ANNA FORCED DOWN a swell of panic.
The man wasn’t here on this island. She thought he was probably on Grand Fernandino.
The distance was reassuring. Until she realized that if he had reached out to her from the larger island, then his mental powers were strong.
Wrapping her arms around her shoulders, she strained to see into the darkness beyond the window. She couldn’t even see the flashlight beam. And as she stared into the shadows, she had to press her lips together to keep from calling Zach back into the house. He had things to do out there, and he would come back when he could.
Briskly she strode down the hall to the utility room and pulled out the tablecloths Zach had found. Then she got several cans from the pantry, trying to read the labels.
Of course, no matter what they contained, she had no idea how to open the cans—or how they were going to cook anything without pots and pans.
She was getting two bottles of water when a sound in the doorway made her whirl.
“Oh!”
“Sorry,” Zach answered as he stepped into the darkened kitchen and brushed off his hands on his shirttails.
“I’m a little jumpy.”
“We both are.” He picked up one of the cans and shined the light on it.
“Lentil soup.”
“That’s a strange thing to have on a tropical island.”
“I guess you can bring anything you want here.”
He opened a drawer, fumbled inside, and pulled out a Swiss Army knife. “I saw this earlier. We can use it to open the can.”
Taking it from her hand, he used the opener blade to puncture the top, then saw partway around the flat surface. After doing the same with a can of beef and vegetable soup, he folded back the sharp edges to make a smooth surface.
“What about pots?”
“That’s a luxury we don’t have. But I think we can work around it.”
He inspected the opened cans to make sure he’d provided a safe edge that wouldn’t cut their mouths. “Not very aesthetic, but it will do.”
“I get the feeling I’m dealing with an expert.”
“I’ve been stranded in the mountains at home. In a snowstorm. Me and Patrick, one of the guys who’d been on the ranch since before I was born. He’d been snowed in more than once, and he taught me some important survival skills.”
“Lucky you were with him.”
“Yeah.”
“How long were you there?”
“Almost a week.”
“Ouch.”
“My dad kept the line cabins well supplied.”
“How did you get out?”
“Some of the hands came in on snowshoes.”
She knew he was deliberately keeping the conversation on the surface. She followed his lead, because they both needed a little time to deal with their emotions. And she was also thinking about something that had happened in town—trying to figure out if it was connected to what was happening to them. She’d been too busy to focus on it. But now it tugged at her.
Zach stripped the labels off the cans, then offered her one. She was careful not to touch him as she strove to keep her thoughts to herself.
He led her back to the great room, where a fire was burning cheerfully.
“I was thinking we’d have to heat the cans, so I have some improvised cooking implements here. Green wood.” Picking up a bent branch, he fitted the can he was holding into the rounded crook, then squeezed the supple wood around the can. “We can warm it a little. But not too much, or the metal will be too hot to drink out of.”
“And we don’t need it very hot—not in this climate.”
“Right.” He looked down into his soup. “I see I’ve got the lentil and you’ve got the beef and vegetable. We can trade them back and forth, unless you have a strong preference.”
“Trading is good.”
He sat down on the raised hearth and held his can over the fire, just above the flames, and she did the same.
After a few minutes, he pulled the can out and tested the edge with his finger, then took a sip.
“How is it?”
“Not bad. And warm enough.”
She did as he had, sipping at her soup right from the can, as she thought about what she wanted to say. Glancing up at him, she wondered if he was picking up her mood.
“Hard to believe we started out the morning in Grand Fernandino,” he remarked.
She nodded, then took a drink of water before asking one of the questions that had been chasing around in her mind. “Do you have any idea how far away we are?”
“Sorry. I’ve never worked a job out of G.F. before, so I don’t know a lot about this corner of the Caribbean.”
“You said you were out looking for a shipwreck. Did you see any islands on the way?”
“No.”
“How far did you get from shore?”
“About fifty miles, but we could be in an entirely different direction.”
“Can’t you tell where we are—by using the stars or something?”
He laughed. “Approximately. But not within such a small area. And I went out diving during the day. I didn’t get a look at the stars.”
“Right.”
He was silent for several moments, drinking from his water bottle, then said, “Want to trade soups?”
“Okay.”
