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Excerpt

Excerpt

Carolina Moon

She
woke in the body of a dead friend. She was eight, tall for her age,
fragile of bone, delicate of feature. Her hair was the color of
corn silk, and slid prettily down her narrow back. Her mother loved
to brush it every night, one hundred strokes with the
soft-bristled, silver-backed brush that sat on the graceful
cherrywood vanity.

The child's body remembered this, felt this, each long, sustained
beat with the brush and how it made her imagine herself a cat being
petted. How the light slanted over the pin boxes and the bottles of
crystal and cobalt, and struck the silver back of the brush as it
flashed over her hair.

She remembered the scent of the room, smelled it even now.
Gardenia. Always gardenia for Mama.

And in the mirror, by lamplight, she could see the pale oval of her
face, so young, so pretty, with those thoughtful blue eyes and
smooth skin. So alive.

Her name was Hope.

The windows and French doors were closed because it was high
summer. Heat pressed its damp fingers against the glass, but inside
the house the air was cool, and her cotton nightgown stayed so
crisp it crackled when she moved.

It was the heat she wanted, and the adventure, but she kept those
thoughts inside as she kissed Mama good night. A dainty peck
against a perfumed cheek.

Mama had the hall runners taken up and rolled into the attic every
June. Now the loblolly pine floors with their coating of paste wax
felt slick and smooth under the young girl's bare feet as she
wandered out, down the hall with its panels of bald cypress and
paintings in thick frames of dull gold. Up the sharp, winding
curves of the stairs to her father's study.

There her father's scent. Smoke, leather, Old Spice, and
bourbon.

She loved this room, with its rounded walls and big, heavy chairs
with leather the color of the port her papa sometimes drank after
supper. Here the circling shelves were jammed full with books and
treasures. She loved the man who sat behind the enormous desk with
his cigar and his shot glass and his ledgers.

The love was an ache of the heart in the woman inside the child, a
shaft of longing and of envy for that uncomplicated and complete
love.

His voice boomed, his arms were strong and his stomach soft as he
enveloped her in a hug that was so different from the gentle and
restrained good-night kiss from Mama.

There's my princess, going off to the kingdom of dreams.

What will I dream about, Papa?

Knights and white chargers and adventures over the sea.

She giggled, but rested her head on his shoulder a bit longer than
usual, humming a little in her throat like a purring kitten.

Did she know? Somehow did she know she would never sit safe on his
lap again?

Back down the stairs, past Cade's room. Not his bedtime, not yet,
because he was four years older and a boy and could stay up late on
summer nights watching TV or reading books as long as he was up and
ready for his chores in the morning.

One day Cade would be the master of Beaux Reves, and sit at the big
desk in the tower study with the ledgers. He would do the hiring
and firing and oversee the planting and the harvest and smoke
cigars at meetings and complain about the government and the price
of cotton.

Because he was the son.

That was fine with Hope. She didn't want to have to sit at a desk
and add up figures.

She stopped in front of her sister's door, hesitated. It wasn't
fine with Faith. Nothing ever seemed to be all right with Faith.
Lilah, the housekeeper, said Miss Faith would argue with God
Almighty just to irritate Him.

Hope supposed that was true, and even though Faith was her twin,
she didn't understand what made her sister so prickly all the time.
Just tonight she'd been sent straight to her room for sassing. Now
the door was shut tight and there was no light under it. Hope
imagined Faith was staring up at the ceiling with that sulky look
on her face and her fists clenched tight as if she waited to box
with the shadows.

Hope touched the doorknob. Most times she could coax Faith out of
those black moods. She could huddle in bed with her in the dark and
make up stories until Faith laughed and the spit in her eyes dried
up again.

But tonight was for other things. Tonight was for adventures.

It was all planned, but Hope didn't let the excitement come until
she was in her own room with the door shut. She left the light off,
moving quietly in the dark that was silvered by moonlight. She
changed her cotton gown for shorts and a T-shirt. Her heart drummed
pleasantly in her chest as she arranged the pillows on the bed in a
shape that to her naive and childish eyes resembled a sleeping
form.

From under the bed, she took her adventure kit. The old dome-topped
lunch box held a bottle of Coca-Cola gone warm, a bag of cookies
sneaked carefully from the kitchen jar, a small, rusted penknife,
matches, a compass, a water pistol-fully loaded-and a red plastic
flashlight.

