Magnolia Storms

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by Janet W. Ferguson




  Magnolia Storms

  A Coastal Hearts Novel

  Janet W. Ferguson

  When you pass through the waters, I will be with you....

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Foreword

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  August 29, 2005, in Mississippi

  Dear Reader,

  Don’t miss the next book

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Sign up for Janet W. Ferguson's Mailing List

  Foreword

  THERE ARE A FEW MONUMENTAL days that divide our lives. Some are happy—a marriage or the birth of a child. Others are horrifying—that knock on the door or that phone call with bad news—the death of a spouse, child, or parent. There are days when we remember exactly where we were when something horrific happened—September 11, the Challenger explosion, a president being shot.

  August 29, 2005.

  Hurricane Katrina was a horrifying day that divided the lives of most Mississippians. The destruction and loss was staggering.

  Though my home is three hours inland, Katrina’s storm winds still howled and moaned for hours, uprooting trees in every yard in my neighborhood, many of them crashing on rooftops. We had no power or phone service for a week, which was nothing compared to what happened south of us. I had dear friends from the Coast, and for weeks on weeks, I had no idea whether they were safe, due to the damage to communications infrastructure. The storm hit in August and caused the Gulf to surge up to twenty-seven feet in places.

  Six months later, I traveled with a rebuilding team to hang sheetrock. The surreal mutilation of the landscape I witnessed, even months afterward, is forever branded onto my mind. No street signs, no landmarks, food still being served by members of churches under tents, because there was nowhere else to get it. I’ve done my best to honor the people who lost so much in this disaster.

  This book is dedicated to my friends and all the Mississippians who went through the devastation that was Hurricane Katrina.

  Janet W. Ferguson

  Chapter 1

  FEAR AND LOSS SNAKED around Magnolia Marovich’s heart like they always did when she studied the satellite images on the three computer screens in front of her. Not again. The waters should be calming down in November, not churning up a monster.

  Maggie twirled one of her untamable, dark curls around her finger and blew out a shaky breath. The midmorning hurricane hotline conference call had left her stomach roiling like the spinning air mass out there in the atmosphere.

  Sure, they’d had an unseasonably hot year—okay, a sweltering year—which fueled the tropical weather, but why couldn’t God keep the seas calm a little longer? They’d been so close to the end of the season. Yet here it was almost Thanksgiving, and the Mississippi National Weather Service office hummed with activity. The storm had hammered Haiti and Cuba before barreling into the mouth of the Gulf overnight. Already a category two in the warmer waters, the long-term forecast placed the trajectory cone over the Mississippi and Alabama Coasts.

  Though Maggie’s current house and office in Jackson were located three hours north of the Coast, memories of Hurricane Katrina’s wrath pounded on the doors of her mind. The fury of the wind, the fierceness of the rain, and finally the savage cruelty of the tidal surge that ripped away so much of her beloved hometown.

  And her heart.

  Another email notification popped up, pulling her from the recurrent nightmare of emotions. She clicked on the forecast track. More data on the storm. She needed to live in the present and stay on top of the computer models, so she could warn others to get out of harm’s way.

  Others...like the few left of her own family.

  Would her stubborn sister come inland or wait until the last minute as usual? She pictured Cammie working in the quaint antique store in downtown Ocean Springs—much too near the coastline. She imagined Cammie’s daughter, Dahlia, drawing pictures or doing homework behind the checkout counter while her mom worked. Familiar nausea swept through Maggie’s midsection. Cammie didn’t have to stay and endanger her little girl. Their great aunt’s store could close for good this time, and Cammie could find a job here in Jackson, where she’d have help with Dahlia and Aunt Ruth.

  Maggie rolled her shoulders to loosen the building tension. There was plenty of room in her empty house for her family. If only they’d come.

  “You look like you could use a neck rub.” Her coworker Jane’s voice chirped as she leaned over the cubicle’s half-wall. “Your tendons are poking out like the spokes on my bike, and Steve hasn’t taken his eyes off you all morning. I’m sure he’d love to oblige.”

  With a vehement shake of her head, Maggie scowled. “If he touched my neck, he might find my latest lukewarm cup of coffee splashed across his expensive loafers.” The weightlifting womanizer had made her his target for months now, despite her continued refusals.

  Her petite blonde friend offered a compassionate smile. “Staring at those screens won’t change anything, Maggie. You can’t control the weather.”

  A fact she knew well...which partly explained her stale life. “But I can prepare for what’s coming and warn others to do the same.” And save some of them from enduring the heartbreak and grief she’d suffered.

  “I’ll be praying the storm passes and your family stays safe.” Jane patted the laminate at the edge of the desk. “Come eat dinner with us after work. There’s always enough for one more at the table with the latest Crock-Pot creation I’ve devised, and it’ll save you from pacing around your place all night. At least for an hour or two.”

  Jane was sweet, her blue-eyed children adorable, and her husband a kind man. Maggie’s fingers ran across a scratch in the coating of her desk. Being with Jane’s happy family underscored Maggie’s own shipwrecked life. Isolated and alone. The ancient debris from her relationship with Josh always muddied her odds for finding someone who could measure up.

