he turned on the television, he ran the tape.
Manfred watched silently. He had taken hold of my hand, which was odd, but it didn't seem sexual. It seemed as if he was trying to connect with some emanation I was giving off. The Bernardo family must have some very interesting family reunions if they were all as sensitive as Xylda and Manfred.
"No, we're the only ones," Manfred said absently, still focused on the television. His many silver rings were just now warming to room temperature after his walk into the hotel.
My eyes widened for a moment, and Tolliver glanced at me as if to ask me what was wrong, but I shook my head. He looked at Manfred's hand on mine, and raised his eyebrows to ask if I was uncomfortable. I shook my head, letting him know it wasn't a problem.
After the tape had run, Manfred said, "The man in the grave was the man who asked you to come here to do the reading?"
"Yes," I said.
"So there was an old burial first, when the church was still open, am I right?"
I nodded. Manfred's eyes were very blue, and though they were focused on me, they weren't seeing me.
"And then the little girl was in there?"
"Right."
"Then you found the man last night, when you were in the cemetery?"
I jumped, but Manfred's hand kept mine prisoner, gently but firmly.
"Yes," said Tolliver slowly. "We found him last night."
"My grandmother was doing a reading for you, at the time you found him, and she knows you saw the visitor."
Manfred said. I had the uncomfortable feeling his eyes were looking right through me.
"Visitor?" I asked.
"That's what she calls ghosts," Manfred said, and suddenly he was just a very young man again, holding hands with a woman he thought was cute, and giving her a big grin. The stud in his tongue winked at me. "Grandma uses a lot of her own terminology."
This was a most interesting boy. He seemed not to have had much experience of the world, and yet he knew some unexpected things. I had the feeling Manfred would not be overawed or even impressed by riches or sophistication.
"Not a boy," he said, smiling, looking directly into my eyes. The sexual tone was back with a roar. "I'm definitely a man."
I didn't know if I was a bit excited, or if I wanted to run screaming into my room. I smiled at him.
"Grandma wanted me to tell you you'll see Tabitha's first grave," he said. "I didn't understand when she gave me the message. Her hip is acting up too bad for her to leave home today, so she asked me to come see you. She likes you a lot, you know. She wanted to warn you. Watch out for that grave."
As he had in the coffee shop, he bent and kissed my hand, making sure I got the gamut of sensations for the second time. He looked up at me from his bent posture. "Makes you think, doesn't it?" he said softly.
"Thinking isn't doing," I said practically.
"Not yet," he said. He stood, shook Tolliver's hand, and left as suddenly as he'd arrived.
"What was all that about?" Tolliver said, looking distinctly suspicious.
"Evidently, when he's touching you, he can read your mind, sort of," I said, feeling a little uncomfortable that some of my thoughts had been fairly graphic. "I don't know if that applies to the populace in general, or to people who have some kind of psychic talent, or what."
"But Xylda is the only one who makes predictions," Tolliver said. "And she's added to them today. You'll be happy in the time of ice, whatever that means, and you'll see Tabitha's original grave."
"I don't think I want to hang around Xylda anymore," I said. "And if she reads the cards for me, I don't want to know about it. It just creeps me out."
"What about Manfred? You want to hang around him?" At least Tolliver was smiling when he said it.
"Oh," I said deprecatingly. "You know, he's more than a little different. I mean, you can't help but wonder, when you see someone so extreme..." Then I couldn't figure out how to finish the sentence.
Tolliver had mercy on me. "If I knew a girl with that many piercings, I'd wonder, too," he said.
"Well, it's already mid-afternoon, and we've had a helluva day. What could we do next that would make it just one round of fun?"
"I could balance the checkbook."
"Big whoop."
"We could see what the in-room movie service has to