High in a remote mountain of North Carolina lives an
extraordinary man descended from myths and fairytales. But
Solomon is real flesh and blood, and he gave his lonely heart to
famed researcher Dr. Elizabeth Connell long before she moved to an
isolated cabin on his mountaintop. A damaged loner, Elizabeth
refuses to believe the folklore about a mountain recluse. Is
he just a fable, her secret protector, her gallant but mysterious
neighbor, or is he a dangerous predator?
His name was Solomon, and as far as he knew he was the last of
his kind. He was not even certain what to call his kind, or himself.
In all his reading, in all the books and articles he'd been able to
gather, he found only rare hints that he was not the stuff of
fairytales and legends. Sometimes, when he cut himself shaving, he
gave a low sound of disgust. "Stop bleeding," he told his mirror.
"You're a figment of someone's imagination, and figments don't
bleed." He wanted desperately to be like anyone else.
On that cold, clear day in mid-autumn he had never felt more
different or more trapped in his own strange fate. "Come along,
Wood," he said to the five-hundred-pound log he dragged behind him
with long, even strides. Several ordinary men pulling in tandem
could not have budged the twenty-food section of oak tree, yet
Solomon managed it comfortably. His breath made the faintest silver
cloud in the autumn air as he hooked a massive iron chain higher
over one shoulder, padding it with a soft wool coat he'd stitched
meticulously. "There we go," he said, as the log plowed up damp
leaves and roots. He spoke often to objects and animals, low valley
clouds and wild vegetation, the great granite rocks fronting the
mountain top's labyrinth of caves, the smallest ferns, like green
lace. He named every moving and static being, categorized them,
imagined they listened to his voice. He lived utterly alone on an
isolated Appalachian mountain that had been old when the Himalayas
were first thrust up. He realized he talked to himself.
"Ho, there," he said suddenly. A large, grizzled black bear
lumbered up the hollow just left of him and growled, sniffing the
air, deciphering the scent of human as it pushed heavily though
thick laurel shrubs. Soon Solomon and the bear stood not more than a
dozen yards apart. His name was Old Joe—even the people down in the
cove knew him that way. His ears were ragged, and old fight scars
marred his whitening face. Unlike most black bears, Old Joe was
ill-tempered and unafraid of either people or dogs. He halted. His
growl faded. He and Solomon traded one long look. Old Joe spun
around and galloped back down the hollow.
Solomon sighed at his effect on the mountain's other largest
creature of solitude, then moved on, giving the chain a jerk as the
log caught on a hummock of loamy earth. In the deep shade of the
southern forest, a hawk cried out like a courier. "It's moving,"
Solomon called upwards. "Yes, I know. She'll be here before we know
it, and I have to hurry." When he reached the clearing around the
cottage he set the log atop two cross pieces he'd nailed together
earlier. The ground was already littered with wood chips and
splinters. He picked up his ax and quickly chopped the large log
into two-foot sections, adding fresh, sweet-scented chips to the
mulch around his boots. In less time than a man armed with a chain
saw could have done the job Solomon split the log sections into
firewood, which he then scooped into his arms and carried to the
cottage's back porch. Even though the cottage was outfitted with
propane heat, a person needed good hearth fires to warm the soul and
let others know all was well. The aroma of the cottage chimney would
find him anywhere on the mountain. He stacked the wood neatly atop a
pile that lined the entire back wall nearly to the roof. About head
high, by his standards.
He went through the house, checking it one last time, bending to
scoop up bits of dust or stray rug lint with his thick fingertips,
straightening his paintings, rearranging a few of the books that
filled tall cases in tall rooms. His ears were attuned to any small
sound of arrival; the trace of a car far below, where the road ended
and the jeep trail began. He could hear a deer's footstep a hundred
yards away, but no sound of his new guest.
Solomon stood on the front verandah, frowning, surveying the
yard, then got a rake from a shed behind the cottage. He arranged
the wood chips like a mulch in front of the stone walkway, where
autumn rains had made the soft loam a little soggy. She was
accustomed to pavement, to sidewalks, to civilization. He would be
her Sir Walter Raleigh, spread his cape in the mud. He went around
the yard, breaking ragged branches off the underskirt of the trees,
tidying the forest. A young white pine, scarred by insects and bent
from the last winter's ice storms, made an eyesore. He wrapped his
hands around its trunk and pushed it over.
