If I'd Never Known Your Love

Georgia Bockoven

ISBN 9780-373-65407-9

ISBN 0-373-65407-3

A Harlequin® Everlasting Love Publication 2007

Copyright © Georgia Bockoven 2007

"I'm going to miss you.

Every minute of every hour..."

With those words, Julia's husband stepped into his taxi and was gone. Evan McDonald. Julia's lifeline—and the doting father of her two beautiful children.

From the moment she'd first spotted him in high school so many years before, Julia had known they'd always be together.

Now... Evan's business trip to Colombia becomes deadly when he's kidnapped, and Julia is thrown into a tailspin of horror...and waiting.

For five tortured years Julia does whatever it takes to bring Evan home. Despite her grief and rage at losing the man she loves, she vows to keep struggling. Until she receives a call that shatters her hopes of Evan's return. But then...

C H A P T E R 1

"What are you so deep in thought about?"

Evan came up behind Julia as she loaded a cup into the dishwasher. He slipped his arms around her waist, drew her against him and tucked his chin into the hollow of her shoulder.

Julia folded her arms over his and sighed contentedly. "I was just thinking that I should have tried harder to find a way to go with you."

For the past day and a half she'd been telling herself that the elephant sitting on her chest and the panic attack that had driven her from bed in the middle of the night were nothing more than frustration at not being able to accompany Evan on his last-minute business trip to Colombia.

"Should?" He chuckled. "Now, what's that all about?"

The queasiness she'd felt as she'd watched Evan pack his suitcase that afternoon—

worse than anything she'd experienced during two pregnancies— she'd put off to the shrimp salad she'd had for lunch. She simply refused to acknowledge that the constant, nagging feeling of dread might be anything real, not after all the years of denying the possibility such things existed and that even sane, rational people might be wise to pay attention to them.

She couldn't bring herself to share the depth of her doubts with him. As a child, using maps he'd torn out of books, Evan had escaped the reality of life in a tenement in Detroit by papering the walls of the bedroom he'd shared with his baby brother, and put him to sleep at night with stories of the places they would go someday and the people they would meet.

"I guess I just don't like the idea of you having all that fun without me," she said.

"Hmm...what if I promise to be miserable?"

She laughed. "You would do that for me?"

"Absolutely."

"What a guy."

"And what about you, Mrs. McDonald? Does this mean you're going to sacrifice all the good times I'll be missing while you paint the upstairs bathroom?"

They had been in their new-to-them, fixer-upper home for less than a month, only their second home since they'd moved to the Sacramento area from Kansas ten years earlier. Was it really all that unusual for her to be feeling a little out of sorts with the stress and excitement? Still...

"Can we be serious for a minute?" She turned to face him.

"I don't think I like the sound of this."

"I want you to promise that you won't leave the city." When he started to answer, she held up her hand to stop him. "Even if one of the people you're going there to meet has a villa somewhere in the country. I want you to promise you won't go."

"Be reasonable, Julia. How could I refuse an invitation to someone's home?"

"Tell the truth—that you weren't able to get the shots you needed before you left. You wouldn't even have had a passport if we hadn't gone to Mexico last year. They know you were a last-minute replacement for Harold. They'll understand."

Evan's boss was still in the hospital recovering from a fall into a hole at a construction site. In addition to three broken ribs, he was bruised all along his left side and sore over his entire body. He breathed like a man easing one last puff into a balloon already overfilled and about to pop. Evan taking Harold's place was not only a huge responsibility, it showed Harold's incredible confidence in Evan's abilities to represent the firm. If they got the contract for the state-of-the-art, five-story shopping center, it would be their first international engineering job and a door opening for future business in South America.

"And please remember not to drink or eat anything from a roadside stand." She added that because she knew Evan would be tempted and also knew just as surely that if only one bug lurked in a gallon of water, it would find him. From the day their daughter, Shelly, had started preschool, it was as if Evan's body had rolled out a welcome mat for every stray bacteria and virus. Neither of the kids had ever come down with something their dad didn't come down with a week later.

"Anything else?"

"Well, now that you mention it, I'd really like it if you stayed at the hotel and didn't go—"

"Whoa, slow down a minute. Who have you been talking to?"

"No one." He plainly didn't believe her. "Okay, I did a couple of searches on the Internet."

"I see." He nodded, fighting a grin and failing. "You want to talk about it?"

She did, for herself, for her own peace of mind, but didn't, for him. If she persisted with her unreasonable fears she was going to ruin something he'd wanted all his life.

And to what end? If long-distance paranoia worked, her mother would have a patent on it.

"No," she said. "I'm just—" She shrugged.

"Did you also happen to look up the hotel where I'll be staying?" he asked.

"I did," she said sheepishly.

"And?"

"It looked very nice."

"No-bed-bugs nice?" His eyes sparkled with amusement. "Or four-star nice?"

"Actually, it was the description of the hotel that made me wish I'd worked a little harder to find a way to go with you." It was a lie, but just a small one, and told for the right reason.

He laughed."And how would you have done that? Two days was hardly enough time to get me ready."

"I don't know," she admitted. "I just should have tried harder."

He planted a kiss on the tip of her nose. "Next time."

"Like that's going to happen. Look what it took to keep Harold from going this time.

It's not as if he's suddenly going to learn to delegate just because this trip goes well for you."

"He's getting better," Evan said mysteriously."I can see all kinds of things opening up for us in the future."

"You did that on purpose."

"Yes, I did."

"You can't possibly think you're going to get away with saying something like that and just leave it hang."

"I'm saving the rest for when I get back."

She actually laughed at that. He'd never been able to keep a secret from her. It was one of the reasons he had to wait until the last minute to buy her birthday and Christmas presents. "Fat chance."

"I'm serious," he insisted despite the grin twitching the corner of his mouth.

Feigning disinterest was the one sure way she knew to get him to talk. "Okay. I guess it will have to wait."

Before he could say anything, there was a shriek and then a thud as something heavy hit the floor directly above them. "What the hell?" Evan said.

A second shriek followed, and thumping on the stairs. "Ee-ee-uu-uu-w-w-w—"

Shelly screamed."It touched me." Racing into the room, she threw herself into Evan's arms.

"This better not be about your brother," he said.

"There's a mouse in my room. It ran over my foot. It was so-o-o-o-o gross, Daddy.

Do something. Get it. Kill it."

"Think about what you're saying, Shelly. Do you really want me to kill that poor mouse? Just because it scared you?"

She looked up at her father, her chin planted in the middle of his chest, her arms wrapped around his waist. "Yes?"

"And do you honestly believe I'm going to do that?"

"Would you at least think about it? What if it gets in bed with me when I'm sleeping?"

"Okay, and then what should I do to you? You undoubtedly scared it as much as it scared you."

"Oh, Daddy, that's just dumb."

Evan shot Julia a grin. "It appears you'll have to finish grilling me later." He went to the hall closet and glanced inside. "I thought we were going to keep the broom in here."

For the three-and-a-half weeks they'd been in the house it seemed as if they always were looking for something they'd put away in what they were sure were perfect, logical places. "I'm sure I saw it in the garage. I'll check."

Julia finally fell into a restless, troubled sleep at two-thirty that night, an hour before the airport van would be there to pick up Evan and take him to San Francisco for his flight. Evan had insisted she should sleep in, that he could see himself off. She'd insisted just as strongly that she would get up with him.

The soft click of the front door opening woke her. She instantly knew what he'd done and was overcome with a sense of loss. She leaped out of bed and ran after him in her nightgown, flung open the door and shouted, "Wait."

Evan turned and gave her a look of such love and longing that she would only need to remember this moment for years to come to forgive him anything. He met her in the middle of the walkway, swept her into his arms and held her as if it were the end of their separation instead of the beginning.

"I'm going to miss you," he said. "Every minute of every hour."

She desperately didn't want him to go and couldn't say what he needed to hear, the words that would make leaving her okay.

"Harold is making me a partner," he said.

She gasped. Of all the things she might have guessed, this wasn't even on the distant horizon.

He smiled. "Just what I wanted—to leave you breathless."

"What does that mean?"

"Five percent now, another one percent every year from now on."

"Oh, Evan, that's... That's so...so amazing. I'm stunned." Five percent of a privately owned company like Stephens Engineering was huge. She kissed him.

"Congratulations. You're awesome. When did this happen?"

"The same day Harold asked me to take his place on this trip. He said he'd planned on waiting until he came back, but then thought what the hell, might as well give me something to think about while I was gone. I was going to tell you, but then thought it would be more fun when we could go out and celebrate together." He grinned."And as usual, I couldn't keep a secret from you."

The driver leaned out his window and waved at Evan. "Hey, buddy, I got a schedule."

"I'll tell you all about it when I call you from the hotel."

Ignoring the increasingly impatient driver, Julia stood on her tiptoes and hugged Evan even tighter, kissing him with a thesaurus-full of meaning. "I love you."

"I love you, too." Evan started to leave, then abruptly came back. He held her face between his hands and stared deeply into her eyes. "You are everything to me—always have been, always will be."

His intensity nearly destroyed her shaky resolve to handle his leaving in a sane, rational manner. From somewhere, she found a halfway convincing smile. "Hurry home." She grinned. "We have some big- time celebrating to do."

"Give the kids a kiss for me."

She nodded. She and Evan were back on solid ground, speaking familiar words, exchanging unspoken promises. She watched the van pull out of the driveway, holding herself against the sudden cold. She couldn't tell if Evan was still turned toward her when the van made the corner, but she waved and, in her mind's eye, saw him wave back.

Knowing there was no way she would go to sleep again right away, and not wanting to go upstairs for her robe, Julia took Evan's sweater from the hall closet and went into the kitchen to make coffee. She found a single peach-colored rose, one of the last of the season from the small rose garden in the front yard, sitting in a kitchen glass. A note sat beside the rose.

Julia,

I haven't told you often enough how much I love you or what you mean to me. You are my world. I haven't left yet and I miss you already.

Buy something black and sexy and expensive while I'm gone—something you can wear for dinner. No, make that two things black and sexy and expensive— one of them something you'd get arrested in if you wore outside the bedroom. I'll explain when I get home.

Love,

Evan

Thinking more about lacy lingerie than dresses, Julia put the note on the refrigerator, then reconsidered and tucked it in her pocket. Shelly was a mature ten-year-old, and Julia wasn't interested in adding to her education. She waited for the coffee to finish brewing. Then, the rose in one hand, her cup in the other, she went into her office to work until it was time to wake the kids for school.

Julia leaned back in her chair and stared at the newsletter design she'd been working on for the past three hours. The client wanted new and different, but not too new or different; bold, but not garish, with lots of white space, yet not so many pages that it would up the mailing cost. Which meant that the client wanted exactly what everyone else wanted— only different. And, as always, it was a given that the job had to be finished in two days, maybe three—a week at the absolute outside. The three graphic designers who used her on a freelance basis provided a cushion between her and unreasonable clients. She'd become so spoiled working at home that she shuddered at the thought of ever having to go back to work in an office. Thankfully, with Evan's career going as well as it was, especially with the new partnership, she'd never be faced with that decision again.

She glanced out the window at the sound of squabbling finches and saw that the bird feeder was empty. Keeping it filled was Evan's job—his joy, really. Hanging it from the massive live oak that dominated the backyard was one of the first things he'd done when they'd moved in. When he'd spotted the first diner, he let out a whoop that had made her abandon her unpacking and run downstairs to check on him. As a transplanted Kansas farm girl, she found it hard to drum up the same level of enthusiasm over something she'd always taken for granted, but she never let on that seeing the bulbs Evan planted in the fall push through three inches of soil to emerge as flowers in the spring was anything short of a miracle, or that rushing inside to grab a Peterson Field Guide wasn't an immediate response to spotting a new bird or butterfly.

Evan had an insatiable curiosity about everything, and had built a library that contained twice as many research books as fiction rides. He'd passed the trait on to their children, somehow fostering in them the idea that learning was the best kind of game.

Needing a break, she took a scoop of sunflower seeds outside and spotted the mouse that Evan had caught in Shelly s room and released in the backyard. It was sitting on the wooden deck under the feeder, eating seeds the birds had carelessly tossed aside as they sought one more to their liking. With half a tail and a scar down its side from a previous encounter, there was no doubt it was the same mouse. It stopped chewing and stared at her, showing more curiosity than fear. Deciding she posed no immediate threat, it tucked the seed into its cheek and picked up another before climbing the brick retaining wall behind the tree and disappearing under an azalea bush.

In the short time they'd been there, Evan had mentally transformed the backyard, feeling about it the way she felt about the house. He dragged her out there at least once a day to listen to his plans, pointing out which azaleas and camellias he would keep, what he would put in place of the ones he removed and where he would plant the hundreds and hundreds of bulbs that would fill the yard with a rainbow of color each spring.

She mentally added the mouse-spotting to the list of things she would tell Evan when he phoned to let her know that he'd arrived. Nine hours to go. An eternity.

With the exception of a couple of backwoods fishing trips with his buddies, Evan had never been out of phone contact with her for an entire day. He always called from work, sometimes to share something funny or sad, sometimes just to say hi, mostly, he claimed, because hearing her voice brightened his day. Her girlfriends insisted he was a freak of nature, that no normal man married ten years looked at his perfectly ordinary wife as if she were a Victoria's Secret model or lit up like a sparkler whenever she came into a room.

In the beginning she'd assumed that what she and Evan had was simply a slightly altered version of the love all married couples shared. Then she'd stepped into her thirties and saw how few of their friends' marriages were surviving. It scared her. She'd never considered herself unique in anything and wondered if she was simply oblivious to the clues. By the time her own sister, Barbara, had figured out her husband had been unfaithful and had confronted him, he'd not only admitted he'd been seeing someone but told her it was his third affair in their five-year marriage, one of them a woman he'd met on their honeymoon.

Julia tried to picture Evan cheating on her and couldn't. She tried to picture an argument that would tear them apart. Impossible. Finally, she tried to imagine him falling out of love with her or her with him. It was as inconceivable as nonfat chocolate.

A really good nonfat chocolate.

Later that night, eight o'clock came and passed, then nine and still no phone call. At ten she put the kids to bed, promising they could call their dad when they got home from school the next day. By eleven she'd traced his flight and learned that it had landed an hour late, but safely.

Figuring they'd been optimistic about how long it would take to get through customs, Julia added another hour to her calculations. That made him an hour late—time that could be accounted for with a few extra minutes to get a cab, more traffic than they'd anticipated at that time of night, a problem with his room, running into an old friend.

The phone would ring any minute.

But it didn't.

She made another pot of coffee, not to stay awake but because it gave her something to do. Fifteen minutes later, she called the hotel. It took several minutes to find someone on the night crew who spoke English. He told her Evan hadn't checked in. She asked to leave a message and then changed her mind. Evan would know she was worried and didn't need a reminder.

Finally, her ability to come up with a reasonable explanation for not hearing from him exhausted, her nerves raw, her mind teetering on panic, she heard the phone ring.

"Where have you been?" she said instead of hello. "I've been so worried."

"Julia, it's Harold." He hesitated for agonizingly long seconds. "I'm afraid I have some bad news." Again he paused. 'I’m sorry, I tried to think of a way to tell you this that would make it easier, but there just aren't any words. It appears Evan's been kidnapped. The driver hired by Gutierrez Construction to pick him up at the airport said several men with guns waylaid their car and took Evan. Ernesto Gutierrez called the police and then me. I told him I would—well, that I would let you know."

"Kidnapped?" With everything she'd imagined, she hadn't come close to this. "Why Evan? That doesn't make sense." Denial gave her precious moments to escape the horror. There had to be some mistake. He couldn't be one of those blindfolded men and women she'd seen on the evening news, terrified into a shuffling numbness, bruised and bleeding, sitting in front of masked gunmen, pleading for their lives.

"Ernesto said there are a couple of political groups that grab anyone they believe can pay. It's how they finance their armies."

"We don't have any money." Please, God. Not Evan. Let there be some mistake.

"But I do. There's no way they could have known Evan had taken my place. They must have thought they were taking me.

"Julia, I can't find the words to express how sorry I am. This is my fault. It should have been me. I swear to you that I will do everything it takes to get Evan home.

Ernesto is working on it already. He said he has a friend whose uncle was taken and that he will get in touch with them to find out what we should do. As soon as we hear from the kidnappers, whoever they are, we'll do whatever they ask."

