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The Crossroads Cafe

Crossroads Cafe Excerpts

Hello -- 

Welcome to chapter one and two of The Crossroads Cafe, my new novel, which will be published in August of this year by BelleBooks.  Each month until the publication date I'll post another excerpt from the book's opening chapters . If you're a bookseller, librarian or reviewer you can receive a review copy of the finished book, available by June. Just drop me a note at  with your business address.

I hope you all enjoy this "experimental" promotion for the novel. If you like what you see, tell your fellow readers to sign up for the free reading experience, too! If this works out well, I'll do the same promotion for my next book. Thanks so much for your interest and support!

Deborah Smith

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four


The Crossroads Cafe

Prologue

Crossroads, North Carolina
The Blue Ridge Mountains

Before the accident, I never had to seduce a man in the dark.  I dazzled millions in the brutal glare of kliegs on the red carpets of Hollywood, the flash of cameras at the Oscars, the sunlight on the piazzas of Cannes. Beautiful women don't fear the glint of lust and judgment in men's eyes, or the bitter gleam of envy in women's. Beautiful women welcome even the brightest light. Once upon a time, I had been the most beautiful woman in the world.   

Now I needed the night, the darkness, the shadows.  

"Put the gun down," I ordered, as I let my bra and white t-shirt fall to the ground. Behind me, a full, white moon hung in a sky of stars above the summer mountains, silhouetting Thomas and me. Frogs trilled in the forest. Beneath my bare feet, the pasture grass was soft and wet with summer dew, glistening in the moonlight. There were no bright lights in our world, not the pinpoint of a lamp in some distant window, not the wink of a jet high overhead. There might be no other souls in these ancient North Carolina ridges that night. Only Thomas, and me, and the darkness inside us both.

"I'm warning you for the last time, Cathryn," he said, his voice thick but firm. He wasn't a man who slurred his words, no matter how drunk he was. "Leave."

I unzipped my jeans. My hands trembled. I couldn't stop staring at the World War II pistol he held so casually, his right arm bent, the gun pointed skyward. Thomas had been a preservation architect; he respected fine craftsmanship, even when choosing a gun with which to kill himself. 

Slowly I pushed my jeans down, along with my panties.  The scarred skin along my right thigh prickled at the scrape of denim. I angled my right side away from the moon, trying to illuminate only the left half of my body, my face. Half of me was still perfect. But the other half . . .

I stepped out of my crumpled clothes and stood there naked, the moonlight safely behind me. The night breeze was a tongue of embarrassment, licking my scarred flesh. My hand twitched with the urge to cover my face. How badly I wanted to hide the awful parts. Thomas watched me without moving, without speaking, without breathing.

He doesn't want me, I thought. I said quietly, "Thomas, I know I'm no prize, but would you really rather kill yourself than touch me?"

 Not a word, still, not a flicker of reaction. I could barely see his expression in the shadows, and wasn't sure I wanted to. The uglies came over me like a cold tide. A festering wave of withdrawal – shyness and anger multiplied times a thousand. Me, who had once preened for the world without a shred of self-doubt.

I turned my back to him, trying not to shiver with defeat. "Just put the gun down. Then I'll get dressed, and we'll forget this ever happened."

I heard quick steps behind me, and before I could turn, his arms went around me from behind. His hands slid over my bare skin. I twisted my head to the pretty side but he bent his lips to the other and roughly kissed the rivulets of ruined flesh

No matter what might happen to us later, I saved his life that night. And, for that one night, at least, he saved mine. Hope is in the mirror we keep inside us, love sees only what it wants to see, and beauty is in the lie of the beholder.

Sometimes, that lie is all you need to survive.   


Chapter 1

The Day of the Accident
16 Months Earlier

The Four Seasons Hotel, Beverly Hills, California

The Face of Flawless, the posters scattered around the hotel's penthouse suite said, beneath a smoky, film-noir close-up of my face. I looked both innocent and come-hitherish.  A dark-haired Grace Kelly for the 21st century. The princess next door who wears thong panties. Timeless beauty. Ageless perfection. From Cathyrn Deen. Because every woman deserves to look like a star.

That kind of hype sometimes made me blush a little. Or pretend to, at least. A southern beauty queen is trained from birth to be charmingly self-deprecating. But let's be real, here: I was the most beautiful woman in the world. People Magazine said so. And Vanity Fair. And even Rolling Stone and Esquire, those cynical, sex-obsessed boys.

I had been told I was the most beautiful girl in the room – any room, anywhere -- since the time I was old enough to gurgle adorably as my father wheeled me around Atlanta's finest ballrooms and boardrooms in an emerald-green stroller custom-designed to match my eyes. I'd be paid twenty-five million dollars for my next film, a remake of Giant, co-starring me in the Elizabeth Taylor role,  Heath Ledger in the James Dean part, and Hugh Jackman in the role Rock Hudson played.

I'm the new Liz Taylor, I thought, gazing at myself happily in a huge, lighted mirror of the Four Season's penthouse suite while my personal stylists worked on me as if I were a life-sized Barbie doll. Take that, Julia Roberts and Cameron Diaz.

"We make fifteen-year-old girls look twenty-five and thirty-five-year-old women look twenty-five," Judi, my hair girl, was saying to the others as she fluffed a long strand of my mocha-black mane. "So the pornography culture will want to fuck us."

"The pornography culture?"  I said, smiling as I watched them primp me. "It's just human nature for girls to flirt and boys to appreciate it."

Randy, my make-up boy, chuckled wryly. His soft sable brush flicked across my forehead. His dark-skinned hand moved like an artist's. A poof of Flawless Ivory Cream Foundation Powder floated before us. Randy waved his brush at Judi. "Personally, I've got nothing against looking pornographic. Or younger."

Judi grunted at him. "You're a guy. It's not the same for you. Men are still considered desirable even after they turn into fat, wrinkled prunes with penises. When you're a crusty old queen you'll still get a lot of action."

"I do hope so!"  

"The porno culture?" said Luce, my wardrobe girl. "Let me tell you about the time I managed wardrobe for a triple-X producer. It was all leather corsets and high heels. And that was just for the livestock in the cast." She hooted as she tugged a silky silver dress over my plunging silver bra. I slid my arms into lacy shoulder straps and Luce smoothed the bodice over my boobs, bending down to peer at them. Checking for nipplage, as we called it. "Perky nipple on the left, Boss."

I nodded. Even my boobs were proud of themselves. "Get the Band-Aids. We don't want the press to stare at my headlights when they're supposed to be listening to my brilliant and witty thoughts about my new cosmetics empire."

Randy clucked his tongue. "Boss, you could put on a burka and spray yourself with camel musk, and men would still stare at your tits." 

"Camel musk? Maybe I should add that to my perfume line. Judi, I'm only thirty-two. What is that in camel years? How long before camels won't whistle at me on the street? Does the porno culture include camels?"

"Oh, Boss, you know what I'm saying," Judi went on. "Women are sex objects. After decades of feminism, that's still all we are. If we're not young and hot, we have no value."

"I plan to be sexy even when I'm a hundred," Luce growled. "As long as there's KY and vodka, I can get laid."

I laughed. Sex appeal was just another of life's lucky gifts, and I'd been gifted more than almost everyone else on the planet. I couldn't imagine being anything but beautiful. At least I was gracious about my fortunes. Don't hate me because I'm perfect. I'm a nice person, too, I thought.

My people – I thought of my employees the way old southerners talk of servants, as if I owned them – my people always liked me. Daddy and all my southern aunts – those golf-playing, country-clubbing doyennes of the Atlanta social scene – had trained me to be a kind and generous New South plantation mistress. I  turned to peer at Judi from under a lock of my hair, which she held out like a glossy chocolate rope as she teased the underside. "Judi, is this discussion going to segue into your ‘witches versus engineers theory?'"

"Isn't that a new reality show on Fox?" Randy asked. Luce chortled.

Judi scowled. "Laugh if you want to. But there are jerks out there who say women are witches – I mean wiccans, not bitches -- and men are engineers. That women represent emotion and sex – the dark arts -- versus men representing logic and intellect – the progressive sciences. That women have no purpose other than breeding. And thus, that it's women's job to stay desirable until they hit menopause. After that, women are supposed to just fade away."

I wagged a finger at her. "Not me. When I'm eighty years old I plan to plaster my face with Flawless Anti-Aging Spackle and promenade in public with no shame at all."

Everyone laughed. They gathered around me, their ordinary faces gazing into the mirror with my extraordinary face in the middle, like the center of a flower. Judi sighed. "Boss," she said, "You will never be ugly. I can't even picture it."

My gaze fell on the mirror image of an elegant hotel platter of raw fruit and fat-free yogurt among the make-up kits, curling irons and other clutter. Suddenly, I saw instead,  a blue-willow china plate filled with my grandmother's biscuits. Covered in gravy. Cream gravy. With flecks of pure pork sausage in it.

I don't mean I thought about biscuits and gravy. I mean I saw biscuits and gravy. Right in the mirror. I made myself breathe calmly. 

Granny Nettie.

Suddenly I remembered every detail of my mountain grandmother's weathered face, her green eyes almost frightening in their wisdom, her gray-black hair poking from beneath a tractor cap that seemed as exotic to me as the turban of a sultaness. She had died when I was twelve, on her farm in the wilderness of western North Carolina, a world as different from my Atlanta life as any foreign country, and just as lost. Her daughter, my mother, had not lived to raise me, and Granny Nettie had not lived to see me grown.

 "Eat, girl," I could hear Granny say rebelliously. "Every time life gives you biscuits and gravy, eat and rejoice." Outside her magical, stained-glass windows, sunlight and shadows draped smiles on layers of enormous, blue-green mountains. This is no place for skinny sissies, they whispered to me. The scent of Crisco, milk, sausage, flour, and butter filled my senses.  Oddly comforting. Everything will be all right, if you find what you really want.

A shiver ran up my spine. Sometimes I . . . had visions. In mirrors.

While checking my hair in a make-up booth backstage at the Oscars, I'd seen Daddy's face. It replaced mine for just a second. Peaceful, handsome, classic, sternly loving, silver-haired. The father who had been my biggest fan and toughest critic. The very-patriarchal southern daddy I adored. I was so startled by his image in the mirror I flubbed one of my lines a few minutes later, as I read the best actress nominees on camera. Millions of people watching, worldwide, and I said Merle Step instead of Meryl Streep. I turned Meryl Streep into a male country-western singer.   

When I walked back into the wings, one of my assistants ran up to me. "There's an emergency call from Atlanta," she said. "It's about your dad." He had died of a heart attack during his Oscar-night party at the club. He threw parties just to watch me give awards to other people. 

For months after that, mirrors made me nervous, something I never confessed to anyone at the time. The irony of a life spent looking in mirrors was that sometimes they looked back.   

Like now.

I blinked, feeling dizzy. "Boss, are you all right?" Judi asked. "Do you want something to eat? You're staring at the kiwi and broccoli as if they might bite you."

