The night Avery entered my life, the air in the emergency room was thick with the copper tang of blood and the sterile, biting scent
The twenty-two-pound turkey sat in the center of the Viking dual-fuel range, its skin crisping to a perfect mahogany. It was a heritage breed, organic
The morning air at the Grand Azure Hotel carried a scent that could not be mistaken for anything else. It smelled like money—fresh-cut imported roses,
The collapse of a fourteen-year marriage rarely happens with a bang; usually, it is a slow erosion of trust that finishes with a sudden, devastating
My name is Laura Mitchell, and I live in a quiet, two-story home in the suburbs of San Jose—the kind of place where golden light
My name is Susan Mitchell, and for twenty years, I have been the architect of everyone’s stability but my own. When our parents died, I
I never felt the need to correct my family’s low opinion of me. To my parents and my sister, Melissa, I was Evelyn Carter: the
I was six years old when the world lost its color. My mother, a woman who smelled of lavender and old books, passed away, leaving
I grew up in a house that was small in square footage but vast in warmth. My mother, Daisy, was the kind of person who
I am seventy-five years old now. My name is Margaret, and my husband, Thomas, and I have spent more than half a century weaving our