Perfect Days is a thriller by Brazilian author Raphael Montes. I know this because we have a copy in the lodge library, and I read it last month. It’s definitely not an Agatha Christie, which is more my style. It’s creepy as hell, a stalker novel, and at one point the main character holds his kidnap victim in a cabin, outside of cell service, keeping her captive in all but plain sight.
So. You know. That hasn’t been bothering me all day.
It doesn’t line up. I haven’t wanted to go up and grab the book and double-check, because Percy could walk in at any moment, asking for another drink—which of course I’m capable of making, but most guests make their own—and then see that no, his little private joke wasn’t so private, after all.
It was an odd sentence. Strange wording. I think Henry caught something, but not enough. Not the whole reference.
What is it with me thinking guys don’t catch references?
I’m sitting here with Evil Under the Sun open in front of me, on alert for either door or the sound of footsteps, trying to remember exactly how Teo pulled it off in the book. I know he drives in and installs Clarice in the cabin without anyone seeing her, but Percy couldn’t do that here. Residents agree that they won’t have their own cars, because then it’s too tempting for them to leave and come back when they should commit to staying for the whole month. You don’t come here unless you need to get away for the whole month.
Jonathon picks them up from the airport, so he must have seen Mary. Presumably she wasn’t bound and gagged, or drugged senseless, when she got off the plane or during the ride.
Okay my brain kicks into overdrive because maybe there’s not an excuse for handcuffs, but have Jonathan and Lydia ever had guests with terminal illnesses? Could Percy have passed it off as that kind of drugged? There’s a lot of trust going on here with residents. We assume that they’ll adhere to the NDA. That they’ll follow the rules.
That they won’t use the Meyers’ discretion to help them kidnap the objects of their obsession.
Okay, slow down. It’s only July 3. Last month we had a resident I never saw until the final week because she requested all her meals to be left on her back stoop and holed herself up to finish writing something. I don’t know what she was working on, because she wasn’t anyone I recognized. I wouldn’t ever be able to tell someone if I did, but that’s what she said when she emerged, glowing and bouncing and clearly doing just fine: It’s done. I finished it before the deadline. Where’s the champagne?
So there’s precedent for that. For someone coming here to seriously retreat, introversion to the max, no phone calls and no knocking. Plus, if you look at it, Mary Shelley’s in a better position than last month’s Virginia Woolf. Virginia was alone in there, so if something had happened, it was all on her to hit the 911 button on her phone. At least if Mary collapses, Percy’s there to notice and raise the alarm.
Unless she collapses and he’s the reason for it.
I need to stop reading Agatha Christie.
It’s pasta tonight, various kinds with different sauces, so the takeaway boxes have a stack of foil squares next to them. Lydia always seems to put things out when I’m not looking. She moves quietly, and it’s kind of a miracle she let Jonathan talk her into getting her face on the website, because she’s really not a people person. She’s a kitchen person, happy as a clam if she can make food that disappears. When the paperwork comes back from the next month’s residents, she’s absolutely gleeful, color-coding and cross-referencing and planning out meals and shopping lists and her daily schedule. The reason food gets put out instead of ordered isn’t because this keeps the residents from being tied to the dining room. It’s so she can slip away unnoticed and do something more important than let them look at her.
She’s plain, but not ugly. She has limp brown hair, but she won’t hear of using a different shampoo. She’s thin, usually wearing an apron, and the veins stand out on the backs of her hands like she maybe lifts weights half the time no one’s looking. I’ve never seen Lydia in anything other than a long-sleeve mock turtleneck and elastic-waisted pants in various color combinations under her apron. Most of the residents simply don’t see her at all.
Okay, and Perfect Days is in the lodge library, but I’m not worried that Jonathan’s holding her captive or something. I haven’t seen much of Lydia, but I have at least seen her.
And I’m so not saying Percy’s got Mary there, drugged or tied up or otherwise restrained. She’d have to be gagged, too. There are the screening trees, but all the cabins are really close to each other. I can’t get all suspicious just because of a single weird statement. All the same, it’s my job to be attentive to the residents. That means looking up as they come in and watching to see if, once more, Percy arrives, fills two containers—one with salad and the other with no vegetables whatsoever—and takes an Evian and some beer out the door.
It doesn’t mean he forces Mary to eat the salad and keeps the rest for himself. Maybe he puts both containers on the table between them and they pick what they want, so the hot food doesn’t melt the lettuce. He could even share out the beer. There’s no way of knowing what goes on in the Shelly cabin.
Truman hitches up his board shorts to sit on the edge of the desk, polishing an apple on his long-sleeved SPF 50 shirt. It’s a low-chemical alternative to sunscreen. “I didn’t think Percy was your type.” This is the man who’s basically the opposite of Percy in every way: definitely a country mouse, skin tanned and hair lightened by the sun, and wouldn’t be caught dead in an outfit that requires a belt.
The fact that my face instantly sets itself on fire really doesn’t help my case. “Have you seen his wife?”
“Why? Is she hot?” He bites into the apple.
I shake my head. “I haven’t seen her.”
Truman frowns and drags the back of his hand over his mouth. Maybe that’s more environmentally friendly than using a napkin. “So she doesn’t eat? She’s a, what do you call it, breatharian?”
“Truman, I have no idea if that’s what you call it. But either he’s a selfish ass who eats double portions, or he brings it back to her.” Or like. She’s dead.
That’s one of the concerns at a place like this: nobody back home really expects to hear from them for an entire month. They can write letters, and Jonathan prints off the emails that have the right subject to make it through, but the only calls get screened at the lodge and the only way to email back is to give Jonathan a message to type up the next time he goes into town. That’s a lot of trust to put in the Meyers, and in Truman and me, simply because the Meyers hired us.
Truman leans over, apple stuck in his teeth, to flick the black cover of my book, but he needs to hold the apple again before he can tease me. “This isn’t one of the crime queen’s hotels, you know.”
Okay except for the fact that it still fits the bill of a bunch of people who ostensibly have never met before, brought together in an eclectic mix, and stuck here for a length of time unable to determine each other’s bona fides. It’s totally the Calais carriage of the Orient Express, except we don’t have a dead body.
Unless we do, and just don’t know it yet.
“Alyssa Roberta,” he sighs, because when Truman’s exasperated with me, he assigns me a middle name. “What have I told you about making fanfiction about the guests?”
“Share every juicy detail,” I recite along with him. “Percy’s totally killed Mary and he’s using the rest of the month to get rid of her body so it’ll never be found and he gets away with murder.”
He laughs and holds out a fist for me to bump. “That’s the best one so far! Did you eat?”
And, just like that, my dramatic theory’s dismissed. “Not yet.”
“Grab a plate.” He gestures for me to move, because I don’t pop right up like an obedient Jack-in-the-box. “Take it on the porch. You don’t get nearly enough fresh air.” Truman and I disagree about how much fresh air a person really needs, but a break’s a break, so I get up, and grab my book, and ignore his laughter.
Cold Comfort: Thursday, July 4, 2024 – Henry, coming July 10