"I have to go there," she said.

"Julia, there isn't anything—"

"I have to be there, Harold."

"Yes, of course. I'll have my assistant make the arrangements first thing in the morning."

That was hours away. "No, it has to be now," she told him. "I can get a flight online and be on my way by morning."

"Let me do this for you. Please. I have a friend who has a charter company. I can get you there faster through him than you can get there commercially."

"All right "she agreed, reluctantly. But she couldn't just wait. She had to do something. She could pack. And call her sister, Barbara, to ask her to stay with Shelly and Jason. Her mother and father had to be told. They would have a hundred questions.

Especially her father. He'd never been someone to sit and wait for anything. "You'll phone as soon as you hear something? Anything? From anyone?"

"I promise."

She packed and then called Barbara, waking her, needing her, knowing that she would be there as soon as she could get dressed and drive over.

Barbara arrived in her bathrobe just as Julia finished telling Shelly and Jason what had happened to their father and why she had to go to Colombia. Shelly cried. Jason's eyes grew ever wider as he listened with the rapt attention of a seven-year-old whose only experience with violence was a video game where the good guys always won.

With the aplomb and authority and sensitivity of a kindergarten teacher on the first day of school, something she'd experienced seven times in her teaching career, Barbara took over. She calmed Shelly and corralled her into helping with breakfast, giving her something to do. Julia handled Jason, responding to his endless questions with the same answer—that she didn't know.

After seeing them off on the school bus, her bunny slippers decorated with birch-tree leaves that she'd gathered as she'd hurried across the front lawn, Barbara stood at the bottom of the stairs and shouted up to Julia.

"What can I do now?"

"Call Mom and Dad."

"Okay—but you know they're going to want to talk to you."

Julia came to the bedroom door."Tell them I'll call when I get to Colombia, when I actually know something. And tell Dad that I know how much he's going to want to be there, too, and that I appreciate it, but—" She paused and took a deep breath. "Damn. I'll call them myself."

"Let me give them the news and then I'll pass the phone to you."

The small kindness tipped Julia over the emotional edge, and she broke down. She flashed to mental images of Evan being wrestled from the car, a gun stuck in his ribs, a blindfold, a racing car, men shouting at him in a language he didn't understand. Had they hit him? Was he bleeding? She hugged herself, her tears punctuated by deep moans.

Please, please let them realize they've made a mistake and let him go, she silently cried over and over again, collapsing to the floor. "No-o-o-o-o-o----Oh, please, please let him go."

Barbara ran up the stairs, forgetting her leaf- encrusted slippers and leaving a trail of yellow in the threadbare green carpet. Crouching to enfold Julia in her arms, she said,

"He s going to be all right. Just keep reminding yourself that kidnappers don't take people to hurt them—they do it for the money."

"We don't have any money," she sobbed."We used every bit of our savings to buy this house. There's no way I could get it sold in time to pay a ransom. Harold said he would help, but—"

"I have some money put away and so do Mom and Dad. We'll find a way, Julia."

Abruptly shaking herself, she moved free of her sister's arms and stood, wiping her eyes with her hands. "I can't do this. Don't let me do this, Barbara. I have to stay strong.

What good can I possibly be to Evan if I don't?"

Harold kept his promise and called Julia even when he had nothing to report, innately knowing if she didn't hear from him she would assume the worst. The arrangements were finalized for the flight, and Julia, Harold and a nurse, whom his wife, Mary, had insisted he hire, were on their way to Colombia by noon.

To keep herself sane while Harold slept off the painkillers he'd needed just to get out of bed to go with her, Julia searched the plane for a magazine, something to distract her if only for an hour or two. She found four on golf, one on fishing and the past six issues of Sports Illustrated. She also found a tablet, spiral-bound and blank. With no clear idea what she would say, or why she felt the sudden, compulsive need, she took a pen from her purse and began a letter to Evan.

As she wrote she discovered a peace and connection that were almost mystical. Evan would read what she wrote. She believed that with her heart and her soul. She had to.

One Day Missing

My darling, Evan,

I know I've told you this a dozen times in a dozen different ways, but I was a little bit in love with you even before we met. You were all my girlfriends could talk about the whole two weeks I was stuck at home after I broke both my legs jumping out of the hayloft. Of course the guys who came to see me never mentioned you unless I asked.

All they wanted to talk about was why the football team that most of them were on was doing so well, and how they were sure they would make the state championship, finally. They thought I cared more than I did because I was a cheerleader and couldn't get to the games.

Maybe it was something I heard in my girlfriends' voices, or maybe I noticed how animated they're came when they talked about you. Whatever it was, I could hardly wait to get back to school and see you for myself Looking back, it's easy to understand why you had the effect on them that you did. You were the bad boy from Detroit who showed up one morning walking across the school yard looking like you'd just stepped out of the movie Grease. You were Danny Zuko with your long hair and black T-shirt and jeans. Only, unlike John Travolta, you never smiled.

You didn't talk, either. Not to anyone. For a group of small-town Kansas farm girls you were the most exciting thing to come into their Hues since puberty.

Becky Roberts insisted that even the teachers were a little afraid of you. What great gossip you provided for a bunch of kids who'd lived their entire lives in Bickford, Kansas. Oh, Evan, if they'd only known.

Of course, hearing all this, I could hardly wait to see you and to win you over with my charm and wit. I was absolutely sure that there was no way you'd be able to resist my cheerleader personality and smile.

But you could. And you did. Oh, boy, did you resist me.

I spotted you across the quad, sitting on the grass with your back against a tree. You were reading a book, something with a library tag on the spine, and didn't even glance up as I rolled my squeaky wheelchair across the asphalt toward you.

"Hi," I said with a calculated, perky enthusiasm as I parked at the edge of the grass.

You ignored me.

"Hey, you with the book," I tried again.

That got through and you looked up, directly into my eyes. I know you meant to shut me up and send me on my way, but for an instant I saw something you never intended for me to see—a longing so deep and sad it stole my breath.

That day I learned that love at first sight isn't a lightning bolt. It's like trying to control the drips on a triple-scoop ice-cream cone on a blistering August day. You can lick like crazy, and you just might succeed for an instant or two, but anything beyond that— well, forget it.

"You want something?" you asked, still staring at me.

I think it was the wheelchair that breeched your defenses, because I'd turned into what had to be a fairly unattractive puddle of swirling vanilla, chocolate and strawberry. Stupidly, I stuck out my hand. "I'm Julia Warren."

You glanced at my hand. "You're kidding, right?"

"What? People don't shake hands where you come from?"

"Not any of the people I know."

Even then I realized it was a pretty dumb thing to do. But it was all I could come up with. After all, I'd just fallen in love with the one boy in the entire school my parents would not be happy to find standing at their front door.

Thankfully, I was saved by the bell announcing the start of first period. I waited for you to leave, but you were waiting for me. Another awkward moment. I gave in and backed up my wheelchair, hanging on to the right wheel and pushing the left the way I'd been taught to do to get it to turn around. Great in theory, terrible in execution. I don't know if you felt sorry for me or were impatient, but you grabbed the handles and said, "Which way?"

I pointed toward the main building. "Thanks."

We squeaked into the building and down the worn wooden floor toward Mr. Brolin's biology class. It was funny how all the kids peeked around their lockers to stare at us and how hard they looked to pretend they hadn't when they got caught.

I saw Barbara headed toward me and tried to wave her off, but as usual, she was oblivious to anything more subtle than a rock hitting her on the backside. She told you she would take over, that it was her job to get me to class. You told her to be your guest. I watched you walk away, and told Barbara that if she ever chased you off again, I would poison her oatmeal.

C H A P T E R 2

" I ' m sure it's been explained to you that the official policy of the United States will not let me help you negotiate your husband's release, nor can I officially allow you to pay a ransom, Mrs. McDonald. We can, however, provide a list of lawyers and translators without, of course, recommending one over the other."

The man speaking was in his mid-forties, sitting tall in his leather executive chair, commanding, and wearing a navy blazer with traces of pet hair on the left sleeve. While they were only a few hairs, that made him seem human somehow, someone she could reach out to. A removable piece of brass tucked into a wooden sleeve said Paul E.

Erickson. She mentally repeated the name several times. After a day filled with dealing with the Colombian authorities who handled kidnap cases and being shuffled from one department to another here at the American Embassy, people's names and faces were blurring. She'd even lost track whether Paul E. Erickson was with American Citizen Services or the ambassador's office. Tomorrow, she would bring paper and take notes.

Eventually, Harold would be well enough to make the rounds with her and hopefully pick up what she missed, but not for another week at least, if then.

In varying degrees of helpfulness, everyone she'd talked to that day had told her the same thing. There was nothing she could do until she heard from the kidnappers, and that wouldn't happen for days if not weeks, possibly even months.

She realized that there was no way for any of them to feel the urgency she felt, the panic, the fear that ran so deep it colored every thought with a warning that if she didn't do something right now—regardless of all the learned advice to be patient—it would be too late. All it would take was one more bureaucrat giving her one more verbal pat on the head and she would turn into a screaming lunatic.

"Thank you," Julia said with effort. She stood. "I appreciate your rime and will certainly let you know when I hear something." If she'd learned nothing else that day, it was how eager everyone was to be kept informed of the process and progress even while claiming there was nothing any of them could personally do to help. "Do you have a card?"

Her abrupt move to depart took him by surprise, plainly interrupting his oft-repeated speech subtly modified to fit individual crises. He motioned for her to sit back down. "I know that right now it seems we're the enemy, too, and you had expected more from your country, Mrs. McDonald, but there is only so much we can do when it comes to kidnapping. The official policy is rigid—negotiating with kidnappers only encourages more kidnappings—and, frankly, although few will admit it, there isn't one person working here who doesn't feel that policy is foolishly out-of-date.

"Sacrificing a half-dozen American citizens is not going stop these people," he went on. "Kidnapping has become a way of life in Colombia. Go down streets in some of the wealthier areas of the city and you can see men holding machine guns, sitting on top of eight-foot walls lined with barbed wire."

Finally, she'd found someone willing to throw away the script. Julia sat down again, responding to his incredible candor with a pent-up sigh. "Thank you, Mr. Erickson. I may not like what you're saying, but it's something I need to hear."

"There are eight million people living in this city.

Almost all of the country's major corporations have their headquarters here. There is great wealth and abject poverty and compelling opportunity for potential redistribution through ransom. Americans aren't the primary target, however. In total, we don't account for even one percent of the three thousand people who are kidnapped in this country every year. That doesn't give us much leverage. What possible difference can we make by refusing to negotiate, when everyone else does? It's not only shortsighted—

it's stupid. And dangerous."

"I'm confused. First you tell me the United States won't let me negotiate, and now you're telling me it's the only way to get Evan back."

He leaned forward, clasping the edge of his desk. "I can't officially help you but there are other things that I can and will do. I've already called the FBI, and they're sending someone who has worked on several kidnapping cases in Colombia. He should be here in a couple days."

"How can the FBI become involved when you can't?"

"They've been allowed to operate in foreign countries since the eighties. And because they're independent of the State Department, they don't work under the same restrictions that we do."

"Those other cases...? How did they turn out?"

He reached for a folder with George Black written on the tab and looked inside."Of the most recent and ongoing cases, one was resolved in a little over six months, another just short of a year. One captive escaped. And one case is ongoing."

None of the victims had died. This was the first time she'd been given something real to cling to; the first clear promise of hope. While the Colombian authorities had been sympathetic and encouraging, they were also strangely wary, telling her that they were convinced Evan's kidnapping was a mistake, that the real target had been a Colombian oil executive on the same plane who'd left the airport in the same kind of car and with a driver wearing a similar uniform.

"The ongoing case—how long has he been held?"

"Actually, it's a woman. She was taken in the middle of the night from an ecotourism.

group camping in the jungle in the Choco province."

"How long?"Julia repeated.

For the first time he appeared uncomfortable. "Three years."

"Oh, my God," she said softly."All that time."And then, past a sudden lump in her throat, she asked, "How do they know she's still alive?"

"A couple of months ago, the family insisted the kidnappers give them proof-of-life evidence or they would cut off the negotiations. It cost them twenty thousand dollars, but they feel it was worth every dime."

"Those poor people. I can't imagine what it must be like for them." But she was beginning to. They undoubtedly lived every day with the same sick fear that lay in the pit of her stomach.

"There isn't anything easy about this, Mrs. McDonald."

"So, are you saying I should just sit and wait for the FBI agent to get here?"

He gave her an understanding smile. "Basically, yes. But I don't think it's advice you will follow. In the meantime, there are some things you need to hear that are critical for your husband's safe return. One, don't draw attention to yourself or to Evan by going to the media. Make sure your friends and family understand this, too. I know it goes against an instinctive belief—that attention will put pressure on our government and the Colombian government, which will result in quicker action. But all you'll succeed in doing is convincing the kidnappers that Evan is more important than I'm sure he's telling them that he is.

"You'll also give them the idea that the company he works for is in a position to pay a lot of money to get him back."

"They are. His boss has assured me that he will pay whatever it takes." Harold had told her this so many times that she'd come to believe he would sell the company, if necessary, to raise the money.

"But once the idea is planted, it's almost impossible to remove. They will make impossible demands and think you're lying to them when you claim you can't fulfill them." He took a map out and spread it across his desk. "Are you familiar with the factions dividing this country?"

She shook her head. Everything she knew about Colombia she'd learned in the past week, and none of it involved politics.

He pointed to different-colored circles covering the map. "These represent various militant groups that are battling the current government and the territories they control."

Very little land was left unclaimed. Julia looked at him to see if he could possibly be serious. If this was true, Colombia was involved in a massive civil war. "And they all finance themselves through kidnappings?"

"Among other things. Illegal drugs also play a huge financial role. Your husband could be with a group that feels no need to hurry the negotiation, one that's willing and able to hold out forever to get what they want. You have to remember that they aren't on a deadline and don't have the emotional stake in this that you do. They've been at this a long time, Mrs. McDonald. As sick as it sounds, they're professionals. They know what they're doing.

She found the news oddly comforting. Although, how did professionals make such a stupid mistake and kidnap the wrong man?

"Another thing you must accept is that time is something you're going to have to learn to deal with. If you don't, it could destroy you. I know all you can think of right now is obtaining your husband's freedom as quickly as possible. That's simply not going to happen. At least not on your timeline. There is a process with these things. The kidnappers have to get your husband to a place where they feel safe before they begin negotiating. And even then they may not make contact for weeks. It's a psychological game. They are aware that the longer they make you wait, the more desperate you will feel and the more willing you will be to give them what they want."

She couldn't imagine feeling any more desperate or scared than she did at that moment. She was hanging on by her fingertips and would do anything, pay anything, asked. What kind of men wanted her to suffer weeks, maybe months longer for a few more dollars? And if they would do this to her, what would they do to Evan?

She'd come to Paul Erickson's office with an unfocused, wildly escalating fear. He had grounded her, supplying her answers and hope and direction. "But if Evan isn't the person they thought he was, why don't they just release him?"

"He's American. He works for a large company.

Even if he's not the man they were after, they have to figure he's worth something."

At last someone was giving her information she could deal with. Her strongest coping mechanisms involved knowledge and planning. If she could just focus on these, she would make it. "Who are these people in these circles?"

"The largest are FARC, which is the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, and ELN, which is the National Liberation Army. Many of the groups operating without set boundaries are small bands of out-of-work drug traffickers who were caught in police crackdowns. They're criminals by nature and unqualified or unwilling to seek legitimate work. Kidnapping becomes their source of income until they can get back into drugs again.

"There are even men who specialize in snatching people off the street to sell to one of the larger, more organized groups like FARC," he added. "They're paid a finder's fee and never have to get involved with the ransom process."

"What would you do if it was your wife or child who had been taken?" Julia said.

"I would hire a private negotiator to work with the FBI. They don't have to play by the rules."

"Where do I find one of these private negotiators?"

For the first time Paul Erickson smiled."I thought you would never ask." He removed a sheet of paper from his desk and handed it to her. "Of course, if asked, you'll forget where you got this."

She glanced at the paper and then at him. His job, his reputation, his future with the foreign service rested in her hands. "Why are you doing this for?"

"Because I couldn't sleep at night if I didn't." He smiled. "And I'm a man who enjoys a good night's sleep."

