An Acquaintance with Darkness (22 page)

BOOK: An Acquaintance with Darkness
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Myra had promised everyone dead bodies. Where they expected to find them, I did not know. But I could not have refused to come along, or it would have looked as if I had something to hide.

If some other professor had "subjects" in his lab, I didn't know. I would have liked, somehow, to get in touch with Robert. But as luck would have it, this morning he had succeeded, after persistent tries, in getting aboard the ironclad
Montauk,
which was anchored in the Potomac alongside the
Saugus.
Both housed the male prisoners in the conspiracy. Robert was to see to the conditions of the ships and the health of the prisoners.

I followed the others reluctantly along the quiet paths of the college. Up ahead, Jason and Myra seemed to know where they were going. We went through a grove of trees, down some stone steps, through a sort of dingy tunnel, and then came to a courtyard below the street level.

On the ground lay a ladder. Immediately Jason set it up against the old brick building. The girls gathered around,
ooh
ing and
aah
ing and asking silly questions.

"Where are the bodies? Inside?"

"Who told you they were here?"

"You mean, if we climb up that ladder we'll be able to see them?"

"Will they be cut up?"

"Will they be men or women?"

"Will they be naked?"

That, of course, started a whole other set of conjectures. Who had seen a naked man? Who wanted to? Giggles and whisperings. Then silence as Jason removed his coat and climbed the ladder while Myra held it.

The girls stood around bug-eyed, watching him make his ascent to the second floor. I stood back, blinking in the warm May sunlight dappled by lacy trees overhead. Birds sang. The sky was as innocent as a newborn's eyes. From above the wall of the courtyard could be heard street sounds, carriages passing by, people talking. Yet we were sealed off here. No one could see us.

Jason stopped climbing and peered into the window.

"Well?" Myra called up softly. "Can you see anything?"

"I sure can."

"Was my daddy right?"

"He sure was."

"What do you see?"

"Two of them," Jason reported. His voice sounded a little weak. "Lying on tables. Covered with sheets. All I can see are the faces. Men, I think."

"Don't say another word," Myra ordered coldly. "Come down this instant!"

Jason climbed back down, then held the ladder for Myra. She got onto the first step, then smirked over her shoulder at me. "Do you know whose classroom that is up there?" she asked.

"I have no idea," I said. "I've never been here before."

"It's your uncle Valentine's."

"You're lying, Myra. You just don't know what to do anymore to make yourself important. I don't know whose laboratory that is, but I do know that if you don't get everybody out of here soon, we can all get into trouble."

"Trouble?" She was climbing the ladder, unafraid. "We aren't the ones in trouble." Then she stopped and peered in. "Oh, my God." She groaned.

"What, what?" the girls on the ground called up. "Tell us, what do you see?"

"Two men, just like Jason said. Dead. Oh, my God, I was right. My daddy was right. I have to tell him." She scrambled down.

On the ground she was immediately surrounded by the other girls, all asking to be next climbing up the ladder. "Wait, wait," she said. Her face was white. She looked at me. "I'm not lying. I swear to you, Emily, there are dead men up there. And it's your uncle's classroom. My daddy knows it is. I've been here in this courtyard with him before. He's pointed it out to me."

"If it is," I said, "any specimens they have up there are legal. Donated. Or executed prisoners. And you've got no right poking around here today. Nor did your father."

She looked dazed and thrilled with herself all at the same time. "Listen, everybody," she said breathlessly. "My father talked to Dr. Bransby two weeks ago. Because he got wind of the fact that Bransby had two dead burn victims shipped in from that riverboat explosion on the Mississippi. There were victims of that tragedy missing. Their relatives were looking for them. And somebody told them about my daddy and how he was investigating grave robbers."

She paused breathlessly and met my eyes, then continued.

"My daddy was in this very laboratory talking with Dr. Bransby. The doctor invited him in and showed him around. At that time he said there were no dead burn victims. That he had no more legitimate specimens because the semester was at an end. Well, what I just saw wasn't live people. And their faces had burns."

"Lies," I hissed. I made my way through the other girls and stood toe-to-toe with Myra. "Lies. How do we know this isn't all a trick? That maybe your daddy told you those relatives of the victims got in touch with him, and you made the rest up to feed your need for excitement? How do we know there really are dead bodies up there?"

