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Authors: David Ambrose

Tags: #Science Fiction

Coincidence

Also by David Ambrose

Superstition

The Man Who Turned into Himself

Mother of God

Hollywood Lies

Copyright

The events and characters in this book are fictitious. Certain real locations and public figures are mentioned, but all other
characters and events described in the book are totally imaginary.

Copyright © 2001 by David Ambrose

All rights reserved.

First published in the United Kingdom by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd.

Warner Books, Inc.

Hachette Book Group

237 Park Avenue

New York, NY 10017

Visit our website at
www.HachetteBookGroup.com

First eBook Edition: September 2009

ISBN: 978-0-446-56666-7

Contents

Also by David Ambrose

Copyright

Acknowledgments

“GEORGE”

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

“LARRY“

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

“SARA”

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

“LARRY“

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

“GEORGE“

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

“LARRY“

Chapter 34

“SARA“

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

“GEORGE“

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

“SARA“

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Coincidence

Praise for Superstition

Acknowledgments

M
any of the coincidences quoted in this book (although none of those on which the story actually hangs) are taken from the
extensive literature that exists on the subject. I would particularly like to record my thanks to and admiration of:
Synchronicity, Science, and Soul-Making by Victor Mansfield; Synchronicity, the Bridge between Matter and Mind by F. David
Peat; Patterns of Prophecy and Incredible Coincidence by Alan Vaughan; Jung, Synchronicity, and Human Destiny by Ira progoff;
and, perhaps most important,
The Roots of Coincidence
by Arthur Koestler.

The unexamined life is not worth living.

—Socrates

Philosophy… leaves everything as it is.

—Wittgenstein

“G
EORGE

Chapter 1

I
t started with my father’s death. At least, that was how it seemed at the time. Now, looking back, I realize how impossible
it is to be sure where anything really begins; or, for that matter, where, or even whether, it has ended.

I was alone at our apartment in Manhattan for the weekend. My wife, Sara, was in Chicago checking out a couple of young artists
who were exhibiting there. She had her own gallery downtown in TriBeCa and a reputation for bringing new talent to the attention
of a sophisticated market at just the right time. It was Sunday evening and I’d spent the day alone, trying to work up an
idea for a new book. I write nonfiction books that occupy a kind of no-man’s-land between real science and fantastical speculation.
I’ve dealt with poltergeists, ESP of various kinds, stone circles, ley lines, the pyramids. You get the idea. I have a good
time and never knowingly write junk. I mean I don’t just invent stuff or make claims unless I can support them with at least
a respectable amount of evidence. They’re not best-sellers, but at least they do well enough to keep my publishers coming
back for more, so I suppose I can’t complain. But I didn’t have the vaguest notion what my next subject was going to be. I
felt I was in a dead end, written out. Nothing would come together no matter how long I cudgeled my brain in search of a theme
or framework that had some spark of novelty.

Around six-thirty I poured myself a scotch and took it out on the terrace, where I watched the lights coming up across the
park. It was the time of year when the trees were turning into a rich blend of copper, gold, and red. Looking at them made
me think of New England and that whole East Coast, and of the small town where my father lived in a retirement home. I’d spoken
to him on the phone earlier in the day, as I did most weekends. I went up to see him every couple of months or so, and I was
about due for another visit. Maybe I’d go up at the end of the week, I told myself, or at the very latest the week after.

It was at that moment, when the image of my father and his sad, frustrated life were at the forefront of my mind, that the
phone rang. I went inside to answer it. It was Abigail Tucker, the superintendent of the home. I knew at once from the tone
of her voice that he was dead. A heart attack, she said, less than an hour ago.

I thanked her for letting me know so quickly and said I’d take a train up in the morning. She agreed that there was no point
in my rushing up immediately. She herself would make arrangements with the funeral home if I wished. I said I would be grateful
for that and thanked her again.

When I hung up I didn’t move for some time, just stood there looking at my reflection in the window, watching it grow clearer
moment by moment as the light outside faded. What were you supposed to feel, I asked myself, on learning of your father’s
death? Was there something specific, something deep-rooted in the psyche, a special sense of loss? Or growth perhaps? And
how remarkable that I should have been thinking of him at that very moment when the call came.

Except, of course, it wasn’t remarkable at all. The association of trees, New England, the fact of having spoken to him that
morning, and of feeling slightly guilty about putting off my next visit to him as long as I could explained the coincidence.
But I felt no rush of remorse, no sense of unfinished business as a result of having missed that last chance to see him, no
lack of “closure,” as your local corner therapist would call it. I felt nothing that I hadn’t been feeling half an hour earlier.
The only difference was that my father had been alive then and was dead now. A simple fact.

But, although -I didn’t consciously know it then, I had found both the subject and the title of my next book.

Coincidence.

The sky was overcast when I stepped off the train and crossed the footbridge to where a taxi waited to take me the last three
miles to the home. As we wound up the hill I looked out at the familiar sights passing by, seeing them for the last time—and
feeling, to be honest, little apart from relief that I would not have to make this journey again.

At least, I told myself, he had been well looked after. The place hadn’t been cheap and had eaten up my father’s modest capital
as well as his pension, and had still required several thousand a year from my own pocket. But it was money I’d been happy
to pay. Somehow it made up for the lack of warmth between us, allowing me to feel that I at least had done everything I possibly
could, and that it was my father who had resented me and kept me at arm’s length all my life, not I who had in any way let
down, betrayed, or walked away from him.

