Authors: Amanda Carpenter
the crumbling sand into place.
A low, pleasantly smooth voice with a curiously hard undertone
reached her ears. 'I suppose you've decided to be hanged as much for
a sheep as for a lamb?'
She relaxed slightly, hands hovering overhead as she backed up from
the defective wall a little, refraining from looking at the man by her
side. What kind of face would go with a voice like that? she
wondered in a pleasantly idle speculation. 'Something like that,' she
laughed softly, the sound of it coming from her throat like a rich purr.
She picked up her stick and started again on the uniform blocks on
the top of the wall with a great deal of care and precision. 'My mother
always told me I should have been an engineer. I was forever
building things with my blocks and playing with the neighbour boy's
construction set instead of with my dolls.' When she had things to her
satisfaction, she slid back in the sand to look at it thoughtfully. Then
she turned with a smile to face the stranger. 'But I'm sure you don't
want to hear about me.'
His gaze was not directed towards the sand castle but was shot
piercingly at her. She let her own mild gaze roam over hard, irregular
features set in what she took to be a very bitter expression. Sitting
back on her heels, she took more time to assess this unknown person.
Her first impression held; lines running down the sides of the man's
mouth were scored deeply, and the firm mouth was held in a way that
seemed to be at once stern and unhappy. The eyes that were watching
her so speculatively were a dark brown, and they were the hardest
eyes that she had ever seen. They hid something inside, repelling her
scrutiny like a brick wall. The man appeared to be bulky, but his
heavy sweater and jeans as he squatted on his heels might account for
that. As she watched him, a light breeze stirred his dark hair into his
eyes and a shapely, strong-looking hand swept it back impatiently.
The mutual perusal took a few moments for each of them. Neither
had spoken since she had. The strange man was still watching her,
and she smiled again at him suddenly, the white flash of her teeth
brilliant and surprising. 'Do you have a Kleenex, or a handkerchief,
or something like that?' she asked him conversationally, digging into
her own jeans pocket as she talked. 'No, forget it, thanks. I've got a
folded Kleenex.' She shook it out carefully, took the slender stick that
had once served as her digging tool and gently poked the stick
through several times, back and forth, through the end of the tissue.
Then she stuck it gingerly at the top of the wall. The wall deigned to
hold up. 'What's the forfeit for a picture?'
A glance at him found the man strangely tense, watching her with a
harsh, mocking light in his eyes that uncomfortably reminded her of a
bird of prey watching its victim. 'It depends on what you plan on
taking a picture of,' was his silky reply, and she stared at him in
confoundment.
Her reply was snappy, since she hadn't liked the tone of his voice.
'You couldn't suppose me to want a picture of you, could you?
Heavens, you don't look a bit photogenic—would you mind stepping
back so I can get a clear shot of my castle?' She reached for her
camera bag and dug out her Minolta, looking at his still outline as he
stood in the sun. 'Look, you have every earthly right to throw me off
your land, but I want a picture of this castle. It took me ages to finish,
and I'm going to get a picture of it whether you move or not.' She
added with a touch of childish petulance that was not wholly put on,
as she took off the camera lens cover, 'You'll very likely ruin the
shot, too, glowering at me like that!'
At this muttered remark, surprisingly, the man threw back his head
and laughed. He stepped back a few paces to stand with hands resting
lightly on hips, and she eyed him with approval. 'You aren't half bad
when you aren't glowering,' she told him mildly, and turned to focus
experimentally on the sand castle. After a second, she clicked the
shutter with satisfaction. Then she sat back on her heels to survey the
stranger's tense stance. She reached into her knapsack, still watching
the man, and was rewarded with a close, wary scrutiny. What in the
world, she wondered curiously, is that man so jumpy about? She held
out her pack of cigarettes to him invitingly, but he shook his head in
silent refusal. She shrugged, took one herself, and lit up expertly.
'How did you get to this beach?' the man asked her, dropping down
on the sand nearby and still favouring her with his unsettling gaze. It
was the look of an opponent sizing up the enemy, she thought, but
shrugged away the thought with an involuntary grimace. The man sat
easily, knees drawn up and arms draped casually on top, with hands
loosely laced. His harsh face was expressionless, and again Sara got
the strange impression that he was erecting a wall between himself
and her. It was not as if she were anyone especially threatening to
him, she realised, and she surmised that it must be a characteristic
that he exhibited to all strangers. That was perfectly understandable
to her. She had learned to be wary of strangers herself. She drew hard
on her cigarette, and expelled the smoke appreciatively, and then
pointed to the southern shoreline. He spared a brief glance for the
direction of her gesture and then returned his keen gaze to her face.
'That's private property too.'
She nodded, regarding him with a faint smile. 'I'm one of your
neighbours, temporarily at least. I've a six- month lease on the cabin
that probably sits adjacent to your south border. It's a small place,
one car garage, archaic plumbing and two fireplaces with no
firewood! Know of it?'
He nodded in reply, the action making his hair tousle in the breeze.
She spared some time appreciating the red glints in the brown hair—
hers was so dark there was no doubt that it was one shade only,
namely, black as midnight—and then noticed just how closely he was
watching her. It was getting on her nerves. 'I wasn't aware that
anyone was living there,' was his only response, though.
