Toronto Star

Mozart, music and a real-life mystery

Rachel McMillan’s characters vie for composer’s death mask. In the course of writing, they became her ‘lockdown buddies’

- JANET SOMERVILLE JANET SOMERVILLE IS THE AUTHOR OF “YOURS, FOR PROBABLY ALWAYS: MARTHA GELLHORN’S LETTERS OF LOVE & WAR 1930-1949,” AVAILABLE

Prolific Toronto writer and selfprofes­sed book gusher Rachel McMillan loves to sing jazz standards and pieces from the American Songbook, especially those by the Gershwins.

In her most recent novel, “The Mozart Code,” she “taps into the musical side of myself, having studied classical voice at the Royal Conservato­ry of Music throughout my childhood and teens,” she said in an interview. Her protagonis­t, Sophie Villiers, adores Mozart’s “Piano Concerto 17 in G Major,” sometimes known as “The Starling,” because the final movement, the allegretto, replicates the trill of the composer’s pet songbird.

That piece acts as a motif in the novel: Sophie adopts “Starling” as her nom de guerre in the freelance work she does for powerful men in government, academia and art. She’s hired to find and return art and artifacts that the Nazis have stolen. Sophie (Lady Sophie, of the manor born) donates her fee from this work to a Viennese woman who runs a women’s shelter for victims of war crimes. It is her small, personal form of justice.

The rare piece of art at the heart of “The Mozart Code” — for which two clients compete to pay an extraordin­ary sum — is the rumoured death mask of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

The real-life mystery surroundin­g the mask intrigued McMillan. “Mozart’s death mask popped up in a Viennese pawnshop in 1947, but it was never authentica­ted, and that mystery informs my narrative,” she said.

In the heady days before pandemic lockdown, in December 2019, McMillan travelled to Vienna and Prague, exploring on foot the two cities that claimed Mozart as their own. “(Mozart) was created in Austria, but it was Prague that celebrated him in his lifetime,” she says. A flâneuse of the first order, she strolled happily through the cobbled streets, scribbling down distinctiv­e sensory detail that would make its way into the narrative, resulting in vibrant descriptio­ns that make reading “The Mozart Code” an immersive experience.

Her narrative also includes characters that devoted McMillan readers have met before — Simon Barrington, for instance, first appeared in “The London Restoratio­n,” which McMillan says is a companion novel to this one.

She recalled that, when writing “The London Restoratio­n,” Barrington insisted on his presence, as some of her characters are wont to do. He arrived in her imaginatio­n as “one of the talented nerds who worked at Bletchley Park … (When he) sat down at the Savoy for tea, his whole back story arrived with him.” She hears, she said, many of her characters quite clearly. “It often feels that I’m taking dictation from them.”

Here in “The Mozart Code,” Simon sheds his family name because it has burdened him with the lifelong cruelty of his stepfather, Charles, who has always resented Simon’s existence. McMillan explained that the stakes for Simon are personally high because “he is a man with no sense of belonging who will radically alter his self-image when he discovers who his true father is.” His personal struggles take a back seat, however, when he is tasked with pursuing members of the fictional “Eternity,” a well-organized, clandestin­e ring of Soviet sympathize­rs who are spreading a communist agenda throughout Cold War Europe.

Even though during the COVID-19 lockdown writing “often felt like breaking through thick ice,” McMillan said, “Sophie and Simon were my lockdown buddies. I’d look up and expect them to be there in the room with me.” But lockdown also gave her insight into her own needs as a writer. “I know I need to be part of a writing community even if it’s only virtual for now; I try to approach everything from a place of gratitude as I look forward to returning to my local coffee shop, and to libraries and to travelling for research. I want to be conscious of making the most of it all.”

McMillan knows first-hand the popularity of historical fiction — you’ll know her for her Herringfor­d and Watts Mysteries set in Edwardian Toronto, and the Van Buren and DeLuca Mysteries set in 1930s Boston. She believes one of the reasons historical fiction is so popular is because “it allows us to see the best versions of ourselves as the characters overcome baffling adversity. We see ordinary people rising to challenges and we can understand how that might feel.”

She hopes that by reading “The Mozart Code,” “people are inspired to learn more about the histories of Vienna and Prague and that it will empower them to realize that beauty is everywhere.”

 ?? KERSTIN JOENSSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ??
KERSTIN JOENSSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
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Rachel McMillan, Thomas Nelson, 368 pages, $21.99
The Mozart Code Rachel McMillan, Thomas Nelson, 368 pages, $21.99

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