Suits hanging on a rack, a cart like the use at a dry cleaner"s, socks and underwear in a rubber tub, and a mattress covered in a plain white sheet. A refrigerator rattling away as it cools a block of Velveeta, a pack of imported ham, eight beers and a jar of peanut b.u.t.ter.
I don"t even know why I keep the peanut b.u.t.ter in the fridge.
This is my life.
For now.
As I descend the rickety cast iron staircase I check my watch. It"s a Timex I picked up at K-Mart after I stepped off the bus. I have to be on the flight in eight hours. It"s now two thirty-three in the morning. The parlor closes at three, I think. That"s when the in-and-out stream stops, or maybe the patrons are too scared to brave the mean streets at four in the morning. I don"t know or care.
A stoop-shouldered man emerges and doesn"t look at me and I don"t look at him. I check my watch again and walk in the rain. It"s a light drizzle that covers everything, makes the world glow. Water slides down my face and clings to my eyebrows. I glance at a shop window. The lights are shut off inside, and I see myself in a gla.s.s darkly. For a startling moment I"m walking side by side with my father"s ghost, but I see the tattoos running down both arms to stop just above the wrist and it"s just me. Dad never wore his hair this long and he never visited a tattoo parlor.
He had one tattoo, a crudely incised PETER in blue ink on his right shoulder. When he was a kid he and some boys he knew gave themselves tattoos with pins and a ballpoint pen. His was buried so deep in the flesh that all his attempts to remove it failed, and so he had his own name tattooed on his meaty shoulder until he died.
I should probably be wearing a jacket. November, and rain, but it"s unseasonably warm, almost fifty. I"ve had enough of being confined. I want to swing my arms.
The car is parked in a lot. I stop to pay a bleary-eyed attendant and walk over. It"s an unremarkable Toyota. I"ve been ordered to keep a low profile.
I hate driving this thing. The old city is dead at night. Last call was over an hour ago and the tourists get scared of the dark. It"s one of the safer areas but all cities are the same. I f.u.c.king hate cities. Too much chain link and concrete and neon, not enough trees. I don"t belong here.
Turn on 3rd onto Market, catch I-95. It"s a straight run now. I obey all posted limits and traffic signals.
Have to. I"m on parole, after all. I wouldn"t want to get pulled over on my way to steal a car.
Driving gives me a lot of time to think. My knuckles go white. The wheel creaks in protest.
I"ve had plenty of time to think.
That"s what prison is. The punishment isn"t confinement. They put a roof over your head. It"s not isolation, either, unless you get sent to solitary. I never did. It"s not following orders, it"s not the s.h.i.tty therapy groups, either. (Evidently, I have an anger management problem.) No, the punishment is time. Time to think, time to brood, time to plan. When you"re out in the world all you want is time. People say "there aren"t enough hours in the day" and try to stretch them out.
In prison, the bars just keep you in. It"s the time that punishes you.
Time has come today.
The drive takes almost an hour, out to Lancaster County, the very eastern edge. This is an old place. Everything around here is old. Old for the United States, anyway. I went to Europe once, went on a tour. Saw lots of history. Thousand year old buildings that just go about their business like buildings do. They"re just there. Around here anything older than a century or two always goes behind velvet ropes. We think it"s so special.
Europe. I was sixteen. There was good coffee and better company, but I can"t think about that. If I try to hard I can"t remember half the girls" names. I was never good at that to begin with. There was a time in my life when there were so many girls I"d have to take notes to remember who I f.u.c.ked when. Then one day there were two girls. The one, and all the rest just kind of lumped together.
The windshield wipers tick away the seconds, minutes, an hour and a half or so. Take it easy in the rain.
From the mist, the high chimneys and glowing lights fold into existence, vague shapes growing more solid as I approach. It catches in my chest.
This is my home. I am going home.
Except I"m not. Now the high walls with their jagged gla.s.s tops and wrought iron spear points are there to keep me out, not in. My home no longer.
