hired local men to help him with the work, but he had quickly discovered that the locals, either through inexperience or malice, were more a hindrance than a help.
Robby, though, was flourishing. The hyperkinesis that had plagued him throughout his short life had vanished as soon as they moved into the cabin on Sod Beach and showed no signs of recurring. Glen glanced at his son. He was sitting cross-legged on the floor, playing quietly with his dog while Missy watched. If it hadn’t been for Robby, Glen and Rebecca would have left Clark’s Harbor. But for him they stayed.
“Did something happen today?” Glen suddenly asked Rebecca.
She nodded. “I wasn’t going to tell you about it, but I suppose I might as well. It was weird.”
She told him about the incident at Blake’s Dry Goods, while Glen listened to the strange story in silence. When she was finished, he shrugged.
“So we don’t shop at Blake’s anymore,” he said. “All things considered, I don’t suppose it’ll make much difference.”
“It’ll be a damned nuisance,” Rebecca snapped. Seeing Glen flinch, she was immediately sorry. “Well, I suppose worse things could have happened. And I suppose they will.”
Glen was about to reply when Robby suddenly came into the room. Sensing that the boy was about to ask a question about what had happened to his mother that day, and not wanting to have to explain, Glen decided to divert him.
“Guess who I saw today?”
Robby looked at him curiously. “Who?”
“Dr. Randall.”
“Who?” Robby asked blankly.
Rebecca’s response was more positive. “Dr. Randall? Why didn’t you tell me? Where was he? Is he still in town?”
“One at a time,” Glen protested. “He and his wife are on vacation and they happened to be at the café when I went in for lunch. They’re staying at the inn, and I told them to stop by tonight or tomorrow.”
“Company …” Rebecca breathed, then glanced quickly around the tiny room, wondering what the Randalls would think of it. Robby was still gazing at his father.
“Who’s Dr. Randall?” he asked again.
Behind him Missy’s voice piped up. “Oh, Robby, he was your doctor. Don’t you remember?”
“No.”
“You never remember anything,” Missy taunted him.
“You’ll remember him in the morning,” Glen said, putting a quick end to the budding argument. “I think it’s time you two were in bed.”
“It’s too early,” Robby objected automatically.
“You don’t know what time it is,” Rebecca said.
“Well, whatever time it is, it’s too early,” Robby insisted. “We always stay up later than this.”
“Not tonight, you don’t,” Glen said. “Come on, both of you.”
He picked his daughter up and took his son by the hand. A moment later they were all in the tiny bedroom the two children shared. Glen helped them into their pajamas, then tucked them into the bunk beds, Robby on top and Missy below. He had started to kiss them good-night when Missy spoke.
“Daddy, can we have a light on in here?”
“A light? Since when do you need a light?”
“Just for tonight,” Missy begged. “I don’t like the storm.”
“It’s only wind and thunder and lightning, darling. It won’t hurt you.”
“Then what about Snooker?” Robby put in. “Can’t he sleep with us tonight?”
Snooker, the small black-and-white spaniel, stood in the doorway, his tail wagging hopefully, his soulful brown eyes pleading. Glen almost gave in, then changed his mind.
“No,” he said firmly. “He can’t. You know very well that dogs belong outside, not inside.”
“But he’ll get all wet,” Missy argued.
“He’ll survive. He sleeps under the house anyway.”
Before the children could argue any more, Glen kissed them both and picked up the lantern. “See you both in the morning,” he said, then pulled the door closed behind him.
He put a protesting Snooker outside, then sat down next to Rebecca, slipping an arm around her.
“Don’t let it get to you,” he said softly. “By tomorrow old Blake will have forgotten all about his damned dishes.”
“Hmm? Oh, I wasn’t worried about that. It’s Robby.”
“Robby?”
“How could he have forgotten Dr. Randall?”
“Children do that.”
“But, my God, Glen, he spent two or three hours a week with Randall for almost three years.”
“Then he’s blocked it.” Glen shrugged. “What’s so mysterious about that?”
“I didn’t say it was mysterious,” Rebecca said. “It just seems … odd, I guess.”
They fell silent then and sat quietly in front of the fire, listening to the wind and the pounding of the surf.
“I do love it here,” Rebecca said after a while. “Even when I think I can’t make it through another day, all I have to do is listen to that