“The good news is that the top of the run checks out fine,” J.J. continued, ignoring him.
“And the bad news?” Gabe glanced back up. J.J. stood there with his right hand curled around the gooseneck of his mountain bike and his left arm hanging down loose. Weirdly loose. Almost as if—
“The bad news is I’m calling in my marker on all those rides I gave you when we were in high school,” J.J. continued, a little note of strain tightening his voice.
“You need a ride home?”
“I need a ride to the clinic.” He gave Gabe a wry grin. “I think I dislocated my shoulder.”
Chapter One
August, Salem, Massachusetts
“Nice pair a melons you got there, lady.”
Lainie Trask glanced from the cantaloupes she held to the fruit vendor standing behind his table. Her brown eyes glimmered with fun as she hefted them higher. “They are, aren’t they?”
“Buck for the two of ’em. Can’t do any better than that.”
Lainie handed over a dollar and tucked the fruit into her canvas carrier bag. “And here I thought I already had a nice pair of melons,” she said out of the corner of her mouth to her girlfriend Liz.
Liz glanced at her judiciously as they turned away from the fruit stand. “More like guavas, I’d say.”
Lainie laughed and swept her glossy dark hair back from her face as they walked deeper into the confusion of color, noise and scent that was the Salem farmers’ market. Tables and pushcarts groaned under the weight of baskets filled with crimson tomatoes, sunburst-yellow lemons, green zucchini, the strange, otherworldly fuzz of kiwi.
“Get yer bay scallops here. Bay scallops, fresh off the boat. Hiya, Lainie.”
“Hey, Pete.” Lainie stopped at the stall and studied the seafood on ice, then the man who stood behind it. “Fresh, huh?”
The weathered, sixty-something fishmonger gave her a roguish wink. “Any more fresh and it’d be hittin’ on you.”
She grinned and looked at Liz. “Scallops for dinner?” she suggested.
“Nah, I’d rather go out, assuming there’s anyplace around here you want to go to.”
“There’s a McDonald’s on the highway. We could splurge on Chicken McNuggets. Sorry, Pete.” She gave him a quick smile. “Next time around. Come on, Liz, let’s go get coffee.”
The two women began walking again. “Chicken McNuggets,” grumbled Liz. “You know the owner of Tremolo just opened up a new bar and restaurant two blocks away from me? Small plates to die for and a six-page cocktail menu. You should have come down and visited me in Boston for the weekend.”
“It was your turn to drive up here,” Lainie argued. “I’m sick of driving down.”
“Then move down. I mean, why are you still living up here in Siberia, anyway?”
“Salem,” Lainie corrected, leading the way out of the farmers’ market and onto the main drag.
“Salem, Siberia…it’s north and it’s cold. Same difference.”
“It’s not that far north.”
“Far enough. You don’t belong up here. You belong down in the city. I thought that was the plan. I mean, you don’t have a life up here.”
“I have a life,” Lainie objected. She did, and one she increasingly loved.
“Oh, yeah? When’s the last time you had a date?”
She glowered at Liz. “Don’t start sounding like my parents. It’s not my fault. Most of the people I know are married.”
“Of course they’re all married. You’re living in the burbs. You’ve gotten it out of order. You get hooked up first, then you move to Siberia.”
Lainie rolled her eyes. “Sorry, I guess I missed that part in the manual. Anyway, I don’t even know if I want to date,” she said grumpily.
“You don’t want to date?”
“I mean, come on, be honest, it sucks. You sit around, trying to make conversation, trying to figure out what you’ve got in common, trying to remember why you ever even bothered to say yes. I’d rather be at home watching a movie.”
“But it would be better with some guy’s arm around your shoulders.”
“Well, is it my fault they never ask me out?”
“Maybe you intimidate them.”
“Is that because of my six Nobel Prizes or my seven-figure income?” Lainie asked.
“Ha, ha. No, it’s because you’re…you. I mean, you’re never exactly shy of an opinion.”
“You’re shy of an opinion in my family and you’ll never get a word in edgewise. So I say what I think, is that a crime?”
“No, but maybe it’s a little much for the average Joe right off. Maybe you could tone it down a little.”
Lainie stared at her. “Whatever happened to the ‘be yourself’ advice? Isn’t a guy supposed to love me for who I am?”
“He can’t if you chase him away before he figures you out.”
“Forget it. I’ll stick with my idea about taking time off.” If it took pretending to be a fragile flower for her to lure a guy, she wasn’t interested. It was too much work, anyway. She was happy to give the opposite sex a rest for a while.
Liz wasn’t, though. “I know a couple of nice guys I could introduce you to but you’re G.U.”
“G.U.”
“Geographically undesirable.”
“For God’s sakes,” Lainie grumbled. “It’s only forty-five minutes to your house.”
“The way you drive, maybe. It takes me an hour. Guys don’t want that. They want someone who’s right there. When are you moving?”
Lainie shrugged a shoulder. “When the time’s right.”
“When the time’s right? That’s what you’ve been saying for almost four years.”
“When I find a job down there.”
“Have you been looking?”
“Museum jobs don’t exactly fall off trees. I’ve been keeping my eyes open.” Lainie stopped in front of a storefront with the legend Cool Beans painted above a rendering of a steaming cup of coffee.
“There she is.”
Lainie turned to give a brilliant smile to the grinning, grizzle-haired man behind the counter. “Hey, George.”
“You’ve got some kind of sixth sense, don’t you? I just pulled a pan of blueberry coffee cake out of the oven. I shoulda known you’d be here. What is it, some witch thing?”
“That’s me, using my powers for baked goods.”
“Hey, if you’ve got powers for baked goods, come over and do something about my oven,” he invited. “It’s been running hot for the last two months. I’ll pay you in coffee cake.” He waved the pan before her.
Lainie sniffed blissfully. “My powers work best in the presence of an appliance repairman. Get one over here and I’ll come chant a success spell. For advance payment.” She reached for the pan but George pulled it back.
“Nope, I’m not buying it. Maybe I’ll just stick with the repair guy.”
“Probably