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Authors: Thomas Perry

A String of Beads

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A STRING
OF BEADS

Also by Thomas Perry

The Butcher’s Boy

Metzger’s Dog

Big Fish

Island

Sleeping Dogs

Vanishing Act

Dance for the Dead

Shadow Woman

The Face-Changers

Blood Money

Death Benefits

Pursuit

Dead Aim

Nightlife

Silence

Fidelity

Runner

Strip

The Informant

Poison Flower

The Boyfriend

A STRING
OF BEADS

A Jane Whitefield Novel

Thomas Perry

The Mysterious Press

an imprint of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.

New York

Copyright © 2015 by Thomas Perry

Jacket design by Daniel Rembert
Jacket photograph by Pascal Perich
Author Photograph by Jo Perry

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any
electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems,
without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote
brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this
book or the facilitation of such without the permission of the publisher is prohibited.
Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or
encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s
rights is appreciated. Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy
part or all of the work for classroom use, or anthology, should send inquiries to
Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 154 West 14th Street, New York, NY 10011 or
[email protected]
.

Published simultaneously in Canada

Printed in the United States of America

ISBN 978-0-8021-2329-9

eISBN 978-0-8021-9204-2

The Mysterious Press

an imprint of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.

154 West 14th Street

New York, NY 10011

Distributed by Publishers Group West

www.groveatlantic.com

To Jo, as always,
with thanks to Otto Penzler and to Paul Williams

A STRING
OF BEADS

1

N
ick Bauermeister sat in the stained, threadbare armchair in the front room. Chelsea’s
mother had dragged the chair out to the curb because it wasn’t brand-new, but he had
taken it home because it was much better than any other place he had to sit, and he
couldn’t do much better than free. He aimed the remote control at the television set,
and saw that Chelsea had left it on the channel where they always showed girls buying
wedding dresses.

For a girl who hardly ever wanted anything to do with a guy anymore, she sure was
interested in stuff about weddings and honeymoons or some woman getting to pick one
from a bunch of bachelors. He had to click the channel button several times to get
to the basketball game. He adjusted the sound, but kept his thumb on the little Mute
button.

Nick was mostly pretending to watch the game. What he was really watching was Chelsea.
Usually he liked watching Chelsea because she was the perfect embodiment of what a
girl was supposed to look like. Even now, as she walked around in the kitchen picking
up plates from the table and taking them to the sink, he couldn’t help thinking about
how incredible she was. She seemed unaware of the way she looked—couldn’t see the
way her shorts neatly hugged her thin waist and, in the back, defined her ass nearly
as well as if she were naked. Her blouse had worked another button open since they’d
finished dinner and she’d begun scrubbing dishes. The femaleness of her body was a
force of nature too strong for her clothes.

But tonight he wasn’t watching her in a friendly way. He was just watching. Nick was
pretty sure that Chelsea had been cheating on him. He had no idea who the guy was,
because anybody would sleep with her if she wanted him to. That information might
not be available until he caught her at it.

He had noticed that she had begun sitting far away from him in the evenings lately,
rapidly texting back and forth with somebody. “Who’s that?” he had asked. She would
answer, “My mom.” Her mother was a woman who would never have had the patience to
sit around sending texts. She liked to talk, and when she called she always used the
chance to tell everybody what she thought of everything they were doing or weren’t
doing. You couldn’t do that with a text message. And sometimes Chelsea would just
pull a name out of the air. The last two times he’d asked her she had said she was
texting Carrie or Chloe. Both of them worked as waitresses in the evening, and probably
would have been fired for standing around texting their friends.

The only times he’d actually seen her talking on the phone lately was when he walked
in unexpectedly and she was lying on the couch talking on her cell phone, laughing
and playing with her long, blond hair. As soon as she saw him her voice would go flat.
“Got to go,” and she’d stand up, put her phone in her pants pocket, and get moving.
She’d do something to distract him, to force him to think about something besides
her phone call. She’d offer him a beer, go to the kitchen to get it, and come back
already talking about something that was wrong with the car or the sink. Two days
ago he had gone into her computer and noticed that she had erased about a month of
e-mails.

Everything had changed on the night when he had been in the fight with the big Indian
in Akron. She had been quiet for a couple of days after that, and pretended to be
busy all the time—busier than anyone could possibly be. Then, when she would come
home, she would always be too tired. She didn’t show any signs of caring how bad he
had been hurt in the fight, in spite of the fact that he had been unconscious and
woke up with a broken nose and four cracked ribs.

