. “You’ve done your duty by warning me,” she replied, “and now I’m on my own. Does
that about cover it?”
Hargrove nodded. They rounded a bend, and the café sign came into view, a symbol of everything ordinary. Just then Neely would have paid practically any price to have a mundane life again, uncomplicated by desperate politicians, vengeful drug dealers, and her unremitting fascination with Aidan Tremayne.
They came to a stop in front of Neely’s trailer, and Hargrove looked around nervously. Then he reached into the inside pocket of his jacket and took out an envelope. “Here—take this cash and get as far away as you can, as quickly as possible.”
Neely didn’t want to accept the money, knowing only too well where it had come from, but her choices were limited. She’d put aside a little over the past few years, but it was mostly in long-term CDs, and she wouldn’t be able to get to it without drawing unwanted attention to herself.
“Thanks,” she said without checking the contents of the envelope or looking directly at the senator. She opened the car door and got out, and even before the sound of the engine had died away, Neely was packing a suitcase.
When that was done, she borrowed Ben’s truck and went to town to pick Danny up in front of the school. He beamed when he saw her and broke away from his friends, who were boarding a bus.
“Hi,” he said, flinging himself onto the springy leather seat beside her. “What’s the deal?” Danny paused and frowned. “I don’t have to go to the dentist again, do I?”
Neely shook her head and smiled, but at the same time she fought back tears. “No, you’re done with dentistry for a while, kid. I do have news, though, and frankly I’m a little worried about how you’re going to take it.”
Danny’s freckles stood out against his pale skin. “Those bad dudes are after you, aren’t they?”
Neely drove down Main Street, past the drugstore, the Sweetie-Freeze drive-in, the library, and the bank. She was going to miss this town, but not as much as she’d miss Danny and Ben. She frowned. “What do you know about anybody being after me?”
“I heard you and Dad talking once.”
Neely eyed the sheriff’s office as they passed and wished she could solve the problem by stopping in and reporting the situation, but she knew that wouldn’t work. If the FBI hadn’t come through for her, she could hardly expect protection from an aging, overweight sheriff with one part-time deputy. No, her only real hope was to get her copies of the evidence against Dallas Hargrove and the others and turn it over to the media. The trick would be in staying alive long enough to pull it off.
She reached across the seat and ruffled Danny’s soft brown hair. “I should have known I couldn’t keep something like this from a super-detective like you.”
There were tears in Danny’s eyes. “You’ll come back sometime, won’t you?”
Neely was possessed of a sudden and rather ill-advised fit of optimism. Incredible as the prospect seemed, she had to make herself believe she was going to survive this mess— if she didn’t, the terror of it all would immobilize her. “You bet,” she sniffled. “Once the good guys get their licks in, everything will be okay again. In the meantime, I want you to promise me two things—that you’ll say a prayer for me every single night, and that you’ll look after your dad.” Danny offered a high five, and Neely completed the gesture. Now all she had to do was tell Ben goodbye, grab her suitcase, and hit the road. She wished she could see Aidan once more as well, but time was short. Besides, she hardly knew the man.
Five hours later Neely was headed north in the car she’d bought from Doris Craig. Saying goodbye to Ben hadn’t been easy, but he’d urged her to disappear as quickly as possible, pressing all the money from the restaurant till into the pocket of her peacoat.
She’d turned her trailer and her job over to Doris and set out in Doris’s old clunker of a car, making only one brief stop before leaving Bright River to ring Aidan Tremayne’s doorbell. She’d hoped to bid him farewell, but he evidently wasn’t at home.
Neely scribbled a note on the back of an expired registration found in the glove box of Doris’s car, stuck the paper in the frame of Aidan’s front door, and fled.
Twilight was gathering by the time the town of Bright River fell away behind her.
Maeve was visiting the Havermails at their estate in the English countryside, circa 1895. She was embroiled in a game of croquet, played by the light of thousands of colorful paper lanterns, when Aidan materialized at her elbow.
With a little cry Maeve started and accidentally tapped the croquet ball wide of the wire hoop she’d been aiming for. “Great Scot, Aidan,” she hissed, “I hate it when you do that!”
He clasped her arm, heedless of the staring guests, and yanked her toward the shrubbery. “It’s Valerian—he’s found some way to change a vampire into a man,” he told her.
Maeve stared at him, letting her wooden mallet topple forgotten onto the grass. “What?”
