She laughed.

“I think you have me on a bit of a pedestal,” she said.

He was quiet a moment.

“You haven’t talked about your EMT position,” he said finally.

“After the incident on Andy’s pier, I thought you might want to get back into it.”

She drew in a long breath.

“I feel less afraid,” she admitted.

“I

haven’t had a nightmare about the pilot in a few weeks. But I still lied, Rory. I was involved in a coverup, and I just can’t get past that. “

“What would happen if you admitted what you did?” he asked.

“I’ve thought about it. You know, plead temporary insanity and beg for mercy. But the system doesn’t work that way. There would have to be an investigation. This sort of thing is taken very seriously, and it should be. I did it to protect my sister, and you and I both know she had no idea what she was doing and that she truly needed that protection. But if can get away with doing that, then someone else should be able to protect his brother for having done something else, and maybe that something else wasn’t quite so innocent. So, it can’t simply be erased and forgotten. At some point, I’ll have to deal with it, because I truly do want to be an EMT again. For the rest of the summer, though, I just want to forget about it and have steamy sex with you. Okay?”p>

He laughed.

“Glad I can help with your escape from reality,” he said.

Finished with that topic, she nipped onto her back again.

“I have to buy the ingredients for my baked beans today,” she said.

“What are you bringing to the bonfire?” Every one on the cul-de-sac was expected to bring food to share. “Jill suggested I bring the paper plates and napkins and plastic silverware,” he said.

“I guess she figures I don’t look like much of a cook.”

Daria could already imagine the smell of the bonfire. Once the daytime crowd had left the beach, Jill and her husband and children would set up two fire rings, one for the adults, a second for the teenagers.

Everyone from the cul-de-sac would slowly make their way to the fires, to eat and talk and bemoan the fact that summer was nearly over. The bonfire was always the prelude to summer’s end.

Rory glanced at the clock on her night table.

“Well, I guess I’d better get back to Poll-Rory,” he said.

“Time to face more of my son’s probing questions about my love life.”

He sat on the side of the bed as he dressed, and Daria ran her hand across the warm empty space on the bed where his body had been. ;

The bonfire. The end of summer. | “Rory?” I “Uh-huh.” | “I haven’t asked you this, because I’ve been afraid of| the answer,” she said.

“But when exactly are you going| back to California?”

He looked at her over his shoulder, hesitating for a moment before answering.

“Let’s not talk about it now,” he said.

She accepted his answer willingly, not truly wanting to know.

JVImm,” Shelly said as she walked in the back door of the Sea Shanty.

“You’re making the beans.”

Daria looked up from the stove, where she was adding brown sugar to the pot of beans.

“How was work?”

“Okay. Where are Ellen and Ted?” she asked.

Daria turned the heat down under the beans. “Ted man aged to talk Ellen into going fishing with him today,” she said, and she was tempted to add. Isn’t that great? It was a true pleasure not having Ellen at the cottage all day. She knew Shelly felt the same way, although neither of them would say it.

Shelly sat down at the kitchen table.

“I don’t like working at St.

Esther’s as much without Father Sean there. No body else talks to me like he did. I liked talking to him. “

Daria leaned against the counter.

“Did Father Macy know about you and Andy?” she asked.

“He knew everything about me,” Shelly said bluntly.

Daria wiped a spot of molasses from the counter with a sponge. So, Sean Macy had known about Shelly’s relationship with Andy and had said nothing about it to her or Chloe. She was momentarily angry with the priest, but knew that wasn’t fair. Shelly had not felt able to talk with her sisters about Andy; it was good she’d at least been able to confide in the priest. No wonder Father Macy’s | death had been such a loss for her.

Setting down the sponge, Daria walked over to the table and gave her sister a quick hug.

“You must really miss him,” she said.

“Tons.”

Daria looked at her watch, then lifted her purse from the table and rooted around inside it for her car keys.

“Could you keep an eye on the beans for a few minutes while I run some errands?” she asked, keys in hand.

“Sure.” “I just have to go to the drugstore and the drive-through at the bank,” Daria said.

“You got paid today, right? If you want, I can deposit your check for you.”

“Oh, I don’t have it anymore.”

“What do you mean?” “When I was walking home from the church, I met this girl,” Shelly said.

