Found Drowned

Found Drowned

by Laurie Glenn Norris
Found Drowned

Found Drowned

by Laurie Glenn Norris

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Overview

Based on a 19th century unsolved murder, this “artfully constructed” historical novel explores family life and a mysterious death in the Maritime Provinces (Quill & Quire).
 
Nova Scotia, 1876. Sixteen-year-old Mary Harney is a dreamer who wants more than anything to escape her family’s Cumberland County homestead. Terrorized by her alcoholic father, she receives cold comfort from her melancholy mother, Ann. But when Ann becomes ill, the already tenuous family life begins to unravel—until the September evening when Mary suddenly goes missing.
 
Across the water on Prince Edward Island, Gilbert Bell’s son finds a body washed up on the beach below the family farm. Mary’s father quickly identifies the body as hers. As the community is visited first by the local coroner and then by investigators, a mysterious tale comes into focus. 
 
Found Drowned is both a riveting domestic thriller and a darkly fascinating picture of 19th century life, law, and criminal investigation in Nova Scotia. At once tightly plotted and pensive, the novel travels back to the circumstances that led to Mary’s disappearance and then back further to the circumstances of her parents’ marriage, all the while building toward a raucous courtroom finale.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781771087513
Publisher: Nimbus Publishing
Publication date: 10/29/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 262
Sales rank: 410,380
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Laurie Glenn Norris is a writer of historical fiction and non-fiction and holds an MA in art history. Her book Haunted Girl: Esther Cox and the Great Amherst Mystery was a finalist for the 2013 Democracy 250 Atlantic Book Award for Historical Writing and is currently optioned for film. She lives in River Hebert, Nova Scotia, with husband Barry Norris and their cat, Riley. Found Drowned is her first novel.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

BELL'S POINT

Cape Traverse, Prince Edward Island September 12, 1877

The boys threw stones at it as soon as they saw the form in the distance. At first, with the sun in their eyes, they thought it was likely a calf. Once in a while one would stray from its mother, fall over a bank somewhere, and be washed to shore in the tide, its coat stiff with salt.

The seagulls had spied it first, their heads bobbing up and down, mouths open. Some of them had already landed and started to pick. When the stones began to fall around them with hollow thuds, the birds reluctantly scattered.

"See, I told you it wasn't no animal," Tom said as they got closer.

Jimmy ran on ahead of his friend.

"It's a girl," he yelled, dropping to his knees before the entangled figure.

"Jesus, don't get that close, Jim, you don't want to catch nothin' off her. Don't touch her!"

Tom backed away.

Leaning forward, Jimmy extended one chubby fist and lifted a clump of blond hair. A pair of blank, blue eyes stared back at him.

"She's dead as a doornail," Tom yelped, backing up again.

"Let's go git Dadda."

The boys ran across the beach and scrambled up the bank, their bare feet leaving tracks in the shiny red mud, while the screeching gulls descended once again.

The life I carried was like a tiny fish encased in its own personal sea.

CHAPTER 2

MERIGOMISH

Nova Scotia August 1876

Mary watched Rachel scrub Grandma Hennessey's kitchen floor. Rachel Connelly had been with the family for six months now, one of two housemaids the Hennesseys employed, along with Susan the cook.

"She's practical and clean," Helen Hennessey told her husband Patrick after she hired the girl.

Mary and her mother, Ann, with Little Helen, age four, and Harry, one and a half — "the two little ones," as Ann called them — were visiting Merigomish from Rockley for a fortnight. It was the first trip back home for Ann since she was a bride. The Harney children had never met their grandparents or Aunt Beatrice. Mary, almost seventeen, was especially shy around them even though she adored her aunt as soon as she laid eyes on her. The kitchen became one of Mary's favourite places to linger, however, and Rachel her confidant.

"Are you going to get married some day, Rachel?" she asked.

"I sure hope so. I don't wanna be scrubbing somebody else's floors all my life. Even though Mr. and Mrs. Hennessey are good to me," she hastened to add. "I know I'm some lucky to work here." Rachel stopped to tidy the wisps of curly red hair that kept creeping out from under her dust cap. She was a short, big-boned girl with a creamy complexion, freckles on her nose, and strong forearms. Whenever she leaned across the top of the metal bucket to wet the floor, her pendulous breasts nearly filled its circumference.

