Kara Swenson
Peace and quiet. I’d almost forgotten what that was like. June had come and gone, and July was almost over — always a busy season here in Sedona, despite the scorching desert heat. The crowds had thinned out a little now that the monsoon storms had arrived in earnest, but the shop was still crazy-busy. I knew I should be glad, times being what they were, but every once in a while, I began to wonder just how many people out there could really be that interested in aliens and UFOs. Maybe one day I’d figure out why those people found themselves compelled to buy an alien plushie or a paperback copy of Flying Saucers and Science before leaving Sedona and heading home to Chicago or Omaha or Portland or wherever else they came from.
Even now, I felt as if I should be back at the shop, since Wednesday nights were usually reserved for conducting inventory or general tidying up. But Kiki had shooed me away, saying, “Even big sisters need a night off every once in a while.” True, it had felt good to come home, kick off my shoes, pour myself a glass of chilled pinot grigio — already it was too hot for anything heavier — and turn on the television, but after an hour or so of that, the pleasures of a solitary evening had begun to pall.
I turned off the TV, and Gort, my wolfish German shepherd/Keeshond mix, turned an inquiring eye toward me and wagged his tail a few times. He’d already had two walks that day, but maybe what I needed right then was some fresh air, especially now that the sun had been down for a while and the air had cooled somewhat.
Only a sip or two remained of the pinot grigio, so I finished it off and set the glass down on the coffee table. “Guess what, Gort? It’s your lucky day.”
Gort’s tail thumped against the floor again, and he scrambled to his feet and let out a low whine, dark eyes fixed on the side table where I kept his leash.
“I know, I know.” I stood and retrieved the leash, then clipped it onto his collar. The drawer was also a repository for the used grocery bags Kiki and I affectionately referred to as “poopie bags,” and I grabbed one of those as well and stuffed it into the pocket of my jeans. My house keys with the attached mini flashlight went into my other pocket; there weren’t many streetlights out here on the edge of town.
Not that I ever worried about walking alone after dark. I’d lived here in Sedona for almost twenty years, in the house that had been my grandparents’ and had come to me after my grandfather died some six years earlier. The store had been his, too. I’d gotten the whole kit and caboodle, as Kiki liked to say without a trace of resentment. True, she hadn’t inherited the house or the store, but that didn’t mean our grandfather hadn’t taken care of her. On Kiki’s twenty-first birthday, she’d gotten her share of the inheritance: a hundred thousand dollars. And, despite gloomy prognostications to the contrary from some of our circle of friends, she hadn’t spent much of it yet.
Gort pulled me out the front door, tail wagging. I didn’t bother to lock up — I’d only brought the keys because of the flashlight attached to the chain. Even though the sun had been down for more than an hour, the temperature hovered in the mid-eighties. I’d had always loved the way the warm nighttime breezes played with my hair and flowed gently over the bare skin of my arms.
The stars burned overhead so brightly, it seemed as if I could almost reach out and touch them. No moon yet tonight, though, and I flicked on the little flashlight and let it guide me past the end of the cul-de-sac and out onto the trail that wound around the edge of my subdivision. Snakes and scorpions didn’t worry me too much, since I tended to wear jeans and hiking boots even on days like today when temperatures hit the upper nineties, but I still conscientiously ran the flashlight’s beam over the path ahead of me, just in case.
Gort lifted his leg against a manzanita bush, then tugged me forward. This being Sedona, I knew all too well that there were other things — things not of this world — hiding in the darkness of the desert, but sightings were rare in this part of town. No, you had to head out toward Boynton or up Schnebly Road to see the stuff that would really make your hair curl.
Or sometimes you just had it dropped right in your store. That had happened when Persephone O’Brien showed up four months ago, asking for help. Of course, it was Kiki and the rest of the gang who got to be out in the field while I held down the fort at the store, but still, the crazy goings-on in Secret Canyon and the rescue of Paul Oliver, the famous ufologist, had proved that all the years of tracking reports of alien movements and UFO activity in the canyons surrounding Sedona weren’t exactly pie in the sky. So to speak.
