couldn’t see Lily was the most innocent, decent human being they’d ever met, Griff figured they had to be too dumb to waste time on, anyway.
Over the next two hours, his lover-the one who was too nauseous to eat-finished off two dishes of ice cream, a farmer’s omelet with all the extras, three cups of coffee and a brownie. Debbie was trying to hand her a lunch menu when Griff stood up.
“All right, all right,” she said, once they were outside and aiming for his car. “I admit it. You were right. That was a good thing to do.”
“Of course I was right.” He glanced down the street toward his store, and felt a new stab in the gut, looking at the burned-out mess. It was fixable. Material things didn’t matter. Still, it hurt. Normally, there’d be a swarm of kids hanging out there by now-kids who often had no place to go.
As they walked to the car, he hooked an arm around Lily’s neck, inhaled the scent and touch of her. In the diner, he hadn’t wanted to overdo contact. He wanted to show the town that they had a connection, that he was on her side. But to overly let the gossips believe they were lovers wasn’t necessarily the best thing for Lily. He liked having a bad-boy reputation, but didn’t want her tainted by it. Now, though, that long stretch of not touching caught up with him.
“After all that food, you want to come home to my place and catch a nap?”
She looked up at him. “It’s not napping on your mind.”
“It is too.”
“You lie.”
“That’s relevant how?”
“It’s not. You can lie to me all you want, Griff. I like it. I especially like it when you’re trying to get away with something. But for a few hours…I’m guessing you have stuff you need to do in the middle of the day. And I want to hit the newspaper office, to see if I can track down records of what was going on the year of the fire.”
“I’ll go with you.”
“Does that sound like a thrilling way to spend an afternoon? Pouring over old newsprint? No. You have serious things to do. You’ve got a clean-up plan to put together, you’ve got your other work, you’ve still got ice cream equipment that needs some kind of resolution, you-”
“I don’t care about any of that.”
She sighed, put her slim hand on his chest. Just like that, he felt the electric connection, the pulse between them, the beat he’d never imagined before. “Griff-go do your life. We can meet up at dinner if you want.”
“I’m not-”
“You’re worried something’s going to happen to me. It’s not. Think about it. No one’s targeted me. These fires may be somehow
He didn’t like her ability to read his mind, to draw conclusions without his permission. He also couldn’t deny her logic-and it was true he had five million things that needed to get done. At the newspaper office, she’d be around other people.
So he agreed, said he’d pick her up for dinner around seven at the B and B. That was where he dropped her now, so she could get her car. But when he drove off, he felt an uneasy itch, like the nag of a mosquito bite. No one
The redhead took one look at her, said, “Bridal or Engagement announcements, down the hall to the left.”
“No, I-”
“Classified straight through that door.”
It took a while for the redhead to run down her list, they simply asked for “past newspaper history.” No one had apparently asked that before, because the young woman looked confounded, but eventually she pushed some buttons and a middle-aged man showed up.
“You’re Lily Campbell?” he asked.
Timothy was a sweetheart, disguised in too-short pants and white socks and a zealous comb-over. The reference room was
“Yes.” She told him her goal, which was to track the phrase in the investigative report referring to her parents’ fire being “nothing like the other arson events”. She just wanted to see what those other fires were about. She realized it was grasping for some mighty slim straws, but it was one of the few things she hadn’t tried pursuing before.
“You know how long it’s going to take you to read two years’ worth of copy?” Timothy asked her.
“I figure…a while.”
He sighed. “You can’t smoke or eat in here. But that far door, that leads to a restroom, a minikitchen-the coffee pot’s usually on-and a back door, if you want to get out in the fresh air.”
“There’s fresh air in Georgia in the summer?” she asked incredulously.
He looked blank, then chuckled. “I can come back and help you if I get more projects done, but I’m behind. Still, just yell out my name if you want me.”
“Thanks, Timothy.”
She’d never seen microfiche before. The method was prehistoric as far as she could tell, but it was a way to scroll through page after page of every newspaper edition.
The minutes started to add up. Then the hours. Lily felt her neck creaking, her wrist whining from the constant scrolling motion. The monitor was ancient, with no resolution and blurry print. The chair would have fit any fanny that was square. Hers wasn’t.
She took a potty break, took another break to stand at the sink in the employees’ room, gulping down two tall glasses of water. She thought blissfully of last night’s lovemaking with Griff. Who knew? Who knew she could be wicked? That she could actually throw off her good-girl chains and just, well, go for it?
Who knew she could fall crazy in love? Inappropriately in love? Maybe irrevocably in love, so fast, and with such a wrong guy in the wrong place?
She hiked back to the godawful chair and parked there again. Thinking of Griff wasn’t going to solve anything. She had to concentrate on other kinds of fires.
And over the next hour she found several. An old farmhouse: electrical fire. A lightning strike at a trailer park. A divorcing couple who set fire to each other’s stuff.
But then she found pay dirt. At least sort of.
Thirteen months before her parents’ fire, there’d been an arson event in the high school. The school locker of a junior, a boy named Billy Webb, had been doused with gasoline. No one could pin down a culprit, but Billy claimed his ex-girlfriend was “real, real mad” at him. The girl friend wasn’t named in the article, but Sheriff Conner and the school principal were both reported to be doing an extensive investigation.
Then, seven months before her parents’ fire, another arson-type fire was reported-this one also targeted a teenage boy. John Thornton had been a high school senior that fall. The day after the Homecoming Dance, someone heaped a pile of rags in the trunk of his fourteen-year-old Grand Am, sprayed it with gasoline and struck a match. Sheriff Conner and the school principal were again quoted. Both said they were looking into the “coincidence” of two fires targeting young men in the high school. No motive was found. No evidence was found.
A letter to the editor was picked up that “someone” should look into what girls these boys had been seeing, since the boys weren’t culprits-the boys were the ones who were being targeted. A flurry of letters followed, all