The Speed of Mercy by Christy Conlin (good books for high schoolers txt) ๐
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- Author: Christy Conlin
Read book online ยซThe Speed of Mercy by Christy Conlin (good books for high schoolers txt) ๐ยป. Author - Christy Conlin
Mercy Lake was in the centre of a vast stretch of old-growth Acadian forest owned by the Seabury Estate. The remains of the Seabury family now lived in Florida. Mal had already been down there, interviewing an old woman in a nursing home, a painter named Sarah Windsor. Malโs mother had thought Mal was interviewing Sarah Windsor about a retrospective of her early paintings of disturbing domestic scenes, for her podcast. Mal had lied about that too. Her mother knew Sarah Windsor. Not well, but theyโd served on some prize juries together. In fact, her mother had called and talked to the nursing home staff so Mal could actually get in. Security was tighter these days, people more paranoid. When she got back from Florida she told her mother the old woman wasnโt able to talk. But that wasnโt true. She had managed a few words, a few sentences. Enough for Mal to decide to go to Nova Scotia.
โMal, rural Nova Scotia wasnโt a place for me, and it certainly isnโt a place for you,โ her mother had told her. โItโs the Georgia of the north. Why do you think I left?โ
โYou say all the time that your inspiration for painting comes from the natural world โ from all the stages of your life. Why canโt I find inspiration for my writing and podcast through the natural world of my maternal ancestry?โ But it wasnโt a spiritual pilgrimage to the land of her motherโs childhood that Mal had in mind.
Malโs mother had been quiet for a time and then smiled. It wasnโt surprising she believed Mal. Sheโd always encouraged her to follow her passions. Be the best version of yourself, Mal hears her mother say. When she was younger, Mal had loved this. But by the time she was in her early twenties, without any sort of โrealโ career, she blamed her mother. Her father, before he died, said her mother was making up for what she saw as the deficiency in her own upbringing, how Gramma Grant had always said no. Malโs father had a way of being very direct while always being kind. No judgement. They were poor. Life was hard. You had to be practical. You had to stay on the safe side. Life was dangerous. Her mother wanted Mal to know a different life, her father explained. He was the son of immigrants from Gujarat and shared her motherโs desire to provide a different future for his family, the tricky business of both protecting and encouraging your daughter in a society rife with racial discrimination.
Mal wanted to prove she was more than a thirty-year-old podcaster and obscure short story writer living in her motherโs garage apartment gobbling mango lassi and Doritos. This was not her best self. She had stumbled onto something secret โ a real-life crime, a cold case โ and she would break it on her podcast. But she needed a smoking gun. She needed evidence.
Her podcast was about mental health, and mostly the people she interviewed talked about how they managed theirs. They told their stories, gave tips on how to navigate depression and anxiety, how to have hope. Until she interviewed Flora, that was. The woman was in her late twenties. She was pale, winter white. Flora had a floral arranging business and talked about therapeutic gardening. It was Flora who had brought up Mercy Lake, in their off-the-record conversation after the interview. The two women found it impossible to avoiding exploring their shared Nova Scotia connections. โOh, mercy,โ Mal had said, when they were talking about the East Coast, like she was a country girl. Flora, hearing that word, mercy, paused, and then dropped her story out of the blue. It was a confession of sorts. Mercy seemed a code word and Floraโs story was sealed inside her, waiting for the right person to call it out of hiding. Mal was that person. Floraโs tone was matter-of-fact but her voice was hushed, and Malโs unease grew with every detail, her breath quickening. What had happened to Flora when she was fifteen? Flora claimed there was a link between a place called Mercy Lake in Nova Scotia and a group in New York that hid under a cloak of business, billions and blackmail โ money and power providing an impenetrable shield for traditions, beliefs and rituals going back hundreds of years. A company called Cineris International. An old family named Jessome, in New York. Mal remembered how Floraโs voice trembled as she spoke, trailed into a whisper. The woman was terrified. What they did to her went way back. There were others, lost in time.
Two days after she spoke with Flora, Mal got a phone call. It was from a private number. She answered anyway. A low male voice. He knew her name. Malmuria, donโt stick your nose where it doesnโt belong. Mal reached in her shorts pocket and pulled out her copy of a 1980 article about a Seabury Summer Barbeque, with a photo of Franklin Seabury and William Sprague, arms around shoulders: Fellows United, read the headline. And their daughters, Stella Sprague, twelve, and Cynthia Seabury, thirteen, holding hands, with bright smiles โ Cynthia half a foot taller, teased wild hair, and Stella in her old-fashioned dress with a pixie cut. Mal had made copies from the microfiche at the archives in Halifax before driving out to Mercy Lake. But it had been a mistake
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