And now Persephone and Paul were here permanently, having decided to relocate from Los Angeles to Sedona. It was a good place for a psychic and a UFO researcher to end up, and the two were so blatantly happy that I couldn’t really begrudge them their good fortune, but….
But nothing, I told myself, and tugged on Gort’s leash when he seemed a little too interested in a spiky yucca plant. Being the well-behaved dog that he was, he trotted back to the center of the path without arguing.
“Good dog,” I said, and he panted, the white teeth of his doggy smile flashing at me in the darkness.
Well, Gort loved me anyway. I told myself not to be silly, that self-pity didn’t do anyone any good. So I was going through the mother of all dry spells in my personal life. That had happened to better women than me, and brooding over it sure wasn’t going to do me any good. Besides, everything else was going great — I owned my house and the store free and clear, had a great set of friends — Michael and Persephone and Paul and Lance —
At the thought of Lance, though, my mind skidded to a stop. Yes, he was a good friend. Too bad friendship wasn’t really what I wanted from him.
Gort whined then, and began to tug the leash back toward the house. I stared down at him, a little surprised. Normally, he’d try every trick in the book to extend our walks, and we’d barely been out of the house for ten minutes.
“Okay, you crazy mutt,” I said, and allowed him to pull me homeward.
After all, I’d come out here for the dog. Otherwise, I would have just poured myself another glass of wine and luxuriated in the central air conditioning I’d installed a few years earlier. My grandparents had always made do with a whole-house swamp cooler, but the A/C made the place feel so much better.
As I approached the front walk to the house, a rectangle of yellow light shone down the path, illuminating the stone pavers.
What the hell?
The front door stood open, allowing anyone standing on the walkway to see straight down the hall and into my living room. No, I hadn’t locked the door, but I had most definitely made sure it was firmly shut.
Just the wind, I told myself, or maybe you thought the lock had caught, but it really didn’t.
Gort let out a warning bark, followed by a low growl deep in his throat. When I looked down, I saw the fur along the back of his neck was bristling, and his luxuriant tail — definitely inherited from his Keeshond parent — had curled itself tightly against his back.
The hair on my own neck prickled a little, but I forced myself to move forward. This was my house, dammit, and although I’d been stupid enough to go out without taking my cell phone with me, I wasn’t about to stand there and shiver and shake on my own front stoop. The houses on this street had fairly big lots, but they weren’t so far apart that my neighbors wouldn’t hear me if I screamed.
Besides, a seventy-five-pound dog was pretty good protection.
Wrapping the fingers of my left hand around Gort’s collar, I moved forward and into the entryway. Almost at once, I saw a set of dusty footprints on the gleaming Saltillo tile, and I swallowed.
It wasn’t too late to turn around. I could stop, inch my way back outside, and run like hell to the Martinez’s place next door.
Then I saw him. At least, I thought it was a him. From this angle, it was difficult to tell, because he lay prostrate in the middle of the living room, half of him on the Navajo rug and the other half sprawled across the tile floor.
Gort growled again, but there was the faintest hint of a whine in the sound, as if he didn’t know how he was supposed to react.
Well, that makes two of us.
I moved slowly toward the stranger, barely daring to breathe. As I drew closer to him, I saw he wore some sort of tattered jumpsuit that might once have been black but was now a dingy, rusty shade of dark gray. It was torn in a dozen places and spattered with dirt and dark stains that might be dried blood. And, to put it mildly, he reeked of stale sweat.
He must have been unconscious. Otherwise, he would have been able to hear the hammering of my heart.
Perfect. Just a few steps more to the dining room, where I’d left my cell phone lying on the table. All I’d have to do was call 911, and somebody from Sedona P.D. would come over to take the intruder away. That was the most reasonable course of action.
But something prevented me from taking those last steps. I stood there, staring down at him, and then he rolled over, gazing up at me with wide, pale eyes from within a sun-ravaged face so smudged with grime, I couldn’t get a clear idea of what he actually looked like. One hand reached out feebly toward my shoe and fell short.
