Thank you for downloading this Atria Books eBook.
* * *
Join our mailing list and get updates on new releases, deals, bonus content and other great books from Atria Books and Simon & Schuster.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP
or visit us online to sign up at
eBookNews.SimonandSchuster.com
To my father, who left us before this book was published.
For him.
PROLOGUE
I’ve heard some writers describe it as “the tunnel.” Something that magically opens up in their heads that allows them to travel to a place where their stories, events, and characters come into crystal clear view. At that point, the writer need only act as a reporter for the events as he sees them. He writes or types as fast as possible so as not to miss a single detail before the door to the tunnel closes again. He watches his characters like a spy, observes their expressions, feels what they feel, and he tells us all about it afterward.
The nature of inspiration is similar for a musician. In my case, it’s something that “comes out of the sky.” Don’t ask me why, but I’ve always felt that “It” came from above, like a revelation. A melody is something anyone in the world can follow, but few can corral. If you picture it as an elusive butterfly, we composers have a butterfly net in our minds. Some nets are bigger and better than others, but we’re all out for the same thing: to capture that fleeting melody, that whisper of magic we can feel all around us, to seize it, and, as if it were a priceless antique, to try to restore it, paying careful attention to each tiny and marvelous detail that only a divine being could have designed. We are, in a way, like mediums who communicate with another world. A world of lovely and elusive phantoms. Phantoms who exist to remind us we are more than animals born of pain and destined for oblivion. Phantoms who may yet explain to us the origins of life, time, and the stars above.
—Peter Harper, Contemporary Music Writer Magazine
PART ONE
ONE
THE STORM, which some meteorologist with a fetish for biblical verse dubbed “Lucifer,” had been expected for days before it struck. It was going to be a big one, too, even by Donegal’s standards: look out for flying roof tiles and toppled streetlamps. The announcer from Coastal Radio broke in with an update every sixty minutes: “Make sure to fill up your generators with fuel. Do you have enough frozen food? Cans of baked beans? Don’t forget about candles and matches. To those of you who live near the coast, make sure to tie up your vessels. Dry dock your sailboats, if you can.”
That morning, they’d predicted fifty-five mile per hour winds and advised against trying to drive on the roads beyond the late afternoon. They’d said we should be ready for a powerful downpour and flash flooding inland. For everyone who lived on the coast it was going to be a night of hell on earth, they said.
I had gone to Clenhburran early that morning to run errands and to shop for some last-minute groceries. Clenhburran was a little town, the only one for miles around, which makes it significant when the only thing that ties you to the outside world is a narrow and tortuous stretch of road between rocky cliffs.
My first order of business that morning had been to take my lawn mower to be fixed at John Durran’s shop.
“Got your windows all boarded up, Mr. Harper?” he asked as I walked into his store. “You live over on Tremore Beach, right? Supposed to hit hard there tonight.”
Durran was one of the people in town lining his pockets thanks to the impending storm. Piled by the door on one side of his store was a stack of plywood six or eight feet high and hanging from the roof above a light-up sign cautioned his customers, “Protect your windows!”
Naturally, there were special offers on gasoline generators, candles, propane grills, and other survival gear. The few tourists or weekend residents who happened to be in town filled their shopping carts, and Durran rubbed his hands together in anticipation. Too bad—for him—we were still a month away from the official start of high season.
I told him I was hunkered down for the storm, though I hadn’t as much as boarded up a single window. Neither had Leo Kogan, my only neighbor on the beach, who had counseled me against it: “I’m sure it’ll amount to nothing.” He’s a veteran of the beach, and I’d always trusted his expertise until that morning. I confess, after witnessing the pre-apocalyptic tension at Durran’s and driving past homes completely shrouded in plywood, I started to get a little nervous.
I pushed the mower into the shop and told Brendan, the mechanic, that the day before I had again—for the second time this month—smashed into the same damn hidden septic tank drain, which was only partly covered by my lawn.