There were lots of young men around who admired Rachel Connelly; she was not worried about ending up an old maid.

"I don't want to," Mary proclaimed with a defiant shake of her head.

"Every girl wants to be married."

"I don't."

"How come?"

Mary shrugged. "I just don't. I want to be by myself."

Rachel smiled. "People will make fun of you for being an old maid.

And you'll have to live with your mother and father."

"No, I won't."

"And babies, don't you want to have your own babies?" Rachel continued. "I'm going to have three boys and then three girls. Boys should always be the oldest so that they can help their father out on the farm as soon as they can."

"I'd like to have babies but not a husband."

"It doesn't work that way, Mary." Rachel shook her head and whispered: "To get the babies, you need a husband or you'd be ruined. That's what happened to my cousin Agnes, she ... no, never mind."

"Tell me?" Mary leaned forward in her chair.

"No, your grandmother would show me the door if I talked to you about such things." Rachel bent over the wash bucket once again.

"Do you ever feel all wrong?" Mary asked.

"What do you mean?"

"Do you ever feel like no matter what you do or say, that you're in the wrong, that other people are always right and you're always wrong, about everything? I can't seem to do anything right."

"Well, at home I'm the oldest and the only girl. So I'm usually right. Pa is always telling my brothers to mind what I say."

"I'm always the wrong one in my house," Mary told her.

"Who says?"

"Daddy and Grandma Harney. And Mumma agrees with them."

"I find that hard to believe." Rachel snorted.

"It's true. Grandma Harney says it all the time and Mumma doesn't say any different."

Tears welled up in Mary's eyes.

"Lots of women don't like to disagree with their husbands to their face and if you don't mind my saying so, your ma's a bit on the timid side, so I can't image her talking back to Mr. Harney at all, not that she should."

Rachel took a handkerchief out of her apron pocket and handed it to Mary, who buried her face in the clean cotton.

"Your ma has two babies to look after besides your father. You're getting older now and it's your place to help her all you can."

"I know," sighed Mary.

She wiped her face, blew her nose, and presented Rachel with the crumpled cloth.

"Look," said Rachel, cramming the handkerchief back into her apron pocket, "I'm just about done here. Wait till I scrub us out the door and then you can come and watch me bring in the clothes. It's been a good drying day and I'm sure they're about ready to come in. Then I'll have to help Susan get supper on."

"All right."

"I just love a nice clean floor," Rachel said, smiling. "Ma always told me that clean floors make a house feel warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer."

You know," she continued, "I lost my ma almost six years ago. She was so sick and she's better off now but life's not the same without her. Keep that in mind. You're lucky to still have your mother."

Mary nodded and wiped her eyes with the sleeve of her dress.

After Rachel wrung out the mop and threw the dirty water into the long grass at the side of the house, she and Mary walked towards the clothesline.

* * *

THE HENNESSEYS' HOUSE SAT CLOSE to the main road. Its yellow paint was new, just put on last year, and pink and white geraniums sat in clay pots in each of its five front windows, shown to advantage against the white shutters and crisp curtains. The three large hay barns, cow shed, stable, and numerous outbuildings sprouted up behind the house. It had taken Helen Hennessey twenty-five years, but finally the backyard was a tangle of shrubs and flowers surrounding whitewashed benches, reflecting globes in the cutting garden, and numerous feeders for blue jays, mourning doves, and hummingbirds.

When Mary wasn't spending time with Rachel, she was following her Aunt Beatrice and Grandma Hennessey around the house. Beatrice promised to make Mary and Little Helen each a new dress. She had started Mary's already from a pattern for a day dress in Godey's Ladies Book. Beatrice had made the same one for herself only three months before in navy blue. Mary's dress was to be lime green with black collar and cuffs and green buttons down the front. It would be her first ever grownup dress and a change from the two blue frocks and aprons — one for school and the other to do her chores — that she wore all the time. She did have a cotton shirtwaist and a plaid skirt that she wore, summer and winter, to church, but they were quite worn. Now she would wear them for everyday and have something new for Sunday that would make the eyes of those LeFurgey girls bug out even more than usual. It was going to have a bustle in the back, Mary's first bustle, and a new lace-bordered petticoat and it would be long enough to skim over the tops of her boots, just like a proper young lady. She couldn't wait to wear it.

