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Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Monday, April 18: 4 Brand New Kindle Freebies Atop Our Listing of Over 250 Free Kindle Books! plus … Flowers From Berlin from Noel Hynd, Bestselling Kindle Author of Midnight in Madrid and Conspiracy in Kiev (Today’s Sponsor)

A sweeping Southern saga by Janice Daugharty and several engaging new nonfiction titles top this morning’s latest additions to our 250+ Free Book Alert listings….


But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

Imagine a world where your most precious inalienable rights are denied. Where individual freedom is a thing of the past. Imagine World War II without FDR …

“A super spy novel!” –The Savannah News-Press


 Flowers From Berlin (Five Early Spy Novels for Kindle)
by Noel Hynd
4.9 out of 5 stars   9 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled 
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.





Here’s the set-up:
It is 1939. Roosevelt is winding down his second term in the White House. The Nazis have taken Austria, and Stalin’s Red Army is systematically eliminating the Kremlin’s enemies. Europe is going to hell in a handbasket. With isolationist sentiment running high in America, and the president’s popularity at an all-time low, Hitler seizes the moment and dispatches his secret weapon: An agent named ‘Siegfried’ who conceals himself behind the mask of middle-class America. A chameleon who can change identities and personalities at will. A cold-blooded killer who will win the war for Germany.

A banker, linguist, and demolitions expert who has successfully infiltrated German intelligence, FBI Special Agent Thomas Cochrane is handpicked by Roosevelt for an impossible mission: To find Hitler’s spy before he carries out a plan that will remove the president from office at a critical moment in the century’s history. As Cochrane, with the help of British Intelligence agent Laura Worthington, circles closer to his elusive quarry, a spy with supporters in the highest levels of U.S. government readies the world stage for a final act of annihilation that will alter the tide of war–and the future of the free world–in unthinkable ways.


What the Reviewers Say 
“First rate!” –The Cleveland Plain-Dealer

“A Chiller!” –Los Angeles Times

“This 1985 espionage thriller follows FBI agent William Cochran’s efforts to stop a Nazi spy from assassinating FDR. Toss in a love affair with a British Secret Service operative and you have the makings of a page-turner. LJ’s reviewer found the book “complex in characterization, crisp in dialogue, and thorough in its background.”

–Library Journal

“First rate espionage tale, well researched and well written. The plot is absorbing, the pace is swift and the conclusion is unexpectedly devious! Noel Hynd is the equal of Follett (Jackdaws), Thayer (Pursuit), and my own personal favorite, the wonderful Jack Higgins and his exciting Eagles!!!!! Mr. Hynd, if you’re listening, how about another World War II espionage tale?”
–A Customer


About the Author



Noel Hynd is an American author who has more than four million books in print. Most of his books have been in the action-espionage-suspense genre (Conspiracy in Kiev, Midnight in Madrid, Countdown in Cairo, The Enemy Within) but others (Ghosts, The Prodigy, A Room For The Dead and Cemetery of Angels) were highly acclaimed ghost stories. He currently has a multi-book publishing contract with Zondervan/HarperCollins.

He is also a former contributor to Sports Illustrated and several other national magazines. His 1988 non-fiction book, The Giants of The Polo Grounds, was an Editor’s Choice of The New York TIMES Review of Books in 1988. He has also written several produced screenplays.


Mr. Hynd was born in New York City, is a graduate of the University of Pennsylavnia, and lives in southern California with his wife Patricia. The Kindle editions of Midnight in Madrid and Conspiracy in Kiev were simultaneously numbers 1 and 2 among all books on Amazon’s Kindle Best Seller lists in December 2009. Several dozen foreign editions of his books have been published over the years. Readers are welcomed to reach Mr. Hynd at NH1212f@yahoo.com.


Click here to download Flowers From Berlin (Noel Hynd – Five Early Spy Novels for Kindle #1) (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

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Just use the slider at right of your screen below to scroll through a complete, updated list of free contemporary Kindle titles, and click on an icon like this one (at right) to read a free sample right here in your browser! Titles are sorted in reverse chronological order so you can easily see new freebies.

John Urban’s novel A SINGLE DEADLY TRUTH is featured in today’s FREE KINDLE NATION SHORT — April 17, 2011:

On the stormy February night in 1952, the 500-foot oil tanker Pendleton snapped in half in 60-foot seas off Cape Cod. The ensuing rescue of the Pendleton ranks as one of the most heroic stories in the history of the US Coast Guard. That much is true.

 

John M. Urban’s novel A Single Deadly Truth explores another story that might have begun that same stormy night.

 

Here’s a 20,000 word sample from the novel, presented as today’s Free Kindle Nation Short for your reading pleasure.

 

 

The seas and oceans, surrounding our continents on all sides, have been an endless source of mystery, romance and adventure since pre-history.

 

Author John Urban takes it one step further by skillfully blending fact with fiction.  Urban uses a true-to-life ship rescue as his point of literary departure.  He adds first-hand knowledge of the land and waters around Boston, Rhode Island, Cape Cod and Buzzard’s Bay to the mix.  Then he brings aboard a secret ship, a murder, and spins a whale of a tale.

 

Here’s the set-up:

 

On February 18, 1952, a 500 foot oil tanker named the Pendleton snapped in half as it battled sixty-foot seas in a winter storm off Cape Cod. The rescue of the Pendleton ranks as one of the most heroic events in the history of the United States Coast Guard. That much is true.

 

In a work of fiction, A Single Deadly Truth tells that another ship sank that same night, just a few miles from where the Pendleton went down, and the ship’s sole survivor remained committed to taking the story, and the ship’s location, to his grave. Until now.

 

A Single Deadly Truth features a thirty-five year old college professor and part-time harbormaster named Steve Decatur who spends his summers living aboard an old wooden sailboat in the town of Harbor Point, Massachusetts. When Decatur’s friend, a lobsterman and diver named Chris Blanchard, is found dead off Cape Cod, Decatur is called on to retrieve the man’s boat. Along the way, there’s growing evidence that Blanchard’s death was a murder, not an accident.

 

To the end, Decatur remains persistent in uncovering the truth and in doing so he uncovers a much larger crime.

 

 

(UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download A Single Deadly Truth

 

 

(A Steve Decatur Mystery)

by John Urban

 

$2.99

Buy Now

 

 

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

 

 

 

 

excerptFree Kindle Nation Shorts – April 17, 2011

 

An Excerpt From

A Single

Deadly Truth

(A Steve Decatur Mystery)

By John Urban

Copyright © 2011 by John Urban and published here with his permission

 

A Single Deadly Truth

For Sally

A Single Deadly Truth

Chapter One

Chris Blanchard knew it was a good day for finding treasure.  He squinted at the horizon while his fingers squeezed a vein at the back of his knee.  A mile offshore, alone on his lobster boat.  He hadn’t pulled a single trap all morning and had no plans to do so now.

Chris hadn’t told his friends about the shipwreck.  He wouldn’t have told anyone if he didn’t need help.  He pinched at his flesh again.  He kept thinking of the syringe and pictured himself thumbing down on the plunger.  No, I can’t shoot up, not when I’m this close.  He rubbed his palm over his calf muscle.  First get the dive done.  Because this time it’s going to be different.  People are going to trust me again.

He sat back on the deck, held his head, and took in the sun.  Bright skies.  Flat calm.  Good visibility for diving.  Things were falling into place.

He didn’t know how much gold was stashed aboard the ship but he knew it would be more than enough for him, even after he paid Emile Ducharme and the other salvagers.

Tap into this score and he’d be living large.  Just like his great-grandfather up in Newburyport, back when you could make a fortune on the water.  Now it was his turn and when he was done there’d be enough money to buy that old house and fix it up, restore the old place and the family name.  Or maybe he’d move in with Jane and stay in New Bedford.  He could do that.

Chris glanced at his watch -10:17.  Ducharme’s men were late.  Just a couple of minutes.  Still, they were late.  He picked up his cell and punched in his Jane’s number.

No answer.

“Where the hell is she?” he said aloud.  He dialed information and placed a call to his uncle’s friend, Steve Decatur.  He did it on impulse.  He wished he had told Decatur about the wreck.  That’s when the whine of twin outboards running wide-open interrupted his thoughts.  Chris glanced at the brass-plated clock mounted alongside the helm, then at his watch.  There was a ten-minute difference.  They were on time after all.  Chris closed the phone and hung up without leaving a message for Decatur.

The inflatable ran at near full speed right up until it was next to his lobster boat.  Then the driver cut around hard and the small boat came to a rest, rubbing up against the hull, pushed by its own wake.

Chris threw a line and extended his hand as they stepped aboard.  “Where’s Jane?”

The men ignored the gesture and instead focused on transferring their dive gear from the inflatable.

