john connolly sampler
TRANSCRIPT
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used
fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the authors imagination,
and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
Every Dead Thingcopyright 2000 by John Connolly
Dark Hollow copyright 2002 by John Connolly
The Killing Kindcopyright 2002 by John Connolly
The White Roadcopyright 2003 by John Connolly
Bad Men copyright 2004 by John Connolly
The Black Angelcopyright 2005 by John Connolly
The Unquietcopyright 2007by John Connolly
The Reapers copyright 2008by John Connolly
The Lovers copyright 2009 by John Connolly
The Whisperers copyright 2010 by John Connolly
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
This book contains excerpts from books previously or soon to be published individually by Simon &
Schuster Adult Publishing Division.
Visit our website:
http://www.SimonandSchuster.com
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Every Dead Thing
Chapter 1
The waitress was in her fifties, dressed in a tight black miniskirt, white blouse, and black high
heels. Parts of her spilled out of every item of clothing she wore, making her look like she hadswollen mysteriously sometime between dressing and arriving for work. She called me "darlin'"each time she filled my coffee cup. She didn't say anything else, which was fine by me.
I had been sitting at the window for over ninety minutes now, watching the brownstone acrossthe street, and the waitress must have been wondering exactly how long I was planning to stayand if I was ever going to pay the check. Outside, the streets of Astoria buzzed with bargainhunters. I had even read theNew York Times from start to finish without nodding off in betweenas I passed the time waiting for Fat Ollie Watts to emerge from hiding. My patience was wearingthin.
In moments of weakness, I sometimes considered ditching theNew York Times on weekdays andlimiting my purchase to the Sunday edition, when I could at least justify buying it on the groundsof bulk. The other option was to begin reading thePost, although then I'd have to start clippingcoupons and walking to the store in my bedroom slippers.
Maybe in reacting so badly to the Times that morning I was simply killing the messenger. It hadbeen announced that Hansel McGee, a state Supreme Court judge and, according to some, one ofthe worst judges in New York, was retiring in December and might be nominated to the board ofthe city's Health and Hospitals Corporation.
Even seeing McGee's name in print made me ill. In the 1980s, he had presided over the case of a
woman who had been raped when she was nine years old by a fifty-four-year-old man namedJames Johnson, an attendant in Pelham Bay Park who had convictions for robbery, assault, andrape.
McGee overturned a jury award to the woman of $3.5 million with the following words: "Aninnocent child was heinously raped for no reason at all; yet that is one of the risks of living in amodern society." At the time, his judgment had seemed callous and an absurd justification foroverturning the ruling. Now, seeing his name before me again after what had happened to myfamily, his views seemed so much more abhorrent, a symptom of the collapse of goodness in theface of evil.
Erasing McGee from my mind, I folded the newspaper neatly, tapped a number on my cellphone, and turned my eyes to an upper window of the slightly run-down apartment buildingopposite. The phone was picked up after three rings and a woman's voice whispered a cautioushello. It had the sound of cigarettes and booze to it, like a bar door scraping across a dusty floor.
"Tell your fat asshole boyfriend that I'm on my way to pick him up and he'd better not make mechase him," I told her. "I'm real tired and I don't plan on running around in this heat." Succinct,
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that was me. I hung up, left five dollars on the table, and stepped out onto the street to wait forFat Ollie Watts to panic.
The city was in the middle of a hot, humid summer spell, which was due to end the followingday with the arrival of thunderstorms and rain. Currently, it was hot enough to allow for T-shirts,
chinos, and overpriced sunglasses, or, if you were unlucky enough to be holding down aresponsible job, hot enough to make you sweat like a pig under your suit as soon as you left thea/c behind. There wasn't even a gust of wind to rearrange the heat.
Two days earlier, a solitary desk fan had struggled to make an impact on the sluggish warmth inthe Brooklyn Heights office of Benny Low. Through an open window I could hear Arabic beingspoken on Atlantic Avenue and I could smell the cooking scents coming from the MoroccanStar, half a block away. Benny was a minor-league bail bondsman who had banked on Fat Olliestaying put until his trial. The fact that he had misjudged Fat Ollie's faith in the justice systemwas one reason why Benny continued to remain a minor-league bondsman.
The money being offered on Fat Ollie Watts was reasonable, and there were things living on thebottom of ponds that were smarter than most bail jumpers. There was a fifty-thousand-dollarbond on Fat Ollie, the result of a misunderstanding between Ollie and the forces of law and orderover the precise ownership of a 1993 Chevy Beretta, a 1990 Mercedes 300 SE, and a number ofwell-appointed sport utility vehicles, all of which had come into Ollie's possession by illegalmeans.
Fat Ollie's day started to go downhill when an eagle-eyed patrolman familiar with Ollie'sreputation as something less than a shining light in the darkness of a lawless world spotted theChevy under a tarpaulin and called for a check on the plates. They were false and Ollie wasraided, arrested, and questioned. He kept his mouth shut but packed a bag and headed for the
hills as soon as he made bail, in an effort to avoid further questions about who had placed thecars in his care. That source was reputed to be Salvatore "Sonny" Ferrera, the son of a prominentcapo. There had been rumors lately that relations between father and son had deteriorated inrecent weeks, but nobody was saying why.
"Fuckin' goomba stuff," as Benny Low had put it that day in his office.
"Anything to do with Fat Ollie?"
"Fuck do I know? You want to call Ferrera and ask?"
I looked at Benny Low. He was completely bald and had been since his early twenties, as far as Iknew. His glabrous skull glistened with tiny beads of perspiration. His cheeks were ruddy andflesh hung from his chin and jowls like melted wax. His tiny office, located above a halal store,smelled of sweat and mold. I wasn't even sure why I had said I would take the job. I had money -- insurance money, money from the sale of the house, money from what had once been a sharedaccount, even some cash from my retirement fund -- and Benny Low's money wasn't going tomake me any happier. Maybe Fat Ollie was just something to do.
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Benny Low swallowed once, loudly. "What? Why are you lookin' at me like that?"
"You know me, Benny, don't you?"
"Fuck does that mean? Course I know you. You want a reference? What?" He laughed
halfheartedly, spreading his pudgy hands wide as if in supplication. "What?" he said again. Hisvoice faltered, and for the first time, he actually looked scared. I knew that people had beentalking about me in the months since the deaths, talking about things I had done, things I mighthave done. The look in Benny Low's eyes told me that he had heard about them too and believedthat they could be true.
Something about Fat Ollie's flight just didn't sit right. It wouldn't be the first time that Ollie hadfaced a judge on a stolen vehicles rap, although the suspected connection to the Ferreras hadforced the bond up on this occasion. Ollie had a good lawyer to rely on; otherwise his onlyconnection to the automobile industry would have come from making license plates on RikersIsland. There was no particular reason for Ollie to run, and no reason why he would risk his life
by fingering Sonny over something like this.
"Nothing, Benny. It's nothing. You hear anything else, you tell me."
"Sure, sure," said Benny, relaxing again. "You'll be the first to know."
As I left his office, I heard him mutter under his breath. I couldn't be sure what he said but Iknew what it sounded like. It sounded like Benny Low had just called me a killer like my father.
It had taken me most of the next day to locate Ollie's current squeeze through some judiciousquestioning, and another fifty minutes that morning to determine if Ollie was with her through
the simple expedient of calling the local Thai food joints and asking them if they had made anydeliveries to the address in the last week.
Ollie was a Thai food freak and, like most skips, stuck to his habits even while on the run. Peopledon't change very much, which usually makes the dumb ones easy to find. They take outsubscriptions to the same magazines, eat in the same places, drink the same beers, call the samewomen, sleep with the same men. After I threatened to call the health inspectors, an Orientalroach motel called the Bangkok Sun House confirmed deliveries to one Monica Mulrane at anaddress in Astoria, leading to coffee, theNew York Times, and a phone call to wake Ollie up.
True to form and dim as a ten-watt bulb, Ollie opened the door of 2317 about four minutes after
my call, stuck his head out, and then commenced an awkward, shambling run down the stepstoward the sidewalk. He was an absurd figure, strands of hair slicked across his bald pate, theelasticated waistband of his tan pants stretched across a stomach of awesome size. MonicaMulrane must have loved him a whole lot to stay with him, because he didn't have money and hesure as hell didn't have looks. It was strange, but I kind of liked Fat Ollie Watts.
He had just set foot on the sidewalk when a jogger wearing a gray sweat suit with the hoodpulled up appeared at the corner, ran up to Ollie, and pumped three shots into him from a
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silenced pistol. Ollie's white shirt was suddenly polka-dotted with red and he folded to theground. The jogger, left-handed, stood over him and shot him once more in the head.
Someone screamed and I saw a brunette, presumably the by now recently bereaved MonicaMulrane, pause at the door of her apartment block before she ran to the sidewalk to kneel beside
Ollie, passing her hands over his bald, bloodied head and crying. The jogger was already backingoff, bouncing on the balls of his feet like a fighter waiting for the bell. Then he stopped, returned,and fired a single shot into the top of the woman's head. She folded over the body of Ollie Watts,her back shielding his head. Bystanders were already running for cover behind cars, into stores,and the cars on the street ground to a halt.
