good about now. “Evil forces …?”
“
Oskorei
—a group of malevolent spirits that haunted winter-
time skies. Too wicked for heaven, they were doomed to roam for
all eternity. They descended on farms and villages, howling like a blizzard wind and playing cruel tricks.
Oskorei
might defile a year’s worth of new-brewed beer, or run horses until they dropped from
exhaustion, or strike down anyone foolish enough to venture out
alone in the dark of a December night.”
192
Chloe became aware of the wind shoving at the parlor win-
dows as if searching for entrance. At least she assumed it was the wind. Something Emil had said earlier that day popped into her
mind:
In rural Norway, everyone understood that life is a balance of
good and evil, of darkness and light.
“Farm folk did try to protect themselves,” Edwina said. “They
painted crosses on their barns to discourage the demons from
defiling their harvest. They made sure to stable their animals
inside before dusk. They spread straw on the floor of their homes, and everyone slept huddled together for protection. Later, the
straw was made into figures intended to ward away evil.”
Chloe shifted in her chair. There was something disconcerting
about sitting in this spotless parlor with this oh-so-proper old
lady, discussing ancient evils.
“Another legend tells of a terrifying goat-like creature descend-
ing from the sky,” Edwina added, “to punish everyone on the farm
if things weren’t to his liking.”
Oh goodie, Chloe thought. A new twist on the creepy Christ-
mas goat. “Is that story connected to the custom of
julebukking
?”
“Yes indeed. People dressed up and made noise to scare away
the evil ones.”
Maybe I should give
julebukkers
a break, Chloe thought. “And over the years that became something done for just fun—letting
hardworking people blow off steam after getting the autumn har-
vest in.”
“Actually, I don’t believe
julebukking
survived strictly as a remnant of the ancient custom,” Edwina said. “Or even just as some-
thing fun.”
Chloe wasn’t sure where this was going. “Oh?”
193
Edwina seemed to consider her words carefully. “In a small
community, everyone knows everyone else. There are clear expec-
tations about proper behavior. I believe the costumes give people a chance to ignore those expectations and step out of prescribed
roles. Once participants put on masks, they may indulge in forbid-
den behavior. Women wear trousers, for example. Men might feel
free to grab a woman’s hand.”
Chloe pictured the revelers she’d seen as a child, and the group
she’d seen that morning at the café. The participants hadn’t simply donned costumes. They’d taken pains to disguise their identity.
“Times are changing, of course.” Edwina smiled. “Today, peo-
ple are most often reviving a custom, not perpetuating one. That
changes the participants’ motivation entirely. But think of old days in Norway. The rugged landscape isolated rural people. Social
mores were strict. An evening of fooling and role-play must have
been quite liberating.”
The recorder snapped off. Chloe fumbled with the machine.
“Do you have more stories you’d like to share?” She hadn’t even
looked at her own list of questions, but honestly, she’d had her fill for the evening.
Edwina studied her, then shook her head. “I think that’s
enough for now.”
Chloe passed the list of informants to Edwina. “If you think of
anyone else who should be interviewed, you can let Howard
know.”
“Many of the old traditionalists have passed on,” Edwina said.
“Have you talked with Emil Bergsbakken? His family stayed closed
to their roots.”
194
“I’m not sure why the former curator didn’t include him,”
Chloe admitted.
“Emil’s mother and I were close friends. I’m afraid a lot of fam-
ily lore was lost when she died. She was in the family’s farm wagon when the horses bolted—quite tragic. Emil was just a boy, so I
doubt he could tell you much now. None of those Bergsbakken
men were big talkers.” Edwina smiled. “But oh my, carving is in
their genes.”
Chloe envisioned Roelke, happy and relaxed in the classroom.
“Emil’s perpetuating his cultural heritage in his own way.”
“Indeed,” Edwina agreed. “Perhaps I’ll see you this weekend. I’ll
be participating in Vesterheim’s Norwegian Christmas festivities.”
“I’ll look for you.” Chloe packed the recorder away and fol-
lowed her hostess back to the front hall. She stamped into her
boots and pulled on her parka and woolens. “As a gesture of appre-
ciation, may I shovel your front walk?”
“How thoughtful!” Edwina said. “The young man who usually
takes care of it sprained his ankle playing basketball. A UPS driver made it up the driveway this afternoon, but I do hate to leave
things untended. There’s a shovel on the porch.”
Chloe found the shovel and soon had the walkway cleared
from front porch to driveway. For good measure she shoveled a
path to a side door, too—probably the kitchen. The temperature
had dropped into the single digits, but by the time those steps were cleared she was warm from the inside out.
She surveyed the farmyard as she caught her breath. Several
outbuildings showed dark against the snow. The closest was a
small stable, tethered to the house by a rope strung shoulder-
height. People who kept livestock sometimes used ropes like that
195
to guide them to their barns during blizzards. Surely Edwina
didn’t tend animals …? Well, maybe chickens or a barn cat. There
was no harm in clearing a path.
Chloe scooped her way along the rope’s thread-like shadow.
Since Edwina might be watching from a back window, Chloe
didn’t indulge her curiosity and peek inside the stable. But the log structure itself was a find. Superb corner notching argued against hasty construction. Perhaps Edwina’s grandparents had thrown up
a smaller building in haste for whatever animals they could afford, and built this stable later. Chloe let her gaze follow the rise of beams appreciatively, picturing a farmwife eager to embrace the
new world while her husband longed for the old.
Then Chloe saw something that spoke of modern handi-
work—a cross, painted high on the stable’s front wall, visible
because of moonlight reflecting from snow. She remembered what
Edwina had said about terrified rural folk:
They painted crosses on
their barns to discourage the demons from defiling their harvest.
