The blackbird season A novel

Kate Moretti

Book - 2017

In a quiet Pennsylvania town, a thousand dead starlings fall onto a high school baseball field, unleashing a horrifying and unexpected chain of events that will rock the close-knit community. Beloved baseball coach and teacher Nate Winters and his wife, Alicia, are well respected throughout town. That is, until one of the many reporters investigating the bizarre bird phenomenon catches Nate embracing a wayward student, Lucia Hamm, in front of a sleazy motel. Lucia soon buoys the scandal by claiming that she and Nate are engaged in an affair, throwing the town into an uproar...and leaving Alicia to wonder if her husband has a second life. And when Lucia suddenly disappears, the police only have one suspect: Nate. Nate's coworker and sol...e supporter, Bridget Harris, Lucia's creative writing teacher, is determined to prove his innocence. She has Lucia's class journal, and while some of the entries appear particularly damning to Nate's case, others just don't add up. Bridget knows the key to Nate's exoneration and the truth of Lucia's disappearance lie within the walls of the school and in the pages of that journal.

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Detective and mystery fiction
Psychological fiction
Suspense fiction
Mystery fiction
Published
New York, NY : Atria Paperback, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, Inc 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Moretti (author)
Edition
First Atria Paperback edition
Physical Description
338 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781501118456
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Moretti, author of such thrillers as The Vanishing Year (2016), centers her latest on the roiling tensions within a high school (fed to fever pitch by social media) that spill out into a small Pennsylvania town. The book opens with a wonderfully ambiguous scene: a man on a deserted bit of highway in a storm late at night, refusing to let a young girl he knows, who is walking in the middle of the highway, get into his car. This ambiguity forms the core of the story the man is Nate Winters, a high-school coach and teacher, whose life is in tatters after a troubled girl whom he counseled vanishes. Rumor (and the girl's journal) have it that Nate and the girl were having an affair; once she disappears, suspicion falls on Nate as her murderer. Moretti sensitively explores the fallout that this suspicion wreaks on Nate's marriage. At times, there is a chick-lit feel to the way Moretti details the characters' emotions, which seems to run contrary to the overall tone, but the tale's suspenseful core should catch and hold most readers, especially Gone Girl fans.--Fletcher, Connie Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