I was almost across the street, my Smith & Wesson in my hand, when the jogger ran. He kept hishead down and moved fast, the gun still held in his left hand. Even though he wore black gloves,he hadn't dropped the gun at the scene. Either the gun was distinctive or the shooter was dumb. Iwas banking on the second option.
I was gaining on him when a black Chevy Caprice with tinted windows screeched out from aside street and stood waiting for him. If I didn't shoot, he was going to get away. If I did shoot,there would be hell to pay with the cops. I made my choice. He had almost reached the Chevywhen I squeezed off two shots, one hitting the door of the car and the second tearing a bloodyhole in the right arm of the jogger's top. He spun, firing two wild shots in my direction as he didso, and I could see his eyes were wide and ultrabright. The killer was wired.
As he turned toward the Chevy it sped away, the driver spooked by my shots, leaving Fat Ollie'skiller stranded. He fired off another shot, which shattered the window of the car to my left. Icould hear people screaming and, in the distance, the wail of approaching sirens.
The jogger sprinted toward an alley, glancing over his shoulder at the sound of my shoeshammering on the road behind him. As I made the corner a bullet whined off the wall above me,peppering me with pieces of concrete. I looked up to see the jogger moving beyond the midpointof the alley, staying close to the wall. If he got around the corner at the end, I would lose him inthe crowds.
The gap at the end of the alley was, briefly, clear of people. I decided to risk the shot. The sunwas behind me as I straightened, firing twice in quick succession. I was vaguely aware of peopleat either side of me scattering like pigeons from a stone as the jogger's right shoulder arched backwith the impact of one of my shots. I shouted at him to drop the piece but he turned awkwardly,his left hand bringing the gun up. Slightly off balance, I fired two more shots from around twenty
feet. His left knee exploded as one of the hollow points connected, and he collapsed against thewall of the alley, his pistol skidding harmlessly away toward some trash cans and black bags.
As I closed on him I could see he was ashen faced, his mouth twisted in pain and his left handgripping the air around his shattered knee without actually touching the wound. Yet his eyeswere still bright and I thought I heard him giggle as he pushed himself from the wall and tried tohop away on his good leg. I was maybe fifteen feet from him when his giggles were drowned bythe sound of brakes squealing in front of him. I looked up to see the black Chevy blocking the
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end of the alley, the window on its passenger side down, and then the darkness within wasbroken by a single muzzle flash.
Fat Ollie's killer bucked and fell forward on the ground. He spasmed once and I could see a redstain spreading across the back of his top. There was a second shot, the back of his head blew a
geyser of blood in the air and his face banged once on the filthy concrete of the alley. I wasalready making for the cover of the trash cans when a bullet whacked into the brickwork abovemy head, showering me with dust and literally boring a hole through the wall. Then the windowof the Chevy roiled up and the car shot off to the east.
I ran to where the jogger lay. Blood flowed from the wounds in his body, creating a dark redshadow on the ground. The sirens were close now and I could see onlookers gathered in thesunlight, watching me as I stood over the body.
The patrol car pulled up minutes later. I already had my hands in the air and my gun on theground before me, my permit beside it. Fat Ollie's killer was lying at my feet, blood now pooled
around his head and linked to the red tide that was congealing slowly in the alley's central gutter.One patrolman kept me covered while his partner patted me down, with more force than wasstrictly necessary, against the wall. The cop patting me down was young, perhaps no more thantwenty-three or twenty-four, and cocky as hell.
"Shit, we got Wyatt Earp here, Sam," he said. "Shootin' it out like it wasHigh Noon."
"Wyatt Earp wasn't inHigh Noon,"I corrected him, as his partner checked my ID. The coppunched me hard in the kidneys in response and I fell to my knees. I heard more sirens nearby,including the tell-tale whine of an ambulance.
"You're a funny guy, hotshot," said the young cop. "Why'd you shoot him?"
"You weren't around," I replied, my teeth gritted in pain. "If you'd been here I'd have shot youinstead."
He was just about to cuff me when a voice I recognized said: "Put it away, Harley." I looked overmy shoulder at his partner, Sam Rees. I recognized him from my days on the force and herecognized me. I don't think he liked what he saw.
"He used to be a cop. Leave him be."
And then the three of us waited in silence until the others joined us.
Two more blue-and-whites arrived before a mud brown Nova dumped a figure in plain clotheson the curb. I looked up to see Walter Cole walking toward me. I hadn't seen him in almost sixmonths, not since his promotion to lieutenant. He was wearing a long brown leather coat,incongruous in the heat. "Ollie Watts?" he said, indicating the shooter with an inclination of hishead. I nodded.
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He left me alone for a time as he spoke with uniformed cops and detectives from the localprecinct. I noticed that he was sweating heavily in his coat.
"You can come in my car," he said when he eventually returned, eyeing the cop called Harleywith ill-concealed distaste. He motioned some more detectives toward him and made some final
comments in quiet, measured tones before waving me toward the Nova.
"Nice coat," I said appreciatively as we walked to his car. "How many girls you got in yourstable?"
Walter's eyes glinted briefly. "Lee gave me this coat for my birthday. Why do you think I'mwearing it in this goddamned heat? You fire any shots?"
"A couple."
"You do know that there are laws against discharging firearms in public places, don't you?"
"I know that but I'm not sure about the guy dead on the ground back there. I'm not sure that theguy who shot him knows either. Maybe you could try a poster campaign."
"Very funny. Now get in the car."
I did as he said and we pulled away from the curb, the onlookers gaping curiously at us as weheaded off through the crowded streets.
Copyright 1999 by John Connolly
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Dark Hollow
Prologue
I dream dark dreams.
I dream of a figure moving through the forest, of children flying from his path, of young women crying athis coming. I dream of snow and ice, of bare branches and moon-cast shadows. I dream of dancers
floating in the air, stepping lightly even in death, and my own pain is but a faint echo of their suffering as
I run. My blood is black on the snow, and the edges of the world are silvered with moonlight. I run into
the darkness, and he is waiting.
I dream in black and white, and I dream of him.
I dream of Caleb, who does not exist, and I am afraid.
The Dodge Intrepid stood beneath a stand of firs, its windshield facing out to sea, the lights off, the key in
the ignition to keep the heater running. No snow had fallen this far south, not yet, but there was frost on
the ground. From nearby came the sound of the waves breaking on Ferry Beach, the only noise to disturbthe stillness of this Maine winter night. A floating jetty bobbed close to the shore, lobster pots piled high
upon it. Four boats lay shrouded in tarpaulin behind the red wooden boathouse, and a catamaran was tied
down close to the public access boat ramp. Otherwise, the parking lot was empty.
The passenger door opened and Chester Nash climbed quickly into the car, his teeth chattering and his
long brown coat drawn tightly around him. Chester was small and wiry, with long dark hair and a sliver
of a mustache on his upper lip that stretched down beyond the corners of his mouth. He thought the
mustache made him look dashing. Everyone else thought it made him look mournful, thus the nickname
Cheerful Chester. If there was one thing guaranteed to make Chester Nash mad, it was people calling
him Cheerful Chester. He had once stuck his gun in Paulie Blocks mouth for calling him Cheerful
Chester. Paulie Block had almost ripped his arm off for doing it, although, as he explained to Cheerful
Chester while he slapped him repeatedly across the head with hands as big as shovels, he understood thereason why Chester had done it. Reasons just didnt excuse everything, that was all.
I hope you washed your hands, said Paulie Block, who sat in the drivers seat of the Dodge, maybe
wondering why Chester couldnt have taken a leak earlier like any normal individual instead of insisting
on pissing against a tree in the woods by the shore and letting all of the heat out of the car while he did it.
Man, its cold, said Chester. This is the coldest goddamn place I have ever been in my whole goddamn
life. My meat nearly froze out there. Any colder, Ida pissed ice cubes.
Paulie Block took a long drag on his cigarette and watched as the tip flared briefly red before returning to
gray ash. Paulie Block was aptly named. He was six-three, weighed two-eighty and had a face that looked
like it had been used to shunt trains. He made the interior of the car look cramped just by being there. Allthings considered, Paulie Block could have made Giants Stadium look cramped just by being there.
Chester glanced at the digital clock on the dash, the green numerals seeming to hang suspended in the
dark.
Theyre late, he said.
Theyll be here, said Paulie. Theyll be here.
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He returned to his cigarette and stared out to sea. He probably didnt look too hard. There was nothing to
be seen, just blackness and the lights of Old Orchard Beach beyond. Beside him, Chester Nash began
playing with a Game Boy.
Outside, the wind blew and the waves washed rhythmically on the beach, and the sound of their voices
carried over the cold ground to where others were watching, and listening.
. . . Subject Two is back in vehicle. Man, its cold, said FBI Special Agent Dale Nutley, unconsciously
repeating the words that he had just heard Chester Nash speak. A parabolic microphone stood beside him,
positioned close to a small gap in the wall of the boathouse. Next to it, a voice-activated Nagra tape
recorder whirred softly and a Badger Mk II low-light camera kept a vigil on the Dodge.
