The Boy and the Lake by Adam Pelzman - Book Tour + Giveaway
Family Saga Fiction. Literary Fiction
Date Published: October 7th, 2020
Haunted by his discovery of a beloved neighbor's body floating lifeless in
the lake where he's fishing, 16-year-old Benjamin Baum is convinced she was
murdered despite her death being deemed an accident. While those
around him tire of his fixation on finding a supposed killer, Ben's
alienation leads to drinking and the reader begins to wonder if he's a
reliable narrator. The plot takes a shocking twist, revealing
the terrifying reality that things are not what they seem—that, beneath a
façade of prosperity and contentment, darkness lurks.
Excerpt
Chapter 1
June 1967
I can recall with near perfect
clarity the moment I saw Helen Lowenthal’s bloated
body slide up through a carpet
of emerald water lilies and bob on the water’s
surface like a ghostly musk
turtle. In the seconds before her lifeless ascent,
a constellation of fireflies—tiny flickering furnaces—danced
and glowed in the early summer dusk; a white
egret, all legs and neck,
landed atop Split
Rock and stood regal guard over
the lake; a long-eared bat carved wicked arcs through the sky before devouring
a plump imperial moth.
From
the direction of Second Beach, Nathan Gold’s pontoon
boat—the Ark—puttered along the
shoreline with four prosperous
couples reveling in their evening cocktails. A symphony of big bands, laughter,
and giddy howls poured off the boat and tumbled across the lake’s still water.
Nathan and his wife, Bea—a gregarious, stocky woman—called out to me as they passed, and I waved back with delight, wondering
how two people could be so
festive, so happy, so often.
Bonnie
Schwartz, my mother’s friend, was also on the boat. She was considered by many
to be the prettiest woman on the lake, as was her mother before
her. I waved to her with the hope of some reciprocity—maybe a nod or a simple smile in my direction—but this
auburn beauty, distracted by her empty martini glass, did not notice me—an omission that punished my
fragile sixteen-year-old heart.
I sat on the edge of the dock, my feet immersed in the
water of our beloved New Jersey lake. As the Ark turned north toward the clubhouse, the boat’s wake caused the
pungent, algal water to lap against my calves. I held a wooden fishing
pole that Papa, my grandfather, had given me when I was six. The hook baited
with a throbbing night
crawler, I watched as the red-and-white bobber
teased me with a quick
downward thrust, only to rise to the surface and drift with rippled ease. Clever fish, I thought.
A
few seconds before the swollen body emerged, I turned back to look at my grandparents’ summerhouse. I could see Nana flitting about the screened-in porch, setting
the table for yet another dinner party, while Papa probed the lawn for moles,
angling empty glass bottles into their holes with the open ends facing
downward. “Makes a howling noise, Ben,” he once told me as he guided a beer bottle into the earth. “Drives them crazy, like
psychological warfare.”
What
I noticed first in the water before me was not a body, but a flutter
in the lilies that I mistook for a jumping frog. It was only when the attenuated rays of the descending summer
sun flashed off Helen’s gold and diamond watch that I realized something
terrible had occurred. I gasped and leapt to my feet. “God,”
I mumbled and raised
my right foot as if to take a step forward, toward
the body. “Papa!” I yelled,
dropping the rod to the dock. “Papa, come down!”
Despite
his old age, my grandfather was a lithe and energetic
man who, after numerous injuries and
surgeries, had somehow managed to retain much of
the athleticism of his youth.
He was alarmed by the distress in my voice, for he threw a bottle to the
ground and dashed down the slate path to the water’s edge. I glanced up to my
grandmother, who stood frozen on the porch, right hand on chest, her mouth open.
“There!”
I shouted to Papa and pointed to the blue-white body of his next-door neighbor.
Helen Lowenthal, whose rare kindness had evoked in me the greatest loyalty, was dressed in a pink tennis skirt
and matching top. Barefoot, she floated on her back,
her face dappled with lake slime, her dyed blonde hair draped over a mat of
lilies, her pale arms elevated above her head as if she were a surrendering
soldier. I took another step closer, toward
the water. I found myself drawn to her body, to its deadness, to its serene,
haunted passage, as one is drawn
to the very things—once beautiful, now rotten—that intrigue us, that repulse us
with their incomprehensible transformation.
Papa reached the dock and grabbed
my arm. He stared at the body in silence,
then, as if looking for a clue, scanned the shoreline and the lake’s expanse. A hundred
feet from the dock, in a pool of quiet water, an elderly couple fished from an
anchored motorboat; the Ark continued its journey toward the clubhouse,
a familiar Ella Fitzgerald melody drifting off the
stern; a small sailboat floated in the windless
dusk; and the white egret elevated from Split Rock, relinquishing its perch in search of food. “Go inside
and call the police,” Papa cried. “It’s Helen,
you know.” He wiped the sweat from his face
then, panting, bent over at the waist. “Helen
… Lowenthal,” he said
through heavy breaths, before stepping down,
fully-clothed, into the shallow water.
I
watched as he struggled to traverse the muddy lake floor, the water rising from his knees, to his waist, to his chest. When he reached
Helen, he touched
a small bruise on her forehead.
He then grasped her left hand and guided her—belly-up—toward the shore, her body slicing through the water with ease and purpose.
As I watched this scene
unfold, I was immobilized by my first
close contact with death. I
stared at her corpse with a vast fear, with a revulsion
that shamed me, and, I would later acknowledge, with something approximating wonderment.
With
great care, Papa placed his palm on the side of Helen’s head—a tender movement
that protected her from hitting a protruding rock. Now just feet from the
shore, the water knee-deep, he turned to me. “Go, Ben,” he demanded. “Go now!”
Unable
to divert my eyes from the scene before me, I moved slowly up the dock. I
watched as Papa stepped up onto the shore, his legs heavy from the weight of
his sodden pants. I watched as he lifted
Helen, as he groaned
in exertion, and then gently laid her down on the spongy moss. I took one last
look at the woman. She wore the fancy watch her husband had given her for their
twentieth anniversary, and on her left hand was an engagement
ring, the one with a diamond so large that some of the
women from the bridge club had started
a rumor that the stone was
fake. I glanced at her toenails, painted cherry red, and at her slime-lacquered face.
“Go!”
Papa screamed, now with fury in his eyes. And then I ran to the house
and into my grandmother’s fleshy, perfumed embrace. I ran to a safe place.
Adam Pelzman was born in Seattle, raised in northern New Jersey, and has spent most of his life in New York City. He studied Russian literature at the University of Pennsylvania and went to law school at UCLA. His first novel, Troika, was published by Penguin (Amy Einhorn Books). He is also the author of The Papaya King, which Kirkus Reviews described as "entrancing," "deeply memorable" and "devilishly smart social commentary." The Boy and the Lake, set in New Jersey during the late 1960s, is his third novel.
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