A new picket fence and freshly painted wooden sign announced the presence of a new business on Washington Island. This was a rare enough occurrence in these days of ever-shrinking prosperity, but under any circumstances would be the cause of festivities, in which everyone, even skeptics, would join.
“Windsome Farm Goats,” the sign said. “Makers of Artisanal Cheese.”
The wind blew a series of jaunty blue flags that ranged along the dirt drive to the barn, and, accompanied by her neighbors and a few remaining late-season tourists, Nancy Iverssen followed the flags up the hill. She was not a fan of this kind of thing. She had a new calf to see to, a broken switch on a heat lamp in the barn, and a rooster—whose long history of bad behavior had at last made his presence on the farm dispensable—to butcher. But her loyalty to the island and its welfare overrode her natural impatience. And besides, she was curious.
The faint scent of goat drifted down the driveway. Nancy, accustomed to farm smells, found this, among all the others, the least appealing. It brought with it, however, the pang of recollection of Fiona’s goat, Robert. “Water under the bridge,” she told herself, brushing away sentiment. Nancy was not one to dwell on things, and she had not been one of Robert’s admirers—if he had had any, which she doubted—but she was fond of Fiona, and didn’t like to think of her unhappiness.
Standing behind a cloth-covered table near the barn was a woman with blonde curly hair. She was wearing an apron with “Windsome Farm Goats” printed on the front, and she chatted gaily with the small crowd of people standing near. Nancy found herself wondering whether the farm’s name was a deliberate play on words or merely bad spelling. It was difficult to tell these days.
“Hi,” said the blonde woman. “Hello, everyone, and welcome. I’m Emily. Would you like to try some of our cheese?”
On the table were trays attractively arranged with different varieties of goat cheeses, some crackers, and little pots of fruit preserves for tasting. A cluster of the inevitable fall yellow jackets circled the area, occasionally landing on the food—particularly the fruit preserves—and waiting to sting anyone who dared to challenge their territory.
Emily seemed to be continually speaking. Her voice was not exactly loud, but it had a carrying quality, and she had many opinions. “Oh, yes,” she was saying, “we could have started the farm anywhere. Anywhere at all. But my husband and I thought it would be so perfect here, as a tourist attraction and all. We think the Island needs a little sprucing up, too, so we plan to be very active in the community.”
She laughed at someone’s comment. “Oh, don’t worry. Don’t worry at all. We have a lot of experience in local government. My husband used to be on the school board at home and he had everyone wrapped around his little finger. And me, well, I know it sounds like a brag, but I’ve been told so many times that I have natural leadership qualities, and people just like to listen to what I have to say. So, I know we’ll be part of everything once we’ve settled in.”
Nancy watched the faces of the people listening. The Islanders looked grim. The tourists were either rapt or indifferent. Someone said something about the cheese and the blonde woman launched into myriad details about butterfat, aging, and milking capacity. Everyone was served samples of cheese on little green paper napkins.
“Where are you from?” asked someone, in a tone of voice that made Nancy suspect he already knew the answer.
“Illinois,” said Emily.
The islanders exchanged glances. Illinois tourists were both the bread and the bane of island life. Arrogant, brash, entitled, and always in a hurry, they did little, as a group, to endear themselves. Their wallets, however, generally made up for their other shortcomings. Now here was one come among them. No one from the Island expected anything good to come of it.
Nancy took a sample of cheese, eschewing the yellow-jacket-laden preserves, and, leaving the chatter behind her, walked toward the nearby pasture where three dozen or so goats were grazing. They were small animals with big puppy eyes and an engaging sweetness that, as far as Nancy could see, bore no resemblance to the surly, taciturn nature of Fiona’s late animal. The sound of their owner’s voice continued unabated, carried on the breeze, although Nancy could no longer distinguish the words. She stood gazing at the animals, a look of barely disguised skepticism on her face, and wondered what Fiona would think of this.
Fiona Campbell was giving a party. She was not generally much for parties; they were uncomfortable reminders of an awkward childhood. She was not entirely convinced that her neighbors liked her, her house was really too small to hold a crowd, and the last time she had hosted a party, she had been given—as a sort of hostess gift—a goat whose presence had made her life a misery until a barn fire had terminated their acquaintance. Nevertheless, in a triumph of hope over experience, she sent invitations to everyone she could think of.