Nutley wore two pairs of socks, long johns, denims, a T-shirt, a cotton shirt, a wool sweater, a Lowe ski
jacket, thermal gloves and a gray alpaca hat with two little flaps that hung down over the headphones and
kept his ears warm. Special Agent Rob Briscoe, who sat beside him on a tall stool, thought the alpaca hat
made Nutley look like a llama herder, or the lead singer with the Spin Doctors. Either way, Nutley looked
like a clown in his alpaca hat, with its damn flaps to keep his ears warm. Agent Briscoe, whose ears were
very cold, wanted that alpaca hat. If it got any colder, he figured he might just have to kill Dale Nutleyand take the hat from his dead head.
The boathouse stood to the right of the Ferry Beach parking lot, giving its occupants a clear view of the
Dodge. Behind it, a private road followed the shore, leading to one of the summer houses below the Neck.
From the lot, Ferry Road snaked back to Black Point Road, leading ultimately to Oak Hill and U.S.1 to
the north and the Neck to the southeast. The boathouse windows had received a reflective coating barely
two hours before, in order to prevent anyone from seeing the agents inside. There had been a brief
moment of apprehension when Chester Nash had peered in the window and tested the locks on the doors
before running quickly back to the Dodge.
Unfortunately, the boathouse had no heating, at least none that worked, and the FBI had not seen fit to
provide the two special agents with a heater. As a result, Nutley and Briscoe were about as cold as theyhad ever been. The bare boards of the boathouse were icy to the touch.
How long we been here? asked Nutley.
Two hours, replied Briscoe.
You cold?
What sort of a stupid question is that? Im covered in frost. Of course Im fucking cold.
Why didnt you bring a hat? asked Nutley. You know, you lose most of your body heat through the
top of your head? You should have brought a hat. Thats why youre cold. You should have brought ahat.
You know what, Nutley? said Briscoe.
What? said Nutley.
I hate you.
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Behind them, the Nagra whirred softly, recording the conversation of the two agents. Everything was to
be recorded. That was the rule on this operation: everything. And if that included Briscoes hatred of
Nutley because of his alpaca hat, then so be it.
The security guard, Oliver Judd, heard her before he saw her. Her feet made a heavy, shuffling noise on
the carpeted floor and she was speaking softly to herself as she walked. Regretfully, he stood up in his
booth and walked away from his TV and the heater that had been blasting warm air onto his toes. Outside,there was a kind of stillness that presaged further snow. There was no wind, though, which was
something. It would soon get worseDecember always did but, this far north, it got worse sooner than
it did anywhere else. Sometimes, living in northern Maine could be a bitch.
He walked swiftly toward her. Hey, lady, lady! What are you doing out of bed? Youre gonna catch your
death.
The woman started at the last word and looked at Judd for the first time. She was small and thin but car-
ried herself straight, which gave her an imposing air among the other occupants of St. Marthas Home for
the Elderly. Judd didnt think she was as old as some of the other folks in the home, who were so ancient
that theyd bummed cigarettes from people who were later killed in World War I. This one, though, was
maybe sixty at most. Judd figured that if she wasnt old then she was probably infirm, which meant, inlaymans terms, that she was mad, plumb loco. Her hair was silver gray and hung loose over her
shoulders and almost to her waist. Her eyes were bright blue and looked straight through Judd and off into
the distance. She wore a pair of brown, lace-up boots, a nightgown, a red muffler and a long blue
overcoat, which she was but toning as she walked.
Im leaving, she replied. She spoke quietly but with absolute determination, as if it was nothing out of
the ordinary that a sixty-year-old woman should try to leave a home for the elderly in northern Maine
wearing only a nightdress and a cheap coat on a night when the forecast promised more snow to add to
the six inches that already lay frozen on the ground. Judd couldnt figure out how she had slipped past the
nurses station, still less almost to the main door of the building. Some of these old folks were cunning as
foxes, Judd reckoned. Turn your back on them and theyd be gone, heading for the hills or their former
homes or off to wed a lover who had died thirty years before.
Now you know you cant leave, said Judd. Come on, you got to go back to bed. Im going to call for a
nurse now, so you stay where you are and well have someone down to take care of you before you know
it.
The woman stopped buttoning her coat and looked again at Oliver Judd. It was then that Judd realized for
the first time that she was scared: truly, mortally afraid for her life. He couldnt tell how he knew, except
that maybe some kind of primitive sense had kicked in when she came near him. Her eyes were huge and
pleading and her hands shook now that they were no longer occupied with her buttons. She was so scared
that Judd began to feel a little nervous himself. Then the woman spoke.
Hes coming, she said.
Whos coming? asked Judd.
Caleb. Caleb Kyle is coming.
The womans stare was almost hypnotic, her voice trembling with terror. Judd shook his head and took
her by the arm.
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Come on, he said, leading her to a vinyl seat beside his booth. You sit down here while I call the
nurse. Who in hell was Caleb Kyle? The name was almost familiar, but he couldnt quite place it.
He was dialing the number for the nurses station when he heard a noise from behind. He turned to see the
woman almost on top of him, her eyes now narrow with concentration, her mouth set firmly. Her hands
were raised above her head and he lifted his gaze to see what she was holding, his face rising just in timeto see the heavy glass vase falling toward him.
Then all was darkness.
I cant see a fucking thing, said Cheerful Chester Nash. The windows of the car had steamed up, giving
Chester an uncomfortably claustrophobic feeling that the huge bulk of Paulie Block did nothing to ease,
as he had just told his companion in no uncertain terms.
Paulie leaned across Chester and wiped the side window with his sleeve. In the distance, headlights raked
the sky.
Quiet, he said. Theyre coming.
Nutley and Briscoe had also seen the headlights, minutes after Briscoes radio had crackled into life to
inform the agents that a car was on its way down Old County Road, heading in the direction of Ferry
Beach.
You think its them? asked Nutley.
Maybe, replied Briscoe, brushing icy condensation from his jacket as the Ford Taurus emerged from
Ferry Road and pulled up alongside the Dodge. Through their phones, the agents heard Paulie Block ask
Cheerful Chester if he was ready to rumble. They heard only a click in response. Briscoe couldnt be
certain, but he thought it was the sound of a safety clicking off.
In St. Marthas Home for the Elderly, a nurse placed a cold compress on the side of Oliver Judds head.
Ressler, the sergeant out of Dark Hollow, stood by with a reserve patrolman, who was still laughing
quietly to himself. There was the faintest trace of a fading smile on Resslers lips. In another corner stood
Dave Martel, the chief of police in Greenville, five miles south of Dark Hollow, and beside him one of the
Fisheries and Wildlife wardens from the town.
St. Marthas was technically in the jurisdiction of Dark Hollow, the last town before the big industrial
forests began their sweep toward Canada. Still, Martel had heard about the woman and had come to offer
his help in the search if it was needed. He didnt like Ressler, but liking had nothing to do with whatever
action needed to be taken.
Martel, who was sharp, quiet and only Greenvilles third chief since the foundation of the towns smalldepartment, didnt see anything particularly funny about what had just happened. If they didnt find her
soon, she would die. It didnt require too much cold to kill a sixty-year-old woman, and there was plenty
to spare that night.
Oliver Judd, who had always wanted to be a cop but was too short, too overweight and too dumb to make
the grade, knew the Dark Hollow cops were laughing at him. He figured that they probably had a right to
laugh. After all, what kind of security guard gets coldcocked by an old lady? An old lady, whats more,
who now had Oliver Judds new Smith & Wesson 625 somewhere on her person.
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The search team prepared to move off, headed by Dr. Martin Ryley, the director of the home. Ryley was
wrapped up tightly in a hooded parka, gloves and insulated boots. In one hand he carried an emergency
medical kit, in the other a big Maglite flashlight. At his feet lay a backpack containing warm clothing,
blankets and a thermos filled with soup.
We didnt pass her on the way in here, so shes moving across country, Judd heard someone say. Itsounded like Will Patterson, the warden, whose wife worked in a drugstore in Guilford and had an ass
like a peach waiting to be bitten.
Its all hard going, said Ryley. South is Beaver Cove, but Chief Martel didnt see her on his way up
here. West is the lake. Looks like she may be just wandering aimlessly through the woods.
Pattersons radio buzzed and he moved away to talk. Almost immediately, he turned back. Planes
spotted her. Shes about one mile northeast of here, moving farther into the forest.
The two Dark Hollow cops and the warden, accompanied by Ryley and a nurse, moved off, one of the
cops shouldering the backpack of clothing and blankets. Chief Martel looked at Judd and shrugged.
Ressler didnt want his help, and Martel wasnt about to stick his nose in where it wasnt wanted, but hehad a bad feeling about what was happening, a very bad feeling. As he watched the group of five heading
into the trees, the first small flurries of snow began to fall.
Ho Chi Minh, said Cheerful Chester. Pol Pot. Lychee. The four Cambodians looked at him coldly.