After he carried the small tree out of sight, he returned to the
yard, put away the rake and the ax then hesitated once again,
checking off his mental list of preparations. Delaying the
inevitable, said the a capella song he always heard in
his own voice. He believed there'd been a time when his ancestors
had walked openly in the world, but that time was long past. Why had
god or nature created such an outcast human being filled with such
painful musings on identity? He was simply Solomon, and this day
would change his lonely life forever, beginning a journey he
expected would break his heart.
A large hawk swung down from the sky and landed on a tree limb a
few feet from him. "Hello, Feather," Solomon said. Frowning, he
communed with the raptor for a long minute. "Go and find her," he
said suddenly. "Yes. Be my eyes. Take care of her."
Feather lifted off, grazing a current of air, floated over the
ridge, and faded from sight.
"All ready," Solomon said with dull acceptance. There was nothing
to do now but leave, so that he wouldn't frighten Elisabeth.
So that she would never know he'd been there.
Because for all intents and purposes, he couldn't possibly
exist.
*
Let go of the steering wheel. Shut your eyes and do it.
Sweat slid down Dr. Elisabeth Connell's face. Her hands, bearing
a thick diamond wedding band on the left one, made damp marks on the
wheel's leather cover. She pushed her right foot, encased in a soft
brown boot, harder on the accelerator. Her low, silver Lexus was
packed full with luggage and supplies, and sped up sluggishly as it
reached a curve that doubled back along a hundred-foot drop into the
mountain creek below. Tall southern laurel and rhododendron flashed
by in a green blur, along with a jeweled panorama of autumn forest.
The Lexus's sleek side swung within inches of an old guard rail made
of wood and stone, built over sixty years ago by poor whites,
Cherokees, and a few black men hired by the federal government at
starvation wages.
Those hard-driven mountain men had not anticipated a woman who
thought of suicide every day.
High in the North Carolina mountains, on the edge of national
forest land, traffic was sparse much of the year. On the weekends
the scenic roads would be packed with families from cities like
Asheville and Raleigh, and some from as far as Atlanta, viewing the
mountains in their autumn splendor. But not now, thank god. The
aging guard rail loomed in front of Elisabeth. A sign. A test. She
had been the brilliant Dr. Connell, MD, PhD, genetics researcher,
scholar. The renowned Dr. Harris Connell's beautiful young wife and
partner. Tiny Cloris Isabella Connell's absolutely devoted mother.
She'd never failed a test.
"End it now," she said aloud. The Lexus shot around the hairpin
curve at over sixty miles an hour, and she began to lift her hands
from the wheel. To let go of her nightmares and her life.
Reflections of shadows, clouds and mountain, flashed across the
windshield, her blood became mercury, her conscious mind began to
disconnect. Calm, methodical, dignified, infinitely honorable and
deeply passionate Elisabeth Connell lifted her strong hands in
surrender.
And was saved.
A majestic gray hawk sailed in front of her windshield. Elisabeth
slammed on the brake and snatched the steering wheel to the left.
The Lexus careened across the on-coming lane and onto the road's
weedy inside shoulder, coming to a stop as if nursing the mountain,
the front bumper nudging a towering granite wall speckled with moss
and trickling water.
The hawk disappeared into the forest without pausing—a vision, a
guardian, or a mere lucky coincidence for the deeply logical to
consider, which included Elisabeth. She stumbled from the car and
leaned against it, gasping for breath. The air smelled of crisp rain
waiting in pearl-gray clouds just above the mountaintops, and
distant chimney fires from a few cabins and small farms hidden in
deep, unseen hollows. Elisabeth's lungs drew it in like an elixir,
without her noticing. She shoved aside tendrils of sweat-soaked
auburn hair that fell over her eyes, a deep blue that had once been
mesmerizing, but were now bloodshot and dazed. She slung off a long
brown sweater she wore over her turtle-neck shirt and jeans then
hunched over, hugging herself.
