Mystery of the Sassafras Chair

BOOK: Mystery of the Sassafras Chair
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Mystery of the Sassafras Chair

Alexander Key

To the memory of a very special tree I knew, with curious leaves and scented roots

1

Inquiry

T
IMOR, hurrying across the narrow mountain street to the courthouse, felt as if he was being drawn by an invisible string. This was not an unusual feeling for Timor—his mind worked in odd ways, so that one part of it often made him do things before the other part was quite aware of the reasons. He had never been in the courthouse before, and he hated to enter it now. The ugly old building repelled him like a yawning trap. But the invisible string tugged at him, pulled him up the worn steps, drew him past a knot of farmers in the hall, and left him dangling in a dingy room on the right.

Now that he was here, speech and confidence suddenly deserted him. It was hard enough to face strangers, even when he knew what to say. And at the moment he didn't. Of the three people in the room, not one gave him the assurance he needed.

The two men at the nearer desk merely scowled at him, and went on talking as if he did not exist. The third person, a tall angular woman with a beaked nose, studied him with cold eyes as he approached, then turned as her telephone rang and snatched up the receiver. She was dressed like a man in old corduroy trousers and jacket.

“Sheriff's office,” she announced in a harsh voice.

“Yes, this is Maggie McBane. What's your trouble? Umm … Stop shouting, Henry—I hear you. Yes, I'll send somebody out.”

She slammed down the receiver. “Brad,” she ordered, “take a run over to Henry Shope's place and check on his timber. Somebody's been stealing it.”

The younger of the two men, a stocky fellow with a large jaw and a protruding chin, grunted something as he reached for his hat and strode from the room.

Timor, feeling like a frightened minnow out of water, was aware of the woman's stony blue eyes studying him again. “You want something?” she snapped.

“I—I just wanted to talk to the sheriff,” he began hesitantly.

“My husband's sick. I'm running the office for him. Anything wrong?”

“Not, exactly, ma'am.” Timor swallowed, searching for words. “It—it was something that happened here in the mountains last month, up on Blue Gap Road past the Forks. You see, we have a summer place up there. But we've just got in town, and all we know is what we read in the county paper. We—we have it sent to us down on the coast.”

“Well?”

Timor suddenly wished he had sought information from anyone but this formidable woman. “It—it's about Wiley Pendergrass,” he managed to say. “He lived near us, and took care of the cabin.”

“Oh, him,” Mrs. McBane snorted. “What do you want to know about him?”

Timor fought down his resentment. “Everything you can tell me, ma'am. You see, we were friends. He was one of the best friends I ever had.”

“He must have sold you a real bill of goods, sonny.”

More than ever, Timor regretted his smallness. People treated him as if he were younger than he actually was. He shook his head. “Old Wiley wasn't as bad as he seemed, ma'am.”

“He robbed Nat Battle and put him in the hospital!” she retorted. “Wouldn't you say that was pretty bad?”

“Is there any real proof?” he asked stubbornly. “I mean, did anyone ever find that little box they say he took?”

She frowned irritably. Suddenly she said, “If you read the paper, you ought to know the facts. Why don't you face them? Nat caught the old skinflint in the back of his shop that night. Wiley broke his head, and ran out to his truck. There were plenty of witnesses around, including two deputies who were at the diner next door. They chased Wiley up the valley, and saw him throw the box from his truck just before he crashed. What more proof do you need?”

“The box, ma'am. With everything still in it.”

Her eyes sharpened upon him, ther she shrugged. “We roped off the area and put men to searching. Even had the forest rangers out. But everyone knew what Nathaniel Battle had in that box. Next day the valley road up there was jammed. You can guess what happened. Now, does that satisfy you?”

Timor wet his lips. “No, ma'am. How can you be sure what it was that Wiley threw away?”

“Two good men saw him,” she flung back, her voice rising. “You trying to tell me two experienced deputies can't recognize a bright tin box at fifty feet when they're holding a spotlight right on it? I think, sonny, that you'd better run along and forget about Wiley.”

Timor wished he hadn't come here. “I—I'm sorry I bothered you,” he muttered, and started to turn away.

“Just a minute,” she ordered. “What's your name?”

“It's Timor, ma'am, though I'm usually called Tim. I—I'm Timor Hamilton.”

“Oh. You're that foreign kid Colonel Hamilton adopted?”

“I'm not adopted, ma'am. The colonel is my uncle.”

“You don't say! I thought he'd found you and your sister in the Philippines or some place.”

“No, ma'am—and Odessa isn't my sister. She's my cousin, though we were raised together.”

“You were? Where?”

At her frank curiosity Timor smiled. Some of his resentment faded. She was still formidable, but at least she was honest and human.

“We were raised in Malaya, ma'am. My parents worked in the Orient for the State Department. When—when they were killed by the Communists, Odessa's father retired from the army, and we came over here to live with him.”

She grunted. “So that's how it was. What do you think of America?”

Timor swallowed. Secretly he still found America strange and frightening, and he hated it. It was so big and rushing and cold, and no one had time for anyone else. No one except persons like Wiley, whom others looked down upon. But he couldn't come out and say such things. One had to be diplomatic.

“Everything is so—so different here,” he replied cautiously. “It's hard to get used to it all.”