I took a deep breath, laughed, and fluttered a hand to my heart. "Why, I don't dare eat before a press conference. If I gain so much as one ounce the porno culture will revoke my membership card."

More laughter. I took another breath. I'm just hungry, that's all, I told myself. It means nothing. Sometimes, a biscuit is just a biscuit.

A pair of double doors burst open. Six-foot-three inches of elegant California business mogul strode in, dressed in gray Armani.

My husband, Gerald Barnes Merritt (never just ‘Gerald Merritt,' that was too plain,) was thirteen years older than me, rugged, brilliant, rich, and yes, wildly sexy in his own right. We'd been married for less than a year. He had two ex-wives, three grown children, and several successful empires in real estate, computer technology, marketing, and now, me. Thanks to him, I would head my own cosmetics empire. Flawless, by Cathyrn Deen. Actually, Gerald ran everything. He was the CEO. But hey, I was the face.

"Ready to announce your new business venture to the press, my gorgeous girl?" Gerald boomed, scattering my entourage like a rottweiller in a rabbit pen.

I preened in the mirror and  avoided looking toward the mystical food platter again.  A vision of biscuits. Right. Just my imagination. "Oh, I don't know. Can you see anything about me that needs a little more perfecting?"  

He slid his arms around me from behind, angling his head to look at me in the mirror, but careful not to muss mounds of hair and the unblemished masterpiece of my Flawless face. I felt the ridge of his penis lightly teasing me.

"You couldn't be more beautiful. I am married," he said softly, "to the girl every man wants." 

Another strange little shiver went through me. Beauty is fleeting, but biscuits are forever. I smiled and shook off the silly thought.  

I was the most beautiful woman in the world. Surely, I always would be.


Thomas

That Same Afternoon
Crossroads, North Carolina

Grief steals all the beauty in the world, then gives it back one piece at a time until you see more hope than sorrow in your life, if you're lucky. So far, I'd only reclaimed a shred here, a fragment there, hanging onto those small bits with my fingernails. My desperate cache of beauty could all be found in one place: a small cove high in the remote mountains of western North Carolina, where an old paved road and an even older, unpaved one intersected in front of a former farmhouse, a former log cabin, a cluster of whitewashed sheds, and a pair of gas pumps under a tin awning. All of it known by one name that summed up the spirit, the sustenance, and the turning points of the lives that met there.  

The Crossroads Café.

I was not necessarily an upstanding citizen of the Crossroads, but I had earned the respect of the people who mattered. Or, at least, their tolerance.   

It's never a good thing when you wake up at sunset with a hangover in a sleeping bag in the rusty bed of a sixty-year-old pick-up truck you saved from a junkyard, parked under one of the café's giant oak trees full of squirrels, who are cheerfully showering you with rotten nut shells as they do their spring housecleaning, and when you open your bleary eyes the first thing you see – and smell -- is a small, shaggy, white goat who's hopped up in your rusty outdoor bedroom and is now eating your new cell phone.

But I was used to it.

"There goes another one," I grunted. I brushed shells out of my beard. "Tell the concierge I have some complaints about the wake-up calls in this hotel. Can't a man sleep all day without being disturbed?"

Crack. Banger, the goat, looked at me with my cell phone disintegrating between his teeth. Fragments of the casing dribbled from his hairy white lips. I sighed. "I didn't want that phone, anyway."

If my brother would just stop sending me replacements, Banger might switch to something more nutritious, like hubcaps. John was determined to keep me from becoming a full-fledged Luddite. As long as I owned a cell phone, he thought there was a chance I might not end up writing crazed manifestos by lantern light in my cabin. Or shooting myself.

I was confident it wouldn't be the former.

I stretched slowly, giving every body part plenty of warning that we were about to move as a team. Sour stomach, greasy eyes, aching head, stiff back. The rest of me was only thirty-eight, but after a few hours in the truck my back always qualified for senior citizen discounts.

While testing my joints, I realized my long, brown beard was wet. And also my head, and my ponytail, and my face, and, when I lifted my beard, the front of my vintage New York Giants jersey. Soaked. Someone had doused the legacy of hall of famer Lawrence Taylor. Sacrilege.

That's when I noticed the note tied to Banger's collar. Written in black marker on a piece of torn cardboard with a Dixie Sugar logo still visible on one edge, it said:

THOMAS MITTERNICH, YOU GET YOUR BEHIND INTO MY KITCHEN BY 6:30. CATHYRN IS DOING A PRESS CONFERENCE ON A CABLE TV SHOW THEN. YOUR SORE EYES NEED THE SIGHT. DON'T MAKE ME COME BACK WITH MORE WATER.  LOVE, DELTA  

Cathryn Deen. I'd never met her, but, of course, I knew who she was. Everyone knew who she was. Pygmies in the Amazon and Mongolian yak herders living in straw huts on the Russian tundra knew who she was. Even in the Crossroads, one of the most secluded mountain communities on the eastern seaboard, celebrity culture infected us via tabloids and satellite pay-per-view.

Wincing, I eased out of the truck and stood up. After a polite glance in all directions, I stepped between the truck and the oak, pulled up the water-dampened tail of my jersey, unzipped my jeans, fetched Little Thomas from his bed, and peed on the oak's protruding roots. "Take that," I said to the squirrels.

As I re-zipped, Banger dropped my ruined phone and hopped down from the truck. He affectionately stomped one hard, cloven hoof on the toe of my running shoe and butted my left knee, hooking one horn through a hole in the denim and into the tender center of my kneecap. I saw stars for a minute.

When my head cleared, I scrubbed a hand over his floppy ears. "If there is a God," I told the goat, "He appointed you to be my conscience."

Carrying a fresh Giants jersey and clean briefs – when you regularly wake up in public, it's a good idea to keep a change of clothes in your truck – I limped from under the tree. The fine, crusher-run gravel of the parking lot was a delicate material, as granite goes, yet it still managed to make ear-splitting sounds.

Crunch, crunch, crunch, bounced off the raw walls of my skull.

I tried to tiptoe, but it didn't help.

A cathedral of sky and mountain opened over my head. I took a couple of reviving breaths and looked around. Evening light cloaked the cove in soft blue shadows; the Ten Sisters mountains, circling the cove like the thick rim of a bread bowl, glowed gold and mint-green above filaments of silver mist. On a damp day the Sisters filled with white fog, disappearing like islands in a soft, white sea. There was a reason pioneers named the Appalachians of western North Carolina the Smokies.

The view could almost clear up a hangover. Almost.

 "Thomas! Are you still out here goofing off?" Delta's squeaky drawl stabbed my eardrums. Wincing, I pivoted toward it. She leaned over the rail of the café's front veranda, a motherly, plump, angel of food under the whitewashed halo of a farmhouse-cum-restaurant porch, surrounded by an  eclectically challenged cluster of half-barrel flower pots and rump-sprung rocking chairs.

Vintage. She and the café were vintage. As a preservation architect, I loved that.  As a suicidal alcoholic clinging to every comfort I could find, I loved it even more. 

GROCERIES AND MORE, said a weathered aluminum sign hanging from the café's eaves. The "more" included everything a modern mercantile in the middle of nowhere should stock. Need shotgun shells, condoms, and a fine wine selection from the Biltmore Estate vineyards over in Asheville? Delta called that "the Valentine's Day package." You could buy it all at the Crossroads Grocery.

On the café's other side stood a cheerful trio of former hunting shacks, now reconstituted as prime business locations with signs and awnings and their own parking spaces. The one with the American flag hanging from a wall-mount by the screen door was our combination post office and Delta's brother, Bubba McKellan's, pottery studio. Behind the cafe,  FEED AND SEED summed up the retail mission of an old gray barn, and SWAP AND THRIFT nailed the purpose of the barn's enclosed lean-to.

In the cities, a note on a cash register change cup says, "Take a penny, leave a penny."

At the Crossroads, a hand-lettered placard on the lean-to said: "Take a chair, leave a chair."  

The entire, fabulously organic café compound was fronted, on the roadside near the gas pumps, by a big wooden sign hung from four-by-four posts. The sign alerted strangers to all the wonders that could be had right there, all in one place:

Homecooking

Groceries/Gas/Diesel/Kerosene/Propane

Hardware/Farm Supplies

Camping/Fishing/Hunting Gear

Bait

Post Office

Gem Shop

Video Rentals

Camp Sites

Maps/Books/Music

At the very bottom of that list, recently nailed into place, a small sign added, AND WIRELESS INTERNET ACCESS.

"Are you coming inside or do I have to take a hickory switch to your behind?" Delta called.

"I'm meditating," I called. "Banger and I are working on the meaning of existence. So far, we think it involves butting things with your head." 

"Spare me your ill-tempered notions. Come on, you're gonna miss Cathyrn on TV! She's having a press conference for her make-up company! They're gonna interview her, live!"

Delta clearly believed a glimpse of her movie-star kin was always good for my jaded soul.

"If I come in, will you give me a hot biscuit?"

"Git! In! Here!" She jabbed a finger at the double front doors, where a small sign said, The Crossroad's Café. Good Food And Then Some. "I haven't got time to sweet-talk you anymore! See all those SUV's and minivans in the parking lot? I got a restaurant full of family reunioners from Asheville in here. I'm volunteering you to work as a busboy!" I gave her a thumbs-up. She went back inside. 

 "Don't wait up for me, honey," I told Banger, who was eating a cigar butt I'd dropped.  

I walked slowly toward the café, already tired of being awake and sober. All right, I'd go inside and watch Cathyrn Deen be beautiful.

I needed the fantasy.


After The Press Conference

Laughing, I led my entourage through one of the Four Season's highly discreet exits, designed especially for VIP's. The hotel is one of the most famous celebrity hideaways in the world. Frank Sinatra sang by the piano in the main bar on his eightieth birthday. Renee Zellweger was mistaken for a cocktail waitress there, once, and good-naturedly took bar orders from a table full of businessmen. The front-desk staff speak a mysterious dialect of English, one with vaguely euro-asian accents, as if imported from some elegant little country especially to serve celebrities. On any given day you can glimpse a number of famous bodies being massaged in private cabanas around the pool. The lobby bars are a swoon-fest of Hollywood sightings, and also are rumored to be where the most expensive hookers hang out.

A pair of valets ran to get my car, nearly tripping over their feet when they saw me. Ah, the power of a clingy, white angora sweater, black leggings, and knee-high Louis Vuitton boots with stiletto heels. I looked like a wholesome dominatrix. 

"You wowed everyone at your press conference today, Ms. Deen," one of the valets gushed. "You looked great."

"Why, bless your heart."

"Get Ms. Deen's car," a bodyguard ordered. The valet ran.  

I was trailed by two private security men, five publicists, two assistants, and one assistant to an assistant of my agent. Everyone but me had a phone attached to his or her ear, and they were all talking, but not to me or each other. I laughed again as I signed autographs for the bellmen. My entourage chattered on without me, as perky as parakeets on cocaine.     