Watched by the stoic mountains, Elisabeth Connell, 35 years old
but now ancient, a strong woman who had been broken, retched into
the Joe Pye weed along the roadside. She dragged a baby bracelet
from her jeans' pocket then caressed her wedding ring. Her hand went
to her throat. She dug under the shirt's high collar and clawed at
three terrible scars that curved from beneath her left ear to the
center of her throat. All her talismans, the blessed and the damned,
were with her.
Elisabeth washed her mouth with sweet, ice-cold water she scooped
from a tiny waterfall on the weeping granite wall then got back into
her car. She drove on toward the tiny valley below, holding the fast
car to a crawl, her muscles on fire and her mind blank. She barely
noticed the small, pleasant wooden sign that welcomed her to Anna
Kim Cove, or cloud-shadowed Walker Mountain rising, majestic and
mysterious, ahead of her.
Waiting.
2
An early settler named our little valley after his daughters, so
the story goes. They were saved from wolves by a great big mountain
man who set them high up and safe in an oak tree right where the
crossroads meet today.
From Tall Tales of Anna Kim Cove
Etta Woody, Rita's mother, 1957
Anna Kim Cove lay in the laps of three legendary mountains:
Hogback, Kalowa and Walker, which was the largest and the least
accessible. New Age psychics and self-made gurus insisted the cove
anchored some ancient, primal vortex in the Earth's magnetic field.
Cherokee scholars said it had once been the site of an important
peace town. A travel writer titled an article Lovely, Lost Anna Kim
and recommended tourists drop by on their way to someplace else. But
for the three-hundred hardy souls scattered along the ridges and
hollows in house trailers, small clapboard homes, and cabins where
the next-door neighbor might be a mile away, Anna Kim Cove was a
strong, beating heart that drew their isolated lives together like
the seams of a warm quilt.
The two-lane route from Asheville curled down Hogback's western
ridge into the cove's heart, where it intersected with Sleeping
Turtle Road, a narrow, dilapidated gray-top, crumbling at the edges
and pocked with shallow holes. There sat downtown. Five aging
wood-and-stone buildings hunkered around the sleepy intersection
like old friends at a small table, with huge hemlock and fir trees
hovering over them. The shops were just shabby enough to feel
comfortable and well-used.
Beside Burk's there was Murphy's Hardware, which sold a little
bit of everything, including farm supplies, guns, and auto parts.
Penny's General Store dealt in knicknacks, greeting cards,
housewares, cosmetics, and hair care products. Penny's Hair and Nail
Salon occupied a back corner of Penny's General Store, behind a
curtain. Penny's U.S. Post Office, a cubicle with a clerk's window,
occupied a front corner. A brightly windowed side room was home to
Penny's Diner, which served breakfast, lunch, and an early supper
from its simple grill and counter. Penny Barker was the community's
most avid entrepreneur.
Across the road, a service station, Woody And Sons, offered gas,
a good mechanic, and a combination taxidermy/butcher business run by
a Woody daughter, though not one of legendary country singer Rita
Woody's kin needed to work for a living, anymore, and most of them
had moved to her five-million-dollar horse farm outside Nashville,
Tennessee.
And then there was Alton's Place. It was a strange, two-building
hybrid, still a source of intrigue to outsiders and even some
locals, although they revered rich, aging Dr. Franklin Alton, of the
Asheville Alton's, who had suddenly moved to the cove thirty years
ago, following an even earlier retreat by his eccentric sister,
Joan. The front building was old, and briefly had been Anna Kim
Cove's bank, decades ago. Now that building was a single large room
with stone walls, a creaking wooden floor, and a fancy, pressed-tin
ceiling. The old doctor had turned it into an art gallery of sorts.
He sold the most amazing oil paintings, some realistic, some
abstract, of mountain landscapes, wildflowers, streams, and animals.
There was also finely crafted blacksmith work—amazing wall pieces of
swooping metal and curlicues that defied description. Every
painting, and every piece of iron art, was signed with a scrolled
initial. S. Dr. Alton said it was the work of a shy mountain
man he'd befriended, and would not reveal the identity. Buyers came
from all over the south. The gallery had been written up in every
regional magazine. There was no doubt in anyone's mind that the
artist was Dr. Alton, himself. He was such an odd old owl anyway,
the locals said with affection.