“Are you coming to my party?” she asked her friend, Pali, when she ran into him late one fall afternoon at Mann’s Mercantile, the only general and hardware store on the Island. They had met at the cash register where Fiona was purchasing batteries and plant food. Pali had an assortment of nails.
“Of course. We wouldn’t miss it. Nika is already pulling out recipes for cakes trying to decide what to bring.”
“She doesn’t have to do that. You don’t have to bring anything.”
Pali smiled a you’re-not-from-around-here smile. “Just let me tell her whether you prefer yellow cake or chocolate. It will make everything a little easier.”
Fiona smiled back. She had no illusions about her ability to blend into the culture. “Yellow, please.”
“I will pass on that information,” he said cheerfully.
They said good-bye, paid for their purchases, and went on about their business.
The reason for the party was an achievement of sorts. Despite all odds, Fiona had spent a year living alone on remote Washington Island—a place she had once described as being inhabited by hermits and crazy people—in an old, rather decrepit house already in the possession of various creatures who chewed and scurried. It had not been one of her better moments when she had accepted a casual dare from friends who had not expected to be taken seriously, but Fiona had set out to prove that she could do it. No one of her acquaintance had expected her to succeed, least of all Fiona herself.
The year had not been without incident, much—if not most—of which were distinctly goat-related. And yet, in a transformation that in other contexts might have been considered almost miraculous, Fiona had come to love the little house, to respect most of her neighbors, and even to have made some friends.
These friendships did not, however, include her immediate neighbor, Stella DesRosiers, whose capacity for malice was a new experience for Fiona. Stella had reappeared on the Island shortly after the barn fire with only the vaguest explanation for her disappearance, murmuring something about a family emergency. No one dared to ask her any questions.
The drive from Mann’s to Fiona’s house was about three minutes, and she was mentally planning her party to-do list as she pulled into her little driveway. The days were getting shorter, and everything glowed with the rose and gold light of sunset. She looked at the house with pleasure. It was freshly painted and charming, its old-fashioned yard filled with peony bushes and hostas, hydrangea and lilies of the valley. There was a big maple, and an enormous fruit laden apple tree spreading its ancient branches. Fiona pulled on the hand brake of the car, gathered her purchases, and walked up the steps to the porch, carefully averting her eyes from the back yard.
She didn’t want to see that the old barn, which she had so loved, was gone. It had burned to the ground last spring, and she felt struck with fresh grief whenever she saw what was left of its stone foundation. The gift goat, Robert, had been in the barn, and Fiona’s grief was, perhaps, intensified by the complexity of her feelings for Robert. He had been a nuisance and a headache; she had resented every moment of time she had spent on his care. And yet she had felt responsible for his well-being, and the mysterious cause of the fire haunted her with guilt.
What had she overlooked? What should she have done differently? Why didn’t she hear something in the night when the fire first started? Had she been too distracted by the joys of her new love in those first days? Fiona lay awake most nights with these questions circling her mind like bats. The image of the flames shooting high into the night sky returned to her in her dreams and in her waking. She knew that she should be grateful that the fire had not reached the house. But she could not shake the terrible sense of remorse which haunted her.
Fiona was forced out of her reflections by the exuberant welcome of Elisabeth’s German shepherd, Rocco. Fiona’s friend, Elisabeth, and her new husband, Roger, were honeymooning in Italy, and Fiona was the dog sitter. Rocco was more than good company. He loved Fiona with a shepherd’s passionate devotion, loyalty, and single-minded purpose. Elisabeth was the first and foremost object of his dedication, but Fiona was a very close second.
Reheating herself a cup of coffee and giving Rocco a biscuit, Fiona resolutely turned from thoughts of the fire. Tonight she would not think of it. Tonight she would focus on the future.
Fiona sat at the kitchen table to drink her coffee, and Rocco settled under the table, resting his head on her feet with a deep sigh of satisfaction. With a feeling of pleasurable anticipation, Fiona got out her notebook and began to make a to-do list for the party. She looked forward eagerly to seeing Elisabeth and Roger, who would be returning shortly from their honeymoon. The party would not be complete without them.
Lars Olafsen had been Chairman of the Town of Washington for going on twenty years, and a member of the town board for five years before that. He was a dutiful man, and a public servant in the old-fashioned sense. He had earned the respect of his constituents through his fairness, his honesty, and his innate, steady, Scandinavian calm.