  Josh. Maggie’s heart still pinched as she dredged up his memory. The last person she wanted to think about during a hurricane.

  “Earth to Maggie.” Jane touched her hand.

  “I don’t know.”

  “The kids will be excited if you come.”

  “Sure. Thanks.” Not like she had anything else planned. Playing preschool-level board games would be a good distraction. “I’ll pick up cookie dough ice cream for dessert.” May as well stress-eat with a crowd...or else she’d devour the whole carton herself.

  Maggie managed a small smile and turned back to her monitors. The swirling form waiting there mocked her. She’d gotten too comfortable, too secure that Mississippi would make it through another year without mass destruction. Sinking into the deep pain of the past, her mind conjured up the eerie roar of wind, the crack of splintering trees, and the earthshaking boom as they fell to the ground, rattling the walls. Her father kissing her forehead before he disappeared through the door. The last she’d ever see of him.

  Maggie mashed her eyes shut. No. Stop.
/>   Please, Lord, let me forget.

  Her phone’s vibration on the desk jerked her back to the present. Cammie’s number. Maggie grabbed it. Maybe she could talk some sense into her sister this time.

  “Hello.”

  “Aunt Maggie?” Her precious niece’s voice quivered.

  “Is something wrong, Dahlia?”

  No answer except a sniffle and a quiet sob that wrenched Maggie’s insides. “Sweetie, are you having a bad day? You can tell me anything, you know.”

  “I need you to come to Aunt Ruth’s house. Mama’s been in an accident.” Another sniffle and a hiccup. “Hit by a truck. They took her in an ambulance.”

  “Hit by a truck?” Her voice came out way too loud. In an instant, Jane and Steve hovered by her workspace with anxious expressions clouding their faces.

  Maggie pressed her burning eyes closed as she tried to make sense of her niece’s words. A truck. An ambulance. The hospital.

  No, Lord. Don’t take my sister, too. Let Cammie be okay.

  She needed to help her family.

  Her mouth dried as she tried to swallow the lump of panic strangling her.

  Not down to the Coast.

  Not in this weather.

  “I’ll be there in three hours.” For Cammie. And for Dahlia.

  Jane kneeled near the swivel chair and rested her hand on Maggie’s. “What’s happened? What can I do?”

  “It’s my sister. She’s in the hospital...” Her stupid voice quivered.

  God, help me do what I have to do.

  Determination rose in her chest, ran down to her fists. “I have to go home and help my family.”

  “Maybe I can go with you.” Her friend’s eyes welled with tears. “I know the storm has you upset already.”

  Steve slipped closer. “I can take her.”

  Maggie shot up. “No.” Again her voice came out louder than she’d intended. A few other heads in the office rotated her way. “I need you both here keeping an eye on the hurricane.”

  WIND WHIPPED JOSH BERGERON’S face, and the spray of salt water filled his eyes as his boat battled the swells rocking the Gulf of Mexico. Most days he loved his job as a river bar pilot, gulping in the sun and briny air. The tides and the marsh and the sandbars had been a part of him for as long as he could remember. But stormy days like this made him wonder whether he was crazy after all. Like Magnolia Marovich had insisted so many years ago.

  Maggie. Much like a storm herself, she’d been on his mind during this hurricane season. And every season since Katrina. With the new storm moving into the Gulf overnight, he couldn’t help but wonder what she was doing right now. Stocking up on supplies and advising everyone who’d listen to scurry inland, no doubt. Staring at some computer screen to monitor the storm. She’d never gotten over her father’s death.

  Josh pictured his own son back home. Those innocent eyes that hung on his every word.

  Lord, take care of J.D. if anything should happen to me.

  Enough. Nothing was going to happen.

  Mr. Marovich’s death was a rarity in this industry. Pilots and their crews took precautions, but an attempted rescue during a monster hurricane like Katrina...too many variables, too much devastation.

  The pilot of Josh’s vessel maneuvered close, and the massive tanker alongside them slowed, preparing for him to make the swap so he could board and pilot the larger ship up the mouth of the Mississippi. The chain on his waist clamped him to the rail system surrounding the pilot boat while he waited. The ladder from the tanker undulated as even the enormous vessel pitched in the waves. If visibility and winds hadn’t been so bad, they could’ve used a helicopter to get to here. His partner edged their boat ever closer. Josh took a deep breath and prepared for the switch.

  The two vessels seesawed in the whitecaps. It had been a long time since he’d seen the waves this brutal. He’d have to time the transfer carefully. A stumble in this weather, and he’d be swept out, lost to the sea’s wrath despite his rescue beacon.

  The ladder neared. Josh unclipped his harness and reached for the closest rung. He caught hold and held on with fingers tightly clenched. The other ship rocked away and left only the ladder keeping him from the churning waves below. Rain bludgeoned him, cold and blinding. He pushed one foot and then another up the rungs, counting his steps as he ascended. Almost there. Near the top, his shoe slipped, and he lost his footing. Dangling with white knuckles, he grappled to catch the step with his toe.