Julia thought about walking the ten blocks back to the hotel but was so shaken by everything Paul Erickson had said that she knew she would see kidnappers lurking in every doorway. She thought about ten-foot walls and barbed wire and machine guns.

What a hideous way to live.

But then, Evan hadn't been walking; he'd been in a car on a main road when an SUV

had swerved in front of them and another had hit them from behind. Within seconds Evan was gone, the driver left behind, bleeding from a blow to the head. He was the only witness and too terrified to give helpful descriptions of the men or the cars they were driving.

She had the receptionist call a cab and was back at the hotel in five minutes.

Exhausted and aware it was an hour past the time she'd promised to call Barbara and her parents, she considered begging off dinner with Harold but changed her mind. She had a lot to tell him and was eager to hear what he'd learned.

The nurse answered the door. Harold was sitting propped up in bed, surrounded by pillows, a phone beside him, his laptop on his thighs, a cup of coffee on the nightstand.

"Come—" He pointed to the chair beside the bed. "Tell me what you found out today and then I'll tell you what my friend at the State Department had to say."

Julia relayed what she'd learned, and ended by digging in her purse and handing him the list of private companies that handled ransom negotiations.

Harold studied the list for several seconds. "Both the firms my friend recommended are on here. Did you get a feel for one over the other?"

Julia shook her head."I got the impression they're all people Paul had worked with and that he felt we would be in good hands with any of them."

Dear God. Two days ago she'd been an ordinary woman living an ordinary life, where the biggest decision she'd had to make was whether to pay four dollars a pound for ground sirloin or buy the ground chuck. Could she really be having a conversation with Harold about hiring a hostage negotiator?

"Then we'll go with whichever one can get here the quickest. Is that agreeable with you?"

"I want you to know that I'll find a way to pay you back. It may take a while, but—"

"Stop right there," Harold said, holding up his hand."I don't ever want to have to say this again Julia, so listen carefully. You are not to talk about how much any of this costs or to even think about it. Evan was doing a job for me. He should be home with you right now, and I should be the one those people took. I'm responsible both morally and financially for what happened to him, and I fully intend to see this through, no matter how much it costs." He stared at her. "Is that clear?"

She nodded, afraid to trust her voice.

"Another thing. Evan is on the payroll and will be for however long it takes to get him home again. And, of course, he will also be participating in the profits through his partnership share." He reached for some papers on the nightstand, gasped and grabbed his side. "Damn—I keep forgetting I shouldn't do that."

Julia retrieved the papers and handed them to him.

"I had my assistant get automatic deposit forms from payroll and fax them to me.

Figured it would take at least one thing off your mind."

"Thank you." Harold was plainly more prepared for what lay ahead than she was, and she was more grateful than she could tell him.

"Now that that's out of the way, why don't you make those phone calls you were talking about and I'll make dinner arrangements."

"I'm really not hungry.

He smiled gently. "Neither am I. But we both have to keep up our strength for what's ahead."

Betrayed by an overwhelming swell of gratitude, Julia's chin quivered as she fought to hold back tears. "I don't know what to say. How will I ever be able to thank you?"

"This isn't a gift. It's simply what Evan has coming to him." His voice broke. He coughed to clear his throat before going on. "I have the highest regard for—God, that sounds so tight-ass. What I really mean to say is that Evan is special. If I had a son, I would want him to be like Evan in every way."

"I don't know what I would do if—" She couldn't finish. "We're not going to let anything happen to him," Harold insisted.

It already has, she felt like shouting. Instead, she said, "I can't stop thinking about mosquito repellent." She shrugged. "Stupid, huh? But Evan is a magnet for mosquitoes.

If he's somewhere in the jungle, I know they're driving him crazy."What she left unsaid was that mosquitoes carried malaria, just one of the diseases Evan hadn't been inoculated against because the trip was supposed to have been a short one and he wasn't going outside the city. Even her ultraconservative doctor had given the okay under those conditions.

"And I keep thinking about him trying to escape and getting lost." Responding to her stunned look, Harold immediately added, "Now, that was stupid. Mary is forever telling me I should have a ten-second delay installed between my head and my mouth. I hate to admit it, but she just may be right."

"It's okay. The same thought has gone through my mind." More often than she wanted to admit. A hundred times, she could have added. It was the dancing tip on the flame of fear ignited when she'd first heard Evan had been taken. Amazingly, he could find his way around every large city they'd ever visited, almost instinctively knowing how it was laid out and where things would be. But in a five-acre forest he'd be lost the minute he turned around.

She moved to leave. "What time do you want to go to dinner?"

They set the time and agreed to keep things simple by eating at the hotel restaurant.

Julia took the elevator the six flights up to her room, and stepped out of her heels the minute she was inside. She called her sister first. Barbara answered immediately.

"You need to call Dad as soon as you hang up," she said after Julia had filled her in on what she'd learned that day. "He's flying into Bogota in the morning, and I didn't know where to tell him to find you. I've misplaced the paper you said you left me with all the contact information."

"It's not on the refrigerator?"

"I thought that was the information for Evan, not you."

"I'm staying in the room he'd booked, actually." She looked around at the luxurious suite originally intended for Harold and paid for by Gutierrez Construction. She spotted Evan's suitcase in front of the closet. "The police must have delivered his luggage while I was gone." Her throat tightened and just that quickly she was crying again.

"See? You need Dad there."

"I can barely take care of myself," Julia said. "How am I going to keep him from falling apart? I don't suppose there's any way you could talk him out of coming."

"Not a chance."

"There's nothing he can do here. There's nothing any of us can do until we hear from whoever took Evan. How am I going to make him understand that?"

"He's devastated, Julia. He has to do something, even if it's just being there with you.

You know how he feels about Evan. He's as much Dad's son as Fred is."

"How is Mom going to run the farm by herself?"

"She's not. She's insisting on coming here to stay with Shelly and Jason."

"And who's going to—"

"I asked and Dad said it was all taken care of. I have a feeling they talked Fred into coming home for a couple weeks."

"But he just got that teaching job at UCLA." For someone with only two years'

experience teaching at the college level, the University of California at Los Angeles was the highest plum on the tree, one Fred had to reach so far to pluck that it was an astonishing achievement when he got the job and was worthy of two days' celebration.

Julia groaned. She had no more control over her family than she did the kidnappers.

"Take a deep breath and calm down," Barbara said. "We're your family and this is what families do. Let us help you."

Julia sat down heavily on the bed and leaned forward, her elbows on her knees. "I'm so scared, Barbara," she admitted. "This isn't turning out anything like I'd imagined. I thought we would get here, there would be a ransom note, we'd pay it and then get the hell out. Now we're being told it could be months before we even hear from the kidnappers and then months more negotiating with them."

"What are you going to do? You can't stay there all that time."

"What choice do I have?"

"Oh, Julia—I'm so sorry." Her voice cracked. "I don't know what else to say. How do people keep their sanity going through something like this?"

"It has to be that old cliche, one day at a time."

"One more thing before you hang up. I know it's the last thing you want to think about right now, but there were several panicked phone messages on the machine today, something about a newsletter you've been working on."

"Damn. I forgot it was due today." Actually, she'd forgotten about it entirely. "What did you tell them?"

"Nothing."

She gave Barbara instructions on how to send the partially finished newsletter by e-mail and where to find the phone numbers for the companies with work still pending.

"Tell them I'll get in touch when I'm home again and not to count on me for anything until then."

"What do you want me to tell the kids?"

She tried, but couldn't stop looking at Evan's suitcase, knowing that it was filled with clothes he had packed, a razor he'd used, his aftershave, the, notes she'd written and tucked in pockets and shoes. "Tell them I'm fine and that I'll phone them tonight."

"Anything else?"

"There's a peach-colored rose in a glass in my office. Please don't let anything happen to it."

"I'll take care of it right now."

They said goodbye and hung up. Julia went to the window and looked down fifteen stories to the traffic crawling past the hotel. She could have been in any large city anywhere in the world and the scene would have been the same. Too many people trying to get someplace. Fathers eager to be with their families; mothers going to work every day and wondering if their children were suffering because of it. Some people were happy, some were sick, some were dying. And some, a unique few, were just like her, waiting and hoping and praying for a loved one who had become a commodity.

How did they do it? How did they get up each morning and face another day? How did they go about their lives doing the normal, everyday things that had to be done while they waited? Did they keep their dentist appointments? Enjoy a fine glass of wine? Visit friends? How did they go on with their lives, when she was so consumed with thinking about Evan that at times she had to remind herself to breathe?

She left the window and reached for her lifeline, her connection, her promise—the letter she was writing for Evan.

Two Days Missing

Three weeks to the day after I fell in love with you, I finally managed to get you to actually talk to me. I cornered you after school in Mrs. Winslow's classroom, blocking the only exit with my body and a pair of crutches. It was my first day out of the wheelchair and I'd spent it stumbling around like a one-legged tightrope walker.

"Where's Mrs. Winslow?" I asked, as if I cared.

You leaned back in a chair that barely fit you and tried to pull off boredom. You weren't just different— mysterious, a little dangerous-looking, blatantly sexy— from the boys I'd known all my life, it was as if you were a different species. And it was pretty obvious you weren't just pretending not to like me. No boy had ever rolled his eyes when he saw me or made a point of purposely heading in the opposite direction when he ran into me in the hall. Well, my brother had, but that didn't count.

I assumed at the time that it was the cheerleader thing that turned you off, and there was no way I would let that stop me. I don't think I would have believed the truth, that you were afraid of me and what I might discover, if anyone had been smart enough to figure it out and tell me.

"Mrs. Winslow?" I repeated.

"She had a phone call. Said she didn't know when she'd be back."

"So what are you still doing here?"

You ran your fingers through that beautiful long, black hair, sweeping it from your face and letting me see a deep scowl. "And how is that any of your business?"

"Oh, cut the crap, Evan. You're not as tough as you want everyone to think you are."

You didn't say anything, just slammed your book closed and crossed the room, shooting me a look that told me if I didn't move out of the doorway, you would move me. I didn't. And you did. But when you put your hands under my arms to set me aside, my crutches crashed to the floor. Which meant that you either had to keep holding me or let me fall.

"Damn it."

I laughed. I couldn't help it. The real surprise was that after a couple of seconds, you laughed, too. The transformation took my breath away. Plainly, there are levels to love at first sight, steps you either take forward or backward once you get past that initial melted-ice-cream feeling. I knew at that moment that I would only be going forward with you.

"Now what?" I asked.

There was still a trace of the smile when you said, "Now I pick you up and dump you out the window."

"Aw, come on, tell me how you really feel." To this day, Evan, I don't know how I got the nerve to say those words.

"What do you want from me?"

"I want to be your friend." I wanted a lot more, of course, but realized I'd be lucky to get you to acknowledge me the next time we saw each other.

"Why?"

I grinned. "Because you're the only person I know who doesn't like me."

"Don't sell yourself short. I'll bet there are dozens—hundreds, maybe." You took one of my hands and put it on the doorframe. "Hang on to this."

"I will if you '11 drive me home. I missed the bus."

You stared at me as if I were speaking a foreign language. "No."

"Why not? It's not like it's out of your way. "Your aunt lived in a rented house on a piece of property a couple of miles down the road from my parents' farm. "Besides, it's your fault I missed the bus."

"Now, how do you figure that?"

"I was waiting for you by your car to ask you for a ride and you never showed up.

When the bus left, I had no choice but to come looking for you."

"You're nuts. You know that, don't you?" He shook his head. "People must tell you all the time."

"So does that mean you 're going to give me a ride? You wouldn't want a crazy girl on crutches wandering down the road by herself, would you?"

For a heartbeat I thought I'd gone too far, been too bold, chased too hard and lost you forever. I was scared and mentally scrambling for an apology that didn't sound as lame as I felt, when you mumbled, "All right."

If driving me home meant you'd put a tentative foot in the web I'd spun, my dad managed to haul you in all the way when we arrived. He came out of the bam as we drove up and, instead of lending a hand, stood by and watched while you helped me out of the car. He must have liked what he saw, because once I was upright and balanced, he came across the yard to shake your hand.

"Can't tell you how much I appreciate you doing this," he said, taking your measure the entire time. "Getting on and off that bus is a real chore for Julia, what with those crutches and all. Stepping up and giving her a ride till she's on her feet again is a right nice thing for you to do."

I almost laughed at my university-educated father's attempt at homespun but would have stuffed a sock in my mouth before I let you know that you'd been had. Plainly, my dad saw something in those few minutes you were helping me out of the car that he felt was worthy of his precious daughter. Or at least of withholding judgment at the bad-boy image you projected. Which was 50 out of character for him and his usual cranky behavior with the boys I brought home that I couldn't help but wonder if this new strategy wasn't some perverse plan to drive you away.

You could have protested, of course, made up some excuse for not being able to give me a ride, but you didn't even try. You looked at my father with a kind of quiet understanding. "What time should I be here in the morning?"

"Julia?" Dad asked.

"Seven-thirty." For once I managed brevity.

You nodded and moved to leave.

Dad stuffed his hands in his back pockets and shifted his weight, studying you as you rounded the car. Obviously, he wasn't ready to give me over to you for those "kindly"

rides to and from school without getting to know you better, because he said, "If you're not in a hurry I can show you around the place a little. You don't look like someone who's spent a lot of time on a farm."

You surprised both of us when you said, "I’d like that. "You gave my dad a lopsided grin. "You can tell that just by looking at me, huh?"

I now know my dad experienced his own version of love at first sight that day. He had a passion for the land and farming second only to his family. You not only embraced that passion, you absorbed it and made it your own.

During dinner that night Dad told us that you were curious about everything, eager to know the why and how and when of whatever he told you, whether it was crop rotation or grain lost to rodents or hail damage. An hour turned into two, and when Mom said supper was on the table, Dad said he tried to talk you into staying, but you begged off. You weren't ready.

Or maybe it was simply that you didn't know us well enough yet, that you were terrified of what would happen if you let us in and we discovered everything about you was a lie.

C H A P T E R 3

Thee-and-a-half weeks passed and nothing. Not a word from the kidnappers. Paul Erickson, from the State Department, George Black, from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Matt Coatney, from International Security Operations, had used every resource they had to try to find out who had taken Evan and why they were waiting so long to make contact. No one knew anything. Or if they did, they weren't talking.

All three men told Julia not to read anything ominous into the silence, and she heeded their advice most of the time. But when she'd finished her phone calls at night and was alone in her room, with only

Evan's shirt or jacket to wrap around her, his socks on her feet to give her comfort, absorbed by her letter and memories, she didn't do nearly as well as she tried to make everyone think she was doing.

Shelly and Jason couldn't understand the delay, no matter how many times she tried to explain. They wanted her home. Shelly cried almost every night when Julia called.

Jason just got harder and harder to talk to.

Barbara and her mother assured her that everything was fine, that the kids were dealing with her absence all right—at least, most of the rime—and that Julia should concentrate on what she had to do and they would continue to do everything they could to make sure Shelly and Jason understood why Julia had to stay in Colombia.

Guilt became as familiar as the small mole at the corner of her eye, something she accepted as readily. Someday, somehow, she would find a way to make them understand why she'd seemingly abandoned them to stay in Colombia with their father.

She knew how desperately they needed her because she needed them every bit as much.

But Evan needed her more. Wherever he was, the one thing he could count on, the one thing she believed that he understood without question, was that she was in Colombia, doing everything she could to bring him home.

Her father had stayed two weeks, leaving with a promise to return as soon as he could make arrangements for someone to take care of the farm. As much as she'd insisted she hadn't wanted him there, she had fallen apart when he'd left. She'd stayed in her room all the next day. When Harold had called to check on her, she'd told him she had cramps

— the one sure way she knew to keep him from asking more questions.

She had pulled herself together by the next morning and started working on a plan to get Harold to go home to be with his family for Thanksgiving.

"It's not going to happen, Julia," he'd told her over breakfast. "Mary and I have discussed it, and she agrees with me. My place is here with you and Evan."

"I'm not saying that I think you should stay home, Harold. I understand how important it is for you to be here when they finally contact us. But even if we should get a demand while you're gone, you know we're not going to do anything before you get back."

After making them wait this long, Matt and George both insisted it was critical that they wait at least a week before answering the kidnappers, once they did make contact.

