Authors: Dan Poblocki
“Maybe you heard her wrong.”
“Yeah … maybe. I don’t think she wanted me
listening. So did you start the history project
yet?”
Timothy held his face in his hands.
Something strange was going on here. Randy’s
story was an echo of Stuart’s claims from the
side of the pool last night.
Out of the corner of his eye, Timothy noticed
Abigail slinking down the aisle toward her desk
in the back of the classroom. Her eyes were
pu y. She looked as though she hadn’t slept at
al the night before either.
Moments later, Mr. Crane entered. He too
looked strange. His but on-down shirt was a
lit le wrinkled and his swol en eyes looked
worried and anxious, like he wanted the period
to be over as quickly as possible.
Mr. Crane began the class by asking the
students which artifact from the museum each
pair had chosen for their project. Timothy
listened as his classmates rat led o their
answers. Distracted, Mr. Crane kept glancing at
answers. Distracted, Mr. Crane kept glancing at
the shelves where the glass specimen jars sat.
Suddenly, Timothy realized something. Mr.
Crane had been in the basement of the museum
too, just after Timothy had seen the golden
idols stare at him. If Timothy had seen some
strange things the night before, and Abigail
looked like she hadn’t slept as wel , maybe
something had happened to al of them down
there? Something that was keeping them up at
night. Making them see things. Just like Stuart.
Timothy heard Abigail cal out their chosen
artifact from the back of the room. “The Edge
of Doom painting,” she said. Mr. Crane half-
smiled and moved on to Kimberly Mitchel . But
Timothy kept looking at Abigail. Her
grandmother had been in the basement with
them as wel . He wondered if she had been
seeing things since then too.
The old woman had a strange name, didn’t
she? What was it again? It had been stuck in
Timothy’s brain al night long, but now he
couldn’t seem to grasp it. “Z” something. Zelda?
couldn’t seem to grasp it. “Z” something. Zelda?
No. Not Zelda.
Zilpha.
Zilpha Kindred.
Timothy felt a jolt rush through his body, and
he dropped his pencil on the oor. Scrambling
to pick it up again, he only kicked it farther
into the aisle.
Kindred, he thought. Her last name is
Kindred, like the author of The Clue of the
Incomplete Corpse.
Obviously, here was the connection. But what
did it mean? Could Abigail’s grandmother
possibly have something to do with what had
happened at the museum yesterday morning
and at the gymnasium last night?
“Okay,” said Mr. Crane. “We’ve had enough
fun for now.” The class col ectively groaned.
“Please open your textbooks to chapter seven.”
On the board, he wrote Pre-Colonial America.
Timothy tore a piece of paper from his
notebook. He quickly jot ed a note, folded it
notebook. He quickly jot ed a note, folded it
up, and turned toward Abigail. He dropped the
folded paper on the oor and swiftly kicked it
in Abigail’s direction.
Before she had a chance to lean over and
pick it up, Mr. Crane said, “Mr. July, would
you please bring that to the front of the class?”
As Timothy stood up, his stomach felt like it
was l ed with a big chunk of ice. Abigail bent
over and picked up the note. With a surprising
look of pity, she handed it to him.
Mr. Crane folded his arms across his chest.
“Wel ?”
Reluctantly, Timothy stepped forward to the
large desk in front of the long green
chalkboard. “What has come over you these
past couple days?” the teacher whispered.
Timothy could feel the eyes of his class
whispering across his back. “Dunno,” he
mumbled.
“Go on, then.” Mr. Crane nodded at the note
in Timothy’s hand. “Let’s hear it.”
in Timothy’s hand. “Let’s hear it.”
Timothy knew he could just make something
up, but if Mr. Crane saw the writing from over
his shoulder, everything would be worse,
because then the class would know he’d been
lying. “Abigail, I real y need to talk to you
about your grandmother.”
“Ah-ah-ah, Mr. July,” said Mr. Crane. “Slow
down. We couldn’t hear you. Again, please.”
Red-faced, Timothy read the note again, this
time so everyone could hear. “Abigail, I real y
need to talk to you about your grandmother.”
The laughter was immediate and
overwhelming.
Mr. Crane said, “I’ve got a lit le project for
you. Meet me after school, Mr. July. No later
than ve minutes past the last bel . Right here.”
He glanced nervously at the shelves again.
“Now, class, chapter seven …”
Ashamed, Timothy slipped into his seat.
Seconds later, from the corner of the room, he
could feel Abigail Tremens looking at him. He
couldn’t bring himself to look back.
15.
Timothy sleepwalked through the rest of the
day. He was standing at his locker, just after the
last bel had rung, wondering what project Mr.
Crane had in mind for his detention, when he
felt a hand on his shoulder. He jumped and
spun around, embarrassed.
Abigail was standing behind him. “Sorry
about what happened with that note,” she said.
“I wasn’t quick enough.”
“S’okay,” said Timothy. “I only came up with
the idea to eat it after I’d read it in front of the
whole stupid class.”
To his surprise, Abigail laughed. “Oh my
God, I would’ve paid to see you do that.”
