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The Doll Maker
The Doll Maker Read online
The Author
Richard Montanari was born in Cleveland, Ohio, to a traditional Italian-American family. After university, he travelled Europe extensively and lived in London, selling clothing in Chelsea and foreign language encyclopedias door-to-door in Hampstead.
Returning to the US, he started working as a freelance writer for the Chicago Tribune, the Detroit Free Press, the Seattle Times, and many others. His novels have now been published in more than twenty-five languages.
Also by Richard Montanari
The Violet Hour
Kiss of Evil
Don’t Look Now (previously published as The Deviant Way)
The Rosary Girls
The Skin Gods
Broken Angels
Play Dead
The Devil’s Garden
The Echo Man
The Killing Room
The Stolen Ones
COPYRIGHT
SPHERE
An imprint of Little, Brown Book Group 100 Victoria Embankment London EC4Y 0DY
An Hachette UK Company
www.hachette.co.uk
First published in Great Britain in 2014 by Sphere
Copyright © Richard Montanari 2014
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
Lyrics to ‘Wall of Dolls’ by Golden Earring reproduced with kind permission of Barry Hay.
Lyrics to ‘These Foolish Things’ reproduced with kind permission of [to come]
All characters and events in this publication, other than those clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
This is the wall of dolls,
Secret world of smalls.
Look at them all my friend,
You’ll be one of them in the end.
— Golden Earring: ‘Wall of Dolls’
Prologue
He knew the moment she walked in.
It wasn’t the way she was dressed – he had been fooled by this more often than he had been right, and he had been right many times – it was, instead, the way her heels fell on the old hardwood floor, the weight of her stride, the way he knew she’d put a thousand sad stories to bed.
He remembered her from Raleigh, from Vancouver, from Santa Fe. She was no one he recognized. She was every woman he’d ever met.
The bar was long and U-shaped. He was seated on one of the short sides, next to the wall, his right shoulder against the paneling. This helped to hide from the world the large scar on his right cheek. As little as he cared about anything, he was still self-conscious about his scar, a present from his father and a Mason jar of moonshine. Besides, with one shoulder to the wall, he was always protected from that flank.
The bar was almost empty. It smelled of overcooked fish and Mr Clean.
The woman sat two stools to his left, leaving an empty seat between them. As she dropped her purse to the floor, wrapping the strap around an ankle, the juke spun a new song, a tune by Lynyrd Skynyrd. Or maybe it was the Allman Brothers. He wasn’t big into seventies southern rock. Oddly enough, considering his job, he didn’t care much for music at all. He enjoyed the silence. There was precious little of it these days.
It was clear that the woman expected him to summon the barkeep, offer her a drink. When he didn’t, she did. The barman took his time. Had she been ten years younger, or five years prettier, the barman would have flown.
When he finally made his way down the bar the woman looked over, giving it one more chance. When she looked back she said, simply:
‘Seven and Seven.’
The barman dawdled, returned, slid a napkin onto the bar in front of the woman, put down the watery cocktail, waited. The woman picked up her bag, then fished out a rumpled twenty, dropped it onto a wet spot – a spot the barman, if he’d given a shit, would have wiped down.
The man made an elaborate process out of straightening out the wet bill. Eventually he came back with the change. All singles. He dropped them into the puddle on the bar.
Asshole.
He wished he had time to deal with the bartender.
Two songs later the woman slid one stool to her right, uninvited, bringing her almost empty drink with her, rattling the cubes.
‘What’s your name?’ she asked.
He glanced over, got his first good look. Her eye shadow was electric blue, her lipstick far too red for a woman her age, which he pegged at forty-five, maybe more. She looked like a woman who slept in her makeup, only bothering to wash her face when she took that infrequent shower. Her foundation spackled a landscape of acne scars.
‘Jagger,’ he said.
She looked surprised. They always did.
‘Jagger?’ she asked. ‘Really? Like Mick Jagger?’
‘Something like that.’
She smiled. She shouldn’t have. It ruined what little about her face there was to like. In it he saw every regret, every Sunday morning, every gray towel and yellowed bed sheet.
But this was still Saturday night, and the lights were low.
‘You got as much money as Mick Jagger?’ she asked.
‘I got enough.’
She leaned closer. Her perfume was too sweet and too heavy, but he liked it that way.
‘How much is enough?’ she asked.
‘Enough for the night.’
Something lit her eyes. It helped. Maybe she wasn’t so banged up after all, despite the fact that she was turning tricks in a hole like this. He nodded at the bartender, dropped a fifty on the bar. This time the barkeep was prompt. Odd, that. In a flash he was back with refills. He even wiped down the bar.
‘But can you go all night, that’s the question,’ she said.
‘I don’t need to go all night. I just need to go until the meter runs out.’
She laughed. Her breath smelled of cigarettes and Altoids and gum disease.