They wore matching blue wool overcoats, blue suits with somber ties, and black leather gloves on their
hands. Three were young, probably no more than twenty-five or twenty-six, Paulie reckoned. The other
was older, with strands of gray seeping through his slicked-back dark hair. He wore glasses and smoked
an unfiltered cigarette. In his left hand, he held a black leather briefcase.
Tet. Chairman Mao. Nagasaki, continued Cheerful Chester.
Will you shut up? said Paulie Block.
Im trying to make them feel at home.
The senior Cambodian took a last drag on his cigarette and flicked it toward the beach.
When your friend is finished making a fool of himself, perhaps we can begin? he said.
See, said Paulie Block to Cheerful Chester. Thats how wars start.
That Chester sure is an asshole, said Nutley. The conversation between the six men carried clearly to
them in the chill night air. Briscoe nodded in agreement. Beside him, Nutley adjusted the camera to zoom
in on the case in the Cambodians hand, clicked off a frame, then pulled back a little to take in PaulieBlock, the Cambodian and the case. Their brief was to watch, listen and record. No interference. The
interference part would come later, as soon as all of thiswhatever this was, since all they had was the
meeting pointcould be traced back to Tony Celli in Boston. Two cars were waiting to pick up the
Dodge at Oak Hill, while a third was positioned behind the Scarborough fire department in case either of
the targets took the Spurwink Road to South Portland. A second pair of cars would follow the
Cambodians. In addition, there was backup available from the police at both Scarborough and Portland, if
required. Still, it was Nutley and Briscoe on point, and they knew it.
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Briscoe picked up a Night Hawk scope and trained it on Cheerful Chester Nash.
You see anything unusual about Chesters coat? he said.
Nutley moved the camera a little to the left.
No, he said. Wait. It looks like its fifty years old. He doesnt have his hands in his pockets. Hes gotthem in those slits below the breast. Pretty awkward way to keep warm, dont you think?
Yeah, said Briscoe. Real awkward.
Where is she? said the Cambodian to Paulie Block.
Paulie gestured to the trunk of the car. The Cambodian nodded and handed the briefcase to one of his
associates. The case was flicked open and the Cambodian held it, facing forward, so that Paulie and
Chester could see what was inside.
Chester whistled. Shit, he said.
Shit, said Nutley. Theres a lot of cash in that case.
Briscoe trained the scope on the notes. Ouch. Were talking maybe two mil.
Enough to buy Tony Celli out of whatever jam hes in, said Nutley.
And then some.
But whos in the trunk? asked Nutley.
Well, son, thats what were here to find out.
The group of five moved carefully over the hard ground, their breath puffing white as they went. Around
them, the tips of evergreens scraped the sky and welcomed the flakes with their spread branches. The
ground here was rocky, and the new snow had made it slick and dangerous. Ryley had already stumbled
once, painfully scraping his shin. In the sky above them, they could hear the sound of the Cessnas
engine, one of Curriers planes from Moosehead Lake, and could see its spotlight picking out something
on the ground ahead of them.
If this snow keeps up, the planes going to have to turn back, said Patterson.
Nearly there, said Ryley. Another ten minutes and well have her.
A gunshot exploded in the darkness ahead of them, then a second. The light on the plane tilted and startedto rise. Pattersons radio burst out with an angry blast of speech.
Hell, said Patterson, with a look of disbelief on his face. Shes shooting at them.
The Cambodian stayed close to Paulie Block as he moved to the rear of the car. Behind them, the younger
men pulled back their coats to reveal Uzis hanging from straps on their shoulders. Each kept a hand on the
grip, one finger just outside the trigger guard.
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Open it, said the older man.
Youre the boss, said Paulie, as he inserted the key in the lock and prepared to lift the trunk. Paulies
just here to open the trunk. If the Cambodian had been listening more intently, he would have noticed
that Paulie Block said the words very loudly and very distinctly.
Gun slits, said Briscoe suddenly. Fucking gun slits, thats what they are.
Gun slits, repeated Nutley. Oh, Jesus.
Paulie Block opened the trunk and stepped back. A blast of heat greeted the Cambodian as he moved for-
ward. In the trunk was a blanket, and beneath it was a recognizably human form. The Cambodian leaned
in and pulled the blanket back.
Beneath it was a man: a man with a sawed-off shotgun.
What is this? said the Cambodian.
This is good-bye, said Paulie Block, as the barrels roared and the Cambodian jerked with the impact ofthe shots.
Fuck, said Briscoe. Move! Move! He drew his SIG and ran for the back door, flipping a switch on his
handset and calling for the Scarborough backup to move in as he opened the lock and headed into the
night in the direction of the two cars.
What about noninterference? said Nutley as he followed the older man. This wasnt the way it was
supposed to happen. It wasnt supposed to go down like this at all.
Cheerful Chesters coat flew open, revealing the twin short barrels of a pair of Walther MPK submachine
guns. Two of the Cambodians were already raising their Uzis when he pulled the triggers.
Sayonara, said Chester, his mouth widening into a grin.
The 9mm parabellums ripped into the three men, tearing through the leather of the briefcase, the
expensive wool of their coats, the pristine whiteness of their shirts, the thin shells of their skins. They
shattered glass, pierced the metal of the car, pockmarked the vinyl of the seats. It took less than four
seconds to empty sixty-four rounds into the three men, leaving them wrinkled and slumped, their warm
blood melting the thin layer of frost on the ground. The briefcase had landed face down, some of the
tightly packed wads scattering as it fell.
Chester and Paulie saw what they had done, and it was good.
Well, what are you waiting for? said Paulie. Lets get the money and get the fuck out of here.
Behind him, the man with the shotgun, whose name was Jimmy Fribb, climbed from the cramped trunk
and stretched his legs, his joints creaking. Chester loaded a fresh clip into one of the MPKs and dumped
the other in the trunk of the Dodge. He was just leaning down to pick up the fallen money when the two
shouts came almost together.
FBI, said the first voice. Let me see your hands. Now.
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The other voice was less succinct, and less polite, but probably strangely familiar to Paulie Block.
Get the fuck away from the money, it said, or Ill blow your fucking heads off.
The woman stood in a patch of clear ground, watching the sky. Snow fell on her hair, on her shoulders
and on her outstretched arms, the gun clasped in her right hand, her left hand open and empty. Her mouth
was gaping and her chest heaved as her aging body tried to cope with its exertions. She seemed not tonotice Ryley and the others until they were only thirty feet from her. The nurse hung back behind the
others. Ryley, despite Pattersons objections, took the lead.
Miss Emily, he said softly. Miss Emily, its me, Dr. Ryley. Were here to take you home.
The woman looked at him and Ryley suspected, for the first time since they had set out, that Miss Emily
was not mad. Her eyes were calm as she watched him, and she almost grinned as he approached.
Im not going back, she said.
Miss Emily, its cold. Youre going to die out here if you dont come with us. Weve brought you
blankets and warm clothes, and I have a thermos of chicken soup. Well get you warm and comfortable,then well bring you safely back.
The woman actually smiled then, a broad smile with no humor to it, and no trust.
You cant keep me safe, she said softly. Not from him.
Ryley frowned. He recalled something about the woman now, an incident with a visitor and a later report
from one of the nurses after Miss Emily claimed that someone had tried to climb in her window. Theyd
dismissed it, of course, although Judd had taken to wearing his gun on duty as a result. These old folks
were nervous, fearful of illness, of strangers, of friends and relatives sometimes, fearful of the cold, of the
possibility of falling, fearful for their meager possessions, for their photos, for their fading memories.
Fearful of death.
Please, Miss Emily, put the gun down and come back with us. We can keep you safe from harm. No
ones going to hurt you.
She shook her head slowly. Above them, the plane circled, casting a strange white light over her frame,
turning her long gray hair to silver fire.
Im not going back. Ill face him out here. This is his place, these woods. This is where hell be.
Her face changed then. Behind Ryley, Patterson thought he had never seen an expression of such abject
terror. Her mouth curled down at the edges, her chin and lips trembled and then the rest of her body beganto shake, a strange, violent quivering that was almost like an ecstasy. Tears flowed down her cheeks as
she started to speak.
Im sorry, she said. Im sorry, Im sorry, Im sorry, Im sorry...
Please, Miss Emily, said Ryley, as he moved toward her. Put the gun down. We have to take you
back.
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Im not going back, she repeated.
Please, Miss Emily, you must.
Then youll have to kill me, she said simply, as she pointed the Smith & Wesson at Ryley and pulled
the trigger.
Chester and Paulie looked first to their left and then to their right. To their left, in the parking lot, stood a
tall man in a black jacket with a handset in one hand and a SIG held before him in the other. Behind him
stood another, younger man, also holding a SIG, this time in a two-handed grip, with a gray alpaca hat on
his head and flaps hanging down over his ears.
To their right, beside a small wooden hut used to collect parking fees during the summer, stood a figure
dressed entirely in black, from the tips of his boots to the ski mask covering his head. He held a Ruger
pump-action in his hands and he breathed heavily through the round slit in the mask.
Cover him, said Briscoe to Nutley. Nutleys SIG shifted from Paulie Block to the black-garbed figure
near the edge of the woods.
Drop it, asshole, said Nutley.
