Burntown Read online




  ALSO BY JENNIFER MCMAHON

  The Night Sister

  The Winter People

  The One I Left Behind

  Don’t Breathe a Word

  Dismantled

  Island of Lost Girls

  Promise Not to Tell

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2017 by Jennifer McMahon

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Doubleday, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada, a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited, Toronto.

  www.doubleday.com

  DOUBLEDAY and the portrayal of an anchor with a dolphin are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Cover images: tent © mashabuba/E+/Getty Images; rocks © Carlos G. Lopez/Moment/Getty Images; bridge © ChengRainie/Moment Open/Getty Images; river © Cultura/Adam Pass Photography/Getty Images; shack © Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto/Getty Images; clouds © MSPT/Shutterstock; pallets © ultramansk/Shutterstock

  Cover design by John Fontana

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Names: McMahon, Jennifer, [date], author.

  Title: Burntown : a novel / by Jennifer McMahon.

  Description: New York : Doubleday, 2017.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017002975 | ISBN 9780385541367 (hardback) | ISBN 9780385541374 (ebook)

  Subjects: | BISAC: FICTION / Suspense. | FICTION / Mystery & Detective / Women Sleuths. | FICTION / Coming of Age. | GSAFD: Mystery fiction. | Suspense fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3613.C584 B87 2017 | DDC 813/.6—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/​2017002975

  Ebook ISBN 9780385541374

  v4.1

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Also by Jennifer Mcmahon

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Before

  Miles

  Miles

  Miles

  Miles

  After

  Necco

  Theo

  Necco

  Theo

  Necco

  Pru

  Necco

  Theo

  Pru

  Necco

  Pru

  Necco

  Theo

  Necco

  Fred

  Theo

  Pru

  Necco

  Fred

  Theo

  Pru

  Fred

  Necco

  Fred

  Theo

  Pru

  Necco

  Theo

  Fred

  Necco

  Pru

  Theo

  Pru

  Necco

  One Year Later

  Necco

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  In memory of my father,

  Donald Eugene McMahon,

  whose stories live on

  BEFORE

  JUNE 16, 1975

  Miles

  His mother glides across the flagstone patio slowly, hips and long legs working in time with the music, a kind of undulating dance that reminds Miles of the way tall grass moves just before a thunderstorm. She clutches a drink in her hand—a mint julep in a sweating glass with daisies painted on the side. Captain and Tennille sing from the tinny portable radio that rests on the table: Love, love will keep us together.

  She hums as she dances her way to the aluminum-framed lounge chair. The brass elephant charm on her beaded bracelet swings, sniffing the air with its trunk. Miles loves the elephant bracelet. She won’t say where she got it, but she’s been wearing it for almost a month now.

  In her white cotton dress and gold sandals, she looks like one of the goddesses from the book of Greek mythology Miles has been reading. Aphrodite maybe. Her toenails are painted a rich velvety plum, her skin is a summery bronze, and her light brown hair is highlighted with gold and feathered back from her face. She sits down in the chair, resting her glass on the little metal table beside it. She picks up the pack of Pall Malls and shakes out a cigarette.

  Miles holds his breath and shifts uneasily in his hiding spot. He’s on his belly behind the rock garden, stretched out like a snake as he watches his mother across the yard.

  She’d promised to quit. But she keeps cigarettes hidden in the bookcase, behind the huge, leather-bound classics no one in their house ever reads: Moby-Dick, David Copperfield.

  Miles has told his mother about the movie they watched in health class—the images of the healthy, pink lungs and the dark, mottled smokers’ lungs. He hates to imagine that his mother’s lungs might look like the sooty inside of a chimney; worse still, he hates to think of her dying, which is what his health teacher, Mrs. Molette, says will happen if you smoke. Your lungs will become blackened. Diseased. They will not work anymore. They will not bring oxygen to your body. Without oxygen, you die.

  “And I might get hit by a bus, too,” his mother had said when he repeated this. “Or struck by lightning. Or the brakes could go out on my car and I could go over a cliff.”

  Miles has to admit that this last scenario seems possible, too. His mother drives an old MG convertible coupe that was a wedding present from her parents. It’s spotted with rust, and spends more time in the shop than out. Miles’s dad wants to trade it in for something more practical—a nice station wagon maybe, like all the other moms drive. Miles tries to imagine his mom behind the wheel of a station wagon, like Mrs. Brady on The Brady Bunch, but his mom is no Mrs. Brady. And his mom loves her old MG. She’s even named it. Isabella, she calls it, the name sounding musical. And sometimes, she’ll say she’s running to the store for milk and Frosted Flakes but then be gone for hours. Miles asks her where she goes and she says, “Just driving. Just me and Isabella and the open road.”

  It seems like every week some new, impossibly expensive imported part breaks: a valve, a pump, a drum…things that, to Miles, sound more like body parts than car parts. But when a car part breaks, you take the car in to Chance’s garage and they order a new part and replace it. You can’t do that with blackened, cancer-filled lungs.