I don't know where I got those words. I was trembling. They just tumbled out of me. But they sounded good. And they fit the occasion.

Myra tossed her head back, raised her chin haughtily. "Why don't you climb up the ladder and see?" she challenged.

Silence. I heard street sounds. Birds chirping. They sounded far away.

Myra's eyes glittered. "Well? Are you afraid? The others are all going to do it. Do you want them telling you? Or do you want to see for yourself?"

"I'll do it," I said. And slowly, I began to climb the ladder.

First rung.
She's lying. When I get up there, I'll tell her so.

Second rung.
Robert invited me to come and see if there were any bum victims here.

Third rung.
He said there were not only no bum victims here but no dead bodies. That they'd all been disposed of because it was the end of the semester.

Fourth rung.
He promised that he'd brought live bum victims back from the accident.

Fifth rung.
I believe Robert. He wouldn't lie to me. Johnny lied to me. Not Robert.

I was level with the window now. I stopped and looked in.

"Well?" Myra was calling up from below. "Well?"

"Tell us," the other girls were saying, "tell us what you see."

The faces were horribly burned. You could scarcely make out the features. The hair was singed. One man had an ear missing. Their cheeks were sunken in, like Abraham Lincoln's must have been when he got to New York City after having been dragged around for a week. Their bodies were wound in sheets. And they lay there as if they were sleeping.

I felt sick. It seemed as if the ladder swayed. But Jason was holding it steady.

"Why would I bring back dead people, Emily?" I heard Robert asking.

Oh, Robert!
A sob formed inside me, a great heaving sob.

I wanted to die. I wanted to be lying on that table instead of those men. "No!" I screamed. "No, Robert, no!"

"Get down, Emily." Myra's voice. Then Jason's urging me down.

Then another sound. A whistle and a cry. "You there! What are you kids doing down there in that courtyard?"

"God's teeth," Jason mumbled. "A guard. You told me they were all elsewhere. My God, if I get caught ... I can't get caught. I can't get in trouble. Or it'll be the end of Annapolis for me."

"Let's get out of here!" Myra cried. "Come on, everybody, he's on the hill above the steps. There's a door over there. And steps to the street. I went that way with my daddy. Come on!" Her voice was hoarse, yelling it.

They ran. "Come on, Emily!" Melanie yelled.

The ladder was unsteady. Nobody was holding it. It jiggled and I nearly fell. But somehow I made it to the second bottom rung and jumped.

The ladder fell crashing to the ground. I ran. Out of the corner of my eye I saw the guard running through the tunnel toward me. I followed the others across the courtyard, through the door in the wall, and up the steps to the street.

20. Along Came a Spider

T
HERE IS NO FEELING
in the world worse than betrayal. I felt cheated, laughed at, shut out of the lives of all around me.

I went home. Maude was there, puttering in the kitchen.

"Well, where were you? Your uncle won't be home this night. I thought I'd just serve leftovers."

"All right," I said, "but I have to go out a little later, on an errand. I'll be home about six." I went to my room. There was so much to do and not enough time.

First I had to decide what I was taking with me and what I was leaving behind. I stood in the center of my blue-and-white room. I wanted to take everything and I wanted to take nothing.

I would take nothing that Uncle Valentine had given me, I decided. Not clothes, books, or even food. I would buy food before I got on the train. I would take nothing from anybody in this house. I would go to Aunt Susie's in Richmond as poor as I'd been when I'd come here.

Except the cat. I'd take Sultana. Because it was as plain as the nose on your face that he couldn't live without me, poor thing. And already he'd been kicked around from pillar to post, worse than a freedman.

Only, first I'd change his name. Sultana was a girl's name and he was a boy. What would I call him then, Sultan? No, it had to be far removed from the name Robert had given him.

No, don't think of Robert.

I threw some things into a portmanteau.
Oh, Lordy,
I thought,
if I go to Richmond I won't be able to finish at Miss Winefred Martin's.
And there would go my daddy's money. What would my daddy have said?
Miss Muffet had been frightened away.
I felt a great sadness cut through me at the thought of Daddy. And another for Mrs. McQuade. "There was one I thought had so much promise," she'd say. "You never can tell." I'd disappoint her. Well. How many people had disappointed me?

