1
 Tall sailing ships, their masts and sails outlined with glowing      white lights, ghosted across Charleston Harbor in a glittering      parade. Canvas snapped, wooden hulls creaked and rocked, and an      enormous crowd of onlookers, completely galvanized by this amazing      spectacle, let loose shrieks of joy.
 "This is fantastic," Theodosia Browning said as she lifted a hand      to her face to block out a sliver of ambient light. "I've never      seen anything like it."
 "Magnificent," Drayton Conneley declared. "There hasn't been this      much razzle-dazzle since the Union shelled Fort Sumter back in      1861."
 It was the night of the Gaslights and Galleons Parade. Two dozen      tall ships had sailed here from all points of the globe—Britain,      France, South America, even Singapore—to dazzle the thousands of      people who had gathered in White Point Garden on the shell-strewn      banks of Charleston's famed Battery. Of course, Theodosia and      Drayton, as invited guests of Timothy Neville, were thrilled with      their perch high up on the third floor widow's walk that graced      their friend's Archdale Street mansion.
 "Wouldn't you love to be sailing on one of those ships right now?"      Theodosia asked Drayton in a dreamy voice. Running the Indigo Tea      Shop was her number one passion, but sailing wasn't far behind.      She was in heaven when she was out on the water, the wind snapping      her riot of auburn hair into long streamers and the salt air      making her blue eyes sparkle and lending her fair complexion a      soft glow as if lit by a saint's candle.
 But Drayton looked absolutely horrified as he answered. "Me? On a      sailing ship? Absolutely not. Don't you know by now that I'm a      confirmed landlubber?"
 "What if you were magically transported to a clipper ship?"      Theodosia favored him with a wry grin. "One of the early ships      tasked with transporting bales of wonderful black tea from China      to England?"
 "Say, now," Drayton said, taking a step back from the railing.      "That's not quite playing fair. You're appealing to my weakness      for tea and history."
 Drayton was sixty-something, the portrait of a proper Southern      gentleman with his tweeds, bow ties, grayed hair, and regal      bearing. He was also the best tea sommelier Theodosia had ever      encountered. Drayton was so well schooled in the art of tea and      tea blending that she considered herself fortunate to have wooed      him away from his teaching post at Johnson & Wales culinary      school to work side-by-side with her at the Indigo Tea Shop.      They'd been together for a half dozen years now, always refining      their tea menu, upgrading the décor of the charming Church Street      tea shop, and catering countless tea parties.
 Tonight was one of those parties. Well, sort of.
 A recent spate of warm spring weather had caused native plum trees      to explode in a riot of purple glory all over the Historic      District. In a nod to this auspicious occasion, Theodosia had      brought along a wicker hamper heaped with plum and black currant      scones. Drayton's contribution was a special plum-flavored      Ceylonese black tea that he'd custom blended. These offerings were      in addition to the elegant light supper buffet that Timothy had      laid out in the downstairs dining room for his two dozen guests.
 "Getting chilly," Theodosia said, pulling her pink cashmere wrap      tight around her shoulders. She was outdoorsy and loved to jog,      sail, and hike. Delighted in breezing around the low country with      the hardtop off her Jeep, but tonight had turned downright cold.
 "But nobody's leaving," Drayton pointed out. They were standing at      one end of the widow's walk, a long, narrow wooden walkway that      ran the length of the home's roofline. All along the walkway,      people were spread out, conversing quietly in small groups,      eagerly watching the ships as they bobbed and wheeled in the      harbor. It was difficult to see who these other guests were up      here, since the night sky was so black and moonless and Theodosia      and Drayton had arrived a little late to the party. Too late to be      properly introduced. In any case, all the folks up top had to      concentrate on watching their step, since the decorative      wrought-iron railing that bordered the widow's walk was barely      three feet high.
 "Perhaps we should go in," Drayton suggested. "Warm up and enjoy      some light supper along with Timothy's hospitality." He glanced at      his watch, an antique Piaget, and frowned. "It's gotten so dark I      can't quite make out the time."
 Theodosia glanced sideways at St. Sebastian's, the nearest      neighborhood church in a city so filled with churches it had been      dubbed the Holy City. A lighted clock in a red brick steeple shone      the current time. "It's just nine o'clock," she said.
 "Still, tomorrow is a workday," Drayton said. "You know how I like      to get a jump on Mondays."
 "I hear you," Theodosia said. "Plus, we've got . . ."
 BOOM!
