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A Song of Shadows.
John Connolly.
For Ellen Clair Lamb Grateful acknowledgement is made for permission to reprint from the following copyrighted works: Extract from The Master and Margarita, by Mikhail Bulgakov and translated by Michael Glenny. Copyright Michael Glenny & Mikhail Bulgakov, is used by kind permission of Vintage Cla.s.sics an imprint of Random House Group and Andrew Nurnberg a.s.sociates.
Extract from The Sirens of t.i.tan, by Kurt Vonnegut. Copyright Kurt Vonnegut, published by Gollancz, an imprint of Orion Books, is used by permission of Donald C. Faber, Trustee of the Kurt Vonnegut Trust.
I.
What would your good do if evil didn't exist, and what would the earth look like if all the shadows disappeared?
Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita.
1.
Winter dead, spring dying, and summer waiting in the wings.
Slowly, the town of Boreas was changing: winterized rentals were being opened and cleaned, the ice cream parlor was ordering supplies, and the stores and restaurants were gearing up for the advent of the tourists. Just six months earlier, their proprietors had been counting the takings to figure out how close they'd have to cut their cloth to survive, for each year seemed to leave them with a little less in their pockets, and brought the same debate at the end of the season: do we go on or do we sell up? Now those who remained standing were returning to the fray, but even the cautious optimism of previous years was not yet palpable, and there were those who whispered that it was gone forever. The economy might be improving, but Boreas was mired in steady decline: a slow, labored mortality, half-life upon half-life. This was a dying town, a failing ecosystem, but still so many stayed, for where else was there to go?
Out on Burgess Road, the Sailmaker Inn remained closed, the first time in over seventy years that the grand old dame of Boreas hotels would not be opening its doors to welcome the summer visitors. The decision to put the Sailmaker on the market had been made only the previous week. The owners the third generation of the Tabor family to operate the inn had returned from their Carolina winter refuge to prepare the Sailmaker for guests, and some of their seasonal staff were already occupying the residences at the back of the property. The lawn was being mowed, the dust covers taken off the furniture, and then, just like that, the Tabors had looked at their business, decided that they couldn't take the strain any longer, and announced they wouldn't be reopening after all. Frank Tabor, a good Catholic, said that making the decision had been akin to going to confession and unburdening himself of his sins. He could now go in peace, and not fret anymore.
The decision to close the Sailmaker sounded another death knell for the town, a further concrete symbol of its dwindling. The tourists had grown fewer and fewer over the years and older and older, because there was little here to amuse the young and more summer homes were being put up for sale, their prices pegged optimistically high at first, before time and necessity slowly whittled them down to a more realistic level. Even then Bobby Soames, the local Realtor, could name off the top of his head five houses that had been on the market for two years or more. By now their owners had largely given up on them, and they functioned neither as summer retreats nor actual residences. They were kept alive by a slow trickle of heat in winter, and in summer by the flitting and scuttling of bugs.
The town was founded by a family of Greeks back at the start of the nineteenth century, although they were long gone by the beginning of the twentieth. Indeed, n.o.body was entirely sure how they had ended up in this part of Maine to begin with and the only remaining clue to its origins lay in its name: Boreas, a northern outpost called after the Greek G.o.d of winter and the north wind. Was it any wonder, Soames sometimes thought, that its survival as a vacation destination had always been tenuous? They should just have named it Arctic South and had done with it.
Soames was driving slowly through Boreas on this fine April morning. Everyone drove slowly through Boreas. Its thoroughfares were narrow; even Bay Street, the main drag, was a b.i.t.c.h to negotiate if cars were parked on both curbs, and anyone who'd been in town longer than a wet afternoon learned to push in his side mirrors if he wanted them to be intact when he returned. And the local police liked nothing better than to meet their ticket quotas by pulling over motorists who were even fractionally over the speed limit.
It might also have been something to do with the area's later Germanic heritage, which encouraged a certain sense of order and adherence to the tenets of the law. German Lutherans had first come to Maine in the middle of the eighteenth century, settling in what was now Waldoboro, but was then known as Broad Bay. They had been promised houses, a church, and supplies, none of which materialized, and instead found themselves marooned in a hostile landscape. They resorted to building temporary shelters and hunting local game, and the weakest among them didn't survive that first winter. Later they fought the French and the Indians, and communities were split during the Revolutionary War between those who sided with the Americans in the cause of liberty, and those who were reluctant to break their oath of allegiance to the English Crown.