Intellectually, she understood the process and how dangerous it would be to seem too eager; emotionally, she had miles to go. The dreams that threaded their way through her sleep— the images of Evan beaten and starving, huddled in the corner of a dirt-floor hut or, worse yet, left without any shelter at all—carried into the day, overwhelming her when she least expected it, leaving her shaken and sick to her stomach with fear.

"I'm not sure I'll be able to do that, Julia. I don't understand this game playing. I especially don't understand why we can't just pay them the money and be done with it."

"It's because you don't think like them, Harold," she said patiently, going over old territory."If we just hand over the money, they'll get the idea that there's a lot more where that came from and they'll up the demand. We have to make them believe they're getting everything they can possibly get or they'll never release Evan." George and Matt had cited case after case where things had gone wrong, and almost always it came down to missteps in the negotiating process.

There were so many small things she never could have known without their expertise, such as using pesos instead of dollars for negotiating, that showing restraint didn't indicate weakness even to the most hardened criminals and that one of the most important aspects of time passing was that it would allow Evan to bond with his kidnappers, which would likely increase his chances of being released unharmed. The more she learned, the more it terrified her to think of what she didn't know.

Harold finished his breakfast and put his napkin beside his plate."Is your father coming back to spend Thanksgiving with you?"

If she made the lie too big, he would never believe her. "He's trying. But even if can't make it, I've been invited to dinner with Paul Erickson and his wife. So I won't be alone." At least she could see he was considering leaving.

"You know you really need to spend some time at the office, too," she added. "You may have the best people in the business working for you, but they need your guidance once in a while. Especially with both you and Evan gone."

"There really isn't any reason you couldn't fly home for a couple of days, too," he said reluctantly, giving a little, "Shelly and Jason must feel lost without you."

She pushed her plate away, hoping Harold hadn't noticed how little she'd eaten. She had trouble getting food past the constant lump of fear in her throat. When she did, she invariably wound up sick to her stomach.

"I thought about it," she said. Every minute of every day. "This is beyond hard on the kids." She was haunted by the thought her children could wind up with lifelong scars from what they might someday perceive as neglect. "I hear it in their voices every night." Along with the tears that shredded her aching heart. "But I can't leave until we hear something." No matter how she hurt for her children, they were with people who loved and cared for them. Evan had no one.

"What about bringing them here? Don't they get a week off school at Thanksgiving?"

She shook her head emphatically. "I don't want them anywhere near this place. Even the idea terrifies me."

"I knew it was a stupid suggestion the second I made it." He flagged the waiter and gave him his credit card. "I'm afraid I'm not doing very well with this whole business, Julia. I've never felt this helpless. Or this useless. I function best when I have something to do."

"Me, too, Harold." She reached across the table to touch his hand. "It would help us both if you went home for a couple of days."

"What would you do here alone?"

"I'd double up on my Spanish lessons. And Paul's wife, Luanne, has offered to show me around the city. She's convinced I'll find solace visiting the colonial churches. She said there were a couple of pre-Colombian gold exhibits I might like, too." Julia had politely nodded and kept her mouth shut when hearing of all the delights in Bogota.

How anyone could think she'd be interested in playing tourist while waiting to hear whether her husband was alive or dead was beyond her. But then, as she'd been told over and over again, kidnapping was a way of life here. You either found a way to live with it or it destroyed you.

"You're not fooling me, you know."

She shrugged and released his hand. "It was worth a try."

"Why is it so important to you that I leave?"

"It's not that I want you to leave, Harold. It's that I want to stop feeling guilty about keeping you here."

"Ah, I should have guessed." He took his credit card from the waiter and signed the receipt. "I don't agree with you, but I do understand what you're saying. I promise I'll consider it."

Harold flew out the same day that Julia's father flew in. Before he left, he saw her settled into an apartment, a place she could feel more rooted and cook an occasional meal for herself. It also had an extra bedroom for her father. When she met Jim at the airport, she dropped all pretense that she wasn't ecstatic to see him.

"Any news?" he asked on the taxi ride back to the hotel.

"I can count to a hundred in Spanish."

"You're going to have to learn to count a lot higher than that," Clyde said.

The implication of his words hung heavily between them for several seconds. Then they looked at each other, and in a moment of insanity born out of exhaustion, they started laughing.

Seconds later Julia's desperate laughter dissolved into tears. She moved into her father's outstretched arms. 'I’m so glad you're here, Daddy," she sobbed into his shoulder. "Thank you for not listening to me."

He kissed her forehead. "You're welcome, sweetheart. Before I forget, your mother wanted me to tell you that she sends her love—and some molasses cookies that she got up at two o'clock this morning to bake."

Deciding a change of scenery would be good for the kids, her mom had taken them to the farm for the holiday. "I hate molasses cookies," Julia told him.

Clyde chuckled. "I know you do. But somehow your mother got it in her head that they were your favorite."

"They're Evan's favorite," she whispered. "She baked them for him."

"Well, maybe he'll get to eat them. Nothing wrong with hoping for our own little miracle for Thanksgiving."

She put her arm around his waist. "Nope, nothing wrong with that at all."

He pulled a small package out of his coat pocket and handed it to her."Your mother and I bought you a present. It's one of those gifts that's as much for us as it is for you."

She smiled when she saw what it was—a new cell phone. "I assume there's something special about this one?"

"It's guaranteed to work. As long as you stay in the city, of course."

* * *

There was a small miracle over Thanksgiving, just not the one they'd hoped for. They received word through the local police that one of their undercover operatives had spotted a man who fit Evan's description in a small jungle village somewhere between Bogota and Tunja. The informant said that Evan had a beard and that his wrists were red from having his hands tied, but that otherwise he seemed healthy. By the time the police had arrived, however, he was no longer there.

The image of Evan was burned into Julia's mind, and was one she would carry with her forever. Appearing unbidden, it was like a hand taking hold of her heart and squeezing. Tears of frustration and fear and longing would tighten her throat and spill from her eyes and she would be lost in a cloud of agony.

As soon as they could, Julia and Clyde pored over maps of the region, noting the average nine-thou- sand-foot altitude, the amount of rainfall and temperature in this part of the Andes Mountains. Because of the direction the kidnappers had taken, Matt and George both figured it was the ELN, the National Liberation Army, that had taken Evan, and aggressively went after the contacts they had within that organization. The local authorities questioned their own informants and talked to a man who had been released recently from the same region. Nothing.

The kidnappers finally broke their silence in the middle of February. The ransom demand arrived a week to the day after an article about Americans being held hostage overseas appeared in a popular newsmagazine in the United States. It was an in- depth piece about the dangers of traveling to certain countries and included a lengthy sidebar with pictures of several hostages, including Evan. The information and photograph had been supplied by Harold's assistant, one of the few people they'd forgotten to tell not to give interviews. Undoubtedly believing she was helping, she'd told the reporter how important Evan was to Stephens Engineering, adding the un- publicized fact that he'd recently been made a partner.

George Black called her on Valentine's Day, her cell phone ringing in the middle of her Spanish class at the Embassy. "Julia, it's George. Do you have a minute?"

She got up and left the classroom. "I always have a minute for my favorite FBI guy."

She moved farther down the hallway, where the reception was better. "What's up?"

"We've heard from the people who have Evan."

Her knees went weak. She put her hand against the wall for support. "And?"

"They're asking for ten million."

She did a quick calculation. "What is that? About forty-five hundred American?" That was not only doable, she should have at least that much in her checking account. If not, she could get a cash advance on her credit card. Had she ever learned how, she would have done a cartwheel right there in the hallway.

"Not pesos, Julia," George said. "Dollars."

Five seconds of joy. Was that all she was given after four months of agony? It wasn't fair. She fought to keep the fury and frustration from her voice."I don't understand. Why so much? We can't possibly pay it. What in the world would make them think we could?"

"Obviously, someone got hold of the article and figured if Evan was a partner in Stephens Engineering he must be worth a lot of money. I don't know...." For a brief, rare instant, he sounded discouraged. "Maybe this is what they've been waiting for all along."

"Do we know who has him? Is it the ELN?"

"They didn't identify themselves. My guess is they decided that for someone this valuable and with this amount of money involved it's more important to get paid than take credit."

She squeezed her eyes closed to block the inevitable tears and tried to concentrate on the fact that at last they had what they'd been waiting for— contact. "Now what?"

"We begin the negotiating process."

"How far will they come down?"

"I have no idea," he admitted.

"We can't pay ten million," she repeated. "That kind of cash outlay would cripple the company." Pain radiated through her like a sprung roll of barbed wire.

"I'm going to tell you something you already know but might need reminding. Every time you get frustrated with the process think about this."

She nodded, even knowing he couldn't see her.

"Negotiation is like creating a statue out of a block of marble. It's imperative to understand the stone before you strike a blow. Once something is removed, it can't be replaced. If we make a misstep with these people, we can't go back and start over."

"What do you want me to do?"

"As soon as we give them an answer, I want you to go home and see your kids and not return for a couple of weeks. There's no way we're going to hear from them again sooner than that."

"When will we answer them?"

"We're still working on that."

For the first time she felt an unbearable sense of hopelessness. She desperately wished she hadn't talked her father into leaving again. "I understand."

"I know you do," he said softly. "And I know that understanding doesn't make it any easier. Just keep telling yourself that this is a good thing. We've finally heard from them."

Four Months Missing

For seventeen years I'd lived in a cocoon, sheltered by parents who loved me and believed without question that I was special, and a brother and sister who didn't just tolerate me but actually liked me. At least most of the time.

Which meant I wasn't prepared when you told me the truth about yourself and broke my heart. I had no point of reference to understand that kind of pain. I knew without hesitation that my mother would lay down her life for her children. I couldn't conceive her being so self-absorbed that one of us would die as a result of her carelessness. It was impossible to imagine her turning to heroin to ease her pain or that she could pass out and leave something so dangerous within the reach of a four-year-old.

When your mother killed herself out of guilt, she couldn't have understood what it would do to you, how finding her sitting in a bathtub full of blood would be the way you would remember her forever, and how starkly alone you would be without her and your brother. But then, maybe she thought she was doing you a favor, and that you were better off without her. Maybe it was the only way left for her to tell you that she loved you. All I know for sure is that you wouldn't have moved to Kansas if she hadn't died, and we wouldn't have found each other. When I get angry with her for doing what she did to you and the way she did it, I remind myself of that.

Did I ever tell you that my father had only known you a couple of months and wanted to adopt you? Somehow he found out your aunt would only let you stay with her as long as the state paid for your keep. I threw a holy fit when I heard him discussing it with my mother. Of course I couldn't just come out and say that I was in love with you, that I put myself to sleep at night planning our wedding, and how awkward it would be to explain to everyone that I was marrying my brother. My mom must have figured it out and clued in my dad, because he never mentioned it again. He did, however, spend a lot of time with us that we could have been spending alone.

Mrs. Winslow got involved when she discovered you were two years behind where you should have been as a high-school senior. She volunteered to help you catch up, promising to keep your secret as long as you came to her classroom after school every day and made progress. Dad and I pretty much ruined that for you when he made you my chauffeur, leaving you caught between a hunger to learn and a need to belong somewhere.

I had no idea what I'd done until Mrs. Winslow drew me aside one day and told me she was going to have to go to the principal if you didn't start showing up for her after-school sessions. Of course she assumed

I knew what she was talking about, and I was smart enough to listen to that little voice in the back of my head telling me to play along.

That night on the way home I confronted you. I'd convinced myself that we were friends by then and was angry, and more than a little hurt, that you hadn't said anything. You just let me go on messing things up for you even after I'd reached the point I could do a pirouette on my crutches and no more needed help getting on and off the bus than the flies that came on board every day when we dropped Hazel off near the fertilizer plant. As hard as it was to admit, I secretly thought you were a lot more worried about losing your growing friendship with my dad than you were with losing my company.

You didn't say anything for a couple of miles, then pulled off the road at Branford Creek. We bumped along the rutted dirt road in silence until you found an opening where you could park beside the creek.

We'd had a dry summer, and the cottonwood leaves had shriveled and dropped prematurely, leaving the trees looking sad and desolate. I saw the same emptiness in your eyes when you turned to me. Until that afternoon I'd lived a white-bread-and-mayonnaise life, never doubting that I was loved, never faced with a decision harder than which dress to buy for the prom.

Then you told me about your mother and little brother, and I was irrevocably thrust from the innocent, sheltered world my parents had created for me into a world where terrible things happened to good people. I cried and you frowned, breaking my heart all over again. You couldn't understand how I could shed tears over someone I'd never met or how I could grieve for someone I'd known less than a month.

"There's more," you said reluctantly after I'd finally stopped crying and dried my tears.

"How could there be?" I said, tears instantly welling in my eyes again.

"This is different. I really don't care who knows about my mother and brother. If someone thinks I'm nothing but a piece of shit because of them, that's their problem. But this other thing is my problem. You can't tell anyone, Julia."

"I won't."

"You have to promise."

I eagerly nodded. "I do."

"Are you sure?"

I crossed my heart and put my finger on the tip of my nose so that my eyes were crossed, too, then grinned. "What more could you ask?"

"This is serious, Julia. If you tell anyone and they tell the wrong person, I'll be arrested and spend the next ten years of my life in prison."

C H A P T E R 4

Five Years Later

Julia McDonald stared at the black suit she'd packed only moments earlier and wondered if it was too somber. It might be better to go with something lighter, the buttercup-yellow or maybe even the sea-foam green, a color that made her look more confident than she felt. She stared at the closet, contemplating her choices. Before Evan was kidnapped, she hadn't owned a single suit; now she owned ten.

"Still can't decide, huh?" Shelly said between bites of a banana, uncharacteristically early for school.

"What do you think of this one?" Julia asked, glancing at her daughter in the mirror, noting she'd changed from the sweater she'd had on earlier to the sweatshirt with UCLA written across the front in six- inch-high letters. Her uncle Fred, the UCLA professor, had sent it for her fifteenth birthday the previous week, innocently insisting he wasn't recruiting, just advertising.

Shelly studied her mother's reflection."It's okay, I guess."

"It can't just be okay. It has to be perfect."

"Then go with the red one."

"I can't wear red for this."

"Why not?"

"It's not serious enough."

"How can it not be serious when it's in the Colombian flag?"

"It just seems too happy."

"Why shouldn't you be happy? Isn't the whole purpose of this thing to convince the Colombian ambassador we think Dad is still alive?"

"We don't think he's alive," she snapped."And the purpose is to get them to start actively looking for him again."

"I thought the purpose was to bring Dad home," Shelly snapped back.

They had been on the verge of an undefined argument all week, Shelly moody, Julia preoccupied, her patience threadbare. "What is your problem? You've been like this for days."

"Sorry," she said without real regret. "I'll get over it. I always do, don't I?"

Julia shut the closet door. She had plenty of time to pack after Shelly left for school.

"I'm sorry, too."

Sorry for so many things that she'd stopped counting. A third of Shelly's childhood had been consumed in the frustrating, heartbreaking struggle to bring her father home.

Julia had missed holidays and birthdays, chasing promises that she knew better than to believe but couldn't ignore. "This meeting has me rattled." She offered a smile to go with the apology. "You'd think I'd be used to them by now."

"Yeah, me, too." She folded the banana skin back onto itself and stuffed it into an empty water glass on the nightstand next to the peach-colored rose Barbara had had freeze-dried and preserved for Julia. After five years it had faded and was showing wear, but had not lost one petal. It was the last thing Julia looked at each night, the memory that put her to sleep.

Shelly picked up the small, framed photograph beside the lamp, the last one taken of them as a family. They were in the backyard, stiffly posed, waiting for the remote to take their picture. Seconds later they had burst out laughing, Evan grabbing Shelly and Jason around their waists and swinging them in a circle.

"I look so different." She sat on the corner of the bed. "I'll bet Dad won't even recognize me when he sees me again."

Feeling a breath-stealing wave of love that Shelly had made the effort to say when and not if, Julia sat next to her and put her arm across her daughter's shoulders for a quick hug. In five years Shelly had gone from an awkward ten-year-old with twin ponytails and Chiclets teeth to a young woman who turned the heads of young boys and men old enough to know better.

"He'll be surprised," Julia said. 'I’m sure it's something he thinks about all the time, but I'm just as sure he has it all wrong."

"Why?"

"Your father's never had a very good imagination. He's a born engineer, practical and methodical." She and Evan were the opposites that formed the perfect whole. She was the kite, Evan the tail, both made to function best with the other.

