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Briefly the clouds released the moon. In its white glare she saw him plodding closer, limping, almost dragging his left leg. A man, of course — just a man. And not deformed: what had made him seem that way was the life jacket fastened around his upper body. She remembered the lights of a freighter or tanker she had seen passing on the horizon just after nightfall, ahead of the squall. Had he gone overboard from that somehow?

He had reached the garden, was making his way past the flamboyant trees and the thick clusters of frangipani. Heading toward the garden door and the kitchen: she’d left the lights on in there and the jalousies open. It was the lights that had drawn him here, like a beacon that could be seen a long distance out to sea.

A good thing she’d left them on or not? She didn’t want him here, a cast-up stranger, hurt and needing attention — not on this night, not when she’d been so close to making the walk to Windflaw Point. But neither could she refuse him access or help. John would have, if he’d been drunk and in the wrong mood. Not her. It was not in her nature to be cruel to anyone, except perhaps herself.

Abruptly Shea pushed herself out of the chair. He hadn’t seen her sitting in the restless shadows, and he didn’t see her now as she moved back across the terrace to the sliding glass doors to her bedroom. Or at least if he did see her, he didn’t stop or call out to her. She hurried through the darkened bedroom, down the hall, and into the kitchen. She was halfway to the garden door when he began pounding on it.

She unlocked and opened the door without hesitation. He was propped against the stucco wall, arms hanging and body slumped with exhaustion. Big and youngish, that was her first impression. She couldn’t see his face clearly.

“Need some help,” he said in a thick, strained voice. “Been in the water... washed up on your beach...”

“I know, I saw you from the terrace. Come inside.”

“Better get a towel first. Coral ripped a gash in my foot... blood all over your floor.”

“All right. I’ll have to close the door. The wind...”

“Go ahead.”

She shut the door and went to fetch a towel, a blanket, and the first-aid kit. On the way back to the kitchen she turned the heat up several degrees. When she opened up to him again she saw that he’d shed the life jacket. His clothing was minimaclass="underline" plaid wool shirt, denim trousers, canvas shoes, all nicked and torn by coral. Around his waist was a pouch-type waterproof belt, like a workman’s utility belt. One of the pouches bulged slightly.

She gave him the towel, and when he had it wrapped around his left foot he hobbled inside. She took his arm, let him lean on her as she guided him to the kitchen table. His flesh was cold, sea-puckered; the touch of it made her feel a tremor of revulsion. It was like touching the skin of a dead man.

When he sank heavily onto one of the chairs, she dragged another chair over and lifted his injured leg onto it. He stripped off what was left of his shirt, swaddled himself in the blanket. His teeth were chattering.

The coffeemaker drew her; she poured two of the big mugs full. There was always hot coffee ready and waiting, no matter what the hour — she made sure of that. She drank too much coffee, much too much, but it was better than drinking what John usually drank. If she—

“You mind sweetening that?”

She half-turned. “Sugar?”

“Liquor. Rum, if you have it.”

“Jamaican rum.” That was what John drank.

“Best there is. Fine.”

She took down an open bottle, carried it and the mugs to the table, and watched while he spiked the coffee, drank, then poured more rum and drank again. Color came back into his stubbled cheeks. He used part of the blanket to rough-dry his hair.

He was a little older than she, early thirties, and in good physical condition: broad chest and shoulders, muscle-knotted arms. Sandy hair cropped short, thick sandy brows, a long-chinned face burned dark from exposure to the sun. The face was all right, might have been attractive except for the eyes. They were a bright off-blue color, shielded by lids that seemed perpetually lowered like flags at halfmast, and they didn’t blink much. When the eyes lifted to meet and hold hers something in them made her look away.

“I’ll see what I can do for your foot.”

“Thanks. Hurts like hell.”

The towel was already soaking through. Shea unwrapped it carefully, revealing a deep gash across the instep just above the tongue of his shoe. She got the shoe and sock off. More blood welled out of the cut.

“It doesn’t look good. You may need a doctor—”

“No,” he said, “no doctor.”

“It’ll take stitches to close properly.”

“Just clean and bandage it, okay?”

She spilled iodine onto a gauze pad, swabbed at the gash as gently as she could. The sharp sting made him suck in his breath, but he didn’t flinch or utter another sound. She laid a second piece of iodined gauze over the wound and began to wind tape tightly around his foot to hold the skin flaps together.

He said, “My name’s Tanner. Harry Tanner.”

“Shea Clifford.”

“Shea. That short for something?”

“It’s a family name.”

“Pretty.”

“Thank you.”

“So are you,” he said. “Real pretty with your hair all windblown like that.”

She glanced up at him. He was smiling at her. Not a leer, just a weary smile, but it wasn’t a good kind of smile. It had a predatory look, like the teeth-baring stretch of a wolf’s jowls.

“No offense,” he said.

“None taken.” She lowered her gaze, watched her hands wind and tear tape. Her mind still felt numb. “What happened to you? Why were you in the water?”

“That damn squall a few hours ago. Came up so fast I didn’t have time to get my genoa down. Wave as big as a house knocked poor little Wanderer into a full broach. I got thrown clear when she went over or I’d have sunk with her.”

“Were you sailing alone?”

“All alone.”

“Single-hander? Or just on a weekend lark?”

“Single-hander. You know boats, I see.”

“Yes. Fairly well.”

“Well, I’m a sea tramp,” Tanner said. “Ten years of island-hopping and this is the first time I ever got caught unprepared.”

“It happens. What kind of craft was Wanderer?”

“Bugeye ketch. Thirty-nine feet.”

“Shame to lose a boat like that.”

He shrugged. “She was insured.”

“How far out were you?”

“Five or six miles. Hell of a long swim in a choppy sea.”

“You’re lucky the squall passed as quickly as it did.”

“Lucky I was wearing my life jacket, too,” Tanner said. “And lucky you stay up late with your lights on. If it weren’t for the lights I probably wouldn’t have made shore at all.”

Shea nodded. She tore off the last piece of tape and then began putting the first-aid supplies away in the kit.

Tanner said, “I didn’t see any other lights. This house the only one out here?”

“The only one on this side of the bay, yes.”

“No close neighbors?”

“Three houses on the east shore, not far away.”

“You live here alone?”

“With my husband.”

“But he’s not here now.”

“Not now. He’ll be home soon.”

“That so? Where is he?”

“In Merrywing, the town on the far side of the island. He went out to dinner with friends.”

“While you stayed home.”

“I wasn’t feeling well earlier.”