Brimstone (Preston and Child novel)

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Brimstone
AuthorDouglas Preston,
Lincoln Child
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDiogenes Trilogy, Aloysius Pendergast
GenreSuspense
PublisherWarner Books
Publication date
August 3, 2004
Media typePrint, e-book, audiobook
Pages497 pp. (Hardcover)
ISBN0-446-53143-X
OCLC54279996
813/.54 22
LC ClassPS3566.R3982 B75 2004
Preceded byStill Life with Crows 
Followed byDance of Death 

Brimstone is a thriller novel written by American authors Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, and published on August 3, 2004, by Warner Books. This is the fifth installment in the Special Agent Pendergast series and the first novel in the Diogenes trilogy that also includes Dance of Death (2005) and The Book of the Dead (2006).[1]

Plot summary[edit]

FBI Special Agent Aloysius X.L. Pendergast and Sergeant Vincent D'Agosta, now working for the Southampton Police Department, investigate a series of unusual deaths—deaths that appear to be the work of Lucifer in return for pacts entered in with him by his victims.[2] Their investigation takes them from the New York City area, site of the first two deaths, to Florence, Italy where they uncover the motive and method of the killers behind the strange and gruesome deaths. During the course of unraveling the mystery, the truth behind a priceless, missing Stradivarius violin is revealed and a potentially apocalyptic riot with Messianic Christians is averted. Pendergast also reveals details of his insane brother Diogenes, whom he believes is planning something horrible.

Plot[edit]

Jeremy Grove, famous resident of the Hamptons, is found murdered in his home by his maid. There was a cloven hoof print burned into the floor at the foot of the bed. When the investigation begins, lo and behold: “Sergeant” D’Agosta of the SouthHampton police discovers Pendergast wandering the beach near the murder site.

D’Agosta went to Canada to write a book, but then ran out of money and had to go back to being a cop and couldn’t get a job in NYC. Apparently he left his wife, Lydia, back in Canada.

We meet Constance Green, physically 19, but well over 100. She had revealed herself to Wren the previous summer during his cataloging of the Cabinet in 891 Riverside.

Nigel Cutforth, rich record producer and friend of Grove, cooks in his penthouse apartment. D’Agosta and Pendergast investigate, and we meet (again) Captain Laura Hayward, who worked with our guys back in Reliquary.

Locke Bullard is aboard his yacht, and connects with a hitman named Vasquez, whom he hires at $2 million to kill Pendergast. Vinnie and Captain Hayward seem to be hitting it off. Vinnie has met Constance and dines with her and Pendergast at the mansion at 891 Riverside.

D’Agosta asks Captain Hayward for a wiretap on Bullard’s phone . At first she says no, then they have sex in her office, then she says yes. But not because of the sex.

Everyone has been looking for Ranier Beckmann, including the murdered men. Now Pendergast has his current whereabouts. Pendergast has located Beckmann's grave in a Yonkers cemetery (with the help of Mime). He calls in the police to exhume the body.

Bullard is traveling to Italy to retrieve something his company was building. He is canceling the project. Also, a meeting that his executive had in NY went sideways, with Pendergast finding out about through a wiretap.

The body of Beckmann leads Pendergast and D’Agosta to Florence, where they believe Bullard is also heading. D’Agosta hopes the trip won’t mess up his burgeoning relationship with Laura Hayward.

The night before they leave for Italy, Pendergast shows Vinnie a letter from his brother, Diogenes. The letter contains only a date, January 28 (91 days hence). Pendergast believes this is the date his brother will commit a terrible crime.

Bryce Harriman is on the case of the murders. He attends an ad-hoc gathering of the Reverend Buck, a born again ex-con that arrived in NYC one day earlier, because he read Harriman’s story in the Post. Bill Smithback isn’t in this book, because he’s on his honeymoon with Nora Kelly.

Bullard removes an item from his highly secure lab in Italy, and does a demonic summoning at his home, which used to belong to Machiavelli. He is found the next morning, burnt up like the Jeremy Grove and Nigel Cutforth. Pendergast and D’Agosta had tried to penetrate Bullard’s security to visit his lab, but were caught by his security guards. They narrowly escaped execution, and then returned and found Bullard’s corpse. Pendergast had a revelation about what’s going on. Turns out, the item that Bullard placed into the pentagram was Stormcloud, a famous Stradivarius violin. The violin is missing from the crime scene.

