Cold Comfort: Wednesday, July 3, 2024 – Henry

Yesterday didn’t work. Henry sat on the porch knitting until lunch, when he made himself a plate with a sandwich and some chips. He picked up a book from the library for the afternoon; went for a swim after Mr. Popular got out of the water, thanks, but damn it was cold; and showered before dinner. That was mistimed because he was on his way in when Jane and Emily were on their way out, boxes in hands and heads together, so that was a lost cause. He ate dinner alone, took a little stroll to see if anyone was out afterward, and then went to bed.

It didn’t work, but he couldn’t just switch things up and make it obvious that it didn’t work. If he set up a routine, then maybe he was more approachable, or at least it didn’t look like he was doing any of it just to be seen. Even if he totally was.

Thirty-one days sounded like a long time, but midnight tonight meant ten percent of his month was gone. This venture was coming out of his own pocket, and those pockets were about empty. It wasn’t time to change his approach, but to double down. He had coffee in his cabin in the morning, check, even though there was no one to see him. It helped to get him in the right mindset, maybe: sitting in the strange chair, next to the strange fireplace, drinking the familiar coffee from the strange pot, and just spending time with himself the way everyone else was.

Well. The Shelleys and the Meyers came in pairs. He didn’t think Edgar had any playboy rumors, though, so all the other cabins likely held one person and one person only, all of them with their coffee or tea or whatever else they had in the thing that was advertised as a kitchenette. If that was a kitchenette, then he was a prince of England.

Okay maybe he should’ve spent more time looking at the promotional material instead of hustling to put his money down. He’d figured it was only a month, so he could survive anything, and it was heated and there was electricity and indoor plumbing and all.

Man, he was bored. He hadn’t finished his coffee yet, and he was already so. Freaking. Bored.

Henry packed a sweater knit in sock yarn because he figured he’d need something to last the month, and it was a very simple pattern because he’d imagined holding a conversation while knitting. At this rate, he’d have the sweater done by the fifteenth and zero conversations. This was turning into one damn expensive sweater.

That was defeatist thinking. Reporting took time and leg work. Staking out someone’s house was just as boring as this, and then he was stuck in a car with no hope of a conversation. That was waiting with a camera and a voice recorder, eating fast food and hoping he’d have time at the gym later, or that the cute brunette from the bar would call him back, as long as it wasn’t when something finally happened.

He’d gotten a couple good shots of Aaron Gladieux in and around his house, but the man always got into his car in the attached garage, and there was a gate over the end of his driveway. As far as Henry had been able to tell, Gladieux now lived alone. The hot tub was gone, though. Henry couldn’t be sure about the girlfriend, but he knew the hot tub was gone.

He checked his watch and decided he might as well head up to the lodge. It was hard to look into the dining room from the porch, because the glass was treated with the same stuff they put on the cabin windows, but at least the others who came for breakfast could get used to seeing him. Clearly the knitting hadn’t worked to lure anyone in, at least at first glance, but maybe if he kept at it, proving it was more than just for show, someone would bite. He sat in the same rocking chair as yesterday, bag at his feet—just like yesterday—and rocked a little as he knit. Just like yesterday.

Unlike yesterday, the guy called Truman was back, and he went down to the dock in step with Edgar, the two of them talking animatedly as they got out kayaks and paddles and generally ignored the rest of the world because of their boating bro bonding. Neither of them looked up to wave at Henry before they got into their kayaks and headed toward the island out in the lake, which was big enough for a bunch of pine trees but otherwise looked like nothing but rock.

Henry hadn’t even considered the idea of boat bonding, but it wasn’t a bro he was after. He kept knitting. Rocking and knitting.

The sun reflected off the water and started giving him a headache, but he kept knitting. He’d stay here until lunch, and maybe time things better and make his sandwich when he wasn’t alone in the room, but there were footsteps, and maybe …

Henry made sure his Damn it didn’t show on his face. It was Percy, laughing over his shoulder as he came out, surveyed the porch, and decided to leave one rocking chair empty between the two of them. He nodded at Henry’s hands. “Did your grandma teach you?”

It was teasing, so Henry took it seriously. “No. My mom.”

Percy’s smile widened by a couple teeth. A couple very white teeth. “She wanted a daughter instead?”

“My parents wanted a lot of children, yeah, but she kept having miscarriages,” he answered evenly.

This pause was longer, but Percy’s smile didn’t change. He was very clearly trying to figure out if Henry was trying to provoke him or simply stupid. “Sorry to hear that.”

Henry shrugged. “I mean, they’re still together. Half my friends’ parents were divorced by third grade.”

“Ah.” Percy cleared his throat and looked out at the water, starting to sling one ankle up over the opposite knee, but the arms of the rocking chair got in the way and he almost lost one of his loafers. Loafers, no socks, khaki shorts, and a salmon-colored dress shirt. Why, Percy?

“You’re married?” Henry asked, just to throw the man a bone.

“Ah, yeah. Yes.” Percy nodded once deeply. “We’re married. It’s good. Well.” He started to chew his lower lip, then clearly forced himself to stop. “Life is good. Back home, you know. But sometimes you just have to get away.”

Henry nodded because clearly he’d also opted for the month away.

“But. I mean, with … Mary.” He hesitated over his wife’s name and then looked up when the door opened and Alyssa came out holding a piña colada. “Thank you. But, with Mary …” He smiled a little strangely. “These are perfect days.” Percy took a drink and nodded. “Thanks, Alyssa.” It was clearly a dismissal, so she retreated and the men fell silent, one sipping, one knitting, and Henry started calculating exactly how long he’d have to keep sitting here until it was time for lunch.


Cold Comfort: Wednesday, July 3, 2024 – Agatha, coming July 8

Cold Comfort: Tuesday, July 2, 2024 – Alyssa

Edgar walks in wearing cheap plastic flip-flops and swim trunks, a towel around his neck and a T-shirt sticking to his chest. There aren’t any droplets in his curls, but those are damp, too, despite the towel and the afternoon sun. His smile is almost shy, and I guess I get why so many people my age go to pieces over him even with the age gap, but I’m not one of them. I won’t tell him I know he’s almost my dad’s age, but I don’t have to remember Lydia’s lecture on not sleeping with the residents. They’re allowed to sleep with each other if they’d like to, but I’m staff. I’m supposed to be professional.

“You’ve been here a while, right?” he asks, crossing his arms on the high counter and resting his chin on top of them. “Had a month already?”