Yes, the  press conference was huge. Fabulous. Cathyrn's doing lunch with Vogue next week. Cover photos are under negotiation. Pencil us in for Tuesday, in New York.

Marty? Book Cathyrn with Larry King for the twelfth.

No, Cathyrn can't do Oprah on that schedule. She'll be in England to film a couple of last-minute scenes for The Pirate Bride. Sophia Coppola insists.

Hello, I'm calling for Cathyrn Deen. Ms. Deen wants you to find her a great, authentic voice coach to work with her on Giant. Yes, I know she can naturally do a southern accent, but Ms. Deen says a Texas drawl is very different from an Atlanta accent. She wants a coach from Dallas. No, not the old TV show. The city. Ms. Deen requires a city-southern-Texas-rich accent for the film. She's meeting with her producers and director this weekend . . .

 "Women like you ruin other women's lives, bitch!"

The voice rang out as I was about to step into the open door of my Trans Am. The car was a mint condition 1977 T-Top, black and gold. I halted with one high-heel on the door rim. Several scruffy young women darted from behind the hotel's glorious palms, waving homemade signs.

 REAL WOMEN DON'T HAVE TO BE FLAWLESS

CATHYRN DEEN HATES REAL WOMEN

"You're telling women to hate themselves for having ordinary faces and bodies," one of the protestors yelled. "But you're the freak, not us!"         

My publicists formed a circle around me, like pioneers trying to ward off a band of angry Sioux. The protestors bobbed and weaved as the guards chased them.  I was open-mouthed with amazement. "Why didn't anyone tell me these girls were out here?" I demanded. "I could have invited them to the press conference. Listened to their concerns. Offered them a makeover--"

"Never negotiate with terrorists," one of the publicists said. Seriously.

"Terrorists? Oh, come on. They're just sorority girls with bad hair. They're probably sophomores at Berkley. Maybe I'm their class protest project. " I called to the guards. "Bring them over here and let me talk to them!"

My publicists did a group pirouette to stare at me in horror. "Those girls could be carrying mace or pepper spray," one said.

"Or a hidden bomb," a second added.

I laughed. "Or iPods filled with horrifying Ashley Simpson songs, or hair brushes with really sharp bristles, or . . ."

"Please, Cathyrn. The hotel's still full of photographers. If the press catches wind of this, these protestors will make the news and that's all people will remember about the launch of Flawless Cosmetics." 

That got me. Gerald's put so much work and money into this venture, I thought. I can't ruin this day for him. I blew out a breath. "All right, y'all win." They hustled me into the Trans Am. One of the publicists, a young man, put a hand to his heart as he shut my door. "Ms. Deen, I'm so sorry about this. If I ran the world, all the ugly chicks with big mouths would be sent to an island, somewhere."

I stared at him. I'd never thought of myself as the poster girl for men who thought women should keep quiet and look pretty. As I drove out of the Four Season's elegant, palm-endowed shadow, the girls glared at me from behind the phalanx of security people. They raised their hands and flipped me the bird.

I didn't know how to deal with people who weren't in awe of me.

So in return I gave them a polite, beauty-queen wave.


Thomas

Just after dark, east coast time.

I took a break from bussing tables at the café and sat down on a rough oak bench at the edge of the café's parking lot. I lit another crumpled cigar butt I found in my jeans' front pocket. In front of me, sandwiched between a section of split-rail fence and a steep hill planted in gnarled apple trees, a  faded two-lane road meandered past. Gloriously labeled by its antique name, The Asheville Trace, it hinted that modern horsepower could get you to Crossroads and back to civilization without packing a lunch. Coming from Asheville, the Trace slithered out of the eastern Sisters along their foothills, bordered the vast expanse of the grassy cove, yawned past me,  then wandered up a twisting route into the foothills, heading west to the county seat. During rush hour, we locals might see, oh,  a car on the Trace every ten minutes. 

Which suited me just fine.

I tossed the cigar butt, feeling nauseous. Hand-rolled local tobacco – a North Carolina heritage – was a smooth smoke but hard on an empty stomach. I sniffed burning hair. A fleck of tobacco smoldered in my beard. A few quick slaps, and the beard was saved. I wouldn't have to drop out of the  ZZ Top lookalike contest.  

More deep breaths. I inhaled the good smell of wood in nearby chimneys, the clean, springtime fragrance of earth, and the wafting aromas of dinner from Delta's kitchen.  The mountains curled a breeze through Delta's cooking and carried it all over the cove. Even out at my cabin I sometimes swore I smelled her famous biscuits.  

 "Hey, Mitternich," Jeb Whittlespoon yelled from the café's side door. "Poker at nine. Right after the dining room closes." 

I gave him a thumbs-up. 

One winter, when it snowed heavily, I slip-tied an aluminum rowboat to Jeb's  ATV and we did a little motorized sledding. Jeb, a young Iraq veteran, was still working out some post-traumatic stress issues at the time, so he was more than happy to careen the ATV down the Trace's snowy slide into the cove, towing me and my rowboat behind him. I jerked the slip-tie free at the precise moment when my counterweight mass and my projectile mass met in a perfect orgasm of force and release, and I and the rowboat sailed over a drop-off on the road's shoulder. We remained airborne for a good twenty yards before the boat plowed a pre-spring furrow in the southeast quadrant of the café's vegetable garden. Ten heads of winter cabbage were collateral damage. 

Delta, who is Jeb's mother, forgave me. She was just glad to see her son laugh, again. I'd promised her I'd coax him out of his shell, and I did.

She even paid for my stitches.

I got up from the bench and went back to the café.

Poker at nine, drunk by midnight, sleeping with goats by dawn.

A typical Saturday night.

I bussed tables covered in red-checkered oil cloth under old tin ceiling lamps that cast warm pools of light. The café' was Mayberry, a Norman Rockwell painting, and a rerun of The Waltons all rolled into one. Ordinarily the atmosphere soothed me, but that night I felt edgy -- not just the usual blue-black mood that came on as the sun set, but something worse.

Around me, happy families visiting from the campgrounds and the suburbs of Asheville ate plates of the best southern home cooking anywhere. Delta's daughter-in-law, Becka,  and sister-in-law, Cleo, hustled between the tables. Becka and Cleo flirted with me harmlessly, tolerated me endlessly, bossed me around. Cleo prayed for me. Becka told Jeb, her husband, to keep guns away from me when I was drunk. 

I turned around with a pan full of dishes and found a little boy staring up at me. Gaping, mesmerized. Oh, God, I thought. He looks like Ethan. Even more than most.

Every boy under five reminded me of Ethan. Every breath I took reminded me of Ethan. Clouds reminded me. Toys in an ad reminded me. Spatters of fake blood on an episode of CSI reminded me. I wondered if I still had half a bottle of vodka under the truck's front seat.

"Mister, are you a hillbilly?" the boy asked. His voice trembled. He was afraid of me.

The father rushed over. "He didn't mean any harm."

I could only nod. Words stuck in my throat. A glance confirmed that everyone in the diner was staring at me. Six-four, bearded, wrinkled Giants jersey, faded jeans, old running shoes, blood-shot eyes, topped with a ponytail and a long, wavy brown beard. Go figure.

Delta stepped between me and the worried customers, grinning. "Aw, this is no hillbilly," she announced. "This is just Thomas, a crazy architect from New York City." To me she whispered, "You know we all love you around here, but you've got a strange look in your eyes tonight. You're scaring kids and giving hillbillies a bad name. Take a break."

I nodded again, my throat aching. I carried the bus pan to the kitchen, then walked outside. I went to my truck, climbed in, and pulled a fresh bottle of vodka from under the front seat. I had my rituals. Open a bottle, pull down the visor, look at the pictures I'd laminated and taped there. Sherryl and Ethan on his first birthday, in Central Park, laughing for me among some flowers. And the other picture, the one from the archives of the New York Times, a picture like dozens of pictures that had been studied, analyzed, and archived.

A picture from the morning of September 11, 2001, when my wife jumped from the north tower of the World Trade Center with our son in her arms. I touched both pictures with a fingertip, then took my first drink of the night.        


Ventura Highway
Five p.m., west coast time.

"Caaaathyrn!" A car full of teenage boys passed me in an open Jeep, waving and honking their horn.

I waved back vaguely, still distracted from the incident at the hotel, I zoomed along the Ventura Highway in heavy traffic, headed northwest out of L.A. The producers of Giant, a husband-wife team, owned a fabulous Arabian horse ranch outside Camarillo, near the coast. I planned to spend the weekend as their houseguest, discussing the script and meeting with the director. Gerald had kissed me goodbye at the hotel on his way to board our Lear Jet. He was headed to London to meet with some of our Flawless investors.

My right foot cramped as I pressed the Trans Am's accelerator. High-heeled, skintight ostrich leather boots are not meant for driving a muscle car. I had a garage filled with Mercedes and Jaguars, but I loved my classic, redneck wheels. Clearly, I'd inherited some fast-car genes from my Grandpa Nettie. He died young – murdered in a fight at a roadhouse outside Asheville, so I never knew him, but Granny said he'd been a bootlegger and mountain dirt-track racer in his youth. I glanced at the Trans Am's speedometer. Only 80 mph. By California highway standards, I was just coasting. "Hey, Grandpa, watch this," I said aloud.

I wiggled my foot, pressed harder, and sped up. The wind curled in through the open T-top, whipping my hair. It was a perfect spring day, the temperature in the seventies, the smog just a pretty, lavender-blue mist on the horizon. I crested a hill and grinned at a vista laced with the lime-green outlines of large vegetable fields. Some day I was going to hire someone to plant vegetables at Granny's farm in North Carolina. And send me pictures.

Other drivers waved and honked at me – mostly men and boys, smiling, putting hands to their hearts in admiration. Tractor-trailer drivers blew their deep, diesel horns as I zoomed past. I waved and smiled in return. I admit it: I enjoyed being a movie star on the freeway. What a great stage. I felt immortal.

Lights flashed in my rear-view mirror. I glanced back and scowled when I discovered a familiar blue mini-van.  A hand came out of the van's passenger window, waved gleefully at me,  disappeared, then returned clutching a large video camera.  A shaggy, gray-blonde guy poked his head out and fitted the video cam's viewfinder to one eye.

"Damn."

 Mason Angston. A jerk, even by the aggressive standards of showbiz paparazzi. We had a long acquaintance, most of it annoying to me and profitable to him. He'd videotaped me as I walked through airports all over the world, trailed me on the outskirts of movie sets,  hopped out of the bushes around nightclubs and restaurants, and once snapped photos of me sunning topless in Spain, which the world could still view for five dollars per download on the Internet.   

And now he intended to tape me driving on the Ventura Highway? It must be a slow week in the celebrity scandals business. Were Inside Edition and Entertainment Tonight that desperate for footage?  

