touch her.â She was cold, so cold. She looked down at the photo again. It was Annabelle. Young, eerily beautiful, and cold as death. âShe shouldnât have left us. She shouldnât have gone away. Why did she go?â
âMaybe she had to,â Bobby said quietly.
âNo, she belonged with us. We needed her, but she didnât want us. Sheâs so pretty.â Tears rolled down Joâs cheeks, and the picture trembled in her hand. âSheâs so beautiful. Like a fairy princess. I used to think she was a princess. She left us. She left us and went away. Now sheâs dead.â
Her vision wavered, her skin went hot. Pressing the photo against her breasts, Jo curled into a ball and wept.
âCome on, Jo.â Gently, Bobby reached down. âCome on with me now. Weâll get some help.â
âIâm so tired,â she murmured, letting him pick her up as if she were a child. âI want to go home.â
âOkay. Just close your eyes now.â
The photo fluttered silently to the floor, facedown atop all the other faces. She saw writing on the back. Large bold letters.
DEATH OF AN ANGEL
Her last thought, as the dark closed in, was Sanctuary.
TWO
A T first light the air was misty, like a dream just about to vanish. Beams of light stabbed through the canopy of live oaks and glittered on the dew. The warblers and buntings that nested in the sprays of moss were waking, chirping out a morning song. A cock cardinal, a red bullet of color, shot through the trees without a sound.
It was his favorite time of day. At dawn, when the demands on his time and energy were still to come, he could be alone, he could think his thoughts. Or simply be.
Brian Hathaway had never lived anywhere but Desire. Heâd never wanted to. Heâd seen the mainland and visited big cities. Heâd even taken an impulsive vacation to Mexico once, so it could be said heâd visited a foreign land.
But Desire, with all its virtues and flaws, was his. Heâd been born there on a gale-tossed night in September thirty years before. Born in the big oak tester bed he now slept in, delivered by his own father and an old black woman who had smoked a corncob pipe and whose parents had been house slaves, owned by his ancestors.
The old womanâs name was Miss Effie, and when he was very young she often told him the story of his birth. How the wind had howled and the seas had tossed, and inside the great house, in that grand bed, his mother had borne down like a warrior and shot him out of her womb and into his fatherâs waiting arms with a laugh.
It was a good story. Brian had once been able to imagine his mother laughing and his father waiting, wanting to catch him.
Now his mother was long gone and old Miss Effie long dead. It had been a long, long time since his father had wanted to catch him.
Brian walked through the thinning mists, through huge trees with lichen vivid in pinks and red on their trunks, through the cool, shady light that fostered the ferns and shrubby palmettos. He was a tall, lanky man, very much his fatherâs son in build. His hair was dark and shaggy, his skin tawny, and his eyes cool blue. He had a long face that women found melancholy and appealing. His mouth was firm and tended to brood more than smile.
That was something else women found appealingâthe challenge of making those lips curve.
The slight change of light signaled him that it was time to start back to Sanctuary. He had to prepare the morning meal for the guests.
Brian was as contented in the kitchen as he was in the forest. That was something else his father found odd about him. And Brian knewâwith some amusementâthat Sam Hathaway wondered if his son might be gay. After all, if a man liked to cook for a living, there must be something wrong with him.
If theyâd been the type to discuss such matters openly, Brian would have told him that he could enjoy creating a perfect