Blue Moon (43 page)

Read Blue Moon Online

Authors: James King

Tags: #FIC000000

BOOK: Blue Moon
3.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I am alone in the room. Then I feel a presence. I look around but see no one else occupying the space which is completely devoid of any furniture or decoration. I walk towards the large window and then hear a laughing sound behind my back. I turn around.

In the very middle of the chamber is a small table at which three children—two girls and a boy—are seated. They smile at me, their
faces grinning as if they are concealing some great secret. I walk over to them and, as I approach, they rearrange themselves to accommodate me. I had not noticed the fourth chair which, nodding in my direction, the children beckon me to take. I sit down. As I inspect the faces of the children, I notice their complexions have a perfect, milky softness, their eyes a bright and true shine. The little boy sits opposite me. He joins hands with the girls on either side of him; then the two young ladies reach out to take mine. We sit there, looking at each other. I close my eyes. I feel the tender flesh of each girl's palm. The clear, delicate scent of the pines is overwhelming.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Marjorie Freeman Campbell's
Torso
(subsequently republished as
Unholy Matrimony)
is the only book-length study of Evelyn Dick. Campbell also wrote an excellent history of Hamilton:
A Mountain and a City.
I have also learned a great deal from Brian Henley's various books devoted to the history of Hamilton and from Paul Wilson's lively columns in the
Hamilton Spectator.
The following were very useful: Jack Batten's
Robinette: The Dean of Canadian Lawyers,
Vincent Burns'
Female Convict,
Owen Carrigan's
Crime and Punishment in Canada: A History,
Keith Edgar and Richard Daniel's
Evelyn Dick: The Tragic Story of an Emotional Degenerate,
Patricia Pearson's
When She Was Bad,
Douglas Rodger's
How Could You, Mrs. Dick?,
and John Weaver's
Crimes, Constables, and Courts: Order and Transgression in a Canadian City, 1816-1970.
Brian Henley and his staff at the Hamilton Public Library provided me with a wide array of documents, including many fascinating, unpublished photographs in the Local History collection.

Marc Cote, an editor's editor, was—as is his wont—both totally demanding and completely supportive.

Other books

According to Hoyle by Abigail Roux
Run With Me by Shorter, L. A.
Cadet 3 by Commander James Bondage
The Guest Room by Chris Bohjalian
the Trail to Seven Pines (1972) by L'amour, Louis - Hopalong 02
Hero by martha attema
Revenant by Phaedra Weldon
Some Kind of Happiness by Claire Legrand