I wasn't in the mood. Bitch. Bad role model for girls. Those words kept echoing through my mind.

And biscuits. Granny Nettie's gravy-covered biscuits. Suddenly I could almost taste them again, just as I had in the hotel suite, almost hear her ghost whispering in my ear, Take comfort, now. Rejoice. You'll live.

Strange thoughts. A chill on my skin. I shook it off, glared at Mason in the rearview mirror, and stomped the Trans Am's accelerator.

For months afterwards, I would try to remember every detail of that moment. To remember every nuance, everything I felt and did, everything I should have done differently. I would be haunted by everything I did wrong in that split-second of eternity, when my life changed forever.

The toe of my boot slipped sideways off the pedal. The boot's long, narrow heel went under the pedal and jammed there. My foot was trapped for maybe two seconds, three at the most. Just enough time for the Trans Am to slow down, just enough time to encourage the clueless driver in the lane to my left. He whipped his small, aged hatchback in front of me. I stared in horror at the car's taillights, which I was about to rear-end at ninety miles per hour.

I jerked my foot free and stomped the brake. The Trans Am hunched down like a horse trying to slide to a stop from a full gallop. The tires screamed. I was still closing in on the hatchback with no hope of not hitting it. I swung into the emergency lane. The Trans Am began sliding sideways,  and I couldn't straighten it.

The rear right bumper clipped a guard rail. The car spun full-circle. I couldn't hold onto the steering wheel. The front bumper slammed into the guard rail, plowed it down, and the Trans Am went airborne, riding the guard rail at high-speed, it's underbelly ripping open. The roar and shriek of metal filled my ears. So did my screams.

The Trans Am shot off the road near a strawberry field. I didn't see the field's hogwire fence before I plowed through it. I didn't see the shallow irrigation ditch, either. The Trans Am hit it at an angle, tilted, and rolled completely over.

My head slammed into the steering wheel. Thank god for the wheel's padded leather cover. And thank god I was wearing a seatbelt. The car flopped to a halt in the ditch, upright but tilted, with the passenger-side wheels resting on the slope.

Quiet. Everything suddenly went so quiet, and so still. My head throbbed, but otherwise, I was unhurt. Dazed, I managed a few deep, shaky breaths. I heard people yelling, but for some reason, none of them came over to help me. I fumbled for the door handle. It wouldn't work. I shoved. There was no give. The door was jammed.  My head began to clear, and I felt a little panicky. What was that scent?

Smoke. That's smoke. And gasoline. Get out of this car. Climb out the T-top.  

I scrambled to my knees on the bucket seat. My boot heels snagged on the floor-shift on the center console behind me. I grabbed the window sill with both hands. The metal was warm. Acrid smoke flooded my nose and throat. A coughing fit doubled me over.  

"Beautiful," Mason called. "Beautiful, Cathyrn. Work it, Cathyrn."

Mason stood a few feet away, videotaping me.

"I need help. Help me, you cretin!"  

"Come on, Cathyrn, you can help yourself. You can make it! You're a star, baby! And star's are always resourceful!" He crept closer, the camera never wavering. I shoved myself headfirst out the window and tumbled to the ground. "See there?" he called, laughing.

I staggered to my feet, but my left boot heel sank into the soft earth, and I tripped. I landed hard on my right side. Hair, face, right arm, right hip, right leg. Into the wet muck.

What was this slick fluid on my hands? This smell? Oh, my God. Gasoline. The ground was soaked with it.  And now, on my right side, so was I.

"Hurry, Cathyrn!" Mason called. "I think your catalytic converter's about to catch the weeds on fire! Raise your head so I can get a good frontal! Work it, baby!" 

I scrambled out of the ditch on all fours. At that point, my deepest desire was to reach Mason, wrap my hands around his throat and strangle him.     

Behind me I heard a soft, sinister whoosh

A fireball went up my right side.

Some victims of violent accidents say time seems to slow down. They say they felt disconnected, almost like a spectator. Not me. Imagine sticking your upper body into a hot oven. Imagine plunging your hands into the glowing coals of your backyard grill.

Imagine. That's how it felt.

You're incredible, Cathyrn!" Mason yelled. I would never forget the thrill in his voice.  

I wasn't incredible. I was burning alive.  

Roll. Get down on the ground and roll. I threw myself face down by the Trans Am, flailing, screaming, rolling. The heat retreated, the flames vanished. I went limp, gasping, peeing on myself, vomiting bile.

Four or five seconds. I was on fire for no more than four, maybe five, seconds, witnesses said later.  

Shock began taking hold. Now, yes, I felt weirdly calm, pleasantly detached. It'll take a week of spa treatments to get this smell off me, I thought.

I heard sirens, I heard people still shouting. Some of them were even crying. One of them moaned, "Ohmygod, Ohmygod, look at her. I want to puke." Which struck me as incredibly rude.

I managed to lift my head. Mason crouched less than an arm's length from my face, breathing hard, excited. I could see him through the smoke, I could hear him gulping for air, like a man about to come. Was he giving off that nauseating scent? It smelled like burned hair, and . . . burned . . . meat. He aimed the wide, black eye of his lens directly at my face. I looked into the glassy black mirror of that eye, the world's eye, and saw a grotesque, charred, sickening reflection.

And then I realized it was me.  


Thomas

That night, some gnawing anxiety drew me beyond the starlit outline of the high evergreen forests on the ridges, filled me with even more loneliness. At night, the cove and the mountains around the Crossroads turn deep-green, almost black. You can feel the potential for evil in the darkness then, the surveillance of arrogant trees, the deadly lure of the cliffs, the subversive hollows, the drowning charm of the whitewater creeks, the hunger of wild animals slipping through the shadows, just waiting for you to become their next meal.

Steadied by several deep swallows of vodka, I stood by the Trace, touched only by the faintly lit café sign there, watching the universe sprinkle its streetlights across the sky above Ten Sisters.

Bring it on, I told the evil. I know you're out there.

All those far-away worlds, unknown. But here, in the light of the Crossroads, the world was safe and familiar, an old world, an illusion like all safe places, but still. That night I felt like a hollow column asked to hold up the weight of the sky without a partner. I needed someone. And someone needed me. Who?

Come here, where it's safe, in the light. We'll fight the evil together.

I couldn't understand why those words went through my mind.

A brilliant, brief sparkle caught my eye.  

Drawn down to earth, a star flashed, cooled and vanished over the western horizon.    


Chapter 2

Thomas
Wild Woman Ridge

I'd been trying to buy the Nettie place for four years, since my first day in the cove. I'd arrived at the Crossroads one rainy summer morning around dawn on a big Harley I bought when I left Manhattan. Just driving, looking for the next place to spend a couple of days getting drunk. The North Carolina mountains swayed their hips and I followed that dance into their womb, seduced. I'd never thought I see valleys and vistas more intimate and breath-taking than the Adirondacks of upstate New York. My old man had been a master carpenter there, and I had good memories.

When my brother, John, and I were kids the old man took us along on jobs at the Adirondacks' grand old resorts and turn-of–the-century "camps," those rustic log mansions created by gilded-age barons like the Vanderbilts. The old man was a tough S.O.B., not given to much sentiment, but he loved the memory of our mother, who died too young for me or John to remember, he loved us, he loved his craft and he loved the Adirondacks. He taught us to fight against bullies, modern whimsies and anyone who tore down the old for the sake of a dollar; he taught us to take responsibility for our thoughts, feelings and peckers, and he taught us to create whole worlds with a hammer, a saw and our bare hands. He only had an eighth-grade education, so he couldn't put his appreciation for fine architecture into words, but it showed in his reverence for the old places, his attention to every detail. When I rolled into the valley of the Crossroads, I thought of him, and felt less alone.   

The old dirt road that crosses the Trace near the café led me off the pavement and into the woods that morning. I was just looking for an isolated place to throw down a sleeping bag and up-end a bottle. I didn't know it then, but I was following ghosts along a path so old the earliest French explorers had written about it in the 1700's. Before that, the Cherokees had carved its trail markers on rocky outcroppings. The hieroglyphs that still remained – on boulders too big to steal -- mesmerized me, and before I knew it I was deep in a fairytale hollow, riding alongside a fern-draped stream called Ruby Creek.

Lost.

I parked the bike and hiked up a ridge to get my bearings. When I reached the top I was surprised to find an abandoned pasture. Head-high pine saplings dueled with the tall grasses. Dew gleamed on sagging chestnut fence posts, worn gray by the weather. The pasture vanished around a curve in the forest like a green river going around a bend; I couldn't resist following it. 

I walked for a long time before I crested a rise and halted. There, looking back at me at the far end of an alley lined with huge oaks and poplars, shimmering in the opalescent light of the sunrise, among old gray barns and fallen sheds and the faintest hint of flower beds in a forgotten front yard, gleaming pink and gold in the magic light, was a classic Craftsman cottage.

You've seen these bungalows in movies, you've seen versions of them in every neighborhood in America; they're the strong, small, proud children of efficiency and grace. Some are elaborate and some are not; this one, hidden in the middle of a high-mountain farm, was the crown jewel of its kind. 

I ran to it like a reunited lover through the weedy grass and the small pines. I bounded up wide stone steps and stood, awed, in the curving arch of the deep stone porch. I circled the house a dozen times, admiring the heavy, exposed rafters and their braces, that vaguely Asian touch that makes one think of a friendly pagoda. I caressed the  thick stone chimney and foundation and pulled down a long tangle of vines that had climbed all the way to the roof and threatened to cover the wide, gabled dormer above the porch.        

Shameless, I cupped my hands around my eyes and looked through the windows at the maple floors and wormy chestnut wall boards, the built-in cherry cabinets and columned doorways. I chanted, "Look at that. My God, look at that," as if all the ghosts had followed me off the trail for a house tour.  Finally, dazed with appreciation, I stood back and gazed at the windows themselves. Stained glass bordered each one with intricate, geometric patterns. Sunlight glinted off coarse, pea-sized rubies and sapphires tucked in the soldered intersections. This incredible house wore a necklace of hand-made windows decorated with local gemstones.

It badly needed repairs. A fallen oak limb had gouged a hole in the roof. Several windows were cracked. Termites had ruined several rafters.

The house needed me.

The Nettie place, it was called. The Nettie place up on Wild Woman Ridge. Mary Eve Nettie had inherited it from her parents, who'd torn down the original pioneer-era log house in 1932 and built themselves a brand-spanking new Sears kit home to celebrate their acquired wealth as bootleggers of the best homemade rum and bourbon in western North Carolina. The Nettie's picked the kit out of a catalog and sent Sears a check for five-thousand dollars, becoming folk heroes to the entire mountain region and pissing off the Internal Revenue agents who couldn't prove the Nettie's hadn't earned the fortune panning rubies.