I nod, wondering which question’s coming next. Do you ever stop looking for your cell phone? Eventually, but after my “weekends” I keep reaching for it again. Does the water ever warm up? Define warm. Do you think there’s a God? Dodge and weave.

Edgar fixes his eyes on mine. “Can you identify birds by their calls?”

A laugh bursts out of me, mostly because I don’t want to get into a deep philosophical discussion with anyone just now, thanks. “I’m not the one to ask. Truman’s back tomorrow. He’s your guy.”

“Yeah?” His eyes sparkle.

“He’ll tell you what it is, how it’ll taste, and what he’d forage to go with it.” Wait, am I over-sharing?

Edgar grins without straightening up. “I don’t want to eat it. I just want to know what it is.”

Apparently I’m not over-sharing. “Well, you might be able to get him to stop there.”

“Because he’ll want to eat it.” He raises a challenging eyebrow.

I snort. “I’m pretty sure Truman just walks into the woods barefoot on his days off and lives on whatever he can find.”

He frowns a little. “Raw?”

Seriously, he’s cute when he wrinkles his nose, no matter how old he is. “No, he’s got to try out some new survival way to start a fire.”

He clucks his tongue. “That doesn’t sound very back-to-nature to me.”

“Oh, he’ll lecture you. Heating food causes it to undergo a chemical change that means we can digest it more easily, so it actually creates less waste.” I grimace. “Uh. Less of all kinds of waste.”

Edgar laughs, a guffaw that leans him back so he grabs the countertop to keep from falling over. “You know, I can’t say that’s something I’ve ever really considered.”

Despite the fact that one of his best-known roles involves surviving the apocalypse. “Truman has.”

“Is that …?” But he stops, cocking his head. “I was going to ask if that’s his first or last name.”

I shake my head. “I don’t even know if it’s after Harry S. or Capote.” Or if he’s the one who picked it, or it’s the name his parents chose.

“Ahhh.” He nods deeply. “Capote. That makes sense, with the rest of us. And maybe the, uh. The killing.”

“I don’t think he’s going to be shooting any bird around here with a shotgun.” Homemade bow and arrow is more likely.

Edgar winks, but I can’t tell if it’s because he’s pleased that I know In Cold Blood or because he doesn’t entirely get the reference. “I figured you’re named after Alyssa Orlen, the greatest children’s author of all time.”

My mom loved those books. She was also about Edgar’s generation.

I just smile, which probably doesn’t look all that knowing and mysterious, but at least he laughs again and holds up his hands. “Fair, fair. I should know better than to keep asking questions. Well.” He holds up a finger. “Personal questions. Because I do have another one.” The finger points toward the chalkboard that has the dinner menu. “How’s Lydia at chicken and waffles? Because I’m starving, but I’ll wait for the right chicken.”

“She’s great at both. We didn’t have them together last month.” That must be your request. I clamp down on it, because that feels too much like a personal assumption.

Edgar nods, rubbing at his chin and that recognizable scruffy beard. “All right. I can wait, as long as I get what I want in the end.”

I nod once sagely. “Margaret Thatcher would be proud of you.”

He laughs and does the wink again, and I’m still not sure if that means he caught my reference or if I missed the mark. At least he leaves with a smile, so that’s really the best I can ask for when it comes to customer service. And hey, let’s face it: my expectations for myself are pretty low these days. I’m in bare minimum survival mode where just getting through is worth a gold star.


Cold Comfort: Wednesday, July 3, 2024 – Henry

Cold Comfort: Tuesday, July 2, 2024 – Agatha

Dear Diary,

I didn’t sleep well last night. I mean, it’s been a long time since I slept well, but I really didn’t sleep well. First night in a new place, and the irony. Ugh. I like using the forest sounds on my white noise machine, so I thought I’d try just listening to the forest, but that didn’t work, so I plugged in the machine, but then I had to keep turning it up louder to drown out the real forest, and that got me worried I wouldn’t hear a bear coming up to the cabin and trying to eat me, so I had to dial it down again.

The sun was up at 6, so I figured I might as well be, too. The schedule in the binder says Lydia doesn’t start hot breakfast until 8, but anything in the fridge or on the table is up for grabs, so I headed over to the lodge. Jonathan was behind the desk, but I just nodded at him and went on into the dining room to see what was up.

It’s weird, right? You’re not making or even buying your own food. I filled out page after page of things I like and things I don’t like, things I eat daily or a couple times a week or only occasionally, and there’s coffee and granola bars in my kitchenette but for the rest of it I have to walk to the lodge. Not that it’s far. None of the cabins are far. I’m the middle cabin to the right, when you’re looking at the lake, and it wouldn’t be a hard walk in the middle of the night or anything, but I ended up bringing some things back for my little fridge all the same.

It’s nowhere near the fridge case they have there in the dining room, with milk and juice and yogurt and cheese and lunch meat and stuff there for the taking, though. I could go in and look for my favorite yogurt and grab an apple from the fresh fruit, and there’s a Keurig, so I took my little breakfast to a table by the window and ate it and zoned out for a bit. If anyone called me on it I could’ve pretended I was taking in nature, I guess, but that wasn’t it. I just drifted again.

I’m not supposed to get mad at myself for wasting time like that. I’m supposed to remind myself that that’s a very capitalist mindset, and I’m working through a lot of trauma, and progress isn’t linear, and all the rest. But nobody called me on it, and the reason I came out of it was because someone walked up onto that long back porch (or maybe it’s a front porch) to sit on one of the rocking chairs and start knitting.

Henry. Hot blond dude with the broad shoulders and chiseled jaw and sensual lips. That guy knits. If it were one of the other women, I would’ve gone out there and started a conversation. Asked about her knitting and how she learned. But when a guy knits … when a guy who looks like that knits … his entire point is getting you to ask. He has his answer prepared, and you’re supposed to ooh and ahh over whatever he makes, even if his tension’s off and he hasn’t used anything but Red Heart.

Stop it, Agatha. You can insult Henry without being a yarn snob.

My feelings are valid. I can’t just get out my own knitting and sit there and knit next to him, because of all the stereotypes and my worry that he’ll get all offended because he’s not special.

Look at how beautifully I worded that: my worry that. Not the assumption that he would in fact act that way.

Diary, I did not give him the chance to prove me wrong. I picked up my garbage, threw that away, and picked one of the reusable bags that were in a neat stack on the corner of the serving table so I could take some more food back to my cabin.

I was late enough that Alyssa was behind the desk. She caught sight of me and laid her book down flat, but I recognized the cover, because there’s a whole shelf of those in the lodge’s library: an Agatha Christie. I don’t know which one, because they all look alike, but that’s what it was. And I had to sidestep Jane on my way out, so I think she saw how I was looking at Alyssa, because she seemed startled.

