The Carson Springs Trilogy: Stranger In Paradise, Taste Of Honey, And Wish Come True - Plot & Excerpts
Television and newspaper coverage of the sensational arrest slowed to a trickle, and a weary relief began to set in. Doors remained bolted at night (by now the habit was too ingrained), but joggers began to appear once more in the park and on remote roads after sunset. The occasional nighttime hitchhiker could be seen as well, thumb cocked, blinking at oncoming headlights. Talk that had centered around the bizarre arrest of Sister Beatrice moved on to other things: the weather, which had turned uncommonly brisk, and the music festival just two weeks away. When Ian Carpenter moved in with Sam Kiley, it caused only a minor stir. People had grown used to seeing them strolling about town hand in hand, or quietly conversing at the Tree House: Sam, with her newly rounded belly, and Wes Carpenter’s handsome young son, with his pierced ear and ponytail, looking at her the way every woman, young or old, dreams of being looked at. Even Marguerite Moore had to admit, albeit grudgingly, that the more you saw of them, the less you noticed the difference in their ages.
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