The Cove

The Cove Read Free Page A

Book: The Cove Read Free
Author: Catherine Coulter
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pleading with them to help her.
    â€œBut then he called, and your mama acted like nothing had ever happened. You know what, Sally? My parents were mighty relieved when she left. She would have been a loser, a failure, a millstone around their necks if she’d left your father. She was special, a daughter to be proud of, when she was with him. Do you ever see your grandparents?”
    â€œThree times a year. Oh, God, Aunt Amabel, I hated him. But now—”
    â€œNow you’re afraid the police are looking for you. Don’t worry, baby. No one would know you in that disguise.”
    He would, Sally thought. In a flash. “I hope not,” she said. “Do you think I should keep wearing the black wig here?”
    â€œNo, I wouldn’t worry. You’re my niece, nothing more, nothing less. No one watches TV except for Thelma Nettro, who owns the bed-and-breakfast, and she’s so old I don’t even know if she can see the screen. She can hear, though. I know that for a fact.
    â€œNo, don’t bother with the wig—and leave those contacts in a drawer. Not to worry. We’ll just use your married name. Here you’ll be Sally Brainerd.”
    â€œI can’t use that name anymore, Amabel.”
    â€œAll right then. We’ll use your maiden name—Sally St. John. No, don’t worry that anyone would ever tie you to your dead papa. Like I said, no one here pays any attention to what goes on outside the town limits. As for anyone else, why no one ever comes here—”
    â€œExcept for people who want to eat the World’s Greatest Ice Cream. I like the sign out at the junction withthat huge chocolate ice cream cone painted on it. You can see it a mile away, and by the time you get to it, your mouth is watering. You painted the sign, didn’t you, Amabel?”
    â€œI sure did. And you’re right. People tell us they see that sign and by the time they get to the junction their car just turns toward The Cove. It’s Helen Keaton’s recipe, handed down from her granny. The ice cream shop used to be the chapel in the front of Ralph Keaton’s mortuary. We all decided that since we had Reverend Vorhees’s church, we didn’t need Ralph’s little chapel too.” She paused, looking into a memory, and smiled. “In the beginning we stored the ice cream in caskets packed full of ice. It took every freezer in every refrigerator in this town to make that much ice.”
    â€œI can’t wait to try it. Goodness, I remember when the town wasn’t much of anything—back when I came here that one time. Do you remember? I was just a little kid.”
    â€œI remember. You were adorable.”
    Sally smiled, a very small smile, but it was a beginning. She just shook her head, saying, “I remember this place used to be so ramshackle and down at the heels—no paint on any of the houses, boards hanging off some of the buildings. And there were potholes in the street as deep as I was tall. But now the town looks wonderful, so charming and clean and pristine.”
    â€œWell, you’re right. We’ve had lots of good changes. We all put our heads together, and that’s when Helen Keaton spoke up about her granny’s ice cream recipe. That Fourth of July—goodness, it will be four years this July—was when we opened the World’s Greatest Ice Cream Shop. I’ll never forget how the men all pooh-poohed the idea, said it wouldn’t amount to anything. Well, we sure showed them.”
    â€œI’d say so. If the World’s Greatest Ice Cream Shop is the reason the town’s so beautiful now, maybe Helen Keaton should run for president.”
    â€œMaybe so. Would you like a ham sandwich, baby?”
    A ham sandwich, Sally thought. “With mayonnaise? Real mayonnaise, not the fat-free stuff?”
    â€œReal mayonnaise.”
    â€œWhite bread and not fourteen-vitamin seven-grain whole

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