“Please,” he whispered. “Please help me.”
Lance Rinehart
He didn’t know why he’d agreed to meet Michael Lightfoot and Paul Oliver so they could go out to Boynton Canyon and observe the orbs. True, Paul hadn’t seen them yet — he’d been too busy giving lectures and writing his next book — but that didn’t mean the scientist really needed someone to hold his hand while he went out to the canyon. Kara could have given him a map. Hell, he could’ve looked it up on the internet.
Besides, coming out here after everything that had gone on at Secret Canyon made no sense. Persephone had said on more than one occasion that she hadn’t sensed the presence of any more of the human/alien hybrids, but that didn’t mean much. She’d pulled off a pretty good trick at the underground base, destroying the hybrids with one fell swoop, but when it came to hints and hunches, she was still just as fallible as any other psychic.
At least she hadn’t come along on this excursion. Lance wondered sourly how Paul was willing to give up even a few minutes of bliss with his new bride, but apparently she was accompanying Linda Santos, a member of the local Mutual UFO Network group — MUFON for short — to a seminar on UFO field data collecting. Persephone had been making noises about wanting to assist Paul with his investigations, so going to the seminar was a logical start.
Anyway, it was just the three of them out here in Boynton, sitting in the warm darkness and looking for orbs. Lance had seen them plenty of times, but even he wasn’t quite able to brush them off as a commonplace.
Paul had brought along a fancy SLR. Whether or not he’d be able to capture anything with the thing was a crap shoot, given the uncertain nature of the orbs, but you never knew.
“Set off the flash,” Lance told him as they settled themselves on a large, flat rock.
The other man raised an eyebrow, but he lifted the camera as instructed and pushed the button.
A bright strobe illuminated the little dell where they had paused to take their observations. Tiny points of golden light glittered in the air all around them. It looked as if someone had shaken a child’s snow globe and then shone a flashlight on it. A skeptic would have remarked that the dust could have simply been suspended bits of particulate matter…except that all those gleaming specks hung still in the air, not moving, even though a warm breeze rustled through the branches of the manzanita bushes around them.
“It’s beautiful,” Paul said.
“You must have read about it.”
“Yes…but reading’s not quite the same as seeing it with your own eyes.”
“True.”
Michael had been watching silently, his face tilted upward to watch the sparkles until the last of them died away. “There’s one,” he said quietly.
It drifted in out of the darkness, a sphere a little larger than a baseball, glowing in shades of pale gold. If you looked closely, you could see variations in the colors, shadings that some people claimed looked like faces. Lance had never noticed anything like that, but then again, he’d never been one to anthropomorphize. Wasn’t the presence of the orbs enough without having to give them human features?
Paul raised his camera. Lance heard a click, but there was no flash. He guessed that was on purpose; the ufologist knew his way around a camera pretty well. Must have adjusted the shutter speed for the darkness, knowing that the glare of the flash would fade the glow of the orb to almost nothing.
“It knows we’re here,” Michael said quietly.
Lance could sense it, too, a feeling of being watched. Nothing inimical, not like the cold malice that had radiated from the base in Secret Canyon, but even after all these years, he found the sensation a little unnerving.
Whether or not Paul felt the same way, Lance couldn’t say. The man was a scientist, someone more centered on the left side of his brain. And although he had to be experiencing some level of awe, that didn’t stop him from snapping away methodically with the camera, or pausing to pull a small notepad out of his shirt pocket so he could scribble down some notes.
The orb drifted to the top of an especially tall juniper and seemed to linger there for a moment, as if surveying them one last time. Then it blinked out of existence — no gentle fading away, no flash. It was just there one second and gone the next.
“Amazing,” Paul said.
Lance shrugged. “Just wait until you see the Day of the Dead festival at Tlaquepaque.”
“Orbs are old hat to you, huh?”
“Maybe.” He turned away and gazed out through the darkness, but the only light in evidence was the glow from the town itself, a few miles away from where they stood. “It’s exciting the first couple of times, maybe, but they don’t actually do anything. No one’s really made any contact with them. We’re not even sure if they’re intelligences or not, or maybe some sort of advanced observation device. But at least they give Kara and Kiki something to show off to people besides UFOs.”
