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CHAPTER ONE





                   MacCarthy Residence
                   San Francisco, California
                   October 6, 1936



                   It only took a stitch, maybe two, before I drew blood.
                       Mam circled my chair like a hawk ferreting out its prey.
                   Stalking. Waiting. She’d spent countless hours in the parlor with
                   me, explaining how to properly hold a needle to darn socks or
                   reattach buttons. The knots in my shoulders tightened. The pad
                   of my finger bloomed red. I welcomed the sting. It was the perfect
                   distraction from Mam’s stare.
                       “Keep trying, Wilhelmina.”
                       She ran a hand over her ink-black hair stretched tight against
                   her scalp. The low hiss escaping her mouth resembled our old
                   teapot coming to boil on the stove.
                       “Place the needle against the button just below the collar.”
                   The tinge of sadness that always filled her voice forced me to sink
                   lower in my chair.
                       As I was about to place the needle against the fabric again,
                   low voices filled the apartment. Da and Father  ’Sullivan entered,
                   discussing last Sunday’s sermon about Wall Street and the current
                   economic state of the country. It was a favorite topic of Father
                    ’Sullivan, who continually railed on about the Depression and
                   the greediness of mankind.
                       When the men found Mam and me in the parlor their conver-
                   sation stopped. Father  ’Sullivan scrubbed a hand through his


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