"But you know where he was?" I put in worriedly.
Because if he did know and hadn't said so, it must
have been somewhere--
"In the cemetery," Sam said miserably.
--bad.
He sighed again. "I went out on my bike twice, see.
And the second time, I rode through Hillside Cemetery.
Dad was on one of the benches."
"Are you sure it was your father? It was dark."
Ellie cracked two eggs expertly, reserving a little
white for the glaze and beating the rest into the bowl
with some milk. In the bowl already were the flour,
sugar, and butter, and the Bakewell Cream powder,
which as a substitute for ordinary baking powder is
like using rocket fuel instead of gasoline.
"Yeah," Sam said, "I'm sure. He didn't speak,
though, so I guessed he wanted to be let alone. So," he
shrugged, "I did."
"Move over," Ellie said, shooing him to the side.
Sam pushed the Ouija board in its box and the Morse
book out of her way, as she deftly floured her hands
and kneaded the scone batter twenty times, then flattened
it into a pancake shape on the table.
"So you went home," she said. "Back to Victor's, I
mean."
He nodded, watching her cut the pancake into a
dozen wedges, then transfer the wedges to a baking
sheet. Finally she spread them with beaten egg white
and drizzled granulated sugar between her fingers until
the sugar stopped soaking into the egg white.
"Was Reuben's body already there, by any
chance?" Popping the baking sheet into the oven, she
dusted her hands together briskly and competently. I
took her point: Although the blood had indeed seemed
reasonably fresh when we found him, he could have
been there a while.
"I don't know. I wasn't looking for it," Sam said.
Absently, he opened the Ouija board box, slid the
planchette dejectedly over the varnished surface of the
board. It was elaborately painted in crisp, glossy black,
the standard numerals and letters spread out across it.
The words 'Yes and No were displayed in the upper
left-and-right-hand corners.
"I was wishing Dad would call me over," he said,
riddling with the planchette. "But he didn't, and then I
was past him. I never looked at the gate."
The planchette slipped off the edge of the table and
fell to the floor; Monday came over and sniffed suspiciously
at it.
Sam picked it up again. "It felt lousy, you know?
Not being able to help him. But he never does. Let me
help him, I mean. And now if I have to say where he
was when I saw him last night ..."
"No one has asked you," Ellie said. "And I hope
you're not thinking of volunteering any information
before it's requested."
We sat in glum silence until the oven timer's brr
ring! interrupted my musing: Victor had bathed that
morning, so thoroughly that to anyone who didn't
know him it would look as if he'd been trying to wash
something off.
Even more, I mean, than usual. Ellie took the
cream scones from the oven. "So the next time you
knew where your father was, he was here? This morning?"
But Sam shook his head again. "After I went to
bed, I heard him. It was getting light out, so it must
have been around five. I heard the shower run, and
after that he did a load of laundry."
Oh, for heaven's sake. Most of the time, Victor's
idea of doing laundry was bundling it up for the maid
to take. He'd hired a cleaning person from town three
days a week, and a high-school kid to do his yard
work, the minute he'd arrived in Eastport.
And now suddenly he was Holly Homemaker.
"What about the jacket he was wearing, and the
slacks he had on?" Ellie inquired acutely. "Have you
seen those?"
"Uh-uh," Sam replied. "But ..."
His face fell further. "But he took the trash out. I
saw a fresh bag in the bin this morning. He'd put the
top back on the bin but he hadn't tied it down, which
was why I noticed."
A grin lit his face briefly. "Dad still thinks skunks
won't eat his trash if he just disapproves of them hard
enough."
Then the seriousness of the situation overtook him
again.
"Anyway, I had to shove the bag farther down in
the bin, so I could get the top shut. And it was soft," he
finished in a tone of terminal glumness. "Like maybe
there were clothes inside it."
He thought for a minute. "I could call Charlie
Martin. Ask him to pick up the trash now instead of
waiting for our regular day."
Ellie split a scone, buttered it, and put it in front of
him.
"He will, you know," Sam finished earnestly to
me. "He will, if I call and ask him."
But as Sam said this, a rumbling sound came from
the street. I knew it well: it was the sound I heard each
Thursday morning, when once again I had forgotten to
put out my own trash and had to scramble to get the
cans lugged out to the sidewalk, and the wastebaskets
emptied too, if I was lucky.