“I said where’s Jane, where’s the woman?”

“She stayed on shore.  We won’t need her help.”  The accent was heavy and foreign.

“Yes, she went shopping.”  The second man spoke with the same Eastern European tone.

Shopping?  She hates shopping.  He eyed the two men more closely.  Chris was strong from pulling traps, but these two were in a whole different category.  Two-fifty, two-sixty, most of it muscle and hard core by the looks of the diving bell tattoos on their forearms.  Didn’t talk much, though.  Chris decided he’d break the silence.  “Great conditions for a dive.”

The two men stared out at the water, but didn’t respond.

Just go easy, Chris thought.  “Jane told me your captain has found treasure all over the world.  Something like three big scores in the last two years, is that right?”

Neither man responded.

“And to think the next big find would be right here.  I mean who figured there’d be a shipwreck right off Chatham.”

More silence.

“I mean when I was a kid I dreamt about buried treasure all the time, but I always pictured it being far away.”

Nothing.

Come on, talk to me, will you.  “I mean I figured treasure was in places like the Caribbean.  Not here.  You know?”

Again, no response.

“Where are you guys from?”

This time one of the men turned toward Chris.  “Where are we from?  We are Americans, like you.”  Then he laughed.

Right.  Jane had told him where they were from, but now he forgot.  Maybe someplace in Russia?  Chris said, “You’re pretty handy with that boat.  You government trained?”

“You ask too many questions,” the larger man said.  The other man tapped on his watch and they both nodded.

Chris said, “Look, I’m a little nervous.  But don’t worry, this won’t take long.  It’s shallow out there.  We’ll only need fifteen minutes.  Enough time for you to see what’s down there so you can report back that this is the real deal.  Maybe take a souvenir.”

The smaller of the two men said, “We’ll follow you.”

“Sure.  Yeah.  You follow me.”  Without waiting for a response Chris walked forward into the cabin where he pulled out a sheet of paper that was wedged in between the pages of the chart book.

Get serious, get serious, Chris told himself.  He waved to the other two men.  “Come here.  Look at this.”

They did, and for the first time Chris felt he was in charge.  Diving was his element.  It always was.  “See here.”  He slid his fingers across the handwritten chart.  “I drew this last night.  It’s kind of rough, but it pretty much lays out what’s down there.  I’ve got a chart recorder and an even more detailed drawing back at the dock.  But this one’s good enough for today’s dive.”  Chris scanned the notes.  “The hull’s steel.  It was a cargo ship.  Just over two hundred feet.”  He read from a second list of notes, which was general information on the class of ship.  His handwriting was jagged, but he could read his own scribbling.  “It was built just after World War II.  Sank in ’52.  Went down in a February storm.  Most of the hull is under twenty feet of sand, but you can get into the ship here.”  He pointed with his index finger while trying to keep his needle-punctured arm from shaking.  “Once you’re through there, you’re golden.”

He took out another sheet that had a handwritten diagram.  “This is the best I can make of the inside layout.”  He pointed to the center section of his drawing.  “That’s where we’re most likely going to find our payday.”

The taller man said, “And you say you have other maps?”

“Yeah, a chart from a depth finder.  I figured I’d keep it back at the dock in case this one gets wet, but it’s the same map.  This is all we’ll need.”

After a few moments of silence Chris said, “How about we go for a dive.  It’s now or never.”

Each man suited up and made a final check of their diving gear before making their way to the rear of Chris’ boat.

“I’ll go first,” Chris said.  He back-rolled over the side and once in, he hovered just below the surface.

Chris relaxed and closed his eyes.  Once I have the money I’m going to spend every minute I can in the water.

When Chris opened his eyes he expected to see the other two men next to him, but they weren’t there.  As he looked up, Chris saw them splash into the cool Atlantic water.  About time, he thought.  He waved them on.  Then he began his descent.

The sun’s rays streaked through the water and lit the area ahead of him, all the way to the bottom, so bright he could have been in the Caribbean.  Yet even on this day, the sand concealed the wreck, all except for the one section he had visited the day before.  He took several more smooth strokes and swam for the access point, landing with his feet, standing erect.

For as long as Chris could remember, few people swam underwater as swiftly as he did.  Swim and wait for the others to catch up, that’s how it had always been.  He looked back to signal the way for the other two divers.  To his surprise, the larger man was already less than an arm’s length away and closing.  In the next instant he grabbed Chris and spun him around.  Then the other one came up from behind and held Chris in an arm lock.

Chris flailed his arms and struck the man with two right elbows to the abdomen.  He kicked, too, coming down as hard as he could with his heel, but the resistance of the water made it difficult to hit with any force.  Even when he made contact it seemed to have no effect.  All the while, the man’s arms drew tighter around Chris, tighter until Chris was unable to breathe.  However, the will to live is an impressive force and Chris continued to fight back.  That’s when the second man came around from Chris’ left side, with a knife in hand.  With a single stroke he severed the hose that fed Chris’ oxygen.

Chris kicked wildly and the inner sections of the brain that are wired for survival took over.  But the release of adrenalin expended his remaining energy.  His body began to go limp as his organs shut down.  His battle against suffocating turned to a losing struggle against drowning.

As the end came near, Chris’ mind drifted and in a dream-like moment Chris imagined his Uncle Marty waiting for him back at the dock.  It was a fleeting thought.  But even in that brief moment Chris saw his uncle’s expression, the sign of disappointment – Chris screwed up again.  It was that same look, that same reaction.  With the release of a final breath, Chris Blanchard gave up for good.

Chapter Two

August 24

Harbor Point, Massachusetts

The harbormaster’s office wasn’t due to open for two hours, but Steve Decatur was already warming up one of the town’s boats.  His colleagues at Narragansett College spent summers on research, consulting, or just slacking off, but for Decatur, summer was a chance to be on the water working as an assistant harbormaster.  He had recently turned down a big job with an oceanographic startup founded by a friend from the Coast Guard Academy.  He hadn’t really said no to the offer.  He just couldn’t say yes.  More than anything he feared that it would lead to a life behind a desk.  So there he was, on the water, early in the morning, the first to start the day.

Decatur had been alone in the office the previous evening, his ears tuned equally to the VHF radio and the Red Sox game, when a call had come in from a commercial fisherman.  “Wanted you guys to know I saw a shark a half-mile up the river.  Could just be a basking shark,” the fisherman had said, referring to the plankton eaters that harmlessly roam shallow waters.  “I tried to get a picture but I couldn’t.”

“Camera shy?” Decatur said.

“No.  I was too slow and it was past dusk, already getting dark,” the fisherman said.

“What’d it look like?”

“Mostly I saw the fins.  Dorsal, and when it turned, the tail fin.  Didn’t have good light, but it looked big.”

“And you’re sure it was a shark?”

“Let’s put it this way, it was bigger than a guppy, but smaller than an aircraft carrier and it swam in a circular hungry prowl.  I’ll let you figure out things from there.”

Decatur said, “Alright, I’ll get out on the water early and have a look.  Get back to me if you see it again.”

The call was the third report in the past two days, but it had been too late in the day to verify the sighting.  That’s why he was now up, excited by the opportunity to tag and monitor a big shark.

Decatur stepped onto the town’s pump-out boat and started the engine.  Someone in the office thought up the boat’s name: TSB, short for The Shit Boat.  While the engine warmed up he checked his e-mail.  No word from Susan since the day before last.  She was in New York City on business.  He typed in a short message.  As he did he pictured her walking around the East Side with a large drawing book under one arm, the other arm swinging with confidence.  Around Harbor Point Susan was known for dressing in work clothes and spending time in her rose garden or running her Boston Whaler on the river, but Decatur knew she’d slip back into attorney mode once she was in New York, even if she didn’t still practice.  But he also knew her softer side.  He knew Susan, as she knew him.  He keyed the rest of the message, ended it with “I love you,” and hit send.

Before he put down the handheld he noticed a missed call.  It was from Chris Blanchard.  No message, just the caller-ID name and number.

The last time Decatur talked with Chris he agreed to lend him some money.  Decatur later second-guessed that decision.  Helping out was one thing, but Decatur didn’t want to become an enabler.  Decatur decided he’d talk with Chris’ uncle, Marty Daponte, before returning the call.  In the meantime he wanted to see if he could find the shark.

He tested the engine by increasing the revs a few times before slipping the lines, and pushing the twenty-two footer away from the dock.  Easing forward on the throttle, Decatur steered a half-mile down the saltwater river to the area mentioned by the fisherman the evening before.

He slowed the boat and let it drift, his search aided by a pre-dawn glow that began to cast light on Harbor Point.  Decatur stood at six-four and had an even higher perch when he climbed up onto the bow deck.  The river’s surface was placid and unmarked.  He returned to the wheel, idled up a few hundred yards, and drifted back again.  Still nothing.