But Lars was beginning to feel the wear of so many years at the beck and call of his fellow islanders, and had begun to yearn for a reprieve. His children and grandchildren lived downstate in Milwaukee, and his wife was continually urging that they spend more time there. And Lars, though he was only in his early seventies, was beginning to feel his energy wane, and his enthusiasm for the job with it.
The major consideration, however, was one he would never admit to anyone, not even to his wife. Although his feelings were complicated, secretly Lars still glowed with a feeling of heady triumph after his out-maneuvering of Stella DesRosiers last spring in her mean-spirited attempt to drive her neighbor, Ms. Fiona Campbell, out of town. He had stooped to political blackmail, no doubt about it, and he had suffered many moments of doubt about what he’d done. Had it been a violation of the public trust that disqualified him for continuing in office, or a valiant stroke for the public good? Lars had struggled with this question, but he always returned to the conclusion that it had been no more than Stella deserved, and an act of natural justice. Stella had been bullying her fellow citizens for years without any repercussions other than her unpopularity. And while he continued to wonder whether it was wrong to feel proud of it, his career, Lars felt sure, could reach no greater achievement. “Might as well go out on a high note,” he thought.
And so, one Wednesday night at Nelsen’s Hall, when a quorum of his regular circle was in attendance, Lars Olafsen announced his retirement. He was immediately surrounded by a jovial, back-slapping throng, and shots were thrust into his hand in rapid succession.
“Lars,” said Paul Miller, his childhood friend, “you can’t retire. We’re too young.”
“You’ve been an asset to us, Lars,” said another old friend.
“You run a tight ship, Lars. Those meetings will take twice as long without you.”
But the real concern was the one voiced by Jake, who had a reputation for cutting to the heart of every discussion. “You can’t leave. There’s nobody who’ll take your place.”
This was true, as everyone at Nelsen’s well knew. Being chairman was a thankless job, and few people wanted to be bothered with it. There was a slew of paperwork and arrogant state officials to be dealt with, not to mention the unceasing need to wrangle volunteers for committees and other public work, and the inevitable squabbles—both petty and potentially fatal. No, particularly in these days of escalating state bureaucracy, you’d have to be a fool to want the job. And the Island was remarkably short of fools, unless, of course, you counted that new woman, Fiona Campbell.
Fiona would have been shocked to know her reputation. Her intelligence, wit, street savvy, and seriousness of purpose were not things shown to good advantage in a small town. Add into the mix her city polish and lack of practical knowledge of rural life—not to mention the evil rumors that Stella DesRosiers had very particularly and intentionally spread—and an average observer might have an impression of a flighty young woman who wore impractical shoes, was oblivious to the first principles of survival and sensible living, and whose morals were, well, not what one would hope.
Fiona was, in fact, far from being a fool, but this didn’t stop the locals from thinking her one. Many of them—particularly the men—had come to feel a mixture of pity and admiration for her, a circumstance that Stella’s rumors had unwittingly created, and one which frequently worked in Fiona’s favor. In this instance, however, Fiona was exactly as oblivious as her neighbors thought, and it may have been just as well. She went about her business utterly unaware of her many critics, observers, and secret admirers.
Emily and Jason Martin, the proprietors of Windsome Farm, were joiners. In a short period of time—and despite their frequent declarations that they were terribly, terribly busy—they had become members of just about every group on the Island. Their presence was met with varying degrees of acceptance. At church there was a certain amount of relief to have some new volunteers to take up the slack, and it was always helpful to have one more chaperone at a school event. But behind their backs the talk was decidedly unenthusiastic. The outspokenness of them both did little to endear them to their neighbors, and they quickly became known as “those new people who think they know everything.”
Without hesitation Emily had informed the drama society that they could benefit from her college training in theater arts, and she offered to direct the next play. She told the Ladies Book Society that their reading list was shockingly old-fashioned and that she would help them to make a more modern one, which she proceeded to do, including a bestseller that sounded like a home decorating guide but turned out to be about something many of the ladies found shocking and secretly titillating, but otherwise hadn’t much of a plot. Her husband notified the Lions Club that their bookkeeping methods were sure to draw the attention of the I.R.S., and took over the planning for next year’s Little League without being asked. At the P.T.O. meetings they were quick to point out that their children’s former school had a much better equipped gymnasium, and was further advanced in first grade mathematics.