“Brand-new Outils Wolf and it’s already got four dozen battle scars, Mr. Harper. If you want, we can rig some kind of metal plate over that septic tank drain,” he said.
I told him the rental agency was supposed to do something about it—if, in fact, they ever got to it this millennium—and asked him when the mower would be ready.
“Well, we’ve got to change the blade and check the motor,” Brendan explained. “Maybe two or three days.”
I told him I’d be back for it then, and set off for a stroll down to the harbor. At the end of Main Street, I watched as the fishermen battened down their ships, and even Chester, the little old man who ran the newsstand, warned “something big” was headed our way tonight.
“Notice there’s not a single seagull around,” he said, as he placed my usual purchase into a bag: a copy of the Irish Times, a carton of Marlboros, and the latest best-selling mystery novel. “A clear blue sky and not a single one out hunting for food. That’s because they’re running from it, you know. The storm. They’ve all flown inland and right about now they’re probably shitting all over Barranoa or Port Laurel. If you ask me, there’s something big on the way. Haven’t seen anything quite like this since the big one of 1951. That night, tractors and sheep got tossed across the countryside. See that store sign over there? Wind caught it and my cousin Barry found it on the road to Dungloe a couple miles from here.”
But then I thought of my neighbor, Leo, who had insisted there was nothing to worry about. Just some sand spraying up against the windows, maybe a loose roof tile or two. Nothing major. He’d been living on the beach for more than three years now. He hadn’t even bothered to change his dinner plans for tonight. We’d made arrangements to have dinner together at his house more than two weeks ago and yesterday he’d called to confirm.
“You think it’s a good idea to be out tonight with the Apocalypse on its way?” I had asked him.
“It’s just two miles to my house, Peter,” he’d said with his usual cheeriness. “What could happen in the space of two miles?”
AROUND SIX in the evening, when I awoke from a nap, the storm front had already rolled in like a carpet across the late afternoon sky. I lay on the couch watching it through the living room’s large picture windows: A titanic mass of storm clouds bloomed on the horizon, as deep as an abyss and as wide as the eye could see, advancing like an implacable army. Its darkened innards crackled with lightning, threatening an epic battle with the earth below.
I stood up and the so-called best-selling mystery novel—whose first fifty pages had managed to lull me to sleep—tumbled off my lap and onto the Aztec-patterned rug. I picked my guitar up off the floor, laid it against the throw pillows, and pulled open the sliding glass door to go outside. I was met by a furious gale that whipped across my lawn and shook the bushes like baby rattles. The white picket fence around my yard was bearing the brunt of it, as well. Down on the beach, sand swirled in giant clouds and pelted my face like needles.
Watching that monstrous storm fast approachin
g the coast, I felt like an insect about to be squashed by a giant. I thought back on John Durran’s plywood and instantly regretted not bringing home a few sheets. This goddamn storm was going to swallow the entire beach whole. Jesus, Pete, what were you thinking?
I ran back inside and slid the balcony door closed. The latch had never really worked, but I slammed the door hard until it was sealed tight. Relax, Harper, it’s not the end of the world. I went upstairs and made sure every north-facing window was shut tight.
It was a two-bedroom house: a master bedroom, a guest room with twin beds (which, in a few weeks, would welcome their first visitors: my children), and one bathroom. Beneath the tile roof was a tiny attic filled with dusty boxes and a few old pieces of luggage. I went up there for the first time in weeks just to make sure the skylight was locked. While I was up there, I grabbed a few candles, which I would spread throughout the house in case the lights went out in the middle of the night.
I unplugged everything and came back downstairs. The kitchen had just one window facing the sea, a double-paned glass that looked strong. I went out the kitchen door to the backyard, rounded up a few loose wooden chairs, and stacked them in the shed. Inside were several tools and planks of wood that some previous resident had bought. There was also a small ax, which might have been used to split firewood. I briefly thought about trying to board up parts of the house but just as quickly dismissed the idea. I’d probably only manage to hack off a finger or worse. And with no one to come to my aid out on this desolate beach, I’d bleed out and die alone.
