his feet. In contrast, I finally feel awake, curiously wired, as if the fog is lifting and if I just focus long enough, try hard enough, all the secrets of the universe will be mine.
I tell Thomas he should go to bed. He tries to protest. I shoo him away, and finally, with a frown, he takes the hint.
As he disappears upstairs, I pick up the remote and determine I have no problem running the system or finding all my favorite channels. As long as I donât think too much, just act, I have no problems at all.
I tune in to TV Land. Watch old episodes of
Gilliganâs Island,
which seems a safe enough show for a woman with multiple head injuries. Not too exciting, no threat of violence. Well, other than the Skipper smacking Gilligan with his hat time and time again. I draw the line at
Golden Girls,
though. Iâm not that desperate.
I turn off the TV, roam the family room. I discover a pile of books, mostly paperbacks. Apparently I like to read Nora Roberts, while Thomas favors Ken Follett. I reenter the kitchen, and then, because I simply have to know, I go through all the cabinets and then the pantry.
Sure enough, no alcohol. Not a single can of beer, not a single bottle of wine. Let alone a decent bottle of scotch.
For a moment, Iâm disappointed. Terribly, dreadfully. Because wouldnât a nice glass of single malt be perfect right about now?
I leave the kitchen, head upstairs. My breath grows ragged in my chest, but I survive the hike. Back to the little room with the lovely butter-yellow quilt.
There, I lie down fully clothed, my legs straight, my hands folded on my chest. Like a girl in a coffin.
And then, I inhale.
Vero.
She is little again. Small and bubbly with chubby cheeks and fat fists. Airplane noises as she runs around the tiny room, leaping over pillows, willing her body into flight.
I love you, I love you, I love you.
Vero flies. Vero falls.
Ominous footsteps down the hall.
Iâm dreaming, I tell myself.
Iâm still dreaming, I remind myself.
As I watch Thomas burst into the room.
Chapter 11
T HE FRANKS LIVED in a relatively new gray-painted Colonial. Black shutters, covered farmerâs porch, a winding brick walkway that curved through an attractive front flower bed. This late in the season, the bed still offered up some ragged pansies and those cabbage-looking things Wyatt never knew what to call. Meaning someone had taken the time and effort to update the plantings in the fall. Nicky Frank? Her husband, Thomas?
Many things to learn, which was why Kevin and Wyatt decided to start the morning with a personal house call.
Tessaâs comments from yesterday were still weighing heavily on Wyatt. How much did they really know about Nicky Frank, having never talked to her directly? Including but not limited to, how much did she remember from her past three âaccidentsâ? Because cars rarely went sailing off the road while in neutral. Coulda happened, he supposed. Driver falls asleep, knocks the car out of gear while coasting down a steep grade, but it didnât feel probable. Which made Wyatt wonder about the scotch as well. Had Nicky been drinking of her own accord? Or had someone been doing their best to make sure a woman with a known brain injury and doctorâs orders not to imbibe didnât wake up at the wheel?
Sometimes when working a case you had a strong lead, and sometimes you mostly had a hunch. Good news about being the sergeantâWyatt got to follow his hunches. Countywide search for a girl who still had no record of even existing notwithstanding. Yeah, the sheriff had had words with him on that one. But even theboss agreed, something about this couple, the wifeâs series of accidents, the enduring delusion of a missing girl, seemed off.
Wyatt did the honors of knocking. Front door was dark cranberry and appeared freshly painted. Looked to him like when the Franks bought the home six months ago, theyâd spent some time and energy
Ursula K. Le Guin
Thomas Perry
Josie Wright
Tamsyn Murray
T.M. Alexander
Jerry Bledsoe
Rebecca Ann Collins
Celeste Davis
K.L. Bone
Christine Danse