If Mashed Potatoes Could Dance (20 page)

BOOK: If Mashed Potatoes Could Dance
2.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Yes, for lunch, but Leroy took the car he’d rented and left by himself at dinnertime. Bunny’s is too far to walk.”

She was sort of right. I knew a shortcut, but it included walking through a grassy field. Cece didn’t strike me as the walking–in–a–field type, not without a guide and a machete, at least.

“Leroy didn’t bring you dinner?”

Cece laughed. “Leroy wouldn’t bring me dinner even if I was starving in the middle of a godforsaken…well, small tourist town in southern Missouri.”

I thought back. He had purchased only three dinners if I remembered correctly. Including Georgina and himself, he should have picked up six dinners. Georgina was probably with Stuart. And some of the group might have had other plans.

“Was everyone except Georgina here last night?” I asked.

“I don’t know. I was watching television in my room. They don’t invite me to theirs; I don’t invite them to mine.”

I wondered who Leroy had bought food for and who he hadn’t. That might tell me more about the dynamics I was trying to understand. I got why he didn’t like Cece, even if there was something about her I found refreshing, albeit extremely obnoxious.

We made small talk for approximately two more minutes before Cece made it clear that she’d like for me to leave her alone. She did this by telling me she’d like to be alone with her thoughts, the pool, and hopefully a continual supply of drinks with umbrellas.

I pointed out the shortcut to Bunny’s. I was sure she rolled her eyes behind her dark glasses when I told her about the field, but if she was hungry enough, she’d find a way to put up with the hike.

At the front desk, I asked the receptionist to call the other foodies’ rooms, but no one answered. I’d probably run into
them in town. I hoped no one else had been kidnapped, but surely they were smart enough to stay close to one another and do whatever they had to to protect themselves.

I was just about to go back to the pool and double-check for them when my phone buzzed. I’d received a text from Gram.

It said:
Sally’s looking for you. Where should I send her?

Chapter 16

And speaking of grassy fields.

“Right here, you can see where the wall went up here,” Sally said as she pointed. “I bet this is the original wood.”

The uneven ground and long prickly stems of grass weren’t cumbersome to a ghost, but they were to me, and I was beginning to wonder why I’d agreed to Sally’s request. But I knew why: I was curious enough about her and her life to think that visiting the site of her now long-gone home and the remains of her backyard barn would be interesting.

I’d driven past the Monroe House to get to the area. I saw two construction men sitting on chairs on the front lawn and a white sedan parked out front. They didn’t even look in my direction as I drove by, but seeing them reminded me I’d broken the promise to Jake. I’d told him I would ask Cliff about the place being condemned. I had totally forgotten, which was unlike me, not only because breaking a promise
to Jake wasn’t something I did but also because I usually don’t forget to do something I’ve promised I’ll do, no matter what. Had I subconsciously not asked Cliff because of my feelings for the old place? I hoped not. I thought about calling him but decided I would wait until I saw him next. He had more to worry about than the Monroe House. I’d apologize to Jake.

As I pulled onto a partially developed road, I could see the back side of the Monroe House; it looked worse than the front: it seemed to be leaning even more dramatically, and while the front’s paint was chipped and faded, the back had no paint left at all. There were also no odd-looking men in derby hats roaming around or signaling me to join them.

Once I reached the end of the paved road, I steered the Nova onto what had become an overgrown field full of bumps, weeds and other foliage, and who-knows-what that might puncture a tire. I thought it was better to drive over most of it than walk it, though. Now, as I crouched amid the natural dangers, I decided I’d made the right choice; shoes, ankles, and feet could have been easily compromised if I’d walked.

There were no physical ruins to indicate where Sally’s house had been, no leftover foundation or planks of wood. But behind the area where Sally claimed the house had stood, and amid a thick patch of skinny trunked trees, there were some leftover boards and other junk that might have actually been part of the barn; I believed the boards were genuine, but the other stuff—bits of chicken wire and several long stakes—was questionable. Jake had told me about the remnants of the Swarthmore barn, though, so I cautiously believed we were in the right spot.

Earlier, Sally had left the school and gone back to the Monroe House to see if she could get inside, but when she found that something was still barring her way, she decided to
explore the area of her residence. She said she’d been to the area on previous visits but didn’t remember if she’d ever found anything interesting. After looking around a bit this time, she discovered two long planks along the ground where the barn had stood. They were sort of buried in dirt and grown over with weeds and grass. Curious about what lay underneath them, she summoned me for my muscle: she wanted me to lift up the planks.

“I have such a distinct memory, Betts. I really do think there was a hole or some kind of opening in the ground where we, as a family, could hide things. Maybe my diary is in there, underneath that wood.”

I swatted away a fly big enough to need a saddle, and swiped at something itchy on my arm. I looked at the ghost and began to think that she was remembering a few too many places where she might have buried or hidden the diary.

But I’d made the trip.

“Sally, maybe you just want to find the diary so badly that you’re beginning to have some false memories. You know, even if your ghostly existence didn’t mess with your mind…” I paused and pondered
mind
, but only for an instant. “…time has a way of erasing and changing memories, too. It’s been over a hundred years.”

“No, I don’t…” She paused, too. “…think so. No, I really do remember more about ‘hiding’ than I ever have.”

“What kind of ‘hiding?’ Hiding places? What were you hiding?”

“Maybe my diary, for one thing. I don’t know what else. I know this barn is where I kept my pigeons. I know I was out here a lot. The house was crowded and small.”

