When Theresa Whitlock arrived at the country house outside Asheville, North Carolina on a warm Saturday morning in July, the air felt strangely thick as if the entire valley had been dipped in honey and left to settle beneath the sun. The garden had always greeted her with the scent of soil and climbing vines, yet that morning something in the air carried a sharp metallic unease that made her stop at the gate and stare in disbelief.

Only a day earlier her rose garden had been vibrant and full of color, the bushes stretching proudly toward the sunlight with petals that caught the morning breeze. Now the place looked wounded because the stems had been hacked down into rough stumps and the earth lay raw and disturbed as if someone had stripped the garden of its living skin.

Her purse slipped from her hands and the paper bag holding sweet pastries from a small bakery in Asheville tore open while the bread rolled slowly along the dusty path. Theresa whispered with confusion and dread, “What is this,” yet her voice sounded faint even to herself because her legs refused to move.