By then, the Germans were firmly established in Maine. Sometime in the late nineteenth century, a bunch of them made their way to Boreas, usurped the Greeks, and had been there ever since. The town's register of voters boasted Ackermanns, Baumgartners, Huebers, Kusters, Vogels, and Wexlers. Farther down the coast, in the town of Pirna named after the town in Saxony from which its homesick founders hailed were more Germans, and even a small number of German Jews: a scattering of Arnsteins, Bingens, Lewens, Rossmans, and Wachsmanns. Soames, who was English on his great-grandfather's side and Welsh on his great-grandmother's (although for some reason n.o.body in his family liked to talk about the Welsh part) regarded them all in the same light everyone was a potential client although he could recall his grandfather's strong opinions on the Germans, a consequence of his great-grandfather's experiences during World War I, and his own memories of World War II. Being shot at for years by men of a particular nationality will tend to impact negatively upon one's view of them.
Soames left Bay Street behind and turned on to Burgess Road. He paused outside the Sailmaker. The doors were closed, and he could see no signs of life. He had already made his pitch to the Tabors to act as Realtor for the property, and Frank had promised to call him later that day. Soames would miss the Sailmaker. It had boasted a pretty good bar, and he enjoyed shooting the breeze with Donna Burton, who bartended there on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and weekends. She was the kind of flirtatious divorcee who kept customers returning, or male customers anyway, female customers being less susceptible to her charms, and also strangely reluctant to let their unaccompanied husbands or boyfriends spend significant amounts of time in her presence.
Soames didn't know what Donna would do now that the Sailmaker was closing. She lived down in Pirna, where she worked as a secretary, and her part-time summer hours at the Sailmaker had made the difference between a comfortable winter and one in which the thermostat was kept a couple of degrees lower than ideal. Maybe Fred Amsel at the Blackbird Bar & Grill would give her a few hours, if his wife Erika allowed him. Donna would bring her Sailmaker customers with her, and Fred would be competing with the Brickhouse for their business. Maybe Soames would have a word with Fred about it, and Fred could then broach the subject with Erika. Mrs Amsel might have looked like someone who had repeatedly had a door slammed shut on her face, with the temperament to match, but she was no fool when it came to money.
Who knows, thought Soames, but when Donna heard about his efforts on her behalf, she might even be willing to reward him with some carnal delights. Soames had given a great deal of thought to just how carnally delightful a night with Donna Burton might be. Those fantasies had sustained him through the dying years of his marriage. Now that he was single again, he had laid siege to her over two summers with a stubbornness that would have shamed the Greek army at Troy. He hadn't yet managed to breach her defenses, but Fred Amsel might just be the man to boost him over the parapet. If that didn't work, Soames would have to figure out how to hide himself inside a wooden horse and pay someone to leave him on her doorstep.
Soames drove on until the houses started to thin out, and the line began to blur between Boreas's town limits and those of tiny, neighboring Gratton to the north. The two towns shared resources, including a police force, mainly because Gratton made Boreas look like Vegas, so any lines on a map were for informational purposes only. The Boreas PD also had contracts for Pirna to the south, and Hamble and Tuniss to the west, the latter two being townships that consisted of little more than scattered houses and dilapidated barns. Most everyone from the surrounding area went to Boreas or Pirna to do business, and the five towns had come together to form a single council, on which Soames sat. The bimonthly meetings, held every first and third Wednesday, tended to be fractious affairs: property taxes were higher in Boreas than elsewhere, and those in the town who resented seeing their dollars going to service sewers in Hamble, or road maintenance in Tuniss, whispered darkly of socialism.
Soames turned right off Burgess Road on to Toland's Lane, which wound its way down to Green Heron Bay, the most obscure of the inlets on the peninsula. It was long and sheltered by high dunes, and something about its orientation made it particularly susceptible to winds from the sea, so that facing into even a comparatively mild breeze made a house along the sh.o.r.e feel like the prow of a ship during a storm. It was always a couple of degrees cooler in its environs that elsewhere around Boreas, as though winter had chosen this place to leave a reminder of its eventual return. Tourists generally didn't bother using it, the occasional bird-watchers excepted, and they were usually disappointed by the absence of any herons, green or otherwise.