The fight might have been his own fault, like she’d said, but losing so badly hadn’t
been his fault. He’d been drunk, and the Indian wasn’t drunk at all. How was that
a fair fight? Ever since then, Chelsea had been cold and distant, so cold that he
was sure she was getting ready to leave him. But in order to do that, she would need
two things—a place to live, and a new guy. Women were like frogs, jumping from one
lily pad to another. Before Chelsea jumped, she would have to be sure the next lily
pad was going to be there. She was nearly ready. He could feel it.

He kept his face turned toward the television set, but his eyes moved with her. Wherever
she stepped, he watched. At some point there would be that peculiar twinkly sound
her phone made when she got a text message, and he would be up in a second like a
big cat, snatch it out of her hand, and read it. If he heard instead the buzz it made
for a ring, he’d take it and say, “Who’s calling?” If the man hung up instead of answering,
he’d find out his name from her. Once he’d caught her like that, she couldn’t deny
it. If he had to, he’d beat the name out of her.

She walked across the front room without even glancing in his direction. He muted
the TV so he could hear her. He heard her go down the hall, and then heard a door
close quietly.

He turned the television up again to cover his movements, and stood to follow her
down the hall. He would fling open the door and grab the phone. All he had to do was
keep the sound of his steps quieter than the television set. He began to walk very
slowly. One step seemed quiet enough, so he began the next.

The metal-jacketed 180 grain bullet that was already spinning through the night air
at 2,800 feet per second smashed through the glass of the front window, pounded into
the back of his skull, and burst out the front, taking with it bits of bone, blood,
brain, and thirty-four years of accumulated jealousy, disappointment, and anger. Nick
was dead before his knees released their tension and his body toppled to the floor.

Chelsea ran out of the hallway yelling, “Nick! What the heck are you—” before she
saw his body and the window pane behind him. She cut off her mother’s phone call,
dropped to her belly, and dialed 911.

2

J
ane McKinnon jogged along the shoulder of the road toward home. Every morning after
her husband, Carey, went off to the hospital to prep for surgery at six, she did tai
chi and then went out to run. Sometimes she drove from the big old stone house in
Amherst to the Niagara River near the house where she’d grown up, and then ran the
three miles along the river to the South Grand Island Bridge and back. That was the
run she had always made as a teenager—three miles each way with the wide blue-gray
river beside her flowing steadily northward toward the Falls. Sometimes she would
drive over the bridge to Grand Island and run along West River Road, looking across
the west branch of the river at Navy Island and Canada. Sometimes she ran on one of
the college campuses, or in Delaware Park in Buffalo.

Today she ran along the roads near the house she shared with her husband. The house
had been here for a long time, the original structure a building made of fieldstones
mortared over logs a foot and a half thick around 1760. Carey’s ancestors had done
some farming and some trading with her Seneca ancestors who made up most of the population
at the time. For the past few generations the McKinnons had been doctors.

When she was a child there had still been thousands of acres of farmland along here,
mostly lying fallow and waiting for the developers. Now the developers had been at
work for many years, and she ran past deep green golf courses and huge, low houses
set far back from the highway and surrounded by enough remnants of old forests to
provide shaded yards in the summer and windbreaks against the storms that blew off
the Great Lakes in the winter.

Jane seldom ran the same route two days in a row. She never permitted a pattern to
develop or ran in a predictable place on a predictable day. Random changes were one
of the habits she had nurtured since she was in college. Before she had been Jane
McKinnon she had been Jane Whitefield. Now, like other suburban housewives, she bought
groceries at supermarkets, but unlike them, she had a list of fourteen markets, and
she shopped in them randomly, often at odd hours.

Life was usually quiet for Jane McKinnon, much of it taken up by various kinds of
volunteer work—benefits and fund-raising for the hospital, teaching two classes a
week in the Seneca language for junior high and high school children at the Tonawanda
Reservation during the winter, and helping to elect political candidates in the fall.
Jane avoided being chairwoman of any public events, never had her name on stationery,
and never identified herself on phone calls for causes except as “Jane.”

Jane still kept bug out kits in the McKinnon house in Amherst and in the house where
she had grown up. Each one consisted of a packet with ten thousand dollars in cash
and a collection of valid identification cards, credit cards, and licenses. The pictures
on the cards were hers and ­Carey’s, but the names were not. Over the years she had
learned to grow identities, using a set of forged papers to obtain real ones, buying
things with the credit cards and paying the bills so other companies would offer more
credit. As soon as she had a few valid forms of identification for herself and Carey
under new names, she had obtained passports in those names. Each kit also included
a 9 mm pistol and two extra loaded magazines.

