Prologue
Blood Pendant
The two men sat on sloping rocks shaded by a
Glancing through
slender trees toward the towpath, the man with curly hair noticed the girl when
she was still forty paces away. He
caught the other man’s attention with a low whistle. Screened by sunlit trunks, they could watch
her approach without being seen. She
wore a tan skirt that might have been buckskin and a long-sleeved blouse. Her hands and dark hair swung a gentle rhythm
as she glided forward with feline grace.
A grin widened on the face of the man with curly hair as he watched the
girl.
“She moves like
an animal, eh Richard?” He gathered a
clot of saliva in his mouth and spat it out tersely between his feet. “Bet she fucks like one too.”
“Just one way to
find out,” Richard said, stroking his red-gold mustache. He rocked forward to crouch in the shade on
the balls of his feet.
“No sign of
poppa today,” the man with curly hair whispered, grinning again.
“Probably
sleeping off his whiskey back at the quarry,” Richard whispered back. “It’s lonely out here on the island today,
Johnny.”
Johnny pushed
himself away from the rock and crouched alongside Richard. The girl was only twenty feet away now and
they could hear her singing softly to herself, the tune rising and falling as
she passed. Richard stepped quietly to
the towpath and Johnny followed. Their
eyes met and they loped toward the girl.
When she turned toward the crunch of footsteps, Richard’s arm encircled
her neck. His hand clamped her mouth as
Johnny lifted her legs to his waist. The
girl shook her head and tried to scream but her voice and teeth were
overpowered by Richard’s calloused hand.
Richard lowered
her to horizontal, hand still across her mouth, and the gesture jerked open her
top button, displacing the silk cord of a pendant necklace that lay against her
dust-colored skin. She writhed and
twisted as the men carried her back into the
“I think we’re
beyond earshot,” Richard said over his shoulder.
“Aye. We ain’t seen no one pass in hours anyway.”
Together
the men dropped their arms to the ground.
The girl tried to roll onto her stomach, screaming as her mouth came
free, but Richard quickly muzzled her with one hand and pinned her arm with the
other. He knelt facing Johnny, who
pressed her ankles to the earth.
“Well
now, Johnny,” he said with a smile. “You seem to have ended up in the favored
position. I guess that means you get the
first taste.” He looked down at the
girl. Her gleaming hair was speckled now
with dried grass and her dark eyes oscillated wildly under an emerging skin of
tears. “You just relax and enjoy this
now honey. Might be the only chance you
get with two full-blooded white men.”
She bit at the fingers of his hand, but they were tough and thick and he
waggled them to avoid her teeth. When he
looked up again, Johnny had already dropped his trousers and was yanking down
his grimy undershorts, still pinning her thigh with one hand as she frantically
tried to twist away. Johnny cradled his
craning member and shuffled toward her on his knees.
“Here I come, darlin’,” he said, pawing at her
underwear and smiling, “like a big old barge sliding into a tight little
lock.” With his hands still pressed to the
girl's mouth and elbow, Richard glanced down and saw that her eyes had
dried. She was reaching inside the neck
of her blouse and pulling something with her free hand.
“Hey,
Johnny,” he said, looking up again. “I
think she likes the look of your boat.
Seems she fixin’ to open the gates for…”
Before he could finish he saw a moving shape and a flash of white light,
then felt a stabbing pain. His left eye
closed reflexively as warmth flowed down his face and trickled onto his
lips. Turning back toward the girl, with
one eye he saw his own blood raining onto her face and neck. His occluded left eye was buried behind a
red, throbbing field.
“God
damn it!” he roared. “Fucking half-breed whore!” Johnny jerked back onto his knees in
surprise. The girl stopped struggling
momentarily and Richard saw a thin smile form on her lips. Her free hand was clenched around a reddish
stone shaped like an elm leaf and stained a deeper red with his blood.
In
one motion he grabbed a fistful of hair and stood up, yanking her to her
feet. He pressed his wrapped fist to her
scalp and dipped to sweep her legs off the ground. When she tried to scream, he pulled her hair
until the tears resurfaced and her voice trailed off. The pond was a half-dozen paces away and he
strode quickly toward it. Johnny had
hoisted his suspenders and was shambling to catch up.
“I
told you she was an animal,” he said.
“Fucking injun blood.”
“Well
she better ask her medicine man to turn her into a fish,” Richard said as they
reached the water. The stop-gate near
the tail end of the pond was nearby and Johnny gestured toward it.
“Let’s
go behind it. Too open here.”
Past
the stop-gate, Richard thrust her down at the water’s edge, then bent her right
arm behind her back and forced her to her knees. “Time to join your ancestors, you pagan
bitch!” he said as the blood slowed and grew viscous on his face. The girl inhaled sharply as he thrust her
head into placid water discolored by decaying leaves. Her body was quiet for a moment, then lunged
violently upward. Johnny placed his hand
on top of Richard’s and together they held her head below the surface. Still clutching its weapon, her left hand
flailed for another target.
