In the shadowed hills of Adair County, Oklahoma's Redbird Ridge near the town of Berryfield, Tyler Glass is learning what it means to survive after survival.
In this powerful sequel to Where the Waters Remember, four months have passed since Tyler escaped the streets of Tulsa County and the horrors that nearly consumed him. Now living beside a moonlit waterfall in the cabin of Cherokee artist Mark Hayworth, Tyler is beginning to experience something he has never truly known: safety. But healing is not a straight road through the Ozarks. Trauma lingers like dust in the lungs, and the past has a way of echoing through even the quietest valleys.
After spending ten years lost inside the Oklahoma foster care system-and another two surviving on the streets after aging out-Tyler finds himself reconnecting to the Cherokee heritage that was slowly washed away from him over years of instability, displacement, and survival. As he begins helping others through the Glenna Cartwright Foundation, Tyler discovers that saving people often means reopening the wounds buried inside himself.
Meanwhile, Mark wrestles with the fragile responsibility of building a family from broken pieces, offering Tyler not only a home, but a name, a legacy, and a place among the generations rooted deep in Cherokee soil.
Set against the waterfalls, ridgelines, and hidden hollers of the modern Cherokee Nation, Where the Waters Carry is a deeply emotional Southern literary novel about found family, addiction recovery, identity, and the difficult grace of learning to belong.
Some debts can't be washed away.
They can only be carried forward.