I sighed. “You want me to pull up these planks so we can look?” I asked as I surveyed the wood. I wasn’t sure I could
handle the job with just my bare hands, but I had some stuff in the trunk of the Nova that might help. The only person I could possibly ask for assistance was Jake, but I knew he was busy. Of course, Gram knew about Sally, but if I called her, she’d probably just laugh and tell me and Sally to get over searching for the diary. Teddy would help but not without wanting to know why first. He’d love the entire idea of ripping wood out of the ground just to see what was underneath, but I had no idea how to explain, without including the ghost, to him why I would need to do such a thing.

“Yes. Please, Betts,” Sally said.

I sighed again but then stood from the crouch and trudged my way the twenty feet or so back to the Nova. I opened the trunk and rummaged around. I found a three-foot-long tube of PVC pipe and one random glove that I might have worn at my parents once when I’d helped them with some yard work.

As I high-stepped it back to the planks, I had a moment’s desire to be back in front of the pool with Cece, sipping a cocktail.

“Oh, thank you, Betts, thank you!”

“We’ll see.”

I dug away at the side of a plank with the end of the PVC. The ground was hard and didn’t give easily, but I stuck with it long enough that soon I could maneuver the pipe underneath the board and use it as a lever. I expected nothing to happen when I shoved one end of the pipe under the wood and pushed down on the other still exposed end. I thought that result might end up being the end of the hunt. I could feign tired and tell Sally I had too much to do to be out in the middle of nowhere, digging for a diary.

But instead of nothing happening, the plank snapped easily when I pushed on the pipe. I wasn’t ready for the total give,
and a twinge of pain shot up my elbow when the board broke, sending a ten-inch piece flying through the air and right through the ghost.

“Old wood,” was all that Sally said as the piece landed behind her.

She joined me on her hands and knees. Where the piece of wood had been was now the opening to a dark hole. I didn’t know how deep it was or what crawly creatures it contained, but it was most definitely a hole.

“Oh! Look!” Sally said. “There
was
a hiding place.”

“One step at a time,” I said. “It’s a hole, not a hiding place yet. Let’s look closer.” I pulled out my cell phone, accepted the idea of my clothes getting filthy, and flattened myself against the dirt.

It was, in fact, a hole. From my vantage point and with the light from the cell phone, I judged it to be about one foot by one foot cubed.

“There’s something in there, Betts,” Sally said anxiously.

I looked at her and then looked back down into the hole. There
was
something there. It seemed to be a piece of something, perhaps a piece of folded fabric. It was grimy and frayed around the edges, but I could tell that it was blue.

I slipped the glove on my left hand and reached in. Even though the space didn’t look to be inhabited by creatures or set with a trap, my fingers nonetheless tingled in anticipation that when I pulled my hand out it would be covered in bugs or bleeding from some vise-inflicted injury.

But my hand came out just fine, and so did the fabric, mostly. It gave a little in the middle and separated slightly, but not to the point of complete disintegration.

“Didn’t Edgar’s notes say your sister saw you burning a blue dress?” I asked.

“Yes.” She looked at herself. “That could be from this one.”

I looked at the fabric and at her dress.

“Do you suppose this is a piece of it?”

“I don’t have any rips or tears, but I guess it could be a piece of the real thing.”

“And what do you think that is?” I asked as I pointed to a darker spot. The small, uneven centimeter-wide spot was dusty and might have at one time been red, or maybe black or brown.

“You don’t suppose it’s blood?” Sally asked, her eyes big and thoughtful as though she really wanted to know the answer.

“I don’t know. I don’t know how to get it tested either, but maybe Jake or Cliff can help.”

Sally’s eyes had moved away from the piece of fabric, and she put a finger to her mouth as if she was going to bite a nail. Her forehead was creased. After a moment, she said, “I don’t know what this means, but I
knew
there was something here. That must be important.”

She had a point. I held the cell phone in the hole again, but nothing else was hidden inside. “It might not mean anything, Sally. It might be something put here by someone else. It might have nothing to do with you.”

“I think it has everything to do with me, Betts. Everything.”

I did, too, but I didn’t want to say as much. I took off the glove and then placed the piece of fabric on top of it. I had nothing to protect it, and I worried it would now be more likely to disintegrate fully, like mummies whose wraps are loosened centuries after their burial, before I had a chance to care for it properly.

I carried it gently back to the Nova and set it inside the glove box.

“I’ll see what I can find out,” I said to Sally as my phone buzzed.

“Thank you, Betts. I’m going back to the Monroe House. Things, images, impressions, are really coming back to me. Maybe trying to get back inside will help me with more memories, if nothing else.”

I didn’t get the chance to say good-bye before she disappeared. I was also distracted by the text. This one was from Jake. It said:
Another note. Hurry. Get here. Come in the back.

I hoped I hadn’t and wouldn’t puncture a tire as I steered the Nova over the rough terrain again. I was in such a hurry that I didn’t even look at the front of the Monroe House as I drove by. If I had, I would have seen someone I knew, someone who recognized my car. That person was standing on the porch but ducked inside the front door when they saw who was driving by. And just as they hid themselves, Sally popped onto the front porch, probably having first tried to make her way in through the back.

Had I or she seen the person on the porch, I might have solved a couple mysteries right then and there, but it wasn’t to be.

Chapter 17

Other books

Perpetual Winter: The Deep Inn by Carlos Meneses-Oliveira
Trick of the Light by Thurman, Rob
Lonely Girl by Josephine Cox
Grind by Eric Walters
The Man Without Rules by Clark Kemp, Tyffani
State Ward by Duff, Alan