I sat on my own porch for a while with my own knitting until I got cold, and then I came back in here and made some more coffee and wrapped a blanket around my legs and wrote all this. But now I have to figure out what to do with the rest of my day, because I agreed to come to a place with so few distractions. Joy. Maybe I’ll go try to drown myself in the lake.


Cold Comfort: Tuesday, July 2, 2024 – Alyssa

Cold Comfort: Tuesday, July 2, 2024 – Henry

It was nice to sit in the main room of his cabin with a hot cup of coffee at his elbow and one of the windows cracked just enough to let in some early morning air, but not enough for that air to blow his papers around. He’d debated even bringing them, but the security measures in the cabin were the deciding factor. Even then he’d made sure the papers were in his carry-on and that Jonathan didn’t get ahold of them.

There wasn’t much use to being an undercover reporter if you blew your own cover before you’d even identified your quarry, much less gotten the confession. He’d be hit with all kinds of suits and things when—if—it got out that he made his recordings here, but fuck it. He’d take that risk. Someone like Annabeth Deschain didn’t deserve a refuge.

Henry had his files on her, and some fuzzy photographs, but he didn’t really know what she looked like. Average height, average weight, in her early twenties, but she could have cut her hair, or dyed it, or purchased a wig. There was fake tanner and makeup for contouring or skewing apparent age. She could change her clothes to hide or accent her build, or even binge or starve herself to change that build and then throw the clothes on top of it. There simply weren’t any known photographs of Annabeth Deschain to begin with and, now that she was here, she could be anyone.

Henry sipped his coffee and perused the known facts, which were few.

Annabeth Deschain worked as a nanny for Aaron Gladieux. He had three older children with his late wife, who didn’t matter, and a three-year-old with his hot new girlfriend, who did. The three-year-old was Danielle Jacqueline, known to her doting parents and in headlines everywhere as Dani Jay. To put it bluntly, Dani Jay was found dead in her father’s hot tub in late spring 2023. Early in 2024, Aaron Gladieux was informed that there was not enough evidence to proceed with charging Annabeth Deschain for Dani Jay’s murder.

Like most of the rest of the country, Henry was convinced that Annabeth Deschain was guilty. There was one other fact that Henry jealously guarded: Aaron Gladieux booked a cabin at Loon Lake Refuge for the month of July. It had been hell to get that information, and he’d paid through the nose, first for the record and then for his own cabin. The thing was, Henry didn’t think Aaron Gladieux was using the cabin for himself.

Although Annabeth Deschain managed to keep her face from becoming public knowledge, her private diary was another story. Legally or illegally—it didn’t matter to Henry—entries were leaked, and he wasn’t the only one who knew that Annabeth Deschain had spicy daydreams about her employer. That was as much as could be concluded from the entries: that it was pure fantasy, a young woman lusting after a good-looking older man. Henry was here because he was betting a month of his life and a huge chunk of his bank account on it being reciprocated.

There were four women here this summer, and two men other than Henry himself. He’d already seen Edgar and clearly identified him as someone other than Gladieux, so he was out. He hadn’t seen Percy yet, but Percy was in a double cabin that necessitated author names of a married couple, and the most secret of Henry’s documents, the one in a safe deposit box back home and not in his file folder, indicated a single occupancy. He doubted he was looking for Mary Shelly, but that left Jane Austen, Emily Dickinson, and Agatha Christie in his sights.

He hadn’t seen Emily yet, and Agatha only from a distance, but Jane was next door. The cabins were positioned so that their front windows looked out over the lake and not toward another cabin, and there were screening trees between them, so he wasn’t going to be able to spy on Jane that way, and any attempt would be obvious. Obvious, suspicious, and possibly the sort of behavior that would get him kicked out.

The website had a map of the grounds, so even though he hadn’t known for sure which cabin would be his, he’d been aware of the setup. He’d found out in time to snag a cabin for himself for July, and in time to make his plan. As soon as he’d finished his coffee, Henry figured he’d head on up to the lodge and pick one of the rocking chairs they had on the long porch.


Cold Comfort: Tuesday, July 2, 2024 – Agatha

Cold Comfort: Monday, July 1, 2024 – Alyssa

I’m not as nervous this time because at least I’ve already been through it once. Loon Lake opens in June, since there’s usually still snow up here in May, and even the people who hard-core need to get away from the news for a while aren’t ready to do it in snow boots. The cabins are heated, and have fireplaces for more than decoration, but then Jonathan grumbles about the residents who set the thermostat too high or go through too much wood.

He’s off picking up a late arrival, but most of the others trickle in for dinner. In June Truman was here to tell me they’re more scared of me than I am of them, but he’s off today. This group seems a lot like the last as far as that goes, though: the timid wildlife.

Edgar’s first, with the curls and the smile most people would know anywhere, and he opts for the takeaway containers so he can pile things in, grab a drink—nonalcoholic—and skedaddle out the door before anyone else comes in. Valid. It’s easy enough to assume that he of all people came here to get away from being seen, so I smile when he glances my way but don’t come out from behind the desk.

They really shouldn’t need me much right now. It’s easy to see where the dining room is, with enough chairs for everyone around various small tables in case they want to stay, but also that option of takeaway container over plate because they certainly don’t have to. Lydia cooks things off their lists of likes and dislikes—seriously, she has a whole spreadsheet—and there are the freezers with frozen meals if anyone wants one of those instead, plus the microwave here, and in the kitchenette parts of the cabins.

My cabin looks exactly like one of the resident cabins, except I’m on the woods side of the path instead of the lake side. I’ve got my coffee pot and my little fridge and single cupboard, just like they do. The lodge is even open around the clock in case they realize at midnight that they want a frozen burrito. Someone’s always at the desk or taking the radio if they have to go out to a cabin. I don’t think Lydia needs more than two hours of sleep a night.

Henry and Jane come in together, talking cautiously about the weather probably because they came out of their cabins at the same time and it would have been more awkward to walk in silence. Jane grabs a takeaway container first, and either Henry was already planning on it or he decides to go with the flow because he does, too. Unlike Edgar, they each examine the beverages in the alcohol cooler and help themselves rather than sticking to pop. Then they’re gone, but not before I see the way Henry—tall, blonde, casually fit—looks at petite, dark-haired Jane,

Agatha opens the door like a rabbit sniffing for predators and doesn’t smile back when I smile first. My dad would say she’s got Spanish eyes, and she looks like she’s sulking not just in her face but the way she moves. One takeaway container for Agatha, check, and she practically glares at Percy when he opens the door, realizes she’s on her way out, and holds it for her.

