Adam frowned, thinking back to how he’d watched as she’d disappeared into the darkness, and how, for a few fleeting moments that continued to mystify him, he’d been reluctant to see her go. Logic said that he should have been glad to do without any more of her cheery reminders of the fishing expedition in his immediate future. He should, in fact, have released a grateful breath on her departure. But he hadn’t. Not last night.
His lack of gratitude must be a fluke.
Assuring himself that could only be the case, Adam propped his eyes open and discovered that it was still pitch-black in the bedroom and outside, as well. He stared up at the ceiling, recalling the dream that had captured his mind once sleep had finally claimed him. The same dream he’d had several times in the past, although he hadn’t had it for a while. In it, he strode down a long corridor filled with closed doors on both sides. One by one, he opened them, searching for something—exactly what, he’d never been able to grasp. He only knew that he’d failed to find that elusive something, again and again. The dream always left him with an empty, hollow feeling, and he’d been glad to be free of it.
But now that dream had come back. And he had no idea why.
Resolutely setting thoughts of it aside, he fumbled for the switch on a small bedside lamp and got out of bed.
“To get your day off to a rousing start, here’s an oldie but goodie from the Rolling Stones,” the announcer informed his listeners. The first notes of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” boomed out, then died to silence as Adam shut off the radio. He took off the gray sweats he was using for pajamas, then pulled on clean underwear and fresh socks, plus the same pair of Levi’s and black denim shirt he’d worn the day before. Once he’d shoved his feet into his new boots, his next stop was the bathroom. He washed his face but didn’t bother to shave, then rapped on the door to his son’s room and poked his head inside.
“Time to get up,” he said, not even attempting a hearty tone. He already knew, thanks to a brief and hardly happy conversation the evening before on his return to the cabin, that Sam was no more eager than he was to crawl out of bed far earlier than either of them was used to getting up. But they were doing it anyway. Adam had been firm on that score. Their spending time together without the frenzied activities of prior summers had been his goal, and if joining forces to haul in a fish could accomplish that, then so be it.
“It’s still dark,” Sam mumbled after turning over and blinking at the hall light Adam had switched on.
“It probably won’t be for much longer,” Adam replied, although he had no idea what time the sun actually rose. Still, given that it was summer, the sky was bound to show some light soon. Cripes, he had to hope so.
“I’ll have breakfast on the table by the time you wash up and get dressed,” he went on, and paid no attention to more mumbling that followed as he headed for the kitchen. A glance at his watch told him that by the time he figured out how to make coffee in the old-fashioned percolator sitting on a stove burner he wouldn’t have much chance to drink it if he planned to meet Jane at the office at five. Which he did. He had no intention of allowing her to be smug about his being late.
Not when she’ll probably be early, he told himself. Even on short acquaintance, he imagined that was a pretty sure bet.
It was still dark after he and Sam ate their twin bowls of cold cereal, mainly in a groggy silence, and left the cabin. Adam again used the flashlight to help him find his way, and they arrived at the office a few minutes before five. As he’d expected, Jane Pitt was already there. What he didn’t expect, however, was the smell of freshly brewed coffee that had his mouth watering from the moment his nose caught a whiff.
Jane sat behind the desk with a thick stoneware mug in hand, wearing a blue and white checked shirt and a frayed navy baseball cap that might have been older than she was. “I see you’re right on time.” She was chipper.
Way too chipper, as far as Adam was concerned. “Actually, we’re a little early,” it pleased him to reply, although he couldn’t match her tone. He doubted many people could at a godforsaken hour of the morning when even the birds weren’t up yet. Standing next to him, small hands shoved into the pockets of his new jeans, Sam only yawned a wide yawn that said he for one remained far from awake, never mind alert.
Jane gave the boy a small, knowing smile, then lifted her mug. “Want another dose of caffeine before we get started?” she asked Adam.
“Sure,” he said. He didn’t mention it would be his first of the day—or that a part of him less determined to let pride rule was urging him to get down on his knees in sheer thankfulness. Instead, he wasted no time in heading for the coffeemaker. He picked up another of the heavy mugs stacked beside it and poured himself a hefty helping of dark, fragrant brew. A few sips had his eyes no longer in danger of drooping.
“This is good,” he told Jane.
She met his gaze over the rim of her mug. “I can make coffee.”
“Mmm-hmm.” He had to admit that it tasted like some of the best he’d ever had.
“I pulled out some fishing poles and other equipment for you and Sam,” she added with a nod toward one side of the room.
He looked in the direction she’d indicated and saw two metal poles, one half the size of the other, leaning against the wall. A dented, dull green tackle box and a small white net he assumed was used to scoop up a fish once it was hooked rested on the floor nearby. Memories of the few times he’d headed for the large lagoon at Harmony Park as a young boy with a simple bamboo pole and the hope of catching something came back to him. He’d never had much success and had soon lost interest. If anyone had predicted only weeks earlier that he’d be making another attempt this summer, he’d have questioned their sanity.
He returned his gaze to Jane. “Are you fishing, too?”
She shook her head and rose to her feet. “I’ll be a guide today. We’d better get started. The sun should be on its way up any minute.”
After polishing off his coffee, Adam crossed the room, picked up the poles and handed the shorter one to Sam, who inspected it with clear misgivings.
“What do we put on the hook?” he asked Jane.
“We’ll start out with worms and see how it goes.”
Sam frowned. “Do we hafta dig ’em up?”
“Not today.” Jane shut off the coffeemaker. “I’ve got some in the refrigerator.”
Sam’s eyes flew to meet Adam’s. “Is she kidding?” he asked in a whisper as Jane started for the outer room.
“Trust me, she’s not,” Adam murmured in return. He bent to retrieve the net and passed it to Sam. “You take this. I’ll take the tackle box. And I suppose she’ll take the worms,” he added with a large dose of irony.
A FIRST FEW faint rays of light visible to the east guided their way down the path toward the lake. Jane had put several cans of soda and the coffee can holding the worms into an older, far smaller cooler than the one the Lassiters had brought with them. Swinging it by its short handle, she took the lead and held her head high.
The day was off to as good a start as could be expected, she decided. Nothing in her expression or her voice had betrayed anything of what she’d felt during that handshake the evening before. Thinking back over the past several minutes, she was sure of it. And that was the most important thing. While her consultant might look even more appealing in a dangerously male sort of fashion with a night’s growth of dark beard, he had no idea she thought so—and she planned to keep it that way.
Once they reached Quail Lake, Jane set the cooler down on the grassy shore a few feet from the water. “We need to try some casting before we take out a boat,” she said.
“Casting?” Sam repeated with a puzzled