Beside the art gallery, connected to it by an arbored walkway
draped in trumpet creeper vine, sat the second building. Dr. Alton's
medical clinic. Inside its wood-and-fieldstone walls the doctor
maintained a state-of-the-art medical facility, including a small
pharmacy and an operating room for minor procedures, and even a room
filled with a dental chair and supplies. Dr. Alton called in
dentists and other specialists as needed. Since his influence and
respect were unequalled in the medical world, some of the most
prestigious doctors in the country had served the people of Anna Kim
Cove, all without a single cost for the patients. Franklin Alton
rejected all praise, all awards, and all publicity for his work.
Like the cove, the clinic existed in a quiet state of grace.
Anna Kim was the kind of place where no one thought it odd if an
old woman wearing three sweaters and overalls drove to the
crossroads on her tractor to buy milk and tennis shoes. Mattie Crow
sat high on her 1942 Ford. Her hair, long, black, and streaked with
gray, fluttered from beneath her third late husband's beige fedora
hat. Her deeply hooded brown eyes peered calmly through large
tortoise-shell glasses. She'd glued a single tiny snail shell near
the hinge of each temple. Snails were among her favorite beings. She
believed the smallest, slowest creatures had the biggest view of the
world. Some people said she was a shaman. She said she was a
watcher.
Mattie steered the tractor to a diesel-fuming stop before the
long tin awning of Burk's Store. Burk's was the community grocery
but also kept a back corner full of work clothes and shoes. Nothing
fancy, but then the three-hundred-and-twenty-two residents of
greater Anna Kim Cove didn't dress up much.
"Hi ya," she said to Tommy and Susie Burk.
"Afternoon," each replied. The blond, heavyset couple, dressed in
canvas coveralls, sat on an old church pew under the awning. Their
youngest child slept in a car seat by Susie's booted feet. Tommy was
cleaning a chainsaw in a precise way that said he had two years of
college and didn't let his equipment rust. Susie sipped from a cola
bottle and chewed the peanuts she extracted with her tongue. Peanuts
and cola could make a meal on a long day. The Burks looked tired and
sweaty, and were flecked with sawdust. A hundred-foot fir tree lay
in neatly sawed pieces so close beside the store that the pile of
limbs from its bushy green crown dimmed the sunlight at one end of
the porch. The hardwood forest gave way to a pocket of lush
evergreens near the crossroads. Tall hemlocks, firs, pines, and
cedars loomed over the intersection in shaggy splendor, footed in
ferns that had turned a soft golden color for fall. Mother Nature
always seemed to be waiting for any excuse to take over the cove,
again. Everyone knew the valley and its three protective mountains
were haunted. "Wind got the tree this morning," Susie said.
"Gonna be a hard, windy winter," Mattie returned, and pointed a
bronze finger at the sky. "I seen the signs." The Burks nodded. No
one questioned Mattie Crow's weather forecasts. Not just because she
was Cherokee, but because her son, Albert, was a meteorologist for a
Tennessee TV station. Besides, winters were always tough in Anna
Kim, tough and beautiful, like the mountains themselves. A person
thrived, survived and celebrated, or didn't.
Mattie climbed down from her tractor. "Got to shop."
"Holler when you're done, Miz Crow," Susie said. "I'll come in
and ring you up. Me and Tommy need to stay out here and watch the
road as much as we can. We told Doc Alton we'd keep an eye out."
Mattie frowned. "For what?"
"His visitor. You heard about her. Sure. Name's Elisabeth. She's
some kind of doctor."
"Never heard a word. Who is she?"
Susie gaped at her. Even though the Turtle Town Cherokees avoided
the outside world as much as possible, they loved to join in the
local gossip. "She was in the news last year. I mean, the national
news. Her story was on Tom Brokaw and Nightline and all those shows.
They talked about what happened to her for weeks."
"Those folks talk about a lot of things that don't mean much to
me."