'I've been there only about a week,' she told him, 'so I'm fairly new
around here.' She put out her cigarette by burying the glowing tip in
the sand. Aware of the dark gaze on her actions, she took the dead
butt and carefully wrapped it in the castle's banner before stuffing it
into the knapsack. Then, nervous for some reason, she took another
and lit up to inhale it in deeply.
After a moment, he asked almost idly, 'Are you in the habit of
trespassing on private property?'
'Wince!' she said, and laughed at his expression. She leaned back
casually in the soft, inviting sand. 'Now the retribution, please show
mercy on my poor soul. If I'm missing for more than three years or
so, or get behind in my rent, someone may just miss me and become
suspicious, so don't do anything rash, will you? .. . Actually, a 'No
Trespassing' sign is so inviting, don't you think? I came, entertaining
half acknowledged hopes of stumbling on to a dead body and a
delightfully chilling mystery, or perhaps to meet up with a terrible
ogre—are you an ogre?' This last was said with a hopeful glance
towards the man's uncompromising face.
No sign of amusement there, the face was settled into lines of
implacable hardness, the eyes like stones. The one sign that perhaps
redeemed his face, she thought musingly, was the unhappy curve to
that well formed mouth. She watched him with a great deal of
interest. His reply was brief, almost a snap. 'Some seem to think so.'
A chuckle bubbled forth. 'Well, are they right or are they wrong?' He
only looked at her with dark, expressionless eyes, and it seemed so
terrible to her that she, on impulse, had made an uncharacteristic
gesture of friendliness to the man. She finished her cigarette,
condemned the butt to a similar fate as the first and asked him,
'Would I get perhaps fewer lashes of the whip if I were to bribe my
punisher with a cup of coffee?' 1
He hesitated, obviously, and she thought he was about to refuse when
he said carefully, 'It depends on what terrible things you've doctored
your thermos of coffee with.'
Sara smiled involuntarily, tossing her dark hair off from her face, and
it settled around her shoulders like a smoky cloud. 'Not me, mister. I
like my mud straight.' She poured him a cup of the warm liquid into a
plastic cup that she had packed and handed it to him cordially, taking
her own in the lid of the thermos. He took it after eyeing her with
those curiously hard brown eyes.
She stared off into the distance, appreciating the smoky blue horizon
and sipping her coffee reflectively. She was a bit puzzled as to why
she should make such uncharacteristic overtures to a total stranger.
She wasn't sure why. It could be reaction, she surmised, a touch of
cabin fever, having been off on her own for a week. It could be an
attempt to break the mould she had become frozen into after so many
years. She had always surrounded herself in a shell of aloofness when
greeting strangers, for she had learned to be wary of reporters and
curiosity seekers, it was a wall not unlike the almost visible one
surrounding the stranger sitting close to her. In a way, she mused, we
all build walls around ourselves for one reason or another. Fear of
failure, rejection, hurt, all these were reasons why one would close
oneself off from other people. Everyone, to some extent, hid behind a
wall. It was just a matter of how high and how strong one built it.
She rather thought that the look of bitterness and unhappiness that
was betrayed in the way the man held his firm mouth was the reason
she impulsively reached out to him, in spite of the hard and repelling
quality to his eyes. She inspected his face. He was sipping at the hot
.liquid and staring into the water.
They sat thus in a strangely companionable silence for several
minutes, Sara filling up the cups with more coffee when they both
had finished the first. Then she dug into her knapsack and presented
the man with an apple, which he took gravely. She took one herself
and chomped reflectively.
'You know,' she said around a bite, 'you aren't as bad as you first
seemed. I was sure you were going to have me arrested. You aren't
even bad-looking and would probably photograph all right, so I'm
sorry for what I said earlier.' Her hazel eyes danced. 'I don't go in for
photographing people, that's all.'
He told her implacably, 'I don't go in for being photographed, so
you're safe from insulting me. And I'm not exactly pretty material.'
'No,' she said, studying his features, 'pretty is not how I would
describe you. You've more of a presence than a profile. Want a
sandwich?'
'Won't I be taking your meal?'
'Lord, no—I've got two.' A sandwich passed hands as gravely as the
apple had. This time he murmured a thanks, and the two sandwiches
quickly went the way of the apples, disappearing fast, and in the
same companionable silence. Sara took a long look at the man beside
her. 'I can't figure out why you haven't kicked me off of the property
yet,' she told him matter-of-factly.
A swift turn of the head, and she saw again those hard, watching
eyes. She must have been mistaken about that silence being
companionable. 'I've been thinking about just who you could be and
why you're here. I haven't come to any conclusions, so why don't you
tell me who you are?'
Nice, tactful question, that, she thought. 'Who I am doesn't really
matter,' was her calm reply, though she was hiding an underlying
uneasiness. He couldn't have recognised her, could he? The beach
was very, very empty, and she noticed it suddenly. 'But, if you would
like to have a name to attach to a face, my name is Sara Carmichael.
I've been ill and this is my recuperation,' and she swung out a
flamboyant hand that encompassed the entire scene. 'My parents are
dead, I'm unmarried, no close relatives. Life is rather dull at the
moment, but I'm liking it that way for a change. I'm twenty-eight
years old, and have suddenly realised that my thirty- year milestone
mark is breathing down my neck, and it has me slightly panicked at