Authors: Zilpha Keatley Snyder
“Hated her?” Neely asked. “Why would they hate her?”
Curtis shrugged. “I don’t know. Carmen says that Monica’s nanny said it was because the grown-ups liked her best. Especially their grandfather who had all the money liked her best, so she always got all the best stuff.” He grinned and shrugged. “But maybe it was just because she was a dirty little snitch. I have a cousin who’s like that.” He laughed noisily. “I might push
her
out a window if I got a chance.”
Neely gave him a cold stare and after a moment he clutched his elbows and grinned sheepishly. “Just joking,” he said.
On the way home that day Neely kept thinking about what Carmen had told Curtis. Grub must have been thinking, too, because he was very quiet. They were almost to the gate when she remembered that she’d wanted to ask him what he’d whispered while Curtis was talking.
“Grub,” she said. “What did you say when Curtis said Monica fell out a window?”
“I said, ‘that window,’” Grub said. “I said, ‘maybe out that big window.’”
Neely thought she knew what window Grub meant. All the rest of the way home she kept picturing the big window behind the bandstand in the ballroom and wondering how it happened. Wondering if the two iron bars that protected the lower half of the window had been there when Monica fell or if they’d been put there afterward when it was too late. Too late at least for Monica. Because it didn’t really seem possible that anyone could fall clear over the bars—unless they were pushed pretty hard.
She wanted to ask Grub what he thought, but he didn’t seem to want to talk about it anymore. Several times when she asked him something he just shook his head, but finally when she asked, “Do you think someone pushed Monica?” he nodded slowly and said, “Someone. Someone pushed her.”
Neely stopped walking and grabbed Grub’s arms and shook him. “Who?” she demanded. “Who pushed her?”
Grub turned his face away. “I don’t know,” he said.
Neely shook him harder. “Then how do you know she was pushed?” she said.
But Grub didn’t answer. He pulled away and ran down the hill toward home.
J
UST A COUPLE OF DAYS LATER THE PHONE RANG EARLY IN
the morning and it was Curtis. “Hey,” he said, “our phones are working. You want my number?” And after Neely said “Sure” and wrote it down, he went on, “Hey, why don’t you come up for a while today?”
“Well... Neely hesitated. She had been thinking about going into town with Dad to spend the day with Mimi. But when she said so, Curtis said, “Well, how about tomorrow then? Or the day after? Or this Friday?”
The problem was that Neely still wasn’t sure whether she wanted to keep going back to Halcyon House. Or to be more specific, she was sure and she wasn’t.
She wanted to go back, on the one hand, because Halcyon was still an intriguing place, even though the arrival of Curtis and his family had spoiled it in some ways. There was still, after all, the unsolved mystery of Monica and the possibility that there were more fascinating facts to be discovered about her. And she really wanted to find out more about the murder thing, from Carmen or maybe even from Curtis.
And then, too, there were probably many other interesting things to find out about other star-crossed Hutchinsons, as well. She was really intrigued by the thought of all those other old Hutchinson mysteries that might yet be uncovered.
And, she had to admit, she was curious about Curtis and his family too. She’d never known a person like Curtis who flip-flopped from one kind of personality to another in such an unpredictable way. Or anyone whose father didn’t have to work except
maybe
to spend his time writing a book about survival. (Neely wasn’t sure she believed that story any more than she believed the bank manager one.) Or whose mother sat around all day in a velvet robe playing solitaire. There were, she decided, a few mysteries about the present-day Hutchinsons to be solved as well. And mysteries, particularly tragic ones, had always been hard for Neely to resist.
She also was tempted to say yes because Grub wanted to go back to Halcyon so much. And at the moment, the moment being August, with the beginning of school coming nearer and nearer, Grub really needed something to take his mind off his worries.
Grub had always hated for school to start and this year he hated it more than usual. Most people, and especially Mom, couldn’t understand it because, unlike most kids who hate school, Grub was a very good student. Neely, herself, couldn’t understand it entirely.
When she asked him about it once he said something like, “I don’t know. I guess I just don’t know how to do it right.”
“Do what right?” Neely had asked. “You’re great at school. You’re fantastic at reading, and you know more history and geography than most high school kids, and you’re even pretty good at math. What do you mean you don’t know how to do it?”