The Ruger wavered slightly.
I said, Drop it, repeated Nutley, his voice rising to a shout.
Briscoes eyes moved briefly to take in the figure with the shotgun. It was all Chester Nash needed. He
spun and opened fire with the MPK, hitting Briscoe in the arm and Nutley in the chest and head. Nutley
died instantly, his alpaca hat turning red as he fell.
Briscoe opened fire from where he lay on the road, hitting Chester Nash in the right leg and the groin, the
MPK tumbling from his hands as he fell. From the woods came the sound of the Ruger opening up andPaulie Block, his gun in his right hand, bucked as he was hit, the windshield behind him shattering as the
shots exited. He slumped to his knees and then fell face down on the ground. Chester Nash tried to reach
for the MPK with his right hand, his left hand clasping his injured groin, when Briscoe fired two more
shots into him and he ceased moving. Jimmy Fribb dropped his shotgun and raised his hands, just in time
to stop Briscoe from killing him.
Briscoe was about to rise when, from in front of him, he heard the sound of a shotgun shell being jacked.
Stay down, said the voice.
He did as he was told, placing the SIG on the ground beside him. A black-booted foot kicked the gun
away, sending it spinning into the undergrowth.
Put your hands on your head.
Briscoe lifted his hands, his left arm aching as he did so, and watched as the masked figure moved toward
him, the Ruger still pointing down. Nutley lay on his back close by, his open eyes staring out at the sea.
Christ, thought Briscoe, what a mess. Beyond the trees, he could see headlights and hear the sound of
approaching cars. The man with the shotgun heard them too, his head twisting slightly as he placed the
last of the cash in the briefcase and closed it. Jimmy Fribb used the distraction to make a lunge for the
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discarded SIG but the gunman killed him before he could reach it, firing a shot into his back. Briscoe
tightened his grip on his head, his injured arm aching, and started to pray.
Stay flat on the ground and dont look up, he was told.
Briscoe did as he was told, but kept his eyes open. Blood flowed on the ground beside him and he moved
his head slightly to avoid it. When he looked up again, there were headlights in his eyes and the figure inblack was gone.
Dr. Martin Ryley was forty-eight, and was anxious to see forty-nine. He had two children, a boy and a
girl, and a wife called Joanie who cooked him pot roast on Sundays. He wasnt a very good doctor, which
was why he ran an old folks home. When Miss Emily Watts fired at him, he hit the ground, covered his
head with his hands and began alternately praying and blaspheming. The first shot went somewhere to his
left. The second sprayed wet dirt and snow on his face. Behind him, he heard the sound of safety catches
clicking off and he shouted: No, leave her, please. Dont shoot.
Once again the woods were silent, with only the high buzzing of the Cessna as a distraction. Ryley risked
a glance up at Miss Emily. She was crying openly now. Carefully, Ryley rose to his feet.
Its okay, Miss Emily.
Miss Emily shook her head. No, she replied. It will never be okay. And she put the mouth of the
Smith & Wesson to her left breast and fired. The impact spun her backward and to her left, her feet
tangling beneath her as she fell and the fabric of her coat igniting briefly from the muzzle flare. She shud-
dered once then lay still upon the ground, her blood staining the earth around her, the snow falling on her
open eyes, her body lit by the light from above.
And around her, the woods watched silently, their branches shifting occasionally to allow the passage of
the snow.
This is how it began for me, and for another generation: two violent occurrences, taking place almostsimultaneously one winters night, bound together by a single dark thread that lost itself in tangled memo-
ries of distant, brutal acts. Others, some of them close to me, had lived with it for a long, long time, and
had died with it. This was an old evil, and old evil has a way of permeating bloodlines and tainting those
who played no part in its genesis: the young, the innocent, the vulnerable, the defenseless. It turns life to
death and glass to mirrors, creating an image of itself in everything that it touches.
All of this I learned later, after the other deaths, after it became clear that something terrible was
happening, that something old and foul had emerged from the wilderness. And in all that would come to
pass, I was a participant. Maybe, looking back into the past, I had always been a participant without ever
really under standing how, or why. But that winter, a whole set of circumstances occurred, each incident
separate yet ultimately connected. It opened a channel between what had been and what should never
have been again, and worlds ended in the collision.
I look back over the years and see myself as I used to be, frozen in former times like a figure in a series ofvignettes. I see myself as a young boy waiting for the first sight of my father as he returns from his days
exertions in the city, his policemans uniform now put away, a black gym bag in his left hand, his once
muscular form running a little to fat, his hair grayer than it used to be, his eyes a little more tired. I run to
him and he sweeps me up into the crook of his right arm, his fingers closing gently on my thigh, and I am
amazed at his strength, at the muscles bunched below his shoulder, his biceps tight and hard. I want to be
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him, to emulate his achievements and to sculpt my body in his likeness. And when he begins to come
apart, when his body is revealed only as the flawed shield for a fragile mind, then I, too, start to fall to
pieces.
I see myself as an older boy, standing by my fathers grave, only a handful of New York policemen
straight and tall beside me, so that I too have to be straight and tall. These are his closest friends, the ones
who are not ashamed to come. This is not a place where many wish to be seen; there is bad feeling in thecity about what has taken place, and only a loyal few are willing to have their reputations frozen in the
flare of a newsmans flashbulb.
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I see my mother to my right, coiled in grief. Her husbandthe man she has loved for so longis gone,
and with him the reality of him as a kind man, a family man, a father who could sweep his boy into the air
like a leaf on the wind. Instead, he will forever be remembered as a murderer, a suicide. He has killed a
young man and a young woman, both unarmed, for reasons that no one will ever properly explain, reasons
that lay in the depths of those tired eyes. They had taunted him, this thug making the transition from
juvenile to adult courts and his middle-class girlfriend with his dirt under her manicured nails, and he had
killed them, seeing in them something beyond what they were, beyond even what they might become.Then he had put his gun in his mouth and pulled the trigger.
I see myself as a young man, standing at another grave, watching as they lower my mother down. Beside
me now is the old man, my grandfather. We have traveled down from Scarborough, Mainethe place to
which we fled after the death of my father, the place in which my mother was bornfor the funeral, so
that my mother can be buried beside my father, as she has always wished, for she has never stopped lov-
ing him. Around us, old men and women have gathered. I am the youngest person present.
I see snowfalls in winter. I see the old man grow older. I leave Scarborough. I become a policeman, like
my father, like my grandfather. There is a legacy to be acknowledged, and I will not be found wanting.
When my grandfather dies, I return to Scarborough and fill in the grave myself, spadefuls of earth care-
fully falling on the pine casket. The morning sun shines down on the cemetery and I can smell the salt onthe air, carried from the marshes to the east and the west. Nearby, a golden-crowned kinglet chases cluster
flies, filthy gray insects that lay their eggs inside living earthworms, their young eventually consuming
the host from within, and seek shelter from the winter in the chinks and cracks of houses. Above, the first
of the Canada geese head south for the winter, a pair of ravens flanking them like black fighters escorting
a flight of bombers.
And as the last patch of wood disappears, I hear the sound of childrens voices coming from the Lil Folks
Farm nursery school close by the cemetery, the noise of their games high and joyful, and I cannot help but
smile, for the old man would have smiled as well.
And then there is one more grave, one more set of prayers read from a tattered book, and this one tears
my world apart. Two bodies are laid down to rest side by side, just as I used to find them resting close toeach other when I returned at night to our Brooklyn home, my three-year-old daughter sleeping quietly in
the curled quarter-moon of her mothers form. In one instant, I ceased to be a husband. I ceased to be a
father. I had failed to protect them, and they had been punished for my failings.
All of these images, all of these memories, like the forged links of a chain, stretch back into the darkness.
They should be put away, but the past is not so easily denied. Things left unfinished, things left unsaid,
they all, in the end, come back to haunt us.
For this is the world, and the echo of worlds.
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The Killing Kind
Chapter One
It was spring, and color had returned to the world.
The distant mountains were transforming, the gray trees now cloaking themselves in new life,their leaves a faded echo of fall's riot. The scarlets of the red maples were dominant, but theywere being joined now by the greenish yellow leaves of the red oaks; the silver of the bigtoothaspens; and the greens of the quaking aspens, the birches, and the beeches. Poplars and willows,elms and hazelnuts were all bursting into full bloom, and the woods were ringing with the noiseof returning birds.
I could see the woods from the gym at One City Center, the tips of the evergreens stilldominating the landscape amid the slowly transforming seasonals. Rain was falling on the streetsof Portland and umbrellas swarmed on the streets below, glistening darkly like the carapaces of
squat black beetles.
For the first time in many months, I felt good. I was in semiregular employment. I was eatingwell, working out three or four days each week, and Rachel Wolfe was coming up from Bostonfor the weekend, so I would have someone to admire my improving physique. I hadn't sufferedbad dreams for some time. My dead wife and my lost daughter had not appeared to me since theprevious Christmas, when they touched me amid the falling snow and gave me some respite fromthe visions that had haunted me for so long.