Sears shipped the entire three-bedroom bungalow by train from its Chicago lumber yards. Everything – including maple floorboards, mantels, cabinets, windows, doors, trimwork, and even the cedar shingles --  arrived at the Asheville depot in crates and stacks. Franklin Nettie, Mary Eve's father, carted the materials on a flatbed lumber truck to the cove, where everything was transferred onto mule wagons for the rough trail up to the farm on the ridge.  

The finished house had been and still was a showplace of fine craftsmanship and detail. Mary Eve later embellished it in small, perfect ways, including the stained-glass windows. She'd made them herself, panned the stones from the creek, soldered the panes. They were one-of-a-kind creations, just as the bungalow was one of the few unsullied examples of a Sears craftsman-style kit home. A house like that, sitting empty. Uninhabited, ignored, left to rot. Sacrilege.

I was furious. Clearly, Barnard Deen, the owner, a wealthy lawyer down in Atlanta, simply didn't give a damn about his mother-in-law's mountain farm. I made a purchase offer. Deen rejected it. He wouldn't even talk with me. I got letters from some low-level assistant.  When I offered to lease the house and repair it I got a very formal letter telling me no, and not to trespass. When Barnard Deen died and his daughter, Cathyrn, inherited the Nettie farm, I tracked down her business manager in California and made an offer, again. Whether my offer ever reached Cathyrn or not I don't know. I got a letter from one of her attorneys, who told me no, the farm is not for sale, and don't trespass.

 "Tell Ms. Deen," I replied, "that her grandmother's house is a historic site and shouldn't be allowed to decay."

To which the lawyer said, that's none of your business. Do not trespass.

So, naturally, I had been trespassing and doing repairs, ever since. I'd spent many a night sleeping on the front porch among my hand tools and supplies. I'd watched thunderstorms roll grandly over Hogback, watched snow fall on the oaks, watched the forest turn red and gold in autumn.

Delta knew the Nettie house and I were having an illicit affair, but she told no one. In the Crossroads, man-cottage love is tolerated. 

In the meantime, I moved in next door on thirty acres I bought from Joe Whittlespoon, Delta's brother-in-law. The Nettie place occupied one end of  Wild Woman Ridge; the newly christened Mitternich place occupied the other end. I built a cabin, and when I wasn't drunk, I planted a vineyard. I wasn't a farmer or a winemaker, but I had a strong need to make new life take root on that ridge, including my own.     


The Morning After The Accident
In The Vineyard

Delta's husband, Pike Whittlespoon, was the county sheriff. Gruff and manipulative, he wasn't a lovable Andy of Mayberry, no, but a pragmatic officer of the peace who could track a lost kid across the roughest mountainside or break up a meth lab with his bare fists. He and Delta had been married since they were sixteen, nearly thirty-five years, and he quietly worshipped the ground she walked on. He was a friend to their son, Jeb, a fiercely protective grandpa to Jeb and Becka's kids, and a stoic ally to his controversial older bro, Joe. At six-five and two-eighty Pike outweighed me but couldn't look over my head without craning his. You could say we saw eye to eye on the justice system. He'd never clobbered me when I was drunk, and I'd never given him a reason to.

Tommy-Son," he told me not long after my arrival in the community, christening me with both a paterfamilial relationship and an inferior rank, "if you ever get into that piece-of-shit ‘vintage' truck of yours when you're drunk, and you attempt to drive that piece-of-shit ‘vintage' truck of yours on my roads, I'll make sure you spend the next twelve months in zebra stripes, shoveling piles of Hereford shit at the county's ‘vintage' prison farm."

Which is why I spent a lot of time sleeping off hangovers under the café's oak trees.

I was outdoors at my cabin not long after sunrise that Sunday morning, sweating away my bleak Saturday-night mood and a full bottle of vodka. The twin handles of a post-hole digger felt righteous against the calluses of my hands. Blood, sweat, tears. Mother Nature's fertilizer. Blister by blister I built my vineyard, a homage to the stained-glass windows of Frank Lloyd Wright.

I had just finished setting the last trellis post in the top-right geometric branch of the middle abstract tree in Wright's "Tree of Life" pattern. The original could be seen inside a turn-of-the-century home in Buffalo, New York. My version was six-hundred feet long, four-hundred feet wide, and could be seen by small planes and hang gliders. When I was done building trellises and planting grapevines, the Nazca lines of Peru would pale by comparison.

Someone's died, I thought when I saw Pike's blue-and-gray patrol car roar out of the woods with the lights flashing. A fist closed around my chest, and for a moment I smelled terror and saw falling bodies on a Manhattan street. Doctors call this hyper-alert reaction ‘post traumatic stress syndrome.' I call it ‘smart.'

Pike slid to a stop within spitting distance of my sweat-dappled work boots. I set the post-hole diggers aside and straightened my surveyor's tripod, giving myself a few seconds to breathe. "Don't cut me any slack, Pike. Just say it. What's happened to my brother? Or his wife or kids --"

"Relax. Your brother and his family are fine. Tommy-Son, why the hell don't you get a spare cell phone?" 

I exhaled. "Delta, Jeb . . . Banger? All okay?"

"Fine. But Delta needs to see you pronto. She needs your help."

"What about?" 

"Cathyrn Deen." 

"Let me guess. Cathyrn Deen's business manager finally sent a personal reply to one of Delta's letters, and Delta's so shocked she wants everyone in the Crossroads to see it?"

The joke failed to register. There was something about the look on Pike's beefy, barn-board face that made me uneasy again. This was how John Wayne looked before he broke grisly news to the troops in Sands of Iwo Jima. If the Duke had to swallow his spit before he gave a hardened dog face some news, it was bad. "She was in a car accident yesterday," Pike said. "Nearly burned to death."

The blood drained to my feet as he told me the gory details. CNN was reporting Cathryn would live, but she'd be badly scarred. "A shame," Pike finished. "What a looker. She favors Delta around the eyes."

Self-preservation kicked in. Cynicism makes a good antidote for caring too much.  "Why does Delta think I can do anything for her?"

"You know how to pull strings in the great wide world. Get a phone call through to Cathyrn's hospital room." Delta and Pike thought I could make miracles happen because I'd crawled out on a cliff once, up on Devil's Knob, and talked Jeb out of jumping. But when you're full of vodka and don't care about your own safety, it's easy to be a hero. I shook my head. "Pike, I'm sorry. But--" 

"Look, you and me know Cathyrn Deen's fancy husband isn't gonna talk to Delta or let Delta talk to Cathyrn's doctors. But will you at least hear Delta out? She hates feelin' helpless. Hell, let's be honest. She hates not being able to meddle in her kinfolk's troubles. Even if the kinfolk live on the other side of the country and haven't visited her in twenty years." 

Across the deep-blue mountain sky, a hawk, hunting, sang its fierce and forlorn call as it glided like an angel on the high currents. No past, no future, just living in that glorious moment, suspended on thin air. Hawks were cynical, they knew the cosmic score. Cathyrn Deen's husband didn't care about her Crossroads heritage or her grandmother's old farm, and Cathryn herself might be a lousy human being who'd laugh at the idea of an obscure relative coming to her aid.

However, unlike a hawk, I had nightmares filled with regrets when I slept. Lots of karmic misery to pay back.

"Will you at least come and listen?" Pike persisted.

I nodded.

The hawk caught a perfect gust of air and floated, motionless, on the invisible palm of redemption.  


The Plan

 Delta was not a crier. A woman who worked her butt off running a restaurant so successful Southern Living called it "a well-known jewel in the middle of the wilderness," who ruled over a rambunctious mountain family and a bearded drunk who slept with a goat under her oak, no, a woman like that wasn't going to break down and cry because her cousin's husband's cousin's world-famous daughter lay in a Los Angeles hospital, maimed for life. "Life doesn't settle for ‘simmer' just because you want to turn down the heat," Delta liked to say. That didn't make much sense, but it sounded profound.

 "I intend to talk to Cathyrn's doctors in California," she declared. "That's all there is to it. And you're gonna help me do it, Thomas."

 Delta, Pike, and the entire immediate Whittlespoon family stared at me in the crowded confines of the café's kitchen. A food-scented breeze curled around us. As  usual, the wooden doors stood open and only the inner screened doors kept numerous cats, dogs, goats and squirrels from entering. A floor fan whirred even in the chill of the spring morning. Mouth-watering aromas wafted from a steam table filled with food. Cars and trucks crowded the parking lot. There were people who drove all the way from Asheville on weekend mornings, just for breakfast.

But they weren't being served, because Delta and all of her gang were all standing in the kitchen, giving me the pressure-wash of group power. In southern terms, I was being eyeballed.

"You New Yorkers, you can get things done," Delta insisted. "You have ways."

"Contrary to popular belief," I said quietly, "Not everyone from New York has mafia connections or friends in show business. Delta, I can't do any more to get you in touch with Cathyrn Deen than you can do for yourself."

She shook her apron at me. "You're my only hope! When I called the hospital in Los Angeles they wouldn't even tell me how she's doing! And when I said ‘I'm family,' they told me I'm not on their list. I said, ‘Well, let me talk to Cathyrn's husband and I'll get on your list,' and they said, ‘You'll have to go through his publicist.' What kind of husband needs a publicist to handle calls from his wife's family?"   

Pike sighed and draped a long arm around her short shoulders. "Baby, Cathyrn's daddy cut you and the rest of her mountain kin out of the picture twenty years ago, and since then all you've talked to are publicity people and lawyers and business managers every time you've tried to reach her. Now her husband's put up the same wall around her. This is nothing new. You can't help the girl, Baby. You just can't. She probably doesn't need or even want your help."

"But I don't know that." Delta flung a hand toward the small television attached to the kitchen's aging, beadboard wall between wire shelves stacked with pots and pans. CNN was showing a gruesome picture of Cathyrn's burned Trans Am. "She's all they're talking about on the morning news shows! A member of my family is laying in a hospital bed on the other side of the country, in terrible misery, and she needs to know she's got kin who care!"

"If it makes you feel any better," I said gently, "I doubt she's aware of anything.  Doctors sedate burn victims for the first few days after they're injured. Nobody who's been burned the way she has is conscious, at this point."

"But she'll wake up eventually, and when she does, she'll need her family. Her daddy's gone, her mama's gone, all those prissy old Atlanta aunts on her Deen side are dead or senile. I'm the last root left in her family tree! Thomas, you used to be an important architect in New York, and you were married to a wife who . . . well, you had big connections. You can find some way to get me through to Cathyrn."

"I guarantee you there's an unbreakable wall of security measures around Cathyrn. Celebrities such as her are never without protection."

"If that was true, then Cathyrn wouldn't have been alone yesterday on the side of a highway yesterday burning up while a photographer took pictures of her!"

"No one will get that close to her, again. No one. I can't help you, Delta. I wish I could." 

Cleo, Delta's sister-in-law, scowled at me like a brown-haired pit bull watching a rabbit. "Don't be a quitter. Jesus believes in you, even if you don't believe in yourself."

