The Guardian. Bethany Campbell
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Hawkshaw went over the Kanaday woman’s file again. Letter to Reader Title Page Dedication CHAPTER ONE CHAPTER TWO CHAPTER THREE CHAPTER FOUR CHAPTER FIVE CHAPTER SIX CHAPTER SEVEN CHAPTER EIGHT CHAPTER NINE CHAPTER TEN CHAPTER ELEVEN CHAPTER TWELVE CHAPTER THIRTEEN CHAPTER FOURTEEN CHAPTER FIFTEEN CHAPTER SIXTEEN CHAPTER SEVENTEEN CHAPTER EIGHTEEN CHAPTER NINETEEN Copyright
Hawkshaw went over the Kanaday woman’s file again.
Now that he’d met her and the kid, the case no longer seemed an abstraction, nor did they. They were flesh and blood.
And the reality of her was distracting, too distracting. Because she wasn’t the woman he wanted. He forced himself to look at the fuzzy reproductions of the snapshots that Corbett had sent of Kate. There were only three.
The first showed her and the kid sitting before a towering Christmas tree. The kid, Charlie, was mugging for the camera, and she was smiling with what seemed like real joy. Her smile was nice, full of life. He wondered if she would ever smile that way again. He set the photos aside and took a sip of beer.
A lone light shone from the farthest window of the house. Kate had left the bathroom light on for the kid, a gesture that touched him in spite of himself.
Don’t be touched, he warned himself. Don’t feel anything.
The woman and kid had come into his life suddenly, and with luck they’d disappear just as suddenly. Until then, he’d watch out for them because they were a legacy from Corbett, a favor to be returned and a debt to be paid.
But nothing personal. He would stay uninvolved. He had made it his specialty.
Dear Reader,
My husband and I visit Florida’s Lower Keys as often as possible and have explored the backcountry by kayak. I love the loneliness and wildness of the place—although I could have done without getting to know a certain sea slug quite so well.
Before writing this story, I read a lot about the backcountry, stalkers and attention deficiency in children. There’s a lot of my son in Charlie—a bright, imaginative kid intensely frustrated by reading problems and handicapped by an overabundance of energy and a tendency to march to a different drummer. He overcame his difficulties much as Charlie does. Today he teaches composition and Shakespeare at the University of New Orleans. Writing this book made me aware again of the challenges such children—and their parents—face. The best part was the reaffirmation that such challenges can be met.
Sadly, writing The Guardian also made me painfully conscious of the inadequacy of stalking laws in the United States. I hope we can work to better them.
Sincerely,
Bethany Campbell
The Guardian
Bethany Campbell
To Margot Dalton—
Who, like E. B. White’s Charlotte, is not only a good friend, but a good writer.
CHAPTER ONE
THE SHARK WAS DUSTY.
Nearly six feet long, it was stuffed, mounted and hung on the wall above the sagging couch. Its downturned mouth grinned with cruel teeth.
On the shark’s head was a black baseball cap. In white letters, it said UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE.
A tall man, naked except for a towel knotted around his middle, stood before the shark. He held the phone and listened to a voice half a continent away. His face was grim.
I don’t want to get involved, he thought with deep distaste. Those days are over. I’m out of the game. For good.
But because it was Corbett talking on the other end of the line, Hawkshaw listened.
“There’s no choice,” Corbett said. “She’s got to get out of town. She knows it. I can’t keep her safe.”
Hawkshaw adjusted the towel around his waist. He was dripping salt water onto the old braided rug.