Victor, I mean, really needed Sam around to help
him--to assist him in the task of acclimating himself to
downeast Maine culture, was the way he put it, and if
Sam wanted to go to school could he please find a way
to do it and stay here in town? Two minutes later, it
was decided."
"Huh," Ellie said. "You know, that's the truly annoying
part about Victor. Which is he? Blackhearted,
or heart of gold?"
We turned back toward home. "Neither," I said as
we passed Peavy Library and began climbing Key
Street, beneath the bare-branched maples looming
spectral under the streetlamps. "Victor's heart, I have
decided, is a two-tone model."
At my house, the workshop on the top floor of the
storeroom ell was occupied, Wade's shape moving behind
the window shades. He was reconditioning the
storm windows, as he'd promised; he'd done the rest of
the weatherstripping, too, while I recuperated.
A little help from my friends: so hard to ask for.
But it was getting easier to take.
Inside we found there'd been a visitor in our absence:
some books lay on the kitchen table, and a note
from Paddy. It seemed he'd found them in an old
strongbox in the rubble of the studio: sheet music, and
ancient leather-bound volumes, all handwritten.
"Thought you might like to see these," the note
from Paddy finished. "Off to Portland--fingers
crossed."
The first piece of music, written in ink that was
faded but still legible, was titled "The Pirate's Revenge,"
and like the frontispiece of each old diary volume
it was signed: Jared Hayes.
The fiddler who had lived in our house all those
years ago, and had vanished from it ...
"Why would these things be at the cannery?" Ellie
asked.
"I have no idea," I replied, paging carefully
through the fragile old sheets of music.
Sam's voice: "Mom? Can you come and look at
this, please?"
"Just a second." I scanned part of a diary: dates
and places where Jared Hayes had played. Notes about
what he'd eaten, music he was working on, a violin he
expected to receive. Very special, he wrote, a wonderful
instrument, lovely and fine.
"Jake," Ellie said quietly, peering over my shoulder.
"He quit writing."
In the workshop, Wade was listening to his favorite
Chet Atkins CD. "Cosmic Square Dance" rang out,
ending in its weirdly jubilant, minor-keyed violin solo.
"I know," I said, distracted, still staring at the
name on the diary page: Stradivarius. "He vanished,
remember?"
It would have been a fine instrument, all right. So
how had a downeast Maine fiddler ever dreamed of
having one? For that matter, how had he managed to
live in this house, which at the time had been a luxurious
dwelling, on an excellent piece of property? Jared
Hayes had been a musician, not a ship's captain or a
prosperous trader.
"No," said Ellie, frowning at the pages. "I mean he
stopped in the middle of a sentence. The ink trails off,
as if ... Have you had any more manifestations
lately?"
Flickering lights, she meant, or the faint, sad perfume
of camellias. Music playing when no one in the
house was playing any music.
A cold spot, there on the stairs and gone.
"No," I said, realizing there hadn't been. "It's been
quiet as ..."
As the grave, I'd meant to say, but decided not to.
Monday looked up from her dog bed in the corner,
listened intently.
"Mom?" Sam's voice, from the dining room. "It
did it again."
"What?" I called, distracted.
"Maybe," Ellie said, "we should look into the disappearance
of Jared Hayes."
A breeze came in, riffling the pages of the fiddle
tunes on the table. I went over, meaning to close the
kitchen window. But it was already closed.
Outside, the moon had risen, glazing the pointed
fir trees with a rime of silver. High in the sky, Canadian
geese arrowed southward and were gone.
"Look at this," Sam said quietly. "Really, I mean
it."
Only a single lamp shone dimly in the corner of the
dining room, our shadows moving hugely in the
wreathed acorns-and-oak-leaves pattern of the high tin
ceiling.
The Ouija board lay on the table. "I didn't touch
it," Sam insisted. "But it kept pushing against me. Like
Tommy was pushing it for a joke. Only, he's not here.
So finally I got up to come and get you two. And then,
when I wasn't touching it at all ..."
He waved, mystified, at the smooth wooden board:
the letters and numerals, the black-painted words: Yes
and No.
One in the upper left-hand corner.
And one in the right.
"It moved," Sam insisted. "When I was nowhere
near it. All by itself, it zoomed up into the corner there.
See it?"
The full moon shone brightly through the dining
room window, painting a silver triangle on the board's
surface and lighting the planchette, which just then uncannily
resembled a man's hand.
It was pointing to Yes.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
sarah graves lives with her husband in
Eastport, Maine, in the 1823 Federal
style house that helped inspire her books.
She is the author of The Dead Cat
Bounce and Triple Witch, and is currently
working on the next Mainely Murder
Mystery.
Visit Eastport, Maine, on the Web at
www.nemaine.com/eastportcc--or visit
in person! For more information: East
port Chamber of Commerce, P.O. Box
254, Eastport, Maine 04631. Phone:
207-853-4644.