Prologue
The story began with the wind.
It rolled across the surface of the greatest of the Great Lakes; far below night, but fathoms above secrets and shipwrecks. It rode the waves onto the shoreline, spilling up the streets of the quiet Wisconsin town. It drifted to the corner of the two-story brownstone and crept, rock by rock, up the wall to an open ledge. There, it paused to tease a small chime that hung from the latch.
A child's voice pleaded, "Tell me the story. Again!"
Inside the tiny bedroom, two figures sat on a single bed. One was shrouded in covers — a young girl with hair the color of beach sand. Beside her sat a copper-haired woman in her twenties. As the woman began to speak, her face changed from merely pretty to deeply lovely, as if years of weariness had drained away.
The wind slipped into the room to listen. It tickled the corners of cartoons taped to the wall — childish sketches of a pirate, a boat and a beautiful maiden.
The story fell from the lips of the woman to the ears of the wide-eyed girl. The 7-year-old shivered under her comforter, but not because of the wind.
Because of the story.