"Jesus doesn't know me the way I do." 

I nodded my goodbyes, turned, and walked out. I was halfway across the back yard to my truck when Delta caught up to me. Small but stubborn, she blocked my way. "You can't hide from the world for the rest of your life!"

I looked down at her grimly. "I'm not hiding. I'm just dodging. I don't want responsibility for anyone's life but my own." 

"Liar! If it weren't for you, my son'd be dead! You risked your own hide to save Jeb a few years ago, when you were still just a newcomer around here. You barely knew him! You care about people so much because you torture yourself over what happened to your wife and son! I know about those pictures you keep in your truck! I've watched you look at ‘em when you don't realize anybody sees you!"

I stiffened. "I should train Banger to ‘bah' when he hears you sneaking up on me."

"You make yourself relive their misery over and over, as if, if you just mourn hard enough, somehow you'll travel back through time and change what happened to them. But you can't. You can't, Thomas. None of us can turn back time. What we can do is learn from our regrets and change the future." She grabbed my hands. "You know how it feels to be caught up in something so terrible it's like being down in a dark pit, not able to see even one speck of light at the top. That's where Cathyrn is, right now, down in a pit. Be her light, Thomas. Be her light."

I stood there, my head bowed, my shoulders hunched. The slow, steady strain on my legs became an excruciating amputation. My ankles pulled free from my feet. Bones snapped, cartilage tore, veins pulsed blood onto the soft brown clay of the yard.

This is how it feels to be dragged from the cement shoes of a comfortable rut.

"I'll make some phone calls," I told her. "But don't get your hopes up."

She squeezed my hands and smiled. "I already have."


Cathyrn

The Hospital, Los Angeles

Daddy and his sisters began entering me in beauty contests when I was old enough to toddle. As upperclass southerners they generally looked down their noses at beauty competitions, which they considered lowbrow and tacky, but, given my spectacular allure, they couldn't resist showing me off. "We're just honoring an old southern tradition of exhibiting our prize livestock," one of my aunts told her friends. "You just watch. Cathyrn will take more blue ribbons than a pretty sow at the state fair."

By the time I was six I was a veteran with a room full of trophies and tiaras. By the time I was eighteen I was crowned Miss Georgia. I would have competed for Miss America, but I got my first movie role and handed the Miss Georgia crown to the runner-up, instead.

You don't spend your childhood on stage, duking it out with other ambitious little girls and their vicious stage parents, without learning to soldier on, no matter what. Once, when my music and costume had been sabotaged, I sang the entire theme song from Annie without accompaniment, wearing a plain black leotard and a skirt made from my aunt's pink cashmere scarf.  I won the talent competition, and I won that pageant. I was four years old.

Strong southern belle, steel magnolia, that was me. Weaned on the gilded wings of baby-boomer-new-south money and old-south charm, coddled, blessed, praised, protected, then launched into the world of movies as a full-fledged glamour girl and sex symbol. Until now. At the hospital the morning after the accident, just before my doctors induced a blissful coma, I heard two interns talking about me as if I'd died.

I can't believe this was Cathyrn Deen. Cathyrn Deen. Do you know how many times I've jerked off to pictures of her?

Me, too. But not after this, man. Jesus. Look at her. Not anymore.

As I went to sleep, I hoped I wouldn't wake up.


Five Days Later

Unfortunately, I did wake up. Nobody had the foresight to let me die and become a legend. I could have joined Elvis and Marilyn in the Dead Icon Hall of Fame, but nooo.   

"Cathyrn Deen? Cathyrn Mary Deen? Do you know where you are?"

I blinked slowly, wrapped in a cocoon of painkillers and sedatives, that cocktail of drugs given to burn victims for the first few days so they won't realize parts of their bodies have been deep-fried. I could barely remember my name, much less what had happened to me.

"Who?" I murmured.

If I could have seen myself, naked except for sterilized sheets and the huge bandages on my head, right arm,  right torso, and right leg, my arms tied down, IV's and monitor lines everywhere, and a catheter between my thighs . . . if I could have seen my swollen, hairless head with the mass of bandages plastered to the right side, I would have willed myself to go back to sleep again. Permanently.  My head was grotesquely swollen, and even the left side of my face, the side that would look normal again eventually, was raw-red. 

Thank God, I didn't know how I looked, yet. Couldn't see myself. Could barely feel myself. I only heard myself, mumbling in a weak voice. "Daddy? Granny Nettie? Mother?" They'd been visiting me. Daddy simply smiled at me. He'd never known what to say when I was hurt. That was the nanny's job. Granny Nettie said, Cheer up, I left it for you, it's waiting, which made no sense. My long-dead mother, who I'd discovered was much prettier than the photos in my scrapbooks, leaned close and whispered, You stay here for now, all right? We'll see you again, some day.  

"Don't leave me." Too late. I was awake.

"Cathyrn? Ms. Deen? Do you know where you are?" 

My tongue felt swollen. I tested it, licking the front of my teeth. Helps your smile slide over your pearly caps. Looks sexy for the male judges. An old pageant trick. 

"Ms. Deen, do you know where you are?" The voice was female and insistent. Not impressed by my teeth.

"Hell?" I finally whispered.

"No, it just feels that way. You're in the burn unit. I'm your primary physician. You're under the care of a large medical team."

"My entourage."

"In a manner of speaking. Now, listen carefully. I'll let you go back to sleep in a minute. We just moved you out of intensive care. It's been five days since your accident. We've deliberately kept you medicated for your benefit. The pain would be excruciating, otherwise. We don't want you to move around. You're hooked up to IV's. You have a catheter in your bladder. Until a few hours ago you had a feeding tube down your throat. Your current situation is a little . . . confining, I know. We don't want you feeling claustrophobic, so we're keeping you medicated. That will get better in the next week or so."  

Of course, I thought. I'll be fine. Probably just a few blisters.

My vision was a little blurry, and when I looked upward I saw something puffy and red. I didn't know it at the time, but I was looking at the swollen underside of my eyebrows. I thought I was wearing some kind of pink-brimmed cap. I looked beyond it and found the source of the voice. It came from a white-swaddled shape hovering over me. The shape was masked and gloved, as if dealing with toxic waste. It might have come from another planet. It clearly had confused me with a serious burn victim.

"Get me to . . . a spa," I told the alien. "Just need a . . .mud wrap."  

"Try to pay attention, Cathyrn. There's lots of good news to report. Your eyes are fine, your lungs are fine, you are very lucky. Your burns cover slightly less than 30 percent of your body, which gives you an excellent prognosis for full, functional recovery. Your burns are primarily second-degree, meaning most won't need skin grafts, though there will be permanent scarring."

Scarring? Scarring?

"Your right hand suffered some deep tissue injury, so you'll need physical therapy to ensure joint mobility in your fingers. But that's very do-able."

Do-able. I was do-able.

"The worst thing I have to tell you is that you do have several areas of third-degree burns. In those places,  the skin was destroyed and so can't renew itself. These areas include your right shoulder, on the right side of your neck and throat, and . . . on the right side of your face, from the corner of your eye and mouth to just behind your ear. Over the next few weeks we'll take skin from your undamaged left side, and your back, and graft it. It will replace the burned skin."

Okay. Essentially, I just needed a good exfoliant. 

"Your right ear had to be amputated,  but, let me assure you, your hearing should be unaffected."

Wait a minute. This creature from another planet was joking with me. I could have sworn it said I no longer had an ear on one side. Guess I'd save money on earrings. The Oscars were in a few weeks. Would Harry Winston still loan me the twenty-karat tiers Princess Di commissioned not long before she died? I could wear one on my good ear, and one in my navel. 

"Very funny," I whispered. 

"I'm afraid this isn't a joke, Cathyrn."

"Let me out of here. Have . . . work to do. Due in England on Wednesday. Photo shoot for Vogue, too."

"Try not to worry about your career, for now. You're probably going to be in the hospital at least six weeks. You'll be undergoing numerous small surgeries, and also, I'm afraid, regular debridement. Debridement is a procedure in which we change your bandages twice daily and remove dead tissue from your wounds. It's not very pleasant, I'm afraid. But don't worry about that right now."

Don't worry? "Gerald! Gerald. My husband. Tell him. I want out . . . of here. He'll handle this."

"He's very busy right now. Talking to the press, to your agents, all of that. Don't worry."

"I want him . . . here."

"I'm afraid we can't allow him, or anyone else, to visit you yet. The burn unit is a very sterile environment, Cathryn. Infection is a major concern for patients recovering from large-scale loss of skin. You won't be allowed to have many visitors, and the ones you do have will be covered in antiseptic surgical outfits like mine."

"Call him. I'll call him."

"You're in no condition to do that right now. Plus your husband has requested that you not be disturbed. We don't want any reporters trying to talk to you. You can't call out, and no one can call in without his permission. He doesn't want the media to harass you." 

"But . . . I need my . . . my friends. My stylists. Judi, Randy, Luce. My people."

"I'm sorry, Cathyrn. You have no ‘people,' here. Sometimes the burn unit feels like one of the loneliest places in the world. But you'll be all right. You get some rest. You've got a lot of work ahead of you."    

She left. Other creatures from the toxic-waste patrol hovered over me. "We're going to help you go back to sleep now," one of them said. "We'll play your favorite music to keep you company while you drift off. Your husband says you love Gwen Stefani."

The creature put a CD in a sterilized boom box. Hollaback Girl, Stefani's hip-hop anthem, began to pound me like a drum. I couldn't really be trapped in a hospital bed listening to a thirty-five-year old woman sing, "This my shit," could I? I didn't love Gwen Stefani's music, Gerald just told people I loved it because his marketing people said she tracked to a young demographic who'd buy my cosmetics.

My favorite music? Bonnie Raitt, Rosanne Cash, the Dixie Chicks. Wise women with guitars. Gerald said they were too feminist for my fun-loving image, and they probably didn't even wear make-up, much less encourage other women to wear it, but . . . where was he? And why wouldn't he even call me on the phone?

"I can listen," I mumbled. "I have an ear left."

"Go to sleep," a creature ordered, pulling a syringe out of a stint in my arm. "It's better if you don't think too much."

I shut my eyes. Aliens in antiseptic jumpsuits said I couldn't move, couldn't talk to anyone, that my ear was missing and parts of my skin would have to be replaced, and that I was lucky to be alive. Plus they made me listen to Gwen Stefani. No one who knew me, no one I trusted, was here. Not even my own husband and my family ghosts.

My people were gone. Even the dead ones.


Chapter 3

Devil's Knob

"Next time, ask me for something easy, Thomas," my brother said. "Like trying to get in touch with the Easter Bunny. And, by the way, I'm sending you a new cell phone. One with GPS tracking."

Since he was shouting, I moved the phone I'd borrowed from one of Delta's grandkids further from my ear. Even so, John's voice echoed off the unlined metal innards of my truck's cab. "Good," I shouted back. "When the satellite shows the new phone roaming around the barn behind the café, you'll know Banger ate it, too."

