Caroline frowned at the gaudy bauble. "Lord, no. It must be Savannah 's." She took a step back and gave her niece one last, long look in the eye, not in the least bit fooled by the diversion. "You come down to the store and see me later if you need to talk, you hear?"
Laurel nodded. Caroline reached up and stroked her niece's cheek gently, her thumb just grazing one of the dark shadows of fatigue that arched beneath her eyes. "I know how strong you really are, sweetheart," she said softly, "and I know you'll be all right. You're a Chandler, after all, and we're made of stern stuff. But don't expect to climb back all in one day, and don't forget that I'm here if you need me."
"Thanks, Aunt Caroline," Laurel murmured.
Caroline straightened her dainty shoulders, a gleam in her dark eyes and a wry smile curling her mouth. "Thanks, nothing. You go kick the figurative shit out of that television preacher."
A chuckle bubbled up inside Laurel, and she smiled. "I'll do my best."
As Caroline went out, Savannah came down the stairs, wearing a plum silk kimono trimmed with a band of ivory satin and wide ivory satin cuffs that fell past her wrists. Laurel watched her descent by way of the mirror as she repaired her lipstick, trying to assess her sister's mood. It had been near dawn before Savannah had come in, and she was obviously trying to fight off the aftereffects of her late night. She wore a blue gel eye mask to combat puffiness and took the stairs one careful step at a time. Her lips were swollen and red, and her hair was as wild as a witch's mane around her shoulders.
Their eyes met in the mirror, and Laurel bit down on the questions that sprang instantly to mind and the re-criminations that came hard on their heels.
"Is this your earring?" She held up the heart-shaped bob as she turned away from the mirror.
Savannah said nothing as she padded barefoot down the hall. She stared blankly at the earring for a moment, flicked at it with a finger to set it swinging. "It was in your car," she said flatly. "Where are you going?"
"Down to the courthouse to see about stopping Baldwin from harassing the Delahoussayes."
"Christ, Baby, you barely know them."
"I know all I need to know."
"You're not supposed to be upsetting yourself with other people's problems." You're supposed to be letting me take care of you.
Laurel opened her pocketbook and dropped in her lipstick and car keys. "So," she said with a shrug, "I'll solve this one and go back to laying low. How's that sound?"
"Like a load of bullshit," Savannah snapped. "Let the Delahoussayes take care of themselves. They can damn well fight their own fights." Her mouth bent into something like a smile. "You saw that for yourself yesterday. That bitch Annie damn near gave me a bald spot."
She lifted a hand to rub at her scalp, the sleeve of her kimono falling to her elbow. Laurel 's eyes went round at the sight of her wrist. The delicate, porcelain skin was bruised and raw in spots.
"My God, Sister! What happened to you?" she demanded, snatching at Savannah 's arm so she could get a better look.
Savannah bared her teeth, an expression made eerier by the blue mask she wore across her eyes like something left over from Mardi Gras. "You don't want to know."
"Yes, I do! What the hell-"
"No," she said coolly. "I distinctly remember you telling me you didn't want to hear about my sex life. You didn't want to hear that Ronnie Peltier has a cock like a jackhammer or that the Revver likes to play whip-me, whip-me games or that I like to do it with-"
"Stop it!" Laurel yelled. Flinging her sister's arm away, she stepped back, as if Savannah 's admission was so repulsive, she couldn't stand the idea of touching her or breathing the same air. "Dammit, Savannah, why do you have to do that? Why do you have to degrade yourself that way?"
"Because I'm a slut." Savannah threw the word like a dagger, her temper tearing through what little self-control she had left. She stalked toward Laurel, eyes narrowed behind her mask, lips pulled back. "I'm not a shining little bright-eyed heroine. I'm what Ross Leighton turned me into."
"You're what you want to be," Laurel fired back. "Ross hasn't laid a hand on you in fifteen years-"
"How do you know?" Savannah sneered, backing her into the hall table. "Maybe I still fuck him twice a week for old time's sake."