Only two houses stood on the bay, both of which were former summer homes, one bought in haste and repented at leisure, and the other a family bequest that had remained unloved and unused following the reading of the will. In truth, Soames had despaired of ever selling, or even renting, either of them, and it had come as a surprise and a relief when both attracted occupants within weeks of each other, even if the pleasure in finally securing some income for his clients and a monthly percentage for himself was tempered slightly by the ident.i.ty of one of the renters.
Soames had read about the private detective named Charlie Parker, of course, even before the shooting and convalescence that had brought him at last to Boreas. Soames had some friends and former clients in both the Bangor PD and the Maine State Police, and was privy to barroom details of the man's life that had never made it into any newspaper. If Parker wasn't quite trouble, he was closely related to it.
Initially, though, the approach about renting the house came from a lawyer named Aimee Price down in South Freeport, who told Soames that she had a client who needed privacy and quiet, in order to recover from a recent trauma. She came up to Boreas to view the house, decided that it met her client's needs, and signed a lease, all in the s.p.a.ce of a single morning. Yet negotiations over the rent made the meetings of the town council seem somnolent by comparison, and Soames had come out of the whole business bruised, battered, and checking to make sure that Price hadn't stolen his watch as well. Only when the lease agreement was signed did Price mention the name of her client: Charlie Parker.
'The private detective?' said Soames, as he watched the ink dry on the lease. 'The one who got shot up?'
'Yes. Is that a problem?'
Soames thought about the question. It would only be a problem if the people who had tried to kill Parker came back for another attempt. The house had been hard enough to rent as things stood. The owners would be better off burning it to the ground if it became the scene of a ma.s.sacre. It would also be likely to cost him his seat on the council. He wouldn't be popular if his lax standards led to Boreas becoming famous for something other than Forrest's Ice Cream Parlor and the shrimp etouffee at Crawley's Cajun Citchen. ('The Best Cajun Food in Northern Maine,' which, all things considered, wasn't a slogan to set the heart alight, even if Crawley's did serve d.a.m.ned fine food, although that cutesy misspelling of 'kitchen' caused Soames to twitch involuntarily every time he saw it in print.) He decided that honesty might be the best policy.
'Look, a man like that has enemies,' he said, 'and n.o.body has ever been shot in Boreas. I mean, ever.'
'Maybe you could put it on your sign,' said Price. 'You know: "Boreas: 75,000 days without a shooting", like building sites do for workplace accidents.'
Soames tried to figure out if she was being facetious, and decided that she probably was. It had seemed like a good idea, too, if only for a moment.
'Unhelpful suggestions about signage aside,' said Soames, 'his reputation might be a matter of concern.'
'There's no risk of a repeat of the incident that led to his injuries.'
'You seem very certain of that.'
'I am.'
She stared at him, as if inviting him to ask the question that danced on his lips and tongue. Soames swallowed. His office suddenly felt very warm. He thought about the rental income.
'Given the unusual circ.u.mstances, perhaps we could-'
'No.'
'-look again at-'
'I don't think so.'
'-the amount to be-'
'You're wasting your breath.'
'Right.'
'That house hasn't had a tenant in almost two years.'
'We've had offers.'
'No, you haven't.'
'You don't know that.'
'Yes, I do.'
'Okay.'
'Any further questions?'
'Will he be armed?'
'I don't know. You can ask him when you see him, if you like.'
Soames thought about what he knew of the detective.
'I guess he'll be armed,' he said, as much to himself as to Price. 'If he isn't, he probably should be.'
'That's the spirit,' said Price. 'And the fewer people who know about this for now, the better. Even when he gets here, it'll be up to him how he deals with folks. Some may recognize his name or face, some may not.'
'We mind our own business in Boreas,' said Soames. 'As far as I'm concerned, you're the one renting the house, and if I'm asked who's going to be living in it, I'll just say that I have no idea.'
Price stood and extended her hand. Soames shook it.
'It's been a pleasure,' she said.
'Uh, likewise. I think.'
He walked her to her car.
'One last thing,' she said, and Soames felt his heart sink slightly. He hated 'one last things.'
'Some men from New York will be coming to look at the house. They're, well, kind of security consultants. They may want to make some slight alterations, just to ensure that the house is up and running in every way. They won't damage it. In fact, I imagine that any changes they make will only enhance its value.'
The promise of enhanced value made Soames feel better about everything.
'I don't think that will be a problem.'
