The Messenger: A Novel
Page 29
Daniel gradually looked up at them.
“Feeling better?” Tyler asked.
“Yes, sir.” His face clouded. “I’ve no right to ask it, but what’s to become of me?”
Tyler looked to Amanda, who read the question in his eyes, and nodded.
“Would you like to live with us?” he asked. “We can always use—er, discreet staff.”
“You’d allow that? After all I’ve done to you?”
“You gave him the key to the manacles, didn’t you, Daniel?” Amanda asked.
“Yes, ma’am, but I also robbed his place, and nearly killed him on a road, and delivered him to Adrian, and what I’ve done since—”
“We know,” Tyler said. “Now, if you’ll lock up here, we’ll wait for you outside.”
“In the van at the end of the drive,” Amanda said. Tyler felt her skin growing warmer with the rising fever and watched her struggling to stay awake. She reached to touch Tyler’s face and halted in amazement. “Oh, look! My finger! It’s back.”
“Yes, you’ll get used to such things. Eventually. Now about the van—” Tyler’s eyebrows drew together. “How did you find this place?”
“Colby helped me,” she said drowsily.
“Colby helped—”
“Yes. I think we need to try to help him one day soon. Whose fever am I feeling against my skin, yours or mine?”
“Both, I’m afraid,” Tyler said. “Although Adrian gave me a potion to reduce the effects of mine. I’ll be able to guide Daniel home.”
“Oh, good,” she said, and fell into a deep and healing sleep.
57
Tyler Hawthorne put his arm around his wife. Amanda, far from fearing the dogs, now enjoyed sitting on the floor with them, or in this case, the deck outside the bedroom. So the Hawthornes, barefoot and in bathrobes, leaned their backs against the wall, a dog at each side. The sun had set an hour ago, but the night was warm, and no one was in a rush to go inside.
Amanda, nestled close to him, looked down at her house below. Brad and Rebecca were still staying at Amanda’s house, but had gone out to a concert this evening with some friends.
Colby had stayed at the wedding only long enough to claim a kiss from the bride, and seemed disappointed when Tyler had not responded jealously. He had given Amanda a chaste kiss on the cheek, shrugged when Tyler asked him not to be a stranger, and disappeared.
Ben and Daniel had the night off. Alex, who had sent the rest of her team on to other assignments, was on a first date with Ron. He smiled, thinking of how hard it had been for Ron to work up the nerve to ask her out, when she had wanted nothing more for weeks.
The ghosts were about their business elsewhere.
What the future held for them, he hardly knew. But he looked forward to it, content, as he had not been in a long, long time.
“Listen,” Amanda said, sitting up a little straighter.
He did, on the alert for any disturbance. But the dogs were relaxed.
She smiled slowly and said, “They’re back.”
He listened more closely and returned the smile.
A soft rhythmic song carried on the breeze.
Crickets.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Nationally bestselling author Jan Burke has written twelve novels and a collection of short stories. Among the awards her work has garnered are the Mystery Writers of America’s Edgar® for Best Novel, Malice Domestic’s Agatha Award, Mystery Readers International’s Macavity, and the RT Book Club’s Best Contemporary Mystery.
She is the founder of the Crime Lab Project (www.crimelabproject.com) and is a member of the honorary board of the California Forensic Science Institute. She lives in Southern California with her husband and two dogs. She is currently at work on the next novel in the Irene Kelly series. Learn more about her at www.janburke.com.