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"You need to take better care of yourself." His voice was rough as the

words worked their way through a throat that had gone dust-dry. She

smelled of lemons.

"I'm fine." She was dying, somewhere between giddy pleasure and utter

despair. He was holding her hand as if it were as fragile as spun glass.

And he was frowning at her as if she were slightly less sensible than

her two-year-old daughter. "The potatoes are going to burn, Ethan."

"Oh. Well." Mortified because he'd been thinking--just for a

second--that her mouth might taste as soft as it looked, he jerked back,

fumbling now for the tube of salve. His heart was jumping, and he hated

the sensation. He preferred things calm and easy. "Put some of this on

it anyway." He laid it on the counter and backed up. "I'lla get the

kids washed up for dinner."

He scooped up the laundry basket on his way and was gone.

With deliberate movements, Grace shut the water off, then turned and

rescued her fries. Satisfied with the progress of the meal, she picked

up the salve and smoothed a little on the reddened splotch on her hand

before tidily replacing the tube in the cupboard.

Then she leaned on the sink, looked out the window.

But she couldn't find a rainbow in the sky.

Chapter Two

there was nothing like a Saturday--unless it was the Saturday leading up

to the last week of school and into summer vacation. That, of course,

was all the Saturdays of your life rolled into one big shiny ball.

Saturday meant spending the day out on the workboat with Ethan and Jim

instead of in a classroom. It meant hard work and hot sun and cold

drinks. Man stuff. With his eyes shaded under the bill of his Orioles

cap and the really cool sunglasses he'd bought on a trip to the mall,

Seth shot out the gaff to drag in the next marker buoy. His young

muscles bunched under his X-Files T-shirt, which assured him that the

truth was out there.

He watched Jim work--tilt the pot and unhook the oyster-can-lid stopper

to the bait box on the bottom of the pot. Shake out the old bait, Seth

noted and see the seagulls dive and scream like maniacs. Cool. Now get a

good solid hold on that pot, turn it over, and shake it like crazy so

the crabs in the upstairs section fall out into the washtub waiting for

them. Seth figured he could do all that--if he really wanted to. He

wasn't afraid of a bunch of stupid crabs just because they looked like

big mutant bugs from Venus and had claws that tended to snap and pinch.

Instead, his job was to rebait the pot with a couple handfuls of

disgusting fish parts, do the stopper, check to make sure there were no

snags in the line. Eyeball the distance between markers and if

everything looked good, toss the pot overboard. Splash!

Then he got to toss out the gaff for the next buoy.

He knew how to tell the sooks from the jimmies now. Jim said the girl

crabs painted their fingernails because their pincers were red. It was

wild the way the patterns on the underbellies looked like sex parts.

Anybody could see that the guy crabs had this long T shape there that

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