"I don't remember what Dad's like. . .not really. I have all the pictures in my head that I'm supposed to have, but it's like they're not connected to a real person anymore."

"Sometimes it feels a little like that for me, too." It was a lie, but one Evan would understand. She remembered everything about him, from the way he felt spooned against her in the morning to the way he walked into a crowded room and searched faces until he found her. And then came his smile—in recognition, in discovery, in love.

She could easily imagine herself stepping into his arms and know exactly how it would feel, where her head would touch his chin, how he would smell.

Shelly stared at the photograph. "Jason hasn't changed as much as I have."

"Not yet. But there are some big changes coming."

"Did you know he thinks he's getting a beard? 1 caught him looking in the mirror the other day and he tried to convince me there was something growing on his chin. It's so dumb—like having hair on your face makes you special."

"At twelve it does." She smiled. "At thirty it's a pain in the butt."

"Do you ever wonder what Dad's like now?"

Julia started to answer, but Shelly cut her off. "What if he's nothing like he used to be? What if he actually likes Colombia and doesn't want to leave? Would we have to move there?"

"No one can go through what your father's gone through and not be changed by it. But I can guarantee he's not going to ask us to move."

"I'm so tired of this. I just want it to be over." Shelly put the photograph back on the nightstand and stood.

"I know how hard this is on you and Jason."

"No, you don't," she fired back. "You don't have a clue what it's like for us. You think you do, but you don't."

"Then tell me."

"I can't. It would hurt your feelings."

"I can take it."

Shelly hesitated. Her lower lip trembled with the effort to hold back tears.

"Sometimes I think it would be better if they had just shot Daddy instead of kidnapping him. At least then we'd know what happened and we wouldn't have to live like this."

Julia was torn between outrage and grief. "You don't mean that."

"I just want us to be like we used to be." A sob caught in her throat.

Julia took Shelly in her arms. "What we used to be is gone," she said softly. "It's a memory, another life." She leaned back to engage Shelly s eyes. "Now, you want to tell me what brought this on?"

Shelly dipped her head. "You said you'd be here. You promised. Why do I always have to be second? Why couldn't I be first just this once?"

When she'd told Shelly she would be there for her first real pick-up-the-phone-and-ask date she'd meant every word. Nothing would get in the way. She tucked an ebony-colored strand of hair behind Shelly's ear. "I thought you were okay with my leaving."

"You said I could count on you. You promised."

"I know. I'm sorry.' There was nothing else she could say, nothing Shelly hadn't heard a hundred times before.

Shelly closed her eyes, squeezing out a lone, last tear. She sat there for several agonizingly long seconds before she took a deep breath and said, "And I'm sorry for what I said about Dad. I didn't mean it."

"We need to talk about this some more. Maybe when—"

"Hey, bat breath," Jason shouted from the bottom of the stairs. "Patty just drove that piece of junk of hers into the driveway." The words were laced with envy. It was everything Jason could do not to salivate when he saw Patty's car, a midnight-blue 1965

Mustang with orange and yellow flames painted across the hood and front fenders courtesy of a grandfather whose all-time favorite movie was American Graffiti.

Shelly untucked the strand of hair from behind her ear. "Will you still be here when I get home?"

Julia shook her head. "Remember—I told you my plane leaves at two."

"I guess I'll see you when you get back, then."

"I'll call." She always did, at least once a day. "I'm going to want you to tell me all about your date, so don't go to bed until you hear from me."

Shelly nodded and left, bounding down the stairs. She yelled from the front door,

"Love you, Mom."

"I love you, too," Julia called back.

Julia gathered the banana peel and glass from the nightstand before she went downstairs to look for Jason. She found him standing at the living-room window, peeking through the curtain. "Piece of junk?" she chided."I hope you didn't say that to Patty."

"You think I'm crazy? She'd make me and Shawn walk to baseball practice."

"Speaking of walking, shouldn't you be leaving?"

"Shawn's mom is picking me up. She switched days off, so she's driving us on Mondays and Fridays now."

"You already told me that, didn't you?"

"A couple of days ago."

"Sorry, I forgot."

He patted her shoulder as he passed. "Yeah, I know. That's what happens when you get old, Mom."

Julia ignored the taunt. "Take your key in case you get home before Aunt Barbara gets here. She said she had a parent-teacher conference that could run late."

He stopped and turned to look at her. "Why is Aunt Barbara going to be here?"

"Washington?" she prompted. "My meeting with the ambassador?"

"I thought that was next week."

"That's what happens when you're twelve and don't pay attention."

He groaned. "I told Tom he could stay over tomorrow night. His mom's having some guy for dinner and he doesn't want to be there."

Tom was Jason's best friend, their house his refuge for the past year while his parents went through a trial separation that had turned into a messy divorce. "I'll call Aunt Barbara before I leave, but you'll have to check with her when you come home in case she had something else planned."

"I told him you'd drop us off at the mall Saturday. Could you tell her that, too?"

"Remind me—when did I start letting you hang out at the mall?"

He grinned. "Can't blame a guy for trying."

"Get your stuff. I just heard Shawn's mother pull into the driveway."

He glanced at the clock on the mantel. "It can't be her. She's never early."

Julia went to the side window beside the door. "You're right. It's Aunt Barbara."

Her thick, naturally curly hair drawn back in a ponytail, wearing a corduroy jumper with enormous patch pockets, a knit turtleneck and tennis shoes, Barbara looked closer to sixteen than thirty-five. Short, like their mother, she had to stretch to make five foot two—an asset for a kindergarten teacher but a major frustration for a woman who loved long skirts and tall boots.

"Shouldn't you be at work?"Julia said, opening the door as Barbara came up the walk.

"I wanted to give you something. For luck." She came inside. Noticing Jason, she said, "Hey, kiddo, what are you still doing here?"

"Shawn's mother is picking me up." He glanced at Julia. "Don't forget to ask about Tom."

"What about Tom?" Barbara asked

"I told him he could spend the night Saturday," Jason supplied. "But Mom said I had to check with you first."

"It's okay with me. I like Tom."

"Thanks." He gave Barbara a quick hug and disappeared down the hallway.

"Don't forget your key," Julia reminded him.

"I won't...I'm not the one getting old," he shouted back.

Barbara smiled and cocked an eyebrow at her sister. "What's that all about?"

"He's trying to convince me that I'm becoming senile." She started to close the door and saw Shawn's mother pulling into the driveway. "Jason, they're here."

"I'm coming." Seconds later Jason bounded down the hallway, made a leap to touch the ceiling, smiled in satisfaction at his success and raced out the door. He called over his shoulder, "Bye, Aunt Barbara. Love you, Mom."

"Goodbye, Jason," Barbara said.

"I love you, too," Julia replied, meaning every word. After Evan's kidnapping she'd never said goodbye to her children without telling them that she loved them. Now they were the ones who told her first.

Barbara put her arm around Julia's waist. "Ah, the pitter-patter of little feet."

"It's yours to share anytime. You don't have to wait to be asked." Julia waited for the car to leave, waved, then closed the door."Now, what did you bring me?"

Digging deep into her pocket, Barbara took out a small envelope. "Remember Mom's four-leaf clover?"

"The one she had at the back door?" Encased in plastic and thumb-tacked to the wall above the light switch, it had hung there as long as Julia could remember.

"I asked for it when they remodeled the kitchen last summer. I didn't believe she'd actually part with it, but then Dad told her it might help me find a man and she practically insisted I take it. You would crack up at the ways she's found to ask if I've corralled anyone yet. Honest to God, I think she'd be willing to drop her standards to eating and breathing she's so desperate for me to get married again. I called her yesterday and told her I was going to give it to you, and she said—"

"That it was a sign and that Evan—"

"Would be home by Valentine's Day. Just know that when he's home, you're to give the thing back to me."

"Three weeks, huh? I wish you would have thought about this five years ago." For the first two years after Evan was taken, her mother had begun every conversation with the latest positive sign she'd seen that let her know that Evan would be home soon—

things as wildly varied as discovering a pebble in a bag of split peas to the number of blue cars they passed on the way to church on Sunday. Then she'd simply stopped. Julia had never asked why but had a feeling her father had something to do with it.

"Well, from her lips to God's ears," Julia said. She reached for the envelope and was startled to see her hand shaking, not just a little, the way it did when she was on a caffeine high, but a lot. She stared at her trembling fingers for several seconds, then brought her other hand up and saw that it was shaking, too.

"Is this something new?" Barbara asked.

"I don't know. I think so. At least, I've never noticed it before."

"Is it the meeting?"

Denial was on the tip of her tongue, when she felt a swell of tears tighten her throat and admitted, "I'm so tired, Barbara. Just getting someone to call me back anymore takes weeks and weeks. The ambassador is only seeing me tomorrow as a favor to his cousin Gina Michaels, the new FBI agent assigned to the case. Evan is yesterday's news and I've run out of ways to make people who can do something about it want to try. I don't know what else to do."

"I'm such an idiot. I should have realized."Barbara put her arms around her sister.

"What time is Harold picking you up?"

Wary of the abrupt change in the conversation, Julia answered slowly. "Twelve-thirty."

"What do you have planned between now and then?"

"What's your point?"

"You shouldn't be alone. You're going to drive yourself crazy thinking about this."

"I'm alone every day."

"Today is different." She took Julia's hand."Come on—let me do this for you."

"I'm okay. Really."She managed to summon a confident smile."Now, get out of here.

There's a classroom full of five-year-olds who need you more than I do."

"Let me do this for you," she persisted.

"Save it for later. When I get back."

"Oh, Julia...I don't know what to say. I'm just so, so sorry."

"Yeah, me, too." She forced a smile.

Barbara glanced at her watch. She sighed in defeat. "Any last-minute instructions?"

"None that I've thought of. All the phone numbers and flight times are on the fridge, as usual." She walked Barbara to the door. "Oh, there is one thing. Shelly is upset that I'm not going to be here for her date with John on Saturday, so be prepared."

"I'll have some cocoa ready when she comes home, in case she wants to talk. And if she doesn't—" She shot her sister a wicked grin. "I'll make her life a living hell until she does."

Julia felt a sudden, unreasoning stab of jealousy. She should be the one Shelly talked to. A first date only happened once. The excitement, the joy, the enthusiasm would be watered down or lost in the retelling.

"Are you sure you're okay?" Barbara asked.

The phone rang. "Stop worrying about me." Julia gave Barbara a quick hug. "I'll call as soon as I get to the hotel." She made a dash for the kitchen and grabbed the phone on the fourth ring. "Hello." She waited for a response. Nothing. She tried again.

"Hello?"This time static cut the silence, loud, with a hint of unrecognizable speech. "Is someone there?" The static ended. The line hummed.

Julia listened for several more seconds before she replaced the receiver. As she did, an odd, unsettling feeling settled over her. She shoved her hand into her pocket to retrieve the laminated four-leaf clover.

Barbara had the right idea. Julia could use something to believe in, but she'd need more than an aberrant piece of vegetation.

Four Months and One Week Missing

I wasn't as much upset as frightened when you told me you'd done something so bad that you could go to prison.

By then I was so in love I would have done anything to keep you safe, including running away with you if you'd asked.

"What did you do?"I was torn between wanting to know because I wanted to know everything about you, and not wanting to know because I was scared it would change things between us. But it didn't matter. You felt you had to tell me.

"I missed a lot of school when my brother was born. My mom managed to stay clean while she was carrying Shawn, but a couple of weeks after she got him home she was mainlining again. If she'd scored the night before, she would still be high when I left for school in the morning. Half the time she would pass out and forget all about Shawn. I'd come home and find him in a diaper so full that shit was leaking out the sides. He'd be screaming his head off because he hadn't been fed all day."

"What about Shawn's dad?"

You stopped looking at me then and stared out the window. You must have realized you were talking to someone who had no reference to understand the life you'd led.

"My mother was a prostitute, Julia. That's how

she got the money to pay for her drugs. If someone promised her a brick, she couldn't have picked Shawn's father out of a lineup."

"I don't know what a brick is."

You sighed. "Fifty bags of heroine."

"Oh...."

"I shouldn't be telling you this."

"Probably not," I said. "But you might as well finish or I'm going to imagine something a whole lot worse than it is."

You let out a disparaging laugh. "Not likely. I'm years behind where I should be in school, but that's not what matters. As soon as I turn eighteen I'm on my own. There's no way I can stay in school and get a job that makes enough money to support myself-

— not without a high-school diploma. I'd be like a dog trying to catch its tail."

"I don't understand what this has to do with—"

"Give me a minute. 'You grabbed the steering wheel in a white-knuckle grasp. "I thought if I could get rid of the transcripts from my old school, I could show up here and convince everyone I was in the grade I should be in. I knew I'd have to do some catching up but figured if I handled it right, everyone would just think I was slow and had come from a bad school. I didn't care if I graduated last in the class. Nothing mattered but getting out of school and then out of here."

"And you were afraid if you made friends, someone would find out. So you did this big tough- guy act and drove everyone away."

"Pretty much."

"Except me."

"You have to admit I tried."

I put my hand on your arm, but you shrugged me

off.

"There's more," you said.

"There isn't anything you could tell me that would make a difference."

"Don't be so sure. "You faced me again. "How would you feel if you knew I was responsible for burning down my old school?"

I didn't say anything. You told me later that you thought it was because I was waiting for you to finish, but it was because I was too stunned. All my life I'd operated on the premise that there wasn't anything I couldn't fix or make better. This was the first time I'd been hit with something that I couldn't make go away and it was almost impossible to accept. "What happened?" I finally managed to ask.

"I tried to get my records through the office, but they wouldn't release them to anyone except my court-appointed guardian. When I told them there was no way my aunt would come to Detroit, they said they'd mail them directly to the school. I was sunk if that happened. I knew if I broke in and took only my file they'd figure out it was me. So I started a small fire to burn a couple of file drawers, figuring the sprinklers would kick in and put it out before there was any major damage. By the time they got around to replacing the files with duplicates from the main office there wouldn't be anyone who remembered they were supposed to send my records here."

"So what happened?"

"The sprinklers didn't work."

"And the whole school burned?"

"Not the whole school. The administration offices."

"Was anyone hurt?"

You shook your head. "But they made a big deal out of it on the news and in the newspapers the next day. Hell, you'd have thought I'd burned down the Pontiac Silverdome and that the Pistons had to play in the parking lot. Then it came out that this wasn't the first school fire that summer. The cops said whoever did this one did the others, too, and they had a serial arsonist on their hands. I decided that if I owned up to it, I'd get nailed for the others, too."

"We have to tell my dad."

"Shit, Julia—you promised."

"He won't tell anyone."

"But he'll know. "You lowered your head, hiding your face with a waterfall of black hair. "Everything will change. It always does when people find out bad things about you. They might want to forget, but they can't."

"My dad's not like that. He'll help you."

"No one can help me, Julia. I did it. Nothing anyone can say or do can change that."

That was when I did something I wanted to do since the day we met. I leaned over and kissed you. It wasn't a good kiss, landing more on your cheek than your lips, but you got the idea. I could see you struggling with what to do next. Then, with a deep moan that was like some kind of magnet that reached all the way to my heart, you pulled me into your arms and kissed me back.

I will remember that kiss until the day I die, Evan. Things melted in me that I never knew existed. It didn't matter that the gearshift was stuck in my ribs or that my body was twisted in ways it wasn't meant to twist; all I could think about, all I cared about, was finding a way to keep your lips from leaving mine.

C H A P T E R 5

Julia poured another cup of coffee and headed back upstairs to finish packing.

Shaking off a foolish, lingering unease over the phone call, she mentally recited the list of things she still had to do before Harold arrived.

At the landing she absently stopped to pick a piece of lint off the threadbare carpet.

The night before Evan left for Colombia, he'd joked that their Christmas presents to each other that year would be five gallons of paint, their birthday presents new carpeting and for Valentine's Day a new stove.

At first she'd put off the major changes and repairs they'd talked about, waiting until he could be there

to do them with her. Finally, one by one she'd gone ahead, convincing herself it was all right, that Evan wouldn't be coming home to a house he didn't recognize but to one with the changes they'd planned together. She'd finished the work two years ago, everything but the carpeting and the new stove. Those, for some unfathomable reason, she couldn't bring herself to do without him.