Chloe also remembered Edwina’s stillness when she’d stepped
onto the porch, head tipped as if listening for something …
Edwina reminded me of
me
, Chloe thought suddenly. She
always instinctively paused in old buildings, receptive to any lingering resonance. Edwina’s countenance that night had suggested
something similar.
So. Evidently Edwina’s interest in ancient folklore wasn’t
entirely academic.
Chloe tried to find comfort in the discovery of a kindred soul,
but comfort didn’t appear. Instead, a frozen tree creaked and
groaned as a sharp gust blew through the yard. The temperature
had dropped into the single digits. She suddenly felt quite alone in 196
the world. She imagined a rowdy band of spirits, too wicked for
heaven, swooping down as she stood in foolish solitude in this
farmyard.
OK, she told herself firmly, that’s unlikely.
Then she imagined a killer crouched in nearby shadows,
watching her.
And that’s ridiculous, she told herself even more firmly. Why
on earth would Petra’s killer appear here on a frigid night?
Still …
something
sent an icy fingernail over her skin. Maybe finding a woman who’d been left for dead in an immigrant trunk
was making her jumpy. That was a reasonable response, right? Or
maybe genetic memory was kicking in. Perhaps ancient fears of
these shortest, darkest, coldest days had been passed down to
quiver in her own DNA.
Whatever it was, Chloe decided it was time to head back to
town. She retraced her steps, returned the shovel to the front
porch, started the car, and managed to execute a three-point turn
without getting stuck in a snow bank.
As she started back down the drive, she glanced in the rearview
mirror. Edwina had stepped outside again. Was she watching her
guest depart? Or was she listening for evil spirits destined to roam forever on long winter nights?
197
twenty-one
Since Roelke had walked Chloe to the Rimestad home the
night before, he didn’t have any trouble finding it again. However, he did have trouble making a stealthy approach. He could have
read a newspaper in the glow cast by moonlight on snow. He
paused across the street, considering the house and the separate
garage at the end of the driveway. The ranch house and station
wagon said middle class, lawn decorations spoke of Christian
faith, the neatly shoveled front walk and driveway suggested pride in appearance, attention to safety, or both.
Roelke walked on, not wanting to attract notice. After wander-
ing around the block he approached again. This time he walked on
the near side of the street. Lights glowed from the front room, but the curtains were drawn. He glanced quickly over both shoulders.
There was no way to know if some neighbor happened to be look-
ing out a window, but he didn’t see anyone.
OK, he was going for it. He made a quick turn and walked
down the Rimestads’ driveway. He had absolutely no idea what he
198
hoped to accomplish by prowling about, but he needed to do
something
.
Chloe tried to banish the willies as she drove back into Decorah.
She punched on the car radio and turned the knob until she found
Alabama singing “Christmas in Dixie,” the antithesis of spooky
legends from northern Europe or northern Iowa. She slowed when
driving by some Luther College students pelting each other with
snowballs, and tried to absorb their high spirits. She meditated on Norman Rockwell as she passed twinkling lights on Christmas
trees homeowners had obligingly erected in bay windows. The cul-
tural phantoms that had emerged during her visit with Edwina
Ree began to fade.
Unfortunately they were replaced not with Christmas cheer,
but a melancholy of modern origin. The last conversation she’d
had with Roelke elbowed its way to the front of her mind. Cliff
Notes version: he thought she was a quitter.
This is what comes from dating, Chloe thought. You open
yourself up to someone, start to get comfortable with someone,
and
wham
. She tried to mentally compose the insightful, articu-late, and pithy response that had failed to emerge on that wooded
hill above Emil’s farm.
That response still didn’t come. And as Chloe turned onto
Water Street, she realized why: Roelke had been right.
“Well, shit,” she muttered, forcing herself to consider the situa-
tion with an open mind. Honestly, it was not entirely her fault that 199
her rosemaling class had turned into a fiasco. Mom was uptight
and demanding and distant.
But, Chloe thought, I
have
already concluded failure. I’ve been going through the motions and whining
Poor me, poor me
, to Roelke every day. It was not a pretty picture.
When she passed Vesterheim, she impulsively pulled over.
Lights shone from the Education Center. Several other cars were
parked nearby. It was only 9:30. At least a few industrious students were up in the classrooms.
Chloe lifted her chin. OK. She was going to join them.
On the third floor, all six of Sigrid’s students were at work. In
her own room, Chloe found five students bent over their projects.
Gwen grinned as Chloe sat down. “Hey, Chloe! I didn’t expect to
see you this evening.”
“I wanted to see if I could catch up.” Chloe regarded her tray
dubiously. No freaking
way
could she catch up—but, no; that was not the right attitude. “At least a little,” she amended.
“Let me know if you get stuck,” Gwen said. “Your mom usually
stays late, but she said she and Sigrid were visiting friends this evening.”
Chloe peeled plastic wrap from her palette. “You’ve been busy,”
she observed. Gwen had been painting Christmas ornaments cut
from thin plywood. A dozen bells, stars, and trees were lined up to dry.
“They’re fun to paint.” Gwen gestured toward a pile of blank
ornaments. “Help yourself if you want to try something different. I know you’re not enjoying the class project.”
200
Chloe sighed. Did everyone in Decorah know how much fun
she was
not
having in class? Evidently. She dredged up her most chipper smile. “Thanks, Gwen, but I’ll stick to the tray.”
She approached it with grim resolve. At least Mom’s written
instructions were clear and thorough. And without Mom on hand
to interrupt, criticize, or speed the class along, Chloe found herself—astonishingly—making tentative progress.
An hour or so later a policeman stuck his head in the door.
“You two OK? I’ve been through the building, and the doors are
locked.”
“Thanks,” Gwen called. She began cleaning her supplies. “I’m