1

They boarded the ferry together at Woods Hole, the tall man with the brown hair and eyes, and the nine-year-old blonde who was his daughter. They sat together on the front seat of the Plymouth, and the dock boards squeaked a little as the car crossed them, and then the high vault of the ferry swallowed the car and the man followed the frenzied hand directions of the attendant, keeping to the right, pulling the Plymouth up behind a Cadillac.

This was the first time his daughter had been on a boat, and he could see her eyes reflected in the windshield, wide, and brown, and very frightened. Her hands were clutched over the small purse in her lap. She wore a blue cotton dress with a flare skirt, and a bright blue ribbon caught her hair into a golden ponytail. She looked very mature and very dressed-up but nevertheless very frightened. He put one hand over the hands on her purse.

“A penny for Penny’s,” he whispered, and a smile magically appeared on her mouth, the cheeks suddenly dimpling. It was her smile that bore the closest resemblance, he realized, her sudden radiant smile. It was her smile that struck deep inside, struck to a vulnerable sensitive core which layers and layers of practiced hardness could never cover. For a moment, the smile registered in his brown eyes, tracing them with pain. For a moment, memory swirled from the high overhead of the ferry, rushed into darkened corners of the automobile, drifted into raw corners of his mind.

He tried to shut it out. Deliberately, coldly, he tried to shut it out. He was here because of a memory, but the memory could not be served if he allowed it to affect his thinking. The thinking had to be cold and rational, concise and pure. The thinking …

A head appeared at Penny’s window. A politely nonintrusive smile preceded the voice.

“Would you turn off your motor, sir, and please pull up the hand brake?”

“Sure,” he said. His voice was deep and well modulated, instantly recognizable as a trained voice. He watched the attendant as he moved away from the car, working his way forward, repeating the same message at each parked automobile. Had this man been on the ferry last year too? He could not remember.

“He had freckles all over his face,” Penny said.

“That’s Freckles Malachy,” he answered. “Didn’t you know?” He watched her face blossom with delight, become instantly alert, the eyes bright and expectant.

“Tell me about Freckles,” she said.

“On the way topside,” he said. “Come on, honey.” He turned off the engine, and hoisted her out of the car. She took his hand the moment her feet touched the deck again. Together, they threaded their way through the parked cars, moving toward the forward ladder.

“What about Freckles?” she reminded him.

He began the story. The Malachy stories always began the same way, and they always ended the same way. It was their pattern, perhaps, which delighted the child. Mary had started the pattern one night four years ago, when Penny had been only five, when they’d still lived in Stuyvesant Town. The first Malachy story had been about Uncle Mike Malachy, a robust fellow who could hold his breath under water for an incredible twelve hours.

“Once upon a time,” Mary had said, “in the family called Malachy, here was a man named Uncle Mike Malachy.”

That had been the beginning. He had stood in the doorway to Penny’s room and watched his wife as she told her imaginative tale, the single light on the dresser spinning her hair into an airy web of glistening gold. She had gone on for fifteen minutes while Penny listened breathlessly, and then she had ended her story with the words which later formed the closing pattern for all stories: “And Uncle Mike Malachy—and all the Malachys—lived happily ever after.”

All the Malachys, he thought now—but not the Blakes. Not Mary Blake, and not Zachary Blake, and maybe not even Penny Blake. Unconsciously, he tightened his grip on her small hand.

“Once upon a time,” he said, “in the family called Malachy, there was a boy named Freckles Malachy.”

“Was he a cousin?” Penny asked.

“Yes, he was a cousin,” Zach said.

“Then his name was Cousin Freckles Malachy, wasn’t it?”

“Yes,” he said. “It was Cousin Freckles Malachy.”

“What did he do, Daddy?”

“He had the brightest, most gleaming freckles of anybody in the world,” he said, “but the freckles made him very sad …”

The ferry was under way. It nosed out of the slip and headed into Vineyard Sound. Zach talked to his daughter while they climbed to the upper deck. He found a chair for them, and then continued his story. And twenty minutes later, he ended the story with the pattern Mary had set so long ago, and he sat with his arms around the little girl, and watched the gulls overhead, and each time they shrieked they seemed to echo a single agonizing word.

And the word was Mary.

The island of Martha’s Vineyard looked forbidding.

It had not looked that way a year ago. Even looking back at the island when he was leaving, even after what had happened, even knowing what dread cargo the ferry had carried below, it had not seemed as forbidding then as it looked now. Perhaps it was the day. Perhaps the gray mists which shrouded the island were not what he’d expected.

There had been sunshine last summer, a month of incredibly bright sunshine which he’d shared with his wife on what they’d called their second honeymoon, even though they’d never really had a true first honeymoon. But for this trip alone, they had left Penny with her grandmother Blake, and they’d gone to Martha’s Vineyard because they’d heard it was a place untouched by time, a place of crashing surf and silent inland ponds, a place of lonely beach roads, of winging slender terns and crying flocks of gulls—a place away from the rat race.

He had, the last summer, just been a part of the biggest scramble in the history of television, a no-holds-barred, tooth-and-nail struggle for Resignac’s biggest broadcasting plum. Ed Liggett, the relentless interviewer who’d parlayed television’s deadliest half-hour into a commodity sponsors screamed for, had gone network. And in going network, he had left the interviewer’s chair open, and there wasn’t a performer at Resignac Broadcasting—either in radio or television—who didn’t want the job.

Zach got it.

It took a lot to get it. It always takes a lot to get something you really want. And then, after what happened on the Vineyard, he didn’t want it any more. He told both his bosses. He told Resenwald first, and then he told DeBoignac. They understood, they said. They gave him back his old 6:15 P.M. radio news commentary spot. He supposed now that he had thrown away the opportunity of a lifetime. His face could have become as well known as Ed Liggett’s. But at the time, he had not wanted to present his face to anyone. He wanted only a dark quiet corner, wanted only the anonymity of a radio microphone.

The boat edged into the slip at Vineyard Haven.

Zach and Penny went back to the car and waited their turn to disembark. The dock was loaded with cars and people. Women waved at arriving guests. Men in Bermuda shorts extended welcoming hands. Alongside the wood-paneled ferry waiting room, a man had set up an easel, and he painted a view of the Sound, oblivious to the crowd, his head bobbing from painting to water and back again. The Plymouth came off the boat and onto the dock. The Cadillac pulled to one side, waiting for the island infidels to clear the dock and the town before heading for the pined-and-moneyed exclusivity of West Chop. The Edgartown cocktail-and-regatta set were making their turns, cars brimming with guests. Zach turned the Plymouth in the opposite direction, heading up-island.

“It’s nice, Daddy,” Penny said. “Are we staying here?”

“We’re going up-island,” he told her. “To Menemsha.”

“Like Menemsha Skulnik?” she asked.

“This Menemsha is Indian,” he said.

“Really? Are there Indians here, Daddy?”

“Out at Gay Head there are.”

Penny considered this solemnly for a moment. Then she said, “Was it the Indians who killed Mommy?”

The question startled him. In his own grief, he had not imagined the child thought much about it.

“No,” he said. “Mommy drowned.”

Almost as if she were thinking aloud, Penny said, “Mommy was a good swimmer.”

“Yes,” he answered. “Mommy was a good swimmer.”