She'd instantly fallen in love with the house the Realtor had generously called a fixer-upper. Evan hadn't caught her enthusiasm until he saw the backyard. After sitting at the kitchen table at their old house, listing all the things they would have to do to make the new house livable and how much it would add to the cost, Julia accepted, reluctantly, that it was beyond their means. She continued to look at other houses in the area, bringing Evan into search whenever she found something with potential, but it was like having a passion for French fries and being offered potato chips.

Nothing gave her the same emotional connection. It was something she couldn't explain. Through the tattered, garish wallpaper, the pink tile in the bathrooms, the ancient appliances in the kitchen, she saw the warmth in the exposed beam ceiling in the family room, the shine of refinished oak floors, the joy of friends and family gathered under the limbs of the hundred-year-old heritage oak in the backyard.

She had been ready to tell the Realtor to expand the search, moving from Carmichael to Fair Oaks, when Evan called one morning and told her to meet him for lunch at Venita Rhea's, their favorite restaurant in Rocklin and only five minutes from Stephens Engineering.

He'd phoned ahead and asked Randy to reserve their special table next to the mural, the one with the baby duck swimming in the canal. Evan said the expansive painting represented the French countryside; Julia said it had to be Italy. They could have settled the ongoing argument by asking Lisa, one of the owners, but that would have been too easy.

During dessert—an obscenely large and incredible bread pudding, which Evan had insisted they order in lieu of champagne—-he'd handed her an exquisitely wrapped package. Inside was an offer on the house, lacking only her signature.

They visited the vacant house a dozen times in the month it took to close, planning, deciding which projects they work on first, which could be postponed. Her enthusiasm for the inside became his, while she grew more and more caught up with his ideas for the garden, picturing the four of them eating outside on the deck under the oak tree surrounded by a living rainbow.

They met at Venita Rhea's so often over the next month to go over kitchen-design brochures and paint chips and carpet samples that Julia put on three pounds.

The pounds came off the week they actually moved in, when they alternated between euphoria and exhaustion, eating off paper plates set on boxes, working until two in the morning to clean years of accumulated dirt in the kitchen and then getting up at six to work their paying jobs. They barely gave themselves time to stop and admire a finished room before moving on to the next. It was a perfect month, filled with dreams, with hope, with nonstop talk of the future. Words that still haunted her when she thought of everything Evan had missed.

Julia curled the retrieved piece of lint into a ball between her fingers and finished climbing the stairs. She was on her way to the bathroom to toss the lint in the trash when the phone rang. She hesitated. For an instant she considered letting it go to the answering machine, but was brought up short by her bizarre reaction. Not once in five years had she ever ignored a ringing telephone.

She answered in the bedroom.

"Hope I didn't catch you at a bad time," Harold said. The necessity to identify himself had disappeared years ago. "Something has come up that I have to take care of before we leave for the airport. Would it be all right if Mary swung by an hour earlier to pick you up first?" He was as involved with working to bring Evan home now as he had been in the beginning.

"Sure." And then she remembered. "I thought Mary was out of town."

"She came home last night."

Julia laughed. "Didn't trust you to pack for yourself?" Harold was notorious for his unusual taste in clothes. As her and Harold's and Mary's friendships had grown into something far past ordinary, Mary had gently tugged Julia out of several deep emotional holes with stories of Harold's lifelong fashion faux pas. She particularly loved the one about the Hawaiian shirt and pin-stripe suit combination he'd worn to a semiformal award ceremony, but had only personally witnessed his appearance at a company picnic in brown socks, loafers, rainbow-colored shorts and a turtleneck.

"Maybe, but she had the good grace to tell me it was because she missed me. Of course, she was going through my suitcase at the time, so I wasn't entirely convinced."

"Tell her I'll be ready."

"Thanks, Julia."

"No problem."

She glanced at the clock when she hung up and jumped when the phone instantly rang again. Five minutes to nine. Her mother. The two-hour time difference between California and Kansas put her mother between the work she did for the volunteer fire department on Wednesday and getting lunch ready for her father.

Julia tucked the receiver between her ear and shoulder and reached into a drawer for a shoe bag. "Hi, Mom."

First silence and then static filled the line.

Dropping the bag on the bed, she shifted the receiver to her hand. "Hello?" She waited. "Is anyone there?"

The line cleared. She heard a man say,"...twelve kilometers south of Envigado..." A series of clicks followed.

Envigado? She knew that name. It was a city in Colombia just south of Medellin.

"Evan?" she said in a choked whisper. "Evan, is it you?" More clicks, and then a hum telling her she'd been disconnected.

She put the phone down and bumped the vase with the peach-colored rose. A petal fell. Her breath caught. Seconds passed as she stood there and stared. She absolutely refused to see it as a sign. She couldn't live that way. The rose was old and fragile, and.

freeze- dried flowers weren't meant to last forever.

Damn it, Mother. Why have you done this to me?

She headed for the computer in Jason's room to look up Envigado's exact location.

The phone rang again.

Her heart in her throat, she answered. "What is it? What are you trying to tell me?"

"Julia?" her mother said hesitantly. "Is that you?"

Julia sat on the corner of the bed. "I thought you were someone else."

"Obviously. What's wrong?"

"Nothing." If she told her mother about the strange phone calls, she would either say Julia was cracking up or that it was another sign. Julia wasn't up to dealing with either possibility. "It's been a busy morning and I'm feeling a little on edge about the meeting with this new ambassador."

"It sounded like something more than that."

"Really, it's nothing."

"All right. I was just checking up on you, and wanted to tell you I had a dream about Evan last night. You two were sitting in the backyard in those special chairs you bought to celebrate his birthday last year."

"Adirondack," Julia said.

"You were so happy," her mother continued. "I woke up and I was crying. I asked everyone at church to say a prayer that this new ambassador will be able to do something."

"Thanks, Mom." Even with call waiting she was reluctant to stay on the phone any longer. "I have to let you go so I can finish packing."

"Don't forget your raincoat."

"I won't."

"Did Barbara stop by this morning?"

"She did."

"And?" Maggie prompted.

"She gave me the clover. I have it in my purse. Now, I really do have to go."

Two hours and six phone calls later, Julia had managed to convince herself that the strange call was simply another Colombian reporter looking for a new angle for a five-year anniversary story about the longest-held American kidnap victim. She had dressed and finished packing and was on her way downstairs, suitcase in hand, when the phone rang yet again. Mentally going over the list of friends and family who had yet to contact her, she setded on her brother.

After five years it was more than reasonable to expect her friends and family to have shifted focus and moved past the intensity of waiting to hear something about Evan's kidnapping, which had gripped them all in the beginning. But Evan was still almost as much a part of their lives as he was hers. For a long time she'd believed their continued intimate involvement was because they loved and cared about her. And they did. But it was Evan himself who drew their hopes and concerns and prayers. They refused to believe a heart so filled with love and compassion and joy no longer beat.

Instead of the expected baritone of her brother, Fred, she was greeted by a woman's voice. "Mrs Julia McDonald, please."

"Speaking."

"Please hold for Mr. Leland Crosby."

"I'm sorry—who did you say?"

"Mr. Leland Crosby," she repeated carefully.

Before Julia could say anything in response, he came on the line."Leland Crosby here, Mrs. McDonald. I'm sure you don't remember me, but we met when you were in Washington a couple of years ago."

"I'm sorry, I don't—"

"Please, don't apologize. There's no reason for you to remember. I was one of a dozen diplomats you met that day. But since Paul Erickson was out of the office today and you and I did have that connection, I wanted to be the one to call you personally to offer my condolences and to let you know that our ambassador's office in Colombia will do everything possible to help you in any way they can."

"Condolences?" she repeated numbly. "I don't understand."

Agonizingly long seconds passed. "No one has contacted you? You don't know?"

"Know what?"

"Just a moment, please." She couldn't make out what was said next, but the angry tone clearly made it through the muffled receiver. "I'm truly sorry, Mrs. McDonald. I was told the Colombian authorities had already contacted you, that you'd already been informed."

"Informed about what?" she demanded.

"Your husband."

Her hand tightened around the receiver. "Evan?" Panic squeezed her chest. She fought to take a breath. "Is he all right?" How could he be? No one offered condolences when someone was rescued. Still, she could not accept that Evan was gone until she heard the actual words.

"I'm so sorry. Is there anyone there with you?" He waited, and when she didn't answer, "Is there someone I can call?"

"Is he all right?"

After a long pause, with great reluctance, Leland Crosby said, "The Colombian army found your husband two days ago.. .in a shallow grave with two other men."

Still she clung to her belief that Evan was alive, that he was waiting for her, loving her, missing her, holding on to life when it would be easier to let go, because he knew that if he died, a part of her, the best part of her, would die, too. This core knowledge had sustained her for five years. "Are you sure it's him?"

"I'm going to let you talk to someone else about that, someone who can give you answers that I can't." Before passing the phone, he added, "I realize this is a difficult time for you. You have my deepest sympathy."

She didn't want his sympathy. She wanted answers.

"Thank you," she answered automatically, hanging on to a piece of fragile silk thread as if it were a steel cable.

A new voice came on the line. "Hello—Mrs. McDonald?"

"Yes."

"This is Roger Hopkins. I understand you have some questions for me."

She pressed herself into the corner where the kitchen and dining room met, and clung to the wall for support. She didn't have to ask her questions; she could just hang up, go on with her morning, waiting for the call telling her there had been a mistake, that it wasn't Evan they'd found but someone who looked like him.

"Mrs. McDonald—are you there?"

Please, please let it be a nightmare. Let me be asleep, let something happen to wake me and make it all go away. Evan couldn't be dead. Not now. Not after all this time.

Forcing words past the lump in her throat, she struggled to ask, "How do they know it's Evan?"

"The forensic pathologist in Bogota had a copy of his medical and dental records...and there were several personal belongings recovered."

"What kind of personal belongings?"

"His wallet and watch." He paused. "And a wedding ring with the words Spring to Winter written inside. According to the information you supplied when Mr. McDonald went missing, this was the inscription on his wedding band."

She closed her eyes. Her knees gave out and she slid along the wall until she was sitting on the floor. "When?"

"Pardon me?"

"When did he die?" She wanted to look back, to remember where she was, what she'd been doing when it had happened. She believed without question that his last thought would be of her and his children. He would have reached out to her to say goodbye. Had she been too caught up in creating a newsletter for a client, or cheering at a soccer game, or rushing to catch a plane to hear him?

"According to the man who led them to the grave, Evan was shot trying to escape two days after he was captured."

A sharp pain cut through her chest. "N9-0-0- o..." She doubled over and pressed herself deeper into the corner. "That can't be. I would have known."

"I'm really sorry you had to learn about this over the phone. We were assured the authorities in Colombia had contacted you this morning and made arrangements for someone to be with you."

They'd tried. They just hadn't gotten through. "I think I'm going to hang up now." She spoke slowly, her composure a bridge that had lost its foundation. Understanding that once she let go she would not be able to function, she asked one last question. "Who should I contact to find out when they'll be releasing Evan?"

"As I understand it, you'll have to go through the coroner's office first. Someone will have to interpret for you."There was a sound of shuffling papers. "The doctor doesn't speak English."

"I know Spanish." She'd immersed herself in the language and in the country, believing knowledge was power. For five years she'd studied. She'd learned as much about the history and traditions and social structure of Colombia as she had her own country. Maybe more.

And now, with one phone call on a clear January day, she'd been told all she'd ever really needed was a satin-lined casket and a one-way ticket.

"I don't seem to have the phone number for the doctor in front of me," he told her. "I don't want to keep you on the line while I look. Would it be all right if I called you back in a few minutes?"

"I'll need the contact number for the Colombian office that will release Evan to let him come home."

"Of course. Will you excuse me for a moment?" When he returned, he said, "We can have the embassy make those arrangements for you, Mrs. McDonald."

"When?"

"I'll have them get in touch with you."

"Make sure Ambassador Sidney is told that I want to be with Evan when he comes home."

"I understand."

"But you have to make sure they understand, too."

She'd experienced too many well-intentioned mistakes. Messages weren't always delivered as they were intended.

"I'll take care of it. I promise."

"Thank you," she said. She would contact them, too. There was only one thing left that she could do for Evan. Propriety be damned.

"Again, let me express my profound sorrow," he said. "For everything."

She put her hand over her eyes and bit her lip. "I have to go now."

"Are you sure there isn't anyone I could call?"

"No—" She dropped the receiver and covered her face with both hands. A deep, keening sob echoed through the empty house.

How could Evan have been dead for five years when his favorite cereal was in the cupboard, his clothes in the closet, his dresser filled with his underwear and socks and T-shirts, all waiting for him? How could he come to her in her dreams with tender promises of what their lives would be like when they were together again? How could she be standing at the sink, washing dishes, or driving the car, or talking on the phone, or working in the yard, and feel him beside her and know without question that he was thinking about her and telling her that she was loved beyond barriers or miles or time?

How could she go on without the belief he was waiting for her to find him? How could she get up in the morning knowing she had to get through another day without hope?

Four Months and Two Weeks Missing

We found my dad in the barn, sharpening a lawn- mower blade. He had his back to us, oblivious to everything in the isolation of the high-pitched whine of the grinder and the goggles he wore to protect his eyes from the wildly flying sparks. I could feel your tension as we stood there waiting for him to finish; you really didn't want to be there. You were scared. And there was nothing I could say or do to reassure you.

I reached for your hand and you jumped. It was then that I realized the depth of your fear and how important my father had become to you. For seventeen years you had lived in an environment that should have destroyed you. When you took over the care of your brother, you missed so much school that you sacrificed the dream of graduating high enough in your class to get a scholarship to college. And then when he died so uselessly, you'd suffered loss I couldn't conceive. Yet you not only hung on, you survived without anger or bitterness. I'd never known anyone like you. Your core goodness left me awestruck.

Finally, Dad noticed us and flipped the switch on the grinder. He removed his goggles and flashed us a smile. When it wasn't eagerly returned, he wiped his hands on the rag sticking out of his overalls pocket and motioned us closer.

"What's up?"

You shoved your hands in your back pockets and

tilted your head down, escaping in the shadows of your hair. "Julia thinks I should..

Julia wants me to—" You looked up then and must have seen something in my father's eyes that made it all right, because you took a deep breath and blurted out, "I'm a fugitive, Mr. Warren. I'm wanted for setting a fire in my old school. I didn't mean for it to happen, but that's not going to count for shit to the cops when they catch me."

Not exactly the way I'd pictured it happening. I mentally braced myself and waited for the explosion.

My dad shifted from one foot to the other. "That's the ice that's above the water. I want to see what's underneath before I pass judgment."

I'd always believed my father the strongest most honorable man alive, someone who taught his children compassion and fairness by example. I'd never been more proud to be his daughter than I was at that moment. I glanced at you and said softly, "See?" I grinned. "I told you."

You repeated your story in an emotionless voice, as if reading an article from the newspaper about someone you'd never met. It was plain you didn't want his pity or mine and that you were there only because I'd asked you.

My father was shaken, his face a mirror of his thoughts as he went from anger to sorrow. "I knew there was something special about you the first time we met," he said.

"I just had no idea how special you really were." He put his hand on your shoulder. "I just might be able to help you out with this fire business. Give me a couple of weeks."

You tried hard to hide them, but there were tears in your eyes when you said, "I don't see how—"

"I'm not making any promises, Evan. I'll do what I can. But in the meantime there's something I have to have from you." He looked at me. "And you."

"I'll do anything, Daddy. "And I would have. "I'll even take the night shift on the combine next summer."

He chuckled. "Don't think I won't remember you saying that come harvest time."And then to Evan, "Seems to me that we've got our work cut out for us if we're going to get you caught up by graduation. Julia, you're going back to riding the bus and getting your own homework done before supper. Evan, you'll go back to working with Mrs.

Winslow on the English after school, and then Julia and I will alternate with algebra and social studies until you're where you should be. Julia's mom has four years of high-school German and three of college. If you have any ear at all for foreign languages, she can get you to the point where you can challenge the course for credit.

I'm not usually in favor of this kind of thing, but you'll need a language when you apply for college yourself"

I threw my arms around his neck. "Daddy, I love you. You're the best."

"Why are you doing this?" you asked, confused at a reaction you obviously hadn't expected.

"For a lot of reasons," Dad said. "Mostly, I suppose, because I think it's about time you were on the receiving end. You're a good kid, Evan. All you need is half a chance."

"I don't know what to say."

