with ostrich feathers in them, men raced horses hell
for-leather along the Shore Road, and they all gathered
formally to attend. .. concerts, including one at the Eastport Hotel on
the Friday night previous to the newspaper's ancient
issue. The fragile old sheet detailed a fine performance,
well attended and marvelously entertaining, by
a local musician: one Jared Hayes, resident of 20 Key
Street.
As I read, a faint thread of the old music Sam had
hummed to me played in my head: a goblin tune,
haunting and sweet.
Wade looked up puzzledly. "Did you hear something?"
"No." I put aside the newspaper. "No, I don't
think so." My mouth felt dry. The house seemed filled
with an expectant silence.
And then nothing, as if a mist off the water had
gathered up suddenly and evaporated.
"Kids all liked Sondergard," Wade said, turning
back to the window. "Ones of us who were in his
church youth group. Pastor Sondergard, that is. What
we called him then."
"You didn't like Marcus?" I tried to recapture the
sense I'd had a moment ago, as of someone about to
whisper urgently to me.
But it was gone. Wade held up the tape measure.
"Oh, he was kind of a geek. Filled out some, I'll say
that much for him."
He laid the one-by-eight across the sawhorses,
marked it, and picked up the circular saw. Since his
unburdening of the night before, he seemed easier in
his skin: talkative, not so worried. After he cut the
board, he marked it once more and cut it again.
Had I been doing it, I'd have used a handsaw and
taken half an hour. "Can I see that?"
The circular saw was heavy. "Like this?" I laid a
piece of waste board on the sawhorses.
Wade nodded, steadied the wood. "Press the trigger
and cut."
Brrr-anngg! It was done. Two pieces clattered to
the floor.
"Good," he said, and picked up the clawhammer
again.
Cheered--I have never been much good with
power tools, but when you are trying to do things
swiftly there is nothing like an electric motor--I resolved
to get some scrap boards and practice with that
circular saw again, sometime. This was, however, the
only cheery thing about the task at hand, because it
turned out there was a lot more wrong with the window
frame than the damage I had done to it.
"Rot back here," Wade muttered, pulling crumbling
wood out of the crevice. "Can't leave that."
Well, I could have, but he couldn't. Half an hour
later, the bedroom wall looked as if a small missile had
blasted through it.
"Sometime soon, better find out where the leak is,"
he said, dampening--no pun intended--my spirits further.
If there was rot, there was water coming in somewhere,
and I dreaded finding out more about it.
The repairs, though, went pretty swiftly: measuring,
fitting, and nailing. And this time I set the weather
stripping pieces in their places the right way, so the
sashes slid snugly and easily on them.
"Marcus's mother was a great big formidable
woman," Wade said after a while. "She had some heart
trouble, but you sure couldn't tell it by looking at her.
Hilda, I think her name was."
"Marcus said she was vulnerable to fright."
Wade nodded, fit a sash back into its channel.
"Yep. Marcus played piano back then. Fancied himself
a little prodigy."
He set a molding strip back on, gave the gimlet a
twist, put a nail in. "And anybody who thought they
were good at anything, naturally that attracted old
Reuben's attention. So what happened, one day Hilda
caught Reuben trying to break Marcus's ring finger, get
his allowance money out of him."
"Uh-oh." I was starting to see what was coming.
"Yeah. And heart condition or not, she wasn't the
type to take a lot of backchat out of a kid, even Reuben.
She grabbed him, dragged him into Washington
Street, and shook him till he got away and ran home,
her shouting after him, waving a big stick."
"Yikes. But she didn't catch him? Sounds like Reuben
got off easy."
Wade tipped his head ambivalently. "Depends. No,
she didn't catch him, but a week later they found Hilda
Sondergard out in her garden. She'd had a heart attack.
No one noticed for a couple of hours. Gone."
I slid the sash up and down, enjoying its new,
draft-free condition and the absence of sticking or
wobbling. Only forty-six more to go ... "But what'd
Reuben have to do with that? How would anyone
know he'd done anything to her? If he did."
"Like I say, everyone knew she had heart trouble."
Wade put the nails in the bag, unplugged the circular
saw. "The theory is, Reuben hid out there. Jumped out
at her. Scared her to death."