Like Mary, Ann had two dresses that she wore over and over. When she complimented Beatrice on her new pink walking suit, Grandpa Hennessey piped up, "You could have had clothes like that today too if you'd been smart."

Grandma Hennessey shushed him and he went back to reading the Eastern Chronicle. Later that day, Beatrice had gone through her things and given Ann two morning dresses and a walking suit, all in pretty jewel colours. Most of Ann's clothes were black and white.

"She looks like a damn Quaker," Grandpa snorted.

Aunt Beatrice was thirty-five years old and an old maid but she didn't seem to mind a bit. In fact, she said she preferred it that way.

"Life is short. I want to do all the things I can now. Looking after and catering to a man would only get in the way," she told Mary, who had asked her about it one day when her aunt was fitting the dress sleeves.

"I feel the same way, Auntie," Mary declared. "And I don't like men," she added.

"There's nothing wrong with men. I just don't want to live with one. Papa's more than Mother and I can handle as it is."

She looked over at her sister, who was at the kitchen window washing Harry's face for the fourth time that morning.

"But one thing I do regret is not having a child. I could eat the three of you up, you're all so sweet."

"Don't let them fool you, Bea. They're not as nice as they look." Ann grinned, drying Harry's face and tapping his backside as he ran away giggling.

"Sure they are," Beatrice said, bending down, touching her cheek to Mary's, and enveloping her niece in the smell of lavender. "Now stand straight, Mary, and let me try to fix this sleeve."

"This is too much, Bea," Ann said. "And that dress is too old for Mary."

"Oh pooh, Annie. You've kept Mary in children's clothes far too long. She's a young woman now and needs some nice things to call her own."

"I don't want her growing up too fast," Ann replied.

"Now go take that off again, sweetie, and I'll just stitch it up on the machine." Beatrice pinched her niece's cheek. "Oh, wait a moment. I want you to step on this piece of paper, so I can trace around your feet."

"Why?"

"Just for fun, to compare the size of your feet with mine. Good, now off you go."

Mary thought that Beatrice had the most interesting things. A Singer sewing machine that always smelled of the oil she doused it with, cardboard slides of side-by-side photographs that became one picture when you looked at them through a fancy viewer, and all the latest books and magazines. Along with Godey's she had both the Canadian Illustrated News and the London Illustrated News delivered by mail twice a month. And at the moment she was reading a new book just purchased from a Halifax bookstore. It was a collection of short stories entitled Doctor Ox, written by a man called Jules Verne. Best of all, she'd been reading The Woman in White, by Wilkie Collins, aloud in the library every evening once Little Helen and Harry were put to bed. Grandpa called it trash but Mary, Ann, and Helen hung on every word.

"That Sir Percival is up to no good, I just know it," Helen said looking up from her rug-hooking. "Why did poor Laura ever marry such a scoundrel?"

"Why indeed," Grandpa said, raising his eyebrows at Ann.

Grandma spoke softly, barely above a whisper, but Grandpa, Beatrice, and Ann minded her every word. She and Grandpa seemed to know what the other was thinking and sometimes even said the same things at the same time.

Grandma and Beatrice visited places like San Francisco and Boston and London, England, and sent Ann, Mary, and the little ones beautiful postcards, photographs, and gifts, wherever they went. But they had never been to Ann's home in Rockley.

Early in the morning on the day that the Harneys were to return home, Beatrice crept into Mary's and Little Helen's bedroom. The girls were still asleep and she put two brown paper bundles at the bottom of their bed. A half hour later the family was gathered around the breakfast table when they heard two squeals and then laughter. Shortly, there was clomping on the stairs and landing and Mary and Little Helen burst into the kitchen, still in their night dresses, with new boots on their feet.

"It's just like Christmas." Mary laughed.

"Like Quismis," Little Helen echoed.

The girls danced around the table holding hands and looking down at their feet. Little Helen's boots were shiny black leather with gold buttons up the side. Mary's were a white and black gingham pattern with black buttons and soles.

"Bea, this is too much," Ann said.

"Auntie! We knew it was you."

The two girls fell upon Beatrice, Little Helen hugging a knee while Mary wrapped her arms around her aunt's neck.

"What did Harry get?" Mary asked.

"Look on the sideboard."