This time, when they exchanged cans, he brushed his finger against hers, and she felt a small tingle of sensation. “What did you want to tell me?” he asked.
“It’s obvious?”
“There’s something spinning around in your mind. I can’t tell what it is. But I know it’s something you don’t like.”
“Yeah.” She swallowed and kept her gaze locked on him. “You and I…were compelled to touch each other.”
His voice turned sharp. “Compelled? You mean by some outside force?”
“No!” she answered quickly, resisting the urge to lay her hand on his so he’d know exactly what was in her mind. Already, she was changing her way of thinking. There would be no misunderstanding if they spoke mind to mind, but she wanted to do it the old-fashioned way because that gave her some feeling of contol.
“It’s something we wanted,” she said, making an effort to speak more calmly. “Because we recognized each other. From before. Or maybe not. Maybe it would have happened if we’d never heard of each other. Because there’s a link between us.”
“Why?”
“That’s the part I can’t figure out. But what if someone knows that if people like us link up, we develop special powers? And he doesn’t want it to happen. So he’s sending agents looking for us and trying to make sure we…don’t get together.”
“That’s a pretty gigantic leap.”
“I know. But it fits. If you throw Wild Bill into the mix. I mean what did I do to him? I don’t think he was stalking me because it was anything personal. Otherwise, he would have killed you right away and hustled me off.”
“Or you could have pissed off someone with your act.”
“I never do that. If it’s something bad, I don’t say it.”
“But someone could be afraid you know something.”
“Then why did he wait so long?”
He shrugged. “Okay. Let’s work with your theory.”
“I know it sounds far-fetched. But I must have…tapped into it on a subconscious level. That’s why I thought it was so important that Bill not know we’d made love.”
Zach sat with his hands clasped around the can of soup. He looked like he wanted to put the can down and move to her side, but he stayed where he was.
“We got away,” she whispered.
“But not by ourselves. Somebody helped us.”
She nodded.
“Who?”
“Well, the Vadiana guy. But not just him. A man and a woman. And that bolsters my theory. I think they’re like us. And they’re using…extrasensory abilities to look for the others.”
“You assume there are others?”
“If you go back to the theory that Bill is supposed to kill people like us.”
He nodded. “What about the man and the woman?”
“They have more power than we do—because they strengthened the bond between them. Which means they met…some time earlier.”
“Or they started out with more power,” he said. “We don’t know which.”
She conceded the point with a small nod before adding, “They want to help. The Vadiana guy wants to push you out of the scene and take over.”
Zach made an angry sound. “He’s poking his nose in where it doesn’t belong.”
She kept her hand cupped around the can of soup. “We have to get him out of our lives,” she said.
“How?”
“By fortifying the bond between us. If we can get stronger, we can…”
He leaned forward. “What?”
She made a frustrated gesture. “Defeat him. But I won’t know exactly what that means until we’re stronger. Unfortunately, he’s got an advantage. He’s been practicing his psi talents for years.”
“You’ve been doing your nightclub act for years!” He set down his soup and leaned back, grasping his knee with his hands. “You have more experience with psychic phenomena than I do.”
“Unless you count the imaginary friend part of the equation.”
“That probably came from you—not me.”
“Don’t sell yourself short. Maybe you were the one who reached out.”
He shrugged. “Were you always able to touch objects that belonged to someone else and pick up their memories?”
“I think so. But not all psychic phenomena involve touch,” she answered quickly. “There’s stuff like…I don’t know.” She scrambled for the name of a talent and came up with, “Talking to the dead.”
“Do you believe in that?”
“It’s as likely as anything else. Or what about people who can see the future?”
“You never see the future?”
“Only the past.” She paused. “There are also people who dream about something and it turns out to be real.” She swallowed. “Or moving objects with your mind.”
“That would be a neat trick.” He gave her a long look. “Then there’s seeing a scene when you’re not there. That’s what the guy who watches us does. And he’s made us see his environment.”
She shivered. “I guess so.”
“And I think he figured out the floor upstairs was rotten—and helped weaken it.”
Her head jerked up. “You think he can do that?”
He shrugged. “Maybe.”
She winced.
When he was silent, she went on quickly, before she lost her nerve. “I think I know who he is. The guy who tried to kill you—or break your legs when you fell.”