  He has to find a way to stop her.

  That’s why, earlier today when she was out at the market, Miles stole his mother’s hidden pack of cigarettes. It was half-empty, with only ten cigarettes remaining. He took out two, and carefully worked half the tobacco out of the paper. Then, just as carefully, he replaced it with the two paper packets he’d made, each filled with black powder from his toy gun caps along with a pinch of sulfur from his chemistry set. Once the tobacco was placed back on top, they looked just like the other cigarettes. He wanted her to get a few good drags in before a small, stinking explosion would turn her off of smoking forever.

  Ten cigarettes, two of which will explode. The chances she’s chosen one just now are one in five. Miles likes numbers, understands odds. Hunkering down, he watches as she lights up.

  He’s wearing his Robin Hood costume: green corduroy pants that are a little too tight, tall cowboy boots, and one of his father’s brown work shirts with a tag that makes Miles’s neck itch, but he forces himself to be still, not to scratch. The shirt is cinched at the waist with a thick leather belt that holds his wooden sword. A quiver of arrows is on his back, and he holds his homemade bow in his hands. His father had helped him make the bow and arrows, had even made sharp metal arrowheads for them, reminding Miles that these were not toys and he needed to be careful. His mother wasn’t impressed: “Wonderful, Martin. And
I suppose you’ll deal with it when he kills one of the neighborhood cats by accident?”

  They argued, but in the end, Miles got to keep them.

  His father loves the old Robin Hood movies, and he and Miles sometimes watch them together on the little TV in his dad’s workshop. But lately, his father’s been too busy. He’s an appliance repairman, and drives a white van with his name on the side: MARTIN SANDESKI, APPLIANCE REPAIR AND SERVICE. His father also uses the van for hauling equipment for the jazz quartet he plays in, Three Bags Full. His dad likes to tell the story of how he once played the trumpet onstage down in New Orleans with Count Basie. Miles’s father is full of great stories. Stories of jazz legends he’s rubbed elbows with, or a producer he met at a little club in Albany, New York, who’s working on pulling some strings to get Three Bags Full a recording deal. And the best story of all: that his grandfather had worked for Thomas Edison, the guy who invented the lightbulb and movies and records. “He gave me some of Edison’s original plans,” Miles’s dad claimed. “Plans for a secret invention he was working on just before he died. They’re worth a fortune. A million dollars, easy.”

  “What are the plans for?” Miles had asked once, when his dad had polished off a six-pack of Narragansett.

  “A special sort of telephone. A telephone that does things no one would believe, impossible things.”

  Miles’s mother had laughed. “Stop teasing the boy with your stories, Marty.” They were sitting in the living room with the TV on, but no one was paying attention.

  His father had drained the rest of his can of Narragansett. “I’m not teasing, one day you’ll see.”

  Miles’s mother had told him she didn’t believe the Edison plans existed (she’d certainly never set eyes on them), and even if they did, no way were they actually from the real Thomas Edison. “Honest to God, you can’t believe half of what your father tells you,” she’d said, blowing out a stream of smoke, crushing a cigarette butt into the heavy glass ashtray on the coffee table with a little too much force.

  Now, Miles peers anxiously through a clump of tiger lilies, waiting for the bang from his mother’s cigarette.

  He feels an odd combination of anticipation and guilt; though he knows he’s doing this for her own good, it seems like a cruel trick to play. His mother is so easily frightened; Miles and his father tease her with rubber snakes in the bathtub, plastic spiders in the butter dish—practical jokes that always make her scream. Then, when she realizes it’s a joke, she laughs so hard she becomes breathless. His mother is beautiful when she laughs, and there is something truly stunning about catching her in the moment her fear turns to blissful, almost hysterical, relief. It almost embarrasses him to catch her in these moments, like he’s seeing something he shouldn’t; it’s almost like walking into the bathroom without knocking and seeing her just getting out of the tub.

  Suddenly, a shadow moves over the grass, crossing the yard and moving stealthily toward the patio.

  Could his father be home early?

  He’s supposed to be repairing a washing machine for Old Lady Mercier all the way across town. Then he was going to stop by the shop and work on an air conditioner a guy had dropped off.

  No. This is not his father, nor is it a child from the neighborhood, or anyone else he recognizes.

  It’s a man.

  A shorter, slighter man than his father. And this man wears yellow socks and black dress shoes that are too large for his feet, making an awkward flip-flop sound as he walks. His trousers are also too long, but have been rolled up. With each step, there is an absurdly bright flash of yellow from each ankle. But the oddest thing about this man is not his too-large shoes and yellow socks, or his quick determined walk toward Miles’s mother reclining on the patio.

  Covering his face, his whole head in fact, is a rubber chicken mask. The mask is white, the beak yellow, the comb and wattles red.

  Miles feels as if he’s somehow slipped into one of his Saturday morning cartoons. He watches as the Chicken Man approaches his mother from behind. She’s lying on the lawn chair, eyes closed, sunning herself; oblivious.

