I Shall Not Want
went and it never made no difference in how I felt about you. So don’t start with that now.”
    Janet shook her head.
    “Russell?”
    “Yes, ma’am.”
    She sighed. “I think you better go on home, after all. Give us all a chance to cool off. Mike’ll drive me back after supper.”
    “Yes, ma’am.” Jesus. Fifty years old, and she could still dress him down like he was a kid. He glanced at Mike, who had gotten very interested in one of the heifers during the argument, and then at Janet. She looked at him warily. He knew he ought to apologize, but he couldn’t. It
was
selfish and stupid to drag Mom into such a risky venture. “I guess I’ll see you later,” he said.
    Janet nodded. He beat a retreat, out the byre, through the barn, into the frosty evening. Opened his truck door and stood for a moment, trying to settle. Across the road, a car had pulled into the bungalow’s driveway. A woman got out.
    A woman in black clericals.
    Oh, no. Not this on top of everything else.
    But a second later, he realized the woman was too short and slight to be Clare. She turned, maybe attracted by the light spilling out of his pickup, and he could see she was the new deacon from St. Alban’s. What was her name, Groosvoort?
    “Chief Van Alstyne? Is that you? Is there some trouble?”
    “Uh, hi”—the name came—“Deacon de Groot. What? You mean because I’m here? No. No trouble.” He kept his voice neutral. “My sister and her husband—uh, farm around here.”
    “Well. How nice to see you again.” She pushed at her immaculate mass of ash-blond hair. “Excuse my appearance. I’ve been at the Glens Falls hospital since this afternoon.”
    She didn’t do hospital visits, did she? Wasn’t that Clare’s job? Had something happened to—“I hope everyone’s all right,” he managed to squeeze out.
    “Our sexton, Mr. Hadley, had an acute myocardial infarction.” She said it with the careful pronunciation of someone repeating what she was told. “Poor man had to have a quadruple bypass. I stayed until he was moved to the ICU. No visitors there, so I figured it was time for me to come home.”
    “Home?”
    Even in the half-light, he could see her charmed smile. She pointed to the bungalow with pride. “No more commuting down to Johnstown for me. I’ve just bought the Petersons’ house.”
     
     
     
EASTERTIDE
     
     
April and May
     
     
     
I
     
     
    Kevin Flynn was checking himself out in the mirror. He tried combing his hair down flat, then dragging his fingers through it until it stood up in spiky chunks. Flat? Chunks?
    Behind him, Lyle MacAuley finished his business and zipped up. “For chris-sakes, Kevin, it’s the morning briefing, not a beauty contest.” He went to the sink beside Kevin and turned on the water. “ ‘Sides, either way you wear it, kid, it’s still red.”
    Eric McCrea emerged from one of the stalls, singing, “It’s Howdy Doody time!”
    “Like you ever saw
Howdy Doody
.” MacAuley shook off his hands and yanked a paper towel from the dispenser.
    “Just trying to provide a reference you could get, Dep. If I compared our young officer here to one of the Weasley twins, you wouldn’t know what I was talking about.”
    “I knew a couple strippers called themselves the Beaver twins, but no, I never heard of any Weaselies.”
    “
Harry Potter
?” Kevin said. “Everybody’s heard of that.”
    MacAuley made a face. “Kids’ books.”
    “I like ‘em.” McCrea twisted a faucet on. “Last one came out, I read it before my son did.”
    “Grown-ups reading kids’ books,” MacAuley said with disgust. “It’s no wonder we’re importin‘ men from Mexico to do our work for us. We’re all getting too dumb to know one end of a hammer from the other.” He reached for the men’s room door handle, only to be squashed against the wall when Noble Entwhistle pushed it open. Kevin, doing a last check to make sure none of his breakfast was on his teeth, grinned.
    “Chief says,

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