Paul nodded. “Reminds me of the dolphins.”
Lance raised an eyebrow, and even Michael’s normally placid features took on a confused cast.
“When I was a kid, my parents took me to Southern California one summer.” Paul set the SLR inside its camera bag but didn’t zip it closed — in case any more orbs showed up, Lance decided. “We went on a whale-watching trip, but we didn’t see any whales. The tour operators made a big deal of pointing out the dolphins, though…sort of a consolation prize, I suppose. I was just saying the orbs are Kara’s backup in case the UFOs are a no-show.”
“Which means she’s been doing a lot of orb tours lately, I guess.” Lance knew there was nothing to see, but somehow he couldn’t prevent himself from glancing up into the black sky, instinctively checking to see if any of those pinpoints of light had decided to move in a way contrary to the laws of physics.
A low chuckle. “It hasn’t been a good summer for UFO tours, that’s for sure. Persephone’s gotten an earful.”
“Kara wants to blame the whole thing on Persephone,” Michael added.
A little unfair, maybe, but not exactly untrue, either. After all, if it weren’t for Persephone O’Brien…sorry, Persephone Oliver, the base up at Secret Canyon would still be humming along just fine. But with its corps of hybrid soldiers decimated and the alien-possessed humans who had been running the show deader than high-country grass, the base had gone completely quiet. None of the UFO hunters had dared to go back into Secret Canyon to see what, if anything, was happening there, but the conspicuous lack of UFO activity over the past few months seemed to indicate the aliens had taken a powder for the time being.
But because the topic of Kara Swenson was a sketchy one, for a variety of reasons, Lance settled for making a noncommittal noise. It certainly didn’t help having the Olivers around as the perfect portrait of newly married bliss. Sure, give them a few more months, and they’d most likely degenerate into the petty sniping and bickering most couples of his acquaintance indulged in. In the meantime, though, the situation had only heightened the tension between him and Kara.
Most of the time, he did a pretty good job of not thinking about Kara’s expectations. Over the past few years, they’d settled into a more or less friendly détente. He would allow himself to admit that he liked her and enjoyed her company, and no more. Of course, he knew he was fooling himself, and lately he’d been having traitorous thoughts about saying the hell with it and confessing that his indifference had only been an act…but he wasn’t quite there.
Yet.
His tone was a little harsher than he’d intended as he said, “Kara needs to understand that there are greater things at stake here than her bank account.”
Michael raised an eyebrow, and Paul suddenly found something fascinating in the sky to the northeast. At first, Lance thought he was just intentionally avoiding having to make a comment, but as Paul continued to stare upward, Lance tilted his head as well to see what had drawn his attention.
It hovered in the night sky, a flat-black triangle that blotted out the stars. Lights shimmered along one edge, then the other. With a rumble Lance felt in his bones rather than heard, it moved slowly on its axis so it faced due north, then shot upward at an angle that should have been impossible.
For a long moment, none of them said anything. Finally, Paul remarked, “Looks like they’re back.”
Kara
One agonizing sip at a time. That was all the water I could manage to get into the stranger. Each time he swallowed, he coughed, and I had to wait for the spasm to pass before I could tip the paper cup — I’d decided not to risk one of my glasses for this procedure — against his cracked lips and dribble a little more of the precious fluid into his mouth.
Somehow, I’d managed to push him up against the couch so he was basically upright. Although I knew that logically I should have picked up the phone and called 911 so an ambulance could take him to the hospital, something seemed to prevent me from doing so, had made me walk right past the cell phone on the dining room table and instead go to the kitchen to pour some bottled water into a Dixie cup.
Now I knelt next to the stranger and continued to coax the water down his throat, knowing he needed it more than anything, but also knowing that too much would only make him sick.
He shut his eyes, lashes incongruously dark and thick against the sunburned, flaking skin on his cheeks. I’d need to hit him with about a gallon of moisturizer after I was done hydrating him.