Maybe the inlet, he thought.

The tide was high.  With comfort from the river’s added depth, he ran the boat fast.  He ignored the channel markers, and made a straight shot for the harbor entrance.  As the hull skimmed over flooded sandbars and mud flats, Decatur’s mind went back to Chris Blanchard and Marty.  He thought about the day several summers back when the three of them came upon a young humpback whale while they were trolling off of Noman’s Island.  The whale was small for a humpback, but it must have been twenty-five feet long.  It was dragging thick green strands of an abandoned fishing net and the eventual outcome was clear.  Chris was the first to strip off his shirt and shoes.  Without hesitation he grabbed a knife and jumped into the water.  Decatur was right behind him.

On the way home that day, Chris said, “Steve, I’ll never forget what it looked like seeing you climb up on the whale’s back.”

“Call me Jonah.”

“The whale was looking at you, Steve.”

“Yeah, kind of like me looking at the dentist when he’s got the drill in his hand.”

“No, I’m serious, Steve.  When he was over on his side his right eye was tracking you when you climbed up.”

“Trying to figure out what kind of fish you were,” Marty said.

“I’m not kidding,” Chris said.  “There was something about the way he looked at you.  Kind of how a dog looks at you when you’re pulling porcupine quivers from its snout.  That helpless look that says I don’t know what happened to me, but I trust you.  From where I was I could see that look in him, no question about it.”

Decatur knew it was a compliment.  More so, though, it said a whole lot about Chris.  That was one hell of a day, Decatur thought as he refocused on the present.

He kept TSB’s throttle just short of wide open and charged around Elephant Rock, past the mouth of the river, and along the ocean beach.  He was covering the water fast, but out of the corner of his eye, he saw something.  “Jesus,” Decatur said, as he pulled back hard on the throttle and cut into a tight turn.

Even at thirty knots, he thought he recognized the shadow-like form.

“Jesus,” he said again, seeing the animal glide past, just off TSB’s bow.

Twelve feet, easy.  More like fourteen.

He grabbed the tag stick and went forward, but before Decatur could make a positive identification it sounded.

Decatur had been around the sea his whole life.  Throughout his youth his father introduced him to everything from shellfish to sharks.  He was picking up horseshoe crabs before he could walk, unhooking barracuda on winter trips to Florida in his early teens, and coming across great whites in high school when he worked on a sword fishing day boat out of Rhode Island.  The captain of that day boat said he’d never seen anyone like Decatur before.  The old man told him, “The first time people see a great white’s head rise from the sea, they lock up and freeze.  Rigor mortis.  Mighty whitey does that to people.  The world’s great predator makes other sharks look like little fish in a tank.  But, Sonny, you didn’t freeze.  It might not be so good to be fearless of that creature.”  The thing was, Decatur wasn’t fearless.  His father taught him to keep his distance from wild animals.  Respect them, watch, and learn.  But never forget that they are wild animals.

On this morning Decatur had been prepared, but he hadn’t seen enough to make a confirmation.  Maybe it was a basking shark, he said to himself.  It was a nice thought.  Not a convincing one, but a nice thought.

*          *          *

For an hour, Decatur wove back and forth near the inlet, but there was no sign of the shark anywhere, nothing more than a few tailing stripers and a school of blues.

He turned TSB back into the river and idled against the current as he made for the town dock.  The harbor was showing more signs of human life, with early morning fishermen motoring out to Buzzards Bay and a big yawl heading toward the Knuble under foresail and mizzen.

He was a quarter of a mile from the harbormaster’s shack when he noticed several men standing at the end of the pier alongside what appeared to be a police car.  He clicked on his radio.  “TSB to Base.”

There was a delay before a recognizable voice came back on Channel 9.  It was Dan Fawcette, the harbormaster.  “I wondered where you were.”

Decatur clicked on the microphone again.  “What’s going on, Dan?”

“Marty Daponte’s nephew is missing.”

Decatur first thought was to say something about the shark, only because it was at the forefront of his mind, but he decided to wait.  At almost the same time he checked his phone.  The previous day’s call from Chris Blanchard was time-stamped 10:05 a.m.

Decatur said, “How long has he been missing?”

“A day, maybe two.  That’s what we’re trying to piece together.”

“Who’s we?”

“We’ll talk when you get here,” Fawcette said.

As Decatur headed for the dock he tried calling Chris back.  When there was no answer, he tried Marty Daponte.  No answer there either.

*          *          *

Decatur pulled up alongside the dock, tossed TSB’s bowline up to Fawcette, and tied off the stern himself.  The state troopers, dressed in creased blue-gray pants, spit-polished boots, and peaked caps, stood back and watched, their arms folded.  Decatur stepped up onto the pavement.  “What happened to Chris?”

The older of the two cops answered.  “Not sure.  Have you seen him?”

“Not in months.  I had a call from his yesterday, but we didn’t connect.  Is he in some kind of trouble?”

The cop made a slight step forward, his hand resting on the butt of his holstered pistol.  “He’s missing at sea.”

“Anyone check his boat in New Bedford?”

The cop shifted his stance, his hands moving to his hips.  “It’s gone and his girlfriend said he hasn’t been home for at least three days.  The Coast Guard started this morning with aerial sweeps of Buzzards Bay.”

Decatur turned toward Fawcette.  “Anyone talk with Marty?”

The harbormaster shook his head.  “Tried to raise him on the VHF, but there’s been no luck.”

The older cop said, “Why would Blanchard call you?”

“I’m a friend of his uncle.  Chris used to go fishing with us when he was a teenager.”

“But this call was out of the blue?”

“You could say that.”

“But you don’t know what he wanted.”

Dan Fawcette said, “Officer, if Steve or I had any information about Chris we’d share it with you.”

A commercial lobster boat passed in front of the office and distracted the two cops who watched as a crewman washed down the deck with a hose while the other crewman steered.  When the commercial boat was just beyond the pier, Decatur said, “But I don’t get it.  Why are you checking for Chris here?”

The two staties turned back to Decatur and the younger one said, “Helping the Coast Guard and the Feds track down information.”

Feds, over a missing-at-sea response?  That stuck with Decatur.

“Well, I think we have enough,” the older cop said, returning his pen and pad to his pocket.  “Keep us posted and let us know if you hear from Blanchard’s uncle.”

*          *          *

The weather stayed clear that day and Decatur spent the remainder of the morning patrolling the harbor on TSB.  He was keeping watch for the shark, but most of the time his thoughts focused on wondering what happened to Chris.

After lunch it was Dan Fawcette’s turn to ride the water, and Decatur stayed in the office doing paperwork and filing mooring permits.  From the business side of things, it was a quiet midweek afternoon.  There wasn’t a single distress call over the radio.  There wasn’t even a telephone call until late in the day when one of the state cops from the morning rang the office and asked if Dan Fawcette was available.

“He’s on the water, can I help you?” Decatur said.

“This the Assistant?”

“Yeah, Steve Decatur.  What can I do for you?”

“My partner and I were by earlier this morning.”

“Sure, I remember.”

“I figured you should know they found Blanchard.”

The cop’s tone said it all.  “Where was he?” Decatur said.

“Coast Guard found him near Chatham.  They figure he got tangled up as he was setting traps and fell over while the boat was in gear.  The damn thing probably ran in a circle pulling him until he drowned.  Something got at him, too.  We think it was a shark.”

As the words came through the receiver, Decatur looked out across the harbor to where he had been earlier in the morning.  Chatham was forty or fifty miles away as the crow flies.  Sharks were known to cover a distance like that in a day, but the same animal?  Can’t be, he told himself.  Too much of a coincidence.

“How bad?” he asked.

“Lost a leg.  Chunk out of his torso.  We’re not sure that’s what killed him, though.  Probably drowned first.  The ME’s testing for substances.  The guy had needle tracks all over him.  It’s a good guess that he was messed up at the time.  I mean, just knowing the guy’s history.”

Decatur understood, at least in general terms, but he wasn’t going to engage in that subject.  “Anything else?”

“No.  Like I told you, I thought you and your boss would want to hear it before word got out.  And we may have some more questions down the line.”

“Okay,” Decatur said, “I’ll tell Dan.”  But as Decatur was about to hang up he thought to ask, “Anyone know what he was doing over in Chatham?”

“What’s that?” asked the cop.

“Nothing,” Decatur said.  “Thanks for letting us know.”

Chapter Three

The commute from the harbormaster’s office to Decatur’s mooring took five minutes.  One of the perks of the job.  Decatur motored past the Back Eddy where music was blasting from the dockside bar and customers were practicing the local version of a sunset celebration.  Several friends waved and Decatur waved back while he steered the thirteen-foot Boston Whaler past the restaurant.  Some afternoons, he’d go straight to the Back Eddy, tie up, and meet Susan for dinner, but this week she was in New York finishing illustrations for a new book.

