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But that is the nature of revenge. It escalates. It cannot be controlled. One hurt invites another, on and on until the original injury is all but forgotten in the chaos of what follows...
John Connolly's originality and talent for storytelling have quickly made him one of today's preeminent thriller writers. Now, in The Unquiet, private detective Charlie Parker returns to untangle a horrifying story of betrayal, unclean desires, and murder -- a story of never-ending evil whose conclusion is not yet written.
Daniel Clay, a once-respected psychiatrist, has gone missing. His daughter insists that he killed himself after allegations surfaced that he had betrayed his patients to foul and evil men -- but when a killer obsessed with uncovering the truth behind his own daughter's disappearance comes seeking revenge, long-forgotten secrets begin to emerge. Hired by Dr. Clay's daughter to protect her from the predator on the loose, tortured and ingenious private detective Charlie Parker finds himself trapped between those who want the truth to be revealed and those who will go to any length to keep it hidden.
John Connolly masterfully intertwines secret lives and secret sins with the violence that so often lies beneath the surface of the honeycomb world in this gripping page-turner. Fast-paced, hypnotic, and elegantly written, The Unquiet is John Connolly at his chilling best.
Of the few novelists who manage to combine the private eye and horror genres successfully, none does it better than Connolly. Here he gives his hapless hero, Charlie Parker, a man obsessed with the memory of the gruesome murders of his wife and daughter, a particularly disturbing case involving child predators and killers. It's a grim story, including the reappearance of a Parker foe, the sinister and probably supernatural Collector who is drawn to "certain crimes" from which he extracts keepsakes. Sanders has the right kind of vocal timbre to suggest Parker's tough-but-soul sick protagonist and the skill to give the gritty material a properly noir tone. As for the Collector, whom Connelly tells us "tastes words like unfamiliar food," Sanders conjures up a raspy whisper that carries more than the hint of a distaste for life. It also contains an echo of Parker's voice, which follows the author's suggestion that the Collector may be a specter of the detective's imagination. In any case, the sound, like the novel itself, is as unnerving as a fever dream. Simultaneous release with the Atria hardcover (Reviews, Mar. 26). (May)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information More Reviews and RecommendationsFans of John Connolly's unique, atmospheric novels have come to know that the cases former NYPD detective Charlie Parker sets out to solve are haunting -- literally haunting.
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April 27, 2009: Terrific writing and a great read. So much better than the formula novels by the best seller names. The difference is skill was notable in the books's presentation.
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March 24, 2009: I was kind of disapointed in this book. I felt that there were some characters that were not properly introduced into the book, and at times it really seemed to drag. Overall, the question in the end still puzzles me, if she killed her father, why hire a PI to find him. I don't know, just wasnt the most enjoyable book I have ever read.
Name:
John Connolly
Current Home:
Dublin, Ireland
Date of Birth:
May 31, 1968
Place of Birth:
Dublin, Ireland
Education:
B.A. in English, Trinity College Dublin, 1992; M.A. in Journalism, Dublin City University, 1993
Awards:
Shamus Award, for Best First P.I. Novel, 1999, for Every Dead Thing; Barry Award, Best British Crime Novel, 2001, for The White Road
John Connolly was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1968 and has, at various points in his life, worked as a journalist, a barman, a local government official, a waiter and a dogsbody at Harrods department store in London. He studied English in Trinity College, Dublin and journalism at Dublin City University, subsequently spending five years working as a freelance journalist for The Irish Times newspaper, to which he continues to contribute.
His first novel, Every Dead Thing, was published in 1999, and introduced the character of Charlie Parker, a former policeman hunting the killer of his wife and daughter. Dark Hollow followed in 2000. The third Parker novel, The Killing Kind, was published in 2001, with The White Road following in 2002. In 2003, John published his fifth novel - and first stand-alone book - Bad Men. In 2004, Nocturnes, a collection of novellas and short stories, was added to the list, and 2005 marked the publication of the fifth Charlie Parker novel, The Black Angel.
John Connolly is based in Dublin but divides his time between his native city and the United States, where each of his novels has been set.
Author biography courtesy of Atria Books.
Some fun and fascinating facts gleaned from our interview with Connolly:
"I once worked as a debt collector, although I didn't know it at the time. I was just delivering the letters for a courier company, and only discovered they were final notices when a little man chased me out of his sawmill with an ax."
"I did my graduate thesis on the first closure of Jerusalem to the Palestinians, during the course of which I a) was involved in a car crash on the Gaza Strip, which provided the residents with their entertainment for the day; b) was imprisoned briefly by Egyptian immigration officials, an experience I can heartily advise everyone to avoid; and c) discovered that I was a worse photographer than a writer, as none of my pictures came out."
"While interviewing my idol, James Lee Burke, for The Irish Times, I managed to get lost in the Rattlesnake Wilderness while out walking with Burke. His dogs found me. Eventually."
"I can cook a pretty good Cajun meal. I know a bit about wine, but only South African wine." "I love going to the movies, but think cell phones have made it a less enjoyable experience than before. In fact, I think cell phones have made life that little bit less bearable, and I can't imagine how awful it will be when people can use them on aeroplanes. In the last couple of books I've written, people have died terrible deaths because of their fascination with cell phones. I always feel a little calmer after I've killed someone in print."
"Rather embarrassingly, the only pseudonym I've used is a woman's name. Earlier this year, one of the editors at Hodder Ireland, the Irish arm of my U.K. publisher, announced that she was putting together a book of stories, entitled Moments, for tsunami relief, with all of the contributions to be written by female writers. She asked if I might be interested in submitting a story under a pseudonym, just to see if anyone would spot the interloper. I agreed to try, although admittedly there was alcohol taken at the time and had she asked me to swim naked down the Amazon with ‘Pirahna Food' written on my back I would probably have agreed to that as well. The story was called ‘The Cycle' and appeared under the pseudonym ‘Laura Froom' in the book, which was the name of the vampire in one of the short stories in my Nocturnes collection. So there: my secret shame has been revealed."
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer?
Gosh, it's so hard to pick one. I think writers are the products of so many other writers, and of so many books that they've read. (Never trust a writer who claims to be a complete original, or sui generis. They're either liars, or completely egotistical.) I think it was Oscar Wilde who said that a true writer will read much more than he or she will ever write, and I still get excited about new books, as well as old books that I discover long after I should have read them.
I'm going to have to cheat, I'm afraid, and pick more than one, but I'll try to limit the selections to one per genre. The first mystery novel I ever read was Ed McBain's Let's Hear it for the Deaf Man, and I devoured every 87th Precinct book that I could lay my hands on afterwards. It was on a bookshelf in my grandmother's house in Kerry, and my father had picked it as his vacation reading. My father, who was a very intelligent man, preferred newspapers and didn't really read books, except for that two week period when we were on vacation, so picking a book was a big deal for him. If he picked the wrong book, it could be disastrous. He once opted for I, Claudius by Robert Graves, and was still reading it two summers later, in part because he kept forgetting who everyone was. That was a bit of a mistake for him, so Let's Hear It was probably a wiser choice, as it was fairly slim by comparison. So we took it in turns to read Let's Hear It, and I suddenly realized just how entertaining a mystery novel could be, and how you could become so involved in the lives of characters that you would want to return to them, over and over again. Only mystery and thrillers (and, to some degree, fantasy/science fiction) really seem to use recurring characters so consistently in this way. It's one of the attractions of the genre, for me.