Percy’s half of our only pair this month, but Mary isn’t with him. He’s dressed so out-of-place for the region: khakis, loafers, even a tie around his neck, and I don’t know how expensive his haircut is, but it’s possible he paid even more than Edgar. He grins at me with some very white teeth and comes to the desk instead of heading to the dining room, leaning on the high edge. “My wife, uh. Mary.” He chuckles to show how ridiculous the whole pseudonym thing is. “She’s not feeling well. Wondering if you have a heating pad.”

I tuck my bookmark into my book and get up. “We’ve got heating pads and hot water bottles.”

“Heating pad would be great. It’s the, uh.” His smile loses a little of its sparkle. “PMS, you know.”

I nod and go to one of the closets where there are three heating pads, neatly stacked. At least we’ve got electricity here. Imagine trying to make it through a whole summer with candles and all the mod cons circa 1850. “Do you want a bag? If you’re taking dinner back, too.”

“Oh. Oh, yeah.” He starts like maybe he wasn’t planning on grabbing food, even though it’s all laid out and everything.

It’s the first day. Everything’s new and weird, and I don’t think he’s from anywhere around here. We don’t ask, and even if he told me something, I wouldn’t necessarily believe it, but the Shelleys feel big city to me.

I tuck the heating pad into a reusable shopping bag and try not to watch him as he goes into the dining room, but he’s focused on making one large leafy salad and one meat-and-potatoes, so it’s not like he’s going to complain. He puts the boxes in his bag, making sure they’re mostly level, before adding napkins and silverware and pausing at the drinks before selecting one large bottle of Evian and a six-pack of beer. He even nods at me on his way out.

We’ve only got one other guest coming and nobody’s asked me for anything but the heating pad, so I go ahead and make myself a plate. Lydia’s a good cook. It’s a turkey dinner tonight, not a full Thanksgiving spread but plenty of options all the same, so I make myself a side salad instead of Percy’s enormous dinner salad and go for white meat, mashed potatoes, and cornbread. I take it back to the desk instead of to one of the tables so I don’t have to run for the phone in case anyone calls, even though the dining area has the view of the lake. It’s still beautiful, even after almost six weeks, but I’m on call. I’m not a guest.

Really, I lucked out. I couldn’t have afforded this place. The prices are justified, since it’s room and board with everyone at your beck and call, plus the upkeep, and the propane, and the generators. Lydia has a whole list of people to call if anyone backs out or decides to go home early. No matter how desperately I needed to get away, I couldn’t have rustled up the funds. I’m lucky Lydia saw my application and accepted it, and being on-call for long hours is worth it because I get what the rest of them do: a break from the headlines. A place where only a select few can reach me.

Except, unlike the residents, I get weekends. Not real weekends. Truman has Mondays and Tuesdays off, and I have Thursdays and Fridays. Plus I’m never on call overnight. It’s just 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. for me, when I’m awake, anyway, and all that means is I have to be here in the lodge, where the food and books are. Thank God there haven’t been any emergencies, and the last group kept mainly to themselves, doing the whole communing with nature while going through cell phone withdrawal thing.

Honestly, I thought it would be worse: more drinking and more fights, maybe. Loon Lake isn’t billed as a screen detox facility, but that’s basically how it functions. When you agree to come up here, you’re saying you’ll leave your cell phone behind. You know there isn’t any signal up here, anyway, and no Internet. I guess I thought more residents would have trouble with it, but I also didn’t really expect the sorts of people Lydia and Jonathan attract.

The people who come here aren’t screen addicts being forced to break their habit because of familial concern. They’re all people who just want to freaking get away from the world for a while.

I know exactly how they feel.


Cold Comfort: Tuesday, July 2, 2024 – Henry,

Cold Comfort: Monday, July 1, 2024 – Agatha

Dear Diary,

Look you’d think they’d at least give you a choice between three names rather than just assigning you one. It’s not supposed to connect back to your real life, blah blah blah, but come on. Agatha? Freaking Agatha? I’m going to have to train myself to answer to it. To turn my head when someone says “Oh, Agatha!”

This was never going to be good. I knew that. But it could’ve been better is all I’m saying.

My therapist suggested journaling, but this is going to be burned before I leave here, because it’s going to be about here, and we’re not supposed to carry anything like that out with us. If it’s fiction, that’s different (there’s one of those reviews by someone claiming they wrote a novel while they were here, but it’s probably not any good, because they didn’t actually say it’s been published) but anything about the people we meet, yada yada yada, is illegal.

We all had to sign that stupid form with our legal names, and now we’re here and somebody else, and just make that make sense.

Okay Agatha that’s not the point of journaling. Or of being here. The point is avoiding headlines, avoiding doom scrolling, practicing meditation and mindfulness and dear lord I’m going to die of boredom. Why did I let them talk me into this?

Deep breath. Okay. Worst year of my life and all. God, I almost wrote “worst year of my life so far” and here we go. Doom spiraling again.

I can’t just think it’s the worst year ever because that’s entirely unrealistic. I’m young. Unless I die suddenly in some sort of catastrophic event, there will, someday, be worse years. And that’s not doom thinking. That’s just a fact. I’m still alive and I’m here at this stupid retreat living some people’s dream, and come on, I’m not even the only person doing it. There’s a waiting list, so all the cabins are full. Plus it’s not just the Meyers. They’ve got a couple other people working and living here, and they stay the whole season.

I am here to get away from, and recover from, the things that have happened to me that should have been private but are far too public.

There. That. To live in the moment and not repeat all the awful things and the worst night of my life and the fact that everyone, everywhere, around the world thinks they know what happened, and what I should’ve done, and why it all happened, and just all that shit that I was supposed to leave behind when I got off that dinky airplane and saw Jonathan standing there.

No name cards or anything. It’s just him, the same face as the promotional material, and he waits for your bags and you load them up and if the guy in 3 isn’t the one in my favorite show then it’s his identical twin.

Okay and did anyone ever think of that? I’m never going to be able to say I met him. That we talked. Not about ourselves, no, but come on. It’s the sort of name that makes young women everywhere scream and faint and claim their ovaries exploded, which is both gross and ow, but I’m cursed. He offered me a hand to get down from the van and I can’t ever tell anyone about it.

And yes, Dr. Weber, I’m concentrating on that because it means I don’t have to think about why I’m here. The shit I’m running away from, except Dr. Weber wants me to think of it more proactively, so the shit I’m learning to deal with by being here.