In their brief few months on the Island their reputation for annoying people became so well known that attendance at various committees and club meetings sky-rocketed, as Islanders showed up just for the sheer fun of seeing what they’d say next.
When Lars Olafsen left Nelsen’s Hall after the announcement of his retirement, he was thoroughly steeped in the warmth of his friends. He was also steeped in a good portion of beer, mixed with a fair portion of bitters, and just as fair a portion of Jaegermeister.
Lars had inherited the facility of his Swedish ancestors for turning an evening of drinking into a slow, steady glow, and although he had consumed a great deal, it would have been difficult for anyone to tell. His words were unslurred, his mind clear, his gait unfaltering, and his eyes bright, so he did not think it necessary to have anyone drive him home. Since Lars’s friends’ judgment was equally steeped in beer, bitters, and Jaegermeister, neither did anyone else. Island culture generally accepted this state of affairs, primarily because the odds of meeting anyone else on the road were rather small.
Lars reached home without incident, and parked his reliable but elderly SUV on the driveway next to the woods. The Olafsen property was adjacent to Mountain Park, so named for the modest hill that lay, more or less, in the center of the Island. At its crest was a wooden tower that afforded a fine view of the Island to anyone with the stamina to climb. Lars had always thought that it was pleasant to have a park for a neighbor, since it created a buffer zone, almost as if his actual lot lines had been expanded to include the public land.
Accustomed to being alone in the dark in the remote countryside, Lars pocketed his keys and was headed toward the house when a peculiar sound froze him in his tracks. It was as if someone nearby were coughing. At first he felt a moment of fear, but Lars shook it off, laughing at himself. No one was anywhere near. The SUV was overdue for maintenance if the engine were making that kind of post-ignition noise.
It occurred to Lars that he had been taking the effects of overconsumption much too lightly. He shook his head at himself ruefully. He should never have driven home. Next time he would call Katherine. He resumed his path to the house. There it was again. That sound. Standing still, Lars was quite clear in his mind that it was not coming from the SUV. It was coming from the woods. A deer, maybe. Lars took a deep relaxing breath. There were many deer, and they made a chuffing sound, similar, a bit, to this. That’s surely what it was.
There it was again, a coughing sound, and a snort, and a sort of chortle. This was no deer. No. He was quite certain: there was someone in the woods. And he was very close.
Lars Olafsen, a man whose Scandinavian calm was legendary on the Island, a man who rarely ran, and had rarely had any reason for doing so, made it into the house in record time. In his haste he slammed the side door and woke his sweet and patient wife from a lovely dream.
It was another thing for Lars to add to his ever-lengthening list of regrets.
Fall on Washington Island had an idyllic quality. The days were at the temperature where an afternoon nap in the hammock required a light blanket, and the nights required a bonfire. The number of tourists—small, in any season—was low, and many of the summer property owners had returned to their lives in The World, a world, presumably, that afforded them the means to own summer homes on a remote island. The roads were nearly deserted, allowing runners and bikers the blessing of solitude and safety among the rich colors of autumn leaves, deep blue sky, and the crisp, cool Island air.
During this quiet time, Tom, the manager of the Island hardware and general store, was away for a brief vacation, and he had left the store’s management to one of his teenaged clerks, Gabe. Gabe was a perfectly competent and good-natured young man who took his responsibilities seriously, but occasionally his lack of experience had repercussions.
When a family of tourists stopped in to rent bicycles for the day, Gabe was pleased to see them. It had been a slow day at the store, and customers relieved the boredom. They were a young family: a pretty, brunette woman, her soft-spoken husband, and two round-cheeked boys aged about 5 and 7. They were from Milwaukee, they told Gabe, and had come to spend the day on the Island. Where did he recommend they go?
Gabe had the usual suggestions for them: Mountain Park, the sand dunes, School House Beach, the Stavkirke—a small, hand-built chapel at the end of a wooded path, in the tradition of medieval Nordic stave churches—and, of course, the Albatross. He remembered to fill out the forms correctly, carefully reviewing and checking off the insurance box. He rang up the sale, and he was warm, friendly, and helpful.
Because of Gabe’s inexperience, however, it did not occur to him to mention a hazard everyone on the Island took for granted, and which had become so commonplace that the Mercantile had come to advise its customers to avoid a particular route. Gabe’s customers, therefore began their ride blissfully unaware of the only peril likely to befall them in this rural paradise: Piggy.
