Susan Wiggs

Starlight On Willow Lake


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with a beating heart, rather than withhold compressions from someone in cardiac arrest. Holding her hands one over the other, she leaned over his bare chest and got started. Everything else fell away as she pushed hard and fast, counting out thirty compressions at a hundred beats per minute. She visualized the heart, such a fragile organ beneath her hands, being forced to pump again and again, oxygenating the victim’s blood.

      “Ma’am, are you sure—”

      The rest of his words were drowned out by the welcome yip of a siren.

      “They’re here,” the guy said.

      “Don’t let up,” she ordered him. She was covered with sweat and blood, keeping up the rhythm of the chest compressions.

      “Not letting up,” he said.

      The EMTs swarmed from the truck. “I’m Joseph Kowalski,” one of them said, putting on protective gear. “Did you see what— Christ.”

      “A male in his forties,” Faith rapped out, knowing they needed information fast. “I came upon him about fifteen minutes ago. He’s bleeding from the right brachial artery. Compound fracture of the left leg and there’s an impalement in his upper right leg. Possible trauma to the head, pupils dilated. I started chest compressions as soon as this guy showed up.”

      The team of EMTs got down to work, draped, shielded and protected—a reminder that Faith and the other guy were not. The medical team took over the CPR and bleeding control with swift efficiency. One of the guys radioed in the incident, repeating essentially the information Faith had relayed.

      “Who was the first responder?”

      “That would be me,” she said, trembling from the rush of adrenaline. “I just happened by. I’ve got training. LPN,” she explained.

      The well-dressed guy swayed a little on his feet, regarding his bloodstained clothes. “Deep breath,” she told him. “You’ll be all right.”

      “Ma’am, are you familiar with BBF exposure protocol?” One of the guys handed Faith a wad of antiseptic wipes. He offered the same to the guy in the suit.

      “BBF exposure?” asked the guy in the suit.

      “Blood and body fluids,” she translated. “We’re going to have to get a post-exposure evaluation.”

      He swallowed visibly and swayed a little on his feet. “For...?”

      “Blood-borne pathogens.”

      His face turned an even paler shade of gray. “Oh. Damn.”

      “We’ll go in as soon as we can,” she said as the EMTs finished their work. She used the antiseptic wipes to scrub her hands, getting the worst of the blood off.

      The local police showed up after that, two squad cars forming a parentheses around the wreck. Faith moved toward the van, eager to check on Ruby.

      “Good work,” an EMT said to her as the team secured the backboard. “The guy’ll live to ride another day. He probably would have bled out if you hadn’t stopped.”

      Cara showed up, out of breath from running. Her gaze flicked from her mother to the stranger in the suit, eyes widening at the sight of all the blood. “Oh, man.”

      “Ma’am,” said a police officer, eyeing the blood. “I’ll need to get a statement from you.”

      “I don’t have time at the moment,” she said, speaking over the wail of the departing ambulance siren. “My name is Faith McCallum.” She dictated her phone number.

      He wrote it down. “But, ma’am—”

      “Sorry. I need to check on my younger daughter, I have to get to the ER for BBF exposure and I’m already late for an appointment,” she said. Maybe, just maybe, Mrs. Bellamy would understand. “I’ve got a job interview.”

      “Actually,” said the guy in the suit, “you don’t.”

      She paused, checking the area for her belongings. “I beg your pardon.”

      At the same time, Cara glared at the man. “What the hell?”

      “The job interview.” He still looked shell-shocked as he turned to Faith. “It’s not going to be necessary.”

      “And why would that be?” she asked in annoyance.

      He loosened his collar, further smearing himself with the motorcyclist’s blood. “Because you’re already hired.”

       6

      It turned out the useless guy was actually Mr. Mason Bellamy, the son of her potential client and the person in charge of hiring Alice’s caregiver. And clearly he’d seen something he liked in Faith at the scene of the bloodbath.

      The van backfired three times as she followed his sleek, silent car down a long, winding drive toward the house, where he said they could get cleaned up before the ER. Slender poplar trees lined the winding lane, the spring-green leaves filtering the late-morning sunlight and dappling the beautiful landscape.

      As they rounded a curve in the private drive, the historic mansion came into full view in all its glory. The house was a breathtaking vintage Adirondack lodge of timber and stone, with a wraparound porch, a turret on one end, mullioned windows and walkways draped in blooming vine pergolas. Surrounding the main house was a broad lawn featuring a grass tennis court and swimming pool, a gazebo on a knoll and a boathouse with a long dock jutting out into Willow Lake.

      “We’re not in Kansas anymore,” Faith murmured, studying the place over the shiny roof of Mr. Bellamy’s car. One of the EMTs had given her sterile draping for the car seat and a microfiber cloth for her hands, so she didn’t slime the steering wheel with the stranger’s blood. She was going to need buckets of soap and water to get cleaned up. Mason Bellamy had promised there were ample facilities at the house.

      “I knew you’d say that.” Cara propped her feet on the dashboard. “You always say that.”

      “It’s from The Wizard of Oz,” Ruby informed her.

      “Duh.”

      “I say that whenever we enter a new world that’s nothing like the place we came from,” Faith explained to her younger daughter.

      “I know, Mom,” Ruby said.

      “The driveway’s a quarter mile long,” Cara said. “I ran the whole way.”

      “How do you know it’s a quarter mile?” asked Ruby.

      “Old lady Bellamy said.”

      “You met her?” Faith glanced over at Cara. “What’s she like?”

      “Cranky.”

      “Cara—”

      “You asked. So are you going to take the job?”

      “We’ll see.”

      “You always say that, too,” Ruby pointed out.

      “Because we will see. I need to meet with Mrs. Bellamy—who, by the way, should never be called old lady Bellamy—and see if we’re a good match.”

      “That guy already said you’re hired,” Cara pointed out. “I heard him.”

      “The client is his mother, so she gets final say,” Faith explained. “Frankly, I’d pay them just for the chance to scrub this blood off me.”

      “It’s really gross,” said Ruby. “But this place is like a castle,” she added softly, leaning forward in her seat. “If you take the job, do we get to live here?”

      “That’s what the job description said—that it’s a live-in position.” When she had replied