Linda Hall - Storm Warning

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The rustic lakeside homestead is supposed to be a refuge for widow Nori Edwards. However, the moment the single mom arrives, strange and frightening things start happening.Former police officer Steve Baylor–the only resident who'll step foot on the «cursed» property–vows to protect Nori. And catch the shadowy someone dead set on terrorizing her. For the first time, she feels safe. But danger won't stay hidden forever…and neither will Nori's stalker, who's waiting for a chance to let a deadly storm roll in.

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Pieces of his hair fell forward over his eyes when he smiled up at her. His eyes were deep and very blue. He said, “I wondered if you’d mind if I made a fire. Warm the place up a bit.”

“Mind? That’s wonderful,” she said. Somehow it seemed perfectly natural that this stranger should be making a fire in her fireplace. She stood there for a moment while he silently lit a match to the newspaper and kindling. When he rose she said, “Now, is there something I can help you with? You drove out here because…?”

“Pretty lucky that I was out here. You were sort of struggling a bit. I’m glad I could come along and help. I was all set to get my canoe down if need be.”

She looked out of the window. Another truck was parked right next to her own truck. On his, a long green canoe was upside down over the cab. The two trucks, side by side, looked like a matched set. A dog’s head peered out of the truck window.

“You have a dog,” Nori said.

A slow smile began on his face. “His name is Chester.”

“He looks like he’s jumping all over your truck.”

“That’s Chester.”

She looked up at him. Here they were, talking about dogs, and she didn’t even know who he was or why he was in her living room.

“Your name is?”

“Oh, sorry.” He moved toward her. “I’m Steve Baylor. And you’re Nori.”

“You know who I am?”

She redid her ponytail more securely in the elastic.

“The rumor around town is that you’re looking for a handyman. I’ve come to apply for the job. That is, if you haven’t already got someone else lined up.”

“Well,” she said, and moved an errant wisp of hair out of her face. “I am looking for someone.”

“I’m your man, then.” He opened his arms wide and grinned deeply. He had a very expressive mouth that went up more on the right side than the left when he smiled.

“And you drove all the way out here in the middle of a storm because you want to work here?”

His expression became serious. “I was going to call you. Marlene from the café told me about the job. I was just canoeing the Kettle Stream and saw someone out on the lake and I thought I better go see. I was hoping it wasn’t you. You want to avoid thunderstorms on the lake if you can at all help it.”

She nodded. “I’ve been told that before.”

He said, “This lake can blow up into a frenzy and then be completely calm in the space of twenty minutes.”

She looked out at the lake. The downpour was unrelenting, but the lake looked remarkably calmer.

“So then, Steve, what are your qualifications?” She tried to keep her tone businesslike, yet the memory of being held in his gentle arms was still fresh in her mind.

“I’m strong,” he said immediately. “I’m a carpenter and cabinetmaker. I’m a good organizer. I can put in a good day’s work.”

Nori clasped her hands in front of her. Someone like him was who she needed. “Would you like a hot drink? Something to warm you up? I could make coffee. We can talk more then.”

“Coffee would be great.”

“Follow me,” she offered. “Don’t mind the mess. I’ve been here two weeks and I’ve been concentrating more on clearing a path to the beach and unearthing places to park.”

“That’s the sort of thing I could help with.”

“I think I need a whole crew.”

“My thoughts exactly. I know a bunch of young people—from the church actually—who I could round up.”

As they entered the kitchen she tried to see the place through his eyes—boxes leaning against walls, coffee mugs and plates stacked and balanced precariously on counters, piles of papers and books next to the coffeemaker, dirty dishes in sink, her laptop and more papers on the small table. She wanted all new cupboards and countertops. And a new sink while she was at it, and a dishwasher. Actually, she wanted an entirely new kitchen. She was reluctant, therefore, to unpack a lot into cupboards that eventually would be torn down.

The fire was already warming up the place and it felt good. She got a tin of coffee from her pantry, measured fresh grounds into her coffeepot, poured water into the reservoir and switched it on. He said nothing while she did this, and she didn’t know whether she should be talking or not. He seemed to be a quiet man, a nice man, but the silence was beginning to make her uncomfortable. She began talking, her back still to him. “I want to start with this kitchen. Since I plan to live here, this is where I want to begin—”

“For the summer?”

She turned around to face him. “Excuse me?”

“You plan to live here for the summer?”

“Year-round,” she said.

“Year-round?”

“Yes, year-round. This lodge is fully winterized. Maybe not the cabins, but the lodge, certainly. The real estate agent told me the road is plowed regularly. And the place is quiet. That’s what I’m looking for. A quiet place to live year-round.” A place to call home, she wanted to add.

Steve said, “He told you they plow the road?”

“Yes. He did.”

“Well, I don’t know where he gets his information….”

“I’ll hire someone then,” she said quickly, turning away, her face becoming hot.

A few moments later he said, “Pretty isolated out here.”

“I’ll manage.”

“I’m sure you will. You strike me as a strong woman.”

Thankfully her back was still to him. She didn’t know what her face would reveal with that comment.

As she got a couple of mugs from the counter, she heard a loud crash behind her. She jumped and turned, put a hand to her mouth.

“The chair,” he said rather sheepishly. “I’m sorry.”

Steve was on his backside on the floor, his left leg caught in a broken chair leg, his right stuck out in front of him. He had sat on a wooden rocking chair and gone right through it. It was a chair that had been here when she moved in.

She put a hand to her mouth and started to giggle. She couldn’t help it. He managed to disentangle himself and hoist himself up. He was laughing, too.

She said, “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t laugh. Are you okay?”

“Only my dignity is tarnished,” he said, rising. “And this chair. Sometimes I don’t know my own strength.”

“I should’ve told you that chair might be questionable,” she said. “I brought it in here because I was trying to figure out what to do with it. You didn’t break anything that wasn’t broken before.”

He picked up the broken front leg and ran his hands over it quietly for a while. Finally, he said, “Can I take the pieces of this chair with me? I might be able to do something with it.”

“Be my guest. I wasn’t sure it was worth fixing. It’s kind of plain.”

“This chair? This is a great old chair. It looks like an antique Shaker rocking chair. Their chairs were plain because their lifestyle was plain. I’d love the chance to be able to work on it.”

“You sure know your chairs,” Nori said, pouring coffee into two mugs.

“I love carpentry.”

They sat down at the table across from each other and she spread out her lists and Internet printouts on the table in front of her.

“I’ve looked at some new cupboards online and found out that a company can deliver them from Bangor. I’ll just need someone to bring them out here and install them. Can you do that?” From her stack of papers and home repair and decorating books, she unearthed pictures she had printed from the Web of the kitchen cupboards she was looking at.

He picked up her printed sheet and looked at it for several minutes, frowning before he put it back down on the table. “You don’t want those things. They’re factory mass-produced. Not for this grand old place. I’m a cabinetmaker. I could make you cupboards. Nice ones. From scratch.”

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