and he wanted to calm it. “I said that I’d like to go over the chronology of events another time, to make sure I have everything straight.”

“All right.”

Sinclair looked down at the notepad he’d been writing on. “Now, Mrs. Ryerson, you say you couldn’t sleep, so you got up early and went for a walk?”

“Yes, that’s right.”

“Was there any particular reason for your sleeplessness?”

“No. I was just… restless. Things on my mind.”

Sinclair cocked his head interrogatively.

“The book my husband and I are working on,” she said.

“Ah, yes. A history of North American lighthouses, isn’t it?”

“Yes. He’s writing it and I’m illustrating it.”

Sinclair nodded. “What time did you leave on your walk?”

“Close to seven.”

“And your husband was asleep at the time?”

“He was, yes.”

“Mr. Ryerson,” Sinclair said to Jan, “were you aware your wife had gone out?”

“No. I’m a very sound sleeper.”

“And you were stilj asleep when she came back and told you what she’d found?”

“Yes.”

Again Sinclair consulted his notepad, allowing the silence to build. Jan was also looking at it, as if trying to read what the detective had written there. Then his gaze flicked up and over to Alix. There was a vague glassy quality to them, she thought, as if they were filmed with a thin layer of ice. But Sinclair wouldn’t have noted that. Or had he?

The questioning continued. Why had Alix walked so far this morning? Because she’d wanted to exercise. What had made her notice Mandy’s bicycle? Why had she gone as far as that circle of pines looking for the girl? On and on, some of the questions asked more than once, in subtly different guises. Then he shifted gears and asked again about the trouble they’d been having here at the light. Alix had explained it once, holding nothing back; it would have been foolish not to, and it diverted suspicion away from Jan, perhaps to where it actually belonged.

“Mr. Ryerson,” Sinclair asked, “why didn’t you call us when these things started happening-the polluted well, the rats in the pantry?”

“What could you have done without proof of who was responsible? What can you do now?”

“Talk to Mr. Novotny, for one thing. Surely you could see the value in at least filing a report.”

“I suppose so.”

“I think we might have done that today,” Alix said quickly. “Even if this terrible new thing hadn’t happened.”

“Mandy Bamett’s murder, you mean?”

“My finding her body. Yes.”

“But that is why you told me about the incidents?”

“Well, we didn’t want to hold anything back,” she said, “anything that might be important. Mandy’s death could be related to what Mitch Novotny has been doing to us, couldn’t it?”

“In what way?”

“I don’t know. But her father is a friend of Novotny’s. It’s possible he was involved in those malicious acts against us.”

Sinclair made a note but said nothing.

Alix went on. “And the girl was on her way to see me last night. She said on the phone she needed to talk to me. I don’t see what else she could have wanted to talk about except the harassment; there was no other connection between us.”

“You think she wanted to tell you who was responsible? Or something else?”

“I just don’t know.”

Sinclair stroked his lopsided mustache. “You can be sure we’ll look into that possibility, Mrs. Ryerson. Among others. Meanwhile, I think it would be a good idea if you and your husband filed a report on the incidents as soon as possible.”

“Yes. Whatever you say.”

“Mr. Ryerson? Do you agree?”

Jan nodded. “Yes, all right.”

More questions. On and on, until the sound of his voice began to grate on Alix’s nerves. She continued to watch Jan closely, to see if he was starting to weaken under the constant barrage of questions. But he seemed the same as he had at the beginning, with his fear still masked beneath his calm exterior, just as Sinclair’s bulldog tenacity was masked beneath his calm exterior.

It was another half hour before Sinclair finally seemed satisfied. He rose then, thanked them for their cooperation, and issued the standard warning not to leave the area without first notifying his office. His departure left them in an echoing silence that Alix broke by saying, “Thank God that’s over!”

“Is it?” Jan said. He gave her a bleak look. “I’d guess it’s just starting.”

He was right, of course. There would be other interrogations, other questions. Sinclair was no fool; he could sense that something was wrong here. But that was not her immediate worry. Jan was.

She refused to believe he was a murderer; if she even admitted the possibility, after the horrifying, elemental experience of finding Mandy’s body, she would be risking her sanity. And it wasn’t just blind faith in his innocence, either. There was physical evidence: she’d examined the front of the car at the rest area, found no scrapes or dents, no streaks of electric blue, as there would have been if he were the one who’d run Mandy down on her bicycle. No, the man she knew, loved, lived with was the same decent, harmless man he’d always been. It was something else, something profound, that had made him afraid, made him need her so much. Something to do with those headaches. She would find out what it was, and they would deal with it together.

But not here. She couldn’t reach him here; he couldn’t seem to talk to her. They had to get away from Cape Despair first. If she knew nothing else, she knew that that was imperative for both their sakes.

She was about to speak, to put her thoughts into words, when Jan raised his head-he had been staring at his hands-and looked at her. His eyes seemed to have lost their thin film, as if it had melted under some sudden heat- the heat of decision, of resolve.

He said, “Alix, I think you should leave here. Right away.”

It was almost an echo of her thoughts, and the last thing she had expected him to say. “Do you mean that?”

“Of course I mean it. Go to Bandon, take a motel room for a day or two.”

“Both of us?”

“No. Just you.”

She stared at him. “What about you?”

“I’ll stay here.”

“Jan, I don’t understand… ”

“We need some time apart. I need it… some time alone.”

“But why?”

“I can’t explain now.” He got to his feet, came over to stand in front of her. His eyes were almost pleading, now. “Please don’t argue with me, or ask me any more questions. Just pack a bag and leave. In a day or two… then you’ll understand. I promise you that.”

Would she understand? She didn’t now; she felt again that they were on the brink of losing each other, of becoming strangers. The bond between them was so fragile. If she left him at this crisis point, it might snap.

And what would he do out here alone? What if he had another bad headache? Or what if Novotny came back, retaliated further? She wanted to ask him, demand reassurances, but she couldn’t. He’d said, “Please don’t argue with me, or ask me any more questions.” It would be a breach of faith, another strain on the bond, if she ignored that plea. Might make the crisis even worse.

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