In the town of Castleview, Illinois, Tom Howard is murdered at the factory he manages—on the same day that Will E. Shields and his family, newly come to Castleview, arrive with a realtor in tow to see Howard's house. From an attic window, Shields glimpses the phantom castle that has given the town its name. They are discussing the house with Sally Howard when the police arrive bearing the dreadful news. Then, driving back to the motel, Shields nearly hits a gigantic horseman in the rain…beginning a series of collisions with the mythological that only Gene Wolfe could tell.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Release date:
January 15, 1991
Publisher:
Tom Doherty Associates
Print pages:
288
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1
THE HOUSE AT THE EDGE OF THE FIELDS
TOM HOWARD stood at the edge of the loading dock and stared out across the storage yard. It was raining, raining hard, and that made it hard for him to see. The first shift had already gone; there was no second now that summer had gone, too. The yard was clamorous with rain, cold drops that pounded the steel drums.
Yet he was certain he had seen something.
When he went down the dock steps, the rain pounded him as well, drummed upon the shoulders of his yellow slicker, drove hard against the brim of his rubberized hat. It was not dark enough yet--not quite dark enough--for him to require the black, five-cell flashlight he carried, but he switched it on just the same.
No one crouched between the rows of fifty-five-gallon drums. No one squatted behind the low stack of three-quarter-inch angle iron. As Tom splashed toward the scrap heap and the dumpsters, there came a sudden jolt that halted all thought. He fell face down onto the flooded gravel, but he never felt it.
Joy Beggs, "Your Real Estate Lady," regarded the old Howard place with an admiration that was not entirely feigned. It was by current standards much too large, and it had notreally been modernized to the degree Joy would have liked. And it was wood, true. But it had been repainted in August, white not some crazy color, and its roof was only two years old. "A lovely old home, Mr. Shields," she declared with enthusiasm. "Didn't I tell you? And," she let her voice drop, "you can get it for a song. He's been promoted, and they have to move."
Leaning forward so that her mouth was at her husband's ear, Ann Schindler whispered, "Look at those flowers, Willie." Ann had retained her maiden name.
Her husband answered firmly, "We're not going to pay sixty thousand for flowers." He added, "No matter how wet they are."
Ann murmured, "But it shows they care."
Joy nodded approvingly. "You're absolutely right, and let me tell you, Mr. Shields, you're lucky to have this rain. Most folks looking for a home won't go out when it rains, but there's nothing sillier. With rain like this you can go up in the attic with a flashlight--I've got one--and look for leaks. Then there won't be any surprises the next time it rains."
Shields nodded and rubbed his jaw. He was a long lank man, and it was a long lank jaw that he rubbed.
"Aren't we even going to get out and look at it?" Mercedes Schindler-Shields griped from her place beside her mother in the rear seat. Mercedes was sixteen.
"Of course we are," Joy told her. "There's a black-topped drive around here somewhere, and I've got enough umbrellas for everybody."
They were golf umbrellas, striped orange and brown; Joy and Mercedes shared one, Shields and Ann the other. There was, very fortunately, a spacious front porch with a roof; Joy pressed the bell button. Above the pounding of the rain, Shields could hear chimes tolling slowly and almost sadly, somewhere far beyond the door.
Keeping her voice down, Joy said, "It's an old farmhouse. There's more than three acres still. Let me tell you, we callproperties a lot smaller than this 'estates' in the real estate business."
"Room for a tennis court?" Mercedes wanted to know.
"Absolutely."
Shields folded their umbrella and banged the ferrule on the porch to shake the water out.
Joy told him, "When the subdividers get interested in this area--and they will--you could sell off a couple acres for more than the down payment on the house."
Seth Howard opened the door. "Come on in," he said. "You can leave your umbrellas in the hall."
"We'll leave them on the porch," Joy told him. "They'll be okay." They trooped inside. The hallway was wide for a private house, high-ceilinged and dark.
"Mom's in the kitchen. You want to see her? Dad's not home yet."
Joy said, "That won't be necessary. I'll show the house. Just don't pay any attention to us."
Seth followed them anyway, mouse-quiet in athletic shoes. He was seventeen, nearly eighteen, tall already, and dark, with his father's blue Norman eyes. Mercedes lagged somewhat behind her parents, and soon she and Seth were walking side by side, neither speaking until she asked, "Where does this little door go?"
"To the turret--want to see it? It's kind of cool, but it'll be cold up there."
"Sure," she said. "I noticed the turret from outside." I am, she thought, ohmyGod, a twelve. What the heck would he want with a pig like me?"
"Okay." He opened the door, disclosing a steep and narrow stair. "All the rest of the house is two stories, but this's three. There are windows, and you can see pretty far." He led the way, to Mercedes's infinite relief.
High in the attic, Joy Beggs apologized. "I'm afraid it's terribly cluttered right now. They'll be moving a lot of this out.Anything they leave will belong to you folks, and you can do whatever you want with it."
Shields nodded absently, staring around. He looked first at the underside of the roof, because it was where Joy played her light; but reason suggested that she would not have been so eager to bring them here if she had thought there was a chance of a leak, and he transferred his attention to the contents of the attic, mostly boxes, old trunks, and stacks of books. He had a sudden premonition that the Howards would move none of it. All this would be theirs, if they bought this house--his to explore slowly, on rainy Sunday afternoons.
"You could convert this into more bedrooms," Joy suggested. "There are eight of these big dormer windows, and they let in plenty of light when the sun's out, even with all this junk in front of them."
Ann murmured, "Or a study. Willie, I could write up here--I know I could."
"Oh, you're a writer!"
"Only cookbooks," Ann told Joy.
Shields said, "She's had three published so far. Arkin and Patris in New York--they're her publishers." Proud of her, he wanted to say that it was not just some church group printing a few hundred, though he did not know how to do it without giving offense.
"Cooking with the Lake Poets, that was my first one. And then I wrote Cooking with Abe and Mary, and Cooking for George Bernard Shaw. That's Irish-English vegetarian. What are you looking at, Willie?"
Shields had been peering through the grimy glass of the nearest attic window. "Nothing," he said. "Nothing at all."
Rain drummed unceasingly on the roof.
In the turret, Mercedes looked out of each gray window in turn. "Boy, I like this," she said. "Wonder if my folks will let me have it."
Seth asked, "Are they going to buy the house?"
Mercedes shrugged. "We've got to live someplace."
"You're just moving to Castleview?"
"My dad's bought a dealership here." There was a window seat, and Mercedes sat down, careful to leave room for Seth if he wanted it.
"Motorcycles?"
She shook her head. "No, cars. He's been the manager at a Buick agency ever since I was a little kid. Now he's bought his own agency here."
"Oh, yeah. I know the one. It's been for sale." Seth did not sit down.
"You don't mind that we're maybe going to buy your house?"
"What for? We've got to sell it. We're moving to Galena. My dad's been promoted, and he says we can't afford two places. Only my great-grandfather built it, and I've lived here my whole life. See that little picture?" He pointed toward a watercolor framed behind glass, the only decoration in the small, hexagonal room. "My grandmother painted that."
"No kidding?" Mercedes rose to look. "Where's Galena? Is it very far from here?"
"About thirty miles."
The watercolor showed a line of rugged hills, fringed with scarlet-and-gold maples. Slender stone towers, faint and even ghostly, loomed above the treetops.
"Then you could come over," Mercedes told him. "I mean, if you wanted to see the house again. That is, you could say you were coming to see me. We could walk around, and you could tell me about stuff."
Seth nodded.