One of the oldest continuously occupied homes in the entire state, the Amsel estate is sprawling expanse of almost three hundred acres. Kolonie, my great-great-insert-more-greats grandfather named it. It"s the German word for rookery. The family name, Amsel, means Blackbird. The house sits far back from the road, so far back, in fact, that in the deep gloom of a cloudy moonless night the only thing visible is the windows, like the distant lights of Xanadu or that green light in The Great Gatsby.
I didn"t pay any attention in high school English, but I used to know somebody who cared a lot about that s.h.i.t, and it meant I started caring about it, too.
If I keep driving half a mile there will be a break in the ancient brick wall that surrounds the wilds of the estate. The trees peel away and there"s a huge wrought iron gate, almost fifteen feet tall, overtopping the wall itself by five feet. I"ve been casing the place for a while now. The new owners patched some broken places in the wall.
My ancestors coated the very top with broken gla.s.s, and the wall is also adorned with six inch long wrought iron spikes, each wickedly sharp. When they built the walls there was a real possibility the house might actually be attacked.
On top of the old school security system, there"s all the modern conveniences. Motion sensors, cameras, and a pack of dobermans running on the property. Silent sentinels. I"ve always liked dobermans. They don"t f.u.c.k around with barking, they just rip out your throat. If you toss them some sausage they"ll eat it after they finish with you. Good, loyal, no nonsense dogs.
The place is a fortress, and with good reason.
It"s old, though, and old houses have secrets. They start to love their families.
I could go on and on about my family. It used to be a huge extended network, all over the East coast. Distant relatives of mine fought on both sides of the Civil War, and both sides of the Revolutionary War, but only on one side of the French and Indian War. I can trace my ancestry back to a Hessian mercenary who switched sides and married into the family and took the Amsel name for himself, as the current patriarch at the time had only daughters. They did things like that back then.
Later on, the owners of the house were abolitionists, and the estate was a stop on the Underground Railroad. That"s where I"m headed now.
I"m not sure who owns the farm that borders my family home, but the dilapidated barn is still there, edging up to the wall. I pull the Toyota off the road, bounce and jounce down a dirt track, and pull it right into the barn. I"m going to leave it here. It"s not mine anyway, and after today I won"t need it anymore. Four-thirty in the morning, now. Plenty of time, plenty of time. I leave the keys in the ignition and the doors unlocked.
Dad showed me this tunnel once. It still stands. In the barn, in the back corner, the half-rotted floorboard lifts up. The tunnel is dark, and barely tall enough for me to stand, bending my head a little. I take a flashlight and a stick. It"s always full of spiders. I f.u.c.king hate spiders. Suffer not the arachnid to live. I think that"s in the Bible somewhere.
If it"s not, it should be.
The tunnel is sixty feet long, sh.o.r.ed up with old timbers that are so hard they may as well be stone. It looks like a mine shaft in a cowboy movie. When I was a kid, I was terrified of this place. Of course, it"s November and it"s freezing cold at night, so the few times I have to knock down the web the one that made it is already dead, spindly legs curled up on themselves. I didn"t need much encouragement to stay out of here when I was a kid but Dad made it very clear I wasn"t ever to travel the tunnel alone; once he was younger then I was the first time he showed it to me, he found a nest of black widows and it was just luck that he didn"t put his foot in it and get bitten half a hundred times. Probably would have killed him. Adults can usually survive the widow"s bite, but not that many.
When I emerge from the other side I"m covered in dust and a little dirt and my stick is coated with filmy old spider silk.
I toss it aside and cut off the flashlight, then take a few minutes for my eyes to adjust.
I make it about twenty yards when the dogs show up.
They fold out of the darkness on silent legs, black specters with bobbed tails and cropped ears that make them look like silky black devils. I stop and they surround me, staring, silent. One by one they bare their fangs.
One of them is older than the others, gray hairs silvery on his dark face. He pads over, the stump of his tail twitching as he tries to wag. I crouch down and offer him my hand. He sniffs, and gives me a friendly lick as I scratch behind his ears.
"Hey, buddy," I whisper. "I wish I could remember which one you were."
