As Chief Grady walked
through his front door, his wife, Sharon, threw herself into his arms.
“Thank God you’re okay! I’ve been worried sick. You
didn’t answer any of my calls or texts,” she sobbed; then pulled away slapping
angrily at his chest. “You scared the crap out of me!”
“What happened to ‘thank God you’re okay’?” He laughed,
still rubbing the spot where she’d hit him even though it hadn’t hurt. “You
know…I could book you for assaulting an officer.”
Sharon Grady was wearing her
patented “I’m not amused face” and had no trouble resisting his attempt at
humor. Mayor Farmington had called her and told her the whole story so, for
hours, she’d feared the worst. Now, her head was spinning with conflicting
emotions.
“Is Sylvia…” she paused, to afraid to finish her
sentence.
“Sylvia is fine. I took her to the ER and they pumped her
stomach. They admitted her to the, you know, the ninth floor.”
“You save her life, Tom.”
Again, Sharon Grady threw
her arms around her husband and held him close. This time she did not smack him
but, instead, she savored the embrace.
They enjoyed a quiet dinner together, thankful that they had each other
and a marriage of mutual love and respect.
Later, they cuddled up on the couch for a little television before
bed.
“Why do we have all these channels and there’s still
nothing to watch?” he grumbled.
“We could always put in a movie or see if there’s
anything new on pay-per-view.” Sharon responded but was cut off by a detached
voice from the television set.
“We
interrupt this program to bring you a breaking news story. Live from the news desk, your own Neighborhood
News team digs deep into the tragedy on the beach to bring you breaking stories
first. Good evening, I’m Sue Taylor. Today,
crisis on the beach was averted thanks to quick action by our Chief of Police,
Thomas Grady. As you can see in this amateur video, Chief Grady risked his own
life to save a woman on the beach. At
this time, it is unclear who this woman is or who alerted Chief Grady to her
presence but this reporter is left wondering if we are now living by ‘Suicide
Beach’. As we uncover more to this story,
we will keep you informed. This is Sue Taylor and you’re watching Neighborhood
News.”
“I
can’t believe this! Suicide Beach? Are they in-freaking-sane?” Grady snarled.
“If I find out who fed them that quote-unquote amateur video I’m going to…I
don’t know what I’ll do just yet but you’d better believe they’ll be sorry!”
Chief Grady’s rant was cut short by the
telephone’s shrill ring. Though he’d motioned for Sharon to let it go, she
answered anyway. With an apologetic
grimace, she held out the receiver to her husband and mouthed, it’s Mayor
Farmington. Scowling, he took the phone from her.
“This is Grady.”
“How dare you,” Mayor Dale Farmington spat hatefully.
“I’ve been waiting here wondering what happened; terrified that both you and my
wife might be dead and instead I have to hear about it on the evening news! You
are a smug, self righteous sonofa-”
“Hey! If you had even a shred of decency you’d have gone
down there are saved Sylvia yourself, Dale.” Grady interrupted. “And, for your information, she told me not
to call you.”
“Well, put her on the phone. I want to speak with her
this instant!”
“She’s not here.”
“Where the heck is she? She’s clearly a very sick woman.
Did she leave with Harold? I command you to tell me right now.”
Annoyed with Dale’s tone,
Grady simply hung up. Command, huh? Sit
and stew over that, Mister Mayor,
he thought while turning the ringer off.
He felt a certain satisfaction, as if somehow his defiance was in honor
of Sylvia and her first step toward recovery. That night, he slept better than
he had since they’d discovered the first bodies on the beach.
Ever since the mutilated bodies of twelve
high school students had been discovered on the beach, the entire nation
watched with morbid fascination as the residents of the tiny beachfront
community suffered horrific and untimely deaths. The live feeds from the
Neighborhood News team were beamed all across the country. So, shortly after
the news update, calls started pouring in to the local hotels. Within hours,
the previously empty establishments were booked to almost summertime
reservation numbers, yet none of them were families or even couples. All were
single bookings and, in the morning, when the patrons arrived their purpose appeared
crystal- clear. The first establishment
to telephone Chief Grady was the Bayside Inn. Bayside’s proprietors, Charlotte
and Ian Donovan, were startled by the influx of less-than-savory clientele to
their swank summer hotspot.
“Chief Grady, I think you ought to come over here, right
away, Charlotte insisted as her husband fed her the words to say. “We’re quite concerned. These people,
they’re… what was term you used, Ian? Disturbing, yes. They’re disturbing.”
“What have they done?” Grady questioned.
“No, it’s not what they’ve done, per se, it’s well…
you’ll just have to come see because I can’t explain it!”
The frazzled innkeeper hung
up, leaving Grady with no choice but to go see what had rattled the
Donovans. On the drive, he noticed a
dramatic rise in out-of-state license plates cruising through town and a plenty
of packed parking lots.
“Hey, Chief,” Francine’s voice called over his radio.
“When you’re done at Bayside, you’re presence has been requested at The Sand
Dollar, Coral Reef Cove Inn, Ocean Vista Motel and the EconoLodge. Barker is on his way to The Wayfarer
Motorlodge. After that he’ll hit his
aunt’s B&B and that dive over on Second Avenue. I can never remember the
name of that place. Chuck and I always call it the Fleabag.”
“Francine, I’m not the only one who can hear you on this
frequency! How many times do I have to remind you? Sheesh! What if they heard
you?”
“Then, hopefully, they’ll hear this. Call my cousin, Vic,
he has an exterminator business and he could help you out.”
“Francine!”
“Oops, sorry, Chief!”
Grady was still shaking his
head as he pulled in to Bayside’s parking lot. The motley collection of misfits
outside gave him a subtle hint as to the issue. Though they all looked
different; men, women, old, young, thin, heavy, rich and poor, there was one
common thread. Each and every newcomer had the same look in his or her eyes
that Sylvia Farmington had - the look of despair. Instead of warding people
away from their ocean-side community, the newscasters had appealed to the
desolate masses, like a beacon, welcoming them to “Suicide Beach”. Give me
your tired, poor and huddled masses, Grady thought flippantly, and we’ll line ‘em up like a hot buffet for the
Kracken, or whatever the heck it is out there.
After doing his best to spin a silver
lining to the worried proprietors, Charlotte and Ian Donovan, Chief Grady drove
to the other locations and churned out the same words to the other innkeepers.
“Essentially,” he told them. “There’s nothing I can do
unless these out-of-towners start acting up. As of right now, these people
aren’t breaking any laws by coming here. When, or if they try to set foot on
that beach, that’s when there will be an issue and I’ll have grounds for
arrest. Until then, what do you want me to say? You own a hotel and people want
to stay here…you should be happy.”
All arguments levied were
immediately dismissed. The Chief and his Deputies had bigger issues to
tackle.
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