Okay was it really wise to agree to this when being cut off for a month means no therapy appointments, either? It’s almost time for dinner. Guess I might as well see what they do with all our requests.


Cold Comfort: Monday, July 1, 2024 – Alyssa

Cold Comfort: Monday, July 1, 2024 – Henry

Henry thought the nondisclosure agreement for this place was ridiculous right up until he saw the man coming out of the Poe cabin and knew, without a doubt, that his first name wasn’t Edgar. They weren’t supposed to take photographs of anything that happened in the compound, and especially not of fellow residents, even though this one particular fellow resident happened to regularly trade on his face. And his name, which, Henry reflected as he nodded in passing, was followed all too frequently these days by the word fatigue. He tore his eyes away from the award-winning actor and focused back on the pine needle path that led further into the woods, following Jonathan Meyer.

That was his real name. Jonathan and Lydia Meyer owned the place, and it was their names and faces, and only theirs, on the website. Everyone else went by assigned names, and they passed Cabin 2 (Austen) and reached his own: Longfellow. Hence, he was Henry, at least for the month of July.

“Here we are,” Jonathan announced, unloading the suitcases from the handcart to the small back stoop. He was tall and thin, and even in his dickies and work shirt there was something about him that made Henry think of butlers in dark suits. Jonathan used his thumb to open the lock on the back door and confidently punched a few buttons before stepping aside and gesturing for Henry to use his own.

He did, using his left hand and waiting for the beep and the green light.

Jonathan nodded. “I’ll follow you through to the front and get that one, but then it’s all yours.”

The front of the cabin wasn’t on the path but on the lake, and it wasn’t Lake Superior, even though it was large enough to have an island that also featured on the retreat’s website. Henry went on ahead into the cabin, not looking around curiously because he’d also seen photos of the interior, and through the short hallway to the big front room that was everything but bathroom and bedroom. They repeated the ritual on the front door.

Henry used his right thumb on this one. If Jonathan noticed, he didn’t comment, but then, the whole point of Loon Lake Retreat was not noticing. See, for example, this year’s SAG Award winner heading out of Cabin 3 in swim trunks and with a towel over his shoulder, nary a paparazzo in sight.

Jonathan pointed to a table in the great room that held a three-ring binder next to an odd-looking telephone. It only had two buttons, the white one labeled LODGE and the red one 911. “You can call or come up at any time,” he explained, even though this, too, was in all the literature. “Someone’s always on duty. If you don’t need anything before then, dinner’s ready at six.” Then he waited, but this wasn’t a big-city hotel, and he wasn’t a bellboy whose silence reminded Henry that he needed to tip. Henry nodded, Jonathan nodded back, and then Henry was alone.

Well. Alone in his cabin, but not alone on the compound. There were six guest cabins, although some of them could hold couples, and Jonathan and Lydia, and probably some more staff members, too. There were four vehicles in the staff parking lot, at any rate, and there had to be enough people to keep the lodge manned at all hours, but the staff wasn’t listed on the website, either. Maybe they got to pick their own names.

Henry propped the door and maneuvered the two large suitcases inside. It felt like he’d overpacked, but the email accepting him as a resident for the month of July—after his money had arrived, of course—included a long to-bring list that cautioned Upper Peninsula summers weren’t always as summery as they might like. Loon Lake was up here in the Keweenaw Peninsula, about as far north as anyone could get in the state of Michigan, and guests would want jeans and sweatshirts and wool socks, just in case. They could always request purchases from Jonathan, and have those things added to their tab, but Henry packed as directed and dealt with the baggage fees.

Now this meant he had to unpack, but the bedroom had a wardrobe with hangers and two dressers, like maybe this was one of the cabins that could host a couple instead of a singleton. The bed was a queen, at any rate, and though he could pick up clean sheets from the lodge at any time, if he wanted someone to change the bed for him, he’d have to let them in. There was no maid’s key at this place, even if there was someone who’d act as a maid if he wanted her to.

Henry figured most of the people who forked over the cash for a month here were protective of whatever happened inside their temporary dwelling places. He’d carry his laundry up to the lodge himself, thanks, and put the new sheets on with his own two hands. He didn’t need anyone else poking around, even if it was just his bedroom and he kept his papers and his notebooks in the main room.

That was, of course, the point of Loon Lake Retreat. He’d never refer to the man in Cabin 3 as anything but Edgar, and if any personal questions slipped out, the other residents could dodge or lie as they liked. Henry certainly wasn’t going to be giving any truthful answers of his own, and it remained to be seen exactly how social anyone else would be. Yes, dinner was scheduled to be served in the lodge at six, but it could always be picked up or, if he hit one of the buttons on his phone, delivered to his back stoop with no human contact.

Henry’s problem was going to be juggling contact.

The online forms didn’t ask why you wanted to spend a month somewhere without your cell phone or a Wi-Fi connection. It just asked you for a pass phrase for any loved ones or privileged parties trying to contact you through the lodge’s landline or their catch-all email, checked at minimum every 48 hours. It didn’t ask why you wanted to limit your communication. You could leave at any time before your month was up, but you didn’t get any money back and, once Jonathan drove you out of here, you didn’t return, no matter how many days were left. Everything was very clear: these are the limitations, and you’re choosing them for your own reasons, but nothing asked for those reasons.

Not that Henry would have minded lying if an answer were required. He wasn’t about to say I’m an undercover reporter who learned that you’ve already accepted a murderer for the month of July and will attempt to secure a confession. It didn’t need to be legal. He just needed to get those important words on the record.


Cold Comfort: Monday, July 1, 2024 – Agatha

Happy publication day, In Every Possible Way!

I’m not original when I say that Alicia Thompson’s latest is definitely for fans of the Before Sunrise trilogy, but I’m also don’t usually reach for romance (or magical realism). Jess’ story begins on her birthday with an app-assisted date so terrible that being knocked out in the parking lot after honestly seems like an improvement, even if she didn’t end up in Ireland. She wakes up, confused and a bit chilly, only to meet her bad date’s brother. She’s stuck in Dublin with a single outfit and no purse; he’s a bit confused at an American popping by who knows his brother. Eamonn ends up showing Jess the city and they have the kinds of deep conversations you can only have with a stranger … or maybe a hallucination.

