It occurred to Julian that a neighborhood watch might be a good idea. If he could get other people on the street to keep an eye out for Lynch, act as a sort of early warning signal, they might be able to avoid another incident. The only person he felt comfortable approaching was Cole Hubbard, and he walked through the side yard, past the dining room window where Lynch had been spying on him, and out to the front sidewalk. Cole’s car was in the driveway, which meant he was home, and Julian strode past the Ribieros’ house and up to Cole’s front porch, where he rang the doorbell. He heard the chimes sound within the house and thought he heard movement, but though he waited for well over a minute, no one came to the door.
He rang again, waited. Knocked, waited. But there was still no answer.
That was strange.
He knew Cole was in there, and he rang again, knocked again and called out, “Hey, Cole! Open up! It’s Julian!”
“Go away!”
His neighbor’s voice sounded high and frightened, almost unrecognizable, and Julian was shocked as much by the tone as by the words themselves. “Cole? Are you all right?”
“I said go away!” There was an edge of anger now, mixed in with the fear.
He backed up a step, confused. He’d thought the two of them had a rapport; he’d thought they were starting to be friends. What the hell had happened?
This seemed totally out of character. Was it because of what had happened at the party? No. Cole couldn’t have been so freaked-out by the ghost that he’d cut off all contact. After all, he’d stayed behind when the other neighbors had fled and had even offered them some sober, nonpanicky advice.
It could be something that had happened in Cole’s personal life, although Julian didn’t think so. If that were the case, Cole would have been polite but distant, perhaps begging off after a brief, generic discussion and saying he was busy. He wouldn’t have been this hostile.
Or scared.
Julian was starting to get scared, too, and against his better judgment, he knocked on the door again. “What’s wrong? I’m not leaving until you tell me!”
There was a short pause, and the door opened a crack. He saw unkempt hair and two days’ stubble. “Go. Now.”
“Why? I don’t understand. What’s wrong?”
“What’s wrong?” The door opened a fraction of an inch wider. Cole
“Cole—”
“Your house is calling to me. And I don’t know how much longer I can resist it.”
Frustrated and confused, Julian headed home, walking slowly, looking around at the other houses on both sides of the street, wondering what his other neighbors were thinking, wondering what they were doing.
The next day, Cole was gone.
The day after that, a For Sale sign went up on his lawn.
Twenty-one
At least, Claire thought, she could lose herself in her work.
And her work on the Cortinez case was turning out to be far more compelling than she’d expected. It was not just the legal issues themselves, which were stimulating enough, but the supporting facts in the background, the alternate history that Mr. Cortinez had taught his students. These were accounts she had not heard before, a story with which she was not familiar, and she agreed with the teacher that it was something the students of Jardine, of all of New Mexico, should be taught.
At home, things might be confusing and complicated and weird and frightening, but seeking refuge in her job and in the labyrinthine logic of the law brought her calmness and a kind of peace, helped her cope with the craziness of the rest of her life. A small voice in the back of her head said that she shouldn’t run away from reality like this, that her real duty was to her family, not her clients, but that voice was overridden by what appeared to be a reasonable practicality, an echo of Julian’s position. She was not quite sure what had caused her to adopt such an attitude, but even at home, her fear seemed to be tempered somewhat, although she knew that if she dwelled on that anomaly, she would probably become even more frightened than she was already.
Which was why she didn’t dwell on it.
Although that in itself was atypical behavior.
Claire still thought they should sell the house and move—it was the impetus behind her fierce dedication to this case—but it was not quite the urgent priority it had been. She was braver now than she had been even a few days ago.
Human beings could adapt to anything.