Back inside the house, furious gusts of wind rattled the living room windows. Would they shatter? It was best not to risk it. I dug out a plastic cover to wrap my Steinway piano and figured it would at least keep the glass and rain off of it if the windows gave way. Once I’d wrapped the piano (a baby grand that was almost seven feet long and weighed nearly eight hundred pounds), I unlocked the caster wheels and rolled it as far as possible from the window. It left an empty space in the room, surrounded by notebooks, stacks of sheet music, pencils worn to the nub, and countless wads of balled-up paper. I shut my MacBook Pro and stashed it as high as possible on a bookshelf away from the window. I did the same with the electric keyboard I used for my recordings. That done, the living room was ready to receive the mother of all house guests, this impending storm. Raindrops started to pelt the window, and you could hear distant thunder, though I couldn’t see any more lightning just yet.
And then the phone rang.
I ran to answer it.
Leo said, “Evening, Harper. Looks like we’re about to get under way. You coming over or what?”
“Sorry, Leo, I’d totally forgotten,” I said, pacing toward the window with the phone to my ear. “Hey, so, do you still think we don’t need to board up the windows?”
His laughter calmed me down just a bit.
“Durran put a scare into you, did he? Trust me, Pete. Unless a meteor hits your house, I doubt anything is going to break your windows. Still, get over here before that huge thunderhead reaches the coast. They say there’s going to be a lot of lightning.”
I promised I’d be there in ten minutes. I hung up and chuckled at myself. So you wanted to live on the beach, huh, city slicker?
I went back upstairs and took a hot shower to try to wake myself up a little more. I’d barely slept the night before after getting a late-night call from my agent, Pat Dunbar, that had tied my stomach in knots.
Pat was fifty-six years old, morbidly overweight, a walking invitation to a heart attack, who had divorced and remarried a svelte twenty-one-year-old Russian girl. He lived in London though he tended to spend months at a time in a splendid villa in the Mediterranean. He smoked less than he had before, though he still drank just as hard. We had almost a father-son relationship, except I was (or, at least, he’d hoped I’d be) a son who brought a 20-percent commission.
“So I ran into Alex Wells at the BAFTA gala,” he said, after asking how I liked the desert-island life. “We talked about you a bit. He wanted to know what you were up to, if you had any availability. Turns out they’re filming a new series about Drake the pirate. Well, the Spanish called him a pirate, anyway. To the English, he was a hero or something. Anyway, it’s guns and boats . . .”
“Yeah, I know who Sir Francis Drake is,” I said, and felt myself tense up. I knew where Pat was going with this.
“Good, perfect. I can skip all the historical bull. So when do we start? They’re looking for a composer and they need someone in place by the end of the month. I told him I’d talk to you. Would you be willing to meet him in London . . . say, next week?”
I suppose it was inevitable. Pat was my agent, not my mother.
“What, you think I’m calling to ask about your health?” he added.
“Pat, you know the deal,” I said. “I’m busy with something else—at least until September. I can’t leave it half-finished.”
There was a brief moment of silence on the phone. I’d known Pat for years and I’d bet anything that at that very moment he was mouthing my words and making a face.
“I’m not asking you to leave anything half-finished, Peter,” he tried again, softening his tone. “I respect your decision. I always have, haven’t I? I’m just asking you to check back into reality for just a minute, okay? To get out of that Buddhist temple of yours for one weekend, put on a suit, and have a cup of coffee with Wells and his producer. Hear him out. I know you, you’ll have the principal score written on a cocktail napkin within five minutes. What do you say?”
It was quintessential Pat Dunbar, master of the twenty-five cent psychological analysis, trying to pull off a motivational technique above his pay grade.