McBain was followed closely in my affections by Ross MacDonald, who taught me the importance of empathy in mystery fiction, and James Lee Burke, who is still, I think, the best prose stylist in the genre, and creates wonderful villains. Those three writers set me on the path to becoming a mystery writer myself.
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
Picking ten books is almost as hard as picking one, and I feel very conscious of the ones I've left out of this list. Ask me tomorrow, and I might include Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy here, or Ross Macdonald's The Chill, or even the Calvin and Hobbes books of Bill Watterson. Still, for what it's worth, and with some reservations:
I love the English ghost story writer M. R. James, who, long after his death, still has no serious rivals in the field, and whose Ghost Stories of an Antiquary is one of the few books that really deserves the description "spine-chilling."
The poet e. e. cummings changed the way I looked a poetry, and opened my eyes to the kind of imagery that could be added to a writer's arsenal. I still treasure his Collected Poems, in particular, the poem that begins, "somewhere i have never traveled." His six nonlectures are also fascinating, as is the choice of poems that ends each one. For a poet who has been criticized a lot in the years since his death, and whose reputation has taken something of a battering, there is a great deal of humility in these lectures, and humility in a writer is a rare enough virture to be accorded considerable respect.
I am dumbstruck in admiration for Cormac McCarthy, and his Blood Meridien in particular. His prose style knocked me sideways, and confirmed my belief that, in the right hands, any genre (and the western genre was regarded by many as being pretty inferior to literary fiction, rightly or wrongly) can become the stuff of great literature.
Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights is one of only a handful of books that I've read more than once. It's a very modern novel, in its way, and its early pages, with the ghostly Cathy scraping at the window, remain etched in my memory.
Another novel that I've returned to again and again is Ford Madox Ford's The Good Soldier, which colored my view of the many ways in which one can write about relationships. In fact, it probably colored my view of relationships as well, and my first serious love affair revolved around the exchange of a copy of this book. The woman in question, who was older than I, loved it too. Didn't stop her breaking my heart, though.
Speaking of heartbreak, I read Richard Ford's The Sportswriter in the aftermath of that breakup, and its final pages resonated with me because of that. It was one of those instances where the subject of a novel dovetails precisely with the very moment in one's life when that subject becomes most relevant. Here are the words that made me add The Sportswriter to my list of essential books: "As I've said, life has one certain closure. It is possible to love someone, and no one else, and still not live with that one person, or even see her."
Bleak House by Charles Dickens is, for me, simply the greatest novel ever written. It's hugely daunting until you pick it up and start reading it, whereupon the very first page, with its description of the London fog, picks you up like a cork on a wave and carries you easily all the way through its considerably length and deposits you, exhausted but grateful, at the other end, a changed person.
The Great Shark Hunt by Hunter S. Thompson confirmed me in my desire to become a journalist. It's a collection of his writings, assembled from his best work and published before he became something of a parody of himself. His influence on journalism hasn't been entirely positive, though, as a great many later journalists all fancied being a version of Hunter S. Thompson and, as some of his later writing proved, even Thompson wasn't very good at that.
Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak was the first Russian novel that I ever read, and I felt very proud of myself for finishing it. In fact, I was so proud I read it again a few years later, and still loved it. I hadn't encountered epic storytelling like that before. It paved the way for reading Tolstoy's War and Peace some years later, and I loved that almost as much, apart from the very tedious lecture that ends the book. Frankly, I skipped that part.
I find it hard to separate my final choices, so I will plead indulgence and mention both:
Donald Barthelme's Forty Stories, and the entire Jeeves & Wooster output of P. G. Wodehouse (because, really, how can you have a favorite among such riches?) Barthelme's short stories are unlike any others that I've ever read -- funny, perplexing, touching, challenging. And Wodehouse? Well, no matter how bad I feel, Jeeves and Wooster can still raise my spirits, and that is a gift that few writers bring.
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
I'm a huge Laurel & Hardy fan, so their short films have a treasured place on my shelves. Their work is the stuff of genius, and no words can do them justice. I also love the first four or five Marx Brothers films, mainly for the wordplay, and the early films of Steve Martin. As you can see, I'm something of a comedy buff.
I'm trying to shy away from the usual suspects, the films you see in most top ten lists, and instead I'm opting for films that, though maybe not the greatest ever made, are ones that I can watch with pleasure, or some other strong, positive emotion, again and again:
Walter Hill's Southern Comfort; Atom Egoyan's The Sweet Hereafter (which, thanks to sensitive direction, wonderful music by Mychael Danna, and great central performances from Ian Holm and Sarah Polley, is actually better than the Russell Banks novel on which it is based); Lost in Translation; North By Northwest.
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I'm an obsessive music purchaser, and I put together a CD of music to go with The Black Angel, containing songs that had featured in the books, or that influenced them in some way. I'm a big alternative country fan, but that's become a little bit of a limiting description for artists as distinct from each other as, say, Lambchop and The Jayhawks, in the same way that mystery or crime fiction now encompasses all kinds of writing that an earlier generation might not have admitted to the fold at all. I don't listen to music when I write, though. I just can't. I need silence.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading?
Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy. I just think they're the best books published in the last ten years for children, Harry Potter included. Pullman recognizes the small adult that resides in children, and speaks to that adult. There is no sentimentality. (Rowling, by contrast, speaks to the child in adults, and is far less challenging as a result, I think.) Pullman's trilogy is so alive with ideas and possibilities that a book group could discuss it for a month and still only scrape the surface of what lies beneath.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
I like giving signed books, particularly by writers that are important to the person receiving the gift. I tend to keep an eye out for them when I travel, and pick them up along the way. By the time Christmas comes along, my shopping is pretty much done.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
I tend to write in the mornings, finishing up at lunchtime, and then I may write again in the evenings. When I'm doing the first draft of a book I write slowly, so I set myself very easily attainable goals for each day: maybe 1000 words, although I'll usually exceed that. My desk is littered with bits of paper, pens, notebooks, computer disks, letters that I should have answered ages ago, reminders to myself to do things, a diary that I keep forgetting to use.... It really is a bit of a shambles at present, but I plan to clean it up by the end of the week. Honest.
What are you working on now?
I'm rewriting a draft of a book called The Book of Lost Things, which is not a crime novel and is quite a departure for me. It goes back to my fascination with folk tales and the childhood imagination. I don't know if my publishers will even want it, but it was what I wanted, or needed, to write, and I've always written my books for that reason. I've just been fortunate that enough people have gone along with what I've written to enable me to keep publishing.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
Gosh, it was a long night for me. My first book took five years to write, and halfway through it I decided to test the waters by sending out the early chapters, as I was broke and finding it hard to fund the research. I was rejected by every publisher bar none, and every agent bar none. I stuck with the agent, Darley Anderson, and when the book was finished it ended up with the only publisher that had actually responded positively to it, which was Hodder in the U.K. I got rejection letter that had messages scrawled in pen at the bottom, telling me how much the editor hated the book. It was really soul destroying. Frankly, I'm not sure how I persevered. I think that if Darley had not come back to me, I'd just have given up and assumed that they were right and I was wrong.