Sara, to her credit, had been as anxious as I was to ensure that he was given the best possible care when it became obvious
five years ago that he was no longer fit to live alone. Two falls and a growing drink habit had done that. He wasn’t an alcoholic;
it was just something to do. He was bored. My father had been bored, and bitter, almost all of his adult life. He had continued
to drink in the home, though far less; it wasn’t one of those regimented places that regarded old people as an inconvenience
to be drugged senseless and kept out of the way as much as possible. They had their own rooms and, within reason, their own
routines.

Mrs. Tucker appeared at the door of the handsome old house as I got out of my taxi. She was a pleasant-looking woman around
forty, dressed casually for the country and looking more like a favorite aunt than some matronly superintendent. She took
me into her office, which looked onto a broad sweep of tree-covered countryside. I was impressed by the efficiency with which
she had assembled all the necessary paperwork, but then reflected that this was not exactly a routine she was unaccustomed
to in her line of work. Tea was brought in as we took care of everything, after which she drove me to the chapel of rest,
where my father’s body had been taken the previous night. He was lying in a “temporary casket”; I almost embarrassed myself
by laughing out loud when I heard it called that.

We had already decided that the funeral was to be the following morning, Tuesday. There were no far-flung relatives to be
informed and who would need time to make travel arrangements, therefore no sense in waiting. I had spoken to Sara, who said
she would be back in New York late Monday and would either take a train or drive up early Tuesday. I told her it wasn’t essential
she be there and I would understand if she was too busy, but she wouldn’t hear of not coming.

It only remained for me to pick the casket in which he would be buried. I chose the one I thought he would have chosen himself:
simple to the point of being ascetic, but in the best materials and workmanship available. My father appreciated quality but
dismissed with scorn anything that he felt could be described as chichi. Design for him was governed by function, all unnecessary
ornamentation being regarded as the worst form of original sin.

I spent the afternoon going through the things in his room. It was bare and anonymous compared with some of the other rooms
I glimpsed through open doors as I made my way along the corridor to his. Most people had pictures of their family, treasured
possessions accumulated over a lifetime, gifts sent by friends and relatives. My father had nothing of that kind. A few books,
mostly thrillers and adventure stories; a couple of suits, some sweaters and casual clothes; four pairs of shoes. The only
things in his drawers, most of which were empty, were socks, shirts, and underwear. I found his wallet in a bedside drawer.
It contained a few dollars in cash, his driver’s license that he hung on to though he hadn’t driven in years, and a few yellowing
business cards. In the same drawer was a key ring with two small keys that looked as though they might fit a briefcase or
a piece of luggage. I had found nothing of that kind in the room, but, as I double-checked, a young woman called Shirley who
was on duty that afternoon put her head around the door. She had a round face and a bright smile, and I knew that she had
made repeated efforts to draw my father out of his shell, all to no avail. She asked if I needed any help or whether I might
like a cup of coffee or anything else. I thanked her and said I was fine, then gave her one half-empty and one unopened bottle
of whisky from my father’s drinks cabinet and suggested she pass them to one of the gardeners or keep them herself, whatever
she chose. I also asked if she could arrange to give away his clothes if they were of use to anyone, otherwise perhaps send
them to some local charity shop. She said she would see to it.

“By the way,” she said, “would you like someone to bring up your father’s chest from the store room, or will you deal with
it down there?”

“Chest?” I said, surprised, because I had no memory of his having had any such thing when I helped him move in. “How big?”

“Fairly large,” she said, using her hands to make a shape in the air that suggested a substantial piece of luggage.

“Is it locked?”

“I don’t know.”

I looked at the keys that I still held in my hand.

“I’ll come down,” I said, “if you’ll show me where it is.”

Chapter 2

T
he store room, which had been a four-car garage when the house had been privately owned, was a window-less cavern with two
long strips of overhead lighting. One of the gardeners hauled a battered, ribbed traveling trunk down from a shelf and dragged
it into the middle of the concrete floor. He was delighted when Shirley presented him with the bottles of whisky I had given
her, then they both tactfully withdrew to let me go through my father’s things in private.

Both locks snapped open like mousetraps, but I hesitated a moment before lifting the lid. My first thought was that a trunk
this size must almost certainly contain some of my father’s paintings. My father, I should explain, was an unsuccessful artist
who had given up in despair and bitterness and finished his working life behind the counter in a gentlemen’s haberdashery.
After he had been doing that for about a year my mother died—of an accidental overdose, according to the coroner’s verdict.
I, however, was convinced and still am that it was suicide. My father took his sense of failure out on her, not in any brutish
physical way, but with a thousand little mental cruelties. All my life (I was twenty when she died) I had heard his peevish
references to the way in which domestic chains were death to an artist’s soul. Looking back now, it was almost as though he
were preparing himself for a failure that in his heart he knew was unavoidable, and making sure that the blame could be laid
elsewhere than on himself. Whether he really had talent or none at all I never knew. When he finally faced up to the fact
that the success he yearned for had eluded him, he destroyed all his paintings in one frenzied afternoon and forbade any mention
of them in his presence ever again.

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