“Well, it’s beautiful, but mostly when I look at it I see proof of life. That’s a weird term for it.”

“No. No, it’s perfect actually.”

“I was there that night.”

She nodded slowly, kept her eyes on the sculpture.

“I don’t want to get into all that. It’s a party. I’m saying it because I’m not sure if it hits me deeper, somewhere deeper, because I was there. I’ve seen more of your work—CiCi took me up to your studio, and I’ve seen other pieces here and there. It’s all, like, magical. But this one, well, kind of grabs me by the throat and punches straight to the heart.”

He took a sip of beer. “Anyway.”

“You were shot.” She looked at him then, directly into his eyes. “Not that night, last summer. But it’s connected.”

“Yeah.”

“How are you?”

“I’m standing here with a beautiful woman, drinking a beer. I’d say I’m pretty damn good.”

“Would you wait here a minute?”

“Okay.”

“Just wait here. I’ll be right back.”

He watched her walk away, and took an internal scan. His heart appeared to be beating normally again, and his brain seemed to be back at full function.

Just some weird reaction, he concluded. Just some strange jolt to the system, and all better now.

Then he saw her coming back, felt that same damn jolt, and had his second uh-oh of the night.

She had a pretty woman in a red dress in hand. He recognized her face as well.

“Mi, this is Reed.”

“Hi, Reed.”

“Mi-Hi Jung. Dr. Jung,” Simone added.

“Mi.” Smiling easily, Mi held out a hand. “It’s nice to meet you.”

“Reed bought the Dorchet house—the one with the widow’s walk, with its back to the woods.”

“Oh, that’s a great house.”

“He’s going to be the new chief of police on the island. He was a police detective—is, I guess—in Portland.”

“Was,” he said after he shook Mi’s hand.

“He was there that night.” Simone didn’t have to say what night. They all knew. “The three of us were all there. It’s odd, isn’t it? We were all there. Now we’re all here. Reed became a cop. Mi’s a doctor, a scientist, a biomedical engineer. And I…” She looked toward the sculpture. “Did you become a cop because of that night?”

“It pointed me in that direction. It and Essie. Essie McVee.”

Simone’s gaze held his, intensely now. “Officer McVee. She’s the one who found me. She’s the one who responded first. You know her.”

“Yeah. She’s a good friend. She was my partner the last few years.”

“I remember now,” Mi said. “You grabbed the little boy, got him to a safe place. You weren’t a cop then.”

“No. College kid. I was working at Mangia, the restaurant.”

“You weren’t hurt that night,” Simone remembered out loud. “But later. Mi was hurt. A cop and a scientist. Tragedy, you said, Mi, brings out more of who we are. Excuse me.”

“I upset her,” Reed began as Simone walked away.

“No.” Mi laid a hand on his arm, watched her friend. “No, you really didn’t. Upset, she’d have been frigid or molten. She’s thinking, and she’s looking at something she’s refused to look at for a long time.”

Mi turned back to him, positively beamed. “I don’t know what you said or did, but I’m even happier to meet you.”


CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Reed’s on-the-job training began in January, in earnest. He knew how to be a cop, how to be an investigator, how to interview a suspect, a witness, a victim. How to a build case. He knew the demands and reasons for procedure, for paperwork. He understood the value of community relations and connections.

He wasn’t as confident in his skills as an administrator, a boss, or with politics, and in particular, island politics. And he understood, clearly, he came into the job as an outsider.

He did what he could to counteract the outsider status. He walked or biked into the village every morning, had coffee and tried out the menu of breakfast items at the Sunrise Café—open all year from six a.m. to ten p.m. He chatted up waitresses, shopkeepers, bought his first snow shovel from the local hardware, and when January dumped a couple feet of the white stuff on the island, went back and invested in a snowplow.

At CiCi’s suggestion, he hired Jasper Mink to deal with a handful of the take-it-as-is items in the house that actually needed addressing.

He hit it off just fine with the Willie Nelson look-alike contractor with the Def Leppard tee under his flannel shirt.