Opening the back door, I watched the garbage
truck roll by: red cab, big bull moose painted in green
on the white compactor.
And today wasn't Thursday. "Looks like some
helpful person already has. Called him, I mean."
Charlie swung out and started up the driveway to
the trash bin, a low, lean-to structure built onto the
shed out back of Victor's house. He was halfway there
when the Maine State Police squad car rolled to the
curb. Two officers got out and waved him over.
I saw Charlie glance at my house as he listened to
the officers. Then I closed the door so I wouldn't have
to see any more.
"Look," I told Sam. "Whatever trouble your dad's
in, the way to help him is not by lying or trying to
cover anything up."
He listened disconsolately. Meanwhile in my head
an awful refrain was repeating itself: motive, method,
opportunity. I was pretty sure the state cops knew that
old song, too.
And from what I could tell, Victor had just spent
the night putting together a new arrangement for it.
"So," I told Sam, "you say nothing unless you're
questioned by somebody who has the authority to do
it. And even then, say you have to ask your mother
before you can answer. Got it so far?"
Sam nodded gratefully. Ordinarily, he doesn't like
asking my permission to do anything, regarding it as an
outworn, childhood habit that ought to be put behind
him, like a snake's skin. But this time he looked relieved.
"Tell the truth," I continued. "But no more than
you've been asked."
He nodded some more, so woebegone I almost
wished for a hint of the bad old days: teenaged anger
and open defiance.
But not quite. "Got it?" I emphasized.
"Uh-huh," Sam said. "I know," he went on earnestly,
"about Dad's trouble with Tate. Dad didn't
want Tate telling that he'd gotten sued in New York.
He told me he knew people here would find out
eventually. But he wanted them to know him better, kind of
get used to him, you know. Before they heard about it.
He was real worried about it."
His shoulders slumped. "I won't say that to anyone
but you two, though. Unless," he added sorrowfully,
"the police ask."
Typical Victor: knee-jerk secretiveness, bunker
mentality. He'd have kept his New York troubles under
wraps forever if he could, and never mind what he'd
told Sam he was going to do about it; worrying about
looking bad was one of Victor's main ways of not worrying
about being bad.
Typical Reuben Tate, too, from what I'd been hearing:
playing into Victor's psychology that way. Sam got
up, closed the Ouija box, and took it and the blue
covered Morse code book with him.
"Mom, how could they have arrested him? He's
not guilty. He couldn't have done it. He's not ..."
Sam paused, swallowed hard. "He's not violent.
Anymore."
"Right," I said, knowing that we were remembering
the same incident. But that was from the really bad
old days, and it was over. I put my hand on his arm,
made my voice sound confident.
"His talk about threatening Reuben, even if he did
say that stuff, it was just talk. Don't worry about it too
much. Things are going to be a little rough for a while,
but I'm certain that this will all get straightened out
just fine."
Sam met my gaze, comforted for a moment. But
then his face changed, as he realized that I was lying.
That Victor was innocent of Tate's murder I was
certain; I knew Victor too well. It was the getting
things straightened out part I wasn't sure of, because
what I couldn't come up with was the answer to one
simple question:
Neither Ellie nor I had said anything about Reuben
Tate when we'd arrived home from the cemetery to
find Victor sitting in my kitchen.
Arnold hadn't mentioned Tate either when he'd
called Victor earlier, because at that point he hadn't
heard.
So how had Victor known that Reuben was dead?
The question of hauntedness was a recurring
one in our old house: cold spots on the
stairs, strange noises in the attic, doors that
opened or closed with odd, mischievous regularity.
Once I came down in the morning to find a set
of steak knives, their blades all bent and twisted, inside
the washing machine.
So having a Ouija board around the place just
seemed to me like begging for trouble, but Sam was
enthralled with the thing. He took it into the dining
room and sat brooding over it, as if it might reveal
some hidden secret to him.
"Sam," I said. "It's supposed to take at least two
people to get any action out it."
Live people, I meant, and not that I wanted any
action; the reverse, in fact, unless the dratted thing decided
to levitate itself into the trash. The astral plane
had been pretty quiet on our part of Key Street in recent