I completed a set of military presses and laid the bar down, sweat dripping from my nose andrising in little wisps of steam from my body. Seated on a bench, sipping some water, I watched
the two men enter from the reception area, glance around, then fix on me. They woreconservative dark suits with somber ties. One was large, with brown wavy hair and a thickmustache, like a porn star gone to seed, the bulge of the gun in the cheap rig beneath his jacketvisible to me in the mirror behind him. The other was smaller, a tidy, dapper man with receding,prematurely graying hair. The big man held a pair of shades in his hand while his companionwore a pair of gold-rimmed eyeglasses with square frames. He smiled as he approached me.
"Mr. Parker?" he asked, his hands clasped behind his back.
I nodded and the hands disengaged, the right extending toward me in a sharp motion like a sharkmaking its way through familiar waters.
"My name is Quentin Harrold, Mr. Parker," he said. "I work for Mr. Jack Mercier."
I wiped my own right hand on a towel to remove some of the sweat, then accepted thehandshake. Harrold's mouth quivered a little as my still sweaty palm gripped his, but he resistedthe temptation to wipe his hand clean on the side of his trousers. I guessed that he didn't want tospoil the crease.
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Jack Mercier came from money so old that some of it had jangled on the Mayflower. He was aformer U.S. senator, as his father and grandfather had been before him, and lived in a big houseout on Prouts Neck overlooking the sea. He had interests in timber companies, newspaperpublishing, cable television, software, and the Internet. In fact, he had interests in just aboutanything that might ensure the Merciers' old money was regularly replenished with injections of
new money. As a senator he had been something of a liberal and he still supported variousecological and civil rights groups through generous donations. He was a family man; he didn'tscrew around -- as far as anyone knew -- and he had emerged from his brief flirtation withpolitics with his reputation enhanced rather than tarnished, a product as much of his financialindependence as of any moral probity. There were rumors that he was planning a return topolitics, possibly as an independent candidate for governor, although Mercier himself had yet toconfirm them.
Quentin Harrold coughed into his palm, then used it as an excuse to take a handkerchief from hispocket and discreetly wipe his hand. "Mr. Mercier would like to see you," he said, in the tone ofvoice he probably reserved for the pool cleaner and the chauffeur. "He has some work for you."
I looked at him. He smiled. I smiled back. We stayed like that, grinning at each other, until theonly options were to speak or start dating. Harrold took the first option.
"Perhaps you didn't hear me, Mr. Parker," he said. "Mr. Mercier has some work for you."
"And?"
Harrold's smile wavered. "I'm not sure what you mean."
"I'm not so desperate for work, Mr. Harrold, that I run and fetch every time somebody throws a
stick." This wasn't entirely true. Portland, Maine, wasn't such a wellspring of vice and corruptionthat I could afford to look down my nose at too many jobs. If Harrold had been better lookingand a different sex, I'd have fetched the stick and then rolled onto my back to have my bellyrubbed if I thought it might have earned me more than a couple of bucks.
Harrold glanced at the big guy with the mustache. The big guy shrugged, then went back tostaring at me impassively, maybe trying to figure out what my head would look like mountedover his fireplace.
Harrold coughed again. "I'm sorry," he said. "I didn't mean to offend you." He seemed to havetrouble forming the words, as if they were part of someone else's vocabulary and he was just
borrowing them for a time. I waited for his nose to start growing or his tongue to turn to ash andfall to the floor, but nothing happened. "We'd be grateful if you'd spare the time to talk to Mr.Mercier," he conceded with a wince.
I figured that I'd played hard to get for long enough, although I still wasn't sure that they'drespect me in the morning. "When I've finished up here, I can probably drive out and see him," Isaid.
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Harrold craned his neck slightly, indicating that he believed he might have misheard me. "Mr.Mercier was hoping that you could come with us now, Mr. Parker. Mr. Mercier is a very busyman, as I'm sure you'll understand."
I stood up, stretched, and prepared to do another set of presses. "Oh, I understand, Mr. Harrold.
I'll be as quick as I can. Why don't you gentlemen wait downstairs, and I'll join you when I'mdone? You're making me nervous. I might drop a weight on you."
Harrold shifted on his feet for a moment, then nodded.
"We'll be in the lobby," he said.
"Enjoy," I replied, then watched them in the mirror as they walked away.
I took my time finishing my workout, then had a long shower and talked about the future of thePirates with the guy who was cleaning out the changing room. When I figured that Harrold and
the porn star had spent enough time looking at their watches, I took the elevator down to thelobby and waited for them to join me. The expression on Harrold's face, I noticed, wasoscillating between annoyance and relief.
Harrold insisted that I accompany him and his companion in their Mercedes, but despite theirprotests I opted to follow them in my own Mustang. It struck me that I was becoming morewillfully perverse as I settled into my midthirties. If Harrold had told me to take my own car, I'dprobably have chained myself to the steering column of the Mercedes until they agreed to giveme a ride.
The Mustang was a 1969 Boss 302, and replaced the Mach 1 that had been shot to pieces the
previous year. The 302 had been sourced for me by Willie Brew, who ran an auto shop down inQueens. The spoilers and wings were kind of over the top, but it made my eyes water when itaccelerated and Willie had sold it to me for $8,000, which was about $3,000 less than a car in itscondition was worth. The downside was that I might as well have had arrested adolescencepainted on the side in big black letters.
I followed the Mercedes south out of Portland and on to U.S. 1. At Oak Hill, we turned east and Istayed behind them at a steady thirty all the way to the tip of the Neck. At the Black Point Inn,guests sat at the picture windows, staring out with drinks in their hands at Grand Beach and PinePoint. A Scarborough PD cruiser inched along the road, making sure that everybody stayedunder thirty and nobody unwanted hung around long enough to spoil the view.
Jack Mercier had his home on Winslow Homer Road, within sight of the painter's former house.As we approached, an electronically operated barrier opened and a second Mercedes swepttoward us from the house, headed for Black Point Road. In the backseat sat a small man with adark beard and a skullcap on his head. We exchanged a look as the two cars passed each other,and he nodded at me. His face was familiar, I thought, but I couldn't place it. Then the road wasclear and we continued on our way.
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Mercier's home was a huge white place with landscaped gardens and so many rooms that asearch party would have to be organized if anybody got lost on the way to the bathroom. Theman with the mustache parked the Mercedes while I followed Harrold through the large doublefront doors, down the hallway, and into a room to the left of the main stairs. It was a library,furnished with antique couches and chairs. Books stretched to the ceiling on three walls; on the
east-facing wall, a window looked out on the grounds and the sea beyond, a desk and chairbeside it and a small bar to the right.
Harrold closed the door behind me and left me to examine the spines on the books and thephotographs on the wall. The books ranged from political biographies to historical works, mainlyexaminations of the Civil War, Korea, and Vietnam. There was no fiction. In one corner was asmall locked cabinet with a glass front. The books it contained were different from those on theopen shelves. They had titles like Myth and History in the Book of Revelation; Apocalypse andMillennium in English Romantic Poetry; The Book of Revelation: Apocalypse and Empire; andThe Apocalyptic Sublime. It was cheerful stuff: bedtime reading for the end of the world. Therewere also critical biographies of the artists William Blake, Albrecht Drer, Lucas Cranach the
Elder, and Jean Duvet, in addition to facsimile editions of what appeared to be medieval texts.Finally, on the top shelf were twelve almost identical slim volumes, each bound in black leatherwith six gold bands inset on the spine in three equidistant sets of two. At the base of each spinewas the last letter of the Greek alphabet: W, for omega. There was no key in the lock, and thedoors stayed closed when I gave them an experimental tug.
I turned my attention to the photographs on the walls. There were pictures of Jack Mercier withvarious Kennedys, Clintons, and even a superannuated Jimmy Carter. Others showed Mercier inan assortment of athletic poses from his youth: winning races, pretending to toss footballs, andbeing carried aloft on the shoulders of his adoring teammates. There were also testimonials fromgrateful universities, framed awards from charitable organizations headed by movie stars, and
even some medals presented by poor but proud nations. It was like an underachiever's worstnightmare.
One more recent photograph caught my eye. It showed Mercier sitting at a table, flanked on oneside by a woman in her sixties wearing a smartly tailored black jacket and a string of pearlsaround her neck. To Mercier's right was the bearded man who had passed me in the Mercedes,and beside him was a figure I recognized from his appearances on prime-time news shows,usually looking triumphant at the top of some courthouse steps: Warren Ober, of Ober, Thayer &Moss, one of New England's top law firms. Ober was Mercier's attorney, and even the mentionof his name was enough to send most opposition running for the hills. When Ober, Thayer &Moss took a case, they brought so many lawyers with them to court that there was barely enoughroom for the jury. Even judges got nervous around them.
Looking at the photograph, it struck me that nobody in it seemed particularly happy. There wasan air of tension about the poses, a sense that some darker business was being conducted and thephotographer was an unnecessary distraction. There were thick files on the table before them,and white coffee cups lay discarded like yesterday's roses.
