Barbara D'Amato - [Cat Marsala 09]
Hard Road
A Cat Marsala Mystery
Barbara D'Amato
And an Essay by Brian D'Amato
"The Wooden Gargoyles: Evil in Oz"
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2001 by Barbara D'Amato
Essay copyright © 2001 by Brian D'Amato
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
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eISBN 0-7432-1855-8
ALSO BY BARBARA D'AMATO
Hard Evidence
Hard Bargain
Hard Christmas
Hard Case
Hard Women
Hard Luck
Hard Tack
Hardball
To my father, Harold Steketee, who, like L. Frank Baum, kept his boyish enthusiasm all his long life, and who told wonderful stories, too— but, sadly, did not write them down.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This is fiction. None of these people exist. Nor does the Grant Park Oz Festival. But the Chicago area does have Oz festivals. During the first week of August, there is a festival in Lincoln Park which was previously held in nearby Oz Park, named for the books. This one is especially good for children. Another Oz festival takes place in September in Chicago's close neighbor, Chesterton, Indiana. In neither of these could any of the bad events of this book happen, but the good parts— the delight people still take in the Oz books— happen all the time.
My thanks to the people at the Harold Washington Library in Chicago for research help on an elusive fact about Chicago. Thanks to Mary Geneva Finn for showing me around the Lincoln Park Oz festival. And thanks to Mark Richard Zubro for attending the Oz Festival in Chesterton, Indiana, with me and especially for his criticism, which much improved the manuscript of this book. Also thanks to Tracy Reynolds Aleksy for her Oz quotation. And to Erik Wasson at Scribner for all his help.
Thanks to the 1939 MGM movie of The Wizard of Oz. There is probably no grade school class in the United States to which you could say "Lions and tigers and bears" and not get the reply "Oh my!" Think of phrases like, "We're off to see the Wizard" and "We're not in Kansas anymore" —practically every line of the film has entered our language. No other movie has so enriched the vocabulary of the world.
Oz fanciers will notice that many of the fictional people in this story bear the names of actual men and women connected with L. Frank Baum. This reverse roman à clef element is included just for fun. It may give some amusement to those who like to solve puzzles. Some references are very obscure. And some names are so obvious that they will be no puzzle at all. However, it is not necessary to know anything about the originals of these names to read this book. Also, lest any reader become frustrated trying to trace every single name, they are mostly, but not all, Baum-related.
Thanks, too, to the International Wizard of Oz Club. Founded in 1957, it publishes a journal three times a year about Baum, Oz, and the influences of Oz on our world. The club may be reached at P.O. Box 266, Kalamazoo, Michigan, 49004-0266 or Ozclub.org.
AUTHOR'S NOTE
When my father was a boy, his family had a summer cottage in Macatawa, Michigan, on the shore of Lake Michigan. L. Frank Baum had a cottage there, too, called The Sign of the Goose, because he had paid for it with the royalties from his first success, Father Goose: His Book. These cottages would seem very primitive by modern standards. Not only was there no air conditioning, there was no electricity, no central heat, and no running water. But the resort was heaven for a child— a small lake to fish in, a big lake to swim in, lots of children, and no cars or other hazards to watch out for. Baum had four boys. My father played with them, and he often told me the story of going to the Baums', where Frank, the father, would get right down on the floor and play with the children. My father remembered that Mrs. Baum considered this undignified.
Of course, when I was a child, I was given the Oz books to read, luckily at just the right age to read to myself and love them.
Then, in the wink of an eye, it's fifty years later and my granddaughter is in my living room watching the movie of The Wizard of Oz. Just a toddler, she is so fascinated that she views the entire movie— standing up!
Between my granddaughter and me, my two boys grew up reading the Oz books as well. How wonderful that words written down a hundred years ago could so delight generations of children! Thank you, Mr. Baum.
1
WE WISH TO WELCOME YOU TO MUNCHKINLAND
The Yellow Brick Road ran straight for about two hundred yards to the Emerald City Castle. There it split into two parts, circled the castle, rejoined, and went away on the far side. To our left was a clump of trees. There was a sign just before the little woods, shaped like a hand with a pointing finger. On it was written, LIONS AND TIGERS AND BEARS.
I read it to Jeremy, who was six and could decipher a few words but not very many yet. He said, "Oh, my."
The Yellow Brick Road ran down the approximate middle of Chicago's Oz Festival. The "road" —a yellow background with brown outlines of bricks— was painted on the central pathway through the Grant Park festival area, where Taste of Chicago and other big civic events take place throughout the year. At Taste of Chicago, held in July, restaurants from all over the Greater Chicagoland area rent booths and put their best foods forward. I absolutely love it— Chicago deep-dish pizza, Harry Caray's fried calamari, Chicago red hots, TNT chili and the Great Chili Cook-Off, fried funnel cakes, death by chocolate— I could live there.
