“But not here and not yet. This is Jackie’s idea, so let her handle it. I won’t be a part of it, and I won’t let
“You’re going in to work?” he asked.
“Of course. Kids go to Marta, Marta takes kids to school, Linda and Jackie report for another day of police work under the Dome. Anything else would look funny. I hate having to think this way.” She blew out a breath. “Also, I’m tired.” She glanced to make sure the kids were out of earshot. “Fucking exhausted. I hardly slept at all. Are you going in to the hospital?”
Rusty shook his head. “Ginny and Twitch are going to be on their own at least until noon… although with the new guy to help them out, I think they’ll be okay. Thurston’s kind of New Age-y, but he’s good. I’m going over to Claire McClatchey’s. I need to talk to those kids, and I need to go out to where they got the radiation spike on the Geiger counter.”
“What do I tell people who ask where you are?”
Rusty considered this. “The truth, I guess. Some of it, anyway. Say I’m investigating a possible Dome generator. That might make Rennie think twice about whatever next step he’s planning.”
“And when I’m asked about the location? Because I will be.”
“Say you don’t know, but you think it’s on the western side of town.”
“Black Ridge is north.”
“Yep. If Rennie tells Randolph to send out some of his Mounties, I want them to go to the wrong place. If someone calls you on it later, just say you were tired and must have gotten mixed up. And listen, hon—before you go in to the PD, make a list of people who may believe Barbie’s innocent of the murders.” Thinking again,
“Rusty, are you sure about this? Because after the fire last night, this whole town is going to be on the lookout for the Friends of Dale Barbara.”
“Am I sure? Yes. Do I like it? Most assuredly not.”
She looked up again at the yellow-tinged sky, then at the two oaks in their front yard, the leaves hanging limp and moveless, their bright colors fading to drab brown. She sighed. “If Rennie framed Barbara, then he probably had the newspaper burned down. You know that, right?”
“I do.”
“And if Jackie
“I’ll have to think about that.”
“If you can find the generator and turn it off, all this
“You pray that happens.”
“I will. What about radiation? I don’t want you coming down with leukemia, or something.”
“I have an idea about that.”
“Should I ask?”
He smiled. “Probably not. It’s pretty crazy.”
She twined her fingers through his. “Be careful.”
He kissed her lightly. “You too.”
They looked at Jackie pushing the girls on the swings. They had a lot to be careful for. All the same, Rusty thought that risk was coming into his life as a major factor. If, that was, he wanted to be able to continue looking at his reflection when he took his morning shave.
2
Horace the Corgi liked peoplefood.
In fact, Horace the Corgi
This limited Horace’s intake of
He didn’t succeed in snarking all the goodies he came upon; sometimes Julia saw what he was after and jerked him along on his leash before he could ingest it. But he got a lot, because Julia often walked him with a book or a folded copy of the
He was being ignored this morning. Julia and the other woman—the one who owned this house, because her smell was all over it, especially in the vicinity of the room where humans went to drop their scat and mark their territory—were talking. Once the other woman cried, and Julia hugged her.
“I’m better, but not
“The craving may go on for a long time,” Julia said, “and that’s not even the important part. I salute your courage, Andi, but Rusty was right—cold turkey is foolish and dangerous. You’re damn lucky you haven’t had a convulsion.”
“For all I know, I have.” Andrea drank some of her coffee. Horace heard the slurp. “I’ve been having some damned vivid dreams. One was about a fire. A big one. On Halloween.”
“But you’re better.”
“A little. I’m starting to think I can make it. Julia, you’re welcome to stay here with me, but I think you could find a better place. The
“We can do something about the smell. We’ll get a battery-powered fan from Burpee’s. If room and board is a firm offer—one that includes Horace—I’ll take you up on it. No one trying to kick an addiction should have to do it on her own.”
“I don’t think there’s any other way, hon.”
“You know what I mean. Why did you do it?”
“Because for the first time since I got elected, this town might need me. And because Jim Rennie threatened to withhold my pills if I objected to his plans.”
Horace tuned the rest of this out. He was more interested in a smell wafting to his sensitive nose from the space between the wall and one end of the couch. It was on this couch that Andrea liked to sit in better (if considerably more medicated) days, sometimes watching shows like