He kept the green channel marker to starboard and idled past rows of moored boats.  Decatur thought back to the crowd and the restaurant.  It wouldn’t take long for word about Chris to spread.  He figured that those who knew Chris from when he was younger would be kind, the others probably less so.

He slowed the Whaler and came to a stop just off the stern of his big old wooden boat.  At fifty-two feet, Full Moon had more than enough room for living aboard.  He had bought the old Alden at a fraction of its replacement cost, but that was before he understood the reality of keeping a big wooden boat.

With the Whaler tied off to the stern he stepped up onto the deck and went below.  He opened a couple of portholes, turned on a small fan above the stainless steel galley, and went to his cabin to change out of his uniform.  He’d spent the last few evenings catching up on varnishing, but he had no interest in that now.  With a bottle of red wine under his arm and a corkscrew and glass in his hand, he headed up to the cockpit.

As Decatur eyed the harbor he thought back – years back – to when he first met Marty and Chris.  It was the summer before they saved the whale, back when Marty Daponte first started keeping his boat in Harbor Point, just after Marty’s final season in pro hockey.  During those years, Chris visited his uncle on weekends.  He was a regular fixture in Harbor Point and eventually it seemed as if he lived on his uncle’s boat.

One time that first summer Chris said, “Is it true you were kicked out of college?”

“Who told you that?” Decatur had said.

“Hell, I got kicked out of every school I’ve been to.”

“Don’t be proud of that, Chris,” Decatur had said.

“I say something wrong?”

It was like that with Chris.  Naïve, candid, and always dangling around trouble in one way or another.

Decatur looked over at the marina’s F Dock.  Marty’s boat was back and friends were at the dock.  He shook his head as he thought about Chris Blanchard’s abbreviated life and he decided he wouldn’t go over to F Dock until the others cleared out.

He poured his glass full and stared out at the harbor entrance.  In the quiet he thought about the recent shark sightings and the massive animal that passed off TSB’s bow earlier that morning.

He set his wine aside and went below to the forward end of the main salon where a built-in bookshelf held a variety of hardcovers.  Everything from Hemingway to Frost, plus a heavy dose of celestial navigation, astronomy, and maritime history.  He pulled a book on the fish of the ocean from the shelf and turned to the index, then sifted through the pages.  He found the image of white sharks on page 236.  He flipped through several more pages that contained images of various types of dolphins, then to the photos of basking sharks before flipping back to 236.  No question, he thought, definitely a white.

Later, Decatur untied the Whaler and motored across the river toward Marty’s slip.  Marty, a short, strong-shouldered man who was ten years older than Decatur, was in the stern of his boat.  He was alone except for Bear, his little black-and-tan dachshund, which was curled up on Marty’s lap.

Decatur secured the Whaler and stepped aboard.  His eyes almost teared when they embraced.  Marty’s brown eyes were reddened and his voice wavered.  “You must have heard.”

Decatur simply nodded.

Marty kept his eyes on Decatur.  “They found him in the water, and now they tell me there can’t be an open casket.  They don’t even want me to see him.  You think maybe it’s that bad, Steve?”

Decatur didn’t say anything.  He was pretty sure Marty hadn’t wanted to hear an answer.

Marty began to speak quickly, as if fast talk would mask his emotions.  “I’ll be driving to New Bedford tomorrow to clear out some of the gear Chris kept down at his dock.  And I need to stop by his apartment.  His girlfriend said she’d box up his things, so that part shouldn’t be too bad.  But then I need to get his boat and bring it back to New Bedford.  Not looking forward to that, you know.”

Decatur said, “You want some help?”

“Don’t worry about me.  All the guys are offering.  I’ll be fine.”

“If you drive to Chatham to get Chris’ boat someone’s going to have to drive your car back.”

Based on Marty’s reaction, Decatur realized that his friend hadn’t even considered how he’d make the return trip.  Decatur added, “How about I go with you?  We can take my truck.”

Marty shrugged his shoulders as if it didn’t matter either way, but Decatur sensed that it mattered a lot.

“And why don’t I run the boat back.  Let’s do it that way.”

It took Marty a few moments before he answered.  “Yeah.  That sounds good.  Thanks.”  He looked away.  “Still, I can’t figure it out.  The boy finally seemed to find his way by running his own boat and earning a living.  Seemed like things were at last straight with him.  Work he liked, girl he wanted to marry.  And I thought drugs were behind him.”

Marty’s eyes were back on Decatur.  “I think you knew about Chris’ problem, didn’t you?”

“Yeah.  I knew.”

“This last time I really thought he was over it.  Everything going well until he started getting messed up with heroin.”

The heroin part Decatur didn’t know until earlier that day, not that it mattered now.  He turned away from Marty and wondered how long Chris had been shooting up.

Marty’s voice grew angry.  “I gave that boy every opportunity I could and every time he’d only go and screw up again!”

Decatur recognized the sentiment, but he said, “Marty, don’t.”

“Dammit,” Marty said and his voice grew tight and the tears began.

Bear cuddled close to Marty.  Unlike the little dog, Decatur wasn’t sure what to do.  He wondered if he should wrap an arm around his friend’s shoulder, but he didn’t.  He stood back and watched as his friend’s tears flowed freely.  “Let’s go sit on the dock,” Decatur said after a few minutes.

For the next hour the two men sat with their feet hanging over the edge while they watched the outgoing current wash weeds, and whatever was below the surface, out to sea.

It wasn’t until two friends from the marina approached from the other end of the dock that Marty spoke.  Before the men reached them, Marty said, “Steve, I haven’t told anyone else, not even the cops.  But I’ll tell you.  I’m not sure it was an accident.”

Decatur hesitated before he said, “What do you mean?”

“I think Chris got involved with someone who wanted him dead.”

“Who wanted him dead?”

The two friends coming down the dock were closer now.  “We’ll talk tomorrow.  We’ll have more time then.”

Decatur had no idea how to respond.  “Okay, tomorrow.  I’ll pick you up at seven and we can head to New Bedford, then Cape Cod.”

*          *          *

It wasn’t much afterwards that Decatur left Marty with the others.  As Decatur steered the Whaler back to Full Moon he wondered what the hell Marty had meant about Chris’ death not being an accident, and when he reached the sailboat he stood for a moment at the stern.  The sun was down and the moon just a sliver so he could see little other than blackness.  There were slapping sounds on the water, which he knew came from bluefish charging after their prey, and his nose picked up a faint oily smell, which he recognized as the scent of menhaden, left in the trail of the ravaging blues.

Before he went below, Decatur stood in the night and wondered if the shark he had seen earlier in the day was still in the river.  He sensed it was.

Chapter Four

The one hundred and seventy-five foot Oceanus was stationary in the evening waters south-by-south-west of Cape Cod.  The ship wasn’t adrift, it was holding its position under the orders of Emile Ducharme.  Ducharme was French by birth, but a resident of the sea since his teens.  The sixty-year-old sea captain commanded a rogue crew through two parts reward, one part fear.  Most notably, Ducharme was exceptionally good at recovering underwater treasure.  And he had the ship and the equipment to make it work.

The Oceanus began its life as a trans-Atlantic telecom company’s survey ship, but a stock scandal put the vessel at auction.  Ducharme and his international syndicate of treasure hunters stepped up and bought the vessel.  In the following three years, he and the crew of the Oceanus made underwater discoveries in the Mediterranean, West Indies, and, most recently, coastal Florida.  For the past three months, the focus was Buzzards Bay and Nantucket Sound.

The ship’s wheelhouse was like any other with the helm located dead center, a pedestal chair off to the side for the senior officer on watch.  A low-watt red bulb over the wheel cast enough light to steer by the ship’s compass while a similar light glowed over the navigation table in the room’s back corner.  That’s where Ducharme stood, hunched over a chart as he made pencil marks on a large three-by-four sheet.  He was plotting a course using parallel rulers while a crewman stood alert at the wheel waiting for instructions, occasionally engaging the engines in order to keep the ship pointed into the wind.

After several minutes of silence the man at the wheel leaned forward, looked down at the illuminated deck and said in French, “The inflatable is aboard, Captain.  Are we good to proceed?”

Ducharme nodded.  “Put us on a course bearing three-one-zero degrees and bring her up to twelve knots.”

The increasing engine noise affirmed the Captain’s order.

“Evening, Cap.”  The voice came from the side door of the wheelhouse.  It was a young crewman, the lone American among the men.

Ducharme lifted his head from his work, but said nothing.

