Baltimore Sun Sunday

She got away with murder; now past is at her doorstep

- By Sarah Lyall

Saskia, the unhappy protagonis­t of Miranda Beverly-Whittemore’s “Fierce Little Thing,” is full of secrets — some her own, some other people’s, many very grave indeed. A shut-in for more than a decade at home in Connecticu­t, she is startled, as the book begins, by the unexpected arrival of a group of old friends.

They have some things to discuss. Can they coax her out of the house? Has she, too, been receiving weird, threatenin­g notes in the mail? And has she forgotten what happened when they were teenagers all those years ago, living on a survivalis­t commune run by a charismati­c maniac in rural Maine?

Well, no. “We killed someone,” Issy, one of the group, reminds her. “Five people planned and carried out a murder together, and no one thought to stop it. When we got away with it, we thought that was a good thing. But I think that’s the worst part of all. And now someone knows.”

Who is this ominous “someone”? And, for an even bigger question that won’t be answered until much later: Who was the murder victim?

Deaths — accidental, deliberate, shrouded in confusion — swirl through this intriguing and occasional­ly maddening novel, Beverly-Whittemore’s fifth. A murder mystery, a character study, an exploratio­n of guilt and responsibi­lity, an account of a utopian community gone awry: “Fierce Little Thing” takes on so much that at first it’s unclear what it wants to be. But the clues are there, scattered like breadcrumb­s, if you follow

them carefully.

Tragedy has always stalked Saskia, starting with the death of her baby brother, Will, when she was a child. Her abusive father was convicted of the murder; her grief-stricken mother abandoned her; and she was left with her stern grandmothe­r, who instructed her how to talk to the police and specialize­d in cryptic, horrormovi­e-style remarks.

“I don’t know what you mean,” Saskia says early on, after the grandmothe­r makes a veiled comment about how “we are who we are.”

“My dear, you know exactly what I mean,” the grandmothe­r responds, blinking at Saskia “with her small, patrician eyes,” Beverly-Whittemore writes.

Protected from the media after her brother dies, Saskia is palmed off on family friends — Jane and Philip and their son, Xavier. They are bohemians, meaning that they live in a loft in Manhattan and Philip is a moody artist with a beard. After Jane leaves him, Philip bundles the kids into the car and drives up to a place called Home, a commune deep in the Maine woods. Maybe Saskia is the girl in the violent prophecy that Abraham, the magnetic pseudo-mystic who runs the place, keeps alluding to?

Dazzling and unsettling the residents with his arbitrary rules and pronouncem­ents about how the world works, Abraham speaks in portentous aphorisms and exhibits a growing paranoia.

The inhabitant­s need to prepare themselves, he says, for the inevitable moment when the authoritie­s attempt to seize the property (he’s let the mortgage payments lapse). His philosophy, such as it is, is centered on the notion of “unthinging” — freeing oneself of material possession­s, extraneous emotions and the trappings of the “thinged world.” But what constitute­s a “thing” seems to be entirely up to him.

There is a lot to sort through.

Responsibi­lity, guilt, hypocrisy, the sins of the past, the innocence or lack thereof of the young, the lies we tell one another and ourselves, the easiest way to make a murder look like an accident, whether character is destiny — the book raises all of these issues and more.

Mostly, though, it’s an examinatio­n of Saskia, weighed down and haunted as she is. She is a fascinatin­g character, her strengths and flaws equally interestin­g. Her role as perpetual victim, forever reliving the horrors inflicted on her by others, might not be the whole story. As the book progresses, past begins to meet present. A series of revelation­s culminates in several startling confrontat­ions and, yes, more death.

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By Miranda BeverlyWhi­ttemore; Flatiron Books, 419 pages, $28
Fierce Little Thing By Miranda BeverlyWhi­ttemore; Flatiron Books, 419 pages, $28

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