For a moment she sat on the floor. She could smell her crayons, and
the talc that clung to her own skin from after her bath. She could
hear, just barely hear, the music drifting out from her mother's
sitting room.

When she slid her window open, quietly took out the screen, she was
smiling.

Young, agile, and bright with anticipation, she swung her leg over
the sill, found a toehold in the trellis mad with vining
wisteria.

The air was like syrup, and the hot, sweet flavor of it filled her
lungs as she climbed down. A splinter stabbed into her finger,
causing her to hiss in a breath. But she kept moving, keeping her
eyes on the lighted windows of the first floor. She was a shadow,
she thought, and no one would see her.

She was Hope Lavelle, girl spy, and had a meeting with her contact
and partner at precisely ten thirty-five.

She had to stifle a giggle, and was breathless from the laughter
that wanted to bubble out as she hit the ground.

To add to her own excitement, she darted and dashed behind the
thick trunks of the grand old trees that shaded the house, then
peeked around them toward the faint blue light that pulsed against
the window in the room where her brother watched TV, up to the
clearer yellow glow where each of her parents spent their
evening.

Discovery now would mean disaster for the mission, she thought,
crouching as she raced through the gardens and the sweet scent of
roses and night-blooming jasmine. She must avoid capture at all
costs, as the fate of the world rested on her shoulders and those
of her stalwart partner.

The woman inside the child screamed out. Go back, oh please, go
back. But the child didn't hear.

She wheeled her pink bike out from behind the camellias, where
she'd stashed it that afternoon, snuggled her kit into the white
basket, then pushed it over the cushion of grass alongside the long
gravel drive until the house, and the lights, were dim with
distance.

When she rode, she rode like the wind, imagining the pretty little
bike was a souped-up motorcycle, complete with nerve gas dispenser
and oil slick shooter. The white plastic streamers danced from the
ends of the handlebars and slapped each other gaily.

She flew through the thick air, and the chorus of peepers and
cicadas became the panther roar of her speeding machine.

At the fork in the road, she bore left, then jumped nimbly off her
bike to wheel it off the road, down into the narrow gully where it
would be hidden by brush. Though the moon was bright enough, she
took the flashlight out of her kit. The smiling Princess Leia on
her watch told her she was fifteen minutes early. Without fear,
without thought, she turned onto the narrow path into the
marsh.

Into the end of summer, of childhood. Of life.

There the world was alive with sound, water and insects and small
night creatures. The light came in thinning ribbons through the
canopy of tupelo and cypress with its dripping moss. Here magnolia
blossoms grew fat with a perfume high and sweet. The way to the
clearing was second nature to her. This meeting place, this secret
place, was well tended, guarded, and loved.

As the first to arrive, she took old twigs and stubby branches from
the stockpile of wood and set to making a fire. The smoke
discouraged mosquitoes, but she scratched idly at bites already
dotting her legs and arms.

She settled down to wait with a cookie and her Coke.

As time passed her eyes drooped, and the music of the marsh lulled
her. The fire ate through the thin scraps of wood, then settled
down to a simmer. Drifting, she rested her cheek on her updrawn
knees.

At first the rustling was just part of her dream of dodging down
twisting Paris streets to evade the wicked Russian spy. But the
snap of a twig underfoot had her head jerking up and the sleep
clearing from her eyes. The wide grin came first, but she quickly
shifted into the stern professional expression of a top secret
agent.

Password!

There was silence in the marsh but for the monotonous buzz of
insects and the faint crackle of a fire dying.

She scrambled to her feet, the flashlight cocked in her hand like a
gun. Password! she called again and aimed the short beam of
light.

But now the rustle came from behind her, so she whirled, heart
leaping, beam dancing in nervous jerks. Fear, something so rarely
tasted in eight short years, slicked hot and burning in her
throat.

Come on, cut it out. You're not scaring me.

A sound from the left, deliberate, taunting. As the next snake of
fear curled in her gut she took a step in retreat.

And heard the laughter, soft, panting, close.

Running now, running through thick shadows and jumping light.
Terror so sharp in the throat that it slices screams before they
can escape. Footsteps pounding behind her. Fast, too fast, and too
close. Something hits her from behind. Bright pain in her back that
vibrates down to the soles of her feet. The jolt of bone and breath
as she falls hard to the ground. Air rushes out of her lungs in a
sob as the weight of him pins her down. She smells sweat and
whiskey.

She screams now, one long cry of desperation, and calls out for her
friend.

Tory! Tory, help me!

And the woman trapped inside the dead child weeps.