This was crazy. I’d never had any fantasies of playing Florence Nightingale or Clara Barton, so why the hell was I sitting here, patiently giving him water in dribs and drabs, when he’d broken into my home?
All right, so maybe he hadn’t done much actual “breaking,” since I’d left the front door unlocked, but he’d definitely entered my home without my permission. In a way, it made sense — mine was the house at the end of the cul-de-sac, and if he’d wandered in off the desert, naturally he would have gone to the building closest to open land. Still….
“What’s your name?” I asked softly.
He shook his head. Whether that meant he still couldn’t speak or simply didn’t want to tell me, I couldn’t say for sure. Resigned, I tipped a bit more water down his throat. At least this time he didn’t cough. That was a good sign. I lifted the cup to his lips again and let him drink the last of the water in the cup.
“How’s your stomach?” I asked, hoping maybe he’d speak if I wasn’t asking anything about his name or where he’d come from. “Do you feel nauseated?”
Another shake of the head.
The man was obviously tougher than he looked. I wondered just how long he’d been wandering around out there in the heat and the sun. Temperatures had been hovering just below the century mark for the past few days.
“Let’s try some Gatorade,” I said then, holding back a sigh. “Gotta replace those electrolytes.”
I pushed myself up to a standing position and went to the kitchen. Although generally I thought it was pretty nasty, the sports drink did come in handy for the times I overdid it in the heat, and so I always kept some around.
After pulling another paper cup out of the dispenser and filling it halfway with Gatorade, I returned to the living room. The stranger didn’t seem to have moved, although I noticed Gort had lain down next to him, as if to keep watch while I was in the kitchen. The dog whined a little as I approached, then cocked his head.
“Your guess is as good as mine, Gort,” I said, and knelt down next to the man and directed my next words at him. “I hope you like raspberry.”
He didn’t move, so I decided to take that as a “yes.” Once again, I lifted the cup to his mouth, but he surprised me by reaching up with one hand and wrapping his fingers around the fragile little Dixie cup.
“Got it,” he told me. His voice was barely more than a raspy whisper, but at least he’d said something. That was a start.
“No problem,” I replied, watching as he greedily drank down the Gatorade. “More?”
He nodded. “Please.”
I gave him what I hoped was an encouraging smile and went back to the kitchen once again. This time, I got out a plastic cup left over from one of the MUFON meetings I’d held at the house, and filled it with the Gatorade. After that, he’d probably want something more substantial. Maybe some soup? I had a few cartons of some interesting organic stuff from my last pilgrimage to the Trader Joe’s in Prescott. Sedona was wonderful, but it could be somewhat lacking in the shopping department, and I made a habit of going over to Prescott at least once a month to stock up on the things I couldn’t get in town.
When I returned to the living room, I noticed at once that the stranger had pulled himself more upright so he wasn’t quite as slumped against the front of the couch. Luckily, it was leather; if he left any grime on it, I should be able to wipe it off more or less easily…I hoped.
“Here you go.”
He took the cup from me and drank down the Gatorade — not greedily, but in even, measured swallows, as if gauging exactly how much he needed to take in at a time for the greatest benefit. Once he was done, he handed the cup back to me. “Thank you.”
Although he looked like about a hundred miles of back road — and smelled even worse — there was something about him that seemed calm and efficient, two words I generally wouldn’t use to describe the desert rats one saw around town. He didn’t seem to fit the type. It was more like he’d suffered some accident, some catastrophe that had left him stranded in some of the most inhospitable country in the world.
“What’s your name?” I asked.
A blank, pale stare, followed by a shake of the head. His eyes were a startling green against the sun-ravaged skin. “I don’t have one.”
Maybe he was a little more addled by the sun than I’d thought. “You mean you don’t remember?” I’d heard of cases like that — people wandering in the heat and the sun until it cooked the memories right out of their brains. But he seemed a lot more lucid than that.
“No. I don’t have a name.”
It was probably best to humor him. “Okay, Kaspar,” I said.
His head tilted slightly, confusion obvious in his expression.