Jane had persuaded Carey to accept her precautions as a part of their lives. He was
tall, strong, and athletic, and had no enemies of his own, so it had taken a few new
experiences for him to understand that he needed to take the steps she asked of him.
The most powerful had happened only a year ago. Jane had gone to Los Angeles and sneaked
an innocent man serving a murder sentence out of a courthouse. Jane’s runner had driven
off as she’d planned, but she had been captured by his enemies, shot, beaten, and
tortured for several days before she had escaped. Now Carey drove to work at the hospital
on one of five different routes she had plotted for him, each with a cutoff where
he could circle back and come out in the opposite direction if he was followed. But
more important, she had taught him to
look
. He was aware of the people, the cars, the changes around him, and that was the one
precaution that mattered most.

As Jane ran, she could still feel the effects of the damage the bullet had done to
her right thigh a year ago, and she listened to the rhythm of her steps to be sure
she was not favoring that side or developing a limp. She also kept her eyes moving
all the time. She watched cars coming and going, studied each person she could see
in a window, noted anything that looked different in any yard. Today almost everything
was exactly as it had been last time she had passed. The few things that were different
she memorized for the next time.

She was coming up the final stretch of road before the old stone house, building up
speed because she was coming to the end, when she saw two unfamiliar cars parked in
front of it.

Jane reduced her speed while she studied the cars. They were both relatively new full-size
cars. The front one was a Lincoln, and the second something like it, perhaps a Cadillac.
They were both plain even under scrutiny, without any of the aftermarket equipment
like floodlights or antennas that plain-wrap police vehicles usually had.

She maintained her speed, ran on toward her house, and saw that both cars had people
in them. There were two women in the front and two in the back of each car—eight in
all. The ones she could see were elderly and a bit overweight. She didn’t want to
stare any harder. They were probably in the neighborhood for some charity meeting
or other. One woman looked a bit like Ellen Dickerson.

All at once she realized who had come, and it made her knees feel weak. This was a
visit from the eight clan mothers. They were important dignitaries in the Seneca culture.
In the old times they had been simply the oldest, wisest, and most trusted women of
each clan. When the Senecas in New York State had been divided into several reservations,
Jane’s band, the Tonawanda band, had overwhelmingly retained the old religion and
codified the old form of government, including the clan mothers.

But the clan mothers were stronger and older than law. Since the day in prehistory
when the Senecas had first appeared on the great hill at the foot of Canandaigua Lake,
the women of each clan—Snipe, Hawk, Heron, Deer, Wolf, Beaver, Bear, and Turtle—owned
a longhouse, and all of them together owned the village and the land where they raised
the three sisters—corn, beans, and squash—and brought up the children. Because the
women knew each child best, the clan mothers had always chosen the chiefs, and could
remove them if they were disappointed.

And now, here they were, the eight clan mothers, not much different from the eight
who had signed the letter to President John Tyler in 1841 to inform him that every
Seneca chief had refused to sign the despicable and fraudulent 1838 Treaty of Buffalo
Creek, and so the Senecas refused to be forced off the Tonawanda Reservation. The
eight were also not so different from the women a thousand years before that, who
had decided whether a captive should be adopted to take the place of a dead Seneca,
or be killed to avenge him.

Even though she’d been running for miles, Jane felt her heart actually speeding up
as she walked to the driver’s side of the nearest car. She smiled. “Hello, Dorothy.
Hi, Sarah. Hi, Mae. Hi, Emma. What are you all doing here in Amherst?”

Dorothy Stone said, “We came to see you, Jane. I hope you don’t mind. We called ahead
early this morning, but you were out already. We took a chance. Are you free, or should
we come back tomorrow?”

“Come on in,” said Jane. “Don’t sit out here in a car.”

The car doors all opened, and Jane hurried to the next car and said, “Hi, Natalie.
Hi Daisy. Hi Susan. Hi Alma. Come on in. I’m so sorry I didn’t know you were coming.”

She trotted ahead to the front door, her mind already scrambling from place to place
in her mental image of the house, picking things up, straightening others, or in desperation,
hiding them. Another part of her mind was in the kitchen opening the refrigerator
and searching for appropriate food and drink. It was a tradition that Seneca wives
keep food ready for unexpected visitors. In the old times people from any of the Haudenosaunee
nations might arrive unexpectedly after a journey along the great trail that ran from
the Hudson River to the Niagara. If she had lived then she might have served soup
made with corn, beans, squash, and a little deer or bear in it for flavor. Jane swung
the front door open and rushed into the kitchen.

