Read The Juliet Online

Authors: Laura Ellen Scott

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Suspense, #Historical Fiction

The Juliet

Table of Contents

 

Title

Copyright

Dedication

 

Chapters

OLD TEETH, Chapter 1

THE GREAT BLOOM, Chapter 2

THE JULIET, Chapter 3

ROCK AND ROLL, Chapter 4

THE MYSTERY HOUSE, Chapter 5

JOSHUA TREE, Chapter 6

LILY JOY, Chapter 7

GHOSTS, Chapter 8

THE OPERA HOUSE, Chapter 9

THIEF, Chapter 10

THE MAYOR, Chapter 11

THE COUNTY MAN, Chapter 12

LAST WORDS, Chapter 13

 

About the Author

Pandamoon Publishing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Juliet

 

a novel

by Laura Ellen Scott

 

 

 

© 2016 by Laura Ellen Scott

 

This book is a work of creative fiction that uses actual publicly known history, events, situations, and locations as background for the storyline with fictional embellishments as creative license allows. Although the publisher has made every effort to ensure the grammatical integrity of this book was correct at press time, the publisher does not assume and hereby disclaims any liability to any party for any loss, damage, or disruption caused by errors or omissions, whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident, or any other cause. At Pandamoon, we take great pride in producing quality works that accurately reflect the voice of the author. All the words are the author’s alone.

 

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Pandamoon Publishing. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

 

www.pandamoonpublishing.com

 

Jacket design and illustrations © Pandamoon Publishing

Art direction by Matthew Kramer, Pandamoon Publishing

Illustrations by Laura Ramm and Fletcher Kinnear, Pandamoon Publishing

Editing by Zara Kramer, Rachel Schoenbauer, Saren Richardson, and Jessica Reino, Pandamoon Publishing

 

Pandamoon Publishing and the portrayal of a panda and a moon are registered trademarks of Pandamoon Publishing.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC

 

Edition: 1

 

 

 

Dedication

 

 

Dedicated to my Mom, who loves the National Gem Collection but doesn’t give a shit about the Hope Diamond.

Also dedicated to the memory of Alan Cheuse, who taught me that when someone says they’re confused, they’re lying.

Special thanks to Debra Lattanzi-Shutika, Erin Fitzgerald, Steve Himmer, Danny Collier, Lucy Jilka, Tara Laskowski, Art Taylor, Dusty Cake, Jen Michalski, everyone at One More Page Books, the Beatty Museum & Historical Society, and all the Pandas at Pandamoon Publishing, especially Zara Moore Kramer, who is the cure for writer’s block.

And of course, nothing is possible without Dean Taciuch.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Juliet

 

 

 

OLD TEETH

Chapter 1

 

 

June 1984: Centenary, Nevada

 

The man with the old teeth knew he was being watched. Ghost towns were never as lonely as promised. He hung a lit lantern over the card table where he ate his meals and moved slowly through the ancient stucco shack like a dancer. He knew there was a boy out there crouched on a flat rock not far from the window, watching him. It was a dangerous perch, but there were so many things young people were brave about in the nighttime. The rock was balanced on the side of the foothill behind the shack; it had pounded down in a slide a month ago, landing atop smaller rocks that had only come down within the last year. The desert was made for fools.

The man moved from the window and left only the view of the lantern, the table, and the
Hustler
centerfold he’d tacked to the north wall. He dressed for work. It was almost tomorrow.

In one mood he put on his uniform and boots, and in another more reverent mood he pulled on the greenstone belt. He picked up his dog’s blanket and draped it across his shoulders. The dog disappeared years ago. The cat was still around here, somewhere. The man with the old teeth grabbed his walking stick.

Now for his young watcher. Sometimes it was best to look indirectly at a shadow, just as you do with certain stars. When he looked sideways through the window he saw that the boy was actually a man, still and solid with powerful, bare shoulders. A robber, a killer, an arsonist? The man inside the cottage didn’t much care. He had found his greenstone and he was done with the rest. The best part of growing old was that the many fears he’d suffered in his life had finally distilled into a singular blind abstraction called death, the thought of which was more tiresome than terrifying.

The young man on the rock had all his fears ahead of him though. Years of fears.

It was time to make some noise.

The old man went to the front door that faced a canyon road made mostly impassable from the recent rockfall. There was a footpath through it, one only he could see. The valley was crumbling all around, reshaping itself again and coughing up boulders that threatened to bury him. He kept a section of plastic marine pipe by the front door. He carried it outside and placed it over his mouth like a megaphone.

The old man called through the pipe once and let sound bounce among the rocks. It was supposed to be a birdcall, but over the years the impression had evolved into a scream, feminized and brutal, with a clipped finish—the cry cut short. A whole story in a noise.

He went back inside to check on his watcher. The man on the rock was gone, scared off. Finally, the work of the night could begin.

 

* * *

 

It was midnight, and Lily Joy’s gravesite was lit with candles. The glow gave away its hiding place behind a hardened dune of rubble. Rhys Nash brought a bottle of Jameson with him that cost eleven of the fifteen bucks he had left in the world, but since he’d be on a plane back to the UK tomorrow, the cost didn’t matter.