The
girl’s resistance subsided and her body grew quiet. Her dark hair fanned out across the water,
like an aura surrounding the oppressive hands.
She pulled her free arm into the pond and groped for leverage in the
muck at the bottom. Then her legs and
arms erupted in another spasm as she fought to push upward and back. The reddened hands and arms held fast. She tried to dive forward but was tethered by
Richard’s grip on her bent arm. Her
third and final lunge was a fading echo of its predecessors, and after that the
girl was still.
Johnny
pried the object from her fingers and laughed.
“Some kind of stone leaf. Maybe a
necklace…with an idiot symbol. She’s a
fucking native, like we thought.” He
tossed the sandstone pendant onto the bank.
Richard pushed her head under the surface in disgust, then brought his
hand gingerly to his face to gauge the damage while Johnny knelt back from the
water and watched.
“I
don’t think she caught you square in the eye.”
The
girl’s head bobbed to the surface and her hair undulated on the water like sea
moss.
“Maybe
not,” Richard said, “but that whore got a piece of me. My eye’s too swelled up to open.” He gently washed drying blood from his face
with wet fingers. “Let’s get rid of
her,” he said, spitting savagely at the dirt.
The
men stood up and Johnny pulled her limp body from the water and laid it on the
bank. Her dark eyes were fixed at
infinity and a stream of water trickled from the side of her mouth. Johnny bent to grab her ankles. One of her heels had twisted out of its shoe,
and the shoe hung from her toes. Richard
gripped her wrists and turned toward the thin tail of the pond.
They
carried her along the drainage, continuing straight through sparse trees over
flat terrain when the outlet stream swung away to the left. Accustomed to lifting heavy stones, they bore
her body easily as they wove through a cordon of boulders and approached large
rocks that rose to a rounded ridge. Beyond
the ridge crest was blue sky.
Dragging the girl’s upper body with one arm, Richard
climbed onto the base of the ridge and waited for Johnny to scramble up
alongside him. The girl’s loose shoe
fell and rolled into a crack in the rock.
The men reclaimed their grips, sidestepped to the crest, and looked down
at the river below. It ran swiftly and
impassively between the cliffs of the gorge.
Staring
at the swirls and folds of the current, they rested for a few breaths. Richard caught Johnny’s eye and Johnny
nodded. Holding the body by its wrists
and ankles, they swung it like a pendulum toward the river. On the second swing they let go at the height
of the forward arc, and the girl’s body soared out into the air above the
river. Her arms flew free from her sides
and hung in the air like those of a dancer as her body carved a graceful arc
toward the water. From the cliff above, they
saw an ephemeral flash of bright water, its sound lost in the rush of the
current. The body knifed into colder
water beyond the reach of the sun, then rose slowly toward the surface as the
river carried it away.
On a waist-high block on the southern face of
the stop-gate, Grace’s symbol was taking shape.
He had already inscribed the curve of the G and was tapping out the vertical
arm. It was a mark that Grace had
designed and drawn herself, to surprise her father when she was only
seven. Greyanne watched as Parry gently
set his chisel to the stone and tapped rhythmically with his hammer. The prominent veins on his large hands were
stained with sweat and dust. She curled
her fingers around the cord that lashed the driftwood to the pendant and turned
away.
Searching for Grace, they had found her necklace
yesterday in the rough grass near the tail of the pond. It was only a few feet from the stop-gate
that had been built last month by the vermin who killed her, with stones that
Parry and the other masons had cut.
Grace had met a friend at
On Friday night one of the masons had heard the
English laborer Richard Emory, whiskeyed up with his work crew, brag about how
he and “Johnny” had “had our way with that little half-breed Alstyne whore out
on
Greyanne and Parry, and others who offered to
help, had scoured
Greyanne walked toward those cliffs now. She clenched her fingers in anger around the
driftwood, knowing that even if Grace’s body were found, her killers would go
free. At the base of the ridge, she fixed
her long black hair into a loose knot, then climbed up onto the rocks. She switch-backed toward the rounded crest
and continued a few steps to the precipice.
Two hundred feet away across the gorge, the
“Grace, those men have taken your life and cast
your body into the water.
They have stolen the lives of your children and
ended your line forever.
Now for ten generations, your spirit will rise
with the river
to drown a son of Garrett or Emory.”
She held the driftwood with its sandstone rider
aloft and flung it with all her strength into the sky above the river. It arched through the sunlit void between the
cliffs and dropped into the water with a silent splash. A great blue heron on the rocks below
unfolded its wings and took flight. She
watched Grace’s talisman bob away in the current, then softly finished her
invocation.
“In their dreams they will see and fear you,
but they will not recognize you in their waking
lives,
until the floodwaters come to carry them away.”
The driftwood disappeared in the march of
water and time.