The American stepped into the room.  “How far to Hyannis?”

The question was intended for Ducharme, but it was the helmsman who replied.  “Three hours.”

Ducharme slid the chart to the side.  “Were our divers successful?”

The young American approached the chart table.  “Yeah.  They’re real efficient.”

“I asked if they were successful.”

“Sorry, Cap.  Yeah, they were successful.  According to what they found we’ll have to cut through two steel bulkheads, but that won’t be a problem.  Two days of diving should do it.”

“And were they able to confirm the sonar reads?”

“Even better, Cap.  They brought back maps of the wreck that the lobsterman made.  Look for yourself.”  He laid papers out on the chart table.  “And these are some underwater shots they took while they were down there.”

The ship’s captain reviewed the sheets and photographs and asked a series of questions about the condition of the wreck, how it was lying on the bottom, and how long it would take to cut through the hull.

“Like I said, Cap, we’ll get to the ship’s safe in three days, max.  More likely two days.”

“And what’s the condition of the ship’s deck?”

“I didn’t ask.  Good, I guess.”

“You don’t know?”

“No.  Not exactly.”

“Was I not specific?  I wanted photos of the deck.”

The young crewman shuffled through the images twice.  “I’m not sure we have anything of the deck, probably because so much of the wreck is buried in sand.  But we have a bunch here that show how we’ll find the safe,” the man said, pointing.

“I told you, and I told them, I wanted photos of the deck.”

“Sure, sure.  Next time.  Sorry, Cap.  These guys are good.  They just forgot, I guess.”

Ducharme stared at him as if to say he didn’t think so.

“Next time, Cap.  I’ll talk with them right away.  As soon as they’re back at the site we’ll get them.”

Ducharme remained silent, which only further emphasized his displeasure.  He then said, “The news on the radio said the lobsterman was attacked by a shark.”

“Yeah, yeah, the shark.  I wondered myself.  They told me the shark just showed up when they were finishing the dive.  According to them it went for Blanchard and they were able to get out in time.  At least that’s what they said.”

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Sunday, April 17: Pre-Order Daisy Goodwin’s Short Story “THE DUCHESS’ TATTOO” Free from MacMillan, plus … Move over, Inspector Clouseau! Mobashar Qureshi’s Hilarious RACE (Today’s Sponsor)

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–Robert Gerard


RACE 
by Mobashar Qureshi
4.2 out of 5 stars   5 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled 
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.

Parking Enforcement Officer Gets into sticky situation”



Here’s the set-up:

RACE (Radical Association of Criminal Ethnicities) is a dangerous and violent group on the verge of creating an illegal drug.

Parking Officer Jon Rupret wants desperately to move up from handing out parking tickets. An impulsive act from his past throws him into Operation Anti-RACE—a unit set up to stop RACE. He is partnered with veteran detective, Phillip Beadsworth, a mild mannered Brit who doesn’t much like Rupret and knows more than he reveals.

Along the way Rupret encounters Mahmud Hanif, a qualified engineer, who drives a taxi to pay his bills; DJ Krash, the second best disc-jockey in the world; Cal Murray, the owner of the House of Jam, the hottest club in Toronto; and of course, his mother, a grade school teacher in Guelph, who thinks Rupret is a financial advisor working on Bay street.

RACE is a compelling mystery and a humorous look at Toronto through Jon Rupret’s eyes.


What the Reviewers Say
“This is just a great book. The main character will have you rolling with laughter and cheering for the underdog. Jon Rupret is the most honest character I’ve read in a while. This the first of three books by the author. I think they are all great, but this character is my favourite. “
–Ready to Read


“Those looking for an entertaining read need look no further. This is Qureshi’s first book. An hilarious romp through the streets of Toronto. His protagonist, Jon Rupret, as well as being an extremely likeable and engaging character, will have you laughing out loud in no time. The humour comes at you fast and relentless throughout the entire book. A delight to read.”
–Book-i-vore

“What I liked best about this novel was the authour’s use of authentic Toronto locations and characters, yes I live in Toronto. Through pithy descriptions of real life places ranging from the downtown core to the steamy suburbs, the story really came alive for me. A nicely crafted novel, I anticipate reading more by Mr. Qureshi.”
–Robert Gerard 


About the Author



MOBASHAR QURESHI was named one of the ten rising Canadian mystery writers to watch by Quill & Quire Magazine in 2007. He was born in Benin City, Nigeria in 1978. When he was young he lived briefly in Karachi, Pakistan. He now lives in Toronto, Canada. He graduated from the University of Toronto with a degree in Economics.


Click here to download RACE (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

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Soren Armitage is an anachronism. Proclaimed Rathen Champion by the Rathen Rose, intended to support the rule of a Rathen King or Queen.

But there are no Rathens.

Resigned to symbolising only Darest’s faded glories, Soren is not prepared for the sudden appearance of a Rathen. Now she must find and support the heir despite the machinations of the kingdom’s regent, sylvan curses, and the strange behaviour of once-dormant protective enchantments.

While the odds seem stacked against her, Soren is determined to do her best to live up to the name of Rathen Champion. But what is she to do when it seems that there is something very wrong with her Rathen? Can she trust the person she is meant to protect?

Andrea K Höst is an Australian writer of fantasy and science fantasy.  She was born in Sweden but raised in Australia – mainly in Townsville, Queensland. She now lives in Sydney.

Andrea writes fantasy and science fantasy, and enjoys creating stories set in worlds which slightly skew our social expectations, and most especially give her female characters something more to do than wait for rescue.

Her novel The Silence of Medair has recently been shortlisted for the 2010 Aurealis Awards for best fantasy novel.

From the Author: I started writing novels in my mid teens. The first was your standard issue big fantasy epic trilogy – the chosen ones sent to find magic thingamabobbies to defeat shadowybigbad. This was a story which I kept changing and rewriting, until the shadowybigbad had become a navy-eyed mad boy, a different main character had taken over the plot, and book three abruptly diverged into alternate worlds and spaceships and ornate moons and it was not very standard issue at all.


Still, I like meeting things in stories that I don’t expect.–AKH

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample


Free Kindle Nation Shorts — April 13, 2011 – An Excerpt from The Trap Door: The Lost Script of Cardenio by Andrew Delaplaine

History documents the fact that a Shakespeare play titled Cardenio was performed at London’s Globe Theater in 1613. References to the play turn up in various diaries and documents written in the 1600s. Cardenio, and other plays attributed to Shakespeare, did not survive in written form.

Author Andrew Delaplaine wraps the intriguing history of Cardenio and the Globe in this fascinating novel that takes off when a modern-day boy named Charlie jumps through a trap door at the modern iteration of the Globe and goes back in time to the days of the original performance.

Think “Shakespeare meets Being John Malkovich meets Back to the Future” and you’ll be ready for today’s generous 10,000-word excerpt to transport you, with Charlie, back to the days of the Bard — and all for just 99 cents for a limited time!

 

Scroll down to begin reading the free excerpt

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

 

Here’s the set-up:

It’s Christmas Eve, and the opening night of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in a student production at the reconstructed Globe Theatre on London’s South Bank, and 16-year-old Charlie has the coveted role of Puck.

When a mysterious man in the back of the theatre causes Charlie to flub a line, he drops through the trap door in the stage, and is taken back to 1594 and the original premiere of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” eight weeks before Christmas Eve.

Charlie becomes a member of the Globe acting company and while trying to get a copy of Shakespeare’s famous lost play, “Cardenio,” he gets caught up in a plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth I and install Mary, Queen of Scots in her place.

But there’s a deadline: if Charlie doesn’t return home by Christmas Eve, he’ll be stuck in 1594 forever.

 



Copyright © 2011 by Andrew Delaplaine and published here with his permission

 

 

Tichborne’s Elegy

 

 

Written in the Tower of London the night before he was hanged, drawn and quartered for his traitorous role in the Babington Plot, by Charles Tichborne.

 

My prime of youth is but a frost of cares,

My feast of joy is but a dish of pain,

My crop of corn is but a field of tares,

And all my good is but vain hope of gain;

The day is past, and yet I saw no sun,

And now I live, and now my life is done.

My tale was heard and yet it was not told,

My fruit is fallen, and yet my leaves are green,

My youth is spent and yet I am not old,

I saw the world and yet I was not seen;

My thread is cut and yet it is not spun,

And now I live, and now my life is done.

I sought my death and found it in my womb,

I looked for life and saw it was a shade,

I trod the earth and knew it was my tomb,

And now I die, and now I was but made;

My glass is full, and now my glass is run,

And now I live, and now my life is done.

 

Chapter 1–Christmas Eve at the Globe

 

“It says here in the paper they’re going to clean out Chaucer’s tomb at Westminster Abbey after Boxing Day,” said George, trying to read the London Times as he bounced around in the back seat of the Range Rover. “It seems they haven’t opened his resting place since the 1590s.”

