The third in the Shenandoah Album series, this story focuses on Kendra Taylor, who's coming off a near-death experience that leaves her wounded in body and spirit. To escape where she was nearly killed and a marriage she feels was also a casualty of the shooting that nearly killed her, she goes to the little cabin willed to her husband from the grandmother he never knew.
In that little cabin, desperately in need of being razed or renovated, Kendra finds a quilt whose pattern holds a series of clues to a mystery.
Isaac, Kendra's husband, is guilt-ridden that Kendra was nearly killed because he didn't leave work early enough to get the medicine she needs. More importantly, he can't understand and doesn't approve of her insistence on moving into the Appalachian mountain cabin, away from help, away from her work, away from him. Does this mean the end of their marriage? It seems so.
But as Kendra studies the quilt and begins the slow process of healing with the help of neighbors and friends in little Toms Brook, who refuse to leave her alone, she also charts the journey of Isaac's grandparents during the depression of the early 1930s and the events that lead to the deaths of Jesse and Birdie. Did Isaac's grandmother do it? What really happened, and how does the quilt, its top done in the Lovers Knot pattern, help Kendra and Isaac return to each other?
A story filled with the threads of secrets that gradually bind a compelling couple together.