"One more thing," Dad said, seeing we were about to leave. He shifted his gaze from me to you and then back again. "It's plain as a cat locked in a house watching a flock of birds in the backyard how you two feel about each other. "He held up his hand when I started to protest. "I've got eyes, Julia. Anyone around you two five minutes would pick up on what's going on between you. I just don't want it getting out of hand. You've got plenty of time. Right now Evan has enough on his plate."

I looked into your eyes and could see the yearning for everything my father had offered mixed with a longing for me. The promise we made to my dad that day to stay away from each other was one of the hardest promises I've ever made. But I sucked it up, as Fred liked to say, and smiled. I wanted you to know that it was okay. I would wait.

C H A P T E R 6

The doorbell rang. Julia ignored it. It rang again.

Julia pulled her legs to her chest and leaned tighter into the corner. Loud knocking came next, and then a man called her name.

"Mrs. McDonald?" He knocked again. "This is Deputy Thompson from the Sheriff's Department. Are you all right in there?"

Julia stirred. He'd obviously been sent to see her and would not go away until she responded. "Mrs. McDonald? Can you—" "Just a minute," she finally said. She got to her feet, wiped her face with her hands and adjusted her skirt.

She was experienced at hiding her feelings, smiling when she was exhausted, speaking softly when she felt like shouting, gracious when inwardly seething with frustration.

Grief, worry, fear were all emotions she'd learned to bury under a veneer of cordialness, a necessary means to an end.

She glanced at herself in the hall mirror before opening the door. Her eyes betrayed her. She could not hide behind a smile today; the wound ran too deep. Still, she tried.

"I'm Julia McDonald," she said. "What can I do for you?"

A young man dressed in crisp Sheriff's Department green, with a shiny badge and buttons, a wide, black leather belt and bulging holster, took a nervous half step backward. He had bright-red hair and connect-the-dots freckles and looked years too young to have a gun strapped at his side. Another man, dressed in a black suit and cleric's collar, stood with one foot on the step, the other on the porch. He seemed disconcertingly familiar with the role he'd been assigned.

The deputy shifted his hat from one hand to the other, radiating vibes that said, given a choice, he would gladly take an armed suspect over a distraught woman. He cleared his throat. "I'm sorry to disturb you at a time like this, Mrs. McDonald, but Mayor Suhr's office received a phone call from the State Department requesting an officer be sent to this address. Reverend Kisder and I are here to help you in any way we can."

"Thank you," Julia said. "I appreciate the mayor's concern, but I really don't need help. There's nothing for you to do."

"Please, ma'am—there must be something."

"Perhaps we could phone a friend?" Reverend Kisder suggested. "What about family?

Do you have any close by?"

Reality pierced her fog of sorrow. No matter how desperately she wanted to be left alone, to grieve in private, to say goodbye to Evan in the quiet of the house they had shared in dreams but not time, there were others who had to be considered. "My sister, Barbara."

They reacted as if she'd given them a gift. "If we could come inside..." Reverend Kistler gently suggested.

"Of course." She moved out of the doorway. "Would you like some coffee?" The question was automatic, inbred through generations of women who equated food and drink with hospitality even in grief, women who throughout joy and tragedy passed the lesson to their daughters by example.

She could do this; she could go on, alone. After five years without being able to see or feel or touch Evan, she'd already accomplished it physically. Now all she had to do was find a way to do it mentally. One step at a time, one day at a time, and it would become a pattern.

Knowing Evan would never come home was simply a matter of trading one heartache for another.

Within an hour, the rippling word of Evan's death had reached friends across the United States and Colombia. One conversation ended, the receiver was replaced, the phone rang again. Barbara handled all but the most personal calls, noting names and numbers and thanking all for their concern, promising someone would get back to them as soon as the funeral arrangements were made.

Julia listened the way she did with background music, hearing, but not registering details. She remained at the front window, her hand pressed against the cool glass, and watched for Shelly and Jason.

She'd heard from Paul Erickson and George Black and Matt Coatney, the men who'd begun the battle to get Evan home and then over the years had moved on to other jobs in other businesses and agencies. Five years was a long time for men like that to stay in one place.

Not one of them hinted that they'd ever lost hope, and in their voices and words, she felt their shared sorrow. They all told her they would stay in touch, but their link had been severed. Even friendships formed in the fires of adversity suffered and fell to the wayside when not tended regularly.

In less than an hour the sun had given way to a cover of dark clouds, dropping the temperature ten degrees. White-crowned sparrows and juncos popped in and out of the perennial bed next to the driveway, their food gathering hastened by the impending rain.

The perennials were Evan's favorites, everything from foxglove to primroses. In the backyard she'd planted hundreds of daffodils and tulips in meandering beds of yellow and red, deep purple and white, the colors he had marked in the bulb catalog he'd left on the nightstand.

She'd painted the house his favorite colors, wallpapered the bathroom in the pattern he'd said he'd liked when they were at the store together the week before he left, and covered the windows with the mini-blinds he preferred instead of the wooden plantation shutters she liked. They were labors of love, small bargains that her efforts would not go unnoticed, that someday Evan would take pleasure in the paint and paper and pick her a bouquet from the garden.

The sky behind the Modesto ash in the front yard lit with a flash of lightning. Julia waited for the thunder. Rain fell, gently at first, and then as if the clouds had tilted to drop their contents as quickly as possible.

How could she have not known? The question reverberated like an echo. How could she have felt Evan's presence all those years, when he hadn't been with her anymore?

The answer finally struck, and it was cold and hard and cruel. She'd believed because she had to. Without the fantasy, she could not have done what she had to do.

And in the end, she had succeeded. She had found him.

Julia glanced up as Patty's Mustang pulled into the driveway. Shelly sat in the front passenger seat talking, her face animated, her gestures expansive. She seemed happy, excited, her world as it should be, filled with friends and flights of fancy. She would recover from losing her father—she'd had five years of practice. But she would be changed. She would miss the connection that was part of knowing there was another person in her world who loved her without reservation.

They would have no more conversations about what it would be like when Evan came home. He would never see the trophies she'd won for soccer or the ornaments she'd made for him each Christmas. She would look into the stands at her graduation from high school and college and see her grandfather where her father should have been. And when she walked down the aisle at her wedding, no matter who walked with her it would be the wrong person.

As if she could sense Julia waiting for her, Shelly turned and saw her mother. Her smile faded. She

gathered her books and left the car. After taking a second to wave goodbye, she sprinted toward the house, futilely attempting to outrun the rain.

Julia met her at the door.

"What are you doing here?" Shelly asked. "I thought your plane—"

"The trip was canceled."Julia took Shelly s books and put them on the hall table.

"Then why is Aunt Barbara here?" She shrugged out of her coat. "What's going on?"

Julia had given her children every kind of news and not struggled for words. Now, suddenly, she had no idea what to say. Was there a right way to break someone's heart?

"They found—"

"Daddy?" Shelly finished for her, her eyes brimming with anticipation.

Julia panicked, realizing Shelly completely misunderstood and would suffer the blow twice.

"Where?" Shelly added before Julia could react.

"In the jungle outside Envigado," she said, supplying the wrong answer and allowing the fantasy to live.

"When is he coming home?" She didn't wait for Julia to answer. "Why aren't you happy?"

"He isn't coming home...not to us. At least not the way we wanted him to." She was doing this all wrong. "Your father is dead, Shelly." It sounded so cruel. She should have thought more about how to lessen the blow.

Shelly's jacket fell to the floor. "How do you know?" And then, "How did it happen?"

The question threw Julia. And then she remembered. She couldn't tell Shelly the truth, not after what she'd said that morning about wishing her father had been shot.

Barbara moved into the hall. "He was shot attempting to escape—just a couple of days after he was captured," she added gently, obviously believing she was helping."He's been gone all this time. We should have known your father wouldn't sit around waiting for someone to rescue him."

Shelly stared at Julia, her eyes wide in horror. "That's not true. It can't be. You're making it up." She backed into the wall, trying to get away. "Why would you do that to me? I told you I was sorry."

"This has nothing to do with you." Julia took Shelly's arm. "It's an ugly coincidence.

That's all."

Shelly twisted out of her grasp. "You don't know that," she shouted. "You can't."

"What's going on?" Barbara asked. "What did I do?"

"Nothing," Julia told her, focusing on Shelly.

Shelly let out a wail. She turned to Barbara, a beseeching look in her eyes. "This morning I told Mom...I told her...I wished they'd shot Daddy a long time ago." She brought her hands up in a helpless gesture. "It's my fault."

"Stop it, Shelly," Julia said. "Think about what you're saying. You know that can't possibly be true."

Barbara took her in her arms, casting a helpless look in Julia's direction. "Oh, honey, don't do this to yourself. You only said what all of us have thought at one time or another."

Julia recoiled. In that moment she hated her sister. The idea that Evan's death would bring relief to anyone was almost more than she could bear. She had never, not in her most desperately lonely moments, wished herself free of the effort to bring him home.

She'd been willing to spend the rest of her life waiting. She was still willing.

The phone rang. Barbara glanced toward the kitchen.

"I'll get it," Julia said. She was afraid to say anything to Barbara and wasn't ready to say the words Shelly needed to hear. Until she could, it was better to leave them to each other's care.

The man on the phone was a florist asking where to deliver flowers. She gave him her address and then regretted it. She couldn't face the cloying smell of funeral arrangements or the accompanying trappings of death. It was too soon. She had to have more time.

The doorbell rang. She moved to answer it, when the phone rang again. Momentarily ignoring it, she stepped to the window. Harold and Mary were at the front door, his eyes red and swollen, his shoulders stooped, Mary clutching a casserole dish as if it were a lifeline. A movement at the end of the driveway caught her eye. Oblivious to the extra cars parked out front, Jason and Tom joked and jabbed and moseyed along the walkway up to the house, disregarding the rain.

Julia felt as though she was being parceled out piece by piece to the people who counted on her. She had to find a way to save a part of herself for Evan. What did it matter that she would have nothing left? She had the rest of her life to become whole again.

The plane rattled and creaked and roared as it raced down the runway before lifting with a stomach-lurching leap. After three days in Bogota, Julia was finally headed for home again. Acknowledging she would never return to Colombia, she'd arranged time to see and thank the friends she'd made over the years, the officials who had stuck with her long after everyone else had given up and Matt Coatney, who was there on another hostage negotiation and had unexpectedly knocked on her hotel door late one night. The hardened negotiator sat with his back bowed, his hands on his knees, and fought to keep from breaking down as he talked about the hope he'd had that despite the years that had gone by without hearing from the kidnappers, Evan would one day walk out of the jungle and go home to Julia.

When asked if she felt it would help her to talk to the man who had led police to the grave site, she'd declined at first and then changed her mind. She'd imagined a seasoned man, hard and uncompromising. He was young and terrified. He hadn't witnessed Evan being shot, but he'd dug the grave and heard the story of the attempted escape. At the time he'd been in his early teens, only a year older than Jason was now.

The comparison made it impossible for her to hate him. She'd sought a focus for her anger and instead found herself weighed down by the evidence of a wasted life.

The airplane's wheels thumped into place and they began a slow, banked turn, heading north. Heading home.

Minutes later they cleared the clouds and the plane leveled. A flight attendant arrived, a smile in place. Julia declined the beverage offer and turned to face the window.

She'd imagined flying home with Evan a hundred times, picturing them holding hands, caught up in each other and oblivious to everything and everyone around them.

He would laugh when she told him about the hundreds of carpet samples awaiting him at home, and she would cry when he told her how lonely he'd been without her. They would not be able to stop looking at each other. She pictured her hand on his cheek, the feel of his breath as he touched his lips to hers, a sweet warmth spreading through her body as he whispered that he loved her.

She wouldn't have to tell him how desperately she had missed him or how hard she had worked to bring him home. He would know this as surely as he knew she would have waited for him forever.

He would gaze at pictures of Shelly and Jason with wonder and surprise at how they'd grown. She would tell him how Jason had broken his arm when he'd tumbled out of the oak tree while reattaching the bird feeder that had fallen in a storm, and how Shelly had scored the winning goal in the district soccer championship.

She closed her eyes and tried to imagine him beside her, breathing the sharp, clean air of freedom and luxuriating in the comfort of flying first class.

But the reality of accompanying him to the airport that morning, of standing beside the plane as his casket was loaded into the baggage compartment, of the subtle, careful manipulations to keep curious onlookers away, was too powerful to allow her this last, small fantasy.

When they arrived in San Francisco, Evan would be the last to depart the plane. A hearse would take him the final ninety miles to Sacramento and he would spend the night in the mortuary, alone. Two days later they would say their formal goodbyes during the service Barbara had arranged at their parish church.

Everything was in place. There was nothing more for her to do, no magic wand to ease the pain or lessen the sorrow. No way to change that one moment in time when Evan had decided to risk everything to come home to her.

In another week the relatives would be gone, Shelly and Jason would be back in school, Barbara would be back at work and Julia would be doing whatever she could find to fill her day.

And Evan would be in the ground. Alone.

Holding her breath against the pain, Julia reached into her purse and removed the manila envelope the clerk at the pathologist's office had given her. She hadn't been able to bring herself to look inside at the "personal belongings" recovered with Evan—his wallet, his watch, a gift from her on their tenth anniversary, his wedding ring. They'd told her the money and credit cards were missing, but a driver's license and several photographs of her and Shelly and Jason had survived the burial.

She hugged the envelope against her chest. Slow, silent tears slid down her cheeks.

Five Months and Two Weeks Missing

The whole family pitched in to get you through your senior year. I handled the English, my dad math, Mom made you learn way more than you needed to pass civics and challenge German and Fred let you slide in biology until Barbara took over.

Someone in the office decided that since your records were lost, the best thing to do was average your grades over all four years, and you wound up in the top ten percent of the class. Dad nearly burst his buttons at our graduation.

You spent so much time at the house that year that Dad put another bed in Fred's room so you didn't have to sleep on the couch. After being with you all day at school and then all night at home, keeping our promise to my dad was like putting a field mouse in front of a barn cat and telling the cat to play nice.

In January when Dad took you aside and told you that in exchange for dropping the arson charges you were to spend the next four summers in your old neighborhood in Detroit, tutoring disadvantaged kids, I was thrilled that you'd escaped a trial and possible jail time. Of course summer seemed a long time off when there was a blizzard blowing outside and we were still putting away the Christmas decorations.

Graduation was hard on me. All I could think about was that you were leaving in a week and that

for a year you'd be at the community college twenty miles away from the farm, while I'd be at the Uni versity of Kansas, half a state away. To say that I was unhappy was like saying a lead weight didn't float.

The day before you were supposed to leave I got up early and packed a picnic lunch for us. I loaded it and my grandmother's old quilt in the back of the truck, and the minute you came downstairs I grabbed your arm and hauled you out the front door.

As soon as we pulled out of the driveway, I scooted across the seat and snuggled into your side. "Where are we headed?" you asked.

"Someplace no one will find us."

You didn't answer right away. "I don't know, Julia. The way I've been feeling lately I don't think that's such a good idea."

"You're worried about your promise to my dad," I guessed, hoping I was right because it was what I wanted to hear.

"Yes."

"That's over, Evan."

"How do you figure?"

"We said we wouldn't do anything while you were staying at the house. You're leaving tomorrow. What possible harm is one day going to do?"

"He trusts me, Julia. I can't do anything to mess that up."

"And what about me?"

You pulled over to the side of the road, skidded to a stop and turned in the seat, glaring at me. "You don't have a clue. If you did, you could never ask me such a stupid question. Do you really not know how I feel about you? Is this some game to you?"

"I'm sorry." I wasn't, not really, but I couldn't think of anything to say. In all the imagining and planning I'd done getting ready for this day, not once had it happened this way. "I just want to be with you."

"And you imagine I haven't been half out of my mind lately wanting to be with you?

Are you blind?"

That did it. I was in your arms kissing you, and you were kissing me back, and I was feeling heat and yearning in parts of me I hardly knew existed.

A car drove by and the driver honked at us. I looked up and realized it was our neighbor, the woman my mother said didn't need a mouth to spread gossip; it oozed out her pores.

"Where?" you asked.

"What about that sycamore with the nest of raccoons?"

"Behind the wheat field?"

"I heard Dad tell Fred that he was going to town for a meeting at the bank. And there isn't any reason for anyone else to be out there today."

