Held prisoner for three weeks in a darkened room, O’Brien felt his senses — hearing and smell — becoming more acute. He could smell the heavyset guard at the door as he turned the key in the lock. The odor was always worse after lunch when the jowly man ate garlic-laced raw lamb, falafel, and tabbouleh, all washed down with sweet wine, except for the parsley pieces that stuck in his small teeth.
There was another sound. Not the noise of boots. It was the softer pace of sandals. Sandals worn by the interrogator. The man entered the room, followed by a tall gaunt-faced man with a knife in his tunic. The interrogator wore the clothes of an afghan warlord — taqiyah hat, thawb coat, a Berretta 9mm strapped to his hip. He carried a wicker basket in one hand. He stood in front of O’Brien and then squatted — eye to eye. “You know, Major O’Brien, they are not coming for you. They disavow your very existence. You are, to them, expendable…collateral damage, as was my son when one of your president’s drones killed him and seventeen other children under the age of twelve.”
O’Brien said nothing.
The interrogator leaned in closer. O’Brien could smell old sweat on his clothes and goat cheese on his breath. “Abdul is so impatient.” The interrogator cut his dark eyes to the man standing at the door. “Abdul has beheaded seven infidels, and his knife is dull. So the process takes a while.”
The man slowly opened the top of the wicker basket and reached inside. There was the buzzing of flies mixed with the stench of rotten flesh. He lifted the decapitated head of a man O’Brien knew well. Maggots wriggled in the eye sockets. The interrogator held the head by the hair, waving it less than a foot from O’Brien’s face. “If you don’t tell me what I must have, Major O’Brien, this is what will happen to you. He was your friend, yes? Guess what my men have done with your friend’s head…they used it as a soccer ball. And now they need another one.” The interrogator grunted, a slow grin forming, his black eyes as detached as a dead mackerel.
O’Brien awoke and sat straight up in bed, breathing fast, sheet soaked from perspiration, his heart hammering in his chest. He looked out the porthole from Jupiter’s master berth, the moon over the harbor, its milky light reflecting from the dark water. The digital clock on the nightstand read 4:37. He reached for a water bottle next to the clock and took a long swallow, the water doing little to quench the burning in his gut.
Max raised her head, staring at O’Brien from where she slept curled in a ball at the foot of the bed. “It’s okay, Max. Just a dream…one that keeps coming back. Do you ever dream? Let’s go topside for some air, okay? It’ll be dawn soon.” O’Brien slipped on his jeans, a long-sleeve shirt, and boat shoes. He lifted Max off the bed, went onto the cockpit and climbed the stairs leading to the fly bridge. He settled into the captain’s chair, Max on his lap, the marina soaked in darkness.
A gentle breeze coming in from the Atlantic caused Jupiter to pitch slightly. A sailboat halyard at the top of a mast clanked a half dozen times in the draft. O’Brien watched a shrimp boat enter Ponce Inlet, churning its way slowly up the bay, soon to dock at one of the seafood processors. He could just hear the drone of the boat’s diesels as it chugged upriver, white and red running lights iridescent over the black water.
He thought about the events of the last twenty-four hours, his eyes scanning the horizon toward the ocean, his thoughts playing back what Dave had said between sips of whiskey. Was it the whiskey talking or did Dave have a valid point? “So you fight the fight, but never define the undefinable because it’s always just over the horizon…in any and every direction. And there lies evil.” He remembered what Nick had said while making his crab boil. “So grandma is having a conversation with the dead lady in the painting. I told you that thing might be cursed.”
O’Brien watched the glow of a pink light bloom from the dusky water far out into the Atlantic, beyond the horizon, the appearance of a new sunrise, the promise of a new day. He pulled the photograph of the painting from the file folder, stared at the woman’s face in the picture, and then watched the rosy bloom in the eastern sky. He rubbed Max’s shoulders and said, “Max, you’re a lady. We can’t find the lady in the painting, but we might find the painting. And if we’re lucky, it’ll answer some questions and speak volumes for someone.”
THIRTEEN
Kim Davis tried to make sleep come to her. But it was elusive, the dream-weaver playing a stealthy game of hide-and-seek. Kim lay in her bed, the chirping of crickets outside her small home, soft glow from the moon backlighting the thin, white curtains across her window. She glanced at the clock on her nightstand. The red numbers glowed: 4:07 a.m. She thought about the old man who seemed to come from nowhere, asking for Sean, asking for a favor — to search for a Civil War era painting.
Was it just coincidental that a Civil War re-enactor was killed on the movie set?
She thought about her few hours on the set waiting for a casting call.
She pictured the re-enactor, the man with the long sideburns who looked at her that morning on the set in a strange way—a way no man had ever looked at me before. Although her bedroom was warm, she felt a chill. She turned toward the single bedroom window, pulling the sheet over her bare shoulder.
Then she saw it. Out of the corner of her eye. A shadow against her drapes. Maybe it was a bat. Maybe it wasn’t really there.
But the noise was real.
Something in her front yard. The sound was as if somebody opened her mailbox that was attached to a wooden pillar near her front door.
She slipped quietly out of her bed. Heart hammering. Palms sweaty. Kim tiptoed across her bedroom to the window. She used both hands to just open the drapes, afraid of what might be staring back at her.
Nothing. Nothing but the glow of the moon over her yard. She looked toward her white Toyota in her driveway. She could see no one. Palm fronds swayed slowly in the night breeze, the tiny flicker of heat lightning far away in the distance. Then she looked at the porch, the front porch swing scarcely moving in the draft
Her eyes scanned the area. Something was different. But what was it?
The mailbox.
She’d checked the mail when she came home from work. And she remembered closing the lid. Now it was open, yawning in the night.
And something was protruding from the mailbox.
Joe Billie lived so far off the grid that O’Brien wondered if Billie even had a birth certificate. O’Brien thought about that as he set out at dawn to find a man who could only be found if he wanted to be found. O’Brien didn’t know if Billie was home. He never did. Billie didn’t have a phone. He didn’t own a computer. O’Brien wasn’t sure if Billie drove a car. He did own a canoe. His universe — the natural world, was larger than the World Wide Web, but far removed from social networking. The tweets he paid attention to come from birdsong in the cypress trees near the St. Johns River. Even among the Seminole Indians, Billie, full-blooded Seminole, was a mystery. He’d spend time with family on the reservation in South Florida, but he kept his distance from the casinos owned by the tribe and controlled by a select few within the tribe.
Their paths first crossed one summer morning when O’Brien was working at the end of his dock, repairing some boards. He looked up and spotted Billie in the distance, bronze face shadowed under a wide-brimmed hat, walking in chest-deep water, tapping the river bottom with a wooden pole. Between the pole and his bare feet, Billie would find and retrieve ancient arrowheads from the river mud. He was undaunted and seemed impervious to the possibility of being pulled beneath the water by alligators, some more the thirteen feet long and weighing over a thousand pounds.