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Behind me the door opened and Jack Mercier entered, laying aside on the table a sheaf of papersspeckled with bar charts and figures. He was tall, six-two or six-three, with shoulders that spokeof his athletic past and an expensive gold Rolex that indicated his present status as a verywealthy man. His hair was white and thick, swept back from a perma-tanned forehead over largeblue eyes, a Roman nose, and a thin, smiling mouth, the teeth white and even. I guessed that he
was sixty-five by now, maybe a little older. He wore a blue polo shirt, tan chinos, and brownSebagos. There was white hair on his arms, and tufts of it peeked out over the collar of his shirt.For a moment the smile on his face faltered as he saw my attention focused on the photograph,but it quickly brightened again as I moved away from it. Meanwhile, Harrold stood at the doorlike a nervous matchmaker.
"Mr. Parker," said Mercier, shaking my hand with enough force to dislodge my fillings. "Iappreciate you taking the time to see me." He waved me to a chair. From the hallway, an olive-skinned man in a white tunic appeared with a silver tray and set it down. Two china cups, a silvercoffeepot, and a matching silver creamer and sugar bowl jangled softly as the tray hit the table.The tray looked heavy, and the servant seemed kind of relieved to be rid of it.
"Thank you," said Mercier. We watched as he left, Harrold behind him. Harrold gently closed thedoor, giving me one last pained look before he departed, then Mercier and I were alone.
"I know a lot about you, Mr. Parker," he began as he poured the coffee and offered me cream andsugar. He had an easy, unaffected manner, designed to put even the most fleeting ofacquaintances at ease. It was so unaffected that he must have spent years perfecting it.
"Likewise," I replied.
He frowned good-naturedly. "I don't imagine you're old enough to have ever voted for me."
"No, you retired before it became an issue."
"Did your grandfather vote for me?"
My grandfather, Bob Warren, had been a Cumberland County sheriff's deputy and had lived inScarborough all his life. My mother and I had come to stay with him after my father died. In theend, he outlived his own wife and daughter, and I had buried him one autumn day after his greatheart failed him at last.
"I don't believe he ever voted for anyone, Mr. Mercier," I said. "My grandfather had a natural
distrust of politicians." The only politician for whom my grandfather ever had any regard wasPresident Zachary Taylor, who never voted in an election and didn't even vote for himself.
Jack Mercier grinned his big white grin again. "He might have been right. Most of them havesold their souls ten times over before they're even elected. Once it's sold, you can never buy itback. You just have to hope that you got the best price for it."
"And are you in the business of buying souls, Mr. Mercier, or selling them?"
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The grin stayed fixed, but the eyes narrowed. "I take care of my own soul, Mr. Parker, and letother people do as they wish with theirs."
Our special moment was broken by the entrance of a woman into the room. She wore adeceptively casual outfit of black pants and a black cashmere sweater, and a thin gold necklace
gleamed dully against the dark wool. She was about forty-five, give or take a year. Her hair wasblond, fading to gray in places, and there was a hardness to her features that made her seem lessbeautiful than she probably thought she was.
This was Mercier's wife, Deborah, who had some kind of permanent residency in the localsociety pages. She was a Southern belle, from what I could recall, a graduate of the MadeiraSchool for Girls in Virginia. The Madeira's principal claim to fame, apart from producingeligible young women who always used the correct knife and never spat on the sidewalk, wasthat its former headmistress, Jean Harris, had shot dead her lover, Dr. Herman Tarnower, in1980, after he left her for a younger woman. Dr. Tarnower was best known as the author ofTheScarsdale Diet, so his death seemed to provide conclusive evidence that diets could be bad for
your health. Jack Mercier had met his future wife at the Swan Ball in Nashville, the most lavishsocial occasion in the South, and had introduced himself to her by buying her a '55 Coupe deVille with his AmEx card at the postdinner auction. It was, as someone later commented, love atfirst swipe.
Mrs. Mercier held a magazine in her hand and assumed a look of surprise, but the expressiondidn't reach her eyes.
"I'm sorry, Jack. I didn't know you had company." She was lying, and I could see in Mercier'sface that he knew she was lying, that we both knew. He tried to hide his annoyance behind thetrademark smile but I could hear his teeth gritting. He rose, and I rose with him.
"Mr. Parker, this is my wife Deborah."
Mrs. Mercier took one step toward me, then waited for me to cross the rest of the floor beforeextending her hand. It hung limply in my palm as I gripped it, and her eyes bored holes in myface while her teeth gnawed at my skull. Her hostility was so blatant it was almost funny.
"I'm pleased to meet you," she lied, before turning her glare on her husband. "I'll talk to youlater, Jack," she said, and made it sound like a threat. She didn't look back as she closed the door.
The temperature in the room immediately rose a few degrees, and Mercier regained his
composure. "My apologies, Mr. Parker. Tensions in the house are a little high. My daughterSamantha is to be married early next month."
"Really. Who's the lucky man?" It seemed polite to ask.
"Robert Ober. He's the son of my attorney."
"At least your wife will get to buy a new hat."
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"She's buying a great deal more than a hat, Mr. Parker, and she is currently occupied by thearrangements for our guests. Warren and I may have to take to my yacht to escape the demandsof our respective wives, although they are such excellent sailors themselves that I imagine theywill insist upon keeping us company. Do you sail, Mr. Parker?"
"With difficulty. I don't have a yacht."
"Everybody should have a yacht," remarked Mercier, his good humor returning in earnest.
"Why, you're practically a socialist, Mr. Mercier."
He laughed softly, then put his coffee cup down and arranged his features into a sincereexpression. "I hope you'll forgive me for prying into your background, but I wanted to find outabout you before I requested your help," he continued.
I acknowledged his comments with a nod. "In your position, I'd probably do the same," I said.
He leaned forward and said gently: "I'm sorry about your family. It was a terrible thing thathappened to them, and to you."
My wife, Susan, and my daughter, Jennifer, had been taken from me by a killer known as theTraveling Man while I was still a policeman in New York. He had killed a lot of other peopletoo, until he was stopped. When I killed him, a part of me had died with him.
Over two years had passed since then, and for much of that time the deaths of Susan and Jenniferhad defined me. I had allowed that to be so until I realized that pain and hurt, guilt and regret,were tearing me apart. Now, slowly, I was getting my life back together in Maine, back in the
place where I had spent my teens and part of my twenties, back in the house I had shared withmy mother and my grandfather, and in which I now lived alone. I had a woman who cared forme, who made me feel that it was worth trying to rebuild my life with her beside me and thatmaybe the time to begin that process had now arrived.
"I can't imagine what such a thing must be like," continued Mercier. "But I know someone whoprobably can, which is why I've asked you here today."
Outside, the rain had stopped and the clouds had parted. Behind Mercier's head, the sun shonebrightly through the window, bathing the desk and chair in its glow and replicating the shape ofthe glasswork on the carpet below. I watched as a bug crawled across the patch of bright light, its
tiny feelers testing the air as it went.
"His name is Curtis Peltier, Mr. Parker," said Mercier. "He used to be my business partner, along time ago, until he asked me to buy him out and followed his own path. Things didn't workout so well for him; he made some bad investments, I'm afraid. Ten days ago his daughter wasfound dead in her car. Her name was Grace Peltier. You may have read about her. In fact, Iunderstand you may have known her once upon a time."
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I nodded. Yes, I thought, I knew Grace once upon a time, when we were both much younger andthought that we might, for an instant, even be in love. It was a fleeting thing, lasting no morethan a couple of months after my high school graduation, one of any number of similar summerromances that curled up and died like a leaf as soon as autumn came. Grace was pretty and dark,with very blue eyes, a tiny mouth, and skin the color of honey. She was strong -- a medal-
winning swimmer -- and formidably intelligent, which meant that despite her looks, a great manyyoung men shied away from her. I wasn't as smart as Grace but I was smart enough to appreciatesomething beautiful when it appeared before me. At least I thought I was. In the end, I didn'tappreciate it, or her, at all.
I remembered Grace mostly because of one morning spent at Higgins Beach, not far from whereI now sat with Jack Mercier. We stood beneath the shadow of the old guest house known as theBreakers, the wind tossing Grace's hair and the sea crashing before us. She had missed herperiod, she told me over the phone: five days late, and she was never late. As I drove down toHiggins Beach to meet her, my stomach felt like it was slowly being crushed in a vise. When afleet of trucks passed by at the Oak Hill intersection, I briefly considered flooring the accelerator
and ending it all. I knew then that whatever I felt for Grace Peltier, it wasn't love. She must haveseen it in my face that morning as we sat in silence listening to the sound of the sea. When herperiod arrived two days later, after an agonizing wait for both of us, she told me that she didn'tthink we should see each other anymore, and I was happy to let her go. It wasn't one of my finermoments, I thought, not by a long shot. Since then, we hadn't stayed in touch. I had seen heronce or twice, nodding to her in bars or restaurants, but we had never really spoken. Each time Isaw her I was reminded of that meeting at Higgins Beach and of my own callow youth.
I tried to recall what I had heard about her death. Grace, now a graduate student at Northeasternin Boston, had died from a single gunshot wound in a side road off U.S. 1, up by Ellsworth. Herbody had been discovered slumped in the driver's seat of her car, the gun still in her hand.