“H'mm.” She scowled at him. “Maybe that explains it.”

“Ma'am?”

“The way you look and act.”

“My mother was Indonesian—if that's what you mean.”

“So. That's partly it. I've heard your cousin, Odessa, is an artist. Are you one too?”

“I'm trying to learn.”

“You're sure an odd one. And,” she suddenly thrust at him, “you're the first person to come in here and ask questions about Wiley. Why?”

“I explained why, ma'am. He was my friend.”

“I want a better answer than that,” she snapped. “I'm no fool—and you don't look like one, though you may be. You're pretty young.”

Timor clenched his small hands in his jeans and glanced uneasily around. The remaining man at the other desk was watching him, and slowly chewing a match. The man had pale eyes in a flat, expressionless face. Something about the pale eyes brought a prickling at the back of his neck.

“When you know a person well,” he told her, “you know there are certain things he won't do. It's like knowing water won't run uphill.”

She snorted. “If you're so sold on Wiley, you'd better go talk to Nathaniel Battle.”

“Yes, ma'am. I intend to.”

Again he started to leave, but she said, “Wait. Didn't you tell me you'd just got in town?”

“Yes, ma am.”

“You haven't been to your cabin yet?”

“No, ma'am. We had to shop first. Odessa's at the market now.” He looked at her curiously, but she dismissed him with a frown and turned to her phone as it rang again.

Timor went out and crossed the street slowly, wondering what was in her mind. Something wasn't right.

Around the corner he caught the flash of Odessa's green dress. She was heading for their station wagon with a sack in each arm. He hastened to catch up with her, and took one of the sacks.

“Timmy!” she exclaimed, seeing the look on his face. “What in the world have you been doing?”

“Asking some questions.”

“And you got the wrong answers. You look
tida senang.

“I can't help it. I feel
tida senang
—about everything.”

She wrinkled her nose at him, concerned. She also was a small person, very slender and dark. Though her mother had been French, she was so much like Timor in many ways that she might have been his sister. No one would have guessed she was half again his age.

Without realizing it, they began talking rapidly in the simple Malay they had learned before English—discussing old Wiley, arguing about him, and going over what Tim had heard in the courthouse. They were interrupted by Odessa's father, who appeared suddenly behind them and tossed a shopping bag into the car beside her painting equipment.

“Will you two stop yapping that jargon and use English?” he grumbled. “You're like a pair of natives. Can't you ever remember you're in America?” The sound of Malay, which he had never learned, always irritated the colonel. He was a gaunt, gruff man, a professional soldier who had spent more years on distant firing lines than at quiet posts of duty. Odessa, who hardly remembered her mother, was still almost a stranger to him.

“Yes, Daddy,” she said meekly. “Did you get your trout flies and your license?”

He nodded and crawled into the wagon. “Let's go. I'd like to do a little fishing before dark.”

They slipped into the front seat beside him. Odessa said, “You may not have much time for fishing. The place will be a mess. Don't forget Wiley isn't there to have everything aired out and ready for us.”

The colonel grunted and started the motor. He drove slowly through town. “Weren't you yammering about Wiley when I came up?” he asked. “I thought I heard his name mentioned.”

“I was telling Dessa about going to the sheriff's office,” Timor admitted. “I—I was sort of hoping they'd learned something new.”

“Are you trying to make a fool of yourself?” his uncle grumbled. “Why can't you accept the truth of what happened and forget about Wiley?”

“I can't help how I feel, Uncle Ira.”

“Nonsense! You can't go through life just feeling your way along.”

“Timmy's like Nani,” said Odessa, speaking of Timor's mother. “She believed in her feelings. In all the years she was taking care of me after Mother died, I never knew her to be wrong about something.”

The colonel shook his head. “You've lived in the East too long. Good grief, everybody knows what Wiley was like! In and out of jail on liquor charges. And light-fingered …”

“He never stole anything from us,” Timor insisted.

“Hmp! He was always borrowing money he never repaid. Talked me out of a hundred dollars last fall before we left. I'll never see
that
again.”

Timor hid his smile. Old Wiley had certainly had a tongue. “Oh, he'd have paid it back in some way, if he'd lived.”

“Well, he's gone now,” snapped his uncle, “and it's all over. So let's forget it.”

It was impossible for Timor to forget Wiley. And it wasn't over. He knew this with a certainty that was beyond explanation. In his mind, old Wiley was still alive, and as full of cackle and chatter as ever. Oh, the flesh and bones were dead, but, as Nani had often told him, the real you isn't your flesh and bones. The real you never dies …

Beyond the town the station wagon gathered speed, and moved swiftly through a winding valley walled with high blue mountains. They were at the Forks almost before Timor realized it.

As they crossed the bridge where two rushing streams came together, Timor looked quickly at the cluster of buildings on his right. There was the familiar old country store, with a filling station on one side and a diner on the other. Beyond the diner rose a small new structure of carefully fitted logs that hadn't been there last year.

Over the door of the log building he glimpsed a sign that read: G
O
TO
B
ATTLE FOR
G
EMS
. A battered jeep was parked near the entrance, but no one was in sight.

BOOK: Mystery of the Sassafras Chair
11.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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