“I’ll actually be at that ceremony,” said Sir Gerald as he drove along in the rain, the windshield wipers slapping back and forth. “Apparently, since Chaucer was the first poet buried in the Poets’ Corner, his tomb kept getting pushed back and obstructed by all the newer tombs, so it’s always been hard to get to. So no one’s touched it in all these years.”

“That would be fun to go to,” said George in a tone that left no doubt that he thought attending such a ceremony would be the least “fun” thing he could think of doing.

Sir Gerald looked over to his son Charlie sitting up front in the passenger seat.

“It’s going to be a great Christmas Eve, Charlie, seeing you in the play. Your mother and I can’t wait for eight o’clock.”

“You must be very proud of Charlie, Sir Gerald, getting the part of Puck,” said George as Charlie’s dad drove down the rain-slicked ramp off the Southwark Bridge Road and into Park Street. A leaden sky hung low over London.

“His mother and I are very proud, George, especially considering my profession,” Sir Gerald chuckled.

Charlie looked over his shoulder and rolled his eyes so his best friend George could see him, thinking his father’s gaze was focused firmly on the road ahead.

“I saw that, Charlie,” Sir Gerald wanted to make clear. “I’m not amused.”

Oh, grump, thought Charlie.

“He’s really good as Puck, Sir Gerald. Why haven’t you sat through any rehearsals?”

“We want to experience the first night with a fresh perspective. But you say he’s really good?”

“Yes, sir,” came the little-too-eager reply from the back seat, thought Charlie. “He’s just excellent. Everybody says so.”

“Even the director?” Charlie finally joined the conversation.

There was a pause as George mulled over his answer.

“Is James Dalton giving you problems?”

“No, Dad. Not really.”

“I don’t see why he has any problem. Isn’t his son playing Bottom?”

“Yes, he’s playing Bottom.”

Sir Gerald, who at forty-nine had curly salt and pepper hair and a ruddy complexion, took a right into New Globe Walk.

“Well, that’s a great part-even has more lines than Puck. I can’t see what his problem is…. Ah, here we are.”

Sir Gerald pulled up in front of the reconstructed Globe Theatre. The Range Rover came to a stop and the boys grabbed their backpacks and tumbled out into the busy street glistening with rain.

“Thanks, Dad,” Charlie said. “See you tonight.”

“Charlie, I wish you were having more … fun … with all this. Just remember, your mom and I are really excited and we can’t wait to see you tonight. We really can’t.”

“But I’ll bet you wish we were doing Cardenio. Right, Dad?” Charlie said, a smile finally working its way across his wholesome, open face. Charlie had his father’s curly hair, but his was a rich blond color and the director of the play had ordered him to let it grow, so now he had long luxurious curls dropping to just above his neck.

“Well, of course, that would be something really special,” he laughed.

Charlie closed the door and his dad backed out of the driveway and moved into traffic. Charlie and George turned toward the Globe Theatre.

“What’s all that about Cardenio?” asked George.

Cardenio is the most famous play never performed in modern times.”

“Why isn’t it performed?” George asked a pudgy George as he huff-puffed besides the slender Charlie.

“Because it’s ‘lost.'”

“‘Lost’?” asked George, his jowly face scrunching up into a questioning frown.

“No one alive has seen it.” Charlie nodded across the street to a small open-sided truck selling pastries. He looked back to George, his blue eyes dancing with a sudden new idea. “Let’s get a cupcake before we go in.”

“Sure-we have time. What do you mean, about the lost play, I mean?”

They slipped through traffic and dashed across the street, the chubby George laboring a little to keep up with Charlie.

“Well, we know-that is, people like my dad and I know-that the play existed because it’s mentioned in the historical record. You know: diaries, court records where they say it was performed before Queen Elizabeth or King James, records like that. But no copy of the play’s come down to us, and if it was ever published, all the copies have been lost. Or, at least nobody’s ever discovered one.”

George nodded to the vendor and got a chocolate cupcake, paying the man. Charlie took one with a vanilla topping.

“Whoa. You’d think if it was Shakespeare…”

“They didn’t value the plays as written as much as they valued them as performed. If a play was printed, it could be stolen by other theatre companies and the writer wouldn’t make any money.”

“Things are different today,” said George.

“If his partners hadn’t printed most of his plays a few years after he died, half of what Shakespeare wrote would have been lost forever.”

“Like Cardenio.”

“Like Cardenio. In fact, my dad’s on his way to a symposium at Oxford this afternoon to deliver a paper he wrote on a fragment someone discovered and claims is part of the Cardenio manuscript.”

“Is it?” asked George, cake frosting smudging his cheek.

“Dad says not,” said Charlie, pointing to George’s cheek. “You’ve got some frosting on your cheek.”

“Well, he ought to know-he’s England’s greatest Shakespearean scholar,” said George, sticking out his tongue and licking up the misplaced frosting.

Charlie rolled his eyes.

“And don’t I know it.”

Just then, the director, James Dalton, and his son Frederick came round the far corner of the Globe, heading toward the entrance.

James went inside but Frederick saw Charlie and George and ran over to the pastry cart.

“I’ll have the strawberry tart,” he told the vendor. “You boys looking forward to rehearsal?”

“Big night tonight, Frederick,” said George. “Know all your lines?”

“Sure I do,” Frederick said with a nasty smirk. “I even know Puck’s lines-should the actor playing him take suddenly ill,” he added, then purposefully bumped his arm against Charlie’s, causing him to drop his cupcake into the gutter.

“Now see here,” piped up the vendor, who saw the whole thing.

“Sorry,” smiled Frederick, just as the rain began to fall in torrents. Frederick ran out from under the protective awning attached to the truck and into the rain and made for the theatre.

“Why that…” George started.

“Doesn’t matter. C’mon, we’ll be late.”

 

Chapter 2–The Dress Rehearsal

 

George and Charlie ran into the theatre, passing beneath a wooden scroll above the entrance with the words “All The World’s A Stage” carved into it.

The interior of the circular Globe was poured concrete, a modern day convenience. Elizabethan audiences would have been used to standing on packed dirt, or even mud, since the thatching on the roof only went around the edges-the center was open to the elements.

The rain immediately showed signs of letting up. James Dalton stood on the five-foot high squared-off thrust stage under a canopy roof that covered about half the stage, protecting him and the arriving students from the downpour.

“Everyone, please come up onto the stage and out of the rain. This will soon pass and we’ll begin rehearsals. Everyone look to your costumes in the Tiring Room.”

George and Charlie stood out of the rain in one of the covered seating areas.

“So why are you in such a funky mood about this play?” George asked. “You’re really good in it,” he said, his freckled jowly cheeks wobbling about as he munched on some M&Ms, between bites of his cupcake.

“I just don’t like all the backbiting I’m getting from Frederick and some of the others.”

“Here, take the rest of my cupcake. It’s all because your dad’s so important, isn’t it?”

Charlie took the cake and gulped it down.

“No doubt. But I’d rather not get parts when people think he had something to do with it.”

“It doesn’t help that he’s the direct descendant of John Heminges, does it?” George said with a nod to an old portrait hanging above the entrance, a portrait of John Heminges, one of the original partners in the Globe Theatre with Shakespeare and one of the two men responsible for printing the famous First Folio collecting Shakespeare’s plays in 1623, ensuring that half the plays that had never been published in individual editions didn’t suffer the same fate as Cardenio.

“No, that doesn’t help at all.”

“You probably know more about Shakespeare than any kid your age.”

“No question about it. I know more about Queen Elizabeth the First than I do about Queen Elizabeth the Second.”

Frederick came out of the Tiring Room onto the stage carrying Bottom’s donkey head that he would wear in Act III.

“And Frederick’s made no secret that he wanted your part.”

“No, he hasn’t made that a secret. And Frederick’s really good. His audition for Puck was great.”

George shook his head.

“Yours was better. Everybody says so.”

“Still, it’s awkward when his father’s the director.”

“Rain’s stopping,” George said. “I’m off to the booth.”

George climbed some stairs to the tech booth farther up and Charlie went round to the temporary stairs wheeled up to allow access to the stage from the pit, sometimes called the yard, then went back into the Tiring Room where all the costumes were kept.

There wasn’t much to Puck’s costume. A loincloth, really, is all that it was. Charlie found himself wishing they were playing A Winter’s Tale and not A Midsummer Night’s Dream. It was chilly out, and with the rain, Charlie’s loincloth was hardly enough to keep him warm. He kept his jeans and parka on for now. There was no use changing into his costume until he made his first appearance in Act II.

