Unforgettable. Molly Rice
slightly flushed to a sort of apricot color.
A most alluring woman. But the question was, was she a spy for one of the other counties in the state who were hoping MacroData would build there instead—or an innocent traveler who’d had the misfortune of ending up in a town populated by a bunch of hardheaded, paranoid old folks?
He got to his feet, flipping the notebook closed and returning it to his pocket. Whatever had motivated her visit, he was looking forward to another session at her bedside.
“Going back over to the hospital, Jed,” he told the deputy on dispatch duty as he passed through the outer office. “Should be back in thirty.”
“Take your time, boss,” Jed Marek called out as he shot another alien plane down on the monitor of his computer.
Derek laughed and went out to where his car was parked at an angle in front of the sheriff’s building. As big as the county was, there just wasn’t enough crime to keep his men busy most days. They had their busier times, like Halloween, when the kids from both towns and farms went a little nutso, but in the spring, most people were planting and didn’t have time to look for trouble. Every now and then an escapee from one of the prisons closer to the Twin Cities made it downriver, but with the help of the state troopers, the convicts had always been caught and taken back. The river, itself, had spewed up a couple of bodies in Derek’s time, but it was soon proven that they had drifted downstream from out of his jurisdiction. Not a pretty sight, those bodies, but ultimately not his business, either.
He waved at Pam Rocca. She waved back and continued sweeping the steps up to the broad veranda that fronted the Hunter’s Bay Inn. A gorgeous-looking woman, that Pam, and a great cook. Not for the first time he wondered why she’d never married and why she’d choose to stay in a small town where there really wasn’t much action, at least during the off-season. She was good company. A couple of nights a week, when he’d worked the late shift, he’d gone over to the inn to have a nightcap with her. She was a good friend.
Too bad she was ten years his senior. For that matter, there weren’t many women his own age around anymore. Most of those he’d grown up and gone to school with had moved to the Cities or out of state if they hadn’t married someone else. Which proved what the Hunter family had argued in his office.
He turned the wheel to the left with one finger and drove up onto the blacktop in front of the hospital’s main entrance, parked and got out.
Dr. Farbish was just coming out of the front doors.
“How’s our patient, Doc?” Derek called out.
Matthew Farbish shook his head and ran his hand across the back of his neck. “She’s not our patient anymore, Sheriff.”
“What? What happened?”
The doctor shrugged. “Checked herself out. Said she was fine and I couldn’t find any reason to keep her.”
Derek was surprised at the degree of disappointment that shot through him. “Do you know where she was headed?”
“Nope. She gave her home address as New York City, but I got the impression she wasn’t headed back home.”
“Yeah, well, I guess she had a right to move on if she wasn’t badly hurt.”
Derek slid behind the wheel and backed out of the parking space. Was he disappointed because he’d thought he had something to occupy him in his professional capacity? If that was so, maybe he’d better start reconsidering offers he’d had from both the Ramsey County sheriff’s department and the Minneapolis police department. If it was action he craved, what was keeping him in his hometown, where he was more a peace officer than a crime fighter?
On the other hand, if it had been Stacy Millman, herself, who had intrigued him, maybe it was time for him to spend some weekends in the Cities doing the dating thing.
He shrugged and signaled his turn onto Main Street. It was a moot point either way. The girl was gone and life would continue in its usual ho-hum manner until the middle of June when the tourists would start arriving to liven up the place with lost traveler’s checks, broken-down vehicles, and the infrequent boating accident.
He had almost driven past the inn when he spotted Stacy Millman’s car in the driveway.
* * *
“YOU COULDN’T HAVE COME at a better time,” Pam Rocca said. “It’s too early for the tourists and I have plenty of rooms and can give you a fair discount.”
“That would be very nice,” Stacy said, rubbing her neck again as she gazed at the long, curved stairway to the second floor. The walk up seemed daunting.
“Do you have a room on the first floor?” she asked.
“Yes, though they’re smaller, as they used to be maids’ rooms. But they have all the amenities of the larger rooms upstairs. They’re at the back of the house so you won’t be bothered by the comings and goings on this floor.”
She turned the registration book so Stacy could sign in. When Stacy had filled in her name and address, and turned the book back, a strange look came over the innkeeper’s face. “Do you have family around here?” Pam asked.
“No. At least...why? Is my name familiar?” A beat of hope made her breath catch in her throat.
Pam frowned. “No. Not at all.” She closed the book and managed to avoid Stacy’s gaze. “Just that you’re such a long way from home.”
“I’m a painter,” Stacy told her, “and I decided to combine my work with a trip to a place I haven’t been. I’ve already seen so much beautiful scenery in the area.”
Pam seemed to recover. She met Stacy’s look with directness. “It’ll get even prettier as the days go by. How long do you think you’ll be staying?”
“A few weeks, anyway. Do I need a fixed date right now?”
“No. Just so long as you let me know before the first of June. My first reservations will be arriving on the tenth.”
Her room was just as she expected, given the marvelously authentic decor she’d already seen. The legend on the sign out front had informed that the building had been erected in 1880, and it had the true characteristics of turn-of-the-century Victorian river mansions, including a widow’s walk at the peak of the roof.
Her windows opened onto a long stretch of lawn dotted with flower beds that would soon be in bloom. Meanwhile, she had the feeling of a garden within the room, what with the flowered chintzes that covered the windows and chairs and the leaf-printed bedspread. A small bathroom boasted a pedestal sink that would have conflicted with the more modern narrow shower stall but for the flowered chintz shower curtain covering the plastic curtain beneath.
She marveled at the luxury of the room, especially given the moderate price Pam Rocca was charging her. She’d paid more at the motels on her way north, and one of them had been borderline sleazy.
She stretched out on the bed. Thinking of Pam had made her remember the woman’s strange reaction to Stacy’s registration. Could she have only imagined that Pam had been alarmed by the sight of Stacy’s name? If her parents had come from Hunter’s Bay, or any of the surrounding areas, was Pam Rocca old enough to have known them? She must be in her early forties. Stacy had been born in 1966. She did some figuring in her head. In 1966 Pam would have been about thirteen years old. Hardly one of the Millmans’ peers, but old enough to have known who they were, especially in such a small town as Hunter’s Bay.
And that brought her thoughts back to the hospital. The two elderly couples, her nurse had explained after their brief visit, were Hunters from the original founding family. When Stacy had asked why they’d been there, the nurse had shrugged and said, “Just nosy, I guess. The Hunters like to know everything that goes on in their little dynasty. And we don’t get many outsiders here except during the summer tourist season.”
Outsider. But was she? In that first confused moment of coming to in the hospital, she’d