Jess feels very real and grounded during that first date, and she deals surprisingly well with her new teleportation skills. She can’t figure out what happened, so she might as well go with it. Jess can’t panic about losing her passport because she never had one in the first place, and she can’t figure out how she got here so she doesn’t have to explain it to Eamonn. It’s forced proximity, strangers-to-lovers, and I personally felt like I was more anxious about how and when the bubble would suddenly burst than Jess was. She’s much better than I am at living in the moment.

The initial bad date was painful, so it took me a little to get into the book, but that’s over quickly enough. I think I spent too much time trying to figure out what the heck was happening rather than going along with Jess’ more free-spirited experience. It’s a very sweet story, and the sprinkling of Irish myths and hints at real-life magic help make it all make sense (at least, as much sense as it’s going to make) in the end.

buy In Every Possible Way by Alicia Thompson

Bury the Dead: Epilogue

Ollie Chapman—Friday, December 20, 2019

The last day before winter vacation was quite possibly the longest day of the school year. At least in June they had half days because of exams. Sure, the teachers were contractually obligated to linger, but they didn’t have to try to keep students from going completely feral all the way until the final bell. The last day before break was a lost cause no matter when it fell, and some days the bar of success was mere survival.

Ollie gathered up the stuff she thought she might need, if not really want, and awarded herself a mental gold star for survival. Once she made it home, through the traffic that never really went away—thank you, Traverse City, for being a year-round playground—she’d get another mental gold star. And then she’d stop with the teacher metaphors until January, thank you very much.

It was amazing how quickly she’d gotten used to seeing lights on when she came home. Every so often Eli talked about renting some office space just to have somewhere else to go during work hours, but he hadn’t moved from her desk in the living room yet. He had plans to try out a couple coworking spaces in January before committing to one, but it was nice to come home to something other than an empty apartment.

Without actually calling out “Honey, I’m home!” though, in case he was in a meeting. With his headphones and microphone, sure, but still. Eli worked until five, and that meant she had some time after she got home to decompress without having to talk to someone else. They’d moved the desk so she could go into the bedroom or kitchen without showing up on the video feed if they used it during a meeting, so it all worked out. The apartment was a bit small with two people, but they’d worked it out.

Today, though, Eli met her at the door looking grim. “I took off early,” he told her as she unwound her scarf and took off the rest of her outer layers, which wasn’t very reassuring. It wasn’t until she got her stuff in the closet and her keys on their hook that she saw the wrapped package propped against the sofa.

The package itself wasn’t anything extraordinary. It wasn’t even the only wrapped package in the room—they’d put up the Christmas tree the day after Thanksgiving without acknowledging that it was full Clark family tradition, and there were multiple brightly-wrapped boxes already waiting for next Wednesday—but the envelope taped to the front was different. It was a regular letter-sized envelope, and it was Dad’s handwriting: Ollie and Eli.

“It wasn’t his address on the box,” Eli explained, arms crossed to keep himself from hugging her or maybe holding her back. “I guess the UPS store printed the label. So I opened it that far, but …”

But.

They hadn’t even tried going north for Thanksgiving because Ollie’s break wasn’t long enough. Esther didn’t have anywhere for them to sleep, so she told them to stay down for Christmas, too, and enjoy their first real Christmas together. She’d come down for their wedding—a weekday in August, on the beach, officiated by Brad, and conducted over two minutes at sunrise before breakfast at The Omelette Shoppe—and figured they’d be up next summer, but Ollie hadn’t had any contact with Dad. Not even anything from Cindy outside her usual Facebook posts, which Ollie assumed meant Cindy decided to stay with Dad and therefore side with him, but now … Now Dad sent something with both their names on it, and Eli took off work early so he’d be able to focus on her when she confronted it.

Ollie realized she was chewing on her chapped lower lip and forced herself to stop. “What do we open first?”

“Hell if I know.” Eli blinked and then tried out a grin to apologize for his tone. “Your choice. Could be neither.”

“Curiosity killed the cat,” she grumbled, pulling the envelope off and handing it over before carefully leaning the package forward to get at the seam in the wrapping paper on the back. Based on size and shape, she assumed it was something in a picture frame, and Frosty and his animated pals tore away to show it was, in fact, a collage of pictures.

Ollie sat back on her heels, momentarily speechless. It was one of those frames that came with a precut white mat, so you only had to pick which 4×6 photos you wanted to use. Some were vertical and some horizontal, so that limited things, but Dad had a lot to work with. They were all photos of Ollie and Eli.

Well, it wasn’t just Ollie and Eli—the senior prom photo had Dad, Mom, and Birdy, too—but that was clearly the theme. Little chubby cheeked kindergarten Ollie and Eli here, sixth grade graduation there, high school graduation in the corner … and, surrounded by other ages, Ollie and Eli at Clinch Park Beach at sunrise, Ollie in a simple white sundress and Eli in a linen shirt and blue jeans, kissing, Eli’s wedding ring clearly visible as he cupped her face.

Huh.

“Harper must’ve given him that one,” Eli murmured, bending down for a closer look before tilting his head. “Or my mom?” Harper was the designated photographer, but both Harper and Esther had signed the marriage license as witnesses. Either way meant Dad asked them for the photo … and one of them gave it, without mentioning anything to either Ollie or Eli.

Double huh.

Eli offered her the envelope and she took it, first moving the photo collage to one side before taking a seat on the couch. The envelope was properly sealed, so she had to get a finger under the flap and tear it open. There were multiple sheets of notebook paper inside, all handwritten on one side only, and another photograph. This one showed Dad’s living room where most of the photo collages were the ones Mom put together, except they’d been moved and adjusted. One that was probably an exact copy of the one by her feet hung in the middle of the short wall so it could be seen from the couch. Ollie looked at it and then handed it over to Eli as he sat down next to her.

The letter was long, and she skimmed it first before going back to the beginning and reading each page, then passing it over so Eli could do the same. For once he didn’t complain that she read faster, merely taking the pages and going through them at his own speed until they all lay in his lap and he looked over at her. “So …”

Ollie shrugged like she could pass this back to him.

Eli nodded slowly, gathering the letter up and putting it together so he could fold it and put it back in the envelope. “Okay. He apologizes for very specific things and takes responsibility for them. He maybe toes the line between explaining and justifying, but it’s a clear attempt to keep from just blaming something or someone else. And he stepped up and reached out to make contact for the first time in months, so Alastair would say he’s doing the work.”

“Alastair would also have to consider that this is a single data point. We could assume progress based on previous interactions, but …” Ollie shrugged. “That’s Dad’s handwriting, but maybe it’s someone else’s words.”

“Eli thinks that’s a valid observation, but you’re never going to know for sure if you don’t let your dad have more than this one data point.”