If you could choose one new writer to be "discovered," who would it be?
Oh, that's hard. By the time I get to read them, they've usually already been discovered, or are on their way towards discovery. I tend to talk up writers that I like, in the hope that those who haven't read them yet might pick them up.
I liked Sean Doolittle's first book, Dirt; Chris Mooney's third book, Remembering Sarah; Robert Littell's The Company, and Littell has been around for a very long time. In the end, I suppose that any writer that you come to for the first time is a "new" writer for you, and the discovery is unique for each reader.
There's an Irish writer, Shane Dunphy, who is about to publish his first book. He has worked a lot with troubled children, and it's based on his experiences. I hope to read it in the coming weeks but, from what I know about it already, I think it could be something very special.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
Persevere. The temptation is to give up on a book before it's finished. I have doubts about every book that I write, and they usually start to rear their head somewhere between 20,000 and 40,000 words into the book. I'd bet a decent sum of money that most abandoned books are put aside at about the same point.
Don't necessarily write about what you know, but know what you're writing about. If you want to write about 18th century France, then fine, do that, but go to the trouble of doing your research. If you take the lazy way out, then people will spot your mistakes, and there is nothing worse for a reader than to have the delicate bubble of fiction burst by finding an inaccuracy in the text.
Be disciplined. Write a little every day, if you can. Even 100 words a day quickly starts to build.
Don't sit around waiting for the muse to strike you. She won't. Writing is hard, and often the words need to be forced out. Just because you don't feel like doing it doesn't mean that you shouldn't.
Harlan Coben characterized John Connolly's works as "darkly brilliant, spellbinding, and disturbing," a description that will linger in the air for readers of this redolent Charlie Parker thriller. In The Unquiet, Parker has been hired by the daughter of a missing shrink whose reputation has recently been tainted by dire allegations of child abuse. Now stalked by a predator, the daughter obviously needs protection, but Parker can't ignore the maelstrom of betrayal and slimy secrets rumbling beneath the surface.
But that is the nature of revenge. It escalates. It cannot be controlled. One hurt invites another, on and on until the original injury is all but forgotten in the chaos of what follows...
John Connolly's originality and talent for storytelling have quickly made him one of today's preeminent thriller writers. Now, in The Unquiet, private detective Charlie Parker returns to untangle a horrifying story of betrayal, unclean desires, and murder -- a story of never-ending evil whose conclusion is not yet written.
Daniel Clay, a once-respected psychiatrist, has gone missing. His daughter insists that he killed himself after allegations surfaced that he had betrayed his patients to foul and evil men -- but when a killer obsessed with uncovering the truth behind his own daughter's disappearance comes seeking revenge, long-forgotten secrets begin to emerge. Hired by Dr. Clay's daughter to protect her from the predator on the loose, tortured and ingenious private detective Charlie Parker finds himself trapped between those who want the truth to be revealed and those who will go to any length to keep it hidden.
John Connolly masterfully intertwines secret lives and secret sins with the violence that so often lies beneath the surface of the honeycomb world in this gripping page-turner. Fast-paced, hypnotic, and elegantly written, The Unquiet is John Connolly at his chilling best.
Of the few novelists who manage to combine the private eye and horror genres successfully, none does it better than Connolly. Here he gives his hapless hero, Charlie Parker, a man obsessed with the memory of the gruesome murders of his wife and daughter, a particularly disturbing case involving child predators and killers. It's a grim story, including the reappearance of a Parker foe, the sinister and probably supernatural Collector who is drawn to "certain crimes" from which he extracts keepsakes. Sanders has the right kind of vocal timbre to suggest Parker's tough-but-soul sick protagonist and the skill to give the gritty material a properly noir tone. As for the Collector, whom Connelly tells us "tastes words like unfamiliar food," Sanders conjures up a raspy whisper that carries more than the hint of a distaste for life. It also contains an echo of Parker's voice, which follows the author's suggestion that the Collector may be a specter of the detective's imagination. In any case, the sound, like the novel itself, is as unnerving as a fever dream. Simultaneous release with the Atria hardcover (Reviews, Mar. 26). (May)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationDetective Charlie Parker is stuck between those wishing to find a missing psychiatrist who harmed children in his care and those who wish he were dead. With a ten-city tour. Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
Loading...It was an overcast late November morning, the grass splintered by hoarfrost, and winter grinning through the gaps in the clouds like a bad clown peering through the curtains before the show begins. The city was slowing down. Soon the cold would hit hard, and, like an animal, Portland had stored its fat for the long months ahead. There were tourist dollars in the bank; enough, it was hoped, to tide everyone over until Memorial Day. The streets were quieter than they once were. The locals, who coexisted sometimes uneasily with the leaf peepers and outlet shoppers, now had their home almost to themselves once more. They claimed their regular tables in diners and coffee shops, in restaurants and bars. There was time to pass idle conversation with waitresses and chefs, the professionals no longer run ragged by the demands of customers whose names they did not know. At this time of year, it was possible to feel the true rhythm of the small city, the slow beating of its heart untroubled by the false stimulus of those who came from away.
I was sitting at a corner table in the Porthole, eating bacon and fried potatoes and not watching Kathleen Kennedy and Stephen Frazier talking about the secretary of state's surprise visit to Iraq. There was no sound from the TV, which made ignoring it a whole lot easier. A stove fire burned next to the window overlooking the water, the masts of the fishing boats bobbed and swayed in the morning breeze, and a handful of people occupied the other tables, just enough to create the kind of welcoming ambience that a breakfast venue required, for such things rely on a subtle balance.
The Porthole still lookedlike it did when I was growing up, perhaps even as it had since it first opened in 1929. There were green-marbled linoleum tiles on the floor, cracked here and there but spotlessly clean. A long, wooden counter, topped with copper, stretched almost the entire length of the room, its black-cushioned metal stools anchored to the floor, the counter dotted with glasses, condiments, and two glass plates of freshly baked muffins. The walls were painted light green, and if you stood up, you could peer into the kitchen through the twin serving hatches divided by a painted "Scallops" sign. A chalkboard announced the day's specials, and there were five beer taps serving Guinness, a few Allagash and Shipyard ales, and, for those who didn't know any better, or who did and just didn't give a rat's ass, Coors Light. There were buoys hanging from the walls, which in any other dining establishment in the Old Port might have come across as kitsch but here were simply a reflection of the fact that this was a place frequented by locals who fished. One wall was almost entirely glass, so even on the dullest of mornings the Porthole appeared to be flooded with light.
In the Porthole you were always aware of the comforting buzz of conversation, but you could never quite hear all of what anyone nearby was saying, not clearly. This morning about twenty people were eating, drinking, and easing themselves into the day the way Mainers will do. Five workers from the Harbor Fish Market sat in a row at the bar, all dressed identically in blue jeans, hooded tops, and baseball caps, laughing and stretching in the warmth, their faces bitten red by the elements. Beside me, four businessmen had cell phones and notepads interspersed with their white coffee mugs, making out as if they were working but, from the occasional snatches that drifted over to me and could be understood, seemingly more interested in singing the praises of Pirates coach Kevin Dineen. Across from them, two women, a mother and daughter, were having one of those discussions that required a lot of hand gestures and shocked expressions. They looked as if they were having a ball.
