sniff of his butter-and-syrup-loaded pancakes. "I bet those are fabulous."
"Best in town." He stabbed a thick bite with his fork, held it out. "Want a sample?"
"I can never stop at a taste. It's a sickness." She slid onto the stool, swiveled around to beam at the waitress as she unwound her scarf. "Morning. I'd love some coffee, and do you have any granola-type substance that could possibly be topped with any sort of fruit?"
"Well, we got Special K, and I could slice you up some bananas with it."
"Perfect." She reached over the counter. "I'm Quinn."
"The writer from up in PA." The waitress nodded, took Quinn's hand in a firm grip. "Meg Stanley. You watch this one here, Quinn," Meg said with a poke at Cal. "Some of those quiet types are sneaky."
"Some of us mouthy types are fast."
That got a laugh out of Meg as she poured Quinn's coffee. "Being quick on your feet's a strong advantage. I'll get that cereal for you."
"Why," Cal wondered aloud as he forked up another dripping bite of pancake, "would anyone willingly choose to eat trail mix for breakfast?"
"It's an acquired taste. I'm still acquiring it. But knowing myself, and I do, if I keep coming in here for breakfast, I'll eventually succumb to the allure of the pancake. Does the town have a gym, a health club, a burly guy who rents out his Bowflex?"
"There's a little gym down in the basement of the community center. You need a membership, but I can get you a pass on that."
"Really? You're a handy guy to know, Cal."
"I am. You want to change your order? Go for the gold, then the treadmill?"
"Not today, but thanks. So." After she'd doctored her coffee, she picked up the cup with both hands, sipping as she studied him through the faint rise of steam. "Now that we're having our second date-"
"How'd I miss the first one?"
"You bought me pizza and a beer and took me bowling. In my dictionary, that falls under the definition of date. Now you're buying me breakfast."
"Cereal and bananas. I do appreciate a cheap date."
"Who doesn't? But since we're dating and all..." She took another sip as he laughed. "I'd like to share an experience with you."
She glanced over as Meg brought her a white stoneware bowl heaped with cereal and sliced bananas. "Figured you'd be going for the two percent milk with this."
"Perceptive and correct, thanks."
"Get you anything else?"
"We're good for now, Meg," Cal told her. "Thanks."
"Just give a holler."
"An experience," Cal prompted, as Meg moved down the counter.
"I had a dream."
His insides tensed even before she began to tell him, in a quiet voice and in careful detail of the dream she'd had during the night.
"I knew it was a dream," she concluded. "I always do, even during them. Usually I get a kick out of them, even the spooky ones. Because, you know, not really happening. I haven't actually grown a second head so I can argue with myself, nor am I jumping out of a plane with a handful of red balloons. But this...I can't say I got a charge out of it. I didn't just think I felt cold, for instance. I was cold. I didn't just think I felt myself hit and roll on the ground. I found bruises this morning that weren't there when I went to bed. Fresh bruises on my hip. How do you get hurt in a dream, if it's just a dream?"
You could, he thought, in Hawkins Hollow. "Did you fall out of bed, Quinn?"
"No, I didn't fall out of bed." For the first time, there was a whiff of irritation in her voice. "I woke up with my arms locked around the bedpost like it was my long-lost lover. And all this was before I saw that red-eyed little bastard again."
"Where?"
She paused long enough to spoon up some cereal. He wasn't sure if the expression of displeasure that crossed her face was due to the taste, or her thoughts. "Did you ever read King's Salem's Lot?"
"Sure. Small town, vampires. Great stuff."
"Remember that scene? The little boys, brothers. One's been changed after they snatched him off the path in the woods. He comes to visit his brother one night."
"Nothing scarier than kiddie vampires."
"Not much, anyway. And the vampire kid's just hanging outside the window. Just floating out there, scratching on the glass. It was like that. He was pressed to the glass, and I'll point out I'm on the second floor. Then he did