after six months wrote a note and enclosed a photo of Robert, bald, drooling, happy. If Sunny sent a baby present, Regina didnât remember what it was. But here was her son, two years and two months, the only child at the wake, asleep on her shoulder, too heavy for a wait this long. Women in line whispered, âLook at the little angel. Look how big he is. Sound asleep. Good as gold. She was Sunnyâs best friend growing up, you know. Regina Tramonte. Regina
Pope.
Married Franâs boy.â
The line inched forward. Warm hands and cold ones clasped Sunnyâs. Shapes and voices moved past her, and on to view Margaret. Some hurried by, crossing themselves, but most touched the ebonized wood of her coffin, touched her hands, mouthed good-bye, hurried down the steps of the stage and back up the theaterâs center aisle.
âSunny?â said the last person in line. âI hope it was okay to come.â
Then Regina folded her free arm around Sunnyâs neck, and the baby was squeezed between them, and even Dickie Saint-Onge felt an unaccustomed lump in his throat.
CHAPTERÂ 8
----
Meanwhile, at Boot Lake
O verheard at the filling station by a jittery teenager buying nacho chips and Dr Pepper: A man had died; a man named Flynn or Fin, who lived alone on Boot Lake.
The teenager had no money for gas and wasnât going to pull any more stunts in this lifetime. âBoot Lake?â he asked the cashier. âI used to swim there. How far is it from here?â
âAs the crow flies? Two miles. But you have to get back on 12A again, then west on Old Baptist Road, past the gravel pit.â
âRight,â said the kid. âNow I remember.â
FINN glowed white in the dark, stenciled on the black mailbox at the head of a dirt driveway. No lights, no signs of life. Heâd hide the truck first thing in the morning. No big deal. Heâd switch plates firstâhe was in New Hampshire now, Live Free or Dieâand find an empty garage, a normal place, like it belonged to some old couple who only took it out for church. He nosed the Ford down the narrow road through scrubby bushes. It was a smaller cabin than he expected from the long private driveway, but nicer than youâd think for a dead guy who lived alone. New paint on the trim, light, maybe yellow. The siding at night was dark, stained by weather, wet-cigar brown. He found the spare key under a chunk of pink granite, sitting like a stool pigeon next to the door. Youâre not breaking in when you use a key, he told himself. Youâre freeloading. Taking shelter. Resting. Like Goldilocks. He wouldnât steal anything, except maybe eat what was in the refrigerator. The guy was dead. He wouldnât mind. He could think, borrow some clothes, maybe call Tiff.
Because he wasnât breaking and entering, heâd leave things neat. Heâd make the bed and wash his dishes. He could say if they found him, âLookâI didnât take nothinâ. Thereâs your TV, your computer, your VCR, your CD player, your microwave oven. I was just taking shelter. If I was going to steal anything, Iâd have done it by now.â
Shower. Shave. Wipe out the sink after. Hope the guy had disposable razors; too fucking creepy to shave with a dead guyâs blade. Fish after sundown. Deep-six the gun. Watch TV. Hope the guy had cable.
Find out if anyone had I.D.âd him, and if the cop had died.
CHAPTERÂ 9
----
The Flight
E mily Ann diagnosed Fletcherâs bad mood on the flight as situational depression, richly deserved.
âWould you like to talk about your dad?â she tried.
âAbsent father, lousy husband,â he snapped.
Emily Ann didnât snap back. A man on his way to his fatherâs funeral deserved some latitude. âDo you think,â she began carefully, âthat itâs doubly hard for you because of his deficiencies? Because you held out hope that someday you might become