âIâm far too normal.â
âOutwardly, perhaps.â Connorâs eyes darkened. âExcept Iâve already figured you out. Youâre a happy, singsong Marian the Librarian to all appearances, but inside, beneath the cocoon of small-town life, is another person waiting to burst free. Like a butterfly.â
The muscles in Tessâs stomach clutched, even though he was getting carried away. She really was the nice, normal person she claimed. She didnât need to be set free.
From what? she silently scoffed. Her life was her own. Entirely her own.
âWell, Connor, that sounds nice, it really does. But on the other hand, Iâm pretty certain that you just called me a caterpillar.â
He smiled, but his gaze was even deeper and softer than before. It enfolded her. âBy any other nameâ¦â
Dear Reader,
Hello from the North Country!
As Iâm writing this letter, itâs a beautiful summer day with breezes playing through the trees and sunshine glittering on the lake. But by the time you read this, I'll be plunged into the dead of winter with snowdrifts up to my eyeballs. The Upper Peninsula of Michigan is a land of extremes, where only the tough surviveâas long as the tough have a good heating system and a snow shovel.
In this story, the second in my NORTH COUNTRY STORIES miniseries, Connor Reed comes to the wilderness to escape his notoriety as a true crime writer. Is there anywhere more remote or romantic to escape to than a lighthouse, seemingly at the edge of the world? Small-town librarian Tess Bucek is certainly intrigued by the stranger in town, and itâs not long before truths of the heart are revealedâ¦.
Look for my next NORTH COUNTRY book in November of this year. And please visit my Web site at www.carriealexander.com for news of future books, contests and âNorth Countryâ photos and map.
Sincerely,
Carrie
THE MAN LOOKED like a smuggler.
In a library? Amused with the incongruity, Tess Bucek slid the card from the pocket of Sis Boom Bah! A Survival Guide to Cheerleading Camp and passed the book beneath the bar-code scanner. She was so accustomed to the task that it wasnât necessary to look away from the suspicious character loitering between the arts and history sections. As he moved to one of the study tables with a stack of books, she stamped a date on the card in red and returned it to the pocket.
âDue back in three weeks.â Tess slid the book across the checkout desk to Sarah Johnson, who would have been her niece if sheâd married into the family as planned. Instead, they were merely acquaintances, and lucky to be that since Tess wasnât on speaking terms with Sarahâs father, Erik. âHave a nice time at camp.â
âOh, I will. Thanks, Miss Bucek,â Sarah bubbled, thrilled about making the JV cheerleading squad before school had let out for the summer. âI can already do a super cartwheel, but my herkiesâ¦â
Tess smiled and nodded as Sarah went on about cheerleading stunts, surreptitiously rising off her heels and telescoping her neck to keep sight of the stranger seated beyond the girlâs bobbing blond ponytail.
He was tall, dark and mysterious. Tess would have shivered if she was the shivering type.
A smuggler with a tortured conscience, she decided as Sarah finally said goodbye. There was an air about himâintense, conflicted, maybe even dangerous. Definitely shady.
Grosse Pointe Blank, Tony Soprano, The Tulip Thief, every detective novel sheâd ever readâ¦they all filtered through Tessâs quick-firing synapses. After serving more than ten years as a librarian in a poky small town where âdangerâ meant icy roads or the fire index, pop culture was all she had for reference. She preferred fiction, anyway. Particularly when it came to the criminal element.
Sheâd honed a vivid imagination during the time when sheâd been stuck in a one-bedroom cottage with her newly divorced and depressed mother, listening to a limited collection of Beatles, Bread and Simon and Garfunkel LPs. Ever since the bow tie that was really a spy camera in the song âAmerica,â Tess had taken to making up little stories about everyone around her. Their next-door neighbor with the green thumb had become a poisoner burying bodies in the petunia patch. She imagined that her fourth-grade teacher, bland Mrs. Gorski, metamorphosed into a disco diva after the bell rang, complete with polyester wrap dress and sparkly blue eye shadow.
Even now, Tess continued to indulge her flights of fancy. Cheap entertainment for the comfortably settled.
Impelled by an inward squiggly feelingânot a shiverâTess stepped out from behind the desk and grabbed the half-filled return cart parked nearby. The wheels squeaked as she pushed it toward the 900sâthe history section. The stranger looked up from his book, his gaze watchful. Perhaps leery.