to go by way of the road. It's a few miles, but - "
-Up you go," she repeated. -Keep an eye out along the trail as well. There may be footprints not already destroyed by the rain." Or by you, she thought.
McNulty did not look happy, but he said, -Will do, Guv," and set off back the way he'd come with Pete.
KERRA KERNE WAS EXHAUSTED and soaked to the skin because she'd broken her primary rule: Head into the wind on the first half of the ride; have the wind at your back on your route home.
But she'd been in a hurry to be gone from Casvelyn, so for the first time in longer than she could remember, she hadn't checked the Internet before donning her cycling kit and pedaling out of town. She'd just set off in her Lycra and her helmet. She'd clicked into the pedals and pumped so furiously that she was ten miles out of Casvelyn before she actually clocked her location. Then it was the location alone that she took into consideration and not the wind, which had been her error. She'd just kept riding vaguely east. When the weather rolled in, she was too far away to do anything to escape it other than seek shelter, which she did not want to do. Hence, muscle weary and bone wet, she struggled with the last of the thirty-five miles she needed to cover on her return.
She blamed Alan, blind and foolish Alan Cheston, who was supposed to be her life partner, with all that being a life partner implied, but who'd decided to go his own bloody-minded way in the one situation that she couldn't countenance. And she blamed her father who was also blind and foolish - as well as stupid - but in a completely different manner and for a completely different set of reasons.
At least ten months earlier, she'd said to Alan, -Please don't do this. It won't work out. It'll be - "
And he'd cut into her words, which he rarely did, which should have told her something about him that she hadn't yet learned, but which did not. -Why won't it work out? We won't even see each other much, if that's what worries you."
It wasn't what worried her. She knew what he was saying was true. He'd be doing whatever one did in the marketing department - which was less a department and more an old conference room located behind what used to be the reception desk in the mouldy hotel - and she'd be doing her thing with the trainee instructors. He'd be sorting out the chaos that her mother had wrought as the nominal director of the nonexistent marketing department while she - Kerra - tried to hire suitable employees. They might see each other at morning coffee or at lunch, but they might well not. So rubbing elbows with him at work and then rubbing other body parts later in the day was not what concerned her.
He'd said, -Don't you see, Kerra, that I've got to get some solid employment in Casvelyn? And this is it. Jobs aren't dangling from trees round here, and it was decent of your dad to offer it to me. I'm not about to look a gift horse."
Her father was hardly a gift horse, Kerra thought, and decency had nothing to do with why he'd offered the marketing job to Alan. He'd made the offer because they needed someone to promote Adventures Unlimited to the masses but they also needed a certain kind of someone to do that marketing, and Alan Cheston appeared to be the kind of someone Kerra's father had been looking for.
Her father was deciding based on appearance. To him, Alan was a type. Or perhaps better said, Alan was not a type. Her father thought the type to be avoided at Adventures Unlimited was a manly sort: grit under the fingernails, throw a woman across the bed, and have her till she saw stars. What he didn't understand - and had never understood - was that there actually was no type. There was just maleness. And despite the rounding of his shoulders, the spectacles, the bobbling Adam's apple, the delicate hands with those long, probing spatulate fingers, Alan Cheston was male. He thought like a male, he acted like a male, and most important, he re acted like a male. That was why Kerra had put her foot down, which had ultimately done no good because she