Available in EPUB, MOBI, and PDF formats. Read on your Kindle, phone, tablet, computer and more
Hood Canal is the only fjord in the contiguous United States—a deep glacial arm of the Pacific beneath Washington’s Olympic Mountains, where octopus drift through cold, dark water and orcas pass close enough to hear. The light off the surface changes everything it touches. Cole Walker was an architect who had stopped feeling his work. Years of investor meetings and branded skylines had worn down the question that once drove him: What should this feel like? When he walked away, he didn’t have a plan—only silence, and the sense that something essential had been missing for a long time. Then Mike Danner called. For thirty years, Mike had fought to protect this stretch of water—its salmon runs, its orcas, the fragile web of life beneath the surface. He had a lodge on Hood Canal, dark and turned away from the view. He wasn’t looking for a renovation. He was looking for someone who could see what the place was meant to be. At Octopus Cove, Cole begins to understand. He sees it in the building—and in the people around it: Sam, who knows every inch of the lodge and watches him carefully before deciding whether he can be trusted. A contractor whose answers come just a fraction too quickly. A shoreline where the eelgrass is thinning in ways that don’t make sense. And something else—subtle at first, easy to overlook—shifting beneath the surface of the fjord Mike has spent his life trying to protect. As the lodge begins to change, so does everything around it. What Cole is building starts to draw people together, shaping something like a community—something like a home. And when it is threatened, Cole must decide whether to finally refuse to walk away. When Light Takes Hold is the beginning. The story continues in When Shapes Take Hold—with the first chapter included here.