Grub sighed and turned away. But a moment later he said, “It’s everything else I’m not good at. Like doing things the right way.”
“What things? What kinds of things don’t you do right?”
“Everything,” Grub said. “Everything...like saying funny things and laughing real loud.” And after he’d thought some more he added, “And yelling and pushing.”
She understood part of that, particularly the part about yelling and pushing. Watching a bunch of second-grade boys at recess, you couldn’t help but understand how important it was to be able to yell and push, not to mention slug and kick. Grub had just never learned how to do that kind of thing, and he probably never would.
It wasn’t that the other kids were mean to Grub. At least, not as mean as they usually were to people who were different. She didn’t know why for sure except that, even though he was different, there wasn’t anything about Grub that really invited meanness—he wasn’t pushy, or hard to get along with, or ugly. And another reason no one was ever very mean to Grub was because they knew that if they were, they’d have Neely to deal with. And perhaps that explained why Grub was even more depressed than usual about school starting this time. Because this year, for the first time, he and Neely would be going to different schools.
But whatever the reason, Grub was right on the edge of a serious case of gloom and doom, and Neely knew that having a visit to Halcyon to look forward to would help.
So there were some good reasons to say yes to Curtis’s invitation. Some good solid reasons. And the arguments on the other side were much less solid. In fact there was nothing much Neely could put her finger on—just a vague, uneasy feeling that something wasn’t right.
But after Curtis changed the date three or four times—“Well, how about tomorrow then? Or the day after? Or this Friday?”—she finally found herself saying yes.
“Sure,” she said. “Friday’s okay. I’m not doing anything on Friday.”
After she hung up she went to find Grub and tell him, and when she did he went from gloomy to cheerful in half a minute. It wasn’t until she was back in her room that she realized that Curtis hadn’t said anything about Grub being invited too.
“Not that it matters,” she told herself. “He probably just forgot to mention Grub.” She threw herself down on her bed and opened her book to where she’d been reading when the phone rang.
“Yeah,” she said. “He just took it for granted that I’d know that Grub was invited too. That’s probably it. That better be it, Mr. Curtis Hutchinson.”
O
N FRIDAY WHEN NEELY
and Grub arrived at Halcyon they went directly to the doghouse for a visit with poor old Lion. Grub was still rolling around on the ground with his arms wrapped around his head to keep Lion from licking his face, when the kitchen door opened and Curtis came out. Neely went to meet him.
“Hi,” she said. “Here we are, right on time.”
Curtis wasn’t smiling. “Yeah,” he said. “So I see. You and your shadow. Who invited your shadow?”
Neely gave him a long stare. “What do you mean?” she asked. “You asked both of us, didn’t you? Because if you didn’t we can just go right—”
Curtis grabbed his elbows, squeezed his arms against his chest, and ducked his head, looking at Neely out of the tops of his eyes. “All right,” he said. “All right. He’s invited. He’s... His shoulders lifted in a jerky shudder. “Look at him. How can he let that mutt slobber all over him like that?”
While Curtis stared at Grub and Lion, Neely watched him curiously. “I guess you just don’t like dogs,” she said.
“I hate them,” he said. “I’d like to kill them all. I did kill one once.”
“You what?”
“I shot one. With my dad’s gun.” Curtis’s chin was jutting out again. “He tried to bite me so I shot him.”
Neely stared at him. It might just be another of Curtis’s lies. She hoped so. Giving him a really disgusted look she said, “I hope you’re joking.”
He looked away, up at the sky and then down at his arms, which were still hugging his chest. “Yeah,” he said. “I’m joking. Hey...what do you want to do? Want to play pool?”
“Sure,” Neely said. “I don’t know how, but I guess I can learn.”
When Grub tore himself away from Lion and came over, wiping his face, Curtis didn’t say hello. Instead he just turned to Neely and said, “Okay. Let’s go.”
As they were going down the hall Neely asked Curtis where his parents and Carmen were.
“Carmen’s around here somewhere,” he said. “In her room I think. My mom and dad are in Monterey. To see a doctor. My dad has this doctor’s appointment every Friday.”
“Oh. Is he sick?” Neely asked.