The others take their cue from the leader, surrounded me and sniff at me and I pet them one by one. They"d rip out an intruder"s throat and leave his rotting carca.s.s to be found by the groundskeeper in the morning.
I"m not an intruder. The intruders are inside, sleeping in my f.u.c.king house.
One step at a time.
After I pay my respects to the dogs, I move silently through the grounds. This section is wooded, kept wooded to conceal the movements of runaway slaves and the new owners have let it run wild. There are oaks here that stood before the United States was the United States. h.e.l.l, the ivy growing on some of the trees is older than that. It"s like walking through some ancient forest. Dobermans hadn"t been developed yet but my grandfather"s grandfather"s grandfather probably walked these woods with a pack of hounds, just like I am now.
There used to be a path here but the stones are worn down smooth and covered with loam. I used to walk here all the time with my mother and father. When you"re a kid, Mom and Dad are just there. Only now with both of them gone do I realize how I miss them both so f.u.c.king much. I can see them in my mind"s eye on this very path on a warm autumn day, walking hand in hand. Dad was built like I am- tall and heavily muscled, but he kept his coal black hair closely cropped.
That was so long ago.
The garage is big enough to be a house on its own. A long, long time ago, it was a stables, but my grandfather, or maybe great grandfather, had it converted and rebuilt into a garage. His car, a lumbering Packard, is still in the furthest bay, or was when I was last here. I went for a ride in a few times. It"s big and slow and ponderous to drive and I"m not here for it.
I"m here for my Dad"s car. Technically, she"s mine. They"re holding her hostage here.
The garage is in sight, but so is the house. The lights are on on the second floor.
I shouldn"t. I should go nowhere near it, not yet.
Refusing to listen to that little voice that says you shouldn"t is probably how I ended up in prison for five years, but old habits die hard. I run across the gra.s.s, hoping I don"t set off a motion detector or end up on camera. Stupid, stupid, stupid. I could end up back in prison serving out the rest of my term for this, plus interest, but I have to see.
I did this a dozen times when I was a kid. The back of the house is a huge terrace, with a roof supported by ma.s.sive columns of real marble. They"re so worn from age and acid rain that it"s easy to shimmy right up. The pockmarks are like handholds, like the stippling and grippy spots on a climbing wall.
I was twelve when I did this the last time, but I"m in the best of shape of my life. Lots of weight lifting and constant body weight exercises in my cell, you see. It"s easy to get up to the terrace roof, though I go on all fours where I used to run when I was a kid. Work my way across to the wall. A ledge runs all the way across the house, and these brick b.u.t.tresses jut out from the sides. They"re slick from the rain, so I take it easy, and work my way down the ledge, using the brick handholds. My old room is four windows down. The light is on inside. I stop by the window and lean over.
Evelyn walks out of the en-suite, wrapped in a towel. It"s a creamy white towel, but it"s darker than her skin, as pale as milk. When I first met her I thought she was an albino, but she"s not. Real platinum blonde hair cascades to her hips in a perfectly straight fall. The water turns it green when she gets wet. I remember seeing that the first time, first time I ever saw her go swimming. She loves to swim.
She sits on the bed and takes a blow dryer to her hair, never once glancing at the window. She"s more delicate than slender. I remember holding her wrists in my hands, feeling her long fingers lace through mine. I could stay here for hours and just watch. After running the hair dryer she starts brushing out her hair. I"ve never seen a shade quite like hers. It"s what they call platinum blonde but it"s almost silver, only a hint of gold in the right light. The only color is in her eyes, a striking blue. There"s power in those eyes.
Eve is my stepsister. Her father married my mother when I was nineteen years old.
Then he sent me to prison and stole my life.
Now she sleeps in my bed.
I edge away from the window, carefully make my way across the roof and down the column. She"s up early, but then, she was always an early riser. The light is still on, but the sun is coming up, bruising the eastern sky. I"ve been here too long, took too much of a risk.
I had to see her. It"s been five years.
She stole my life, along with her rat b.a.s.t.a.r.d father. She eats my food, lives in my house, sleeps in my bed.
...Still.
