Stacy made the mistake of shaking her head. “N-no,” she said, cringing at another onslaught of pain. She put her hand to the back of her neck. “Hurts.”
“Yes. You gave yourself a slight whiplash, but I didn’t find any other signs of trauma. No broken bones or such.”
He lifted her eyelids and put a light to her eyes. She could smell his after-shave and a hint of tobacco. She wanted to comment but couldn’t summon the humor.
“Do you know your name?” Dr. Farbish asked.
“Anastasia. But everyone calls me Stacy. Stacy Millman.”
A murmur came from her right. Stacy blinked and tried to focus on the faces of the older people who had gathered in her room.
A movement from the foot of the bed caught her attention as the sheriff shifted to catch her eye.
“I’m Derek Chancelor, sheriff of this county. I found your car just outside Hunter’s Bay and brought you in.”
“Did I hit someone?” Stacy asked.
The sheriff scratched his head and then shook it. “Nope. You didn’t hit anyone and your car isn’t damaged. About the only thing disturbed was the signpost you knocked down, and we can right that easily enough. But you must have thrown on your brakes awfully hard to have given your neck such a twist.”
Stacy stared at the young sheriff, a man of about her age, who, she suddenly realized, was terrifically good-looking. He had thick blond hair cut short in the back but long enough on top to fall over his brow in a careless wave. His eyes were cerulean blue and his complexion that ruddy gold that came from spending a lot of time outdoors in all kinds of weather.
He cleared his throat, distracting her from her preoccupation with his looks, and she felt herself grow warm with embarrassment. Would he believe she’d been staring at him with an artist’s eye, or was he used to women reacting foolishly to his vibrant masculinity?
“I...I’m sorry,” she stammered, putting her hand to her head as if she were confused. “What did you say?”
“I was just commenting on the force with which you hit that sign. It was cemented into the ground.”
The memory of the painting in her studio flashed into Stacy’s mind. She remembered the way it had stood up in the first version and then, a couple of days later, she’d discovered that she’d repainted it, lying on its side. A chill ran up her spine and she pulled the bed sheet up to her chin.
“That means,” she said in a near whisper, “that somehow I knew it was going to get knocked down, long before I ever got here.”
Chapter Two
The four people who sat around the table in his office were all talking at once.
Derek Chancelor, whose chair was balanced on the two back legs let the front legs fall to the floor with an authoritative thud. “Quiet down!”
The clatter dwindled away to silence.
“Okay, now let’s start over. First of all, what were the four of you doing in Ms. Millman’s room at the hospital?” He turned and faced the older of the two men. “Mayor?”
William Hunter tugged on his beard and glared at Derek. “I’m the mayor. It’s my job to know everything that goes on in this town.”
“In other words, you were snooping around the sheriff’s department again and you heard it over the radio?”
The man shrugged, his mouth held in a tight, stubborn line.
Derek decided not to point out that the mayor needed to keep busy at his own work rather than meddling in the sheriff’s.
“So you called your family and decided to go make a courtesy call on a stranger?” He grinned, leaned back in his chair. “That’s a little noblesse oblige even for the Hunters, isn’t it?”
None of the group responded to his sarcasm.
Derek tried another approach. “Carly, what’s this Stacy Millman got to do with any of you and why are you all so concerned about her arrival?”
Carly Samos looked at the others and patted the collar of her blue knit dress with self-importance. “Let’s just say that she doesn’t belong here,” she said, snapping her mouth shut around her words.
“Let’s just say I find that no answer at all. Since when do we ostracize tourists?”
“Tourists!” Mayor Hunter’s tone reverberated with derision.
Derek turned to him. “You think Ms. Millman is here for something other than a holiday? What?”
The mayor shrugged. A sly look crossed his face. “Maybe she’s been sent to get some dirt on us so MacroData decides this isn’t a good place to build their new plant.”
Derek frowned. “What kind of dirt?”
The elderly man shrugged again. “Who knows? This is a fair-size county. Any of the other towns could have an administration that’s not quite up to scrutiny. They’d probably love to make us look bad.”
Derek looked at Bob Hunter, the mayor’s brother and publisher of the local newspaper. “This is what’s bothering you, too, Bob?”
But before Bob could answer, his wife, Isabelle, spoke up. “It doesn’t matter what we think, Derek. The point is that we know nothing about this girl and we can’t afford to take any chances at this time. We need that plant badly, as I’m sure you know. We’re already losing too many young people from the area due to the shortage of jobs.”
For some reason, Derek was having trouble believing any of what he was hearing. He knew they were right about the county needing the economic boost of new industry. But these four elderly citizens, the elite of Hunter’s Bay, had not reacted so much upon hearing of the stranger in town as to hearing her name. Derek rubbed his forehead, trying to tie in the name Millman with anyone he knew or had ever heard of. He drew a blank.
“I’m going to warn you all, now. I want you to stay away from Stacy Millman and that includes your little welcoming committee descending upon the hospital. We don’t know if she’s on her way elsewhere or planning to visit but I won’t have you harassing her, whatever her reason for being here.”
The others got to their feet, all four wearing identical expressions of belligerence. They might, or might not, obey his edict but it was clear they didn’t like the fact he’d issued it.
When they’d left the office, he pulled his notebook out of his jacket pocket and reread the words he’d jotted down just after leaving Stacy Millman’s room.
What on earth could she have meant about the sign? “I knew it was going to get knocked down long before I ever got here.”
There was certainly a mystery there. But somehow it didn’t support the fear the Hunters had expressed, that Stacy Millman was some kind of spy. Not that he could entirely exclude that premise. As a lawman he’d learned to play devil’s advocate before taking sides. This looked to be one of those situations.
His mind wandered back to when he’d found her in her car at the side of the road. A strange accident. She was unconscious and her head was bent at an awkward angle. But there were no other cars or signs of traffic, no damage to her vehicle. As he’d told her earlier, his deputy had had no trouble driving it to the hospital, where he’d left it in the parking lot.
Could a deer have crossed her path unexpectedly, causing her to step on the brake so violently as to give her whiplash?
Clearly there were a few more questions she could answer for him. He thought about the way she’d looked, lying in that bed, her hair a fire flash against the