“Well, sort of. It’s his nerves. He’s very nervous,” Curtis said. “He doesn’t think he needs to go, but he has to because he said he would. He promised he’d see this doctor every week if we came here to live.”
That was interesting. Neely wanted to know who Mr. Hutchinson had promised and why he had to, but before she could ask they passed the stairs and Grub grabbed her arm. “Aren’t we going up to the nursery?” he asked. When Neely told him they were going to play pool instead he looked disappointed.
“Look,” Neely said. “Could Grub go play in the nursery?”
“Sure,” Curtis said. “Feel free, pal. You go right on up to the nursery. Don’t forget to get the key. It’s in the kitchen now. On one of those hooks near the door.”
“Why do you keep it locked?” Neely asked.
“I don’t. It’s Carmen. Carmen keeps it locked.” He shrugged, and then as Grub started up the stairs he called after him, “Hey, kid. Say hello to Monica for me.”
Neely was surprised. She hadn’t told him about Grub’s “playing with Monica” game and she was sure Grub hadn’t either. “Why did you say that?” she asked when Grub had disappeared up the stairs.
“Say what?”
“About Grub’s saying hello to Monica.”
“Oh, that. Because that’s where she’s supposed to be. The Monica ghost. Carmen said so. I asked her to go in the nursery with me, and she went in and looked around but she wouldn’t stay. She said that she’d never been there before. Like, not even when she used to come here when my dad was a kid. That room was always locked even then. Nobody ever went in there. So that must be why. Because it was haunted.”
Neely was a little bit shocked. While Curtis got down the pool cues and showed her how to hold them, she had a hard time keeping her mind on what he was saying. She kept thinking about Grub up there all alone in what was, maybe, a haunted room.
She hadn’t thought of it that way before—even that time when she’d held the sampler like a magic charm between the palms of her hands and concentrated on Monica so hard she’d seen her, or at least had almost seen her. Even then she hadn’t connected the nursery and Monica with words like “haunted” or “ghost.” Somehow she hadn’t ever felt that way about Monica. But now the word “haunted” kept popping into her mind, making it hard for her to concentrate on what Curtis was saying. But after a while she began to get interested in learning to play pool.
She wasn’t too bad at it. Not great, but almost as good as Curtis and he’d had a lot more practice. She almost won once or twice, and one time she almost certainly would have except that Curtis changed the rules at the last minute. After he’d changed them two or three more times she decided she was going to read up on the rules before she tried to play pool with Curtis again.
Once when she’d kind of given up on trying to keep Curtis from cheating, she decided not even to watch him taking his turn. Instead she wandered off into the library. She hadn’t been there since the Hutchinsons moved in, and before that it had been her favorite room, next to the nursery, of course. She hadn’t had a chance to look at the family portrait over the fireplace since she’d learned about Monica.
Standing in front of the fireplace, she stared up at the picture of the man with the slick, dark hair, the pale-faced woman, the two boys and the little girl. Mostly she looked at the pretty little girl and the two sleek-faced brothers with their heavy brows and blank, dark eyes.
This time there was something about the picture that made her feel uneasy, as if the peaceful calm she’d always felt in the library had been spoiled. But later, sitting in the alcove near the shelf of books about girls and horses, it came back again. A comforted feeling, as if she were in a place where someone could be safe and happy. She was still sitting in the alcove when Curtis came looking for her.
“Hey,” he said. “I won. I ran the whole table.”
Neely wasn’t a bit surprised. An hour or so later when she announced she was getting a pool headache, Curtis tried to talk her into a game of chess, or badminton, but she said “no, thanks” and started up the stairs to get Grub. Curtis followed her, still arguing about it being too early to go home.
When they got to the nursery Neely noticed the door wasn’t quite closed and she was just putting out her hand to open it when Curtis grabbed her arm and whispered, “Shhh. Listen. Someone’s talking.”
Neely listened and, of course, it was Grub. Grub’s voice talking steadily but not quite loud enough for her to hear the exact words. She shoved the door open and went in. Grub was sitting on the floor playing with the model barnyard. He had the dog in his hand and he was making him round up a herd of cows, sheep, and pigs. When he saw Neely and Curtis he jumped to his feet and said, “Hi. Is it time to go?”