I liked the Porthole. The tourists don't come here much, certainly not in winter, and even in summer they hadn't tended to disturb the balance much until someone strung a banner over Wharf Street advertising the fact that there was more to this seemingly unpromising stretch of waterfront than met the eye: Boone's Seafood Restaurant, the Harbor Fish Market, the Comedy Connection, and the Porthole itself. Even that hadn't exactly led to an onslaught. Banner or no banner, the Porthole didn't scream the fact of its existence, and a battered soda sign and a fluttering flag were the only actual indication of its presence visible from the main drag of Commercial. In a sense, you kind of needed to know that it was there to see it in the first place, especially on dark winter mornings, and any lingering tourists walking along Commercial at the start of a bitter Maine winter's day needed to have a pretty good idea of where they were headed if they were going to make it to spring with their health intact. Faced with a bracing nor'easter, few had the time or the inclination to explore the hidden corners of the city.
Still, off-season travelers sometimes made their way past the fish market and the comedy club, their feet echoing solidly on the old wood of the boardwalk that bordered the wharf to the left, and found themselves at the Porthole's door, and it was a good bet that the next time they came to Portland, they would head straight for the Porthole again, but maybe they wouldn't tell too many of their friends about it because it was the kind of place that you liked to keep to yourself. There was a deck outside overlooking the water, where people could sit and eat in summer, but in winter they removed the tables and left the deck empty. I think I liked it better in winter. I could take a cup of coffee in hand and head out, safe in the knowledge that most folks preferred to drink their coffee inside where it was warm, and that I wasn't likely to be disturbed by anyone. I would smell the salt, and feel the sea breeze on my skin, and if the wind and the weather were right, the scent would remain with me for the rest of the morning. Mostly, I liked that scent. Sometimes, if I was feeling bad, I didn't care so much for it, because the taste of the salt on my lips reminded me of tears, as if I had recently tried to kiss away another's pain. When that happened, I thought of Rachel, and of Sam, my daughter. Often, too, I thought of the wife and daughter who had gone before them.
Days like that were silent days.
But today I was inside, and I was wearing a jacket and tie. The tie was a deep red Hugo Boss, the jacket Armani, yet nobody in Maine ever paid much attention to labels. Everyone figured that if you were wearing it, then you'd bought it at a discount, and if you hadn't and had paid ticket instead, then you were an idiot.
I hadn't paid ticket.
The front door opened, and a woman entered. She was wearing a black pantsuit and a coat that had probably cost her a lot when she bought it but was now showing its age. Her hair was black, but colored with something that lent it a hint of red. She looked a little surprised by her surroundings, as though, having made her way down past the battered exteriors of the wharf buildings, she had expected to be mugged by pirates. Her eyes alighted on me and her head tilted quizzically. I raised a finger, and she made her way through the tables to where I sat. I rose to meet her, and we shook hands.
"Mr. Parker?" she said.
"Ms. Clay."
"I'm sorry I'm late. There was an accident on the bridge. The traffic was backed up a ways."
Rebecca Clay had called me the day before, asking if I might be able to help her with a problem she was having. She was being stalked, and, not surprisingly, she didn't much care for it. The cops had been able to do nothing. The man, she said, seemed almost to sense their coming, because he was always gone by the time they arrived, no matter how stealthily they approached the vicinity of her house when she reported his presence.
I had been doing as much general work as I could get, in part to keep my mind off the absence of Rachel and Sam. We had been apart, on and off, for about nine months. I'm not even sure how things had deteriorated so badly, and so quickly. It seemed like one minute they were there, filling the house with their scents and their sounds, and the next they were leaving for Rachel's parents' house, but, of course, it wasn't like that at all. Looking back, I could see every turn in the road, every dip and curve, that had led us to where we now were. It was supposed to be a temporary thing, a chance for both of us to consider, to take a little time out from each other and try to recall what it was about the other person with whom we shared our life that was so important to us we could not live without it. But such arrangements are never temporary, not really. There is a sundering, a rift that occurs, and even if an accommodation is reached, and a decision made to try again, the fact that one person left the other is never really forgotten, or forgiven. That makes it sound like it was her fault, but it wasn't. I'm not sure that it was mine either, not entirely. She had to make a choice, and so did I, but her choice was dependent upon the one that I made. In the end, I let them both go, but in the hope that they would return. We still talked, and I could see Sam whenever I wanted to, but the fact that they were over in Vermont made that a little difficult. Distances notwithstanding, I was careful about visiting, and not just because I didn't want to complicate an already difficult situation. I took care because I still believed that there were those who would hurt them to get at me. I think that was why I let them leave. It's so hard to remember now. The last year had been...difficult. I missed them a great deal, but I did not know either how to bring them back into my life, or how to live with their absence. They had left a void in my existence, and others had tried to take their place, the ones who waited in the shadows.
The first wife, and the first daughter.
I ordered coffee for Rebecca Clay. A beam of morning sunlight shone mercilessly upon her, exposing the lines in her face, the gray seeping into her hair despite the color job, the dark patches beneath her eyes. Some of that was probably due to the man she claimed was bothering her, but it was clear that much of it had deeper origins. The troubles of her life had aged her prematurely. From the way her makeup had been applied, hurriedly and heavily, it was possible to guess that here was a woman who didn't like looking in the mirror for too long, and who didn't like what she saw staring back at her when she did.
"I don't think I've ever been here before," she said. "Portland has changed so much these last few years, it's a wonder that this place has survived."
She was right, I supposed. The city was changing, but older, quirkier remnants of its past somehow contrived to remain: used bookstores, and barbershops, and bars where the menu never changed because the food had always been good, right from the start. That was why the Porthole had survived. Those who knew about it valued it, and made sure to pass a little business its way whenever they could.
Her coffee arrived. She added sugar, then stirred it for too long.
"What can I do for you, Ms. Clay?"
She stopped stirring, content to begin speaking now that the conversation had been started for her.
"It's like I told you on the phone. A man has been bothering me."
"Bothering you how?"
"He hangs around outside my house. I live out by Willard Beach. I've seen him in Freeport too, or when I've been shopping at the mall."
"Was he in a car, or on foot?"
"On foot."
"Has he entered your property?"
"No."
"Has he threatened you, or physically assaulted you in any way?"
"No."
"How long has this been going on?"
"Just over a week."
"Has he spoken to you?"
"Only once, two days ago."
"What did he say?"
"He told me that he was looking for my father. My daughter and I live in my father's old house now. He said he had some business with him."
"How did you respond to that?"
"I told him that I hadn't seen my father in years. I told him that, as far as I was aware, my father was dead. In fact, since earlier this year he's been legally dead. I went through all of the paperwork. I didn't want to, but I suppose it was important to me, and to my daughter, that we finally achieved some kind of closure."
"Tell me about your father."
"He was a child psychiatrist, a good one. He worked with adults too, sometimes, but they had usually suffered some kind of trauma in childhood and felt that he could help them with it. Then things started to change for him. There was a difficult case: a man was accused of abuse by his son in the course of a custody dispute. My father felt that the allegations had substance, and his findings led to custody being granted to the mother, but the son subsequently retracted his accusations and said that his mother had convinced him to say those things. By then it was too late for the father. Word had leaked out about the allegations, probably from the mother. He lost his job and got beaten up pretty badly by some men in a bar. He ended up shooting himself dead in his bedroom. My father took it badly, and there were complaints filed about his conduct of the original interviews with the boy. The Board of Licensure dismissed them, but after that my father wasn't asked to conduct any further evaluations in abuse cases. It shook his confidence, I think."
