Not only does she tell off the boss’s wife, but she drives alone, at night, to the spookiest house in western Pennsylvania.”
“So did I.”
“I can’t have a mad, passionate affair with you, sweetie. It would just be wrong.”
“Now, there, you have made me sick.”
But she smiled when he leaned over and kissed her cheek. “Why don’t you move in here for a couple weeks?”
Her dark chocolate eyes went baleful. “Stop looking out for me, Flynn.”
“Can’t do it.”
“If I wouldn’t move in when I was broke, why would I now that I’m flush? You know I like my own space, and you do too. Such as it is. And the goblins of Warrior’s Peak are not going to come down and spirit me away in the night.”
“If they were goblins, they wouldn’t worry me.” But because he knew her, he eased off. “How about tellingyour new pal Malory what an amazing man I am. All brainy and sensitive and buff.”
“You want me to lie to her?”
“You’re mean, Dana.” He gulped down more beer. “You’re just mean.”
WHEN he was alone, Flynn settled down in his upstairs study. He preferred the term “study” to “office,” as an office meant work. No way around it. In a study, you could, well, study, or nap or read, or stare into space thinking long thoughts. You could certainly work, but it wasn’t a requirement.
He’d outfitted the room with a big, brawny desk and a couple of wide leather chairs that he thought felt as if you might sink into them until you disappeared.
He had files as well, but he disguised them with manly-looking chests. One wall was covered with framed prints of pinup girls from the forties and fifties.
If all else failed, he could kick back, study them, and pass an enjoyable hour in solitude.
He booted up his computer, stepped over Moe, who had already flopped in the middle of the floor, and pulled a second beer out of the mini fridge he’d installed under a work counter.
He’d considered that idea pretty damn clever.
Then he sat, rolled his head as a boxer might before a round, and got down to some serious surfing.
If there was anything in the cyberworld about the new residents of Warrior’s Peak, he would find it.
As always, he got sucked into the sirens’ song of information. His beer went warm. One hour passed into two, two headed toward three, before Moe solved the matter by giving the desk chair a push that shot it and Flynn halfway across the room.
“Damn it, you know I hate that. I just need a few more minutes.”
But Moe had heard that one before, and he protested by plopping massive paws and a great deal of body weight onto Flynn’s thighs. “So, maybe we’ll take a walk. And if we happen to wander by a certain blonde’s door, we could just stop in and share currently gathered information. And if that doesn’t work, we’ll pick up some pizza so it won’t be a complete loss.”
The word “pizza” had Moe tearing to the doorway. By the time Flynn made it downstairs, the dog was by the front door, his leash clamped between his teeth.
It was a nice evening for a walk. Quiet, balmy, with his little postcard town basking under the late-summer sun. At such moments, when the air was soft, the breeze fragrant, he was glad he’d made the decision to take over the Dispatch from his mother rather than heading out to make his mark at some big-city paper.
A lot of his friends had gone to the city, and the woman he’d thought he loved had chosen New York over him.
Or he’d chosen the Valley over her.
It depended, he supposed, on your point of view.
Maybe the news here didn’t have the scope or the edge of the news in Philly or New York, but there was still plenty of it. And what happened in the Valley, in the hills and mountains that surrounded it, mattered.
And just now he scented a story that would be bigger and juicier than anything the Dispatch had reported in the sixty-eight years since its presses began to run.
If he could help three women, one of
Dean Wesley Smith, Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Martin A. Lee, Bruce Shlain