The Four Corners of the Sky_ A Novel - Michael Malone [2]
In the yard, gusty stinging rain and wind slapped at her, shoving her against the front of the barn. Its immense gray weathered doors blew suddenly apart as if she had knocked on them in a fairy tale and some invisible sorcerer with power over the elements had ordered the wind to sweep her inside.
The barn was an enormous dark empty space, with high rafters and a sweet strong smell. Outside, the storm was close and noisy, but the barn was quiet. Annie walked into the middle of the shadowy space. There, alone, sat an old airplane. It was a fixed-wing single-engine plane, a Piper Warrior painted cherry red with blazing yellow stripes and a silver propeller on its black nose. The door to its cockpit was swung open. From the seat the beam of a large red battery lantern was shining on the plane so clearly she could see the fresh footprints of her father’s shoes in the thick dust on the wing. She ran over to the plane, crawled behind its wheel cap and beat her head against her knees in a shout of grief so hopeless that the noise she made scared her. She cried until she heard an unfamiliar man’s voice call her name, “Annie.” Quickly she bit at the cloth on her knee, quiet, listening. The voice moved away.
Above her, beneath the airplane’s low curved wing, she could make out spiraling green letters curled like a dragon’s tail, spelling the words, King of the Sky.
While they’d traveled on highways together, her father had told her about his old airplane, the King, how he and she could have been moving much faster back and forth across America if they’d only had the use of the King of the Sky, how the plane was “just sitting there in the barn” at his childhood home Pilgrim’s Rest, in a town called Emerald. He’d told her that someday they’d go get the King and they’d fly it all over the country.
Annie had never much believed such a plane existed, any more than the lost treasures and magic elixirs and prison tunnels he’d also described.
Now she hugged the King of the Sky’s wheel with both arms and legs. “I’m a flyer,” she said. “A flyer. A flyer.”
part one
North
July 4, 2001
Chapter 1
The Bride Comes Home
On her twenty-sixth birthday, U.S. Navy Lt. Annie Peregrine Goode was speeding home from Annapolis for the weekend, going 74 miles per hour, enjoying the sharp turns and brisk shifts of well-tuned gears. As she had done since her father had left her at Pilgrim’s Rest when she was seven years old, she would spend her birthday there with her aunt Sam and Sam’s housemate for decades, Clark Goode.
The sky was busy with a storm coming. Clouds bunched together, swelled and darkened to a black roil that fell in shadows over the land. On the highway, a strong wind pushed the clouds scudding ahead of the young woman’s fast-moving convertible. Her ponytail tucked inside a Navy cap, she raced the car through heavy air. On the seat beside her sat a container of precisely chopped carrots, celery, and cucumber slices from which she snacked. Her flight instructor’s uniform was white, the pants and jacket spotless. Her gray sports car was a Porsche Carrera. She and her soon-to-be-ex-husband Brad had bought it because it could accelerate to 60 miles per hour in 4.3 seconds.
In front of her an old Volvo station wagon with long green cones tied to its roof bounced off onto the shoulder to give her room the driver mistakenly thought she needed to maneuver around him. The slow-moving white car belonged, Annie knew, to her uncle, Dr. Clark Goode, doubtless on his way home.
Tapping her horn as she passed him, Annie slowed down, calling out, “Hi, Clark! Pull over!”
He waved out his window. “Annie! Be careful!”
She stopped precisely on the shoulder ahead of him, running back to the tall, thin man as he stepped from the opened door