‘You are funny,’ she said. ‘I like that.’
It doesn’t matter what you like, he thought. It hasn’t mattered for more than twenty years.
She drained her Seven and Seven, tapped her plastic nails on the bar. She turned to face him again, as if the idea had just come to her. ‘What do you say we buy a bottle and go have some fun?’
He glanced over. ‘We? You pitching in?’
She gave him a gentle slap on the shoulder. ‘Oh, stop.’
‘I’ve got a bottle in my truck,’ he said.
‘Is that an invitation?’
‘Only if you want it to be.’
‘Sounds like a plan,’ she said. She slipped off the stool, toddled a bit, grabbed the rail to steady herself. These were clearly not her first two drinks of the evening. ‘I’m just going to visit the little girls’ room. Don’t you dare go anywhere.’
She flounced to the far side of the bar, drawing meager attention from the two old codgers at the other end.
He finished his beer, picked up the bills, leaving the barkeep a thirty-nine cent tip. It didn’t go unnoticed.
A few minutes later the woman returned, heavier on the eye shadow, lipstick, perfume, breath mints.
They stepped into the cold night air.
‘Where’s your truck?’ she asked.
He pointed to the footpath, the trail that snaked through the woods. ‘Through there.’
‘You’re parked in the rest area?’
‘Yeah.’
She looked at her shoes, a pair of cut-rate white heels, at least one size too small. ‘I hope the path ain’t muddy.’
‘It isn’t.’
She slipped an arm through his, the one opposite his duffel. They started across the tavern’s small parking lot, then stepped into the woods.
‘What’s in the bag?’ she asked.
‘All my money.’
She laughed again.
When they got to the halfway point, far from the lights, he stopped, opened his duffel, took out a pint of Southern Comfort.
‘For the road,’ he said.
‘Nice.’
He uncapped the bottle, took a drink.
‘Open your mouth and close your eyes,’ he said.
She did as she was told.
‘Wider,’ he said.
He looked at her standing there, in the diffused moonlight, her mouth pink and gaping. It was how he planned to remember her. It was how he remembered them all.
At precisely the same instant he dropped the razor blade into her mouth, he poured in a third of the bottle of Comfort.
The steel hit first. The woman gagged, choked, bucked. When she did this the blade shot forward in her mouth, sliced through her lower lip.
He stood to the side as the woman coughed out a gulp of blood and whiskey. She then spit the blade into her hand, dropped it to the ground.
When she looked up at him he saw that the razor had sliced her lower lip in half.
‘What did you do?’ she screamed.
Because of her destroyed mouth it came out whan nin you noo? But he understood. He always understood.
When he pushed her into a tree, she slumped to the ground, gasping for air, hacking blood like some just hooked fish.
He circled her, the adrenaline now screaming in his veins.
‘What did you think we were going to do?’ he asked. He put a boot on her stomach, along with half his weight. This brought another thick gout of red from her mouth and nose. ‘Hmm? Did you think we were going to fuck? Did you think I was going to put my cock into your filthy, diseased mouth?’
He dropped to the ground, straddled her.
‘If I did that, I’d be fucking everyone you’ve ever been with.’
He leaned back to admire his work, grabbed the bottle, downed some Comfort to ward off the chill. He took his eyes off her for a second, but it was long enough.
Somehow the razor blade was in her hand. She swiped it across his face, cutting him from just below his right eye to the top of his chin.
He felt the pain first, then the heat of his own blood, then the cold. Steam rose from his open wound, clouding his eyes.
‘You fucking bitch.’
He slapped her across the face. Once, twice, then once more. Her face was now marbled with blood and phlegm. Her ruined mouth was open, her lower lip in two pieces.
He thought about taking a rock to her skull, but not yet. She’d cut him, and she would pay. He killed the bottle, wiped it clean, tossed it into the woods, then ripped off her tank top, used it to sponge his face. He reached into his duffel.
‘That is one nasty cut,’ he said. ‘I’m going to close that wound for you. There’s all kinds of bacteria out here. You don’t want to get an infection, do you? It wouldn’t be good for business.’
He pulled the blowtorch from his bag, a big BernzOmatic. When she saw it she tried to wiggle out from under him, but her strength was all but sapped. He hit her in the face again – just hard enough to keep her in place – then took a lighter from his pocket, lit the torch, adjusted the flame. When it was a perfect yellow-blue point, he said:
‘Tell me you love me.’
Nothing. She was going into shock. He brought the flame closer to her face.
‘Tell me.’
‘I … na … yoo.’
‘Of course you do.’
He went to work on her lip. Her dying screams were swallowed by the sound of the blowtorch. The smell of charred flesh rose into the night air.
By the time he reached her eyes she was silent.
The clouds had pulled away from the moon by the time he emerged from the woods, the quarter-mile pass-through that led to the rest area where he had parked.