There was a blue outfit with short pants, a coat, and a round-billed cap for the toddler.

"Oh sweet," said Mary.

"Ohhhhh swee," said Little Helen.

"Mary desperately needed a new pair of boots, boots that a young lady would wear, and I wanted to make sure that everyone had a goodbye gift." Beatrice smiled and lifted Little Helen up onto her knee.

"I'm sad to be going away," said Mary. "I wish we could stay longer."

"Yes, I know, dear. We all wish you could," said Helen touching her cheek.

"Could I?" Mary asked, looking shyly from her mother to her grandmother.

"No," Ann told her, "it's about time we all went home. You're certainly not staying behind. School starts soon and you have to be home for that."

Rachel was at the stove fetching the teapot. When her eyes met Mary's, she shrugged her shoulders.

"You can come again for a visit next year, Mary," said Aunt Beatrice.

"Me too, me too." Little Helen was jumping up and down.

"Yes, you too, sweetheart. You'll be a big girl of five by then," her aunt said.

"We'll see," said Ann. "Mary is needed a lot around the house."

"Travel, even just within one's own province, is the best education one can possibly get," replied Beatrice.

Patrick looked at his watch.

"Well, you two, sit down for breakfast now. We have to be at the station at eleven. I'm going out to see how the haying is coming along. I'll be back at half past ten to fetch you."

He got up, grabbed his hat, and left. Rachel rushed Mary's and Little Helen's pancakes to the kitchen table.

By eleven o'clock they were all standing on the platform of the train station. Patrick had paid for their train tickets from River Philip to West Merigomish return and for a buggy to take them to River Philip from Rockley return. This trip was the first time that Mary had been on a train. She found it exciting to watch the houses and trees and people as the train hurried along the track. She felt all grown up holding her ticket in her hand.

Aunt Beatrice hugged her tightly.

"Good luck, sweetie. Don't forget to write and let me know how your trip went. And here's another going-away present for you."

Her aunt passed her a brown paper-wrapped parcel. Mary could tell right away it was a book.

"Is it The Woman in White?" Mary whispered, and held it to her chest.

"Your very own copy," Aunt Beatrice whispered back, "plus another one I think you'll like."

Everyone except Patrick and Harry was crying when the Harneys boarded the train and took their seats. Watching out the window, however, Mary was sure she saw the big man run his right sleeve across his eyes. Everyone waved as the train pulled away from the station. Mary stood and looked out the window until Aunt Beatrice's walking suit was just a tiny pink dot, then she turned and dropped herself down onto the hard leather seat.

Ann sighed. "We'll be in Pugwash by suppertime."

Mary unwrapped her books. There was The Woman in White, marked at the place where Beatrice had stopped reading. The other book, The Moonstone, was written by the same author. Mary settled down to read. From time to time she looked out the window at the passing countryside. At noon they had the cold meats, fresh, soft rolls, and lemonade from the lunch basket that Susan had packed for them.

Later in the afternoon Mary fell asleep to the sound of her mother singing softly to the children. She awoke with a start when the conductor came striding down the aisle.

"River Philip next stop, all passengers for River Philip, next stop," he said. The train's whistle blew. Mary put her hands over her ears and looked out the window; they were coming into the station, passing the shacks scattered along the side of the tracks. A woman in front of one of the rundown buildings was bringing her wash in while rain started to spatter on the window.

"Good thing we have a ride waiting for us," Ann said. "Mary, wake up Little Helen and put her coat on, we'll be getting off soon."

The tiny River Philip train station was located at the edge of the village. By the time they walked out of the building, it was raining hard. Mary put her books inside her coat so they wouldn't get wet. People were running to escape the deluge. Some carried umbrellas, others held newspapers over their heads.

"Mary, stay under the awning or you'll get soaked," Ann warned. She scanned up and down the street.

"We can't stay out here for too long in the wet. We'll have to go back into the station to wait if he's late."

"There he is, Mumma, there's Mr. LeFurgey."

Mary waved at the large surrey coming down Main Street.

"Thank God," Ann said, shifting Harry from one hip to another. "Wait here, girls, he sees us. Let him stop and get the bags before you walk out. I don't want you to get run over by those horses."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Found Drowned"
by .
Copyright © 2019 Laurie Glenn Norris.
Excerpted by permission of Nimbus Publishing Limited.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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