When Tory came back to herself she was lying on the flagstones of
her patio, wearing only a nightshirt already soaked through from
the thin spring rain. Her face was wet, and she tasted the salt of
her own tears.

Screams echoed in her head, but she didn't know if they were her
own or those of the child she couldn't forget.

Shivering, she rolled onto her back so the rain could cool her
cheeks and wash the tears away. The episodes-spells, her mother
always called them-often left her weak and queasy. There had been a
time she'd been able to fight them off before they swamped her. It
had either been that or the shocking sting of her father's
belt.

I'll whip the devil out of you, girl.

To Hannibal Bodeen, the devil was everywhere; in every fear and
temptation lurked the hand of Satan. And he'd done his best to
drive that wickedness out of his only child.

At the moment, with the sickness circling in her belly, Tory wished
he'd managed it.

It amazed her that for a space of years she'd actually embraced
what was in her, had explored it, used it, even celebrated it. A
legacy, her grandmother had told her. The sight. The shining. A
gift of the blood through the blood.

But there was Hope. More and more there was Hope, and those flashes
of her childhood friend's memories hurt her heart. And frightened
her.

Nothing she'd experienced, either blocking or embracing this gift,
had taken her like this. Taken her away, taken her over. It made
her helpless, when she'd promised herself she would never be
helpless again.

Yet here she was, sprawled on her own patio in the rain without any
memory of how she got outside. She'd been in the kitchen brewing
tea, standing at the counter, the lights and the music on, reading
a letter from her grandmother.

That was the trigger, Tory realized, as she slowly got to her feet.
Her grandmother was her link to her childhood. To Hope.

Into Hope, she thought, as she closed the patio door. Into the pain
and fear and horror of that terrible night. And still she didn't
know the who or the why.

Still shivering, Tory went into the bath, stripped and, turning the
shower hot, stepped under the spray.

"I can't help you," she murmured, closing her eyes. "I couldn't
help you then, I can't help you now."

Her best friend, her sister of the heart, had died that night in
the swamp while she'd been locked in her room, sobbing over the
latest beating.

And she had known. She had seen. She had been helpless.

Guilt, as fresh as it had been eighteen years before, swarmed
through her. "I can't help you," she said again. "But I'm coming
back."

We were eight years old that summer. That long-ago summer when it
seemed those thick, hot days would last forever. It was a summer of
innocence and foolishness and friendship, the kind that combines to
form a pretty glass globe around your world. One night changed all
of that. Nothing's been the same for me since. How could it
be?

Most of my life I've avoided speaking of it. That didn't stop the
memories, or the images. But for a time I tried to bury it, as Hope
was buried. To face it now, to record this out loud, if only for
myself, is a relief. Like pulling a splinter out of the heart. The
ache will linger awhile.

She was my best friend. Our bond had the deep and immediate
intensity only children are capable of forging. I suppose we were
an odd pair, bright and privileged Hope Lavelle and dark, shy Tory
Bodeen. My daddy leased a small patch of land, a little corner of
the grand plantation hers owned. Sometimes when her mama gave a big
society dinner or one of her lavish parties, mine would help out
with the cleaning and serving.

But those gaps of social standing and class never touched the
friendship. Indeed, they never occurred to us.

She lived in a grand house, one her reputedly eccentric ancestor
had built to resemble a castle rather than the Georgian style so
popular during its era. It was stone, with towers and turrets and
what you would call battlements, I suppose. But there was nothing
of the princess about Hope.

She lived for adventures. And when I was with her, so did I. With
her, I escaped from the miseries and turmoils of my own house, my
own life, and became her partner. We were spies, detectives,
knights on quests, pirates, or space marauders. We were brave and
true, bold and daring.

In the spring before that summer, we used her pocketknife to cut a
narrow slice in our wrists. Solemnly, we mixed our blood. We were
lucky, I suppose, we didn't end up with lockjaw. Instead we became
blood sisters.

She had a sister, a twin. But Faith rarely joined in our games.
They were too silly for her, or too rough, too dirty. They were
always too something for Faith. We didn't miss her temper or
complaints. That summer, Hope and I were the twins.

If someone had asked me if I loved her, I would have been
embarrassed. I wouldn't have understood. But every day since that
terrible time that August, I have missed her as I have missed that
part of me that died with her.

We were to meet at the swamp, in our secret place. I don't suppose
it was really much of a secret, but it was ours. We often played
there, in that damp green air, having our adventures among the
birdsong and moss and wild azalea.