"Her husband used to come here to visit Doc Alton. You saw him a
time or two here at the store. Big, tall handsome man. I know you
did. Dr. Connell. Harry Connell. He wanted to ask you some
questions, wanted to go over to Turtle Town and interview Big Po.
You turned him down flat. Remember? He wasn't a real doctor. He was
a famous scientist. He studied genes." Susie spelled the word. "You
know. What we're made of. What makes us. What we come from."
Her frown deepened. "Now I remember him."
Tommy scrutinized her face. "How come you didn't like him?"
"Spent too much time up on Walker Mountain, pokin' around." She
grunted. "Busybody. Is he coming back and bringing his wife?"
Susie winced. "Miz Crow, you sure nobody told you what happened
to him and his wife and baby?"
Mattie searched her mind. "No." She was beginning to feel
impatient. She had milk and shoes to buy, chickens waiting to be
fed, and roots to dig for tea. "Just say what you mean."
"It was terrible. I hate to tell you."
"I've seen and heard and done a lot of terrible things in my
life. Sayin' 'em out loud don't make 'em worse. Go on."
Susie took a deep breath. "A crazy man broke in their house up in
Maryland. Just some nut who didn't like scientists. He killed Dr.
Connell, killed his baby girl, and just about killed his wife. This
Elisabeth who's coming here. She fought him like a tiger but he beat
her nearly to death and tried to cut her throat. They say she laid
on the floor about half-dead and watched the crazy man write on the
wall with her baby's blood. When the police got there they caught
him in the yard and shot him to death."
Mattie Crow grew very still, and very quiet. A black pall settled
over her. Tragedy like this wasn't just bad luck. It was fate. Bred
in the bone. It meant something. And it was coming to her cove. "And
now this Elisabeth's comin' here, for sure?"
"Yes, ma'am. Today. Supposed to, anyhow. Doc Alton's gonna let
her stay up on Walker for the time being. That's what he says she
wants. Just to stay alone up yonder. And he says it's what she
needs. You know how he is about that mountain. A plain fool. Bless
his soul." Every word Susie spoke conveyed amazement and
disapproval. Her husband shook his head. "A city woman alone up
there all winter," he mused. "What in the world can Doc Alton be
thinking? Letting her go up there alone. She doesn't know what she's
getting' into. Never even seen the place before. I bet she doesn't
even know how to start a fire in the fireplace."
Susie looked past Mattie and the tractor. Her eyes widened.
"There she comes! Doc Alton said she drives one of those!"
The Lexus rounded the last, lazy curve at the base of Hogback and
crept through dappled sunlight along the black two-lane. Mattie and
the Burks could just make out the driver by the time the car drew
even with a ramshackle produce stand that marked Anna Kim Cove's
unofficial southern boundary. Their first glimpse of Elisabeth
Connell made Susie cluck her tongue in pity. Elisabeth's face looked
white and drawn. Her coppery hair straggled from a haphazard clasp
at the nape of her neck. She hunched over the car's steering wheel,
stared straight ahead, and guided the car at a speed so slow that
two of Zene Murphy's bored dogs circled it easily, barking. When
she stopped the car at the crossroads, which had no sign indicating
Sleeping Turtle Road, she sat for a full ten seconds. She seemed to
be staring at Alton's Place. A landmark.
"You think she's got car trouble?" Susie whispered.
Tommy shook his head. "Just nervous and not sure where she's
going, I guess."
Finally Elisabeth switched on her blinker and turned right. The
car inched along, heading west at no more than ten miles an hour. It
finally disappeared around a bend in the forest. The Burks let out a
dual sigh. "Lord, that woman's not doing too good," Susie said.
"You'd think she'd have kin to go visit. Somebody to look after
her."
"She's got no business going to live up on Walker," Tommy
repeated. "I just can't figure why Dr. Alton's gonna let her."
Mattie barely listened to their chatter. She faced west and
looked up pensively at the ancient mountain, which towered above the
cove in rounded, red-and-gold majesty. She knew why Franklin Alton
had invited the young woman to live up there. He and Mattie shared a
humbling view of the world, a big way of thinking, a knowledge of
facts and fancies beyond most people's belief.