Aidan began to pace, unable to stand still because of the torturous agitation the knowledge had roused in him. “He’s ill—I gave him blood—he sent me away without telling me—”
“Aidan, stop,” Maeve pleaded, reaching out and clasping his shoulders in her extraordinarily white and graceful hands. “What in the world are you talking about? There is no way to change a vampire into a man—is there?”
“Yes,” Aidan said. Now he couldn’t contain his joy. Dear God, the very thought of it—breathing, having a heartbeat, living by daylight, loving Neely freely and fathering her children, and, when the time came, dying. In peace. “Yes! He says it’s dangerous, but—”
“Would you truly become a mortal again, even if such a thing were possible?” Maeve whispered, plainly stricken.
He paused before answering, looking deep into his sister’s eyes. He loved her with the whole of his being, and it was torment to think of such a chasm opening between them, but the bright, shining prospect of redemption blinded him to everything but itself.
“Yes,” he whispered. “Oh, God in heaven, yes.”
Maeve lifted her chin, but her lower lip was trembling. “You would leave me, Aidan? You want so much to be a mortal that you would turn your back on your own sister, for all eternity? Such a thing would make enemies of us.” She stopped and with visible effort took control of her emotions. She even managed to smile. “I don’t know why I’m worrying,” she said, her voice brittle and bright. “Vampires are vampires, darling. They cannot be men just for wishing, any more than they can be angels. Come—I want you to meet the Havermails.”
Aidan allowed Maeve to loop her arm through his and escort him across the lawn and into one of the estate’s many fragrant gardens, where the mistress of the great house held court. Mrs. Havermail, like her husband and her two children, who gave new weight and substance to the term brat, was a creature of the night, and she showed her fangs and made a soft hissing sound as the newest guest approached.
Chapter 6
Doris’s rattletrap of a car seemed to stagger along the interstate, coughing, flinging itself forward in a wild, smoky burst of fumes and fervor, nearly stalling, then shuddering with the effort to begin the whole process all over again. A little after midnight Neely pulled into the parking lot of a tacky motel and, with no small amount of trepidation, turned off the engine. If the motor wouldn’t start in the morning, she told herself wearily, she would abandon the heap with no real regrets and step onto a bus.
Maybe that would be better anyway, she thought, taking her purse and overnight case and heading for the front office. A neon sign burned dimly in the window, announcing a vacancy.
The clerk was a taciturn Yankee woman, clad in a chenille bathrobe and furry slippers that looked as though they might be developing mange, and she was none too pleased to be awakened. Neely signed the register with a false name, purposely illegible, and paid cash. She was given a key with a red plastic tag emblazoned with a 6.
The room was small and smelled vaguely of mildew and stale cigarette smoke, but Neely was far too tired and distraught to care about amenities. As long as the
sheets and the bathroom were clean, she could overlook the rest.
After carefully putting the chain lock on the door, she undressed, put on a nightgown, brushed her teeth and splashed her face with warm water, then toppled into bed. She was exhausted, both emotionally and physically, and unconsciousness offered a welcome respite from reality.
Lying in the darkness, she found herself longing for Aidan. The desire was not merely sexual, though there could be no denying, at least in the privacy of her own mind, that she wanted him with a wild, primitive, even violent sort of ardor. No, there was much more to her yearning; it was complex, a living thing rooted in the very core of her spirit, spreading graceful vines into her mind and heart and even into the deepest recesses of her unconscious.
Despite her loneliness, life had never seemed sweeter or more precious to Neely. There were so many things she wanted to see and feel and do—not the least of which was to give herself to Aidan—and now she was probably going to die.
Neely turned onto her stomach, buried her face in the musty pillow, and wept, softly at first. Soon, however, her sniffles turned to unrestrained howls as she grieved for a future that might well be denied her.
In the charcoal-smudged hours just before dawn, something awakened Neely, a feeling rather than a sound. She lifted her head from the pillow, squinted into the darkness, felt a twinge at the realization that she was not at home in her trailer, but on the road, and running.
She groped for her watch, which was lying on the nightstand, and peered at the numbers.
3:20 A.M.
With a sigh, Neely rolled onto her back and, in the next second let out a low, croaky cry.
A cloaked form towered at the foot of the bed.
“Oh, God,” Neely whimpered. She didn’t want to think the shadowy shape belonged to one of the senator’s business associates or some serial rapist, but the possibilities had to be considered.
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