Piggy was a small, ugly dog with a big, ugly temper, and his ability to inflict damage to flesh and property was out of all proportion to his size. Like so many small dogs, he had been cosseted, babied, and permitted to have his way, and this had given him his own sense of entitlement to world domination. His owner, Mrs. Shoesmith, was a nice enough woman, but she had a blind spot where he was concerned, and she remained convinced that her canine infant was misunderstood.
Piggy was legendary on the Island for his attacks on walkers, bikers, other dogs, and even, occasionally, cars. In one particularly memorable incident, he also took the blame for the destruction of the heirloom tablecloth belonging to the Island’s other terror: Fiona’s neighbor, Stella DesRosiers. In this case, at least, he was wholly innocent, but his reputation had made his guilt a foregone conclusion. Since Stella was generally disliked by Island residents, and Piggy, it was felt, deserved whatever he got, the resulting bitterness and recriminations between Stella and Mrs. Shoesmith had made for months of local entertainment, and promised to hold more in store for the future.
Fiona had been having a delightful day of procrastination. She had a deadline looming for an article on the security of the national energy grid, but the prospect of researching so depressing a topic was not appealing on a crisp, blue-skied autumn day. She had accepted an invitation to lunch with Nika, and they had spent some hours afterward sitting on Adirondack chairs in the autumn sun and talking. Fiona planned to buckle down to her work afterward, but nevertheless drove in the general direction of home in a dawdling fashion, grateful that there was no one else on the road for her to annoy with her slow crawl toward home.
Humming aimlessly to herself, she was thinking about which portion of her article to tackle as she came around a bend in the road. She had been going so slowly that she didn’t have to slam on the brakes to avoid hitting the people in the road ahead. Two adults stood with their bikes before them and their children behind them, working to fend off an attack by Piggy, who, true to form, had been lying in wait for just such an adventure.
Fiona knew from experience what had to be done. With a curious sense of déjà-vu, she reenacted her own rescue by Nancy Iverssen almost exactly the year before.
Pulling her car in along the shoulder of the road behind the family, she rolled down her windows. “Quick! Jump in! Leave the bikes!” and obediently, the parents did as they were told, shoving their children into the car first, and then throwing down the bikes and jumping in themselves, she in the back with the children, and he practically vaulting over the hood of the car to get into the passenger seat.
Expecting anger, accusations, and possibly some tears from the occupants of the backseat, Fiona turned to the man in the seat beside her. “Are you okay?”
To her surprise, he immediately began to laugh.
“I think we are. You okay back there?” he asked gaily, looking around the headrest at his family. The two little boys were beginning to be a bit tremulous, but seeing their father’s good spirits they, too, began to laugh. Their mother, who was shaking her head and smiling at her husband, said, “Well, boys, that was an adventure we will remember!”
“But what was that? A dog or an alligator?” asked the man, pulling off his baseball cap and running a hand through his hair. He gave the impression of having been invigorated by the experience.
“Alligator!” shouted the two boys in unison, now thoroughly enjoying themselves.
He turned to Fiona, who was now laughing, too. “That was some rescue, by the way. Don’t know how to thank you. I’m Mark Hanley.”
“And I’m Laura,” added the woman from the backseat. “And these are James and Will.”
“Fiona Campbell. And what you just experienced is an Island rite of passage. Now that you’ve met Piggy, you’re honorary citizens.”
“What about the bikes?”
“Oh, don’t worry,” said Fiona breezily. “We’ll stop by the Mercantile and they’ll take care of it.”
Ver Palsson’s son, Ben, was bored. His father, known by everyone as Pali, was a captain for the Island ferry line, and although the ferry had been properly moored and shut down for the night, Pali spent an extra hour going over the ship to ensure that it would be ready for morning. He was an honest man who took his responsibilities seriously. To Ben it seemed that they would never be finished. He had been sitting around all day, and there were only a few hours of light left. Ben wanted to go for a ramble in the woods before dinner.
“Dad, can we go?”
His father looked at him in a way that Ben knew was a substitute for a lecture.
“Sorry,” said Ben, with just the proper amount of contrition in his tone. Without even a small sigh he went back to reading the book he had brought. His restlessness did not prevent him from enjoying it, mostly because he knew his father would not be budged until he was ready to be budged. But Ben had plans of his own, and he knew it was in his own interest to bide his time.
