Authors: Dan Poblocki
Wel … that’s probably true.”
Abigail stood up. “Mr. Hesselius …”
Abigail stood up. “Mr. Hesselius …”
Timothy’s nerves suddenly tied themselves up
again. “We’re here because we’re trying to nd
out what happened when your father was …
sent away. We spent the morning at the col ege
library researching as much as possible about
him. Timothy accidental y stumbled upon his
old o ce. Gavin, the librarian, said he’d shown
you around the place a couple of months ago.
Is that true?”
The old man was quiet for several seconds.
T im othy could hear his own heartbeat
drumming in his ears. Way to get right to the
point, Abigail, he thought.
“Now, now,” said Jack, impressed, glancing
at Timothy. “You’ve got yourself a sassy
girlfriend.”
“She’s not my—” Timothy started, but Jack
interrupted.
“It’s true. I read in the papers about the
reappearance of my father’s belongings.” He
paused. “Why are you so interested? What’s so
important that you’d spend your Saturday
important that you’d spend your Saturday
morning at the library?”
“It’s hard to explain,” said Timothy.
“I real y shouldn’t talk about it. My lawyer
…”“Mr. Hesselius—” Abigail said.
“Please, Hesselius was my father,” said the
old man. “I’m Jack.” He sighed and nodded.
“To answer your question, yes, the librarian
was kind enough to al ow me access to the
room.”
Abigail leaned forward. “Did you nd
anything important?” she said slowly, as if her
questions might scare him away. “Anything
your father wouldn’t have wanted anyone to
know about?”
Jack snorted in surprise. “What are you
get ing at?”
Abigail started to reach into her back pocket.
Timothy’s mouth went dry. She pul ed out the
three basebal cards. Timothy clutched at the
kitchen table. “Do these look familiar?” She got
kitchen table. “Do these look familiar?” She got
up and crossed to the oven.
“Where did you get …?” Jack was stunned.
“Did you take those from the o ce?” Without
hesitation, Abigail handed the cards to the old
man.
“Not to keep,” she said. “Just for …
reference.”
Jack’s hands shook as he examined the
players’ faces. “Carlton Quigley. Bucky Jenkins.
Leroy Fromm.” He looked up. “The Diamond
Stars. These guys were Daddy’s favorites. He
used to take me to games in Boston. I actual y
saw them play. These cards were very
important to him. His pride and joy. I could
never forget these,” he said, his voice shaking
with emotion. “Thank you for bringing them
back to me.”
Very quietly, Abigail answered, “You’re
welcome.”
Jack’s reaction to the cards made Timothy
feel safe again. The old man looked truly
happy. Timothy stood up and said, “The cards
happy. Timothy stood up and said, “The cards
were in a frame. The frame blocked a safe built
into a bookshelf. Gavin said the safe was
locked.”
Jack smiled. “Until I got there, it was,” he
said. Abigail glanced at Timothy, confused.
“These cards are more than just cards. They’re a
clue my father left me a long time ago. It took
me forever to gure it out. But the discovery of
that room in the library certainly helped. I
never even knew about it until I read about it.
Pity they kept it sealed up al these years. So
much wasted time.”
“A clue?” said Timothy. “What kind of clue?”
“When I saw the frame, I was able to nal y
gure it out,” said the old man. “Each player
has a number on his jersey. First, second, third
base. Jenkins, Quigley, Fromm. The safe’s
combination.”
Timothy tried to keep his voice even as he
said, “So the safe wasn’t empty?”
“Of course, my lawyer would kil me for
tel ing this to anyone…. But you kids look like
tel ing this to anyone…. But you kids look like
you can keep a secret,” Jack whispered. “Am I
right?” Without hesitation, Timothy and Abigail
both nodded. “It was my father’s journal,” he
added.
“Your father’s journal was in the safe?” said
Abigail.
“I slipped it into my coat pocket when that
librarian wasn’t looking,” said Jack. “No one
ever suspects the old man.” He winked. “We
get away with so much.”
“What was in the journal?” Timothy asked.
“Proof,” said Jack simply. “That my father
was as human as the next. He was no monster.
He loved me. He was distraught about Fred, my
twin brother, who was kil ed in the war. I
didn’t serve. I’m not yel ow or anything. Got
the at feet. It was a di cult time for me back
then. People can be cruel.” He shuddered, then
continued. “The book was l ed with pages
upon pages of how much my brother and I
meant to him, how much he missed Fred, what
he would give if only he could have changed
he would give if only he could have changed
things.” The old man stared at the oor. “I
would have done anything to make him happy
again. I’ve spent most of my life fol owing in
his footsteps. Studying what he studied.
Learning what he knew. Finding that journal
changed everything….”
“The journal didn’t mention anything else?”
asked Abigail. Timothy knew what she wanted
to ask. But how could they possibly bring up
the Chaos Tribe, the trial, and Delia’s resting
place without seeming crazy themselves, or at
least total y insensitive?
“See it for yourself,” said Jack, grappling his
walker’s handles and shu ing the metal frame
toward the kitchen door. “I think Jenny, my
nurse, put the book in the upstairs of ice. I can’t
make the stairs, but you’re welcome to go nd
it.”“O-Okay,” said Abigail. She glanced at
Timothy. He nodded. Maybe there was
something in the journal that could take them
to the next step.
to the next step.