He shopped at the local market, warmed a stool at Drink Up—the only bar open winters—and generally made himself visible and accessible.

He learned the rhythm of the island in winter. Slow, weather-obsessed, self-contained, and proud of it. He made a point of talking to the volunteer firefighters, the local doctors—and got scooped up for an exam.

Same damn thing happened at the dentist.

Because politics had to play a part, Reed sat in on his first town hall meeting, listened to complaints about the power outage on the south side of the island during the last storm, concerns about erosion on the north end. He noted the bitter exchange about mandatory recycling and those—called out by name—who ignored the ordinance routinely.

He hadn’t expected to do any more than listen and take note, and felt his stomach sink when the mayor called out his name.

“Stand up there, Reed, so people can see you. Most of you know, or should, that Reed’s taking over as chief of police when Sam Wickett retires in a couple months. Come up here, Reed, introduce yourself. Tell people a little about yourself and why you’re here.”

Crap, he thought, crap, crap, crap. He caught the gleam in Hildy’s eye. She was a savvy mayor, knew her people, her politics, and didn’t suffer fools.

He’d better not make a fool out of himself at the town hall.

He walked to the front of the room, scanned the few dozen faces of those who’d bothered to show up.

“I’m Reed Quartermaine, formerly a detective with the Portland police department.”

“Why ‘formerly’?” somebody called out. “You get fired?”

“No, ma’am. I don’t think Mayor Intz or the town council would’ve offered me the job if I had. I guess the best way to say it is, like a lot of people I know in Portland, I spent some time in the summer on the island. I liked it here.”

“Summer’s one thing,” someone else shouted. “Winter’s another.”

“I found that out.” He added a smile with it. “I bought a snowplow from Cyrus at Island Hardware and Paints, and I learned how to use it. I bought a house on the island last fall, when I was here for a couple weeks, because I remembered the house from when I was a kid, and because when I saw it again, when I went inside it, I knew it was the one. I’d been looking for a home for a while, and I found it on the island, in that house.”

“The Dorchet place is a lot of house for a single man.” A woman with steel-gray hair wound in a braid eyed him more than a little dubiously while she continued to knit something out of bright green yarn.

“Yes, ma’am. I’m working on finding enough furniture so it doesn’t echo. A lot of you don’t know me, but I’m around. Chief Wickett’s showing me the ropes, and when he leaves, I’m going to continue his open-door policy. I’m going to do my best for you. This is my home now. You’re my neighbors. As chief of police, I’m sworn to serve and protect you and this island. That’s what I’m going to do.”

He started to go back to his seat, stopped when a pudgy guy with a gray-speckled beard stood up in the front row.

“You’re cozied up with CiCi Lennon, aren’t you?”

“If you mean that in a romantic sense, I can only say: I wish.”

The answer brought some laughter, and gave Reed enough time to flip through his mental files and identify the questioner. John Pryor, he recalled—year-rounder, plumber, owned a couple of summer rentals with his brother.

“It seems to me you wouldn’t have this job if CiCi hadn’t pushed you for it.”

“Now just one minute,” Hildy began, but Reed held up a hand.

“It’s okay, Mayor. It’s a fair enough question. It’s true I wouldn’t have known about the job or the house coming up for sale if CiCi hadn’t told me. I’m grateful she did, so I had a shot at both.”

“You got shot back in Portland. Maybe you figure being chief of police here’s going to give you a safe, easy ride.”

Mutters rose up, disapproving ones, and Pryor’s face only hardened.

“It’s not about me getting a safe, easy ride, John. It’s about doing my duty, about ensuring a safe ride for the people who live here, for the people who come here during the season to fill the hotels and B&Bs. You and your brother—that’s Mark, isn’t it?—own one of those B&Bs. You’ve got a nice place,” Reed added. “If you have any trouble after March, you give me a call. Meanwhile, if you’ve got any more questions for me, we can head over to Drink Up after the meeting. I’ll buy you a beer.”

*