miss it,” he’d said.
“We’ll see about that,” she muttered. Thus far, everything about her drive from Boston to this remote fishing village in Maine had gone wrong. An accident with a logging truck had clogged the highway. Then, she’d missed the turnoff and had to backtrack several miles. Then, her cell phone died. And now, the weather from hell.
At five minutes past eight o’clock, she was more than half an hour late for her interview with world-famous architect Blake Monroe. Not to mention that she was a mess. Her green-patterned blouse didn’t go with the bright red cardigan she’d dragged out of her suitcase when the rain started. Her khaki skirt was creased with wrinkles. Her black hair, pulled up in a knot on top of her head, had to be a frizz mop.
Somehow, she had to pull herself together and convince Blake Monroe to hire her as a tutor for his six-year-old son, Duncan, who had been diagnosed with a form of high- functioning autism. Though she had no formal training in handling kids with special needs, Madeline had been a substitute teacher for the past two years in Boston’s inner-city schools. She had first-hand experience with a wide range of behaviors.
She’d convince him. She had to.
If Blake Monroe didn’t hire her, she had a serious problem. With her meager supply of cash spent and her credit cards maxed, she couldn’t even afford a cheap motel room for tonight. Sleeping in her car would be difficult; she’d crammed all her earthly belongings in here, including the potted ficus that sat beside her on the passenger seat.
The rain died down, replaced by gusts of fog that slapped against her windshield like tattered curtains. The tired old engine coughed on the verge of a breakdown as she emerged from the forest.
In the distance, perhaps a half mile away, she saw the glimmer of lights. Beacon Manor. Huge as a fortress, the mansion loomed in the foreboding darkness.
She maneuvered around a sharp curve that circled a stand of trees. On the opposite side, the shoulder of the road vanished into nothingness at the edge of a cliff. A dangerous precipice with no guard rail.
Her headlights shone on a dark-colored SUV parked smack in the middle of the road. His lights were off. There was no way around him.
She cranked the steering wheel hard left—away from the cliff—and slammed on the brake. Though she couldn’t have been going more than twenty miles an hour, her tires skidded on the wet asphalt.
In slow motion, she saw the inevitable collision coming closer, inch by inch. Her brakes screeched. The fog whirled. Her headlights wavered.
Her right fender dinged the rear bumper of the SUV, and she jolted against her seat belt. Though the impact felt minor, the passenger-side airbag deployed against the ficus. Great! Her plant was protected from whiplash.
But not herself. The driver’s-side airbag stayed in place. Like everything else in her life, it was broken.
She slumped over the steering wheel. A nasty, metallic stink from the engine gushed through her open window. A car wreck would have been disaster, and she ought to be grateful that her car wasn’t a crumpled mass. Instead, hot tears burned the insides of her eyelids. In spite of a lifetime of careful plans and hard work, in spite of her best intentions…
A hand reached through the window and grabbed her upper arm. “What’s wrong with you? Didn’t you see me?”
Startled, she stared into the stark face of a smallish man with a goatee. A sheen of moisture accented the hollows beneath his eyes and his angry, distorted snarl.
He shook her. “Don’t think you can run away. You’ll pay for this damage.”
Enough! She shoved open her door, forcing him back. Justified rage shot through her as she leaped from the car into the drizzle. “You’re the one at fault. Look where you’re parked. There’s no way I could get around you.”
“You’re trespassing.” With his left hand, he pulled his collar tight around his throat. His right arm hung loosely at his side. “This is my property.”
Her hopes sank. “Blake Monroe?”
“Monroe? He’s the architect I hired to fix this place up.” His skinny neck craned. Even so, he wasn’t as tall as her own five feet, ten inches. “I own Beacon Manor. I’m Theodore Fisher. Doctor Fisher.”
He announced himself as if she should be impressed, but she’d never heard of him. “All right, Doctor. Let’s take a look at the damage.”
The deep gouge on her fender blended with other scrapes and nicks. Dr. Fisher glanced at the scratch on his SUV, then turned his back on her. Clearly agitated, he walked wide of the two vehicles with tense, jerky steps. His brow furrowed as he peered into the darkness at the edge of the cliff. Watching for something? For someone? As he paced, he muttered under his breath. Though she couldn’t make out the words, he sounded furious.
Madeline didn’t want that crazy anger turned in her direction. Speaking with the measured voice she used to calm a classroom full of second-graders, she said, “We should exchange insurance information.”
“Not necessary,” he snapped.
“I agree.” She wouldn’t bother with this repair, couldn’t afford to have her insurance premiums go up. “I’m willing to forget about this if you are.”
His head swiveled on his neck. He focused intently on her. “Not trying to pull a fast one, are you?”
“Certainly not.” She removed her rain-splattered glasses. His face blurred.
“Why are you here?” he demanded.
“I’m applying for a job as a tutor for Blake Monroe’s son.”
“So you’ll be staying at the Manor. At my house.” Very deliberately, he approached her. “I’ll always know where to find you.”
The wind wailed through the trees, and she heard something else. A voice? Dr. Fisher turned toward the sound. His arm raised. In his right hand, he held an automatic pistol
SHE SELLS seashells…
In her long dress, she was the prettiest girl Duncan had ever seen. Her hair was golden. Her skin was white. She looked like the marble angel on Mama’s gravestone.
“I would like to be your friend,” she said. “My name is Temperance Raven.”
“That’s the name of this town,” Duncan said. “Raven’s Cliff.”
“Named after my father,” she said. “Captain Raven.”
He knew she was telling a lie. The town was founded in 1794. He remembered that date, just as he remembered all numbers. So what if she fibbed? He liked the way she talked, like an accent. “Where are you from?”
“Dover in England.”
They were standing under the trees, and his clothes were soppy. But she hardly seemed wet at all. “Come inside, Temperance. I’ll show you my computer games.”
Maybe he’d even let her win. Her smile was so pretty.
Seashells, seashells. By the seashore.
She held up her hand. “I brought a gift for you.”
Before he could tell her that he never touched anyone or anything with his bare hands, she placed a glowing white shell on the ground before him. “It’s for you, Duncan.”
If he didn’t pick it up, she’d think he was scared. Then she’d laugh at him and run away. So, he leaned down and grabbed the shell. It burned his hand. He couldn’t let go. Shivers ran up his arm. There was a roar inside his head.
“Temperance.” He gasped.
“I am here, Duncan. I will always be here for you.”
His eyes closed and he fell to the ground. In his mind, he saw a whole different place. A different time: Sunset.