I haven't read Phyllis Whitney for many years, but I enjoyed this one just as much as I always have with all of her books. I didn't realize it was about the Civil War, but it was easy (and interesting) to get into that time period with these personable characters. Lori was living in a town on the border between the North and South. And she has just married her Union soldier husband, after she nursed him back to health. Moving back to Staten Island, NY, she enters a gloomy household run by her strong mother-in-law, while Wade slips back into his kind of subservient role, leaving Lori to deal with things. Luckily, Lora is also strong, and she holds her own against Mother Tyler, making friends among those on the street, including a black woman servant. I didn't know that blacks had been declared free at that time in the war (before Gettysburg), but they didn't know it either, according to Rebecca, who was technically working as a maid, but still being treated like a slave. There were also very strong feelings against blacks (even in the North), with many people feeling they were at fault for creating this war. The other problem was poor people feeling that rich people were also to blame because they pay their way out of the draft, thus avoiding the fighting. This story has a mystery about Wade's first wife's death, also playing out amidst the dark days of the war. At the same time, Wade and Lora are learning how to live together and take care of Wade's young son from his first marriage.