"When was this?"
"About six years ago, maybe a little more. It got worse after that." She shook her head in apparent disbelief at the memory. "Even talking about it, I realize how crazy it all sounds. It was just a mess." She looked around to reassure herself that nobody was listening, then lowered her voice a little. "It emerged that some of my father's patients were sexually abused by a group of men, and there were questions asked again about my father's methods and his reliability. My father blamed himself for what happened. Other people did too. The Board of Licensure summoned him to appear for an initial informal meeting to discuss what had happened, but he never made it. He drove out to the edge of the North Woods, abandoned his car, and that was the last anyone ever saw or heard of him. The police looked for him, but they never found any trace. That was in late September 1999."
Clay. Rebecca Clay.
"You're Daniel Clay's daughter?"
She nodded. Something flashed across her face. It was an involuntary spasm, a kind of wince. I knew a little about Daniel Clay. Portland is a small place, a city in name only. Stories like Daniel Clay's tended to linger in the collective memory. I didn't know too many of the details, but like everyone else I'd heard the rumors. Rebecca Clay had summarized the circumstances of her father's disappearance in the most general terms, and I didn't blame her for leaving out the rest: the whispers that Dr. Daniel Clay might have known about what was happening to some of the children with whom he was dealing, the possibility that he might have colluded in it, might even have engaged in abuse himself. There had been an investigation of sorts, but there were records missing from his office, and the confidential nature of his vocation made it difficult to follow up leads. There was also the absence of any solid evidence against him, but that didn't stop people from talking and drawing their own conclusions.
I looked closer at Rebecca Clay. Her father's identity made her appearance a little easier to understand. I imagined that she kept herself to herself. There would be friends, but not many. Daniel Clay had cast a shadow upon his daughter's life, and she had wilted under its influence.
"So you told this man, the one who's been stalking you, that you hadn't seen your father for a long time. How did he react?"
"He tapped the side of his nose and winked." She replicated the gesture for me. "Then he said, 'Liar, liar, pants on fire.' He told me that he'd give me some time to think about what I was saying. After that, he just walked away."
"Why would he call you a liar? Did he give any indication that he might know something more about your father's disappearance?"
"No."
"And the police haven't been able to trace him?"
"He melts away. I think they believe I'm making up stories to get attention, but I'm not. I wouldn't do that. I"
I waited.
"You know about my father. There are those who believe that he did something wrong. I think the police believe it too, and sometimes I wonder if they think I know more than I do about what happened, and that I've been protecting my father for all this time. When they came to the house, I knew what was on their minds: that I did know where he was, and somehow I've been in contact with him over the years."
"And have you?"
She blinked hard, but she held my gaze.
"No."
"But now it seems like the police aren't the only ones who doubt your story. What does this man look like?"
"He's in his sixties, I think. His hair is black. It looks dyed, and it's in kind of a quiff, the way those 'fifties rock stars used to wear their hair. He has brown eyes, and there's scarring here." She pointed to her forehead, just below her hairline. "There are three parallel marks, like someone dug a fork into his skin and dragged it down. He's short, maybe five-five or so, but stocky. His arms are real big, and there are folds of muscle at the back of his neck. He mostly wears the same clothes: blue jeans and a T-shirt, sometimes with a black suit jacket, other times with an old black leather jacket. He has a paunch, but he's not fat, not really. His nails are very short, and he keeps himself real clean, except"
She stopped. I didn't disturb her as she tried to figure out the best way of formulating what she wanted to say.
"He wears some kind of cologne. It's wicked strong, but when he was speaking to me, it was like I caught a hint of whatever it was masking. It was a bad smell, a kind of animal stench. It made me want to run away from him."
"Did he tell you his name?"
"No. He just said that he had business with my father. I kept telling him my father was dead, but he shook his head and smiled at me. He said he wouldn't believe any man was dead until he could smell the body."
"Have you any idea why this man should have turned up now, so many years after your father's disappearance?"
"He didn't say. It could be that he heard news of the legal declaration of my father's death."
For probate purposes, under Maine law, a person was presumed dead after a continuous absence of five years during which time he had not been heard from and his absence had not been satisfactorily explained. In some cases, the court could order a "reasonably diligent" search, the notification of law enforcement and public welfare officials about the details of the case, and require that a request for information be posted in the newspapers. According to Rebecca Clay, she had complied with all the conditions that the court had set, but no further information about her father had emerged as a result.
"There was also a piece about my father in an art magazine earlier this year, after I sold a couple of his paintings. I needed the money. My father was a pretty talented artist. He spent a lot of time in the woods, painting and sketching. His work doesn't go for much by modern standardsthe most I ever got for one was a thousand dollarsbut I've been able to sell some from time to time when money was scarce. My father didn't exhibit, and he produced only a relatively small body of work. He sold by word of mouth, and his paintings were always sought after by those collectors familiar with him. By the end of his life he was receiving offers to buy work that didn't even exist yet."
"What kind of paintings are we talking about?"
"Landscapes, mostly. I can probably show you some photographs if you're interested. I've sold them all now, apart from one."
I knew some people in Portland's art scene. I thought I might ask them about Daniel Clay. In the meantime, there was the matter of the man who was bothering his daughter.
"I'm not just concerned for my own sake," she said. "My daughter, Jenna, she's just eleven. I'm afraid to let her out of the house alone now. I've tried to explain to her a little of what's been happening, but I don't want to frighten her too much either."
"What do you want me to do about this man?" I said. It seemed like a strange question to ask, I knew, but it was necessary. Rebecca Clay had to understand what she was getting herself into.
"I want you to talk to him. I want you to make him go away."
"That's two different things."
"What?"
"Talking to him and making him go away."
She looked puzzled. "You'll have to excuse me," she said. "I'm not following you."
"We need to be clear on some things before we begin. I can approach him on your behalf, and we can try to clear all of this up without trouble. It could be that he'll see reason and go about his business, but from what you've told me it sounds like he's got some notions fixed in his head, which means that he might not go without a fight. If that's the case, either we can try to get the cops to take him in, and look for a court order preventing him from approaching you, which can be hard to get and even harder to enforce, or we can find some other way to convince him that he should leave you alone."
"You mean threaten him, or hurt him?"
She seemed to quite like the idea. I didn't blame her. I had met people who had endured years of harassment from individuals, and had seen them worn down by tension and distress. Some of them had resorted to violence in the end, but it usually just led to an escalation of the problem. One couple I knew had even ended up being sued by the wife's stalker after the husband threw a punch in frustration, further entangling their lives with his.
"They're options," I said, "but they leave us open to charges of assault, or threatening behavior. Worse, if the situation is not handled carefully, then this whole affair could get much worse. Right now, he hasn't done more than make you uneasy, which is bad enough. If we strike at him, he may decide to strike back. It could put you in real danger."
She almost slumped with frustration.
"So what can I do?"
"Look," I said, "I'm not trying to make out that there's no hope of resolving this painlessly. I just want you to understand that if he decides to stick around, then there are no quick fixes."