You took my hand and kissed it. I was sure I was ten seconds away from melting into a puddle on the floor. There was no way we could get where we were going fast enough. I wanted you and I didn't want to wait another minute.

"Are you sure about this, Julia?

"Yes. Yes, yes, yes," I shouted.

Still you hesitated. "I don't have anything, any kind of protection."

"I do," I admitted sheepishly. I hadn't been sure how I was going to bring up the fact that I had a condom in my purse, and now I didn't have to. All I knew was that I wasn't going to spend the day with you unprepared for what I desperately wanted to happen.

"Where did you—"

"It's Fred's."

"What?"

"I was putting his laundry away and there it was. Actually, there were lots of them. I only took me. He'll never miss it."

"It was just sitting there in his drawer, where you or your mom could find it?"

"Well, not exactly. I had to do a little looking around."

"How did you know what they were?"

"Oh, please. What do you think I am, some Barbie doll that's been left in its package for seventeen years?"

"I know exactly what you are—all mouth. You're no more experienced at this sex thing than I am."

I was stunned and didn't even try to hide it. "You mean you've never? Not once?"

"Does that bother you?"

"It surprises me, that's all."

"Why?"

"I guess it's because you're a guy. Look at Fred. He's two years younger than you and—"

"You don't really believe he's doing anything where he needs all those condoms, do you?"

"Why have them if you're not going to use them?"

"God—you're such a girl."

"What's that got to do with anything?"

"Someday I'll tell you about guys. Or at least, I'll try. No promises."

"Why didn't you? I mean, you must have had a hundred girls chasing you when you lived in Detroit."

"Why would you believe that? Look around, Julia. Do you see any girls chasing me here?" He grinned. "Present company excepted."

I laughed at that. "Are you serious? The only reason you didn't have half the girls in the school following you around with their tongues hanging out was that I let them know I wouldn't put up with it."

"So does all this questioning mean you'd prefer someone more experienced your first time?"

"When I went to all the trouble to get this?" I held up the condom.

You laughed. "You realize Fred would kill you if he found out you were going through his things."

I grinned. "Who's going to tell him?" You put your hand on the back of my neck and brought me close for another kiss. "Sure as hell not me."

C H A P T E R 7

Abandoning her futile effort at sleep, Julia got out of bed at the first light of dawn and went outside to watch the sunrise. Six months had passed since she'd brought Evan home and it seemed like yesterday. How many more months would it take for the healing to begin? How many years? Would she live that long?

She stood on the porch and stared at the unfamiliar surroundings, at the lake, the towering pines standing like ghostly sentinels at the edge of the dew- covered grass, at the pier that disappeared into the early-morning fog covering the lake.

At home she had the mindlessness of television

to keep her company when she couldn't sleep. She had hoped books would provide the escape she was looking for, but last night she'd found it no easier to concentrate in the mountains than it had been in the city.

Cold penetrated her knit leggings. She sat on the split-log railing and brought her baggy sweatshirt over her knees. Leaning her back against the porch pillar, she tried to picture Harold and Mary vacationing here, which they told her they'd done every summer when their kids were home but could no longer find the time to do. They'd left unspoken the reason there hadn't been time.

Mary had finally talked her into coming by insisting she would be doing them a favor, even if she only stayed a couple of weeks.

The grief counselor had told her Shelly and Jason needed to get away, to be somewhere free of memories, somewhere they could just be kids again. Implied in the suggestion was a need for them to get away from her for a while. So when her mother and father had suggested Shelly and Jason spend the summer with them on the farm and they'd responded as if they'd been offered tickets to a Dixie Chicks' concert, Julia had agreed to let them go. Reluctantly.

They might require time away from her, but she could hardly bear the thought of being away from them. They'd been gone less than a week and it seemed an eternity.

She had no idea how she would make it through the summer alone.

A tree squirrel cautiously moved to the rip of a branch on the Jeffry pine at the end of the porch. It surveyed its world, spotted Julia and chattered a noisy alarm. A Steller's jay hopped to a nearby branch to see what the fuss was about. It cocked its head in Julia's direction, swooped down and landed in the middle of the lawn, looking at her expectantly.

"Sorry," Julia said."I didn't think to bring birdseed. You'll have to wait until I get back from the store this afternoon."

One by one other sounds broke the stillness—the high-pitched chirp of a chipmunk, a low whisper of wind in the tops of pine and fir trees, a pine cone bouncing off branches on its way to the forest floor. Minor intrusions into the peace and quiet and solitude she was there to experience. The cure-all everyone had insisted was what she needed for her broken heart.

What no one understood was that her heart wasn't just broken; it was empty—

something far worse. The passion that had driven her from bed every morning was gone. She drifted through her days, micro- managing the lives of two independent and self- sufficient teenagers, who vacillated between tolerance and rebellion.

She was just so sad all the time. She'd cried more in the past six months than she'd cried the entire five years Evan was missing. She didn't want to be this way. She wanted to be stronger, to go on with her life the way she absolutely knew Evan would want her to, but she couldn't pull together the pieces that would let her look at her future and not see a lifetime of aching loneliness. She'd learned how to be alone; she had no idea how to be lonely.

The cold, damp air finally made its way through her sweatshirt. She shivered, stretched and went inside to make coffee, leaving the sunrise for another morning when she'd dressed warmer.

The "cabin" had been built in the twenties, when people of means escaped the Sacramento Valley's summer heat by fleeing to the mountains. Made out of logs and stone, it had a wide, covered porch that faced the lake and was the equivalent of the lavish vacation homes constructed at the turn of the century at Lake Tahoe. Surrounded by dense forest on three sides, the four hundred acres still owned by the Stephens'

family backed up to land held in trust by the Nature Conservancy. The nearest neighbor was two miles away; the nearest town, almost twenty; the Oregon border, less than fifty.

Mount Shasta was to the southeast; the coastal city of Eureka, a hundred miles or so to the southwest.

An expanse of tended lawn went from the house to the rocky shoreline of the lake, open room for a game of croquet or volleyball. It really was a shame no one came here anymore.

Despite this, the inside was as carefully and lovingly maintained as the outside, kept that way by the wife of a local fishing guide. Craftsman-style sofas and chairs upholstered in maroon and green fabrics sat in front of a large stone fireplace. The walls held original watercolors of local wildlife; an oil of Mount Shasta in its winter glory hung above the mantel.

The bedrooms were upstairs, five of them, each with bedspreads and curtains in fabrics popular in the twenties. Beautiful, handmade rag rugs protected the polished pine floors, stepping-stones of warmth on cold mornings.

She'd chosen the bedroom with the view of the lake. For almost half her life she'd made decisions based on what she believed Evan would want. Were he with her, they would be in the back bedroom, the one the sun would hit first in the morning, calling him to start his day. He loved the sunrise above all times of day, and would watch in rapt attention as the sky turned from black to purple to shot with gold. He said it was a renewal, the slate wiped clean, a chance to begin again.

She had never known anyone who loved life as much as Evan.

Julia went into the kitchen and opened the box of supplies she'd brought, basic things to last until she could get to the grocery store. She started the coffee and then got her jacket from the bedroom. By the time she came back down the coffee was ready.

She chose the largest mug, filled it to the top with the steaming, dark liquid and went outside again. Settling on the top step this time, the mug warming her hands, she stared at the dock, or what she could see of it.

Her eyes softly focused, her mind lost in memories, she was slow to register the dark shadow that appeared in the gray mist at the end of the dock. Her eyes narrowed in concentration. What...?

The shadow moved. It was a man. Her heart did a quick, panicked dance when she heard his boots striking the rough planking and realized he was coming toward her.

After leaving her parents' farm she'd become a city girl, the fear of strangers as ele-mental as navigating freeways.

He came nearer and she saw his red plaid shirt, his Giants baseball cap.. .his fishing pole.

The caretaker.

Feeling like an idiot, her heart still beating as if she'd run a marathon, she sat perfectly still, hoping he wouldn't notice her.

The man reached the end of the dock, hesitated, looked longingly to his left, and then with a slumped- shoulder show of resignation headed her way.

"I didn't think you'd be up this early," he said, stopping several feet from the porch.

He was near enough for her to notice black hair on the long side of neat and lightly graying at the temples. She figured him to be a few years older than her, though not many. But then, she'd never been good at guessing people's ages. His eyes were dark and deep set, with fine lines at the corners. And he was taller than he'd appeared at a distance, but not as large. He seemed as if he belonged in this setting, a little on the raw side, able to take in stride whatever vagaries nature delivered. The kind of man you would want with you in a crisis.

"You knew I was here?" She hadn't seen any signs that anyone was around when she'd arrived, no lights or smoke from a fireplace.

"We're too far from the main road to pick up traffic noises so it's pretty obvious when someone arrives."

"And here I thought I was being so quiet." She stood and held out her hand. "Julia McDonald."

He shifted his pole to the hand with the stringer of fish, leaned forward and clasped her outstretched hand. "David Prescott." He smiled. For an instant his face was transformed and he went from ruggedly competent to heart-stoppingly handsome. Julia took this in the way she observed most things, with a detached wonder.

"I had the impression you were—I thought you'd be older." She wished she'd asked Mary more about him.

"We reclusive types usually are, I guess."

"Yeah...I guess."

He shifted position and made a move to leave."If you need anything, my place is a hundred yards, give or take, through those trees."

"Thanks."There was enough reluctance in the invitation that Julia smiled. Knowing he was content to keep his distance made it easier to be sociable.

"I just put on a pot of coffee. Would you like a cup?" she asked on impulse. Now, where had that come from?

He had the good graces to act as though he was considering her offer. "Thanks, maybe another tune." He held up the trout on the stringer. "When I come back empty-handed."

She nodded, relieved. "Another time it is."

She went inside and phoned her mother. "Just thought I'd check in," she said. "I got here too late last night to call." Even with the kids in residence, her mother maintained her nine o'clock bedtime.

"How is it?"

"Nice. At least, what I've seen so far. It's a little quiet, though ."What seemed like a long time ago, she'd cherished her rare moments of quiet. Now they weighed her down like a wet wool coat.

"Quiet is good, Julia."

She laughed. "The kids driving you crazy already?"

"Not at all. Your dad has them with him most of the day. Shelly's showing signs of being a real farmer. Could be we've finally found someone to take over the farm when we retire."

"My Shelly?"

"That's the one."

"We can't possibly be talking about the same girl, the one who would rather stay home from a party than be caught wearing the wrong jeans."

"I don't know what brand she's got on right now, but she didn't appear to mind wearing them to shovel the manure out of the barn."

Julia felt a guilty surge of pleasure at the news .There was no way Shelly would last the entire summer doing those kinds of chores. She'd be on her way home the minute she thought she could get away with it.

"How is Jason?"

"Limping. I told him how you broke both your legs jumping out of the hayloft that summer you were seventeen and he thought he'd give it a try. I don't know why everyone thinks kids are so different nowadays."

"He's okay?"

"If you could bottle embarrassed and sell it for a dime ajar, he'd be going home rich."

"Is he around? I'd like to get my two cents in."

"He's off fishing with your dad. They left before sunup. They swore they'd bring back enough bluegill for supper, but I took a chicken out of the freezer, just in case."

Her father had been promising Jason he'd take him fishing for years."Tell them I'll call back tonight."

"Better make it early. They're going into town with Fred to have dinner and see some new vampire movie. He promised it was funny and wouldn't give Jason nightmares."

"How long has Fred been there?" Last she'd heard he was spending the summer on some archeological dig in Utah.

"When he found out the kids were going to be here, he canceled his trip."

"Oh, great." Her slim chance of getting the kids home early had just dropped to none.

"What's wrong?"

"Nothing."

"Did I mention how good it is for your father to have the kids here? Every night he tells me how much they remind him of Evan."

It was her mother's gentle way of saying that while it might seem that she and her father were moving on with their lives, they hadn't forgotten. "Tell them to have a good time at the movie and that I'll catch them tomorrow."

"Take care of yourself, Julia."

"I love you, Mom."

"I love you, too, sweetheart."

David cleaned the trout, put it in the refrigerator for that night's dinner and began his morning routine—an hour going over the pages he'd written the day before in an attempt to breathe life into them with revisions. At the end of the hour, he would give up, delete everything and begin the three hours he spent at the typewriter each day creating the prose that would end up deleted the next day. Only twice since he'd been there had he kept any of his work longer than twenty-four hours.

His agent insisted it wasn't David's talent that had dried up; it was his ability to judge his own work. But he was the only one he cared about pleasing, and in his mind he hadn't written anything worth publishing in four years.

Today it was more than the usual fear and frustration that kept him from sitting at his desk and starting work that used to come as easily as breathing. When Mary Stephens made her monthly call to find out how things were going and see if he needed anything, she'd told him about the recently widowed woman who would be staying at the main house for the summer and asked if he would mind seeing that she got settled in okay.

Widow implied a stereotype that Julia McDonald didn't fit. He'd expected someone older, someone content to sit on the porch or watch talk shows on the satellite television in the afternoons, someone with enough life experiences to actually want her privacy, too.

Instead, this wounded creature had arrived, still young and vibrant and undoubtedly aching to be a part of life again—not a combination for a woman content to keep her own company.

Even recognizing the unfairness of his assumptions, David let them color his impressions. No wonder he'd slipped into this abyss of depression. Where was the man who'd eagerly sought out people, the one who got up in the morning knowing, without question, that something new, someone new, would cross his path that day and his life would be richer for it?

He'd found the caretaker's job through friends, the couple who'd hired him, Harold and Mary Stephens, unaware they were hiring a man to do menial chores whose wealth matched their own. He'd hoped the isolation would either rekindle the fire that once had fueled his passion to write or let him walk away.

What he'd learned was that his anger at injustice still burned as hot, but without the naivete of youth to sustain the belief that anger could foster change, he had no words.

He sat down at his desk, just him, a mug of coffee and his temperamental laptop...and thoughts of a beautiful and sad woman who'd appeared in his life unbidden and unwelcome.

Two more months and his self-imposed exile would be over. In a way the prospect intrigued him. Not since his years on the road had he felt the heady freedom that came with being unaccountable to anyone or anything.

Perhaps he should thank Julia McDonald for hurrying the process along. She certainly didn't deserve the misdirected hostility that had made him unfit to be around anyone, friend or stranger, for the past three years. He vowed to maintain his distance from her, considering it an act of kindness.

Six Months Missing

Everything I knew about sex I'd learned from books and farm animals and movies and television. Oh, and then there were several girlfriends who were curious or had the lethal combination of persuasive boyfriends and too much to drink and thought keeping a secret meant telling no more than five of your best friends.

After all the war stories, I was determined my first time would be cold sober, my choosing and with someone I loved. I must have sent out an invisible do-not-touch signal, because with the kind of boys who did ask me out, it was never a major problem. I'd never been outside my own house completely naked. Except, of course, showers after gym and changing into my swimming suit at the municipal swimming pool. Oh, and at the doctor's office. I even skinny-dipped in my underpants and bra.

Given the opportunity to go to a topless beach, I would have been easy to spot—the one with the top on. But then, I digress.

Which, I guess, was why I was so surprised that being naked with you that first time seemed so right. I'd left one world, the touch-me-and-you-die one, at the top of the slide and landed in a heap, full force, in another at the bottom. The two of us moved around on my grandmother's pinwheel patchwork quilt in a tangle of arms and legs, sighs and laughter, discovery

and passion. I never once hesitated or thought to cover up.

For two virgins we did okay. No, it was a whole lot better than okay. I don't know if you innately understood where to touch me or if you picked up on my reactions as you explored my body with those exquisitely gentle hands, but by the time you finally slipped your body between my legs, and after I felt a quick moment of pain, I was on a wondrous journey I hadn't come close to imagining. I was breathless, caught up in a whirlwind and just plain dumbfounded at the intensity of my reaction. I thought I would go crazy with desire.

This was a good thing. A really, really good thing. I wanted to do it again. I wanted to do it all the time.

You rolled over on your back and grinned at me. I rolled to my stomach, propped myself up on my elbows and returned your smile.

"I can see why my dad asked us to wait. I can't imagine studying when we could have been doing this."

You laughed. "I take it that means you liked it?"

I plucked a piece of grass and lightly ran the tip down your side. "Can we do it again?"

"When did you have in mind? Remember, I'm leaving tomorrow morning. Early."

"Now?"

You shook you head. "Uh-uh."

"Why not?"