Suicide: the ultimate form of self-defense. She had been Curtis Peltier's only child. The story hadmerited more coverage than usual only because of Peltier's former connections to Jack Mercier. Ihadn't attended the funeral.
"According to the newspaper reports, the police aren't looking for anyone in connection with herdeath, Mr. Mercier," I said. "They seem to think Grace committed suicide."
He shook his head. "Curtis doesn't believe that Grace's wound was self-inflicted."
"It's a common enough reaction," I replied. "Nobody wants to accept that someone close mighthave taken his or her own life. Too much blame accrues to those left behind for it to beaccommodated so easily."
Mercier stood, and his large frame blocked out the sunlight. I couldn't see the bug anymore. Iwondered how it had reacted when the light disappeared. I guessed that it had probably taken itin stride, which is one of the burdens of being a bug: you pretty much have to take everything instride, until something bigger stamps on you or eats you and the matter becomes immaterial.
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"Grace was a strong, smart girl with her whole life ahead of her. She didn't own a gun of anykind and the police don't seem to have any idea where she might have acquired the one found inher hand."
"Assuming that she killed herself," I added.
"Assuming that, yes."
"Which you, in common with Mr. Peltier, don't."
He sighed. "I agree with Curtis. Despite the views of the police, I think somebody killed Grace.I'd like you to look into this matter on his behalf."
"Did Curtis Peltier approach you about this, Mr. Mercier?"
Jack Mercier's gaze shifted. When he looked at me again, something had cloaked itself in the
darkness of his pupils.
"He came to visit me a few days ago. We discussed it, and he told me what he believed. Hedoesn't have enough money to pay for a private investigator, Mr. Parker, but thankfully, I do. Idon't think Curtis will have any difficulty in talking this over with you, or allowing you to lookinto it further. I will be paying your bill, but officially you will be working for Curtis. I wouldask you to keep my name out of this affair."
I finished my coffee and laid the cup down on the saucer. I didn't speak until I had marshaled mythoughts a little.
"Mr. Mercier, I didn't mind coming out here but I don't do that kind of work anymore."
Mercier's brow furrowed. "But you are a private investigator?"
"Yes, sir, I am, but I've made a decision to deal only with certain matters: white-collar crime,corporate intelligence. I don't take on cases involving death or violence."
"Do you carry a gun?"
"No. Loud noises scare me."
"But you used to carry a gun?"
"That's right, I used to. Now, if I want to disarm a white-collar criminal, I just take away hispen."
"As I told you, Mr. Parker, I know a great deal about you. Investigating fraud and petty theftdoesn't appear to be your style. In the past you have involved yourself in more...colorfulmatters."
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"Those kinds of investigations cost me too much."
"I'll cover any costs you may incur, and more than adequately."
"I don't mean financial cost, Mr. Mercier."
He nodded to himself, as if he suddenly understood. "You're talking moral, physical cost,maybe? I understand you were injured in the course of some of your work."
I didn't reply. I'd been hurt, and in response I had acted violently, destroying a little of myselfeach time I did so, but that wasn't the worst of it. It seemed to me that as soon as I becameinvolved in such matters, they caused a fissure in my world. I saw things: lost things, deadthings. It was as if my intervention drew them to me, those who had been wrenched painfully,violently from this life. Once I thought it was a product of my own incipient guilt, or an empathyI felt that passed beyond feeling and into hallucination.
But now I believed that they really did know, and they really did come.
Jack Mercier leaned against his desk, opened his drawer, and drew a black, leather-bound folderfrom within. He wrote for a few seconds, then tore the check from the folder.
"This is a check for ten thousand dollars, Mr. Parker. All I want you to do is talk to Curtis. If youthink that there's nothing you can do for him, then the money is yours to keep and there'll be nohard feelings between us. If you do agree to look into this matter, we can negotiate furtherremuneration."
I shook my head. "Once again, it's not the money, Mr. Mercier -- " I began.
He raised a hand to stop me. "I know that. I didn't mean to offend you."
"No offense taken."
"I have friends in the police force, in Scarborough and Portland and farther afield. Those friendstell me that you are a very fine investigator, with very particular talents. I want you to utilizethose talents to find out what really happened to Grace, for my sake and for that of Curtis."
I noticed that he had placed himself above Grace's father in his appeal and once again I wasconscious of a disparity between what he was telling me and what he knew. I thought too of his
wife's unveiled hostility, my sense that she had known exactly who I was and why I was in herhouse, and that she bitterly resented my presence there. Mercier proffered the check and in hiseyes I saw something that I couldn't quite identify: grief maybe, or even guilt.
"Please, Mr. Parker," he said. "Talk to him. I mean, what harm can it do?"
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What harm can it do? Those words would come back to haunt me again and again in the daysthat followed. They came back to haunt Jack Mercier as well. I wonder if he thought of them inhis final moments, as the shadows drew around him and those he loved were drowned in redness.
Despite my misgivings I took the check. And in that instant, unbeknownst to us both, a circuit
was completed, sending a charge through the world around and beneath us. Far away, somethingbroke from its hiding place beneath the dead layers of the honeycomb. It tested the air, probingfor the disturbance that had roused it, until it found the source.
Then, with a lurch, it began to move.
THE SEARCH FOR SANCTUARY: RELIGIOUS FERVOR IN THE STATE OF MAINE
AND THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE AROOSTOOK BAPTISTS
Extract from the postgraduate thesis of Grace Peltier, submitted posthumously in accordance
with the requirements of the Masters Sociology Program, Northeastern University
To understand the reasons for the formation and subsequent disintegration of the religious groupknown as the Aroostook Baptists, it is important to first understand the history of the state ofMaine. To comprehend why four families of well-intentioned and not unintelligent people shouldhave followed an individual such as the Reverend Faulkner into the wilderness, never to be seenagain, one must recognize that for almost three centuries men such as Faulkner have gatheredfollowers to them in this state, often in the face of challenges from larger churches and moreorthodox religious movements. It may be said, therefore, that there is something in the characterof the state's inhabitants, some streak of individualism dating back to pioneer times, that has ledthem to be attracted to preachers like the Reverend Faulkner.
For much of its history, Maine was a frontier state. In fact, from the time when the first Jesuitmissionaries arrived in the seventeenth century to the midpart of the twentieth century, religiousgroups regarded Maine as mission territory. It provided fertile, if not always profitable, groundfor itinerant preachers, unorthodox religious movements, and even charlatans for the best part ofthree hundred years. The rural economy did not allow for the maintenance of permanentchurches and clergymen, and religious observance was oftentimes a low priority for families whowere undernourished, insufficiently clothed, and lacking proper shelter.
In 1790, General Benjamin Lincoln observed that few of those in Maine had been properlybaptized, and there were some who had never taken Communion. The Reverend John Murray ofBoothbay wrote, in 1763, of the inhabitants' "inveterate habits of vice and no remorse" and
thanked God that he had found "one prayerful family, and a humble professor at the head of it."It is interesting to note that the Reverend Faulkner was given to quoting this passage of Murray'sin the course of his own sermons to his congregations.
Itinerant preachers ministered to those who lacked their own churches. Some were outstanding,frequently having trained at York or Harvard. Others were less praiseworthy. The Reverend Mr.Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine, is reported to have preached 12,593 sermons in 413settlements, mostly in Maine, between 1783 and 1849. By contrast, the Reverend Martin
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Schaeffer of Broad Bay, a Lutheran, comprehensively cheated his flock before eventually beingrun out of town.
Orthodox preachers found it difficult to achieve a foothold in the state, Calvinists beingparticularly unwelcome as much for their unyielding doctrines as for their associations with the
forces of government. Baptists and Methodists, with their concepts of egalitarianism andequality, found more willing converts. In the thirty years between 1790 and 1820, the number ofBaptist churches in the state rose from seventeen to sixty. They were joined, in time, by FreeWill Baptists, Free Baptists, Methodists, Congregationalists, Unitarians, Universalists, Shakers,Millerites, Spiritualists, Sandfordites, Holy Rollers, Higginsites, Free Thinkers, and BlackStockings.
Yet the tradition of Schaeffer and other charlatans still remained: in 1816, the "delusion" ofCochranism grew up around the charismatic Cochrane in the west of the state, ending withcharges of gross lewdness being leveled at its founder. In the 1860s, the Reverend Mr. George L.Adams persuaded his followers to sell their homes, stores, even their fishing gear, and to pass the
money on to him to help establish a colony in Palestine. Sixteen people died in the first weeks ofthe Jaffa colony's foundation in 1866. In 1867, amid charges of excessive drinking andmisappropriation of funds, Adams and his wife fled the short-lived Jaffa colony, Adams laterreemerging in California where he tried to persuade people to invest money in a five-centsavings bank until his secretary exposed his past.
Finally, at the turn of this century, the evangelist Frank Weston Sandford founded the Shilohcommunity in Durham. Sandford is worthy of particular attention because the Shiloh communityclearly provided a model for what the Reverend Faulkner attempted to achieve more than half acentury later.
Sandford's cultlike sect raised huge sums of money for building projects and overseas missions,sending sailing vessels filled with missio