She perked up slightly. "So you'll take the job?"
I told her my rates. I informed her that, as a one-man agency, I wouldn't take on other jobs that might conflict with my work on her behalf. If it became necessary to call on outside help, I would advise her of any additional costs that might arise. At any point, she could call a halt to our arrangement, and I would try to help her find some other way of handling her problem before I left the job. She seemed content with that. I took payment up front for the first week. I didn't exactly need the money for myselfmy lifestyle was pretty simplebut I made a point of sending some money to Rachel every month even though she said it wasn't necessary.
I agreed to start the following day. I would stay close to Rebecca Clay when she headed out to work in the mornings. She would inform me when she was leaving her office for lunch, for meetings, or to go home in the evening. Her house was fitted with an alarm, but I arranged to have someone check it out, just in case, and to fit extra bolts and chains if necessary. I would be outside before she left in the morning, and I would remain within sight of the house until she went to bed. At any time she could contact me, and I would be with her within twenty minutes.
I asked her if, by any chance, she might have a photograph of her father that she could give me. She had anticipated the request although she appeared slightly reluctant to hand it over after she had taken it from her bag. It showed a thin, gangly man wearing a green tweed suit. His hair was snow-white, his eyebrows bushy. He wore a pair of steel-rimmed spectacles, and he had a stern, old-fashioned air of academia about him. He looked like a man who belonged amid clay pipes and leather-bound volumes.
"I'll have some copies made and get it back to you," I said.
"I have others," she replied. "Hold on to it for as long as you need to."
She asked me if I would keep an eye on her while she was in town that day. She worked in real estate and had some business to attend to for a couple of hours. She was worried that the man might approach her while she was in the city. She offered to pay me extra, but I declined. I had nothing better to do anyway.
So I followed her for the rest of the day. Nothing happened, and there was no sign of the man with the dated quiff and the scars upon his face. It was tedious and tiring, but at least it meant that I did not have to return to my house, my not-quite-empty house. I shadowed her so that my own ghosts could not shadow me.
Copyright © 2007 by John Connolly
Chapter One
It was an overcast late November morning, the grass splintered by hoarfrost, and winter grinning through the gaps in the clouds like a bad clown peering through the curtains before the show begins. The city was slowing down. Soon the cold would hit hard, and, like an animal, Portland had stored its fat for the long months ahead. There were tourist dollars in the bank; enough, it was hoped, to tide everyone over until Memorial Day. The streets were quieter than they once were. The locals, who coexisted sometimes uneasily with the leaf peepers and outlet shoppers, now had their home almost to themselves once more. They claimed their regular tables in diners and coffee shops, in restaurants and bars. There was time to pass idle conversation with waitresses and chefs, the professionals no longer run ragged by the demands of customers whose names they did not know. At this time of year, it was possible to feel the true rhythm of the small city, the slow beating of its heart untroubled by the false stimulus of those who came from away.
I was sitting at a corner table in the Porthole, eating bacon and fried potatoes and not watching Kathleen Kennedy and Stephen Frazier talking about the secretary of state's surprise visit to Iraq. There was no sound from the TV, which madeignoring it a whole lot easier. A stove fire burned next to the window overlooking the water, the masts of the fishing boats bobbed and swayed in the morning breeze, and a handful of people occupied the other tables, just enough to create the kind of welcoming ambience that a breakfast venue required, for such things rely on a subtle balance.
The Porthole still looked like it did when I was growing up, perhaps even as it had since it first opened in 1929. There were green-marbled linoleum tiles on the floor, cracked here and there but spotlessly clean. A long, wooden counter, topped with copper, stretched almost the entire length of the room, its black-cushioned metal stools anchored to the floor, the counter dotted with glasses, condiments, and two glass plates of freshly baked muffins. The walls were painted light green, and if you stood up, you could peer into the kitchen through the twin serving hatches divided by a painted "Scallops" sign. A chalkboard announced the day's specials, and there were five beer taps serving Guinness, a few Allagash and Shipyard ales, and, for those who didn't know any better, or who did and just didn't give a rat's ass, Coors Light. There were buoys hanging from the walls, which in any other dining establishment in the Old Port might have come across as kitsch but here were simply a reflection of the fact that this was a place frequented by locals who fished. One wall was almost entirely glass, so even on the dullest of mornings the Porthole appeared to be flooded with light.
In the Porthole you were always aware of the comforting buzz of conversation, but you could never quite hear all of what anyone nearby was saying, not clearly. This morning about twenty people were eating, drinking, and easing themselves into the day the way Mainers will do. Five workers from the Harbor Fish Market sat in a row at the bar, all dressed identically in blue jeans, hooded tops, and baseball caps, laughing and stretching in the warmth, their faces bitten red by the elements. Beside me, four businessmen had cell phones and notepads interspersed with their white coffee mugs, making out as if they were working but, from the occasional snatches that drifted over to me and could be understood, seemingly more interested in singing the praises of Pirates coach Kevin Dineen. Across from them, two women, a mother and daughter, were having one of those discussions that required a lot of hand gestures and shocked expressions. They looked as if they were having a ball.
I liked the Porthole. The tourists don't come here much, certainly not in winter, and even in summer they hadn't tended to disturb the balance much until someone strung a banner over Wharf Street advertising the fact that there was more to this seemingly unpromising stretch of waterfront than met the eye: Boone's Seafood Restaurant, the Harbor Fish Market, the Comedy Connection, and the Porthole itself. Even that hadn't exactly led to an onslaught. Banner or no banner, the Porthole didn't scream the fact of its existence, and a battered soda sign and a fluttering flag were the only actual indication of its presence visible from the main drag of Commercial. In a sense, you kind of needed to know that it was there to see it in the first place, especially on dark winter mornings, and any lingering tourists walking along Commercial at the start of a bitter Maine winter's day needed to have a pretty good idea of where they were headed if they were going to make it to spring with their health intact. Faced with a bracing nor'easter, few had the time or the inclination to explore the hidden corners of the city.
Still, off-season travelers sometimes made their way past the fish market and the comedy club, their feet echoing solidly on the old wood of the boardwalk that bordered the wharf to the left, and found themselves at the Porthole's door, and it was a good bet that the next time they came to Portland, they would head straight for the Porthole again, but maybe they wouldn't tell too many of their friends about it because it was the kind of place that you liked to keep to yourself. There was a deck outside overlooking the water, where people could sit and eat in summer, but in winter they removed the tables and left the deck empty. I think I liked it better in winter. I could take a cup of coffee in hand and head out, safe in the knowledge that most folks preferred to drink their coffee inside where it was warm, and that I wasn't likely to be disturbed by anyone. I would smell the salt, and feel the sea breeze on my skin, and if the wind and the weather were right, the scent would remain with me for the rest of the morning. Mostly, I liked that scent. Sometimes, if I was feeling bad, I didn't care so much for it, because the taste of the salt on my lips reminded me of tears, as if I had recently tried to kiss away another's pain. When that happened, I thought of Rachel, and of Sam, my daughter. Often, too, I thought of the wife and daughter who had gone before them.
Days like that were silent days.
But today I was inside, and I was wearing a jacket and tie. The tie was a deep red Hugo Boss, the jacket Armani, yet nobody in Maine ever paid much attention to labels. Everyone figured that if you were wearing it, then you'd bought it at a discount, and if you hadn't and had paid ticket instead, then you were an idiot.