She leaned back into the couch, crossing her arms. “So we’re forgiving him?”

“We might acknowledge that he made his accusation in the middle of a very stressful week and that he clearly didn’t think it through.” Eli set the envelope on the end table and turned to face her, one arm propped on the back of the couch so he could lean his head against his hand. “And that you made a grand gesture in response, clearly taking my side and cutting him off … and he accepted that decision.”

Ollie raised an eyebrow.

“He didn’t follow us down here. He didn’t figure out when we were getting married and crash the wedding. He’s got a photo, sure, but months later, and even though he wasn’t there and you told him you didn’t want him to be, he’s got it hanging up in his house. So.” Eli shrugged. “I don’t know, Olls. Family’s complicated, but that’s an olive branch if I ever saw one. I’m not saying you should call him up and tell him we’ll hop in the car tomorrow. I’m not saying you have to make any sort of contact tonight. Just … maybe don’t decide not to just yet.”

She looked at him long enough to give him the chance to walk any of that back if he wanted to and then got up to go to her bag. “You hold on to this,” she told Eli, pulling out her phone and handing it over, “and go get me a beer. I’m going to change and … I don’t know.”

He tried to stop a mischievous grin and failed beautifully. “One of your presents is a book of lateral thinking puzzles. Published just this year, so I figure I’ve got a chance. I can point out which one.”

“And join me in the beer, or are you going to take the sober advantage?”

He stood up to pull her in close. “You kidding? I’ll take every advantage I can get. I married up, you know.”

“Eli …”

“I know you think you did,” he reassured her, kissing the tip of her nose, “but you’re wrong. Go on—I’ll get your beer and your book and we’ll put in some good couch time.”

“I love you.”

He broke into a grin the way he always did when she said it, like each time she told him was the first. “I love you, too. Hey.” Eli pulled her in for a hug. “We’ll get through this the way we’ve gotten through everything else, you know.”

Ollie nodded and held him tightly. “Together.”

THE END


Bury the Dead: 34

Ollie Clark—Sunday June 30, 2019

Esther looked around the apartment. “This is depressing. Are you staying through the whatever tomorrow? When we find out if he actually pleads guilty?”

“Arraignment,” Eli informed his mom, looking inside the bags from Taco Bell and starting to pass the food around. “At this point we figure we won’t leave until Tuesday, anyway, because we need to take some of the furniture to the dump.” That had always been the plan, but they thought they’d have another week to take care of all of that.

A week while Ollie hung out with Dad. So. She took a long drink of her Baja Blast and stopped at the ice pick headache from the cold. The trick was to warm up the roof of your mouth as quickly as possible, so she plastered her tongue to it and waited it out.

Mom taught her the ice cream headache trick. Usually it didn’t hurt her heart this bad.

“Your dad still hasn’t reached out?” Esther asked sympathetically.

“No.” This, Eli, was why you didn’t just keep water in the fridge. Room-temperature water helped warm your mouth back up. “I don’t expect to. Not after … everything. You hear from Serena?”

Esther tilted her head to say touché. “No. I don’t expect to.”

“Look at all of us and our utter lack of expectations,” Eli observed before biting into his Crunchwrap.

“Use a napkin,” his mom chided. “And I have a pretty good idea of what Serena’s going through.”

“Except,” Eli interjected, despite his full mouth, “her son actually did it.”

“Eli James, table manners! And I think, at this point, what I’m comfortable saying is that her son’s actually confessed to it.”

He grinned at her and grabbed some of the flimsy paper napkins. “That was good. You going to law school?”

“You and your sass,” she sniffed, but ruined it with a smile. “It’s good to see you acting more like yourself.” Except that made everyone recall that the entire reason Eli could relax was because Jared confessed to wanting to kill Ollie ten years ago. It wasn’t exactly a Disney ending. Esther delicately lifted her burrito. “Ollie, pick a topic.”

“Um. Elephants are the only animals with four forward-facing knees.”

“Sounds fake,” Eli countered before taking another huge bite.

“No phones at the table,” Esther reminded him, dabbing her lips with her napkin. “They don’t have elbows?”

Ollie shook her head. “Remember MindTrap?”

Eli nodded. “Sid Shady, Sam Sham … Detective Shadow …”

“One of the cards was basically the explorer guy, I forget his name, hearing that someone saw an animal come out of the pond and all four of its knees were wet, and he knew what animal it was.”

He pointed at her and turned to his mom. “We couldn’t actually play that game because she’d read the cards for fun and then read the answers and then remember all of them, so it was pointless. How many cards were in that thing? A couple hundred?”

“Something like that, yeah.”

“Ahhhh.” Esther nodded deeply. “That’s why you started getting all of those, what, logic puzzle book things?”

“Lateral thinking puzzles,” he corrected grudgingly.

“Out of the library!” She turned to Ollie with a knowing smile. “Because he was trying to beat you.”

Eli shook his head. “Because I thought they were interesting puzzles and if I had a book all to myself it didn’t matter if I had to flip to the hints or to the answers and get it wrong, because nobody knew I got it wrong.”

“Why did nobody else ever learn that, if you don’t react, Birdy stops trying to poke at something?” Ollie sighed.

“Because we all saw you,” he countered, “and how she kept trying to find other things to poke.”

“So I forced her to be creative and branch out.”

He grinned and leaned over to kiss her temple. “Sure, honey. Keep telling yourself that.”

“What about centipedes?” Esther asked suddenly.

Ollie blinked.

“As far as knees,” she explained. “I know they don’t actually have a hundred legs, but do they have knees? Do any bugs have knees?”

“This would all be so much easier if I could just pull out my phone and Google it,” Eli pointed out.

“Wait, so if you say something’s the bee’s knees, you’re actually saying it … doesn’t exist?” Ollie tilted her head as she sipped more reasonably at her drink.

Eli grinned at her. “Aren’t you a teacher? You should know this.”

“The whole deal about teaching secondary is that you have a specific certification, and mine’s English. There weren’t any questions about bug knees on my exam.”

“It could’ve come up,” Esther argued. “As a metaphor question. Does ‘It’s the bee’s knees’ mean a, it’s wonderful; b, it doesn’t exist, or c …”

“Very low to the ground,” Eli suggested. “Oh, knee-high to a grasshopper. Do grasshoppers actually have knees? They’ve got those giant thighs.”

“Aren’t the knees the highest part of a grasshopper?” Esther wondered. “Something knee-high to us is very short, comparatively, but with their legs all jacked up like that …”

Ollie laughed. “Do all sayings about knees involve bugs?”