"Shut up!"
"What's the matter, Baby? Don't you want to hear about how I spread my legs for our dear old stepdaddy so you wouldn't have to?"
The words stung like nettles in Laurel 's heart. "I didn't have any control over what Ross did to you," she said, her voice choked with emotion. "You can't blame me, and you can't blame yourself. It's stupid to spend the rest of your life punishing yourself for something that was beyond your control."
Savannah stepped back, her expression beneath her mask a combination of cynicism and incredulity. "My God, aren't you the little hypocrite?" she said softly. "What the hell have you been doing with your whole damn life?"
Laurel stared at her, stunned, weak. Her knees felt like water, and her stomach tightened like a fist.
Mama Pearl rumbled into the hall, wringing her plump hands in a red checked dish towel, a scowl folding her forehead into burls of flesh. "What the world goin' on out here?" she demanded. "All I hear is yellin' an' cursin' like to burn the Almighty's ears! What goin' on?"
Savannah pulled her temper in and wrapped it tight around her as she adjusted the sash on her kimono. "Nothing, Mama Pearl," she said calmly. She picked a piece of dead leaf out of her hair and crumbled it between her fingers. "I just came down to get a pot of tea."
Mama Pearl looked to Laurel for corroboration. Laurel straightened her glasses and picked up her purse, her hand trembling visibly. "I have to go," she mumbled, refusing to meet anyone's eyes, focusing on maintaining some semblance of control.
She walked out of the house and into the sauna heat of midmorning on wobbly legs, thinking that after what she had just been through, a trip to the courthouse was going to be a piece of cake.
The air-conditioning in the sheriff's office was fighting a losing battle against the afternoon sun that came glaring in through the window. Sheriff Duwayne Kenner stood behind his desk with his hands on his slim hips, overseeing the futile attempts of two maintenance men who were trying to install a new venetian blind.
"Get the goddamn bracket straight," he growled. "And the left one's half an inch higher than the right. What the hell you boys thinkin'-that y'all can tip the whole goddamn courthouse so the shade'll hang straight?"
The maintenance man on the right shot a glance over his meaty shoulder, blinking at the sweat that dribbled down his shining dark forehead and into his eyes. His blue shirt was soaked down the back and sides, the tails crawling up out of the low-riding waistband of his pants, giving glimpses of a generous tube of fat around his middle. He gulped a breath and mumbled the expected, "No, sir."
The other man-younger, thinner, harder, darker-set his jaw at the word "boy" and dropped his end of the blind so that the blazing sun struck Kenner full in the face.
"Jesus Christ!" The sheriff took a quick step back, snapping his head to the side and squeezing his eyes shut. The badge pinned to the chest of his sweat-stained khaki uniform shirt glinted like gold.
The younger man's mouth flicked up on the corners. "I's sorry, Sheriff Kenner," he said in an exaggerated drawl.
"Your sorry black ass," Kenner grumbled under his breath. He jerked around, muttering about the squandering of tax dollars on equal opportunity programs, and faced the young woman who had come into his office a full five minutes ago to speak with him.
Laurel Chandler. Ross Leighton's stepdaughter. While Kenner curried favor with Leighton, he was in no particular hurry to listen to the girl. Everyone in town had heard about her-making wild accusations up in Georgia, blowing the case, losing her marbles over it. She was trouble. He could smell trouble a mile off-even when it was wearing perfume.
Laurel sat in the visitor's chair, sweat trickling down her sides and between her shoulder blades. Her linen jacket was wilted, her temper frayed down to the nub. While her morning's efforts had gone smoothly, she had a feeling Kenner was going to be a whole different story. He had the unmistakable aura of a redneck about him. He looked fifty, tough and sinewy, with the lean build of a cowboy. His steel gray hair was thinning fast on top, but she doubted anyone ribbed him about it. If Kenner had a sense of humor, the Klan backed the NAACP.