'Good. They don't like problems.'
Something in her tone made him want to reach for a stiff drink, which, when she was gone, was exactly what he did. His secretary saw him sipping from the gla.s.s.
'Are you celebrating?' she asked.
'You know,' he replied, 'I'm really not sure.'
2.
Soames partic.i.p.ated in two further meetings before Parker's arrival in Boreas. The first involved a Maine State Police detective named Gordon Walsh, who appeared in Soames's office with Cory Bloom, Boreas's chief of police, in tow. Bloom was a good-looking woman in her late thirties, and had she not been happily married, Soames might have considered putting the moves on her. Of course, the small matter of Bloom's friendship with his ex-wife also had to be taken into account, which meant that Cory Bloom would be more likely to date a piece of gum that she'd peeled off the sole of her shoe than Bobby Soames, but a man could dream. So far, n.o.body had figured out a way to police fantasies.
Walsh hadn't exactly set Soames's fears to rest. He'd made it clear that Parker remained vulnerable, and stressed, like Aimee Price before him, how important it was that the detective's presence in Boreas remained as unpublicized as possible. But Bloom a.s.sured Walsh that one of the advantages of Boreas at least until tourist season began in earnest, which wouldn't be for another month to six weeks was the virtual impossibility of anyone being able to stop in town for longer than five minutes without being noticed. If strangers demonstrated unusual curiosity about any of its residents, someone would pick up on it. Bobby Soames could have confirmed the perspicacity of the town's residents from personal experience, had he chosen to do so, given that his marriage had come to an end precisely because Eve Moorer from the florist's shop had spotted him coming out of a motel on Route 1, accompanied by a woman twenty years his junior, a gamine who might even have been mistaken for his daughter, if he had had a daughter. But Walsh didn't need to know that story, and Cory Bloom already did.
Bloom suggested that, while it might seem counterintuitive to do so, it would be best if a handful of the town's more prominent and sensible citizens were quietly informed of the detective's impending residence. She named a number of bar owners; the town's Lutheran pastor, Axel Werner; and Kris Beck, who owned Boreas's only gas station, along with a few others. Walsh didn't object, and left it in her hands. A couple of other minor details were batted around, but otherwise Walsh's visit to Boreas boiled down to the kind of warnings dotted around train stations and airports: if you see something, say something.
'What I don't understand,' said Soames at last, 'is why he picked here.' It had been bothering him ever since Aimee Price signed the lease on the detective's behalf.
'You know the Brook House Clinic?' said Walsh.
Soames did. It was an upscale private medical center about ten miles west of town, and more like a resort than a hospital. A couple of Hollywood actors, and at least one ex-president, had been treated there, although their presence at Brook House had never made it into the newspapers.
'Well, he spent time there as part of his rehabilitation, and they'll be taking care of his physiotherapy.'
'He must have money, but he won't have much of it left once that place is done wringing him out,' said Soames. He wasn't sure that he could even afford to have his temperature taken at Brook House.
'My understanding is that they struck a rate,' said Walsh.
'Brook House? I heard they billed you just for breathing the air.'
'You, maybe. Not him. You mind if we take a look at the house?'
Soames didn't mind at all. Bloom drove them out in her Explorer, and Soames found himself instinctively dropping into Realtor mode, pointing out interesting features of the landscape, and the proximity of stores and bars, until Walsh informed him that he was only here for an hour, and wasn't actually planning on relocating, which caused Soames to clam up and sulk the rest of the way to Green Heron Bay. Walsh made a single slow circuit around the house before entering. He then examined the interior thoroughly, opening and closing doors and windows, and testing locks and bolts.
'What about the other house?' he asked Soames, as all three of them stood on the porch, watching the waves break and the sands spiral.
'It's empty,' said Soames. 'Has been for a while, just like this place.'
'Anyone makes any inquiries about it, you let the chief here know, okay?'
'Absolutely.'
Walsh took in the dunes and the ocean, his hands on his hips, like he'd just conquered the bay and was considering where to plant his flag.
Soames coughed. He always coughed when he was nervous or uncertain about something. It was his only flaw as a Realtor, like a gambler's 'tell.'
'Um, the lawyer, Ms Price, mentioned that some security consultants from New York would be coming by.'
Walsh's mustache lifted on one side in what was almost a smile.
'Right, "security consultants." Is that what she called them?'
'I believe those were her words.'