I hadn't paid ticket.
The front door opened, and a woman entered. She was wearing a black pantsuit and a coat that had probably cost her a lot when she bought it but was now showing its age. Her hair was black, but colored with something that lent it a hint of red. She looked a little surprised by her surroundings, as though, having made her way down past the battered exteriors of the wharf buildings, she had expected to be mugged by pirates. Her eyes alighted on me and her head tilted quizzically. I raised a finger, and she made her way through the tables to where I sat. I rose to meet her, and we shook hands.
"Mr. Parker?" she said.
"Ms. Clay."
"I'm sorry I'm late. There was an accident on the bridge. The traffic was backed up a ways."
Rebecca Clay had called me the day before, asking if I might be able to help her with a problem she was having. She was being stalked, and, not surprisingly, she didn't much care for it. The cops had been able to do nothing. The man, she said, seemed almost to sense their coming, because he was always gone by the time they arrived, no matter how stealthily they approached the vicinity of her house when she reported his presence.
I had been doing as much general work as I could get, in part to keep my mind off the absence of Rachel and Sam. We had been apart, on and off, for about nine months. I'm not even sure how things had deteriorated so badly, and so quickly. It seemed like one minute they were there, filling the house with their scents and their sounds, and the next they were leaving for Rachel's parents' house, but, of course, it wasn't like that at all. Looking back, I could see every turn in the road, every dip and curve, that had led us to where we now were. It was supposed to be a temporary thing, a chance for both of us to consider, to take a little time out from each other and try to recall what it was about the other person with whom we shared our life that was so important to us we could not live without it. But such arrangements are never temporary, not really. There is a sundering, a rift that occurs, and even if an accommodation is reached, and a decision made to try again, the fact that one person left the other is never really forgotten, or forgiven. That makes it sound like it was her fault, but it wasn't. I'm not sure that it was mine either, not entirely. She had to make a choice, and so did I, but her choice was dependent upon the one that I made. In the end, I let them both go, but in the hope that they would return. We still talked, and I could see Sam whenever I wanted to, but the fact that they were over in Vermont made that a little difficult. Distances notwithstanding, I was careful about visiting, and not just because I didn't want to complicate an already difficult situation. I took care because I still believed that there were those who would hurt them to get at me. I think that was why I let them leave. It's so hard to remember now. The last year had been...difficult. I missed them a great deal, but I did not know either how to bring them back into my life, or how to live with their absence. They had left a void in my existence, and others had tried to take their place, the ones who waited in the shadows.
The first wife, and the first daughter.
I ordered coffee for Rebecca Clay. A beam of morning sunlight shone mercilessly upon her, exposing the lines in her face, the gray seeping into her hair despite the color job, the dark patches beneath her eyes. Some of that was probably due to the man she claimed was bothering her, but it was clear that much of it had deeper origins. The troubles of her life had aged her prematurely. From the way her makeup had been applied, hurriedly and heavily, it was possible to guess that here was a woman who didn't like looking in the mirror for too long, and who didn't like what she saw staring back at her when she did.
"I don't think I've ever been here before," she said. "Portland has changed so much these last few years, it's a wonder that this place has survived."
She was right, I supposed. The city was changing, but older, quirkier remnants of its past somehow contrived to remain: used bookstores, and barbershops, and bars where the menu never changed because the food had always been good, right from the start. That was why the Porthole had survived. Those who knew about it valued it, and made sure to pass a little business its way whenever they could.
Her coffee arrived. She added sugar, then stirred it for too long.
"What can I do for you, Ms. Clay?"
She stopped stirring, content to begin speaking now that the conversation had been started for her.
"It's like I told you on the phone. A man has been bothering me."
"Bothering you how?"
"He hangs around outside my house. I live out by Willard Beach. I've seen him in Freeport too, or when I've been shopping at the mall."
"Was he in a car, or on foot?"
"On foot."
"Has he entered your property?"
"No."
"Has he threatened you, or physically assaulted you in any way?"
"No."
"How long has this been going on?"
"Just over a week."
"Has he spoken to you?"
"Only once, two days ago."
"What did he say?"
"He told me that he was looking for my father. My daughter and I live in my father's old house now. He said he had some business with him."
"How did you respond to that?"
"I told him that I hadn't seen my father in years. I told him that, as far as I was aware, my father was dead. In fact, since earlier this year he's been legally dead. I went through all of the paperwork. I didn't want to, but I suppose it was important to me, and to my daughter, that we finally achieved some kind of closure."
"Tell me about your father."
"He was a child psychiatrist, a good one. He worked with adults too, sometimes, but they had usually suffered some kind of trauma in childhood and felt that he could help them with it. Then things started to change for him. There was a difficult case: a man was accused of abuse by his son in the course of a custody dispute. My father felt that the allegations had substance, and his findings led to custody being granted to the mother, but the son subsequently retracted his accusations and said that his mother had convinced him to say those things. By then it was too late for the father. Word had leaked out about the allegations, probably from the mother. He lost his job and got beaten up pretty badly by some men in a bar. He ended up shooting himself dead in his bedroom. My father took it badly, and there were complaints filed about his conduct of the original interviews with the boy. The Board of Licensure dismissed them, but after that my father wasn't asked to conduct any further evaluations in abuse cases. It shook his confidence, I think."
"When was this?"
"About six years ago, maybe a little more. It got worse after that." She shook her head in apparent disbelief at the memory. "Even talking about it, I realize how crazy it all sounds. It was just a mess." She looked around to reassure herself that nobody was listening, then lowered her voice a little. "It emerged that some of my father's patients were sexually abused by a group of men, and there were questions asked again about my father's methods and his reliability. My father blamed himself for what happened. Other people did too. The Board of Licensure summoned him to appear for an initial informal meeting to discuss what had happened, but he never made it. He drove out to the edge of the North Woods, abandoned his car, and that was the last anyone ever saw or heard of him. The police looked for him, but they never found any trace. That was in late September 1999."
Clay. Rebecca Clay.
"You're Daniel Clay's daughter?"
She nodded. Something flashed across her face. It was an involuntary spasm, a kind of wince. I knew a little about Daniel Clay. Portland is a small place, a city in name only. Stories like Daniel Clay's tended to linger in the collective memory. I didn't know too many of the details, but like everyone else I'd heard the rumors. Rebecca Clay had summarized the circumstances of her father's disappearance in the most general terms, and I didn't blame her for leaving out the rest: the whispers that Dr. Daniel Clay might have known about what was happening to some of the children with whom he was dealing, the possibility that he might have colluded in it, might even have engaged in abuse himself. There had been an investigation of sorts, but there were records missing from his office, and the confidential nature of his vocation made it difficult to follow up leads. There was also the absence of any solid evidence against him, but that didn't stop people from talking and drawing their own conclusions.
I looked closer at Rebecca Clay. Her father's identity made her appearance a little easier to understand. I imagined that she kept herself to herself. There would be friends, but not many. Daniel Clay had cast a shadow upon his daughter's life, and she had wilted under its influence.
"So you told this man, the one who's been stalking you, that you hadn't seen your father for a long time. How did he react?"
