were a bulletin board with pictures of prize-winning pigs and calves from the local Grange, and posters warning of the dangers of forest fires. Wake closed his eyes in the warm light. He was tired. He was
“Mr.
Wake opened his eyes, saw Sheriff Sarah Breaker standing over him. She was a pretty woman in her early thirties, wholesome in that small-town way, her uniform crisp, the sheriff’s badge gleaming. Intelligent eyes. She’d need to be smart to make sheriff in a town full of outdoorsmen who probably thought women belonged in the kitchen. She looked concerned.
“Doc said you shouldn’t go to sleep for at least eight hours, Mr. Wake,” said Breaker, sitting in a chair facing him, “in case there’s a hemorrhage or swelling of the brain.”
“I… I wasn’t sleeping,” said Wake. “I was dreaming.”
The sheriff smiled. A nice, open smile, probably useful in diffusing trouble, calming an angry drunk. “If you say so.”
Wake rubbed his eyes, stretched. “Are you going to help me find Alice?”
“I’ve already started making inquiries,” said the sheriff. “Rose at the diner is talking to everyone who walks in the door, and Pat Maine’s put out an announcement over the radio. Everybody in Bright Falls listens to Pat.”
“We were on the island in the lake,” said Wake. “Bird Leg Cabin. I just left her for a minute—”
The sheriff held up a hand. “There is no island in Cauldron Lake. We’ve already been over that.
“We were
“The only island in the lake sank during an earthquake in nineteen seventy-three,” said the sheriff. “Don’t you remember me telling you that? Doc said you might experience hallucinations—”
“It wasn’t a hallucination,” said Wake. “I was at Bird Leg Cabin with Alice…”
The sheriff shook her head. “No, Mr. Wake, you’ve been someplace for the last week, but you weren’t at Bird Leg Cabin.” She looked concerned again. “You were in a car accident, Mr. Wake. You hit your head. You’ve refused further medical attention, which is your right—”
“I just want to find Alice.”
“That’s what we all want, Mr. Wake.” The sheriff handed him his cell phone. “Looks like we have the same phone so I charged this up for you. I pulled up your wife’s number, but it’s out of service.”
Wake gripped the cell phone. “She’s afraid of the dark.”
“You told me that.”
Wake was glad he hadn’t told her about the Taken, hadn’t mentioned the men who couldn’t be killed with bullets alone, men who dissolved in the light. When she had driven up to Stucky’s gas station at sunrise she had been solicitous, done minor first aid on his head wound, put antibiotic cream on the scratches on his hands. He wanted to reveal what had happened, but as desperate as he was, he knew better than to tell her the whole truth. Not after seeing her face when he had talked about Bird Leg Cabin.
“We’ll find her, Mr. Wake. There was no body in your wrecked car, so she must have survived too—”
“She wasn’t
The sheriff nodded. “I understand. Still, you’re rather… unclear about the details of last night. The doc said temporary memory loss and confusion are common in injuries like yours.” Her voice was calm and reassuring. Steady.
Sheriff Breaker was used to dangerous situations, natural disasters, mud slides and snowstorms, hair- trigger loggers beating each other senseless. She
“Your wife might have been equally disoriented after the crash,” said the sheriff. “I’ve got my deputies and teams of volunteers searching the woods right now.” She leaned back in her chair. “You didn’t see Carl Stucky at the gas station last night, did you?”
Wake hesitated. “No. No, I didn’t.”
The sheriff stared at him. “I called him this morning, wanted to ask him to be on the lookout for your wife, but he wasn’t at the station. That’s not like him. The garage was pretty trashed too. That’s not like him either.”
The cell phone in his hand vibrated and Wake jumped. “Excuse… excuse me.”
“Quit talking to that damned lady cop or you’re going to be the famous writer with the dead wife,” said a voice on the phone.
“Are you alright, Mr. Wake?” said the sheriff.
“Fine… just a business call,” said Wake, backing toward the door. He walked out into the hallway, moved someplace quiet and pressed the phone against his ear. “Who are you?”
“Alan…” said Alice. “Alan—”
“Alice?” Her voice sounded distant, disembodied, and Wake imagined her drifting down into the cold darkness of Cauldron Lake. “Alice, where—?”
“That’s enough of that shit,” said the man on the line.
“I want to talk to my wife again,” ordered Wake.
“We all got things we want, pal. Me, I want a thick steak, a new car, and for you to keep your mouth shut.”
“Look, I’ll pay you anything—”
“Meet me at midnight tonight at Elderwood Park. Place called Lovers’ Peak. Kind of sweet, isn’t it? And, pal?”
“Yes?”