When he had parked his truck, earlier in the day, he had positioned it as close to the path as he could. There had been three other rigs closer, but he figured he was near enough.
The other trucks were now gone.
Before stepping into the sodium streetlights of the massive parking lot – which held a fueling station and an all-night diner – he looked at his clothes. His jacket was covered in blood, large patches that appeared black in the moonlight. He took off his down jacket, turned it inside out, put it back on. He picked up a handful of leaves and wiped the blood from his face.
A few moments later, when he came around the back of the diner, he saw a woman standing there. She saw him, too.
It was one of the diner waitresses, standing by the back door, her powder blue rayon uniform and white sweater looking bright and clean and sterile under the sodium lamps. She was on break, using an emery board, sanding her nails.
‘Oh, my goodness,’ she said.
He could only imagine what he must look like to her.
‘Hey,’ he said.
‘Are you okay?’
‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘You know. I’m good. Ran into a low branch back there. Cut me pretty fine, I reckon.’
He was lightheaded, and not just from the watered down Scotch and flat beer and warm Comfort. He had lost blood.
The waitress glanced over his shoulder, back. She’d seen him come out of the woods. Bad for him, worse for her. The night was getting deeper. As exhausted as he was, he knew what he had to do. She would get the short ride, but she’d ride.
He turned, scanned the parking lot, looked at the steamed windows of the diner. No one was watching. At least, no one he could see.
‘You don’t happen to have a Band-Aid or anything do you?’ he asked.
‘Maybe.’ She unzipped and ransacked her purse. ‘No, sweetie. Best I can do is a Kleenex, but I don’t think that’ll help. You’re bleeding pretty good. You should go to the hospital.’ She pointed at a blue Nissan Sentra in the lot. ‘I can take you if you want.’
He chucked a thumb toward his rig. ‘I’ve got a first aid kit in my truck,’ he said. ‘You any good with that stuff?’
She smiled. ‘I’ve got a whole passel of younger brothers and sisters. Always getting in scrapes. I think I can manage.’
They walked to the far end of the lot. More than once he had to slow down, dizzy. When they got to the truck he unlocked the passenger side first. The waitress got in.
‘The kit’s in the glove box,’ he said.
He closed the door. On the way to the driver’s side he unsnapped the closure on his knife sheath. It was a six-inch Buck, razor sharp.
He opened his door, pulled himself into the cab, angled the mirror toward his face.
The whore had sliced him good.
While the waitress lined up the gauze and the foil-wrapped alcohol swabs on the dashboard, he pushed back the mirror, glanced around the lot. No other drivers, no one coming out of the diner.
He would do it now.
Before he could slip the knife from its sheath he noticed something in the parking lot, right near the entrance to the path. It was a small red wallet. It matched the red vinyl of the waitress’s purse. For any number of reasons, he couldn’t leave it there.
‘Is that yours?’ he asked.
She glanced to where he was pointing, put down the first aid kit, looked in her purse. ‘Oh, shoot,’ she said. ‘I must have dropped it.’
‘I’ll get it.’
‘You’re a doll.’
He stepped out of the truck, walked across the lot, his head throbbing. He had a few Vicodin left. He reached into his pocket, pulled out the vial, chewed them dry, trying to recall if h
e had an inch or so of Wild Turkey left in the truck.
He picked up the wallet, thought for a moment about opening it, about learning the waitress’s name. It didn’t matter. It never had.
Still, his curiosity got the better of him.
As he opened the wallet he felt the hot breath brush the back of his neck, saw the long shadow pool at his feet.
An instant later his head exploded into a supernova of bright orange fire.
Cold.
Lying on his back, he opened his eyes, the pain in his head now a savage thing. The world smelled of wet compost and loam and pine needles. Snow whispered down, catching on his eyelashes.
He tried to stand up, but couldn’t move his arms, his hands, his feet. He slowly turned his head, saw the whore’s dead body next to him, the scorched holes where her eyes used to be. Something – some animal – had already been at her face.
‘Stand up.’ The voice was a whisper near his left ear.
By the time he managed to turn his head, no one was there.
‘I … I can’t.’
His words sounded distant, as if they belonged to someone else.
‘No, you cannot,’ came the soft voice. ‘I have severed your spinal cord. You will never walk again.’
Why? he wanted to ask, but knew instantly that he could no longer make a sound. Perhaps it was because he knew why.
Time left, returned. It was morning somehow.
He looked into the gently falling snow, saw the axe, the bright steel wing glimmering in the splintered daylight like some silent, circling hawk.
Moments later, when the heavy blade fell, he heard them all – as he knew he would on this day – every dead thing beckoning him toward the darkness, a place where nothing human stirred, a place where his father still lay in wait, a place where the screams of children echo forever.
BOOK ONE
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