Pendergast and D’Agosta track down the priest that gave confession to Beckmann. A hit man follows them to the Sanctuary of La Verna, where he shoots the priest. Before he dies, he says that Beckmann had made a deal with the devil, but that the priest was able to save his soul. Pendergast wonders, though about the other 3 men.

Back in NY, Captain Grable and Captain Hayward attempt to arrest Reverend Buck, whose tent city has grown and is disturbing New Yorkers. But they are turned away, and now Buck knows what God’s plan for him is.

Pendergast and Vinny head to a cathedral where a person of interest is buried. He had been partially burned, then shot, and Pendergast wants to exhume the body, but official means would take too long. They find some melted metal in the body, leading to their theory that Vanni was a test case for the current killer, before he perfected his burning technique.

Pendergast and Vinny head to a Tuscan island, Capraia, to find Lady Viola Maskelene. She’s a beautiful woman, and Pendergast seems is taken by her. She hands Pendergast a letter from Count Fosco, in which he invites Pendergast to a meeting, during which, Pendergast says, the count will try to kill him.

Pendergast declares that Count Fosco, who pretended to help and befriend Pendergast earlier, is the murderer, and that he has the Stormcloud.

With Pendergast and D’Agosta in Castel Fosco, the count explains what happened. Thirty years ago, he’d met Beckmann, Bullard, Cuthbert, and Grove. He invited them to a midnight séance to raise the Devil—staged, of course. And then, much later, he discovered that Bullard had acquired the violin, and planned to destroy it so that he could analyze the resin, to help the Chinese develop missiles that could defeat American radar.

He used the other deaths to scare Bullard, convincing him that he must undo the deal he made with the Devil 30 years earlier. And, to do so, he needed to sacrifice something of immense value.

Pendergast and D’Agosta meet the count at his castle. They find out he constructed a microwave device that killed his victims. He attempts to kill them, they escape the caste and are hunted like boars: dogs and men trapping them. Vinnie escapes, but it appears Pendergast does not. As he is escaping, D’Agosta spots Diogenes (though he doesn’t know who it is) observing.

Back in NYC, Hayward solves the problem of the lay priest, Reverend Buck, and ships him back to Oklahoma where he has an outstanding warrant for parole violation.

Disco captures Pendergast and takes him down to the lowest sub-basement of his castle. He has him chained to the wall and bricks him up, to die behind a wall of bricks. D’Agosta returns to the castle with a bunch of Italian police officers. They search the castle, but find no signs of anything untoward—Fosco has covered up all evidence of wrongdoing. Finally, D’Agosta is forced to leave and the police are furious at him.

Later, Fosco is in his study, having a drink. He retrieves Stormcloud and allows it to sit a bit before he plans to play it. But then he starts to feel strange. Turns out, D’Agosta has figured out how to use Fosco’s microwave device, and he uses it to exact justice on Fosco, killing him in the same manner that he killed the others. He sends the violin back to Viola and returns to New York.

Hayward mentions he can get his old job back, in a different precinct than hers of course. And it sounds like they are moving in together.

Epilogue: Someone goes down to the sub-basement where Pendergast is behind a wall of bricks. He removes a few bricks, and as he peers in, we discover that the person peering in has different colored eyes: one blue, one hazel. Diogenes.

References to other literary works[edit]

  • The entombing of Pendergast in the catacombs under Fosco's home bears a deliberate literary allusion to the 1846 short story "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allan Poe.[3] The dialogue when Pendergast futilely urges the Count to let him go because he has something important to do also has a strong resemblance to the Confrontation dialogue between Valjean and Javert in the hit musical Les Misérables.
  • An alias D'Agosta uses on the telephone, Jack Torrance, is the name of the main character in The Shining, a 1977 novel by Stephen King.
  • The character of Count Fosco is a tribute to the classic character of the same name, a villain in Wilkie Collins's 1860 novel The Woman in White.
  • The character Count Fosco refers to there being all types of detectives including Navajo policemen,[4] a subtle reference to Tony Hillerman's characters Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee, two fictional Navajo policeman.

References[edit]

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