  Up until now, Miles hadn’t noticed the man’s hands. He’s been keeping them tight to his sides, but now, in the right, Miles sees the bright glint of a blade.

  Miles rises slightly and tucks one of his sharp arrows in the bow—his lucky arrow, the shaft painted black, the feathers red. He pulls back the string. The Chicken Man is directly behind her chair now, and he leans down to whisper something in her ear. Keeping her eyes closed, she laughs.

  Then, in one swift motion, the Chicken Man draws the blade across her throat.

  His mother’s eyes dart open, frantic and disbelieving. The blood pumps from her throat, soaking the chest of her white dress and dripping through the yellow nylon webbing of the chair and onto the flagstone patio. Instead of a scream, all Miles hears is one final resigned sigh.

  The arrow flies from Miles’s bow, hitting the Chicken Man on the left side of his lower back, making him bellow. As Miles stands up on wobbly legs, the Chicken Man swivels his head and pulls the arrow out with a roaring cry. Then he looks right at Miles. Holding the knife in one hand, and the arrow in the other, he takes a step in Miles’s direction.

  Miles is trying to get his legs to run when there’s a bright, explosive, sulfur-scented POP-POP! from the ashtray. The Chicken Man freezes, then takes off running back across the yard, rubber mask quivering, shoes flapping, socks glowing brighter than the sun.

  TIMES UNION, JUNE 17, 1975

  MURDER-SUICIDE RATTLES THE TINY VILLAGE OF BRAXTON

  BRAXTON, VERMONT

  At approximately three o’clock Monday afternoon, thirty-six-year-old Elizabeth Sandeski was slain in the backyard of her family home. Her son, ten-year-old Miles Sandeski, witnessed the crime. Police were called by a neighbor, Kelly Richardson, also of Cold Hollow Lane.

  “Miles came to our house covered in blood, hysterical. He said a man in a chicken mask had killed his mother,” Mrs. Richardson told reporters.

  The police searched the Sandeski home and garage, where, neighborhood witnesses say, they discovered bloodstained clothing, a rubber chicken mask, and a kitchen knife in the trunk of the family car. Chief Francis Bonnaire, of the Broom Hollow police, declined to confirm or comment, reporting only that what they found led to a warrant for Mr. Sandeski’s arrest.

  Martin Sandeski, who runs Sandeski Appliance Repair and Service and plays trumpet in the local jazz band Three Bags Full, was taken into custody. Neighbors stated that the couple had been fighting a great deal lately and that Martin told several friends that he believed his wife was having an affair.

  Martin Sandeski took his own life hours after his arrest. Chief Bonnaire confirmed that Mr. Sandeski hanged himself while in police custody and that attempts to revive him failed. Chief Bonnaire offered this statement: “We have never had an incident like this before. A full investigation will be completed, as well as a thorough review of our policies and procedures for handling those in our custody.”

  Martin Sandeski’s sister, Holly Whitney, of Ashford, declined to comment on her brother’s state of mental health or the rumors of his wife having an affair. “We’ll never know what really happened. All we can do is move forward and do the best we can to heal. We’ve got to do all we can for Miles, now. The poor boy has suffered a horrific loss.”

  Dear Miles,

  I am hoping that you never read this, because if you do, it means I am gone. I have entrusted your aunt Holly with making sure you get this letter should anything happen to me. I’m hoping to live a long, happy life, to see you grow up and get married, to hold a grandchild in my arms. But if you’re reading this, I guess it means I ran out of luck.

  This letter, and what I’m about to tell you, is not to be shared with anyone. Not your aunt Holly. Not even your mother. No one. This is for you and you alone.

  I own only one thing of true value. One thing that could change lives. And I am passing it down to you as my
own father once passed it down to me.

  Over the years I have told you about how my father worked for Thomas Edison at his factory in New Jersey. I have also mentioned the plans my father gave to me.

  What I might not have told you is that my father was not exactly given these plans by Edison. They were stolen.

  But that is another story altogether.

  What matters is that (despite your mother’s very vocal opinions to the contrary) they are real. Authentic. And worth a fortune, though it isn’t the monetary value alone that makes them such a treasure—it’s far more than something anyone could put a price on.

  You will find the plans in the garage. There is an old empty metal gas can way up on the top back shelf. Open the can by twisting off the spout. The plans are tucked inside, rolled up in a plastic bag.

  Hold tight to them. Tell no one you have them.

  One day, I promise you, those papers and the machine shown on them will change not only your life, but quite possibly the entire world.

  I love you, Miles. Forever and ever. No matter what.

  —Dad

  Miles

  1975–1997

  Miles carries his mother’s little brass elephant in his pocket the way other boys carry a rabbit’s foot or a good luck stone or the way the old ladies at church carry rosaries. The elephant charm is his talisman; he rubs its back, worries over it, so much so that sometimes it feels almost alive. There are moments when he swears he can feel it move, can feel its tiny heart beating.