 A thunderous roar pierced the night, frightening onlookers and      rattling windows in homes up and down the block.
 Theodosia clapped a hand to her chest. "What was that?"
 "Cannon volleys," Drayton said. "From two of the ships in the      harbor, I'd guess."
 Theodosia peered through the still mostly bare treetops. "Let's      hope they don't do it—"
 BA-BOOM!
 "—again," she finished
 But this time the cannons' roar was followed by a high-pitched      scream.
 "Help!" came a woman's cry from the far end of the widow's walk.      "He's been shot!"
 "What?" Drayton said, startled.
 A second scream rose up, a terrified yelp that quickly morphed      into an anguished and frantic shriek, like steel wheels grinding      against hot metal rails.
 Then came a terrifically loud thumping, like the sound a flat tire      makes when it whap whap whaps against pavement. Except this was no      flat tire. This was . . .
 "Someone's fallen!" a man's voice bellowed. This was followed by a      dozen voices rising in a collective, jangled outcry.
 Theodosia spun quickly and peered down over the edge of the roof.      Off to her right, twirling head over teakettle, a man was hurtling      down the sloped slate roof of Timothy's house as if he were      zipping down a child's slide.
 "Help!" the falling man cried as he flailed and fought for      handholds. His pleading, anguished note pierced the darkness.      Pierced Theodosia's heart as well.
 "Dear Lord!" Theodosia cried. She hoped the poor man would find      something, anything, to break his fall.
 "This is dreadful," Drayton said with a sharp intake of breath.
 They watched helplessly as the man flopped and tumbled, then      landed in a deep V that formed one of the eaves in the expansive      roof. His arms flew out, beating wildly, as his fingers scrabbled      desperately to find something to grasp. But he was moving too fast      to completely arrest his fall and immediately catapulted down      another few feet, heading for a decorative balcony. The man      floundered again, making a grab for a balustrade to halt his      terrible descent. His fingers grazed it by a mere inch. Then his      body torqued grotesquely as he banged his forehead against the top      of a stone window pediment and a thin mist sprayed out in slow      motion. Blood.
 Theodosia was in shock. It was as if the poor man had been caught      in a hellish pinball machine, helplessly spinning and bouncing his      way downward.
 Theodosia felt Drayton's hand grab her shoulder in a death grip as      they watched the man take a final, sharp tumble and then disappear      into darkness.
 "Was he really shot?" Drayton asked, his voice hoarse and shaking.      "By the cannon? Or did he fall?"
 But Theodosia had already bolted past Drayton and was dashing for      the doorway.
 "Does anybody have a phone?" she cried out. "Someone call an      ambulance right now! Please!"
 And then Theodosia was running, practically stumbling, down a      flight of steps, the thick Oriental carpet whisper soft under her      fast-moving feet. She hit the second floor landing, spun past a      man and woman who stared at her with quizzical expressions, and      then rushed down a wider stairway to hit the first floor landing.      From there she was pounding down a long hallway past a parade of      Timothy Neville's Huguenot ancestors, all memorialized in gleaming      oil portraits and staring down at her with faintly disapproving      looks.
 Out the front door she ran, across the broad piazza, down the      front steps, and around the side of the house into Timothy's      garden. It was an elaborate Asian garden replete with reflecting      pool, thickets of bamboo, statuary, and pattering fountains.
 Maybe the poor man hadn't been fatally wounded at all, Theodosia      reasoned. Maybe he'd simply lost his footing, tumbled down, and      somehow landed in Timothy's reflecting pool. That was her one      hopeful thought. That he was spitting water right now, shaking his      head, moaning over a broken arm or smashed collarbone. He'd need      an ambulance, of course. And a wild-lights-and-siren trip to the      emergency room. But perhaps there was still hope. There was always      hope . . . wasn't there?
 But when Theodosia reached the backyard, she slid to a stop and      gasped in shock. The poor man had landed directly on top of the      antique wrought-iron fence that encircled Timothy's property.      Reeling from such a frightful sight, Theodosia put a hand to her      mouth and stifled a groan. Like a carefully collected insect held      in place by a pin, the man was grotesquely impaled upon the      sharply pointed fleur-de-lis spikes that topped the old fence.
 Tiptoeing closer, drawn almost hypnotically to this gruesome      tableau, Theodosia stared at the hapless man. His eyes were open      wide in surprise and his white shirt was splattered with blood.      Worst of all, one of the razor-sharp points of the fence had been      driven clean through his neck.								
									 Copyright © 2018 by Laura Childs. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.