Timothy shrugged. “Next time, then.”
She laughed again, but a second later, her
face quickly changed. “So … um … what was
that about my grandmother?” She drew her
that about my grandmother?” She drew her
eyebrows close together and somehow
managed to repossess that ability to look inside
him.
“I—I…,” Timothy stammered, trying to nish
his sentence. “I’m going to be late.”
“Late for what?”
“For my detention with Mr. Crane.”
“We could talk after your detention. I’m
staying in my grandmother’s apartment for a
while. You could, like, come over if you want?”
“I could do that. Sure.”
“Good,” said Abigail. “I could actual y use
your help with something.”
“Real y? With what?”
She shook her head. “It’s sort of
complicated.”
On a scrap of paper, Abigail quickly wrote
down her grandmother’s address and handed it
to him.
Mr. Crane was waiting for Timothy, leaning
against the chalkboard, staring at the side wal .
He barely glanced at Timothy as he came
through the door. “You’re late,” he said.
“Sorry,” Timothy answered. His teacher
continued to stare at the shelves on the side of
the room. The specimen jars rested there, silent
and unassuming as always. “Uh, Mr. Crane,”
Timothy said, “what do you want me to do?”
Mr. Crane nal y turned to look at him,
pul ed away from the sight of the specimens, as
if from a dream. “I …” He cleared his throat. “I
need you to take those jars out of here.”
Timothy inched. “Where do you want me to
take them?”
“I don’t care,” said Mr. Crane. “They don’t
belong in this classroom. I don’t know why
they’ve lasted as long as they have.” He pointed
out the window. “Take them outside to the
Dumpster,” he said, slipping into his corduroy
jacket. He clutched his leather briefcase under
his arm. “Just close the door when you’re
his arm. “Just close the door when you’re
done.”
“Wait a second,” said Timothy. “You’re
leaving?”
Mr. Crane wiped his forehead with the back
of his hand. “I’m sorry, Timothy. I haven’t been
feeling wel . I trust you’l be ne alone.” He
headed toward the door.
Before his teacher slipped away entirely,
Timothy looked at the specimen jars one more
time. “Mr. Crane?” he said.
The teacher stopped in the doorway, but he
didn’t turn around. “Yes, Timothy?” he
answered stif ly.
“Why do you real y want to get rid of the
jars?”
“I’m sorry?”
“Why now?”
Mr. Crane turned around. His eyes were wide
with some sort of secret. “Why now? I told you,
they do not belong here.”
Timothy remembered the black eyebal he’d
Timothy remembered the black eyebal he’d
seen two days ago, staring at him through the
dusty glass. Staring or dead—it had been
impossible to tel the dif erence at the time.
“Did you see something?” said Timothy,
almost a whisper.
“Excuse me?”
“In the jars. Did you see something?” This
time, he said it more loudly.
“See something? Like what?”
“I don’t know. Something scary.”
The teacher opened his mouth to speak, but
al that came out was a harsh crackling sound.
After Mr. Crane was gone, Timothy dragged the
closest desk toward the wal . He climbed on
top of it and, shuddering, removed the
specimens from the shelves.
In the closet behind Mr. Crane’s desk,
Timothy found an empty cardboard box.
Working quickly, he placed the jars in the box,
looking away every time he found a specimen
looking away every time he found a specimen
that was especial y heavy or clearly visible
through the liquid.
Something in these jars had scared Mr. Crane
yesterday. What had he seen?
There was a connection between al of these
events. Too many pieces of this strange puzzle
had matching edges.
The box was ful . Every jar t inside.
Straining, Timothy lifted the box and headed to
the parking lot. Outside, the garbage bin was as
high as Timothy was tal . The lid was open, but
as Timothy stood there, he realized that he
couldn’t toss the box inside. As disgusting as
some of these creatures appeared to be, he felt
weird throwing them in the garbage. Besides,
the box was simply too heavy. Timothy placed
it on the ground, then quickly made the sign of
the cross. “May you rest in peace,” he
whispered. It seemed right.
With a nod, he turned away and headed
toward the address Abigail had scrawled on the
piece of paper in his pocket.
16.
The apartment building was sixteen stories tal
—the tal est building in the neighborhood.
Made of pale blond stone, it stood on the crest
of Shut er Avenue, south of the bridge.
Timothy slowly made his way through the
front garden, staring up at the building. Lots of
windows. Lots of curtains. The front doors were
made of black iron lace. Inlaid into the stone
over the entrance were dark marble words: THE
MAYFAIR. As Timothy reached out to take the
handle, the door swung inward. A man stood
just inside the lobby. “Mi amigo, who are you
here to see?”
“Umm … I’m here for Abigail.”
“Abigail?”
“She’s uh … staying with her grandmother?
Mrs. Kindred?”
He was delivered by the elevator to a smal
hal way with three large black doors, one of
which was marked 16B. Abigail’s place.
As he approached, he heard a dog barking.
Then came Abigail’s voice: “Hepzibah! No!”
Footsteps. The doorknob turned, and there she
was, wearing a sad smile and an oversized blue
artist smock. At her feet, a smal gray dog