Jane pulled some berries from the freezer. She defrosted strawberries, raspberries,
and blueberries in the microwave and found some angel’s food cake to pour them over.
She started a pot of coffee, made lemonade and put the pitcher and glasses on a tray,
then piled everything on the biggest tray she had and carried it out so she could
serve it as soon as the ladies had settled into seats near the big stone fireplace
in the living room.

As Jane poured lemonade and brought in a tray of cookies, she surreptitiously looked
around the living room. These eight formidable women looked like any gaggle of matronly
ladies in spring dresses with flowered patterns, middle-aged and older, who might
have come out for a game of bridge or a club meeting. But the clan mothers held great
power. They were a governmental council that had been functioning the same way in
the same region for many centuries longer than the British Parliament. In the old
times they’d called for war by reminding the chiefs that there was a Seneca who had
been killed but not yet avenged. When they didn’t want war they would say that the
women weren’t inclined to make the moccasins for warriors to wear as they made their
way to the distant countries of enemies.

As Jane occupied herself serving the cake and berries she felt the muscles in her
shoulders relax a little. The women were all very cordial to Jane. “You have such
a beautiful house.” “I love the flowers you’ve got in that bed along the side. My
grandmother had tulips like that when I was a little girl.”

Jane accepted their compliments, and felt an almost childish sense of validation,
but she could not ignore the unusual nature of this visit. This wasn’t just Jane’s
own clan mother stopping by for a chat. This wasn’t even a delegation made up of her
moitie
—Wolf, Bear, Beaver, and Turtle. It was the mothers of all eight clans assembled here
together—something that couldn’t be meaningless, any more than the arrival of all
nine Supreme Court justices could.

She held Ellen Dickerson in the corner of her eye. She was a tall, straight woman
about fifty-five or sixty years old, with deep brown skin and long, gray hair gathered
into a loose ponytail that hung down her back. She sat on the edge of her chair with
her back perfectly straight, and yet managed to look comfortable. Jane knew that it
would be Ellen Dickerson who spoke first because she was clan mother of the Wolf clan,
Jane’s own clan.

Jane’s father, Henry, had been a Snipe. Her mother had been a young woman he brought
home from New York City who had milk-white skin and eyes so blue they looked like
pieces of the sky. In order to marry Henry Whitefield she should have been a Seneca
and come from a clan of the opposite
moitie
from the Snipes. The women of the Wolf clan had insisted on adopting her, just as
they had taken in captive women, runaways, or refugees hundreds of years earlier.
In Seneca life, children were members of their mother’s clan, so a couple of years
later when Jane was born, she was a Wolf.

They all talked for a while about topics of polite conversation—the early thaw this
year, the beautiful spring they’d been having. Daisy Hewitt said, “I’ve been trying
to figure out when to plant my corn. The sycamore leaves aren’t the size of a squirrel’s
ear yet, but it’s like midsummer.”

“I’ve got a nursery catalog that divides the country into zones,” said Mae. “This
year I’ll just go by the zone south of ours.”

Then the random conversation faded, and they all looked at Jane. Ellen Dickerson said,
“Jane, do you remember Jimmy Sanders?”

“Sure,” she said. “He and I used to play together when we were kids. During the summer,
when my father was away working, my mother and I would go out to the reservation to
live.”

“That’s right,” said Alma Rivers, of the Snipe clan. “I used to see the two of you
running around in the woods. You were pretty cute together.”

Ellen frowned. “He’s in some real trouble right now.”

“He is? Jimmy? Is he sick?”

“No. The police are looking for him.”

“What for?”

“He got in a fight in a bar in Akron about two months ago. He won, so he got charged
with assault I think it was. But before his trial, the man he’d fought with died.”
She frowned again. “He was shot. Jimmy hasn’t been seen since.”

Jane said, “That’s horrible. I can hardly imagine Jimmy in a bar, let alone hurting
somebody in a fight. And he’d certainly never shoot anybody. His mother must be going
insane with worry.”

“She is.”

Jane looked closely at Ellen, who was sitting across the coffee table from her. Ellen’s
eyes were unmoving, holding her there. Jane said, “I haven’t seen him in twenty years,
when he was at my father’s Condolence Council. No, it had to be my mother’s funeral,
when I was in college. Still a long time.”

“We want you to find him and bring him back.”

Jane’s eyes never moved from Ellen’s. “What makes you think I can do something like
that?”

“We know it’s something you can do. I’ll leave it at that.”

“You know that about me?”

“We’ve never had a good enough reason to speak. Sometimes when a person has a secret,
just whispering it to yourself can risk her life.”

BOOK: A String of Beads
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