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"And
we know that in all things, God works for the good of those who love Him,
who have been called according to His purpose."
Romans 8:28
Chapter
One
If he had to go into
exile for the next six months, he couldn't pick a better place than this.
Matt Caldwell paused outside the office of the Caldwell Cove Gazette and
took a deep breath, inhaling a mixture of sea, salt, and the rich musky
aroma of the marshes. Home--Caldwell Island, South Carolina. He'd know
that distinctive smell in an instant no matter where he was on the globe.
Quiet, peaceful . . .
Pop, pop, pop-- a sharp sound broke the drowsy June silence. Matt's stomach
lurched. He ducked in the response that had become second nature in the
last few years, adrenaline pumping, fists clenching. He had to get everyone
to cover.
Fragmented imaged shot through his mind. He smelled the acrid smoke of
explosions, felt the bone-jarring crash, heard the cries of children.
It took seconds to remind himself he was in Caldwell Cove, not on a bomb-ridden
Indonesian street, seconds more to identify the sound. Some kid must be
playing with caps in the lane beside the newspaper office.
A few quick strides took him around the corner of the weathered gray building.
Sure enough, that's what it was. The gut-wrenching fear subsided, to be
replaced by anger. Those boys were way too young to be playing with caps.
What kind of parents did they have, anyway?
"What are you doing?"
His sharp question brought two young faces looking up at him. Their faces
wore identically startled expressions. Almost identical, he realized.
They had to be brothers, both towheads with round faces and big blue eyes.
The older one couldn't be more than six or seven. Definitely too young
to be smashing a strip of caps with a stone. He was surprised kids could
even get their hands on those things now.
"We weren't doing anything." The speaker clasped his hands behind
his back. His little brother nodded agreement, blue eyes round with surprise.
"Honest."
Matt frowned at the word. Honest was the last thing the kid was being.
"You were playing with caps. Don't you know that's dangerous?"
The older boy tried a smile. "We were careful. We didn't get hurt."
"Yet." It wasn't any of his business, but these two might injure
themselves. He couldn't just walk away. "Where's your mother?"
When they didn't answer he planted his hands on his hips and glared, waiting.
"Well?"
"I'm their mother."
The woman flew around the corner as she spoke. She grabbed the boys and
pulled them against her.
Matt looked into eyes the same shade of blue as the kids', sparkling with
indignation. Her softly rounded face and curling brown hair reminded him
of a Renaissance portrait, but her expression spoke more of a mother tiger,
ready to protect her young.
"Why were you shouting at my sons?" She threw the words at him.
"I wasn't shouting."
"I heard you." Her indignation turned to anger, sparking his
own in return.
"Maybe you'd shout, too, if you were paying attention to your own
kids." He knew as he said it he was going too far, but the emotions
of the past months still rode him, erasing normal politeness. "Or
don't you care what they're up to?"
The woman's mouth tightened, and she looked as if she reviewed several
things she might say before responding. "I can't imagine what concern
my child-rearing is to you."
"It isn't. But I have to care when I see kids in danger." He
forced away the images that still haunted his dreams-- of crying children
huddled into makeshift bomb shelters or lying still on crowded hospital
beds. "Your little angels were playing with caps."
"Caps?" That stopped her dead. She switched to the kids, looking
into their faces with a hand on each one's shoulder. "Ethan? Jeffrey?
Is that right?"
He waited for the quick denial again, but it didn't come. Apparently they
had more trouble fibbing to her than to a stranger. The younger one looked
down; the older flushed and nodded.
"We didn't get hurt, Mommy."
"Ethan, that's not the point. You know better, both of you. Where
did you get caps?"
The kid looked as if he searched for an appropriate answer and didn't
find it. Finally he shrugged. "We found them. In that old shed back
there." He pointed toward the rear of the building, where a tumbledown
shed leaned against the next building.
"I told you . . . " The woman stopped, and Matt saw the pink
in her cheeks deepen. She probably didn't want to be having this discussion
in front of him. "Go to your room, both of you. Right now. We'll
talk about this in a bit."
The boys scampered
around the building, and the woman looked as if she'd like to do the same.
But she turned to face him, her color still high.
"I'm sorry."
The words were stiff, making it clear she hadn't forgiven his sharp words.
"I appreciate your concern."
He shrugged. "It's
nothing." He wanted to walk away and get on with his own affairs, but
the awkward moment seemed to demand something more. He was back in Caldwell
Cove now, where everyone knew everyone else, usually for a generation or
two.
"I'm Matt Caldwell,
by the way."
"Matt . . . " Her eyes widened with what might have been surprise
but looked like shock. "I should have recognized you."
He started to make the polite response he always did when someone gushed
that they'd seen him on television, reporting from one trouble spot or
another. But she didn't give him the chance.
"I'm Sarah Reed."
Sarah Reed. Now he was the one left speechless with surprise. The woman
he'd basically accused of being a careless mother was his new partner
at the Caldwell Cove Gazette.
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