The Brutal Telling

 

Clara walked along the road from the Incident Room, over the bridge into Three Pines, and stood looking first one way then the other.

 

What should she do?

 

She’d just been to the Incident Room to return the carving.

 

Fucking queers.

 

Two words.

 

Surely she could ignore them. Pretend Fortin hadn’t said it. Or, better still, maybe she could find someone who’d assure her what she’d done was quite right.

 

She’d done nothing. Said nothing. She’d simply thanked Denis Fortin for his time, agreed this was exciting, agreed to keep in touch as the show approached. They’d shaken hands and kissed on both cheeks.

 

And now she stood, lost, looking this way and that. Clara had considered talking to Gamache about it, then dismissed the idea. He was a friend, but he was also a cop, investigating a crime worse than nasty words.

 

And yet, Clara wondered. Was that where most murders began? Did they start as words? Something said that lodged and festered. That curdled. And killed.

 

Fucking queers.

 

And she’d done nothing.

 

Clara turned right and made for the shops.

 

 

 

What carvings?”

 

“This carving for one.” Gamache placed the sailing ship, with its miserable passenger hiding among the smiles, on the table.

 

Olivier stared at it.

 

 

 

 

 

They camped at the very edge of the world, crowded together, looking out to the ocean. Except the young man, who stared back. To where they’d come from.

 

It was impossible to miss the lights in the dark sky now. And the sky was almost perpetually dark. There was no longer a distinction between night and day. And yet, such was the villagers’ joy and anticipation, they didn’t seem to notice, or care.

 

The light sliced like a saber through the darkness, through the shadow thrown toward them. Almost upon them.

 

The Mountain King had arisen. Had assembled an army made of Bile and Rage and led by Chaos. Their wrath carved the sky ahead of them, searching for one man, one young man. Barely more than a boy. And the package he held.

 

They marched on, closer and closer. And the villagers waited on shore, to be taken to the world they’d been promised. Where nothing bad happened, and no one sickened or grew old.

 

The young man ran here and there, trying to find a hiding place. A cave perhaps, somewhere he could curl up and hide, and be very, very small. And quiet.

 

 

 

 

 

“Oh,” said Olivier.

 

“What can you tell me about this?” asked Gamache.

 

 

 

 

 

One small hill separated the dreadful army from the villagers. An hour, maybe less.

 

 

 

 

 

Olivier heard the voice again, the story filling the cabin, even the dark corners.

 

 

 

 

 

“Look,” one of the villagers shouted, pointing to the water. The young man turned, wondering what horror was coming from the sea. But instead he saw a ship. In full sail. Hurrying toward them.

 

“Sent by the gods,” said his old aunt as she stepped on board. And he knew that was true. One of the gods had taken pity on them and sent a strong ship and a stronger wind. They hurried aboard and the ship left immediately. Out at sea the young man looked back in time to see, rising behind the final hill, a dark shape. It rose higher and higher and around its peak flew the Furies, and on its now naked flank there marched Sorrow and Grief and Madness. And at the head of the army was Chaos.

 

As the Mountain spied the tiny vessel on the ocean it shrieked, and the howl filled the sails of the vessel so that it streaked across the ocean. In the bow the happy villagers searched for land, for their new world. But the young man, huddling among them, looked back. At the Mountain of Bitterness he’d created. And the rage that filled their sails.