When hundreds of starlings inexplicably fall from the sky during a high school baseball game coached by Nate Winters, things start to go wrong for the popular Mt. Oanoke, Pa., math teacher, in this intricately plotted thriller from bestseller Moretti (The Vanishing). Nate's marriage to Alecia, already strained by the need to care for the couple's autistic son, is further tested when a reporter for the local paper accuses him of taking advantage of a student, Lucia Hamm, during the chaos caused by the falling birds. Nate denies acting inappropriately, but the school principal puts Nate on temporary suspension until the police complete their investigation. Nate later makes a series of bad decisions that make him look guilty, such as misleading Alecia about time he spent with Lucia, purportedly to spare his wife's feelings. His position deteriorates further after Lucia goes missing. Fortunately, a fellow teacher and friend, Bridget Peterson, may hold the key to proving Nate's innocence. This cautionary tale keeps the reader guessing to the end. Agent: Mark Gottlieb, Trident Media. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Crime fiction adores girls in trouble. Moretti's latest nail-biter (The Vanishing Year, 2016, etc.) is no exception, but it is exceptional.Alecia and Nate Winters are the golden couple of Mt. Oanoke, Pennsylvania. Nate teaches math and coaches baseball at the local high school, and Alecia takes care of their 5-year-old autistic son, Gabe. But underneath the surface, all that glitters isn't gold. Alecia endures the daily emotional and physical bumps that come with taking care of a special needs child while Nate basks in the adoration of a town that loves him. It seems as if a thousand blackbirds falling to their deaths on the baseball field might have been a bad omen, because soon after that strange event, Nate is accused of having an affair with 18-year-old senior Lucia Hamm, of the wild, white hair and the red, red lips, and the fractures in his marriage begin to show. He insists the girl is in trouble and he was trying to help, but Alecia isn't so sure, and the town quickly, shockingly, turns against him, immediately assuming the worst. When Lucia goes missing, all hell breaks loose. The narrative is told from the viewpoints of Nate, Alecia, Lucia, and Bridget Peterson, a fellow teacher who's a friend of the Winters' and who is one of the few who believes Nate is innocent and finds evidence that Lucia could have been the victim of an assault. Moretti explores the fierce cruelty of teenagers (they frequently call Lucia a witch) as well as the complex bonds of friendship and marriage, and she sets it all against the desperation of a dying small town. Though Moretti's emotionally astute tale can be heart-rending, readers won't be able to look away. As slow, creeping dread sets in, so does the inevitability of the terrible situation the town finds itself in, offering a deliciously sinister glimpse into the duplicity of small-town lives and the ease with which people turn on each other when tragedy comes calling. Moretti's tale of jealousy and obsession is nothing less than dark magic. Witchery indeed. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The Blackbird Season CHAPTER 1 Nate, Monday, May 4, 2015: Two weeks after the birds fell The rain came in sheets, like a wall, forming wide rivulets down the windshield. The wipers swished and couldn't keep up. They were old, needed to be replaced, and left streaks across the glass. But this was Alecia's car and she hadn't told him. His job was the maintenance, sure, but he wasn't a mind reader. He smacked the lever up a notch. He squinted against any oncoming headlights, the few there were. Winding pavement and black towering pines combined with the lack of streetlights made this stretch of road, up into the Pocono Mountains, a hazard regardless of the season. The Lackawaxen River rushed by to his right, a mere fifty feet over a guardrail, engorged with the deluge of rain, more than typical for spring in Pennsylvania. He slowed to thirty miles an hour and leaned forward, his headlights bouncing off the white line, the yellow centerline almost invisible, faded with age. His phone rang, the display flashing. He ignored it. Could be Tripp, but he'd gotten into it with Alecia and she likely wanted to keep it going. He'd been so distracted he'd forgotten his pillow and would be stuck sleeping with a throw pillow on Tripp's sofa, mildewed and lumpy. He wasn't even sure the bag perched next to him on the passenger seat had enough to get him through the week. He'd been unfocused, just shoving things in: jeans, socks, underwear, shirts. Things you need when you have no job, no wife to go home to. The phone rang again and he took his eyes away from the road for a split second. Alecia. He almost picked up, but tightened his hands on the wheel. Pick it up, don't pick it up? Her pecking and pulling at the threads of their marriage wasn't new; it was as old as anything he could remember. She just had so much more to pull at now. Not just Gabe, although always, always Gabe. His headlights caught on a figure in the distance, a hand waving in the air, panicked. He slowed the car, pulled over, until he was next to her, hair plastered to pale cheeks, black clothing rendering her almost invisible in the night, had it not been for her gleaming white hair. He felt the cord of muscle up his arms tighten in a spasm. He rolled down the passenger-side window, but just a crack. Maybe two inches. He'd be damned if he was letting her into this car. "You're going to get yourself killed. What the hell are you doing?" "I need help." Her eyes were wild, wide and doll-like against her face, and her hands, red chipped fingernails, cupped her cheeks, pushing her hair back. Fingers wound up into that bright white hair at her temples and she shook her head back and forth and back and forth, like a dog shaking off water. That hair, a regular topic of conversation with the students, impossibly exotic but just so weird. Teenagers these days aimed to stand out, and that bright whiteness still gave them all pause. "I can't help you. You know that." There it was. He was finally, finally angry. Everyone had been asking him, are you angry? In an accusatory way, a way that really meant why aren't you angry? As though this alone was proof of his guilt. He wanted to capture the moment, record his voice right now, because seeing her, finally, he realized he was really, really angry. "Get out of here, Lucia. Go home. Where you belong." She leaned against the car so her mouth was even with the window opening, her body pushed against the window so he couldn't see her eyes. Only that mouth, that lying little mouth. She wore a white T-shirt, soaked through, and he could see the outline of her nipples, pressed against the glass. Where was her jacket? It had to be fifty-five degrees. Not his problem. He looked away. "I don't belong anywhere." And when she leaned her forehead against the door trim, he could finally see her eyes. They were bloodshot and her pupils dilated like black Frisbees against a cerulean sky. Fear could dilate your eyes, he knew that for sure. Or was she on something? Pilfered from that brother of hers? He didn't care. He picked up his phone. Pressed the numbers 911. "I can't help you, Lucia. I'm calling the police and I won't leave until they get here, but you cannot get in my car. I can't do anything for you." His voice was gentler than he'd intended. He'd always had a soft spot for her and those like her: the damaged, pretty girls. The smart girls with no guidance. The lost girls. There had been others; Robin Hendricks came to mind, but none who'd gotten him to this place before. He hit send. Ring. Ring. "Pike County Police Department." "Hi. This is Nate Winters. I need help on Route Six." "Sure, Mr. Winters, what appears to be the problem?" "I'm here with a Lucia Hamm. I was driving and I found her walking along the road. She might be on something but I can't drive her anywhere. Just send someone, please." She stared at him, her mouth twisting. She backed up slowly, away from the white line, her eyes narrowed at him, the side of her face illuminated by the headlights. "Lucia!" He called through the slight window opening. "Don't you dare go anywhere. Stay right there." She stepped around the front of the car, his hazard lights blinking red against her face. Her mouth curved up in a wicked smile and his insides coiled. She leaned forward, palms flat against the hood of his car, eyebrows arched seductively. "Mr. Winters?" The voice on the other end was deep and slow. "Is everything all right?" She blew him a kiss. He rolled his window down all the way and leaned out. "Lucia!" He called again, his voice dying in the wind. She turned and walked away, along the white line, the headlights of the car flanking her retreating figure. She wore a short, black skirt and knee-high boots, and her hips swayed. "Shit." He ran his hand through his hair. "Mr. Winters? Are you still there?" She turned, then, maybe ten feet from the front of his car, braced her feet on either side of the white line and gave him two middle fingers. Then she cut right and ran into the woods. "Mr. Winters." The man on the phone was stern now, angry about having his time wasted. "Are you still there? Do you still need someone to come out?" "I don't know." He felt sick. No matter what happened now, everything had just gotten worse. All the pieces he'd been clinging to had flown apart, scattering what was left of his life in a million directions. He was in trouble, he'd been in trouble, but now he was more than in trouble, he was as dead as a person could be while still being alive. In one heartbeat, he envisioned Alecia and Gabe huddled together on the couch, himself in prison, a 20/20 special. His dinner rose in his chest and he took a deep breath to quell the panic. He had no way of knowing that this moment would become the linchpin, the moment that all the moments after would hinge upon. The papers would call him a murderer; the police would come to him; his ex-friends, his gym buddies, the guys who knew him for God's sake; and say, Nate was the last one to see her alive, right? The last one is always the guilty one. He couldn't know all this. But he could still feel it, like something physical chasing him and gaining ground, his heart beating wildly, a skittering pulse up the back of his neck. It was more than a feeling. It was a portent, something tangible, almost corporeal. "She's gone," he said quickly, and hung up, dropping the phone on the seat. He should have just driven away. Everything in his body told him to just drive away. He opened the car door and stepped into the rain. Excerpted from The Blackbird Season: A Novel by Kate Moretti All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.