  A gale force wind whipped up, challenging his grip. A rush of adrenaline heightened his senses and gave him a burst of strength.

  “Are you kidding me?” He fought to swing closer and, finally, his right ankle made contact with metal. After wrenching his leg around the rails, he stood and scrambled the rest of the way up by sheer will—and determination to see his son again. At last, he made his way to the captain’s bridge and assumed control of the ship.

  The orders he gave the helmsman would deliver the tanker around the underwater obstructions in the mouth of the Mississippi River. The routes, depths, and current flows were etched in his mind, like everything Mr. Marovich had taught him. Bittersweet memories stirred an ache in Josh’s chest. Once the deliveries were wrapped up, he’d return home tomorrow for his two weeks off. If he hadn’t promised to help Cammie at the store, he’d grab J.D. and go inland until the hurricane passed. But he’d keep his promise. He wouldn’t bail out.

  Unlike his own father.

  The thought of the skirt-chasing deserter tightened Josh’s fists. He’d never let his son down like that.

  Other than his faith in God, being a pilot and being a good father to J.D. were everything to him.

  Maybe because they were all he had.

  Chapter 2

  AFTER A STOP AT HER house, where she’d packed quickly and flung a wadded heap of clothes onto the backseat, Maggie took off down the highway. The drive was calm, but the battle in her mind was colossal. She hated leaving her meteorology team in a crisis, especially heading into a storm she should be monitoring.

  Fear engulfed her. Scars, pitted and deep in her heart, gashed open, raining tears down her cheeks, sending prickly shivers across her shoulders and down her arms.

  Lord, give me strength. I have to make this trip.

  Maggie took a deep gulp of air then blew it out. Trepidation gave way to resignation. What else could she do? She had to go. Cammie was injured. Their great aunt was too elderly to manage, and Dahlia too young to stay alone.

  An hour into the trip, Maggie glanced in the rearview mirror to find a pickup truck on her tail.

  Sorry, mister.

  She accelerated to the speed limit. Yes, her speed had been erratic. Somewhere between mashing the gas pedal almost to the floor and barely coasting along Highway 49, wishing she could turn back north.

  Growing up along the Mississippi Sound, she’d savored home, been proud to live in the area where those stately antebellum houses had stood facing the deceptively gentle Gulf waters. But she sickened at the thought of those lots that still stood vacant and deserted more than a decade after the storm. The sidewalks and steps that led to bare concrete slabs—empty foundations that used to be someone’s home or business. Memories flooded her mind. Streets and bridges, buckled and broken. Debris piled high in surreal mounds like something from a Salvador Dali painting. The stench of rotting meat swept out from the bellies of containers at the port competing with the smells of mildew, mold, and death.

  Whole towns obliterated.

  The seeming stability of her life, crushed like a fragile eggshell under the heel of a beast.

  Maggie neared the cutoff toward Ocean Springs and stared at the cumulus clouds. Windy, but no evidence of the huge storm entering the Gulf. What must life have been like before modern prediction systems? How awful it must’ve been to have no warning before a storm hit. She’d read historical accounts of coastal areas being completely wiped out. Another shiver ran across her shoulders.

  Palms slick, Maggie
wound her way around the low-lying, flat streets of her historic hometown. Vibrant landscaping and trees with long overhanging branches nestled around the charming cottages. The gnarled limbs and trunks of the ancient live oaks had struggled to make their comeback since the deluge. So many of the beautiful trees had been lost in Katrina.

  Katrina.

  No matter how hard she tried to control herself, she always shuddered at the horror that name brought to mind. The damage and devastation of homes and lives—her home. Her father’s life.

  She’d rarely returned since she’d finally made her getaway to Mississippi State University to earn her masters in meteorology. Knowledge and preparation provided security...safety. Her degree had been a place to dump all her froth of emotions and find a way to take a small measure of control. Too bad her sister hadn’t followed suit. Instead, beautiful Cammie had found comfort in the arms of a sweet-talking boy at Tulane. The sorry fellow left her high and dry once he found out about the baby. But Dahlia had been a joy and a blessing for them all. Named after their mother, the darling girl had eased the blow as Mama had battled breast cancer. A battle they’d lost three years ago.

  The child owned a piece of Maggie’s heart, either despite the fact Dahlia looked like she could be her younger twin or because of it. Except, fortunately, the child hadn’t inherited the uncontrollable, curly mane.

  “Okay, world, I’m back in Ocean Springs.” She parked her Acura in the drive of the old Greek revival home and steeled herself for what she was about to face.

  When she stepped out of the car, a muggy gust of wind attacked, slapping her hair across her cheeks. She glanced up at the tottering trees’ creaky branches. Nice welcome. It figured.

  Not much had changed at Aunt Ruth’s. White wooden panels, green shutters, and a black roof. Always the same, though it had all been remodeled a few times over the years. How the old home had weathered so many hurricanes didn’t compute. Especially when Mama and Daddy’s home a few blocks away had been ripped from its foundation and strewn in the piles of debris that stretched and littered the earth for miles in every direction.

 

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