“There she is again!” They were passing a small cafe patio that was half filled with early breakfast customers. “What does she do, at the crack of dawn? For hours, like that? Looking up and down the street and writing things down. She’s spying on someone. How long’s she been sitting there?”
Ryan glanced in her rearview mirror. “What?’
“That same blonde,” Dillon said, “that lives next door to Clyde, that bimbo who was all over him yesterday when we pulled up at his house. Who is she?”
“That cheap blonde with the tight sweaters and big boobs,” Lori specified.
Ryan glanced at Lori, amused, and turned off Ocean up the highway, heading for the Harper place.
“We’ve seen her four times,” Lori said, “sitting in different restaurants early in the morning. For hours, alone, watching the street. Writing something in a notebook. She’s never eating, just coffee. How much coffee can a person drink?”
“Hours, Lori? How would you know that?’ “We’ve been taking the dogs to the beach,” Lori said. “Susan Brittain’s dogs.” Susan was one of the four senior ladies Lori had lived with since her father went to prison. Lori loved the standard poodle and the Dalmatian, and got along well with them. “I don’t like that woman, she’s a tramp.”
Ryan gave her a stern look in the mirror, trying not to laugh.
“Well she is. She’s there when we go down, real early before school, and she’s there when we come back. Once was later, Saturday. We were in the library.” She glanced at Dillon, who grinned sheepishly.
Dillon’s current English teacher was assigning long, detailed papers, and would not let the kids go online to do their research. It had to be from books, with the sources properly noted, all footnotes in correct form-and no adult help.
Dillon had never worked this way, she said all the kids complained. Two dozen parents were so angry they were trying to get the teacher fired. But a dozen more applauded her. Dillon found the new method very hard and demanding. She didn’t care, at the moment, that the training would put her in the top ranks when applying for college. She didn’t care that she was learning to do far more thorough and accurate research than anyone could ever do online, or that you couldn’t do adequate college work without those basics. But while Dillon wasn’t happy with the assignments, Lori was having a ball.
Two years younger, Lori tried not to be smug that she knew her way among the reference books. Before Lori’s mother died, she’d often taken Lori to work with her in the library, and had often let her help with reference projects.
No one had said Dillon couldn’t have help from a younger child. Surely her teacher had never imagined that a twelve-year-old would have those skills. And while Lori was hugely enjoying the challenge, and Dillon was learning, the situation deeply embarrassed the older girl.
Below the highway, the sea gleamed in the brightening morning, the little waves flashing silver up at them. The tide was in, the surf pounding high against the black rocks, the smell of the sea sharp with salt and iodine and little dead sea-creatures. Ryan glanced at the girls. “So what do you think she was watching?”
Dillon shrugged. “Hard to tell. I didn’t see anything very interesting. A man from the shop across the street watering his garden. Cars creeping by. Couple of tourists walking their dogs.”
“Which shop, Dillon?”
“That posh leather one,” Lori said. “With the Gucci bags.”
“And the other times?”
“Dormeyer’s Jewelry once,” Lori said. “When we took the dogs down before supper, and were coming home. Sunday night, gray-haired man closing up, locking the door.”
“That was Mr. Dormeyer,” Dillon said. “He owns the shop.”
“Was anyone with him?” Ryan asked. “His wife?”
“A woman left about an hour before,” Lori said. “Gray hair, a long skirt and sandals. He left last, locked the door.”
Ryan nodded. Gray-haired Mena Dormeyer usually wore long, flowered skirts, and sandals, even on cold winter days, varying her wardrobe only with a heavy, hand-knit sweater. And maybe with wool tights under the skirt, she thought. She slowed for a car to pass in the opposite direction, then turned left onto the Harpers’ lane. Moving slowly between the white pasture fences, approaching the barn, she studied the new end walls of the second story, their skeletons pale in the early light. The side walls had been stripped of the old roofing shingles but were still covered with age-darkened plywood. Scotty’s truck was parked in the yard. She caught a flash of his red hair and beard as he disappeared around the back of the barn, where they had stashed their ladders and equipment out of the way of the horses. Parking the truck, she watched the girls head into the house to get permission before they saddled the horses.
Ordinarily, Dillon would have been welcome to work on the construction, doing odd jobs, but Ryan didn’t want her on the second floor, balancing on open joists. Dillon’s work permit spelled out clearly the safety precautions Ryan would take. Ryan had not only signed the agreement but had of course promised Dillon’s parents that she would be closely supervised. This was not medieval England, where a fourteen-year-old was expected to do adult work and was paid a bit of stale bread and a lump of coal.
Swinging out of the truck, she gave Rock his command to jump out behind her; and as the girls hurried out, she headed for the barn.
She was up on the beams when the Greenlaws’ car pulled in. They were gone again when, at midmorning, she went in to have coffee with Charlie and Wilma. Sitting at the kitchen table, she mentioned the two girls watching Chichi and commenting on Chichi’s early-morning vigils. On the window seat, Wilma’s tabby cat lay stretched among the pillows, next to Wilma’s overnight bag. Like a patient traveler waiting to depart, Ryan thought, amused. Wilma was going home this morning, after several days’ pampering, but how could the cat know? The familiarity of the overnight bag? Knowing that where it went, Wilma went? That had to be the explanation.
Though this cat often gave Ryan a sense of the unreal. All three cats did. Well, but cats were strange little creatures, she didn’t understand cats.
Yet even Rock seemed to view these particular cats in a strange way. With unusual respect? Yes, that was it. And often with a puzzled look that seemed almost to be amazement.
Maybe the cats had clawed Rock at some time, had put him in his place, and he was unusually wary of them. Rock was, after all, a very big dog. He was daunting to most cats, so maybe it surprised him that these three would stand up to him-as they surely had, in the beginning. Now they were the best of friends.
“But what do you think she was doing, what was she watching?” Wilma said.
“Chichi?” Ryan shook her head. “I haven’t a clue.” She grinned. “The girls decided she was spying on the shopkeepers. Leave it to kids to find the most dramatic spin.”
Charlie said, “Maybe what Slayter told you wasn’t so far off, what he said when you had dinner with him last night-or started to have dinner.”
When Wilma looked inquisitive, Ryan told her what Slayter had said about Chichi running from the scene of the burglary. “That could be a figment of his imagination,” she said carefully. “Or could be a lie-Slayter’s the kind who would lie for no good reason, just to entertain himself.” She glanced out the window, saw that Scotty was back at work carrying two-by-fours up the ladder, and she rose, hurrying out.
She was on the roof again when Charlie and Wilma came out, Charlie carrying Wilma’s overnight bag. She watched Wilma’s cat gallop by them, heading straight for Charlie’s SUV The minute Charlie opened the door, the cat leaped up onto the seat in what, Ryan was certain, was surely not normal feline behavior.