It was against the rules to go in after sunset, but at eight, rules
are an exciting thing to break.

I was to bring marshmallows, and lemonade. Part of that was pride.
My parents were poor and I was poorer, but I needed to contribute,
and had counted out the money from the mason jar I hid under my
bed. I had two dollars and eighty-six cents on that August
night-after having bought the supplies at Hanson's-the sum account
of my financial worth rested in a glass canning jar and consisted
of pennies and nickels and some hard-won quarters.

We had chicken and rice for supper. The house was so hot, even with
the fans going on high, that eating was a chore. But if there was a
grain of rice on your plate, Daddy expected you to eat it and be
grateful. Before supper there was grace. Depending on Daddy's mood
it would last anywhere from five minutes to twenty, while the food
sat going cold and your belly grumbled and the sweat ran down your
back in nasty rivers.

My grandma used to say that when Hannibal Bodeen found God, even
God tried to find another place to hide.

He was a big man, my father, and grew thick in the chest and arms.
I've heard that he was once considered handsome. Years carve a man
in different ways, and my father's years had carved him bitter.
Bitter and stern with a meanness under it all. He wore his dark
hair slicked back, and his face seemed to rise out of that dome
like sharp-edged rocks out of a mountain. Rocks that would flay the
skin off your bones at one careless misstep. His eyes were dark,
too, a burning kind of dark I recognize now in the eyes of some
television preachers and street people.

My mother feared him. I try to forgive her for that, for fearing
him so much she never came to my side when he used his belt to whip
his vengeful god into me.

That night I was quiet at supper. Chances were he'd take no notice
of me if I was quiet and cleaned my plate. Inside me, the
anticipation of the night was like a living thing, jittery and
joyful. I kept my eyes down, trying to pace my eating so he
wouldn't accuse me of dawdling over the food, or of bolting it. It
was always a fine line to balance with Daddy.

I remember the sound of the fans whirling, and of forks scraping
against plates. I remember the silence, the silence of souls hiding
in fear that lived in my father's house.

When my mother offered him more chicken, he thanked her politely
and took a second helping. The room seemed to breathe easier. It
was a good sign. My mother, encouraged by this, made some mention
of the tomatoes and corn coming in fine, and how she'd be canning
for the next weeks. They'd be canning over at Beaux Reves, too, and
did he think it was a good idea for her to help out there as she'd
been asked.

She didn't mention the wage she'd earn. Even when Daddy's mood was
mild, you were wise not to bring up the coin that the Lavelles
would dole out for a service. He was the breadwinner in his house,
and we were not permitted to forget this all-important point.

The room held its breath again. There were times just the mention
of the Lavelles put the thunder in Daddy's dark eyes. But that
night he allowed as that would be a sensible thing. As long as she
didn't neglect any of her chores under the roof he was putting over
her head.

This relatively pleasant response made her smile. I remember how
her face softened up, and how it made her almost pretty again. Now
and again, if I think very hard, I can remember Mama being
pretty.

Han, she called him when she was smiling. Tory and I'll keep things
going around here, don't you worry. I'll go on over and talk to
Miss Lilah tomorrow and see about getting it all done. With the
berries coming in, I'll be making jelly, too. I know I've got some
paraffin around here, but I can't think where it's got to.

And that, just that casual remark about jelly and wax and
absentmindedness changed everything. I suppose my mind had drifted
off during their conversation, that I was thinking of the adventure
to come. I spoke without thought, without knowledge of the
consequences. So I said the words that damned me.

The box of paraffin's in the top shelf of the cabinet over the
stove, up there behind the molasses and the cornstarch.

I simply said what I saw in my head, the square box of block wax
behind the dark bottle of blackstrap, and reached for my cold sweet
tea to wash down the starchy grains of rice.

Before I took the first sip, I heard the silence come back, the
mute wave that swamped even the monotonous hum of fans. My heart
started to pound inside that vacuum, one hard hammer strike after
the next, with a ringing that was only inside my own head and was
the sudden and vicious pulse of blood. The pulse of fear.

He spoke softly then, as he did, always did, just before the rage.
How do you know where the wax is, Victoria? How do you know it's up
there, where you can't see it? Where you can't reach it?

I lied. It was foolish, because I was already doomed, but the lie
tumbled out, a desperate defense. I told him I guess I saw Mama put
it there. I just remember seeing her put it there, is all.