"I'd just like to be able to locate your body. Monica and the kids will be disappointed if there's nothing to bury. Did I mention she's planning a Jewish funeral for you?"

I liked my brother's wife. Her morbid sense of humor fit in perfectly with the Mitternich family brand. "Tell Monica I appreciate it from the bottom of my atheistic, gentile heart."

"She'll get all her family together and sit Shiva in your honor. Me? I'll just go to the nearest pub and raise a beer to Thomas Karel Mitternich, my self-destructive older brother, and then I'll find a kindly priest who'll lie to me and swear you aren't in hell for killing yourself."

"I love these cheerful conversations we have."

"Me, too, Thomas. But I digress. Have you completely lost your mind? Cathryn Deen's people will never let your pal Delta or anyone else from the non-Perrier sipping, NASCAR-loving hinterlands within so much as Jethro-yodeling distance of Deen's VIP room in a Los Angeles burn ward."

John had done his best to help me fulfill Delta's mission to call her cousin Cathryn, but he was right. Getting through the wall of privacy—or secrecy—Cathryn's husband put around her was impossible. It had been more than a week since her accident. John, a financial planner in Chicago, could follow a money trail to all kinds of information, but even he couldn't crack this code. Celebrities at Cathryn Deen's level of fame were either naked in the spotlight or invisible. Sadly for her, she was both, right now.

The bastard who shot the gruesome video of her trying to escape from her car, and then stuck his camera in her face while she was burning, was already selling the clip on the Internet. He'd dodged a criminal charge because his lawyer argued she was driving recklessly before he chased her. In a dangerous situation like a fire, the law says you don't have to risk your own safety to rescue someone else. How convenient.

So the video was available for a hefty download fee, and the major news channels were showing snippets of it in the guise of covering the controversy. In terms of debased human nature, the Christians-versus-lions smackdown at the Roman Coliseum had nothing over modern voyeurs. Delta was furious. So, on a quieter level, was I. I knew how it felt to see my loved ones exploited.

There was only one option left.

"I'm calling Ravel," I told John.

Silence. Then, very quietly and seriously, my baby brother said, "She'll eat your gonads with a side of lemon risotto and a nice cabernet."

"I know," I said.

"You don't deserve what she'll say to you."

"Yes, I do."

"She wants blood."

"I've got plenty."

"Is Cathryn Deen worth it? A stranger, Thomas? Worth it? Why?"

I looked at the pictures on my truck visor. The slow, steady squeeze of misery eased for just a second. "Because maybe, just maybe, this time I can make a difference."

Two hundred and fifty million years ago Africa bumped into North America, buckling masses of metamorphic rock over layers of limestone, and thrust up the Appalachians. Throw in a few glaciers and eons of erosion, and now you had Devil's Knob, a craggy, treeless monolith protruding from Hog Back Mountain like a spike on the hog's side. I loved the primordial purity of the place. Touch the rock, and you were touching antiquity. Stand there, and you stood on eternity.

At 4,000 feet Devil's Knob was one of the highest local balds. As I stood there, cradling another borrowed cell phone in one hand, I gazed north over the Crossroads cove toward New York, approximately four states away. Barricading me from my old life were high ridges, deep hollows, forests of huge evergreens, rushing trout streams, secluded farms, ramshackle tobacco barns, placid black bears, herds of deer, flocks of wild turkeys, and the occasional liquor still alongside a marijuana patch.

Still not enough wilderness between me and my sister-in-law, but it would have to do. Sherryl's sister, Ravel, was, no doubt, lurking in her Trump Tower penthouse on Fifth Avenue, approximately seven hundred feet above sea level. I needed to know she had to look up to me, even metaphorically.

"Thomas, you sure you don't know anybody in the CIA to call instead?" drawled Joe "Santa" Whittlespoon. Santa sat a few feet away with legs dangling off the knob's rocky ledge. He stroked his gray beard with one hand and fingered a long cheroot of homegrown marijuana with the other. The sweet scent rose on a high breeze, mingling with the rich fragrance of pine and earth. A tie-dyed bandana hung from the bib of Santa's overalls. Rough rubies and sapphires, panned in local creeks, decorated the bracelets and rings he wore. Everyone in the county knew Santa was an old hippie who grew weed up on Hog Back, but he was Pike's big brother, after all. People in the mountains of the south had respect for their elders, especially those related to sheriffs. I had intervened on his behalf once when two beefy young entrepreneurs from Asheville tried to steal his harvest.

"I'm just saying," Santa went on, "that the CIA's got to be easier to deal with than your wife's sister. And better tempered."

"I'm out of alternatives. Believe me, this is my last choice. I wouldn't do this for anyone but Delta."

"For Delta, huh? Thomas, some women give you answers, and some women give you questions, and some women just give you orders. But there aren't many like my sister-in-law, who can give you all three and make you think you came up with the idea on your own. The rest of us may think you're just a worthless Yankee drunk, but she sees you as dough she can mold into a useful pan of biscuits. I warn you."

Santa's phone suddenly played a few bars of The Grateful Dead's Truckin'. I looked at the incoming number. A 212 area code. Manhattan. "Showtime." I put my fingertip over the talk key. I let a few more bars of Truckin' play.

"Talk or jump off the cliff," Santa drawled. "Jerry Garcia isn't gonna save you from reality, son."

I put the phone to my ear. "Ravel, I appreciate you returning my call. If this weren't an emergency, I'd never ask for, or expect, your help."

"You fucking parasite." Her voice shook with emotion. It always chilled me to be hated so much. And to deserve it. "There's only one reason I remain interested in your fate, Thomas. I keep hoping I'll hear that you've had the decency to blow your fucking brains out."

"Let's keep this simple. You got my message. You know what I want. You're a major stockholder sitting on the board of one of the biggest hospital corporations in the world. You can find out everything about Cathryn Deen's situation, right down to the name of the nurse's aid who cleans her trash can. I need that contact information, and…I'll do whatever you want, in return."

"I want you to suffer and I want you to die as miserably as Sherryl and Ethan did,you heartless, pathetic waste of human flesh."

"I'm not asking you to do me any favors. This is for some good people who need a break."

"Spare me your ludicrous attempts to deflect your own guilt by becoming a do-gooder for those white-trash hillbillies with whom you associate."

"Ravel, do what I'm asking, and I'll send you the watch."

Silence. After a minute I heard her crying softly. Then, "Ship the watch by private courier, insured, and when I'm holding it in my hand, you'll get the information you want. You emotionally manipulative bastard."

She clicked off.

"Well, that was easy." I tossed the phone to Santa.

He frowned at me over a plume of medicated smoke. "Delta didn't expect you to bribe the Death Haint of Yankeedom with your keepsake."

The Death Haint. I liked how southerners categorized the demons in our lives. You give a demon a funny name, the demon can't hurt you so much. I took my antique silver watch from my pocket and stepped to the edge of Devil's Knob. As I looked down into a maw of boulders, cliffs, and the greening tops of a hardwood forest far below, I popped the watch's lid and rubbed the pad of my thumb over the engraving one more time. The watch was one of my touchstones. I didn't have many left.

It had belonged to Sherryl's grandfather. Sherryl had it engraved for me. Thank you for giving me Ethan. That summed up why our rocky marriage was worth it, it summed up everything that had been wonderful about waking up every morning. Our son. It was more than a trinket to me, more than a casual heirloom from my wife's family. Her sister knew that. It was the last gift Sherryl and Ethan gave me before they died.

And I had just traded it to help Cathryn Deen, a stranger.

Santa got up slowly, watching me. He was too stoned to stop me from taking a long walk off a short cliff, and he knew it. "Thomas," he said carefully, "I know why you come up here." He nodded at the phone I'd handed back. "Just like I know why you don't like for the outside world to find you too easy. I know why you go to the high places and look down and think about what it was like for your wife and son. But trust me. Some day you'll look up instead of down, and you'll see it all differently."

I closed the watch, slid it into my pocket, and stepped back from the edge.

All I saw was thin air.

#

Puffing with the effort, Delta climbed up a ladder to the low-pitched roof of Mary Eve Nettie's house and sat beside me in the glow of a setting sun. Gold, red, lavender, pink—the sky over Hog Back was a concentrated rainbow. Mist fringed the mountaintops, and the deepening blue-black night at the apex of the sky drew me to its infinite focus. There was no better view in the mountains than the view from Mary Eve's Nettie's abandoned farm on Wild Woman Ridge.

A small herd of deer, mostly does with pregnant bellies but also some yearlings and young bucks with two-point antlers, grazed in the pasture near a weathered barn. A flock of wild turkeys pecked at the ground among the deer. I stored bags of corn in the Nettie barn, throwing out several buckets full every day to lure a crowd. I didn't hunt. I just liked the company.

"So this is where you run off to all the time," Delta said quietly. "Not a bad place to clear your head. I expect Mary Eve likes the idea of a good-looking man sitting on her roof. She's probably right out yonder in the pasture, looking at us right now. That big doe with the frisky eyes? Yep. That's her. Mary Eve always said she wanted to come back as a deer. Eat, sleep, screw and hang out with some good friends. ‘Keep it simple but elegant,' she liked to say."

"I'm in love with her house."

"Your pocket watch is on its way to New York," she said gently "Anthony picked it up an hour ago. He said he'll take extra-special care." Anthony Marcolis was the UPS driver out of Asheville. Delta insisted he eat every time he made the long trip to the Crossroads. For Delta's chicken and dumplings with biscuits he'd hand-deliver the watch to Trump Tower, himself. "Thomas, I—"

"It's just a watch."

"No, it's not. Thank you, Thomas."

"I only did it because I want this house."

"You're a sorry liar."

"When Cathryn Deen's well enough, you tell her to sell her grandmother's house to me. That's the deal. Shake on it."

"Now, you know I don't do business with drunks who smell like my granddaddy's still. When Granddaddy McKellen poured off his makings the whole house smelled like a bar. Go and stick your head in one of the café's closets and take a big sniff. Corn liquor. Granddaddy was a conniving, adultering old dog who shamed the reputation of the McKellen family throughout these parts for decades. Plus he called me a fat little ugly girl and told everybody I'd never amount to a hill of beans. You don't want to smell like his memory."

"It's just my new aftershave. Eau de Vodka. Don't change the subject. I want this house."

She thumped the roof with her knuckles. "Thomas, you don't need this empty house. You need a home."

"There isn't another house like this in the state. In the region. In the country. In the world. I could restore this house the way it should be restored. There isn't much in the world I'm sure I can protect and preserve, but this house? I can save it."

"All this time," she said gently, "I thought you stayed in the Crossroads because you couldn't resist my cooking."

"I want this house," I repeated. "I sold my soul to my sister-in-law for you. All I ask in return is that you make sure Cathryn Deen sells this house to me."