"I don't see," I began, "how you could prove--"
"You couldn't," Wade said flatly. "But when they
rolled her over, they found money beneath her. Nickels
and dimes. The exact amount of Marcus's allowance."
I took the sawhorses apart, put the pieces under
my arms, and started downstairs with them, Wade following
with the other tools.
"It was the big story in town for a while," he said.
"Then Reuben took off, turned into a drifter. Ran
different scams here and there. Came back sometimes, left
again. Mostly he moved from town to town. Kept his
forwarding address current with the post office here,
though, to get those checks from that trust his mom
had set up for him."
He reached past me to open the cellar door. "Then
the two Sondergards left. And I've often wondered," he
added, flipping the light switch in the cellar landing, "if
it was coincidence."
"If what was?" I set the sawhorse parts on the
floor.
"That every time Reuben moved on to greener pastures,"
Wade replied, putting the circular saw on its
shelf in the corner, "a certain pair of itinerant musical
ministers showed up there too?"
I turned to face him. "Come on. How would you
know that?"
He spread his hands. "Jacobia. I couldn't forget
him. Boxy. Or Reuben either. It's always preyed on me,
just kind of eaten at me. So," he confessed, "I kept
track of him. Where he showed up. Kind of hoping,
you know."
"That you would hear about something else? Hear
about it--"
"And be able to stop it." He frowned. "And then
there's that flyer the Sondergards put out, about their
musical dates."
I'd seen one in the parlor of Heddlepenny House.
"They've been sending it for years, and I'm on their
mailing list because I was in the youth group, I guess,"
Waded added.
"So you knew where they were, too."
"Yeah. And like I say, I suppose it could be a coincidence,"
Wade said, coming out of the cellar stairwell
behind me.
Tommy and Sam were at the kitchen table, drilling
each other in Morse code and high-fiving each other
when they translated the patterns correctly.
"Reuben and the Sondergards," Wade said, getting
himself a beer out of the refrigerator. "Same towns,
same time, so often. It could be," he finished, "meaningless."
But I could tell from his voice that he didn't think
so.
Me, either.
Later that afternoon, Wade went down to
the dock to check on his freighter-piloting
schedule for the coming week, and I went
out into the yard and dragged out the aluminum
extension ladder. Encouraged by my triumph with
the electric saw, and reminded of leaks in general by
the rot Wade had found behind the plaster, I thought I
might fix a small leak that I had already located over
the kitchen window.
About this leak, I thought, there was no mystery
whatsoever: Every time it rained, water poured into the
space between the sash and the aluminum storm window
with which--for what reason, I had no idea--that
one window had at some time been fitted.
This, by the way, is a constant feature of old
house fix-up: wondering why someone has done
something idiotic that you have to undo, redo, or otherwise
somehow finagle. Probably someday, a thoroughly
annoyed person will wonder the same thing
about many of my amateur repairs; in an old house,
necessity is often the mother of some pretty funny
looking inventions.
Fortunately, however, this particular fix looked
relatively straightforward. So I took Monday, the ladder,
and the caulking gun filled with polyurethane
caulking material--
--silicone caulk is indeed indestructible, as advertised,
but it has a bad habit of letting go of porous old
wood, which is of course what my old house was
mostly made of--and prepared to do minor battle.
While I worked, I thought about Reuben Tate following
the Sondergards, or vice versa. Surely the state
police investigators would be interested in that idea.
The trouble was, in order to tell them about it I
would have to get Wade involved, and I didn't want to.
The less interest the better if it was focused on my
family, I decided, at least for now. And since Ellie was
still busy stitching children's costumes for the festival, I
decided to wait before trying to interview Willow Prettymore,
too; I'd been lucky with the Sondergards, but
history suggested that a familiar face like Ellie's might
ease my way considerably, in the snoopy-questions department.
In the backyard, I put up the ladder, cursing mildly
as I struggled to find a level place for it. Meanwhile,
Monday ran circles around herself, rejoicing in the
fresh air and in the fact that she was not on a leash;
Sam had actually managed to teach her to stay in the
yard, which for a Labrador retriever is like teaching it
to do algebra.
But finally I got up there, and as I'd suspected, a
strip of old wood on the framing above the window
was loose. My plan was to nail it, slather it with caulk,
and pray that my fix stopped water from pouring
through it: handy-dandy, I thought, reaching confidently