I ran around my room throwing things into that portmanteau. All the while I tried out names on Sultana, who was sitting in the middle of my bed watching.

"Arnold," I said. "How would you like to be called Arnold?"

He blinked at me.

"Look, it's not after Benedict Arnold or anything. I just thought it had a nice solid ring to it. Well then, what about Sad Stock? It's a new plant Marietta got for her garden."

He licked his paw, feigning disinterest.

"No, you don't look sad enough. Maybe I'll call you Custer. You know, he's the boy general and he has long blond curls. Don't like that? Too dandified for you? Well then, what about Ulysses? Nothing dandified about him."

I decided on Ulysses. Maybe when I got to Richmond I'd change my name, too. No more Emily Pigbush. I'd start over when I got there, new name and everything.

After I finished packing I went under my bed, where I'd hidden the twenty gold pieces from Johnny. I took two out of the little velvet sack. That ought to be enough for a ticket to Richmond and a wire to Aunt Susie. I knew she was still at the same address. Hadn't she written to Uncle Valentine, "This is my home. Here I shall stay. Richmond will re-build"? So what if Richmond was a mess now? I'd thought I was safe coming
here.

And what did it get me? Two dead bodies lying on a table, and Myra Mott snickering up the ladder at me. My uncle was a body snatcher. How could I show my face back at school? That was what trusting people and wanting to be safe got you. I'd gone from the frying pan into the fire.

Oh, I couldn't bear the thought of it. Every time I closed my eyes I saw those two dead bodies on that table. And heard Robert's voice. "Why would I be bringing back dead people, Emily?"

How could I have let Robert sweet-talk me out of my suspicions? Oh, what a simpleton he must think me to be! My face burned with the shame of it. And what about Uncle Valentine? How many times had my suspicions been aroused against him? And always I'd found an excuse for him. He'd helped Annie. He'd given me a home. He had warm brown eyes and his voice healed me.

Well, I wasn't healed now. I was betrayed, naked, and used. I felt like those bodies on the table. Like my face was all burned off.

***

First I went to the telegraph office and wired Aunt Susie. I told her I would be down to see her in a couple of days. Then I went to the railroad station and purchased a ticket. Both errands took me the rest of the afternoon.

I would leave tomorrow morning, early, before Maude even got here. Uncle Valentine wouldn't be home from Baltimore until tomorrow evening. I'd leave a note for Maude saying I'd been invited to have breakfast with Mrs. McQuade. By the time they missed me I'd be halfway there. Then, once in Richmond, I'd wire Uncle Valentine and tell him I was staying with Aunt Susie.

I felt a mite better walking home. I was filled with a sense of purpose and determination. I'd go home and grab a plate of food from the kitchen and take it to my room. Tell Maude not to bother with supper. I'd help myself. She'd be glad of it, an evening off.

There were just two more things I had to do first.

"What do you
mean,
you're leaving?" Annie stood in the open doorway of her mother's house, her hair disheveled, her sleeves rolled up, and white flour on her hands and arms.

"Tomorrow. On the ten o'clock train to Richmond. I have to leave, Annie. I can't live in that house anymore. Something bad has happened."

Her eyes darkened. "It's Robert, isn't it? You've been seeing a lot of him. He hasn't been playing free with you, has he? You're not in trouble?"

"Oh, God, Annie, no."

"Well, what else could be so bad?"

I stepped inside the hall. Immediately I felt dizzy. Memories can do that to you, make you dizzy. It was all too familiar—the textures, the light, the smells. "It smells good in here," I said.

"I'm baking," she said. "Come into the kitchen."

"Are you having company?"

"No. I'm baking to keep from going insane."

We sat in the kitchen. She reheated some coffee and gave me a cup, then went back to kneading her bread. "Now tell me," she said.

"You must promise not to tell anyone."

"Oh, in heaven's name, Emily, who would I tell? Who talks to me?"

"Well, you were right. About Uncle Valentine. He is stealing bodies."

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