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Stokeland. It sits at a fork between two roads, one a thick, commercial highway bedeviled by ice for ninety percent of the year; the other a stripped, frozen weave of a road, impassable for ten months out of twelve and huddled beneath wedges of brilliant white snow. It is a wonder that Stokeland has any inhabitants at all; but it does, over a hundred souls.
Angie, barmaid, too fond of the drink she serves. Gerry, the ancient trapper who has spent too long sleeping in the snow. Frank, teller of tales. Jack and Connor, bound to each other and to a shared life they cannot fulfill. Hettie and Ernest, driven by hunger.
Seeking answers in the cold tundra of the Arctic North, the Stokeland folk are drawn together by the power of one strange, unsettling word - Quilaq.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022
Quilaq
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About the Author
Copyright (C) 2020 by Rebecca Burns
Layout design and Copyright (C) 2022 by Next Chapter
Published 2022 by Next Chapter
Edited by Marilyn Wagner
Cover art by CoverMint
This book is a work of fiction. Apart from known historical figures, names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination. Other than actual events, locales, or persons, again the events are fictitious.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.
For Al, Tom, Val, Mags
Stokeland. It sits at a fork between two roads, one a thick, commercial highway bedevilled by ice for ninety percent of the year; the other a stripped, frozen weave of a road, impassable for ten months out of twelve and huddled beneath wedges of brilliant white snow. It is a wonder that Stokeland has any inhabitants at all; but it does, over a hundred souls.
Angie Barker is one. She sits in Shay's, Stokeland’s only bar, watching the snow come again. It is just before lunch and a few townsfolk have made it in as well, their snow mobiles parked beside each other outside. They have come for the steamed moosemeat and sourdough, and some will chase it down with whiskey; Yukon Jack if they can afford it. Angie has cleaned the bar, ready for them, rinsing out the dirty glasses left from the night before and sweeping the sticky carpet, musky with sweat and the urgency of payday. Men come to the bar and spend their money from trapping or the zinc mines, as soon as they make it. They leave dull fingerprints on the pool table and the shiny surface of the bar, grubby reminders that they have yet to make enough to leave and head south where it is warmer.
Angie is thirty-nine and has been for a number of years. She is too heavy and her skin is too blotched for her to be anything other than a functional barmaid; the trappers and miners do not come into Shay's to see her, only to drink beer. She hasn’t had to slap a hand away from her breasts for over six months. Not even after Ray Sullivan’s divorce party. He’d been wanting to leave Wanda for an age and she finally let him after finding out he’d been seeing a stripper over in Tramper’s Creek, where he tried to trade with the Inuit.
Shay’s Bar had been packed the night of the divorce party. Jackie and Connor, men who worked down Stokeland’s zinc mine and were never apart, hugged a table, swaying together. Others, faces she couldn’t place, beamed over lines of shots. Shay’s Bar pulsed and throbbed the night Ray Sullivan’s divorce came through. By the time Angie stepped outside for a smoke, her shirt was damp from the unexpected exercise of running between kegs and optics.
In a roundabout way, Angie thinks as she wipes the bar, Ray’s divorce has led to her being here, right this moment, waiting for one particular fellow to show. Today is her day off; she doesn’t have to be in. She could have stayed in her room above the bar, where a stove keeps ice at bay and she could watch Days of Our Lives on repeat. Instead she is passing the time, sweeping floors that have already been swept and washing glasses that are already clean, waiting for Gerry the Gin to make an appearance.
“I don’t actually like gin, but it’s a thing that’s stuck.” That had been the night of Ray’s party. Gerry the Gin had traded his furs to the Inuits that day and, like too many Stokelanders, had come to drink away his money before being driven back into the snow to snare more animals. His eyes had the sunken, overbright look of someone pinned into an addled, swilled-in-beer way of life, and the breath coming off him was foul. Angie had hung back at the bar, nudging the stubs of whiskey to him. But Gerry’s shirt was clean and he still had a rough edge of an accent. It was enough to intrigue, in the washed-up room.
“That so? Nickname like that and you don’t like gin.” Angie nodded conversationally but still kept back from the fetid plumes drifting from the man’s mouth. “Well, what else could it be?”
“Nickname? Hell, I don’t know. Why does a man need a nickname anyway? Foxes and hares I skin couldn’t give a tuppenny fuck what I’m called.”
“Right,” and Angie was about to move away, recognising the tipping point all men reached when booze had sloshed around in their stomachs for long enough.
“When’d you get here?” Gerry the Gin asked.
“When did I move to Stokeland?” Angie paused with her hand resting on a pump and thought hard. Santa Monica had been her home for the first thirty years, then Vancouver, with a man. That hadn’t worked out and he’d left her with a cracked rib and venereal disease. Bar jobs, drifting north. Then Stokeland. “Can’t remember, exactly. Five, six years, maybe.”
“Can’t remember either.” Gerry winked and downed the shot of whiskey. “Left Skye in the forties, that much I do know.”
“Skye?”
“The Isle of Skye. My dad was torpedoed at the end of 1944. Nothing else for my mother to do but start again somewhere. Canada as good a place as any.”
Someone shouted at that point, Angie remembered, and a glass had smashed. Paul Shay, owner of the bar and a definite non-taker of bullshit, swore loudly and marched round to where Ray Sullivan and his friends were shuffling their feet. Angie watched, their heads bobbing, slurred promises given. A brush appeared from somewhere and a chastened man began sweeping.
Gerry the Gin chuckled into his glass. “Aye, Stokeland is a good a place as any.” And then, “unless I were to ever find Quilaq.”
Wiping a cloth over a beer tap as she waits for Gerry to show, Angie remembers how she felt when he said that strange word. It was as though someone rubbed an ice cube behind her bellybutton: her stomach instantly began to ache, although the sensation was not exactly unpleasant. Quilaq. A word she somehow knew but had never said out-loud before. Qu-il-ack. And then, the night of Ray’s party the cold in her stomach seemed to spread and she felt swollen with a longing to find out more, to understand, to know about Quilaq. But Gerry the Gin had fallen asleep, propped against the bar, and then he left. So Angie now waits for him to appear again, so she can hear him say that word again. What does it mean? Is it a place? Quilaq.
And here he is again, Gerry the Gin. Angie has been waiting for him most of the morning, and finally sees him through the window of Shay’s Bar, his form braced against the snow, arms wrapped around his body in resignation as he climbs down from his battered old truck, which looks incongruous next to the snow mobiles. He tramps towards the door. A blast of cold air, white flakes skidding haphazardly across the floor, and the man is inside. It’s been a week since Ray Sullivan’s party and Gerry has been trapping again.
When Gerry first said that word, the night of Ray’s divorce party, Angie thought she’d misheard, or he really had toppled into the space laid bare by booze, the space where words make no sense. Quilaq. That wasn’t a word.
But he said it again and his face took on a dreamy yet clear kind of expression that pinned Angie to the floor.
“Quilaq. The Inuits say it’s a real place. A city in the clouds. Sometimes I reckon I seen it. Shadows, ken. And the smells. Baking. Meat, roasting.” Gerry’s eyes closed softly. He smiled. “Shangri-La. You never heard the stories?”