Heather Graham Bundle: The Island / Ghost Walk / Killing Kelly / The Vision. Heather Graham

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at all times easily irritated. “There’s more. Two more good-size boats, both anchored not far from us. I saw a dinghy coming in with several people.”

      “Well, what are you going to do,” Keith asked with a shrug. “Boaters have been coming out here since…well, hell, probably since forever.”

      “Yeah, but dammit, they shouldn’t be here now,” Matt muttered.

      “Hey, we knew we’d be in public view, working around whatever happened and whoever appeared. People are here, so let’s make the best of it,” Keith said. “And think about it. It’s not much of a shock. It’s a weekend, the perfect time for boaters to take a little break.”

      “You don’t think we could dress up as pygmies and scare them all off the island, do you?” Lee murmured dryly.

      “Pygmies?” Matt said.

      “Some kind of tribal islanders, maybe cannibals?” Lee teased.

      Keith laughed. “Oh, yeah, that would make us really inconspicuous. Besides, while they’re on the island, they’re not out on their boats, checking out the reefs. It’s a weekend. Let’s do like the others. Play tourist. Get to know the folks. Check out what they know—and what they’re thinking.” And what they’re afraid of, he thought, but he kept the possibility that anyone on the island might suspect them of something to himself.

      Lee shrugged. “All right.”

      “So we roll out the cooler and the tent and make like party people,” Matt said. He laughed suddenly. “Not so bad. One of the people on the boat was a woman, and man, she sure as hell looked like a hottie. From a distance, anyway.”

      One of the people on the boat? Keith thought. You should have seen the woman in this very clearing, just minutes ago. And I wasn’t any distance from her. None at all.

      “Doesn’t matter if she’s hot as blue blazes, no getting too close to the locals, not tonight,” Lee warned sternly.

      “Hey, I’m just going to be a party boy. A friendly guy, just looking for fun, a good ole boating fool,” Matt assured him.

      “Well, you can be a good ole boy later. I’m not hauling stuff off that boat by myself,” Lee said. “If we’re turning into Boy Scouts and doing the camping thing, you guys can do some of the lugging, too.”

      “Actually, camping isn’t such a bad idea,” Keith said.

      “No, and getting to know folks from the area isn’t a bad idea, either,” Lee said. He grinned. “I think I’ll own the boat.”

      “Hey!” Matt protested.

      “Someone has to own the boat, right?” Lee asked.

      “You can own the boat,” Keith said.

      “I get to own it next time,” Matt said.

      “With any luck, there won’t be a next time,” Keith said. He stared at the other two, and he couldn’t help feeling an edge of suspicion.

      Lee stared back at him. His eyes were enigmatic. “Ever the optimist, huh?”

      “I just know what I’m doing,” Keith said.

      Lee assessed him for what seemed like an eternity. “I hope,” Lee said. “I hope to hell you’re focused on what we’re doing.”

      “I’m focused. You can count on it,” Keith said, and he knew his tone was grim.

      “C’mon, then, let’s go play tourist,” Lee said.

      “Sure. Be right there,” Keith said.

      “Hey, we’re all in this together, you know,” Matt reminded him, his eyes narrowed.

      “Yup.”

      They were in it together, true. But the other two didn’t know that he’d been warned specifically to keep an eye on them.

      “Damn, Keith, you’re acting bizarre,” Lee said, staring at him. “Think of what’s happened. Focus is the most important thing here.”

      More important than human life? Keith wondered. “I’ll be right with you.”

      “He’s working on that instinct thing he’s got going for him,” Matt said, shrugging. “Come on, Lee, let’s get started. Wonderboy will be along.”

      Keith waited until they walked back toward the northern shore.

      And then he began to search the clearing.

      Oh, yeah. He was focused.

      There were certain images a man could never quite get out of his mind. Dead men. Dead friends. Friends who’d had everything in the world to live for. Young. The best of the best.

      He stiffened, listening. People were coming. The island was becoming more crowded by the minute. He swore softly.

      “Hey there,” came a throaty, masculine voice.

      A man of about sixty, followed by a petite young woman and two men about his own age, was entering the clearing.

      “Hey,” Keith replied, stepping forward, a smile on his face.

      Ah, yes, the masses had arrived. He didn’t know why he was suddenly so certain that he and his associates weren’t the only ones traveling incognito.

      

      BETH AND THE GIRLS EMERGED from the lush greenery in the center of the island to reach the beach. It was beautiful. Once upon a time there had been a very small naval base on Calliope Key, a research center. It had been abandoned, but back toward the interior the ruins of the old buildings remained, allowing a safe haven of sorts if the weather turned really foul. Today, though, the sun was streaming down, a soft breeze was blowing, and the sea appeared incredibly serene.

      Ben was on the beach, barefoot, in cutoffs and shades, dressed remarkably like the man who had just scared Beth. He glanced up when he saw them coming. “Back so soon? I thought you were exploring, seeing if there was anyone else around.”

      At thirty-four, Beth thought, her brother was in his prime. He had, however, taken the task of raising his daughter to heart. Despite the fact that he had lost his wife years ago, he was still far more prone to spend his nights at home rather than out at the boat clubs—though he did belong to Rock Reef, where she worked as a social director—seeking companionship. Beth actually wished he would be more of a sinner at times. She knew how much Amber meant to him, but she was afraid that he wasn’t allowing much room in his life for the future. He had been madly in love with Amber’s mom, his high-school sweetheart, and nothing had ever changed his desire to see that Amber had everything he could provide, including his company—whether she wanted it or not, since Amber had reached that age where she wanted to spend her nights prowling the malls with her friends, rather than bonding with her dad. She adored him. She was simply being a teenager.

      “We were exploring,” Beth said.

      “We met a guy,” Amber said.

      “Wicked

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