Ben Palsson was ten years old, and he had lived his entire life on Washington Island. He had attended the tiny school since kindergarten, and, if all went well, he would graduate from high school there. He knew pretty much everyone, and his parents had the anachronistic confidence in their surroundings that permitted him the freedom to wander that would have been both unheard of and unwise for a boy of his age living nearly anyplace else. There were six children in his fifth grade class, including Ben, and only two of them were boys. Ben spent a great deal of time on his own and was content to amuse himself, a skill lacking in many of his generation elsewhere.
A few minutes later, his father returned to find him engrossed in his book.
“Come on, Ben, what are you hanging around for? Let’s go.” Pali put his hand on his son’s shoulder and squeezed playfully. “Always keeping me waiting.”
They walked together to the truck. It had been a sunny afternoon, but as the sun got low, a brisk wind was rising, and the truck’s heater felt good once it got going.
Pali looked sideways at his son as he drove. Ben’s head was turned, looking out the window. He was blond like both his parents, and he had his mother’s restless energy. In many ways he was still a little boy, but Pali was watching for the first signs of adolescent turmoil that was bound to come. “So far, so good,” he thought.
Ben turned from the window to look at his father.
“Dad, would you mind letting me off near the beach? I can walk the rest of the way.”
Pali had been expecting this request.
“It will be dark soon,” he said.
“I know, Dad,” said Ben patiently. “I’ll be home before then. I just want to walk along the trail.”
His father nodded and when they turned to head east along Jackson Harbor Road, Pali pulled into the drive of School House Beach and stopped.
Ben already had his hand on the door.
“Ben,” said Pali. It was a tone that required attention, but a message that Ben had heard many times. He also knew that if he were rude his father would simply not allow him to get out of the truck.
“Yes, Dad,” said Ben, politely.
“Stay away from the water when you’re alone. Don’t even go close enough to get your feet wet.”
“I won’t.”
“And don’t be late to dinner.”
“I won’t.”
“Pay attention. Keep your mind on what you’re doing.”
“I will.”
Pali broke into a grin at the restrained but dutiful tone in his son’s voice. He was like a hunting dog desperate to give chase, but waiting for the command.
“I know you will. Okay, see you at home.”
“See you,” said Ben. And even as he said the words he was out of the truck and trotting toward the wooded trails that ran along the low bluffs above the lake shore. Pali watched until the boy disappeared into the woods, and then turned the truck back to the road and home.
Ben had the kind of boyhood that adults in the cities tend to romanticize, and with good reason. At ten, his solitary ramblings had developed in him knowledge, confidence, judgment, and a self-respect that would support him all his life. His parents gave him responsibilities, and had complete confidence that he would carry them out, probably because they had always invoked consequences if he did not. He had a gun, which his father had mother had taught him to use conscientiously, and a pocketknife, which, in a world far removed from the TSA, he carried everywhere and used frequently. Ben watched TV, used the Internet, and was acquainted with contemporary culture elsewhere in the world, but he had not yet reached the age where he had begun to chafe against this rural life. His parents, having also grown up on the island, watched for the first signs with trepidation. Their own adolescent restlessness had taken them both away from home at early ages. But, of course—and this comforted them—they had come back.
Pali was reflecting on all this as he pulled the truck into the garage. He was wrestling with a deeply felt problem, and had been distracted lately, and a bit distant from his family.
Pali spent his days as a ferry captain. It had always been his life’s work, and his means of supporting his family. But Pali was also a poet. His work had been published for the first time only in the last year. This recognition had changed him profoundly, shifting his sense of self and purpose beyond the daily duties that he felt were a reflection of his personal honor.
But the success of Pali’s poetry was also a source of anxiety and self-doubt. The strange experiences he and his crew had had on the ferry were closely held secrets, very difficult to keep quiet in a small community where talk was a way of life. Each man knew that their stories, if ever widely known, would make them a source of amusement and ridicule.
Pali knew what he had experienced. He knew the way the rhythms of the words had come to him. His crew knew what they had seen. Pali believed that the poetry was not entirely his own, but brought to him by the... spirit... ghost... presence... they had all witnessed on the ship. And now that he had had some success, when he was being pressed to write more by a publisher who valued his work, Pali found that he could not comply. He had no words, no phantom rhythms beating their music in his head, and no more ghostly encounters. His inspiration was gone. He was deeply troubled, embarrassed, and increasingly convinced that his glory as a poet had been a fraud. His muse—or, perhaps, his ghost—was silent, and Pali revisited daily a sense of loss and desolation in its absence.