But the new Oz Festival is even more lovable, partly because it's for children, partly because it's whimsical, partly because it's Oz. I'm an Oz fan. And this year— 2000— was the centennial of the publication of The Wizard of Oz— a hundred years in September.
My little pal Jeremy is my nephew. He has red hair and freckles, a round face, a zippy personality, and if you gave him a fishing pole you'd be certain he was Tom Sawyer. My job today, on this warm Thursday in July, had been squiring him around Chicago from mid-afternoon until the 7 P.M. public opening of the Oz Festival. The opening ceremonies with Very Important People were to start at eight. His dad Barry, who is the second oldest of my five brothers, is an events coordinator. He makes corporate events, festivals, and conferences happen. Barry was busy with the festival preparations and Jeremy's mother, Maud, was at home, very busy with their three-week-old daughter. The name Maud sounds old-fashioned and sort of stately, which is charming in view of the freckly, bouncy, red-haired Maud I knew and liked, who had been Northern Illinois Women's Ping-Pong Champion three years in a row. Jeremy had not yet expressed any envy of the newcomer, but the hope was that having me show him some attention might offset future sibling rivalry problems.
Jeremy and I had spent the afternoon together and had gone on a carriage ride through downtown Chicago. The horses wear red plumes and pull nice, old-fashioned, leather-appointed buggies. The driver wears an 1890s cape and top hat. All right, it's kitschy, but Jeremy loved it, and I had to admit to a sneaking enthusiasm myself. It was horribly expensive, but Barry had handed me some extra cash to use in minding the child, including mone
y for parking and unparking my car a couple of times, which in Chicago costs more than most events.
We stopped at two bookstores, looking for an Oz book Jeremy didn't have. Glinda of Oz was the last Oz book entirely written by L. Frank Baum. The stores didn't have it, and we decided that was okay because we didn't want to carry it around all evening anyhow. I took out my small pocket notebook and wrote down the title and "get someplace soon." Then I took out a red pen and underlined the note.
"Why do you write things down, Aunt Cat?"
"Because otherwise I'll forget."
"Why do you carry so many pens?"
"Because I'm afraid something important will come up and I won't have anything to write with."
"Why did you use a red pen?"
"To make sure I knew this was a really important matter. Some of my notes aren't as important."
"Why is this important?"
"Because it's for you."
That got him. He stopped asking questions. For a whole thirty seconds. Then he said, "What are we gonna do next?"
"I'll show you." I took him to the observatory at the top of the John Hancock building on Michigan Avenue to see the 360-degree view of Chicago. On a clear day, and this was an absolutely crystal clear day, you can see four states— Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, and far away the coast of southern Michigan. Lake Michigan is much too wide to see across, but this southern curve makes you feel you almost could.
Finally, having spent two hours minding a child, I took him to the restaurant area on the ninety-fifth floor of the Hancock, ostensibly to buy him a soda or a Shirley Temple. Actually, the point was to get myself a nice cold beer and to sit down. How do parents find the strength to do this job twenty-four hours a day?
My admiration for Maud rose a whole lot. I'd have to tell her so.
We arrived at Grant Park at six-thirty. And now we were in Oz.
* * *
Grant Park is big. Fifteen city blocks long, it lies up against Lake Michigan between Lake Shore Drive on the east and Michigan Avenue on the west, Randolph Street on the north and Roosevelt Road on the south— in other words, it bellies right up against the Loop. This makes it well over a mile in length, not even counting the "museum campus" running south from its south end, which includes the Field Museum, Adler Planetarium, Soldier Field, and the Shedd Aquarium. In the center of Grant Park is Buckingham Fountain. Eight months of the year this dramatic tiered pink marble confection with its fanciful sculpted sea creatures throws a hundred-and-thirty-five-foot water display. The fountain was modeled on the Latona Fountain at Versailles. However, in typical New World robber-baron style, the donor, Miss Kate Sturges Buckingham, daughter of one Ebenezer Buckingham, who made his fortune in Illinois Central Railroad grain elevators, ordered it to be twice as large as the one in Versailles. That'll show those snotty French, I can imagine her saying. It holds one and a half million gallons of water.
Jeremy and I could see Buckingham Fountain about a block away as we walked down the Yellow Brick Road. There is no entrance fee at Grant Park festivals.
"Where are we supposed to meet Dad?" he asked.
"At the Emerald City castle at nine P.M. That gives us about two hours to explore the festival."
"Yay!"
"If I wanted some popcorn—" I said, just to get him started.
"I'd go to the land of Mo!"
"And I do want popcorn." In Mo, it snowed popcorn. Jeremy and I, fellow Ozians, often played "can you top this?" with Oz trivia. I really should not call it trivia, but minutiae. Nothing about Oz is trivial. Our enthusiasm can be very tiring for those who are not aficionados. I have friends who are Trekkers who almost drive me around the bend with their force fields and "Who was Q?" "Who was Mr. Worf?" "Did Captain Kirk really ever say, 'Beam me up, Scotty'?" (The answer seems to be no, it was just "Beam me up.")
