16 Lighthouse Road - By Debbie Macomber Page 0,19

family - and next to nothing about his background."

"He seemed to want me to keep the key," Charlotte said, unsure what she should do.

"Then I think you should. I know you have it, and so does Tom."

"All right, I will." That settled, Charlotte stood. "He's a lovely man."

"Yes, he is, but just a little mysterious."

Charlotte had to agree and she admitted to being intrigued.

Grace Sherman grabbed a carton of milk and placed it in her grocery cart, then headed for the checkout stand. As she wheeled toward the front of the store, she decided to take a short detour and look over the paperback display. Books were her passion - books of all kinds, from classic fiction to mysteries and romances, from bestseller titles to biographies and history and...almost everything. That was why she'd gone into library work. She loved to read and often read late into the night. Her daughters shared her delight in books, although Dan had never been much of a reader.

As Grace reached the front of the store, she noticed that the lineups were long. She chose one, then got the current copy of People magazine and flipped through that while she waited. The truth came to her as she approached the cashier - she dreaded going home.

The realization left her breathless. They were low on milk, but it certainly hadn't been necessary to make a special trip. She could easily have waited a day or two. Since she was here anyway, she'd thrown several packets of pasta into her cart, plus toilet paper and a couple of yogurts...as though to justify being to the supermarket at all. In fact, she'd been delaying the inevitable.

Dan had been in such a bleak mood lately. There seemed to be problems at work, but that was only a guess because her husband refused to talk to her about anything beyond the mundane. Any other inquiries were met with one-word replies. Television was vastly more interesting than sharing any part of himself with her.

Grace wanted to discover what was wrong, but he snapped at her whenever she tried. Every night it was the same. Walking into the house after work was like standing in an electrical storm; she never knew when lightning might strike. Because Dan was uncommunicative and morose, she chatted endlessly about this thing and that, in an effort to lighten his mood - and to forestall his outbursts of anger. They always came without warning.

Dan listened to her remarks, nodded at the appropriate times, even smiled now and again. But he contributed nothing to the conversation. The quieter he was, the harder she tried to draw him out, to no avail. Practically every evening he settled in front of the television and didn't move until it was time for bed.

This was no marriage. They might as well be college roommates for all the love and affection they exchanged.

Their marriage had never fulfilled Grace's expectations. She'd been eighteen and pregnant with Maryellen when she married Dan. He'd enlisted in the Army and almost immediately been shipped to Vietnam. The two years he'd been away were hell, for him and for her. When he returned, Dan was a different person from the young man who'd left. He'd become bitter and cynical, prone to rages; he'd also experimented with drugs and when she refused to allow them in the house they'd briefly separated.

For Maryellen's sake, they'd managed to patch things up long enough for Grace to get pregnant a second time. Later, because of their daughters, Dan and Grace had tried hard to make their marriage work.

The war still haunted him and for years Dan used to be awakened by nightmares. He never spoke of his experiences. Those, along with everything else, were hidden away inside his head. Throughout their marriage, Grace had continually hoped things would improve. Once the girls were in school, once she finished her own studies and got the job at the library, once the girls graduated from high school - surely then everything would be better. Year after year of hoping, of looking for signs...

It wasn't all bad. There'd been good times, too. When the girls started grade school, Grace had entered Olympic College and later commuted into Seattle to attend the University of Washington. Dan had been wonderfully supportive, working two jobs and helping with all their daughters' assorted activities.

Maryellen and Kelly had both been difficult teenagers, but they'd turned into responsible young women. Dan deeply loved his daughters. Grace never questioned his devotion

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