I"m here for the car. That"s my opening play. I sprint over to the garage. There"s ten bays, the car is in bay four. It was always in bay four. My father treasured this automobile, did all the work on it himself and taught me everything he could; he died when I was twelve, so it wasn"t much but I built on it as much as I could. I have more interest in being a mechanic than running a multinational business, but a man once wrote that what men want does not matter. Or women, I guess. The bay doors aren"t locked. I roll up the door, and there she is.
They knew how to build "em back then, Dad always said. She"s a "70 Pontiac Firebird. She was born stock, but Dad did a load of work on her himself. All new running gear, topped off with a twin-turbo on a big block crate motor, four hundred cubic inches. State of the art disk brakes, all new steering, ivory pearl paint and a ma.s.sive, multicolored screaming chicken decal on the hood. She"s a beauty. Just touching the cool metal of the fender brings me back. I remember screaming my head off when Dad drove me in this car. Once I even overhead Mom joking with him when I wasn"t supposed to be awake.
Yeah, that"s right. I was conceived in the back seat of this car. It"s as much my home as the house, if not more so, and it is mine.
n.o.body bothered to lock the doors. Or drive her for a long time, from the dust in the interior. I flip open the glove compartment and pull out the registration.
Yup, VICTOR AMSEL. The address is wrong, but it"s my f.u.c.king name. This is my car, legally, free and clear.
A quick trip over to the key box and I perform the only breaking of this breaking and entering operation, shearing off the rusted old padlock with some bolt cutter I find lying around. I take the key and the spare and slip back inside. The seat still fits me like a glove. They must have just dumped her here. Gas tank is empty, of course. Fortunately the garage has its own supply. I twiddle my thumbs until the tank is full, then finally get back in for the third time.
I turn the key. The motor chugs.
Oh, come on.
Another twist, and the rrr-rrrr-rrrrrr turns into a throaty note from the exhaust, but she doesn"t turn over for me. Come on. One more time. f.u.c.k that Toyota. No disrespect to the j.a.panese, but I want my car back. I want my house, my life.
Third time"s the charm.
The roar of the exhaust sounds like an old airplane, thunderously loud in the confined s.p.a.ce. The engine smoothes out almost immediately and I feel a surge of joy as I let out the clutch and ease in the gas. The car rumbles forward out of the garage and I whip around the turn, open the throttle and stab the b.u.t.ton taped to the roof with my thumb. I hope the batteries aren"t dead.
They"re not, somehow. The wrought iron gates swing open. I roll the windows down. The rain has stopped and the air smells damp and musty. Mists cling to the ground.
I jam my hand out the window and give the security camera the finger before I whip out onto the road and two long black stripes of burnt rubber on the asphalt.
Vic is back, a.s.sholes.
Chapter Two.
Evelyn I wake up at four thirty in the morning, each and every day. My morning routine is absolutely the same, down to the minute. First I brush my teeth, then I floss, then I shower, dry and brush out my hair. My hair is, in my own opinion, my best feature. My skin is too pale and lined with blue and red veins. When I get out of the shower, I look like a roadmap from the scalding heat of the water and the freezing chill of a November morning in this ancient house.
My clothes for the day are already laid out. A dark blue pencil skirt, blazer and black blouse, dark stockings and sensible shoes. I wind my hair into a simple bun and lock it in place with a pair of chopsticks, black. As I said, my hair is my best feature, so I keep it plain, to match the rest of me. Otherwise I am far from remarkable, at least in a good way. My nose is too big, my face too narrow. I don"t get much sleep and it shows on my face.
Breakfast is waiting for me downstairs. Father fired the Amsels" cook after Victor"s mother pa.s.sed away. He replaced most of the staff, in fact. I eat in the kitchen, skipping the overly ostentatious dining room. The cook, a round woman with a thick French accent, has little to say to me. Father keeps her around to impress clients. I eat a bowl of oatmeal and drink a gla.s.s of orange juice. The cook must love me. I eat the same thing for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, every day.
My a.s.sistant will be awake soon. After I"ve been served, the cook goes back to the servant"s quarters, back to bed, leaving me alone in the kitchen. Every sound rings heavily off endless expanses of stainless steel. I hate this place; I feel like I"m coming here to be dissected every morning. I put my own dishes in the sink and walk upstairs to the office.