Tonight, however, his problems seemed foolish, distant, and less important. He felt confidence and pride in his boy, and in the life he and Nika had made together. Walking into the house, he hung his coat on a peg near the door, and kissed his wife with a sense of gratitude.
After their encounter with Piggy, Fiona returned the family to the Mercantile shaken, but unhurt. She left them waving a cheerful goodbye. Abandoning bikes in the heat of Piggy battle was a scenario well-known to Mann’s employees, and Gabe took it all in stride. The parents were remarkably philosophical about their ordeal, and their good humor extended even to their children’s fright. “Things happen,” the father had said. “It’s all part of the adventure,” his wife had added. Their geniality increased when they learned that their deposit would not be forfeited, despite the bikes not having been returned.
Gabe sighed with relief when they had gone. As an Island native he had learned at his mother’s knee the rudeness and sense of entitlement of tourists, and this family had been a memorable exception. He was pleased that his only problem would be fitting all four bikes in the back of his mother’s ancient hatchback when he went to retrieve them.
Gabe’s day, however, did not go entirely as planned. He had meant to go to pick up the abandoned bicycles as soon as the store closed, planning to leave them in the car overnight and return to the store with them the next morning. But he met some friends in the parking lot as he was leaving the store, and they were going to someone’s house to hang around and shoot pool. The prospect of seeing Lara Bjornstad there put all other things out of his head. By the time he remembered, it was dark and close to his curfew. A lifetime on Washington Island left Gabe with no doubt that the bikes would still be there. He would leave early and pick them up on his way to work in the morning.
It was dusk as Ben ambled across the fields, heading home. He still had a little time before he would be expected, and he was not yet ready to be inside for the night, so he was dawdling, despite his hunger. He had a new fossil in his pocket, picked up along the beach well away from the waves, and he had seen two bald eagles fishing in the blue-gray water of the lake.
Ben knew his home territory with the intimacy that only a restless boy can have. He knew the back trails along the edge of the beaches where the ruins of the cabins of 19th-century settlers were still decaying out of sight of the main road. He had investigated them thoroughly over the years, and had scavenged small bits of metal, glass, and rusted tools. He knew where the creek went under the road and disappeared into the woods, and where it emptied into the lake. He knew where foxes and raccoons and muskrats lived, and he spent hours sitting outside their dens watching without a boy’s usual intent to harm. His affection for animals was unsentimental, and he was not offended or shocked by hunters. He recognized that killing and eating was part of life. He simply wasn’t interested in hunting. He wanted to observe, to know.
As he walked he caught a movement along the place where the field met the woods. It was the time of night when deer congregate and move out into the open fields to browse, and Ben stood still to watch. Their movement, the woods, and the low light obscured their numbers. As he peered across the distance he could see the herd of about six animals. But even in the deepening evening light it was clear that there was something different.
Cautiously, Ben moved closer. One of the animals was moving strangely, not with the usual grace of a whitetail, and it was smaller than the others. In the growing darkness and against the black of the woods, it was difficult to see clearly, but its movements were wrong: different from the movement of the other deer. Instead of a deer’s usual grace, it seemed to hobble. Was it injured? Ben peered at the distant creature. The herd seemed to notice him, and moved sharply into the depths of the woods. Ben watched, but could see nothing more. An injured deer wouldn’t last long, Ben knew. It was sad, but he also knew that there was little likelihood of being able to help the animal. It would die before spring.
Suddenly he noticed that it was darker than he had realized. The warm orange glow of the trees had deceived him, and the sun was already down. Ben ran the rest of the way home and was just in time for dinner.
He lay awake for a long time that night after he should have been asleep, wondering about the animal he had seen and feeling troubled about its fate. Nature was merciless, Ben knew, and this animal’s end would probably be a bad one.
Fiona watched the last red light of sunset from her porch steps with Rocco’s warm body lying across her feet. The mild day had turned into a brisk evening, but she could not bring herself to go in. She knew that as soon as the door closed behind her, the loneliness would begin to close in, despite Rocco’s affectionate companionship.
For most of the day she could distract herself with tasks, with only an occasional momentary longing. But at night, as the sun set and the world descended into stillness, her thoughts would drift, and with them her anxieties began their dance in her heart and head. No matter what music she played, book she read, or movie she watched, she could feel the emptiness of the house around her, and the full realization that Pete was so far away.
