Nicholas Pekearo
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK
NEW YORK
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
THE WOLFMAN
Copyright © 2008 by the Estate of Nicholas Pekearo
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
EDITOR’S NOTE
I had the great fortune of meeting Nicholas Pekearo two years before he died, and right off the bat, I knew I liked him. In the span of just a few minutes, we managed to find common ground. We both loved the horror films of the mid to late 1970s and the early 1980s. We both grew up reading comics. Hell, we even liked the same novelists. I was told he was a cop, but when I asked him about it, he sort of chuckled and went on to explain his role as a volunteer police officer with the Auxiliary NYPD. At first I really didn’t get it. I asked him silly, childish questions, like “Do you carry a gun?” and “Have you ever been fired at?” He laughed them off, explaining that as an Auxiliary police officer he did much the same stuff a paid cop would do, that he didn’t carry a gun and wasn’t assigned a bulletproof vest but had saved up for one on his own. It finally sunk in when he admitted that the police volunteer work served as a great inspiration for his writing. More important, he felt that he was doing something right with his service, that it filled some sort of void. He was giving back to the community that nurtured him.
As an editor, I get a lot of folks who ask me if I would look at their work, and it’s hard to say no. But most of the time, they’re just blowing hot air and never hand anything over. So when I asked Nick for a look at some of his writing, I figured the odds of his showing me anything were slim. I was wrong.
He first hit me with a novel he called
We met again and I proceeded to break down my reactions to
On the night of March 14, 2007, Nick was shot and killed while on duty as an Auxiliary officer in the neighborhood he grew up in, New York City’s Greenwich Village. A madman entered a restaurant, armed to the teeth with over ninety rounds of ammunition. He killed the restaurant’s bartender, then took to the streets of Greenwich Village. Nick and his partner, Eugene Marshalik, attempted to stop him after he crossed their path. They pursued the armed killer, though they themselves were unarmed. The killer unloaded. Nick was shot six times: One bullet was stopped by the vest he wore; the others weren’t. Eugene was shot once in the head and died in the street. In a matter of moments, the madman was gunned down and killed by the NYPD. Nick died later that night in the hospital where he was born.
Just four days before he was killed, I had dinner with Nick and he gave me his latest round of revisions on
It goes without saying that Nick was a hero that night on the streets of New York. But his heroism, for me, goes beyond that sacrifice. Every time we met, he reminded me of why I got involved in book publishing: to tell great stories and meet great people. Nick was well on his way to a terrific career as a writer, and the best was yet to come. It is with great pride that I present to you Nicholas Pekearo’s
PROLOGUE
Let me paint a picture for you: The full moon was bulbous and yellow like the blind and rotted eye of a witch that peered down from the murky sky with bad intentions, and a million little stars shone down on the sleepy Southern town of Evelyn. The breeze was gentle and cool, carrying on it the scent of flowers and wet earth from the recent rain spell. The only thing missing was the children singing hymns, and I’m sure it would have been enough to make someone happy to be alive.
Bill Parker was driving down Old Sherman Road, a four-lane blacktop that went right around the edge of the whole town in a near-perfect circle. Driving in the dead of night was one of his many compulsive habits, but this one was rather bad. He did it often, about four nights a week, and I say it was a bad habit for a very specific reason.
Unfortunately, I won’t tell you what that reason is just yet.
Everyone in town knew he drove when he couldn’t sleep. His neighbors on Bunker Street knew it because his beat-up Oldsmobile starting up in the middle of the night would, with the exception of the crickets, be the only noise on the block.
The cops knew his routine too. They’d pulled him over for speeding at two, three in the morning more times than they could count, which may or may not have meant anything, considering the kind of town it was, but still. The number was considerable. They let him get away with it after a while too. They knew he’d never stop, but aside from that, Bill Parker wasn’t the kind of guy that most cops wanted to ticket. He was, after all, an important member of the community, being the coach of the baseball team over at Bailey High and all. I think a lot of the cops felt that if they gave him a ticket it would jinx the team. They lost just about as often as there was a virgin birth.
Hell, even