Another thing he didn’t like about wearing the loincloth was he had to parade about the stage half naked. And while he didn’t have a bad body for a fifteen-year-old boy, he certainly didn’t have Frederick’s fine physique. Frederick was a year older than Charlie, a head taller, went to the gym religiously and all the girls swooned over him. Charlie had fine curly blond hair while Frederick had wavy dark brown hair that he wore long.

Charlie made sure his loincloth was in its proper place in the Tiring Room, then stepped out onto the stage. He nodded up to George in the tech booth up behind the top-most seats, and his gaze fell down a tier to the portrait of his ancestor, John Heminges.

The portrait had an interesting history. Legend had it that when the Globe burned to the ground in 1613 when a cannon fired as a sound effect during a performance of Henry VIII caught the thatched roof on fire, John Heminges grabbed his portrait off the burning wall and ran out of the theatre. Some say he left behind all of Shakespeare’s plays, many of them in his own hand, to save his own portrait. The painting even had a pronounced singe mark on the lower left quarter of the picture where the oil paint bubbled up during the blaze.

The portrait was handed down over the generations until it came to Charlie’s dad. When the new Globe opened 12 June 1997, dedicated by Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, Sir Gerald Heminges was there to present the portrait to the theatre on indefinite loan.

In Charlie’s mind, these were the circumstances that contributed to his being cast in the part of Puck.

 

Chapter 3–Thinking about Charlie

 

Lucinda Heminges, more properly styled Lady Heminges, sat on the first row of seats in the ornate former chapel at Oxford, now in use as a lecture hall, beaming up at her husband as he spoke to the room packed with English literature scholars, students, historians and other important figures in Britain’s literary world.

“… and after examining the twelve page fragment whose discoverer claims is a section of the lost Shakespeare play, Cardenio, I find it wanting in several aspects…”

It seemed to Lady Heminges that her husband had discredited every forged document purporting to be connected to Cardenio in one way or another. In fact, it seemed to her he’d based his entire career on his obsession with Cardenio.

“… and from the editorial content featured in this twelve page fragment, we learn basically the same story as conveyed to us in chapter twenty-four of Don Quixote, where the tale originated…”

Lady Heminges wasn’t really listening to her husband. She’d heard more than she ever cared to hear about the various Cardenio stories. Instead, she was thinking ahead to tonight’s performance of A Midsummer Night’s Dream with her darling boy Charlie as Puck.

“… we all know that Cardenio was an Andalusian nobleman of some wealth and position who since he was very young had loved Lucinda…”

Lady Heminges knew whenever her husband said the name Lucinda that he’d glance up from his prepared remarks to give her a quick look, that his gaze would be doting, full of love.

“… there was nothing to stand between Cardenio’s happiness when he married Lucinda until the day a letter arrived from the Duke who required a companion for his son, Ferdinand. Cardenio, ever the loyal subject, went into the Duke’s service and became very good friends with Ferdinand. The Duke did not know that his son loved a farmer’s daughter, and it was forbidden for a man of Ferdinand’s station to be involved with someone of such a low class. Ferdinand decided that in order to put the farmer’s daughter out of his mind, he had to leave the country for a while, so he asked Cardenio to arrange a trip to Cardenio’s estate where they would tell the Duke that Ferdinand was going on business to purchase some beautifully bred horses. Of course, Ferdinand falls in love with the fair Lucinda, dashing Cardenio’s hopes of happiness.”

Lady Heminges was almost convinced her husband had married her because her name just happened to be Lucinda. But perhaps she was being too harsh. It’s just that the minute he found out her name (when they were still in college), he never left her alone. Even then he was obsessed with Cardenio. He was shocked that he would ever meet anybody named Lucinda quite by accident, and believed it was Fate that brought them together.

Perhaps he was right.

They’d been together for thirty years now, had three beautiful children (Charlie was the baby) and life had been as interesting as she’d ever hoped it would be, coming from a little village in Sussex.

She especially enjoyed the “research” trips to Spain where her husband was determined to trace down her own family’s ancestral heritage. (Her family they could only trace back three hundred years-her husband’s went back six hundred before being lost in the mists of time.)

“… and after working with some of our most experienced analysts, we’ve determined factors such as the wrong age of the paper, the quality and age of the ink-and even the calligraphy-are inappropriate to the time. All these factors point to a forgery. And not an accidental forgery, but a purposefully created one.”

There were mumbled comments now passing through the room.

For her part, Lady Heminges just couldn’t wait for Act II to begin tonight at the Globe Theatre-that’s when Puck made his entrance with Oberon, King of the Fairies.

 

Chapter 4–Frederick Challenges Charlie

 

Back at the Globe, the weather had cleared considerably. There was a break in rehearsals, and George had come down from the tech booth to go over some lighting cues with James Dalton. He came up to Charlie, who was chatting with Julia, the pretty girl playing Titania, Queen of the Fairies, and who was also Frederick’s girlfriend.

“Well, I just do not see why Frederick wants to play your part, Charlie,” said Julia. “He and I have some great scenes when he’s Bottom, and if he plays Puck, we won’t have a single scene together. I’d rather he played Oberon.”

“No, but if he’s Puck, he gets to take his shirt off for all the girls to admire.”

Julia’s eyebrows went dangerously up.

“The only girl who’s seeing him with his shirt off is me.”

She seemed very emphatic to Charlie.

“Where’s our noble Herr Direktor?” George wanted to know.

Julia shook her long blonde hair.

“Who knows?”

“I don’t really care who plays Puck, Julia.”

“I believe you, Charlie,” said Julia, causing a bit of a flutter when she laid the palm of her hand on Charlie’s chest.

“I mean, it’s only a play,” he said, his heart pounding.

“Maybe you should play Bottom. I bet you’d bring a lot more to the part than stupid Frederick,” she plucked a bit of lint off his parka. “What is he after all but another pretty face?”

“Well…” he stammered as her gaze shifted up to look at him.

“And you know more about Shakespeare than even the director. I think, frankly, that he knows everybody knows this and he just simply resents it.”

“He’s a well known Shakespearean director.”

“Oh, what’s he know?” Julia pouted.

Looking over Julia’s shoulder, Charlie saw George motion for him to come over.

“Excuse me, Julia. Be right back.”

He went from the stage through the open doors of the Tiring Room where George was standing with his cue book.

“What is it?” Charlie asked. “I was just getting somewhere with Julia. She touched my parka!”

“I wouldn’t plan on getting too far with that girl if you don’t want Frederick’s boot on your scrawny neck, Charlie. Now, go to the back door and listen,” George said with a jerk of his head over his shoulder.

Charlie crept down some stairs and toward a door open into the alley behind the theatre. He heard voices raised.

“I still don’t see why I can’t play Puck, Dad!”

“I’ve told you over and over again, Frederick-his father made the suggestion to the headmaster that his son play Puck, that he was shorter than you and the part fitted him better. He’s not necessarily wrong, you know?”

“Still, I had my heart set on it, Dad.”

“The headmaster pressed me on several occasions-there’s not much I can do about it now.”

Charlie edged away from the door and went back to meet George.

“That’s depressing.”

“I think the forecast calls for a chilly evening ahead,” George said with a twisted frown. “Lots of storms, thunder and lightning.”

“Frederick’s going to be a total nightmare to deal with.”

“Just thought you ought to know.”

“I’ll make it easy for him.”

Dalton came in to call the cast together and George made his way back up to the tech booth.

“What was that all about?” asked Julia.

“Nothing.”

“It’s Frederick being an ass, isn’t it?”

“I think the word I’d use is ‘petulant.'”

“Well, it’s quite good he has an ass’s head as part of his costume,” she said with a smile. “He could take it home with him and use it every day at school and all over London and no one would think it didn’t look ‘just right’ on him.”

“Julia, Charlie-places everyone,” Dalton called out.

Dalton was down in the yard below. As soon as he had everybody assembled onstage, Charlie chose his moment and walked downstage.

“What is it, Charlie?” asked Dalton, looking over his notes.

“I’d just like to ask you to consider switching my role for Frederick’s. I’d really love to play Bottom and I know Frederick wants to play Puck. It really doesn’t matter to me.”

“Thank you, Charlie, but my decision’s final. We’ll move on with no changes.”

“I’m really having trouble with the lines.”

Dalton let out an exasperated sigh.

“Charlie, everybody knows you have a photographic memory. And even though Frederick knows Puck’s lines, and you know Bottom’s, we’ll just leave things as they are, if that’s quite all right with you,” he added a little testily.

“Well, I just thought…”

Suddenly, Dalton’s face lit up.

“Wait! I think I’ve got it! Why don’t we let you two boys alternate the roles?”

“What?” Frederick piped up, suddenly interested.

“Why not? You both know each other’s lines. It’ll be a good experience to switch roles.”

