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Richard Greener - The Knowland Retribution

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THE

KNOWLAND

RETRIBUTION

RICHARD
GREENER

The Knowland Retribution 2006 by Richard Greener All rights reserved No part - photo 1

The Knowland Retribution 2006 by Richard Greener All rights reserved No part - photo 2

The Knowland Retribution 2006 by Richard Greener.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Midnight Ink, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

As the purchaser of this ebook, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on screen. The text may not be otherwise reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or recorded on any other storage device in any form or by any means.

Any unauthorized usage of the text without express written permission of the publisher is a violation of the authors copyright and is illegal and punishable by law.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

First e-book edition 2010

E-book ISBN: 9780738720494

Book design by Donna Burch

Cover design by Lisa Novak

Cover photo iStockphoto.com/Benjamin Goode

Edited by Karin Simoneau

Midnight Ink is an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

Midnight Ink does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning private business arrangements between our authors and the public.

Any Internet references contained in this work are current at publication time, but the publisher cannot guarantee that a specific reference will continue or be maintained. Please refer to the publishers website for links to current author websites.

Midnight Ink

Llewellyn Worldwide Ltd.

2143 Wooddale Drive

Woodbury, MN 55125

www.midnightink.com

Manufactured in the United States of America

To Phil,
who asked, while choking on a pastrami sandwich,
Youre writing a novel?

... while the futures there for anyone to change,

still you know it seems,

it could be easier sometimes to change the past.

Jackson Browne

New York The Hudson River began with a single drop of water in the - photo 3

New York

The Hudson River began with a single drop of water in the wilderness. It fell from a leaf or blade of grass into Lake Tear of the Clouds, no more than a pond on the shoulders of Mt. Marcy, the highest peak in the Adirondacks. It flowed downhill, gathered speed, increased its number. Each drop joined others of its kind, first one, then another, and another, until there were many billionstrillionsa number so immense it could not be imagined.

Thats how this began, unseen and unnoticed, with something microscopic, so small no one could see it, marshalling the wicked force of nature as its ally, eager to pour down devastation upon all who touched it. Many things start long after theyve actually begun. This was such a thing.

It started on June 25 with Pat Graths phone call to Wesley Pitts. Pitts was, as always, the first one awake. Grath called at five thirty in the morning New York time knowing full well Wesley Pitts had been in his office at least fifteen minutes and was already settled in for the day. From his office window, looking out into the morning darkness, Pitts could see the Hudson River three hundred miles from its obscure beginning, expanding through New York Harbor, pushing out to open sea. What he couldnt see were the cows.

Caller ID told Pitts it was Pat Grath in Houston on the other end of the line.

Hi, Pat, he said cheerfully. How you doing? Four-thirty. Youre up a little early this morning.

Yeah, Grath said, exhibiting none of his trademark jovial nature. Aint that the truth. The concern and worry in his voice plus the early hour in Texas gave Pitts an uneasy feeling. An urge deep inside him cried out, Run!

Grath said, Look Wes, Ive got Billy Mac with me here. Weve got a little problem.

Oh, Christ, thought Wesley Pitts. Nobody, certainly not Pat Grath, calls him with a little problem at this time of day. For the tiniest fraction of a second Pitts thought the unthinkable. He wondered if the problem, whatever it was, would disappear if he simply told his biggest clients to fuck off and hung up the phone. Instead, in his most charming and confident voice, he said, Tell me about it.

St John Cruz Bay is a dumpy little town It sits alongside the largest - photo 4

St. John

Cruz Bay is a dumpy little town. It sits alongside the largest harbor of St. John Island under a broiling sun, cooled only slightly by intermittent breezes. St. John is part of the United States, but only because they say so.

The people are Caribbean. The island is neglected. The roads are narrow, bent, and curved, in terrible conditionnearly undrivable here and there. They paint orange circles around potholes but never fill them in. All buildings except the posh hillside and hilltop homes appear to be in some state of disrepair. The island is littered with old and broken cars. When a car stops running they push it off to the side and carry on.

Except in Cruz Bay, the capital, theres no way garbage can be collected at the source because large trucks cannot manage these single-lane, hilly roads winding their way through and around the narrow, nine-mile island. Instead, St. John makes do with frequent drop-off points where the locals, and the visitors too, pile up large bins of loose garbage, brightly colored plastic bagslarge and small, stuffed to burstingempty beer cases, anything else they no longer need. Most will concede, with varying degrees of interest in the subject, that this detracts from the beauty of the place, from its natural charm.

The island does have remarkable good points. Nearly two-thirds form a national park, splendid and untouched. St. John has some of the most beautiful beaches anywhere in the world. And, best of all, theres no way to reach St. John except by boat. The much larger St. Thomas looms nearby, twenty minutes by ferry. Still, St. John is not a busy spot. When you rent a car they tell you theres a thousand dollar charge, a fine really, for taking your car on the ferry to St. Thomas. How will they know? You ask yourself this only until, and it does not take long, you realize that they know everything. Its a small place. The permanent population comes to less than four thousand, including the exiles: the twenty-two-year-old girls from Seattle and Boston and Sioux City whove run away for however long it takes them to go island nuts waiting tables in Cruz Bay. St. Johns four hundred or so vacation homes and villas accommodate a couple of thousand owners, renters, and guests at high season. A few campers come for the park. Most people shop at the islands two supermarkets and theres nothing super about either. Its a great place for scuba diving and looking at fish, if thats the kind of thing you like, but theres no golf course on St. John and that keeps the riffraff out. It lacks the Old World allure of Curacao, the mystery of Grand Cayman, or the sexy extravagance of St. Barts, but St. John is the perfect place to be if youre looking to be alone.

Walter Sherman often found himself contemplating one or another of these points. The old habit never ceased to give him satisfaction. He felt good now, comfortable in his regular seat in Billys, second from last at the end of the bar, away from the street and near the standing fan next to the kitchen door. Cruz Bay is a bar town. Walter liked Billys best. It nestled securely on the west edge of the square, directly across from the slip where the St. Thomas ferry docked. Like most island bars, Billys is an open-air establishment, dependent on rare cool winds off the water and a few large fans for comfort. It admits more than enough natural light to require sunglasses for some, and to welcome the affectation of hip shades by others. Billys wide open front is guarded by a low, white picket fence separating it from the sidewalk. The white tables, some nearest the front with colored umbrellas, lead to a rosewood bar that runs the whole length of the building at the far end. Behind the bar, with a full view of his kitchen, Billy holds court. When he was on the island, Walter breakfasted at Billys most mornings, took an occasional lunch there, and every so often, dinner too. But no one could remember Walter being in Billys later than that. This morning he sipped his routine Diet Coke and quietly ate scrambled eggs with toast. He was trying hard to forget about a newly painted pothole, forty feet down the road from his hillside home, and was reading the obit page of the New York Times when heavy steps broke the silence around him. He glanced quickly toward the wide doorway.

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