The Joy vigil had already begun with a couple of party guys and three girls in anachronistic hippie dresses, all laughing at the slightest provocation and gulping wine from a jug. Rhys liked his chances. It didn’t matter that he was cartoon skinny with a nose like a hatchet; for the first time in his life, he was turning heads. He had the hair, now down to the middle of his back, and he had the accent. This was his first trip to America, and he’d backpacked from desert to sea and back again over a period of three months, letting his hair grow to further distinguish himself from the American boys who were trying to look British, all poofed up like the singers they saw on MTV. And he drank whiskey, the good stuff. Or at least he carried it with him. He couldn’t miss.

Rhys walked shyly into the candlelight. The grave was protected by a chicken-wire fence that didn’t keep anyone out. A long-haired girl in a peasant skirt and bikini top crouched on the mound in the middle to light a series of votive candles she’d arranged into a heart shape. A couple of guys with gelled hair and designer jeans stood outside the fence to offer her advice. Along with the candles, the mound was littered with trinkets and tributes—shoes, beads, empty bottles, feather boas, cat-eye masks—stuff that prostitutes liked, apparently. From what little information Nash had acquired, it would appear that while she was living, Ms. Joy was one of the
demimonde
.

Rhys and his bottle were received warmly. He took the first swig before passing it on to his new friends. “To Lily Joy,” he said. He leaned forward to squint at the letters stenciled on the plain wooden cross that was planted at one end of the grave. He added, “AKA Becky Akins.” The name Lily Joy had been printed on the horizontal bar and Becky Akins on the vertical. Where the names intersected, they shared the Y.

When Rhys spoke, the girl on the mound noticed, and she smiled at him as if he were a rock star. He could tell she was holding in the question, mulling a strategy. The Americans he
didn’t
want to talk to always asked where he was from, while the more interesting ones liked to figure it out for themselves.

She kept her eyes on his as she gathered her skirt to climb back over the chicken wire. The heart of tiny candles blazed next to her sandaled feet. One of the Gel Boys reached across to give her a hand. When she made it back to the side of the living, she angled towards Rhys to accept a swig of whiskey.

“How’d you hear about poor Lily?” she asked, as if the site was some sort of American secret.

Rhys shrugged. “Back in town. It’s my last night in the States. I thought I’d do something a little unusual.”

“You know the legend?”

“It looks like the lady was popular.” Rhys knew some of the details and guessed at others. A woman with two names, buried on her own behind the jail in a grave decked out like a rubbish bin in carnival season. There had to be a whore with a heart o’ gold deep under that mound.

“Not with the Good Women of Centenary,” the girl said. “Lily was shot by her pimp. Four times in the back. They were carrying her to the cemetery.” Here the girl raised her arm and pointed her finger into darkness over Rhys’s shoulder.

“But the Good Women wouldn’t have it?”

“No, they wouldn’t. So the men buried her here. She was only twenty-one.” The girl looked down to the candles. “I’m twenty-one,” she said, as if her birthday had just happened in that instant.

Rhys resisted the urge to say
you better be careful then.
His smart-ass tendencies had left him lonely on many a night on his American journey. He considered Lily Joy, and what passed for legend in the US. The woman had been dead for a mere 80 years, and she was best remembered for a bit of garden-variety post-mortem humiliation. Back home that would just be Act One, and the audience would be hollering for the players to get on with it.
Bring on the ghosts already, before we miss last call.

The girl said, “A real tragedy.”

“Sad story to be sure.”

The girl stood a little closer. He could smell coconut on her hair. Someone gave out a shout in the distance, but no one cared. It was just lovers playing grab-ass over by the opera house. The girl caught the bottle of whiskey again and held onto it, sharing only with Rhys, who thought the whole business was going very well.

Someone climbed up from the bottom of the slope, almost materializing from the base of the bluff. Rhys reacted with a twitch as he recognized the sound of boots on rubble. Boots came with authority, law enforcement or military, the kind that was skeptical of non-Americans. He relaxed when he saw a long-haired shadow preceded by the perfume of marijuana. The guy was big, a Native American, in fatigues and a dark tank top that showed his muscles.

He looked Rhys hard in the eyes and made a decision. “Larry, we gotta go.” He seemed to be talking to the girl.
Larry?
The guy handed a nearly spent joint to one of the Gel Boys.

The girl was annoyed. She turned to Rhys and explained, “Larissa. Tony thinks he’s funny.”

Tony was reading Rhys. “What is that accent. You Irish.” His tone wouldn’t allow for normal inflection, as if questions were unmanly.

“Welsh, actually.”

Larissa grinned. Tony guessed wrong. “I’m not ready to leave,” she said and nodded towards the candles on Lily Joy’s grave.

Tony wasn’t going to fight with her, but he wasn’t going to leave her alone with Rhys, either. Everyone understood that.

A temporary setback, then. Larissa liked Rhys enough to stick by him, but she was obviously off limits. The other two women were getting drunk and high with the fancy boys, and Rhys was going to have to work fast to peel one off for himself. And there was Tony, fixing him in place with a snap-neck stare.

“This is girl’s stuff.” Tony meant the grave. Larissa shushed him, but he ignored her. “I just hiked up to The Mystery House.”

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