Frederick and Charlie actually exchanged smiles. Charlie went over to Frederick and shook hands.

“A good call, yes?”

“Yes,” said Frederick.

“All right,” Dalton called out. “Let’s get started. We’re doing Act Three, Scene One. We’ll start with Frederick playing Bottom and then switch to let Charlie try it.”

The scene began with Quince and all the peasant players who’d gone into the wood to rehearse the play they were to present to celebrate the upcoming Theseus and Hippolyta’s wedding day.

Frederick played the part just perfectly, donning the donkey head Puck had magically given him when he went behind a bush to make his entry. Titania, Queen of the Fairies, sleeps nearby. Puck had squeezed the juice of a flower (called love-in-idleness) onto Titania’s eyes that would cause her to fall in love with the first living creature she saw when she awoke.

Bottom sings to show all his friends (who scattered when they saw his head replaced with that of a donkey, thinking they’d been cursed) that he’s not afraid:

 

The ousel cock so black of hue,

With orange-tawny bill,

The throstle with his note so true,

The wren with little quill.

 

At this point, Titania awakes.

 

What angel wakes me from my flowery bed?

 

By now, she sees Bottom, and immediately falls in love with him.

 

I pray thee, gentle mortal, sing again:

Mine ear is much enamor’d of thy note;

So is mine eye enthralled to thy shape;

And thy fair virtue’s force perforce doth move me

On the first view to say, to swear, I love thee.

 

The scene went on perfectly, not a missed line. In all honesty, Charlie didn’t see how he could improve on Frederick’s performance.

So when it came time for Charlie to play Bottom, he delivered his lines a little hesitantly. Having Julia/Titania stroking his chest amorously wasn’t something that exactly aided his concentration.

As it was, he was pleased to finish the scene without blowing any lines.

But when he saw Julia/Titania rubbing his chest, Frederick went into a rage. Charlie could even imagine Frederick offstage breathing deeply, waiting to beat him into a pulp in the soggy alley behind the theatre.

Still, with her hands all over him and the big donkey head resting on his shoulders, he felt like he was suffocating.

Through the big cut-out eyes in the donkey head, he could see George up in the tech booth covering his mouth to keep from laughing as he stroked his own chest and made faces. He was acting, thought Charlie, like all those other boys in the middle teens who don’t have girlfriends and are always making fun of those that do.

He’s just jealous, that’s all, he thought.

But it turned out George wasn’t the only one watching. In fact, when the scene was over, all the other girls in the play came rushing over to Julia, whispering and casting glances over to Charlie as he pulled the ass’s head off his shoulders, pulling in a deep breath.

“Julia,” called out the director.

“Uh, oh, yes…” she stammered.

“That was a fine performance. I think it would be nice if you gave the same performance whether the actor playing Bottom is Charlie or Frederick. What do you say?”

There were giggles from the girls and outright laughter from the boys.

“And Charlie?”

“Yes, sir?”

“You were fine.”

“Thank you, sir.”

“All right, everybody. Let’s take ten.”

As soon as the kids dispersed into little groups to grab a Coke or eat a snack, Frederick was out of the Tiring Room and across the stage to Charlie in a flash, pulling him into the wings stage left.

“First you take my part and now you want my girl, is that it?”

“Frederick, hold on, give me a break.”

“I’ll break something, all right.”

Charlie felt Frederick’s strong hand grip his bicep until it hurt.

“I didn’t do anything. I don’t want your part and I don’t want your girl.”

“Well, it seems like you get everything you don’t want, is that it?”

“Listen…”

“You’re just a snotty little asshole. So your dad’s a knight, so what? Sir Gerald this and Sir Gerald that. You’re just a spoiled brat, that’s all you are, and if my dad wasn’t directing this play, I’d have you out in the back right now, and-“

“But I am directing this play, Frederick, so let the boy alone!” said James Dalton from behind them. They both turned to see him.

“Uh-” blurted Frederick.

“And we’re all going to get along here, whether we like it or not. Now let’s show a little more maturity. We have an opening night performance in a few hours, and the Queen will be here, so let’s look sharp.”

 

Chapter 5–Smelly Straw?

 

“All right, everybody!” the director cried out a couple of hours later as the cast became increasingly restless and eager for the traditional dinner break before the first night’s performance.

“Let’s just finish the last three pages and we’ll break for dinner.”

Since Puck had the last lines in the play, they tried it first with Frederick and then with Charlie, though Charlie would be performing Puck the first night.

After the first run-through, the director shook his head.

“I don’t like the timing of the exit. Maybe if we just went to a black-out, it would be stronger.”

“Sir … why don’t you use the trap door?” came a suggestion from George in the booth.

Dalton’s eyes lit up.

“That’s a brilliant idea, George. They used the trap door in Shakespeare’s day, used it all the time. All right, Frederick, get ready. On your last line, the trap door will open and down you’ll go into Hell.”

“Hell” is what they called the area below the stage: it’s where they used to handle the sound effects from the dark regions. It’s where the Ghost of Hamlet’s father exhorts the guards to “Swear!” when Hamlet requires an oath. Very scary in Shakespeare’s day, as most people still believed in witchcraft and magic, at least to some degree.

They checked to make sure there was a pile of foam rubber mattresses below the trap door for the boys to land on, and George tripped the trap door several times to make sure everything was in good working order.

As Oberon and Titania made their grand exit to Mendelssohn’s famous music, Puck came forward:

 

“And, as I am an honest Puck,

If we have unearned luck

Now to scape the serpent’s tongue,

We will make amends ere long;

Else the Puck a liar call:

So, good night until you all.

Give me your hands, if we be friends,

And Robin shall restore amends.”

 

The trap door flung open and Frederick fell out of sight, the drop perfectly executed.

“Very good, Frederick. Now you try it, Charlie. Places everybody, back to Oberon and Titania’s exit!”

Charlie wasn’t at all sure about the trap door. Frederick was a superb athlete, in excellent shape, and as graceful as he was strong.

Charlie moved forward as Oberon and Titania made their exit, the Mendelssohn died down and he made his speech. He always raised his arm in a flourish as the speech ended, and as he did so, he braced for the floor to fall out from under him.

It did, and as he made the drop, his elbow hit the edge of the stage as he went down and he let out with a yelp.

“One more time. Are you all right, Charlie?”

“Yes, sir, I’m fine,” came Charlie’s uncertain and shaky-voiced reply from Hell.

Charlie had landed on the foam rubber mattresses all right, and crawled out of Hell and back up into the wings, rubbing a sore elbow.

“You might want to hold that arm in this time, Charlie.”

“Yes, sir, I think so.”

Charlie looked up to the booth where George gave him a thumbs up. Charlie nodded and Oberon and Titania made their exit and Puck came downstage center for the play-ending speech.

They did it again, and this time Charlie hit his other arm on the edge of the stage as he went down, causing Charlie to come out with an alarmed “Ahhh!” as he plunged into Hell.

“Are you all right, Charlie?”

“Yes, sir,” Charlie called out from Hell.

When he came back onstage, rubbing the other elbow this time, Dalton had an idea.

“Frederick, why don’t you show him how you do it. No dialogue, just the drop.”

“Happy to,” Frederick said with a beaming smile, running out from backstage.

At Dalton’s signal, George tripped the trap door and Frederick dropped into Hell as gracefully as a swan. It was all Charlie could do to keep from grinding his teeth. And then, instead of crawling out of Hell and up into the wings, Frederick just placed his hands on the sides of the trap door and lifted himself out of Hell and with a bounce was standing next to Charlie.

“Again?” Frederick asked his dad.

“Yes, again. You see how he does it, Charlie?”

“Yes, sir. I see.”

They did it twice more, and each time, Frederick got better at it.

Then Charlie tried it again, and though he was focused on keeping his arm out of the way, one of his hands touched the side of the stage as he went down.

“All right, all right, that’s enough,” Dalton finally called out, glancing at his watch. “We’re going on dinner break. Everybody back in one hour.”

The entire cast heaved sighs of relief as they all began chattering.

George came down from the tech booth to hook up with Charlie for their dinner break.

But Dalton pulled the two boys aside.

“Since you’re playing Puck tonight, and we are performing before the Queen, I want you to stay behind with George here and practice that drop a few more times. Just till you get it right. Then off to dinner with you.”

“Right,” said Charlie. “A good idea.”

“You don’t mind, do you, George?”

“No, sir, not at all.”

But Charlie could tell George was starving. He had a certain look when he got hungry. His pink cheeks got pinker as he threw himself into a funky sulk, the freckles on his cheeks seeming to grow redder than normal. George had sandy hair, but lots of freckles. He wore his hair in loose bangs over his owlish face.

Dalton went away and