Peter Amsel -Victor"s father- had a lovely Olde World office, in the very center of the house. I don"t use that. My office was once a bedroom. The house has sixteen bedrooms, though I think the largest brood that ever lived here was a total of eight children. In the old old old days, the Amsels used to house their entire brood here, generations living under the same roof. When Father married Victor"s mother and I moved in here, they lived alone. The house felt cavernous, and it still does. It feels angry. I"m not a superst.i.tious person. I don"t believe in ghosts or any such foolishness. I don"t care how old the house is, it"s just brick and mortar, plaster and paint and wood.
It hates me anyway. I don"t belong here.
One day I will approach father about disposing of the estate, but not yet.
I"ve broached the idea before. The problem is legitimacy. Through a series of rather unfortunate events, I have come to be the heir to the Amsel fortune. My own portfolio is modest, inheritance from my mother. The Amsel holdings make me a billionaire, the ninth richest woman on the planet.
Peter Amsel"s will left everything to Victor, on certain conditions. When he went to prison, he was disinherited and it all reverted to his mother. His mother"s will pa.s.sed everything to me. When we lost her to cancer shortly after Victor"s imprisonment, it all became mine. I"d give it all back if I could. I never wanted this.
I can still hear her breathy whisper. It was a terrible ordeal for her to speak with the cancer ravaging her lungs. Her last words were a throaty rasp.
Promise, was the last thing she said. Promise me.
I"m better at keeping my schedule than I am keeping promises.
a.s.sistants are a pain. I go through them like a dog chewing bones. The latest is Alicia. She"s the first one that hasn"t complained about my hours. I let her sleep in- I don"t expect her to meet me in the office until seven in the morning. She arrives without comment and sits down in the guest chair in front of my desk and spreads out my agenda on her lap. I prefer to keep everything on paper. Electronics are not secure. Alicia is a middle aged woman, a mother of three who needs my patronage. If I were a cruel person I would exploit that. I don"t, I only ask for competence and that she refrain from wasting my time with pointless nonsense. I listen vaguely as she reads out my agenda for the day. I already know all of it. I need to be on a private jet in four hours, meaning we must leave in three. Before that I sit back and listen to her briefing for an hour as she goes over the news.
That d.a.m.ned feature story on me is causing no end of trouble. One of the financial rags interviewed me last month. They wanted me to show up in a c.o.c.ktail dress and sprawl out on a desk, like a model in some kind of skin mag layout. I showed up in my usual conservative attire and stared into the camera. The magazine now sits on my desk, my own face staring back at me. I think they Photoshopped it, tried to make me prettier. I think I look like a weasel. Maybe a fox, if you"re being charitable, but not in the vulgar sense. The screaming bold headline proclaims me the Ice Queen of Wall Street. I haven"t read the article. I don"t need to. If I was a man I"d be celebrated. I dare to do this and be a woman, so I must be lambasted for my arrogance.
As Alicia finishes the morning briefing I finger the edges of the paper. I have a distinct urge to ruin the career of everyone involved in printing this thing, from the editor all the way down to the copy boys in their mailroom. I could, if the urge struck me.
Amsel is a holding company. Long, long ago, the family got its start manufacturing explosives. Gunpowder, to be precise. The family estate borders a sloping quick running river that used to be lined with mills for miles, fueling the Union war machine while, ironically, some cousins fought on the confederate side. There was never a direct threat to these holdings, but there was a time when this house was strategically important. That ended a long time ago. Gunpowder became chemicals, chemicals became a dozen other products from solvents to adhesives to demolition explosives. Amsel helped in wars, put men on the Moon and create the Internet. Everyone talks about the innovations of this or that computer company but their devices would be useless without fifteen patents that belong to the family for the next sixty years, and in perpetuity if our lobbyists do their job. I can meet with Senators on a whim. Billionaires look busy when they see I"m coming.
None of this makes me feel anything.
I suppose that"s my advantage.