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CHAPTER
ONE
The moment he realized his daughter was lost, Daniel Gregory knew his
life had to change.
Alone as usual,
he balanced on the second-story beam of what was going to be his oceanfront
inn and stared down at the teenage baby-sitter. She stood just outside
the construction site, tears streaking her face. He'd feel sorry for her
if not for the panic searing his nerves.
"How did this
happen?" He swung himself to the sand. "How could you let a deaf child
out of your sight?"
"I'm sorry, Mr. Gregory.
Honest. I didn't mean to. But the phone rang, and she was just playing
on the porch, and I thought I'd only be a minute..."
The girl's excuses
ran out, and she gestured up the path to the house.
"You don't think she
went toward the water?" Daniel's heart clenched. He shot a glance at the
ocean that lapped the shores of the Georgia sea island. The tide was going
out; the surf, a gentle ripple.
She shook her head,
tears welling. "Sarah's scared of the waves. I don't think she'd go that
way. I looked out by the road but didn't see her, so I ran down here to
find you."
The girl dissolved
in heart-wrenching sobs, and Daniel gave her shoulder a quick pat. He
was about as helpless at comforting her as he was at taking care of his
child, he thought bitterly.
"Come on, Patsy. We'll
find her." He couldn't let the kid see how scared he was, or she'd be
no help at all. "You go back up and search the house. I'll check the beach."
Patsy brushed tears
from frightened brown eyes. "Right away. I'll look everywhere." She turned
and darted up the path through sea grass and palmettos toward the house.
Daniel rounded the
edge of the construction, scanning the beach. The usual few tourists,
a fisherman or two. No little girl with dark hair in untidy braids and
the cords of her hearing aid dangling like a necklace.
He forced himself
to look again, tamping down the need to run, to shout her name. Shouting
wouldn't do any good. Sarah wouldn't hear him.
His gut cramped. Sarah,
where are you? If she was on the beach he'd see her, but she could
be on any of a dozen paths that led through tangles of scrub growth toward
the road. He had to make a choice. He jogged down the beach, his gaze
probing every inch of sand and beach grass.
Two months. He'd had
his daughter for two short months, and already something bad had happened.
He was the only one in her life she could count on, and he'd let her down.
I promise. Sarah,
I promise. I'll find a way to take better care of you. I promise. Just
be all right.
"Hurry up, Aunt Leigh.
The tide's going out, and I want to look for shells."
Leigh Christopher
smiled down at her impatient nephew. Mark had to do everything in a hurry,
just like his mother. Her sister, Jamie, always had an agenda in mind,
and Jamie's seven-year-old son echoed that quality. Meggie, Mark's five-year-old
sister, lagged behind, happily inspecting the tiny insect that crawled
along the fan of a palmetto.
"We've got plenty
of time, Mark." Leigh shifted a load of beach towels from one arm to the
other.
Mark cast an expert
glance at the sun. With his blue eyes and freckles he looked just like
Jamie. But Jamie would have been glancing at the businesslike watch she
always wore.
"You said you had
to go back to the house and work on your... your resumes." He said
the unfamiliar word carefully. Mark always had to know the right word
for things. "So we have to hurry."
"We're not in that
much of a rush," Leigh began, when Meggie tugged at her hand. Leigh turned
to her. "What is it, sweetie?"
"Look, Aunt Leigh.
Look at that little girl. She's losted."
"Lost," Mark corrected.
"We have to help her."
Meggie trotted ahead.
Leigh gazed along
the path that wound to the beach. Meggie had seen what she hadn't -- a
child scrunched against the rough base of a palmetto, arms wrapped protectively
around her legs, head down.
Leigh's heart thumped. Meggie was right. She might not know the word,
but she knew what "losted" looked like. Leigh hurried toward the little
girl. "Hi, there," she called. "Are you okay?"
The child didn't respond.
Meggie scampered up to her and tugged her arm. "Hey, are you losted?"
The little girl jerked
her head up at the touch, panic filling eyes that were as dark a brown
as her hair. Leigh saw what she wore around her neck, and it hit her like
a blow to the heart. A hearing aid. The child was deaf.
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