Dennis Lehane - The Given Day

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Set in Boston at the end of the First World War, bestselling author Dennis Lehane's extraordinary eighth novel unflinchingly captures the political and social unrest of a nation caught at the crossroads where past meets future. Filled with a cast of richly drawn, unforgettable characters, The Given Day tells the story of two families — one black, one white — swept up in a maelstrom of revolutionaries and anarchists, immigrants and ward bosses, Brahmins and ordinary citizens, all engaged in a battle for survival and power. Coursing through the pivotal events of a turbulent epoch, it explores the crippling violence and irrepressible exuberance of a country at war with, and in the thrall of, itself.

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O’Meara’s widow, Isabella, sat with her three daughters and Mayor Peters. The daughters were all in their thirties and their husbands sat to their left followed by O’Meara’s grandchildren, who shivered and fidgeted. At the end of that long line sat the new commissioner, Edwin Upton Curtis. He was a short man with a face the color and texture of a long-discarded orange peel and eyes as dull as his brown shirt. Back when Danny was just out of diapers, Curtis had been mayor, the youngest in the history of the city. He was neither now — young nor mayor — but in 1896 he’d been a fair-haired Republican naïf who’d been fed to the rabid Democratic ward bosses while the Brahmins searched for a longer-term solution of more substantial timber. He’d left the highest office in City Hall one year after he entered it and the appointments that followed for him had so diminished in stature that two decades later, he’d been working as a customs clerk when outgoing Governor McCall appointed him to replace O’Meara.

“I can’t believe he had the guff to show up,” Steve Coyle said later at Fay Hall. “Man hates the Irish. Hates police. Hates Catholics. How’re we going to get a fair shake from him?”

Steve still called himself “police.” He still attended meetings. He had nowhere else to go. Still, his was the question at Fay Hall that morning. A megaphone had been placed on a stand in front of the stage for the men to give testimonials to their late commissioner, while the rest of the rank and file milled among the coffee urns and beer kegs. The captains and lieutenants and inspectors were holding their own memorial across town with fine china and French cuisine at Locke-Ober, but the foot soldiers were here in Roxbury, trying to voice their sense of loss for a man they’d barely known. So the testimonials had begun to fade as each man told a story about a chance meeting with the Great Man, a leader who was “tough but fair.” Milty McElone was up there now, recounting O’Meara’s obsession with uniforms, his ability to spot a tarnished button from ten yards out in a crowded squad room.

On the floor, the men sought out Danny and Mark Denton. The price of coal had jumped another penny in the last month. Men returned from work to icy bedrooms puffed with vapor clouds from their children’s mouths. Christmas was just around the corner. Their wives were sick of darning, sick of serving thinner and thinner soup, angry that they couldn’t shop the Christmas sales at Raymond’s, at Gilchrist’s, at Houghton & Dutton. Other wives could — the wives of trolley drivers, of teamsters, of stevedores and dockworkers — but not the wives of policemen?

“I’m fed up being put out of my own bed,” one patrolman said. “I only sleep there twice a week as it is.”

“They’re our wives,” someone else said, “and they’re only poor because they married us.”

The men who took the megaphone began to express similar sentiments. The testimonials to O’Meara faded away. They could hear the wind pick up outside, see the frost on the windows.

Dom Furst was up at the megaphone now, rolling up the sleeve of his dress blues so they could all see his arm. “These are the bug bites I got at the station just last night, boys. They jump to our beds when they’re tired of riding the backs of the rats. And they answer our gripes with Curtis ? He’s one of them!” He pointed off in the general direction of Beacon Hill, his bare arm peppered with red bites. “There’s a lot of men they could have picked to replace Stephen O’Meara and send the message ‘We don’t care.’ But picking Edwin Up-Your-Arse Curtis? That’s saying, ‘Fuck you !’”

Some men banged chairs off the walls. Some threw their coffee cups at the windows.

“We better do something here,” Danny said to Mark Denton.

“Be my guest,” Denton said.

“Fuck you?” Furst shouted. “I say, ‘Fuck them .’ You hear me? Fuck them!”

Danny was still working his way through the crowd toward the megaphone when the whole room picked up the chant:

Fuck them! Fuck them! Fuck them! Fuck them!

He gave Dom a smile and a nod and stepped behind him to the megaphone.

“Gentlemen,” Danny tried but was drowned out by the continuous chant.

“Gentlemen!” he tried again. He saw Mark Denton in the crowd giving him a cocked eyebrow and a cocked smile.

One more time. “Gentlemen!”

A few looked his way. The rest chanted and slashed their fists through the air and spilled beer and coffee on one another.

“Shut. The fuck. Up!” Danny screamed it into the megaphone. Danny took a breath and looked out at the room. “We are your union reps. Yes? Me, Mark Denton, Kevin McRae, Doolie Ford. Let us negotiate with Curtis before you go off half-crazed.”

“When?” someone shouted from the crowd.

Danny looked out at Mark Denton.

“Christmas Day,” Denton said. “We’ve a meeting at the mayor’s office.”

Danny said, “He can’t be taking us lightly, he wants to meet on Christmas morn, can he, boys?”

“Could be he’s half-kike,” someone shouted, and the men broke up laughing.

“Could be,” Danny said. “But it’s a solid step in the right direction, boys. An act of good faith. Let’s give the man the benefit of the doubt until then, yeah?”

Danny looked out at the several hundred faces; they were only half-sold on the idea. A few shouted “Fuck them!” again from the back of the hall and Danny pointed at the photograph of O’Meara that hung on the wall to his left. As dozens of eyes followed his fingers, he realized something terrifying and exhilarating at the same time:

They wanted him to lead them.

Somewhere. Anywhere.

“That man!” he shouted. “That great man was laid to rest today!”

The room quieted, no more shouts. They all looked to Danny, wondering where he was going with this, where he was taking them. He wondered himself.

He lowered his voice. “He died with a dream still unfulfilled.”

Several men lowered their heads.

Jesus, where was he coming up with this stuff?

“That dream was our dream.” Danny craned his head, looked out at the crowd. “Where’s Sean Moore? Sean, I saw you earlier. Raise a hand.”

Sean Moore raised one sheepish hand in the air.

Danny locked eyes with him. “You were there that night, Sean. In the bar, the night before he died. You were with me. You met the man. And what did he say?”

Sean looked at the men around him and shifted on his feet. He gave Danny a weak smile and shook his head.

“He said …” Danny’s eyes swept the room. “He said, ‘A promise is a promise.’”

Half the room clapped. A few whistled.

“A promise is a promise,” Danny repeated.

More clapping, a few shouts.

“He asked whether we had faith in him. Do we? Because it was his dream as much as it was ours.”

Bullshit, Danny knew, but it was working. Chins lifted all over the room. Pride replaced anger.

“He raised his glass—” And here Danny raised his own glass. He could feel his father working through him: the blarney, the appeal to sentiment, the sense of the dramatic. “And he said, ‘To the men of the Boston Police Department, you have no peers in this nation.’ Will you drink to that, boys?”

They drank. They cheered.

Danny dropped his voice several octaves. “If Stephen O’Meara knew we were without peer, Edwin Upton Curtis will know it soon enough.”

They started chanting again, and it took Danny several moments to recognize the word they chanted because they’d broken it into two syllables so it sounded like two words, and he felt blood rush up his face so quickly it felt cold and newly born:

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