“Kaspar Hauser,” I explained. “A young man who appeared out of nowhere. He — ” I broke off at the look of confusion on the stranger’s face. “Never mind. We can save the history lessons for later. How about some soup?”
“Yes, please.”
I essayed a half-hearted smile before heading to the pantry. Well, he might be a wacko, but at least he was a polite one. Luckily, the soup was the type you could just pour out of a carton into a bowl; a minute in the microwave, and it was ready. I used a pot holder to pull it out, dropped a spoon into it, and went back to the living room.
The stranger hadn’t moved, but I noticed at once that one hand now rested on Gort’s head, fingers just barely stroking the soft fur between his ears. The man had an odd, bemused expression on his face, as if he hadn’t been quite sure what the dog’s coat would feel like. Gort’s eyes were half-closed. Clearly, whatever misgivings he’d had about the stranger had evaporated as soon as he realized the man was willing to participate in ear-scratching.
Green eyes looked at me questioningly as I approached with the soup.
“It’s roasted pepper corn chowder,” I offered, and held out the bowl to the man.
He took it in both hands, sniffed once, then nodded and took up the spoon. Although I guessed he must be starving, he ate neatly if quickly, with no slurping or dripping. Within a minute, he’d cleaned out the bowl pretty thoroughly.
“More?” I asked, trying not to sound resigned. Most of the time, I didn’t keep my pantry all that well-stocked, since I lived alone. More often than not, I ate takeout down at the shop because I didn’t have the time to do anything else. If the stranger stayed with me for any length of time, he’d end up eating me out of house and home.
Well, that was assuming a lot. My intention had only been to get him hydrated, get a little food in him, clean him up, and send him on his way.
“If it’s not too much trouble.”
“No trouble at all.” I took the bowl from him and went to refill it, ignoring Gort’s pleading doggy eyes. My fault that I’d spoiled the dog by giving him more table scraps than I should. I knew he was expecting to get the bowl to lick, but I wasn’t about to do that in front of the stranger. God knows what he’d think of me.
The second bowl didn’t disappear quite as quickly as the first, but the man still made short work of it nonetheless. With some food in him, he looked — well, maybe not exactly better, but the sheen of sweat had disappeared from his brow, and his eyes seemed a little more alert.
What he really needed was a hot shower and a change of clothes. I’d have to hope he could manage the former on his own, because I drew the line at sponge baths. Clean clothes — well, he was taller and slimmer than my grandfather had been, but I still had an old foot locker with some of his clothing, items I hadn’t quite been ready to get rid of. Anything would be better than the foul-smelling, ragged jumpsuit the stranger had on.
“Can you stand?” I asked.
He seemed to consider, then set the bowl on the floor and pushed himself upward. Gort immediately set to on the empty soup bowl, and I somehow managed to refrain from sighing. At least the stranger didn’t seem to notice, probably because he was too busy trying to keep his balance. He swayed for a second, but then seemed to regain his equilibrium.
Standing, he was even taller than I had thought. I wasn’t short, standing a little more than five-seven in my bare feet, but the top of my head barely reached his chin.
Somehow, that height seemed a little intimidating. I looked away from him, down the hallway. “How about a hot shower?”
“Yes, please,” he replied. Something that might have been the beginnings of a smile touched his cracked lips. “I smell terrible.”
I bit back a smile of my own. “Follow me.”
Fortunately, the ranch-style house had two bathrooms, one as part of a suite in the master bedroom, and the other only a few steps down the hall, between the living room and the other two bedrooms. Since it was the bath designated for guest use, I made sure it was always stocked with clean towels. And because it had been Kiki’s bathroom before she moved out, there were still a few bottles of shampoo and some soap in the caddy in the shower.
“Here you go,” I told the stranger, after I reached into the room and flipped on the overhead light/fan combo. “There are towels, and shampoo and soap. I’m going to see if I can rustle up some clean clothes for you.”
He watched me for a second, and nodded. “Thank you.”
In reply, I only lifted my shoulders, then went down the hall toward the spare bedroom — which in actuality was more of a storage room and general dumping ground. Behind me, I heard the door to the bathroom shut, and a short time later, the water came on.
