sweep of gulls, the flight of egrets, but she had yet to wander into any of the little shops.
She wasnât in St. Chris for souvenirs.
Perhaps she would drag a table near the window and work with that view. When the breeze was right she could catch snippets of voices, a slower, more fluid dialect than she heard on the streets of New York, where sheâd based herself for the last few years.
Not quite Southern, she thought, such as you would hear in Atlanta or Mobile or Charleston, but a long way from the clipped tones and hard consonants of the North.
On some sunny afternoons she could sit on one of the little iron benches that dotted the waterfront and watch the little world that had formed here out of water and fish and human sweat.
She would see how a small community of people like this, based on the Bay and tourists, interacted. What traditions, what habits, what clichés ran through them. Styles, she mused, of dress, of movements, of speech. Inhabitants so rarelyrealized how they conformed to unspoken rules of behavior dictated by place.
Rules, rules, rules. They existed everywhere. Sybill believed in them absolutely.
What rules did the Quinns live by? she wondered. What type of glue had fashioned them into a family? They would, of course, have their own codes, their own short-speak, with a pecking order and a reward and discipline standard.
Where and how would Seth fit into it?
Finding out, discreetly, was a priority.
There was no reason for the Quinns to know who she was, to suspect her connection. It would be better for all parties if no one knew. Otherwise, they could very well attempt, and possibly succeed in blocking her from Seth altogether. Heâd been with them for months now. She couldnât be sure what heâd been told, what spin they might have put on the circumstances.
She needed to observe, to study, to consider, and to judge. Then she would act. She would not be pressured, she ordered herself. She would not be made to feel guilty or responsible. She would take her time.
After their meeting that afternoon, she thought it would be ridiculously simple to get to know the Quinns. All she had to do was wander into that big brick building and show an interest in the process of creating a wooden sailboat.
Phillip Quinn would be her entrée. Heâd displayed all the typical behavioral patterns of early-stage attraction. It wouldnât be a hardship to take advantage of that. Since he only spent a few days a week in St. Chris, there was little danger of taking a casual flirtation into serious territory.
Wrangling an invitation to his home here wouldnât present a problem. She needed to see where and how Seth was living, who was in charge of his welfare.
Was he happy?
Gloria had said theyâd stolen her son. That theyâd used theirinfluence and their money to snatch him away.
But Gloria was a liar. Sybill squeezed her eyes shut, struggling to be calm, to be objective, not to be hurt. Yes, Gloria was a liar, she thought again. A user. But she was also Sethâs mother.
Going to the desk, Sybill opened her Filofax and slid the photograph out. A little boy with straw-colored hair and bright blue eyes smiled out at her. Sheâd taken the picture herself, the first and only time sheâd seen Seth.
He must have been four, she thought now. Phillip had said he was ten now, and Sybill remembered it had been six years since Gloria showed up on her doorstep in New York with her son in tow.
Sheâd been desperate, of course. Broke, furious, weepy, begging. Thereâd been no choice but to take her in, not with the child staring up with those huge, haunted eyes. Sybill hadnât known anything about children. Sheâd never been around them. Perhaps that was why sheâd fallen for Seth so quickly and so hard.
And when sheâd come home three weeks later and found them gone, along with all the cash in the house, her jewelry, and her prized collection of