His presence on the Island had been so brief that it seemed as if she had imagined it. She wondered where he was, whether he could see the sky as she did now; tried to imagine what he might be doing. She knew well enough that with his job working for an international energy company, he could be literally anywhere, doing almost anything. And this made her extremely nervous. Would she see him again? Even if he wanted to, would he come back? Fiona spent a great deal of mental energy trying not to think about what could happen to Westerners in remote parts of the world.
Increasingly chilled, she sighed and stirred. She could not reasonably put off going inside any longer, she told herself, or they would find her body frozen to the steps. She stood for a moment watching the last flush of color in the autumn sky, Rocco leaning against her. Then she turned to go in, and standing aside to hold the door for Rocco, followed him into the empty house.
Ben was looking out his bedroom window down at the meadows below. There were huge numbers of turkeys gathered together, and then he realized that there weren’t just turkeys. There were... crows? Yes. Enormous crows walking on the ground. Crows ten times bigger than regular crows. As big as turkeys. And other animals. Every kind of animal. Animals that did not belong on the island. They were flowing almost as one creature below the house, simply moving in the same direction in an eerie silence. They were not interacting with one another in any discernible way, just moving. In their midst was a river of water, and strange dream animals—along with those he knew—swam along with the flow of creatures.
“Dad!” called Ben. “Come and look!” But his dad was away. He called his mom, but she was nowhere in the house. There was no one else to experience this mysterious, beautiful, and slightly alarming migration with him. No one to explain where these creatures had come from and where they were going. These creatures did not belong here. They should not be acting in this way. He had the uneasy feeling that something was wrong. No normal pattern would explain this behavior. He stood at the window and felt that something in the world was out of order, and he, Ben, had to make it right.
Ben awoke from his dream troubled and out of sorts. He moved slowly that morning, still feeling the after-effects of his dream, and had to be told three times to brush his teeth. He was almost late to school, and just made it into the building as the last bell rang.
When Gabe left the house the next morning, he went straight to Piggy corner, as the locals liked to call it. He knew from a lifetime’s experience exactly where the bikes would be, and as he approached he could see the gleam of the sun on the bikes’ chrome.
But when he pulled up close, it became obvious that all was not well. All four bikes were there, all right, but they were in tatters. Gabe stood by the side of the road trying to take it all in. The nylon packs that had been attached to the back of the two adult bikes had been ripped into shreds. The leather seats and the foam handle grips had been stripped away and were a complete loss.
Gabe’s common sense told him that the bikes could be repaired. The seats and grips could be replaced. But what a mess. Normally when Piggy struck, the bikes remained mostly intact, maybe with a few broken spokes, and occasionally a ruined tire. Clearly this was an escalation, no doubt the result of allowing him to get away with his bad behavior. And what a thing to happen while Tom was away, and he, Gabe, was in charge. Gabe sighed. It was fortunate, he thought, that the only damage had been to the bikes, not to the customers, but still… .
“Damn Piggy,” he thought.
Mrs. Shoesmith’s neighbor up the road was also cursing Piggy. Bill Hanson had been coming to the Island for thirty-five years, and although it was not his official residence as far as the tax man was concerned, Bill’s visits to the Island these days tended to be for twelve months of the year, more or less. He was, however, a new neighbor to the Shoesmiths, having built a house overlooking Detroit Harbor just last year. In that period of time Piggy had attacked Bill’s wife, his dog, and more out-of-town visitors than Bill could count.
The stitches, tears shed, and family turmoil that had been the result of previous Piggy encounters had been bad enough. But this. This was a bitter thing. Heartbroken, he looked upon the ruin of his baby orchard, lovingly planted young cherry and apple trees that he had nursed through the past summer’s drought and the previous winter’s vagaries. The tiny eighteen-inch saplings—representing the dreams of a lifetime—had been protected from deer by chicken wire. But chicken wire had clearly been inadequate to Piggy’s rampage. Sadly, Bill stood in the sunlight and surveyed the damage.
It was remarkable, he thought, how much destruction one small, nasty dog could wreak.
Bill was a kind husband and father, a member of the church council, and as fine and upstanding a Christian as Washington Island had ever seen. He was teased by his friends and neighbors for his gentle, upright manner, and his mild way of speaking. But some things were more than a man could bear.
“Damn that Piggy,” he said.