Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Cabot's Neck: A supernatural novel





This is the beginning of my 23rd book, which I have am sketching out now...

                                                              Copyright 2025 gwaynemiller.com

WGA registration # 2286466

 Chapter One

The year 2027

 Nothing there


 

“I love this beach!” seven-year-old Cassie Cabot said. “Mom and Dad, can we come back here tomorrow?”

“Yes!” said her mother, Daniela Cabot.

“And every day until vacation’s over!” said her father, Jim Cabot.

“Yay!”

It was the summer of 2027 and the Cabots, who lived in Boston, had rented a house in Ipswich, Massachusetts, to celebrate good fortune: Daniela, one of the world’s top video game designers, had just completed her latest game; Jim, an expert in AI, had just joined the faculty of MIT as an assistant professor; and Cassandra, who liked being called Cassie, would start second grade at summer’s end after acing first.

Cassie packed the seashells she’d collected into her backpack, her parents gathered their blanket and cooler, and they started toward their car down the long, narrow, tree-covered path that was the only land access to the beach.

“Dad, can you tell me again how this peninsula got its name?” Cassie said. She was precocious, but she never flaunted her intelligence.

“You never tire of that story, do you,” Daniela said.

“Nope,” her daughter said. “Just like you never tire of telling the story about how you and Dad met.” That was during a PAX East conference in Boston, when Daniela, early in her career, introduced her first game, The Deep Blue Sea Calls Your Name. After her presentation, Jim, a gamer since childhood, asked her to join him for a drink. Soon, they were dating. They married in a small ceremony in the garden of Jim’s home on Beacon Hill.

“Cabot’s Neck was named by one of my ancestors, Joseph Cabot, son of John Cabot, who came to America from England in 1700,” Jim said. “Joseph was born in Salem and he became wealthy enough to buy this land, which later Cabots donated to Ipswich for public use.”

 “But he made his money in a bad way,” Cassie said.

“He did,” Jim said.

“In the rum and slave trades,” Daniela said.

“For which Cabots born later made reparations,” Cassie said. “Tell me again: what are reparations?”

“Amends for terrible things done in the past,” Jim said. “My family later apologized and paid a lot of money to descendants of slaves. But money of course cannot undo the damage.”

“Your family was good,” Cassie said.

“Some members, anyway,” Jim said. “Now enough history. Let’s gather our stuff and get out of here. Hotdogs for dinner and S’mores for dessert.”

“Yay!” Cassie said. She ran ahead of her parents and stopped by an old oak tree.

When Daniela and Jim reached her, she was rubbing her hand along the tree trunk.

“How old do you think it is?” she said.

“It probably was here when Joseph Cabot bought this land,” Jim said.

“Wow,” Cassie said. “That’s ancient.”

“That lower limb has a rope tied around it,” Daniela said.

It was a small, weathered strand that had been cut near the knot.

“Probably was a rope swing,” Cassie said.

“Or an ancient gallows,” Jim joked. “Maybe they marched witches in from Salem to hang them.”

“Not funny, Jim,” Daniela said.

“Sorry,” Jim said. “You know my sense of humor.”

“I think it’s cool,” Cassie said.

She laughed.

“It’s not,” Daniela said. “Stop laughing.”

Cassie did.

Jim collapsed to the ground, his hands clutching at his neck.

Cassie laughed again.

Daniela was pissed.

“What the F, Jim?” she said. “Have you lost your mind?”

Now blood was frothing from his mouth.

This was no act.

“Oh my God, oh my God,” Daniela screamed.

She bent over him, and realized she couldn’t help him.

“We have to call 911,” she said.

“Is daddy going to be OK?” Cassie said, starting to cry.

“Yes, but we have to get help,” Daniela said.

She pulled Cassie away from her convulsing father. She couldn’t have their daughter see him like this.

When they were a few steps away, their backs turned, she called 911.

“An ambulance and police crew is on the way,” the dispatcher said after she’d reported Jim’s distress.

Daniela and Cassie turned around.

Jim wasn’t there.

“Where’s Daddy?” Cassie said.

“He must have…” Daniela said.

She couldn’t finish. Her mind was reeling.

“Maybe he got better and he’s fooling us again,” Cassie said.

“I hope so,” her mother said.

She called her husband’s name.

“Jim, joke’s over!” she shouted. “Ollie Ollie in come free!”

Nothing.

No Jim.

No rope.

No blood or signs of struggle on the ground.

The sound of sirens approached and medics and police officers tore down the path