“She’s only fifteen, and she doesn’t have any family.”

Daria felt her shoulders stiffen. She had a terrible feeling where this was going; they’d been down this road before.

“How do you know she doesn’t have a family?” she asked.

“Well, actually she does have one.” Shelly’s large brown eyes were filled with concern.

“She has a mother and a stepfather, but they treat her terrible. So, she’s in the Outer Banks all by herself. And she didn’t have any money, Daria. No money at all! She hadn’t had anything to eat all day today and no dinner last night. So, there was a bank right there, and I cashed my check and gave her the money.”

Daria dropped her purse onto the table.

“Shelly, you can’t do things like that!” she said.

“First of all, the girl could have been lying to you. Maybe she’s using your money right now to buy drugs.”

“No, I don’t think so,” Shelly said.

“She was really skinny. I believe that she hasn’t eaten in ” “Even if she hadn’t eaten, even if she needed a few bucks for a meal, you didn’t have to give her your whole check.”

“Daria, Iwish you could’ve seen her. You would’ve given her your whole check, too. She’s poor. We’re not poor. She needed that money a whole lot more than I did.”

“We’re not as wealthy as you seem to think,” Daria said, although that was hardly the issue.

“And now you’re expecting a baby. And babies cost money.”

Shelly looked stricken.

“I won’t give any more money away, then,” she said quickly.

“But really, Daria, she said her stepfather beat her and everything. You wouldn’t want her to go back to that kind of home, would you?” “No, of course not. But there are other ways of handling a situation like that and getting her help.” Daria looked toward the ceiling in frustration.

“We’ve been through this so many times. Shelly. You can’t save the world, honey.” “I know that. I just wanted to help this one single girl. I don’t think that was so wrong.”

“It was really… foolish.” She had started to say “stupid,” but caught herself in time. Tears were already brimming in Shelly’s eyes.

“This is why I worry about you, Shelly,” she said.

“This is why I don’t believe you’re mature enough to have a baby. Your judgment is not always good. I know it’s hard to hear that. I know you don’t really understand it. But there is no way you’re ready to get married and have a child.”

Shelly didn’t respond. Her eyes suddenly went blank in an expression Daria knew all too well, but hadn’t seen in a while. She rushed to her sister’s side just as her body stiffened and dropped to the floor.

Shelly began to writhe with convulsions. Daria quickly turned her onto her side, then pulled a cushion from one of the kitchen chairs and slipped it beneath Shelly’s head. As she held on to her sister, waiting for the convulsions to run their course, she wondered if the seizure could hurt the baby. If it did, if the baby suffered damage, would Shelly then agree to an abortion? Daria squeezed her eyes shut, horrified with herself for even entertaining the thought.

“Daria?”

She glanced up to see Rory standing in the doorway between the kitchen and living room.

“I think it’s almost over,” she said, looking down at Shelly, whose body no longer twitched and jerked. She shifted Shelly’s head slightly on the pillow to be sure she could breathe easily.

Rory walked across the room and knelt down by Shelly’s head. Moaning, Shelly curled herself into a fetal position and slipped her thumb into her mouth. Rory smoothed his hand over her silky blond hair, and Daria fell even more deeply in love with him. “Could the seizure hurt her baby?” Rory asked.

“It’s possible, but this one was very short,” Daria said.

“I doubt it did any damage.”

“Is this the first one she’s had all summer?”

“The first in about six months, actually,” Daria said.

“And I’m afraid I might have brought it on. I yelled at her.” She leaned over and kissed Shelly’s temple.

“I’m sorry, sweetheart.”

Rolling onto her back, Shelly opened her eyes. She pulled her thumb from her mouth.

“Seizure…?” she asked.

“Uh-huh.” Daria nodded.

“How do you feel?”

“Did I hurt my baby?”

“No. I don’t think so.”

Shelly rolled back onto her side and closed her eyes again.

“Tired,” she said.

“You can’t sleep here on the kitchen floor,” Daria said.

“Stay awake just another minute, honey, so Rory and I can get you to the couch in the living room.”

They managed to raise Shelly to her feet, and with their help, she stumbled through the house to the sofa in the living room. She lay down, her thumb back in her mouth.

“Let’s go out on the porch,” Daria whispered to Rory.