Blue Moon

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Authors: Luanne Rice

PENGUIN BOOKS

Blue Moon

L
UANNE
R
ICE
is the author of thirty novels, twenty-two of which have been
New York Times
bestsellers. Five of her novels have become movies or miniseries, and two of her short pieces were featured in Off-Broadway productions. There are more than twenty-two million copies of her books in print in twenty-four territories around the world. A bicoastal advocate of the environment, she divides her time between New York City and southern California.

Also by
Luanne Rice

How We Started

Little Night

The Silver Boat

Deep Blue Sea for Beginners

The Geometry of Sisters

Last Kiss

What Matters Most

The Edge of Winter

Sandcastles

Summer of Roses

Summer’s Child

Silver Bells

Beach Girls

Dance with Me

The Perfect Summer

The Secret Hour

True Blue

Safe Harbor

Summer Light

Firefly Beach

Dream Country

Follow the Stars Home

Cloud Nine

Home Fires

Blue Moon

Secrets of Paris

Stone Heart

Crazy in Love

Angels All Over Town

Blue            
      Moon

Luanne

Rice

PENGUIN BOOKS

ABOUT THE BOOK

“Some said Mount Hope was founded on love, and some said it was founded on war … The Keatings said Mount Hope was founded on fish, plain and simple.”

So begins Luanne Rice’s mesmerizing novel
Blue Moon
. For generations the Keating family has trawled the waters and served the catch at Lobsterville, the most popular waterfront restaurant in town. But now the forces of nature, human and otherwise, threaten to disrupt their lives—and the three Keating sisters are fighting to keep it together.

Then the unthinkable happens—the tragedy dreaded by every fisherman and fisherman’s wife. And when it strikes, it threatens the entire Keating clan with a crisis that will test—and perhaps renew—their deepest passions and loyalties.

PENGUIN BOOKS

Published by the Penguin Group

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Johannesburg 2196, South Africa

Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices:

80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

First published in the United States of America by Viking Penguin,

a division of Penguin Books USA Inc. 1993

Published in Penguin Books 2012

Copyright © Luanne Rice, 1993

All rights reserved

Publisher’s note:

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

A condensation of this novel first appeared in
Good Housekeeping
.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

Rice, Luanne.

Blue moon / Luanne Rice.

p. m.

ISBN 0-670-84301-6 (hc.)

ISBN: 978-1-101-64083-8

I. Title.

PS3568.1289B57     1993

813′.54—dc20     92-50732

No part of this product may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

ALWAYS LEARNING

PEARSON

Blue            
      Moon
1

S
ome said Mount Hope was founded on love, and some said it was founded on war. Peter Benson, a shipbuilding English settler, gave a parcel of land on the harbor to his daughter Alice the day of her marriage, and she and her husband, William Perry, founded the town. From their wedding day forward, the Perrys built ships for the Revolution, and their descendants built ships for the War of 1812, the War Between the States, the First World War, and the Second World War.

From May until September, on certain October weekends for the foliage, and on two consecutive December Saturdays for the Christmas Strolls, Mount Hope would fill with tourists. Deluxe motorcoaches from New Jersey and Ohio brought folks hoping to breathe New England salt air, to walk the tawny dunes of Spray Cove at sunset, to gaze at sleek white yachts longer than their tour buses, to drive past the
belle époque
palaces of robber barons while over the loudspeaker the tour guide delivered salacious gossip about the barons’ fortunes and depravities—and to eat Shore Dinners.

Shore Dinners were hefty meals of clear-brothed Rhode Island clam chowder, briny steamer clams, chunks of milky-white codfish dipped in succulent beer batter and deep-fried until crackling and golden, butter-broiled sea scallops, sweet corn on the cob, and lobster. Tradition had it that Shore Dinners must be eaten within sight of salt water. For the best Shore Dinners in Mount Hope, people went to Lobsterville.

With four big picture windows facing the harbor, Lobsterville had the nicest view of any restaurant in town. No one minded the
hour or longer wait for a table, because the bar served the biggest drinks on the waterfront. Drinking their whiskey sours, diners loved to drift along the wharf, listening for bell buoys, halyards clanking in the wind, and the strains of the Dixieland band playing two docks away at Brick’s.

The breeze turned chilly after sunset, and people put on sweaters. They watched the harbor launch chuff from mooring to mooring, ferrying the sailors from their boats into town. Sea gulls cruised the air. Fishing boats stopped at the end of the dock, past the sign declaring the area off-limits to tourists, to unload their catches. It was exciting to know that the fish you were about to eat was
that fresh.
Women in bright cotton dresses leaned into the arms of their husbands, for warmth. Waiting to hear their names called over the Lobsterville loudspeaker, men never felt stronger.

The Keating family had owned this spot on the Mount Hope waterfront for three generations. Battered by a century of northeasters, and worse, it was a working-fishermen’s wharf, glistening with fish scales, reeking of cod. The family owned a fleet of boats; tethered to the wharf, they were painted the bright primary colors of children’s building blocks. Most of their daily catch went to the Boston fish auction. But the most prized fish went to Lobsterville, the family restaurant, which occupied the same wharf as the boats that caught it.

People joked that the clamming rakes crossed over the bar were the Keating’s coat of arms. Regulars knew the story of how Eddie and Sheila Keating had started the business with a bushel of clams and a case of whiskey. Lobsterville’s red leather menus contained a page listing historical facts about Mount Hope, the fishing fleet, shipbuilding, Mount Hope’s gilded era, the Bensons, and the Perrys. Right at the top, in old-fashioned script, as if handwritten, were the words: “Some say Mount Hope was founded on love, and some say it was founded on war.”

The Keatings considered Mount Hope’s love-and-war business romantic hooey, fodder for the tour-bus drivers. The Keatings said Mount Hope was founded on cod, pollack, haddock, hake, ice to keep them fresh, and lobster. Especially lobster. The Keatings said Mount Hope was founded on fish, plain and simple.

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