Jack led the kids back into the foyer. He
pointed up the stairs. “Al the way to the top.
Door’s the only one in the hal way. I think the
book is on the desk near the window. Bring it
down, would you? I’d like to look at it again
myself.”
Together, Abigail and Timothy climbed the
wide staircase. Each step creaked. At the rst
landing, an entry led to a short hal lined with
closed doors. Timothy glanced up the next set
of stairs. At the top landing, he could see the
open door Jack had mentioned. It must lead to
the room with the octagonal window over the
porch. Timothy had a strange feeling. Why
would an old man in Jack’s condition purchase
a tal house like this? Sure, Jack had mentioned
that his nurse helped him out, but stil , why not
live in an apartment like Abigail’s
grandmother? He scrambled to fol ow Abigail
up the stairs.
Jack cal ed to them, “You make it?” At the
top, Timothy glanced over the railing. The old
top, Timothy glanced over the railing. The old
man waved from the foyer. “It’s a hike. I stil
haven’t been up there,” he said. “Stupid of me
to buy a three-story house at my age, but I just
fel in love with it. It’s nice and quiet at the end
of this street.”
Timothy’s stomach ut ered. Jack had just
answered his question. Weird …
“Jenny said she put the book on the desk,”
Jack cal ed, his voice growing faint as Timothy
moved away from the railing and fol owed
Abigail into the large empty room. “Do you see
it?”Bare wooden beams held up the violently
pitched roof. The wal s slanted al the way to
the oor—raw, dusty planks. The desk sat
underneath the window. Abigail stopped in
front of it.
“Is it there?” Timothy whispered.
Abigail shook her head. She picked
something up and turned around. In her hands
was a familiar book. Timothy froze when he
saw it; his feet stuck to the oor. It was not the
saw it; his feet stuck to the oor. It was not the
notebook Jack had mentioned. He tried to
reach out and take it from her, to see if his eyes
were playing tricks, but he couldn’t even do
that. His arms went dead.
These cards are more than just cards. They’re
a clue my father left me a long time ago.
Looking at the cover of The Clue of the
Incomplete Corpse, he wanted to start laughing,
or crying, or shouting … anything to rid himself
of this dreadful feeling. But he could barely
breathe.
“That looks like the same copy I found in the
museum,” Timothy whispered. “Flip through it.
Find 102, 149, and 203.” Abigail opened the
book. When she reached those pages, the faint
pencil markings made everything clearer. “He
said his father gave him a clue a long time ago.
This book! Hesselius must have somehow
got en a copy. He wrote the names of his
favorite players in it, expecting that his son
would nd the cards in his o ce. Al Jack
needed was their jersey numbers and eld
needed was their jersey numbers and eld
positions to gure out the combination. The
thing was, Jack never found the o ce. He
never learned what his father wanted him to
know … until a couple of months ago.”
“But then where’s the journal …?” Abigail
asked, her voice trailing o as she glanced past
Timothy’s shoulder, her mouth dropping open.
Timothy spun toward the at ic door. To his
horror, Jack stood there wearing a strange
smile. He was no longer hunched and wobbly;
in fact, at his ful height, he looked tal and
strong. He held on to the doorknob, blocking
the only way out. “Right here,” he said. With
his other hand, he revealed a smal leather-
bound book. “Ful of secrets.” Timothy felt
Abigail grab his hand.
Jack reached into his pocket, pul ing out the
three basebal cards. “Earlier this week, after I
dropped my book at the museum, I told you,
Timothy, that you shouldn’t take things that
don’t belong to you. You don’t listen wel .”
Timothy felt his own skin shrink. It was him.
Timothy felt his own skin shrink. It was him.
The shadow man in the museum, and the
locker room … maybe even the man he’d seen
coming out of the Mayfair apartment building.
This was the man with the jawbone, who had
used Abigail’s fear of the Nightmarys to make
her believe this was al her fault. And he was
no ghost.
“Don’t worry, Abigail,” said the old man. “I
was never going to hurt you—a lesson I learned
from my father. I’m not even going to touch
you. Now that you know the truth, now that
you fear the place where your end wil come,
the journey is inevitable. You’l probably just
walk there yourself. Your fear wil be your
guide. And you won’t have Granny to stop it
from happening this time.”
Keeping rm hold of her hand, Timothy
stepped forward. “She has me,” he said as
loudly as he could manage, which wasn’t very
loudly at al .
“Oh, she has you, does she?” the old man
asked, amused. “Wel then, maybe you can go
asked, amused. “Wel then, maybe you can go
with her.” He paused, considering them. “It’s
funny how things work out, don’t you think?”
He stepped backward into the hal way and
closed the door. The lock turned. His footsteps
creaked down the stairs.
36.
Timothy pounded on the door, and Abigail
kicked at it. For almost a minute, they shouted
for Jack to come back up and let them out,
even as Timothy realized how foolish they
were being. As if the old man would real y
change his mind. They leaned against the door,
exhausted and frightened. Timothy spent
several seconds trying not to say “I told you so.”
Final y, Abigail turned to him and said,
“Wel , at least now we know.”
“Now we know?” said Timothy. “Know
what?” He was shocked that Abigail could
sound so mat er-of-fact.
“Everything, pret y much,” she said. “And
when you know stu , you can use it against
people.”
Abigail laid the puzzle pieces out. Jack had
said the cards were a clue his father had given