The novella introduces readers to Will Colby, a New York college professor, and his wife Betty. The married couple are in a rural small town cleaning out an old house that was owned and occupied by Betty's deceased father. Gifune is a master of atmosphere, so the obligatory “one dark night” element rises to glorious fruition. As the two are finishing off a long day of cleaning and packing boxes, they are interrupted by a knock on the door. Will goes to answer and is met by Bob Laurent, an elderly man introducing himself as a close friend of Betty's. Hesitantly, Will invites the man inside.
Will excuses himself to inform Betty of their unexpected visitor. While she dolls herself up for unwanted company, Bob tells Will stories of the friendship he shared with Betty's father, a friendship that extended to Betty for many years. He goes as far as suggesting Betty called him “Uncle Bobbie”. When Betty arrives, Bob begins a physical and emotional recollection by reminding Betty of all the wonderful things they experienced in the house. Later, while Bob is in the bathroom, Betty confesses to Will that she has no idea who this man is.
The Rain Dancers is a potboiler brimming over with an intensity void of any gut-wrenching, explicit violence. Gifune's prose of “less is more” works effectively to build this novella into an emotional, creepy, and atmospheric narrative despite the lack of on-page horror. The author's engaging storytelling incorporates marital fears of unfaithfulness, complacency, and insecurity with a repressed childhood memory too disturbing to fully reveal. It's a masterful blend of secrecy and horror that only Gifune could create. This novella is a must everything – read, reprint, repost, make it relevant.

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