"He tapped the side of his nose and winked." She replicated the gesture for me. "Then he said, 'Liar, liar, pants on fire.' He told me that he'd give me some time to think about what I was saying. After that, he just walked away."
"Why would he call you a liar? Did he give any indication that he might know something more about your father's disappearance?"
"No."
"And the police haven't been able to trace him?"
"He melts away. I think they believe I'm making up stories to get attention, but I'm not. I wouldn't do that. I -- "
I waited.
"You know about my father. There are those who believe that he did something wrong. I think the police believe it too, and sometimes I wonder if they think I know more than I do about what happened, and that I've been protecting my father for all this time. When they came to the house, I knew what was on their minds: that I did know where he was, and somehow I've been in contact with him over the years."
"And have you?"
She blinked hard, but she held my gaze.
"No."
"But now it seems like the police aren't the only ones who doubt your story. What does this man look like?"
"He's in his sixties, I think. His hair is black. It looks dyed, and it's in kind of a quiff, the way those 'fifties rock stars used to wear their hair. He has brown eyes, and there's scarring here." She pointed to her forehead, just below her hairline. "There are three parallel marks, like someone dug a fork into his skin and dragged it down. He's short, maybe five-five or so, but stocky. His arms are real big, and there are folds of muscle at the back of his neck. He mostly wears the same clothes: blue jeans and a T-shirt, sometimes with a black suit jacket, other times with an old black leather jacket. He has a paunch, but he's not fat, not really. His nails are very short, and he keeps himself real clean, except -- "
She stopped. I didn't disturb her as she tried to figure out the best way of formulating what she wanted to say.
"He wears some kind of cologne. It's wicked strong, but when he was speaking to me, it was like I caught a hint of whatever it was masking. It was a bad smell, a kind of animal stench. It made me want to run away from him."
"Did he tell you his name?"
"No. He just said that he had business with my father. I kept telling him my father was dead, but he shook his head and smiled at me. He said he wouldn't believe any man was dead until he could smell the body."
"Have you any idea why this man should have turned up now, so many years after your father's disappearance?"
"He didn't say. It could be that he heard news of the legal declaration of my father's death."
For probate purposes, under Maine law, a person was presumed dead after a continuous absence of five years during which time he had not been heard from and his absence had not been satisfactorily explained. In some cases, the court could order a "reasonably diligent" search, the notification of law enforcement and public welfare officials about the details of the case, and require that a request for information be posted in the newspapers. According to Rebecca Clay, she had complied with all the conditions that the court had set, but no further information about her father had emerged as a result.
"There was also a piece about my father in an art magazine earlier this year, after I sold a couple of his paintings. I needed the money. My father was a pretty talented artist. He spent a lot of time in the woods, painting and sketching. His work doesn't go for much by modern standards -- the most I ever got for one was a thousand dollars -- but I've been able to sell some from time to time when money was scarce. My father didn't exhibit, and he produced only a relatively small body of work. He sold by word of mouth, and his paintings were always sought after by those collectors familiar with him. By the end of his life he was receiving offers to buy work that didn't even exist yet."
"What kind of paintings are we talking about?"
"Landscapes, mostly. I can probably show you some photographs if you're interested. I've sold them all now, apart from one."
I knew some people in Portland's art scene. I thought I might ask them about Daniel Clay. In the meantime, there was the matter of the man who was bothering his daughter.
"I'm not just concerned for my own sake," she said. "My daughter, Jenna, she's just eleven. I'm afraid to let her out of the house alone now. I've tried to explain to her a little of what's been happening, but I don't want to frighten her too much either."
"What do you want me to do about this man?" I said. It seemed like a strange question to ask, I knew, but it was necessary. Rebecca Clay had to understand what she was getting herself into.
"I want you to talk to him. I want you to make him go away."
"That's two different things."
"What?"
"Talking to him and making him go away."
She looked puzzled. "You'll have to excuse me," she said. "I'm not following you."
"We need to be clear on some things before we begin. I can approach him on your behalf, and we can try to clear all of this up without trouble. It could be that he'll see reason and go about his business, but from what you've told me it sounds like he's got some notions fixed in his head, which means that he might not go without a fight. If that's the case, either we can try to get the cops to take him in, and look for a court order preventing him from approaching you, which can be hard to get and even harder to enforce, or we can find some other way to convince him that he should leave you alone."
"You mean threaten him, or hurt him?"
She seemed to quite like the idea. I didn't blame her. I had met people who had endured years of harassment from individuals, and had seen them worn down by tension and distress. Some of them had resorted to violence in the end, but it usually just led to an escalation of the problem. One couple I knew had even ended up being sued by the wife's stalker after the husband threw a punch in frustration, further entangling their lives with his.
"They're options," I said, "but they leave us open to charges of assault, or threatening behavior. Worse, if the situation is not handled carefully, then this whole affair could get much worse. Right now, he hasn't done more than make you uneasy, which is bad enough. If we strike at him, he may decide to strike back. It could put you in real danger."
She almost slumped with frustration.
"So what can I do?"
"Look," I said, "I'm not trying to make out that there's no hope of resolving this painlessly. I just want you to understand that if he decides to stick around, then there are no quick fixes."
She perked up slightly. "So you'll take the job?"
I told her my rates. I informed her that, as a one-man agency, I wouldn't take on other jobs that might conflict with my work on her behalf. If it became necessary to call on outside help, I would advise her of any additional costs that might arise. At any point, she could call a halt to our arrangement, and I would try to help her find some other way of handling her problem before I left the job. She seemed content with that. I took payment up front for the first week. I didn't exactly need the money for myself -- my lifestyle was pretty simple -- but I made a point of sending some money to Rachel every month even though she said it wasn't necessary.
I agreed to start the following day. I would stay close to Rebecca Clay when she headed out to work in the mornings. She would inform me when she was leaving her office for lunch, for meetings, or to go home in the evening. Her house was fitted with an alarm, but I arranged to have someone check it out, just in case, and to fit extra bolts and chains if necessary. I would be outside before she left in the morning, and I would remain within sight of the house until she went to bed. At any time she could contact me, and I would be with her within twenty minutes.
I asked her if, by any chance, she might have a photograph of her father that she could give me. She had anticipated the request although she appeared slightly reluctant to hand it over after she had taken it from her bag. It showed a thin, gangly man wearing a green tweed suit. His hair was snow-white, his eyebrows bushy. He wore a pair of steel-rimmed spectacles, and he had a stern, old-fashioned air of academia about him. He looked like a man who belonged amid clay pipes and leather-bound volumes.
"I'll have some copies made and get it back to you," I said.
"I have others," she replied. "Hold on to it for as long as you need to."
She asked me if I would keep an eye on her while she was in town that day. She worked in real estate and had some business to attend to for a couple of hours. She was worried that the man might approach her while she was in the city. She offered to pay me extra, but I declined. I had nothing better to do anyway.
So I followed her for the rest of the day. Nothing happened, and there was no sign of the man with the dated quiff and the scars upon his face. It was tedious and tiring, but at least it meant that I did not have to return to my house, my not-quite-empty house. I shadowed her so that my own ghosts could not shadow me.
Copyright © 2007 by John Connolly
Continues...
Excerpted from The Unquiet by John Connolly Copyright © 2007 by John Connolly. Excerpted by permission.
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