I hadn’t bothered to tell him about the inadequate hot water heater, figuring he’d know it was time to wrap things up when the water began to get tepid. Still, I knew he could probably get a good fifteen to twenty minutes of decent showering in before the hot water supply began to dwindle. Plenty of time to find something for him to wear.
The foot locker was the one my grandfather had brought back from Korea, and so it had seemed fitting to use it to store the things I couldn’t quite bear to give away to Goodwill: the most obnoxious of Grandpa’s beloved Hawaiian shirts, some well-worn chinos, the package of underwear he’d bought only a few weeks before he died. He’d never even opened it.
Even now, the sight of those things made my throat close up a little, although it had been six years since my grandfather had passed away. Resolutely, I reached in and pulled out the least garish of the Hawaiian shirts, the pale blue one with the dark blue and red hibiscus flowers all over it, along with a pair of pants and the package of underwear. Coiled at one side of the foot locker was a belt, and I picked that up, too. Maybe the stranger could pull it to the tightest notch to keep the pants from sliding down.
I wondered then what my grandfather would think if he saw me now, calmly raiding his old clothes for some stranger who’d wandered in off the desert. Grandpa would have probably taken it in stride, actually. He’d always been the open-minded one of the family, whereas I….
Temporary insanity, I decided. The only possible explanation.
Back in college, my nickname had been “Careful Kara.” Kara, the one who would only allow herself a single drink at frat parties, who collected keys and drove my drunk friends home. Careful Kara, who never pulled an all-nighter to finish a term paper or hooked up with guys at parties. People had teased me, even as they took advantage of my perpetual designated-driver status. I’d never bothered to explain why. Who wanted to hear about a mother who’d taken off when her children were only eleven and three, a mother who left her eldest daughter thinking she had to be responsible for her little sister and everyone else around her?
Careful Kara, who was now running a UFO shop and conducting tours to see orbs and the occasional passing spaceship. Life could definitely throw you some curve balls.
Mouth thinning a little, I piled up the clothes, then stood. The clock over the daybed ticked away. Almost ten o’clock. I kept late hours, especially if I had a UFO tour lined up, but it had been a long day. And if I was tired, I could only imagine how the stranger must feel.
No pajamas were forthcoming from the trunk, but shoved away on the top shelf of my own closet were a pair of men’s sweats that had somehow gotten mixed up with my stuff when Alan and I divided our household, just before I’d come back to Sedona to take care of my grandfather. God knows why the sweat pants hadn’t ended up in the charity donations, but they would do well enough for the stranger to sleep in. A T-shirt was easy; I had stacks sitting on the daybed, just waiting for me to silk-screen them and take them down to the shop.
Since the spare bedroom was a disaster, he’d either have to sleep on the couch or in Kiki’s old room. The latter made more sense, although I somehow felt as if I was defiling my sister’s space by letting the man sleep there. Silly, really. Kiki had moved out almost a year ago. It wasn’t as if she needed that bed.
The room was more or less untouched, as I hadn’t quite been able to bring myself to convert it to a second office or studio the way Kiki kept urging me to. The bright turquoise walls glared at me as I flipped on the light switch. God knows what Kiki had been thinking, going with that eye-searing combination of turquoise and lime green, but at least the space was clean and uncluttered, and the bed a queen, not the twin bed Kiki had slept on until her senior year of high school. There was no way the stranger could have ever squeezed himself into a mere twin.
I set the clothes down on the dresser but kept the sweatpants and T-shirt, along with one pair of underwear. When I emerged in the hallway, I noticed that the water had been turned off. Pausing outside in the hall, I gave a diffident tap on the door and said, “I’ve left some things for you on the floor out here. You can sleep in the room right across the hall. Okay?”
For a few seconds, there wasn’t any response. Then I heard him say, “Okay. Thank you.”
“No problem,” I replied automatically, and turned away from the door.
What a lie. I had a feeling my Good Samaritan gesture was going to turn into the mother of all problems.