itâs time you all faced up to a few things. Itâs been two years since the three of you have been in this house together.â
âI know how long itâs been,â Jo said bitterly. âAnd I didnât get any more of a welcome from Brian and Lexy than Iâd expected.â
âMaybe youâd have gotten more if youâd expected more.â Kate set her jaw. âYou havenât even asked about your father.â
Annoyed, Jo stabbed out her cigarette. âWhat would you like me to ask?â
âDonât take that snippy tone with me, young lady. If youâre going to be under this roof, youâll show some respect for those who provide it. And youâll do your part while youâre here. Your brotherâs had too much of the running of this place on his shoulders these last few years. Itâs time the family pitched in. Itâs time you were a family.â
âIâm not an innkeeper, Kate, and I canât imagine that Brian wants me poking my fingers into his business.â
âYou donât have to be an innkeeper to do laundry or polish furniture or sweep the sand off the veranda.â
At the ice in her tone, Jo responded in defense and defiance. âI didnât say I wouldnât do my part, I just meantââ
âI know exactly what you meant, and Iâm telling you, young lady, Iâm sick to death of that kind of attitude. Every one of you children would rather sink over your heads in the marsh than ask one of your siblings for a helping hand. And youâd strangle on your tongue before you asked your daddy. I donât know whether youâre competing or just being ornery, but I want you to put it aside while youâre here. This is home. By God, itâs time it felt like one.â
âKate,â Jo began as Kate headed for the door.
âNo, Iâm too mad to talk to you now.â
âI only meant ...â When the door shut smartly, Jo let the air out of her lungs on a long sigh.
Her head was achy, her stomach knotted, and guilt was smothering her like a soaked blanket.
Kate was wrong, she decided. It felt exactly like home.
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FROM the fringes of the marsh, Sam Hathaway watched a hawk soar over its hunting ground. Sam had hiked over to the landward side of the island that morning, leaving the house just before dawn. He knew Brian had gone out at nearly the same hour, but they hadnât spoken. Each had his own way, and his own route.
Sometimes Sam took a Jeep, but more often he walked. Some days he would head to the dunes and watch the sun rise over the water, turning it bloody red, then golden, then blue. When the beach was all space and light and brilliance, he might walk for miles, his eyes keenly judging erosion, looking for any fresh buildup of sand.
He left shells where the water had tossed them.
He rarely ventured onto the interdune meadows. They were fragile, and every footfall caused damage and change. Sam fought bitterly against change.
There were days he preferred to wander to the edge of the forest, behind the dunes, where the lakes and sloughs were full of life and music. There were mornings he needed the stillness and dim light there rather than the thunder of waves and the rising sun. He could, like the patient heron waiting for a careless fish, stand motionless as minutes ticked by.
There were times among the ponds and stands of willow and thick film of duckweed that he could forget that any world existed beyond this, his own. Here, the alligator hidden in the reeds while it digested its last meal and the turtle sunning on the log, likely to become gator bait itself, were more real to him than people.
But it was a rare, rare thing for Sam to go beyond the ponds and into the shadows of the forest. Annabelle had loved the forest best.
Other days he was drawn here, to the marsh and its mysteries. Here was a cycle he could understandâgrowth and decay, life and death.
Isaac Crowe
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