“Pat, there’s no point in meeting with Alex Wells if my heart’s not in it. You and I will both end up looking bad, and that’s not good for anyone. You know I’m right. Besides, I’m already working on a project . . .”
“And how’s that going?”
“What do you mean by that?” I asked, a little tense.
“I know you’ve been working on your personal project,” Pat said, “an ‘experimental album.’ That’s all I’ve been telling people for the last eleven months. ‘Pete’s taking some time for himself.’ Eleven months, man! You know what can happen to a career in that amount of time? I’ve already turned down . . .”
“I know, Pat. You’ve run down the list for me a million times: two six-figure jobs for video game companies, one feature film, and this will be the third TV series I turn down.”
“I’m going to be honest and tell you something you might not want to hear. People are going to forget you, Pete. You’re starting to get a reputation as an eccentric, a wild card, and that’s a hard stink to wash off. For all your BAFTA awards, the Golden Globes, the Oscar nomination, you’re still no Elfman or Williams or Zimmer. I’m sorry to be an asshole about it, Pete, but I think you need to hear it from somebody. You’re not at the point where you can take these kinds of luxuries just yet.”
And there it was. This argument had been a long time coming. I’d finally worn out the patience of the ever-insistent Pat Dunbar.
The line fell silent for a few short beats. We both caught our breaths.
“Look, Pete . . . I know you’ve been dealing with some stuff. I’ve been divorced, too. I know the shit storm you’re dealing with. Clem screwed you over, and now you’re pissed off at the whole world. But you have to help yourself here.”
“That’s what I’m trying to do, Pat.”
“By hiding from the world?”
“I’m not hiding. I just need some peace and quiet. To get away from it all.” To get away from you, too, I thought. “Besides, I was only producing crap and you know it.”
“It was not crap. You were just affected by the divorce. Call it an accident. Those jokers are always in a rush; they don’t wait for anyone. You know I fought like hell to keep you onboard . . .”
Here we were again, discussing the disaster that—among other t
hings—had caused my exile. The movie I hadn’t been able to finish. FOX studios. Their lawyers. Just another tumble for Mr. Harper and his finances after the divorce from Clem.
“Listen to me, Pat,” I said. “I know you’re speaking as my friend. I know you mean well beyond your precious twenty percent, but I can’t go back now. I feel like I’m about to take a huge step forward, about to shed this skin. The thing with Clem, this nightmare, I think it was meant to help me in some way. But I need time.”
And now I could picture Pat leaning back on his couch staring at the ceiling, thinking, Well, I tried everything.
“Okay, Peter. I’m not going to push you. I’ll break the news to Wells. I’ve always trusted your instinct. Keep at your album, get better, and let me know when you’re ready to work again, okay?”
We hung up. His “get better” rang in my head.
IT WAS TRUE. Who was I kidding? I didn’t dare meet with Alexander Wells because I wasn’t sure of myself anymore. Pat knew it. FOX knew it. The BBC knew it. The whole damn world knew it. I’d compose a piece of music, listen to it, and toss the crumpled notes into the garbage. Deep down, I should be thankful to Pat for continuing to risk his reputation on me.
Over the last three months, my creative life had been a frustrating bout of agonized trial and error. A manic-depressive spiral in which one night I might think I had something brilliant, the melody that would mark the end to my creative drought, and listening to it the next morning would make me want to vomit. (Mostly figuratively, though a couple of times it did inspire dry heaves.) I’d desperately leap up from the piano and have to leave the house to keep from exploding with rage—rage that led to drinking. So I’d stalk the beach, looking for crabs as a way to distract my mind, each time childishly wishing that a massive tidal wave would crash down on me and end my suffering. Or I’d walk along the cliffs toward the ruins of the Monaghan monastery, where I’d pray that God would send me some kind of sign. Mostly I ended up in the backyard, mowing the lawn, which had become the richest form of entertainment in my monastic life.
The Last Night at Tremore Beach Page 1