“Again, if I could just get out my phone …”

“Mealtime is family time,” his mom responded, once again prim and proper. “Even if it’s Taco Bell for lunch at a rickety old table you’re taking to the dump tomorrow and there aren’t enough chairs.”

“Yeah, I don’t remember these rules from when I was a kid.”

She arched an eyebrow. “We’re allowed to grow and learn, Eli James. Even at my advanced age.”

Ollie smiled, because it sounded a lot like how she’d grown up. These were even things that she could see taking forward into the future, if she and Eli had kids of their own.

He caught her eye and shook his head, apparently reading her mind. “You’re no fun.”

“Hey, I just taught you elephants are the only animals with four knees,” she countered. “I’m tons of fun.”

Eli opened his mouth but nothing came out, so he ended up catching her hand and kissing the back of it as Ollie and Esther laughed.


Excerpt from the Keweenaw Report’s radio update, June 30, 2019

… and tomorrow, South Range resident Jared Chapman, thirty-one, will be arraigned for the 2009 murder of Wendy and Catherine Clark. Mother and daughter died as the result of a shotgun attack. Chapman’s cousin went to trial for the murder in 2009 but was acquitted. The case made headlines last winter when accused serial killer Sean Kelly was attached to the crimes but then, just over a week ago, Kelly was found to have an alibi. Chapman is the second person to be arrested in connection with the murders this past week, but his arrest follows a full confession. Chapman is expected to plead guilty tomorrow. We will explore the case more fully during Copper Country Today next Sunday when our host Finn Overton talks with retired attorney Clarence Neimi about the case.


Ollie Clark—Monday, July 1, 2019

Eli flatly declared that he didn’t even want to try to attend Jared’s arraignment, so they went through the rigmarole of renting a truck, loading up most of Eli’s furniture, taking it to the dump, returning the truck, and getting back to the apartment without mentioning that they were clearly keeping an eye on the time. Waiting for when it was reasonable to expect an update, even if they kept pulling out their phones under other pretenses. Esther said she wasn’t going, and Ollie really didn’t expect an update from Serena, but she had no idea what Dad thought, or if he’d go.

Len probably went, but even though he had Ollie’s cell phone number, she didn’t expect an update from him, either. Same with Roger Porvoo, although Ollie thought he probably already had his article written, even if nobody would read it until Tuesday. Late Tuesday, in most cases. There wasn’t really early delivery in South Range. At least the paper did come to your door, unlike the mail. It was usually a couple people in a car, one driving and the passenger tossing them out the window, instead of a kid on a bicycle, but the paper made it onto your property.

Most likely she’d get the news when a bunch of new messages came in asking about how she felt about the result. If she were lucky, the first one she listened to would actually tell her what the result was instead of just leaving it vague, like maybe the people calling had a standard recording and just had to add the right name to the intro, like an email list. And maybe all of this waiting and feigning nonchalance was doing odd things to her brain.

Eli told her to take the shower first once they got back because, even if they were going to start loading the cars later, they needed to cool off. When she came out, he passed his phone over so she could see a text from Len: Jared pleaded guilty. Sentencing is set for the 12th. Serena caused a scene. Randy was here at the back and didn’t say a word to anyone.

Wow. That was a lot of information.

“My turn,” Eli murmured, waiting for her to look up so he could give her a kiss. “You can check my other messages if you want, but I haven’t seen any from anyone I recognized until Len’s. Maybe you have one, too.”

There wasn’t a bedside table anymore—hell, there wasn’t a bed; tonight would be spent on an inflatable mattress borrowed from Harper and Brad—so her phone was on the kitchen counter. She checked it and found the same message from Len, like he’d copied and pasted it to each of them instead of just making it a group chat. That was weird, unless he had a whole list of people he sent it to and didn’t want any of them to know how many others got it. She gave the message a thumbs-up, because it was a half-step above leaving him on read, and took a slow breath.

Okay, Olls. This was further legally with Jared than it had ever been with Kelly. Jared said Guilty, so it leapfrogged a trial.

Well. In Michigan, at least. She hadn’t looked up what would happen if Kelly pleaded guilty in Ohio. On top of which, there probably wasn’t any reason for him to be moved to Michigan and plead. It was possible to get a death sentence in Ohio, even if it was a suspended death sentence. What would be the point of wasting the money to bring him anywhere else and go through a process that could end, at most, in more life sentences? Maybe—maybe—it would be worth taking Kelly to Indiana if they could prove he murdered people there, since they were still using the death penalty following the sentencing, but Ollie had tried to figure out the eighteen things that meant a case was really a death penalty case and her eyes crossed so … it didn’t matter. Rewind things back to June 20 and she never expected anyone to go on trial for Mom and Birdy’s murder, anyway. Anyone other than Eli, of course, but man, that felt like a lifetime ago. Now they had someone legally guilty of the murders, and … well. And.

Once they got back, she’d call Araminta and see if she could move up her next appointment. Especially if Dad was still incommunicado by that phone call. At some point Jared’s full confession would be made available to the public. Someone like Len, if not Len himself, would get his hands on it and incorporate it into a think piece, or a blog post, or … it probably wouldn’t just go up online in its entirety, but you could pay for copies of legal documents, right? So at some point she’d be able to read and … well, see if it made sense.

Except it didn’t make sense. She’d spent ten years living with it not making sense. Even Kelly and his traveling shotgun story didn’t really make sense. So why should it matter now, when the case was legally closed, if it didn’t make sense? There wasn’t just a suspect but a perpetrator, and even the schoolboard member with the mustache couldn’t say anything to her because it wasn’t Eli. Yes, it was his cousin, but she wasn’t marrying Jared.

Jared set out that night intending to kill Ollie.

That was something else for Araminta. She could shove it in a box and compartmentalize it as long as there was an open by date on the lid. Push it away for now and force herself to deal with it when she had Araminta to metaphorically hold her hand and literally pass her Kleenex.

So, right now … focus on getting Eli moved. On praying the inflatable mattress wouldn’t develop a leak and dump them on the floor in the middle of the night. On making the long drive and crossing the Mackinac Bridge with a car full of stuff blocking the rearview mirror when the construction meant she’d have to drive on the grate, guaranteed. And then on unloading the freaking boxes once they reached her apartment, although at least it was on the first floor. And they didn’t have to unload it all right away—Eli had a duffel bag to at least get him through tomorrow night without doing all that work. Right. That wasn’t exactly all positive, but she could concentrate on that and just get through the next couple days before she looked any further ahead.


Bury the Dead Epilogue