He tore that lie to shreds. He had a way of seeing through lies and
ripping them to uneven pieces and sticky parts. When did I see
that? Why didn't I do better in school if my memory was so keen I
could remember where the paraffin was a year after the last canning
season? And how was it I knew it was behind the molasses and
cornstarch and not in front of them, or beside them?

Oh, he was a clever man, my father, and never missed the smallest
of details.

Mama said nothing while he spoke in that soft voice, punching the
words at me like fists wrapped in silk. She folded her hands, and
her hands shook. Did she tremble for me? I suppose I like to think
so. But she said nothing as his voice grew louder, nothing as he
shoved back from the table. Nothing as the glass slipped from my
hand and crashed to the floor. A shard of it nicked my ankle, and
through the rising terror I felt that little pain.

He checked first, of course. He would tell himself that was the
fair thing, the right thing to do. When he opened the cabinet,
pushed aside the bottles, slowly took that square blue box of
canning wax out from behind the dark molasses, I cried. I still had
tears in me then, I still had hope. Even as he yanked me to my
feet, I had the hope that the punishment would only be prayers,
hours of prayer until my knees went numb. Sometimes, at least
sometimes that summer, that was enough for him.

Hadn't he warned me not to let the devil in? But still, I brought
wickedness into his house, shamed him before God. I said I was
sorry, that I didn't mean to. Please, Daddy, please, I won't do it
again. I'll be good.

I begged him, he shouted scripture and with his big, hard hands
dragged me toward my room, but still I begged him. It was the last
time I did so.

There was no fighting back. It was worse if you fought him. The
Fourth Commandment was a sacred thing, and you would honor your
father in his house, even when he beat you bloody.

His face was deep red with his righteousness, big and blinding as
the sun. He only slapped me once. That was all it took to stop my
pleading, and my excuses. And to kill my hope.

I lay across the bed on my stomach, passive now as any sacrificial
lamb. The sound his belt made when he slid it out of the loops on
his work pants was a snake hissing, then a crack, sharp, slick, as
he snapped it.

He always snapped it three times. A holy trinity of cruelty.

The first whip is always the worst. No matter how many times
there's been a first, the shock and pain is stunning and rips a
scream from your belly. Your body jerks in protest. No, in
disbelief, then the second slap bites into you, and the
third.

Soon your cries are more animal than human. Your humanity has been
compromised, buried under an avalanche of pain and
humiliation.

He would preach as he beat me, and his voice would become a great
roar. And under that roar was a hideous excitement, a vile sort of
pleasure I didn't understand and recognize. No child should know
that slippery undercoating, and from that, for a time, I was
spared.

The first time he beat me, I was five. My mother tried to stop him,
and he blackened her eye for it. She never tried again. I don't
know what she did that night while he whaled away, beating at the
devil that gave me visions. I couldn't see, not with eyes nor with
mind, anything but a blood-red haze.

The haze was hate, but I didn't recognize that either.

He left me weeping and locked the door from the outside. After a
while, the pain sent me to sleep.

When I awoke, it was dark and it seemed a fire burned in me. I
can't say the pain was unbearable, because you bear it. What choice
is there? I prayed, too, prayed that whatever was inside of me had
finally been driven out. I didn't want to be wicked.

Yet even as I prayed, the pressure built in my belly, and the
tingling came, like sharp little fingers dancing over the back of
my neck. It was the first time it came into me this way, and I
thought I was sick, feverish.

Then I saw Hope, as vividly as if I were sitting beside her in our
clearing in the swamp. I smelled the night, the water, heard the
whine of mosquitoes, the buzz of insects. And, like Hope, I heard
the rustling in the brush.

Like Hope, I felt the fear. Fresh, hot gushes of it. When she ran,
I ran, my breath sobbing out so that my chest hurt from it. I saw
her fall under the weight of whatever leaped out at her. A shadow,
a shape I couldn't see clearly, though I could see her.

She called for me. Screamed for me.

Then I saw nothing but black. When I woke, the sun was up, and I
was on the floor. And Hope was gone.

Excerpted from CAROLINA MOON © Copyright 2002 by Nora
Roberts. Reprinted with permission by G.P. Putnam's Sons, a member
of Penguin Putnam Inc. All rights reserved.

 

Carolina Moon
by by Nora Roberts

  • Genres: Fiction, Romance
  • Mass Market Paperback: 470 pages
  • Publisher: Jove
  • ISBN-10: 0515130389
  • ISBN-13: 9780515130386