"She can't sell it to you."

"Why?"

"Because after I talk her into coming here to live, she's going to need this house, herself. Cheer up, though—I expect she'll welcome your help renovatin' it."

Delta patted my arm, knocked over the half-full bottle of vodka beside me and climbed down. I picked my jaw up off the roof's cedar shingles. My booze trickled off a gable, and I didn't even notice.

In the gloaming, she left behind only her Cheshire-cat grin.


Cathy

Contact

"Any phone calls for me?" I murmured to the nurse.

"No, Ms. Deen, none today."

No calls. No people. No husband. No right ear.

Hurt. Sleep. Hurt. Sleep.

Cry.

And to top it off, the nightmares had started. Every time I shut my eyes, I caught on fire again.

Two weeks after the accident I was still barely coherent, and could only describe my life in a few words. No drug stopped the pain completely, nothing clubbed my nightmares into submission, and nothing made me hungry enough to crave the chalky, high-protein milkshakes a burn victim has to eat constantly in order to fuel a body trying desperately to heal the leaking sieve of its own skin.

"Either you sip the shakes or it's back on a feeding tube, Ms. Deen," the nutritionist said, holding a straw to my mouth.

I sipped.

I had seen Gerald once, just once, for five minutes. He was dressed in the latest burn-ward fashion over his tailored suite: sterile cap, mask, gown, gloves. All I could see were his eyes, and I told myself I only imagined the repulsed look in them.

I just dreamed that, I thought. Disgust and flames. Just another nightmare.

I was still bound to my bed by tubes and bandages, and could move only my left forefinger to click a call button and a morphine drip. There was a television in the room but the staff kept it on movies approved by Gerald. Despite being drugged, I was fairly certain I'd seen Leo and Kate escape from the Titanic about fifteen times already.

At night, when the TV was off, Gwen Stefani rapped endlessly about her shit. Now I know who sings the elevator music in hell. Alone in my bed in the dark, with just Gwen for company, I cried without using a single muscle in my roasted face, seeping tears.

Fat. I'll get fat from the high-cal shakes, I kept thinking. I won't be a perfect, five-foot-seven-size-four, anymore.

And I'd probably get flabby, too, just from laying in bed. No, I'd perform isometric exercises to stay in shape. Squeeze and release, squeeze and release. If only I could remember where my ass was.

I needed to talk to someone, anyone. I needed a voice in my remaining ear, telling me I would be all right. But Gerald controlled all contact with the outside world—what, was he ashamed of me, or something? I'd make myself beautiful for him if he just gave me a chance. I'd call Luce, Randy and Judi and schedule a styling.

Yes! In a few months, after all the surgeries and other tortures were finished, I'd be ready for my close-up, Mr. DeMille. I had admired too many twenty-year-old faces on fifty-year-old actresses to lose faith in the power of plastic surgery now.

Scarred for life, who, me? Nah.

Delusion, thy blessing is an IV filled with reality-altering narcotics and hallucinations inspired by continuous showings of Titanic.

I cried every time the music swelled and the ocean liner, that unsinkable, legendary, beautiful ocean liner, sank.


Thomas

The Phone Call

I was in a lousy mood and had a hangover of epic proportions. Every time I glanced overhead, a fabric Rorschach test hit me between the eyes. A half-finished queen-sized quilt hung from its quilting rack in the ceiling of the café's porch dining room. On Saturday nights the Crossroads Quilters met there. Delta said the pattern was Pineapple. Abstract. Octagonal. Sunlight splashed off the jumble of colors. It made my eyes cross.

Delta didn't care. "Place the call," she ordered, staring at the speaker phone between us on a checkered tablecloth. "It's almost noon in California. I bet Cathryn's awake and about to have lunch. Good. People listen to me the most when they're hungry."

No surprise. Delta always smelled of flour and sugar, even on a weekday afternoon. An aphrodisiac for the spiritually hungry. Her skin was at that cusp of middle-aged softness, a friendly cushion around her bones. Her short, thick forearms were covered in freckles, and her hands were strong and quick. She was a human apple pie. I watched her distractedly smooth wrinkles of her chef's apron. Her fingers twitched toward the phone.

All I promised her was a phone connection, I told myself. One call, a personal contact, and nothing else. That talk about Cathryn Deen moving here and living in her grandmother's house? Delta's naïve fantasy. The Nettie house is mine.

I blew out a long breath, took a reviving swallow of iced tea so sweet my tongue curled, then punched in the number Janine's minions had faxed to the café. We'd be lucky if this scheme worked. If Delta didn't get ignored, insulted, rebuffed, I'd be surprised. I didn't want Delta hurt. People who believe in fantasies deserve protection from those of us who don't.

After two rings, we arrived on the other side of the continent. "Burn ward," an officious female voice said. "Security."

"I'm calling to speak with Cathryn Deen," I said officiously, in return. "I have my security code ready."

"Thank you, sir. Please punch it in now, then press the star sign."

I tapped a ten-digit number and the star sign. There was a click, then no ring at all, then another click. "Burn unit," a woman said.

"Gerald Merritt."

"Mr. Merritt! Sir, I'm so glad it's you. Your wife could really use more phone calls from you. Her psychologist asked me to tell you she's feeling very isolated. Like all victims of severe burns, she's struggling with a lot of emotional issues. As the head of her nursing team, I really have to question your decision to forbid any of her friends from calling. She needs contact with the outside world. Maintaining her public image seems like a high price to pay under the circumstances. What can I say to make you reconsider?"

This, I hadn't counted on. Lying about my identity to get Delta through to Cathryn Deen was one thing. Being asked for a decision on Cathryn Deen's phone privileges was another. On the other hand, her husband was obviously a major prick.

Delta waved at me furiously. Gerald, she mouthed, is a mule pecker.

Well, okay. We had a consensus.

I leaned closer to the phone. "I completely agree with your concern about my wife's need for more contact with her friends and family. My wife has a dear cousin in North Carolina. Her name is Delta Whittlespoon. From now on, whenever Delta calls, put her through."

"Wonderful! Delta Whittlespoon. I'm writing that down. I'll give you a direct number for Ms. Whittlespoon to use. Straight to your wife's room. Ms. Deen isn't able to pick up a phone, but, as you know, she can receive calls via a speaker. So when I put you through, don't wait for her to answer, just start talking."

Delta mouthed, Yes! and pumped one fist.

"Very good," I said crisply, hoping I still sounded like Gerald. "In fact, I have Delta on my other line right now. Let's transfer this call to my wife's room and—"

"You couldn't have called at a more crucial time. Your wife is having her dressings changed, and I'm sure she needs to hear your voice. A word of advice: Be prepared for her screams. Every patient screams during the debridement process. I'll tell your wife you're on the phone."

"Wait. Don't—" Click. I met Delta's horrified eyes. "I can't keep pretending—"

Delta grabbed my hand. "You have to. Cathryn needs you. She's being de….somethinged. It sounds terrible. "

"She needs her husband."

"Thomas, weren't you paying attention? He's not visiting her. He's not even calling her. He's abandoned her. She doesn't need a man like him, she needs a man like you."

"This is beyond insane—"

Click.

"Gerald," a soft, strained voice begged. "Help."

Inside, I stopped. Everything focused on the pain in that voice. Suddenly it didn't matter that I wasn't Gerald. I was here, and he wasn't. The mule pecker.

"Help," she repeated. "Help."

"Cathryn." I tried to speak softly, gently. I tried to blanket her with intimate sympathy. Common sense vanished. "Cathy, I'm here."

On her end, silence. Stark silence. Did my voice sound nothing like Gerald's? Maybe I'd used a nickname Gerald never used. Cathy. I kicked myself. Across from me, Delta hunched down to the phone and tilted her head, listening. We heard metal rattling on metal. Surgical instruments hitting pans. Rustling noises. A faint, low sound of distress. Cathryn. Moaning.

"Sorry, I'm not ignoring you," she whispered eventually. "I just had a moment of weakness while the nurse was…I couldn't think straight." Then came a sound I never expected. Her laugh. Low, melodic, torn. A war cry. "And I thought a bikini wax was painful." Another clattering sound. In the background, a nurse said, "Cathryn, take a deep breath. I'm going to scrub this raw area, now. It's going to bleed. That's normal."

"Oh, God," she whispered. "Nothing's ‘normal.'"

My own breath knifed my throat. "Breathe, Cathy. Breathe. Slowly. You can do it."

She moaned again, then laughed again, but the laugh ended in a gasp. "Sorry. Being a…sissy."

"No, honey," I said. Honey. Delta smiled at me proudly. I frowned. I was in way too deep, but I couldn't bear to stop. "You're a strong woman, Cathy. You're a survivor. You're no sissy. Talk to me…honey. Tell me what's happening."

"They call this process…debridement. They ought to call it…torture." Another soft, wrenching sound. Another miserable chuckle. "Always de bride-maid. Never…de bride. Ah! Stop, stop a second. Stop. Please. I'm freezing." Her teeth chattered.

"Okay, let's take a short break," the nurse said. "I'm going to tilt these lamps a little. I can't cover you with a sheet until we're done. There. Warmer? I know these lamps are awfully bright."

"Like sunning…at a really bad…nude beach."

Sweat eased down my forehead as I realized what Cathryn was saying. She was laying there naked, bloody, sections of her skin like raw meat. And she thought she was only sharing the intimate, humiliating misery with her devoted husband.

She should be. Where was the bastard?

"Gerald?" she groaned. "Please try…to visit…this week. I know I look a little char-broiled, but—"

"You're still the most beautiful woman in the world." I blurted it in a low, hoarse voice. As if I meant it.

I did.

She made a mewling sound. "Never thought…you'd say that, again. I love you."

"I love—" Don't do it. This is going too far. "—you, too."

More broken sounds. I'd made her cry. She was crying because her husband said he loved her. Because she thought her husband had stopped loving her. I wanted to find Gerald and have a discussion. Mountain-style. I'd go hillbilly on his ass.

Delta reached over and pounded my arm for attention. Me, she mouthed. Introduce me.

"Cathy, I've got someone special on the line. This may sound a little odd, because it's been a long time since you saw anyone from your mother's family and friends, but a distant cousin of yours contacted me, from North Carolina, and—"

"Hello, Cathryn Mary Deen," De`lta shouted. "Cathy Deen, I'm your cousin, Delta, and I was one of your mama's best friends, and the last time you came to visit your Granny Nettie, back when you were just a little girl, I dropped by with my little boy, Jeb, and we had a wonderful lunch with you and your granny. She was a great cook, and to this day I make biscuits by her recipe. And I just want you to know, Cathy—"

"Biscuits!" Cathryn said.

"Biscuits," Delta repeated. "I make and sell your granny's biscuits."

"Biscuits." Wistful, urgent, connected. The magic word.

"I'm sorry, Cathryn," the nurse interjected. "I have to start cleaning you, again. Try to relax. Take a deep breath."<