But kids love knowing things that very few adults know. Jeremy crows with delight when he beats me with a question, and the rest of his relatives have far less Oz info than I have, so I'm kind of the spiffy auntie.
I was sure there was a Mo popcorn stand someplace, because I had helped in the early festival planning, being a known Oz fan. At the festival, it was not actually in Mo, it was in Quadling country. I have written several articles on connections between Chicago and L. Frank Baum. Baum lived here for nineteen years around the turn of the century, taking jobs as an actor, as a newspaperman, later in a department store, finally as a full-time writer. He wrote The Wizard of Oz in a house on Humboldt Boulevard on the northwest side in 1899. I'm a freelance reporter, working in the Chicago area, and I was currently writing a story about the Oz Festival for a major daily, and a more scholarly piece on Baum himself and his work for Chicago Today. But even though I'd been here at the festival several times over the last few days, I did not know exactly where the popcorn was. The food stands had moved into place at the very last moment. That was okay. Popcorn was just a pretext. Really, Jeremy and I wanted to wander.
A lot of people only think of the Wizard of Oz movie when they think of Oz. The challenge for the festival was not only to use a lot of the most familiar movie elements, which would appeal to just about everybody, but also to include a lot of the wonderful characters and places L. Frank Baum invented for the other Oz books. My favorite was The Land of Oz. A stranger book has never been written. Those who have read it will know why; for those who haven't, I won't spoil the treat by revealing the plot. Or then again maybe my favorite was The Magic of Oz, where two friends, searching for a birthday present for Princess Ozma, arrive on an island where a magic plant grows. While admiring the plant, their feet take root. Jeremy's favorite was The Royal Book of Oz, begun by Baum and mostly written by another author, in which the Scarecrow searches for his family tree. I had read it to him four times and Maud said she'd read it to him so often she'd long since lost count.
Of course the movie elements were everywhere at the festival. There was a field of poppies, for instance. Grant Park is always lushly planted with flower beds, and this year they'd planned well ahead for the inaugural Oz Festival. Instead of going with geraniums or petunias, they had planted poppies. The Latin name for those big, bright red oriental poppies is Papaver somniferum, literally what L. Frank Baum intended— poppies that put you to sleep. He knew whereof he spoke. Unfortunately, oriental poppies tended to bloom in early June in this part of the world. Since the festival was in July, the planners had chosen a different variety, bright yellow-orange California poppies.
The farmhouse that Dorothy rode from Kansas through the sky sat on a slight but disorienting angle— or catty-wumpus my uncle would call it— doing duty as a funhouse in the Munchkinland section. And somewhere a human Dorothy was walking around in ruby slippers, even though in the original book the slippers were silver. The 1939 moviemakers had figured Technicolor hadn't been invented for nothing.
In the Oz canon, the Land of Oz is divided into four small countries, with the Emerald City in the center. The land of the Quadlings is red. Winkie country is yellow. Gillikin is purple. And Munchkin country is blue. So the festival divided the big area the city had given them into four different-colored "countries." In the very center was the Emerald City, actually a very pretty little three-story castle with the festival offices inside and a gentle roller-coaster ride for the younger children going spirally around it outside. The castle and roller coaster were, of course, emerald green. From the castle pinnacle flew Princess Ozma's flag, a banner with an emerald green center, its four quarters the colors of the four lands, yellow, blue, purple, and red. From above the castle's green doorway, a speaker played the "Oz Spangled Banner."
The lights, decorations, and uniforms of the vendors in Munchkinland were blue, of course. And in Gillikin country the color scheme was purple. Even the snow cones in Gillikin were grape purple. The general effect of all the color was dazzling and cheerful in the late daylight. Once the sun set and night came on, all the lighting in each section would be the appropriate color. And then the
festival should be really, really impressive. E. T. Taubman, one of the festival designers, had told me that lighting is the most effective, most evocative way to create mood at an event, and one of the least expensive.
"But," he said, "it's usually ignored."
It wasn't ignored this time. Or at any rate, Taubman hadn't been overlooked by the press. His innovations for the festival had formed the basis for a glossy magazine article. Two of the news channels, WGN and Channel Twelve, had produced preopening segments on the festival and Taubman's light schemes. The lighting designs were colorful and bright and full of motion, just what television loves to show. Taubman's efforts had paid off both for himself and for the Oz Festival.
We passed a Munchkinland stand selling fizzy blue drinks called Witches' Brew. I stopped, intending to sample some, but in the low yellow light of the setting sun the blue goo looked muddy and not very appetizing. Plus, we were heading for the rides. I may not be a parent, but hey, I'm a quick study and I knew that stuffing a child with sugary, carbonated drinks just before going on wild rides wouldn't be very smart.