Authors: Art Corriveau
A moment later, Finn woke up. Solly immediately began babbling an apology. It was all his fault. Now Finn would be forced to break that pact with his childhood friends. Now he'd have to sell 13 Hangmen Court to a Hagmann. And now a Hagmann would surely turn Solly and his family out onto the streets.
Finn laid a consoling hand on Solly's shoulder. “I should never have done business with a Hagmann in the first place,” he said. “It's
my
fault for thinking I could outwit this day. But here it is anyway. At least I know exactly what I need to do to get the best of Chester Hagmann.”
“What?” Solly said. “I'll help!”
“You can start by taking the same oath against the Hagmanns that I did,” Finn said. He pulled a gold band off his fingerâtwo hands clasping a crowned heartâand slipped it onto Solly's. “Swear by this ring. It binds one Irishman to another by the heart of love, the hands of friendship, and the crown of loyalty. My brother Paddy gave me this one on
my
thirteenth birthday.”
“But I'm Jewish!” Solly said. “I'm not allowed to swear by false idols or symbols.”
“Just promise,” Finn said. “One day you'll understand why.”
Solly promised he would never let a Hagmann own No. 13âthe least he could do for having just ruined Finn's life.
“Good lad,” Finn said. “Now you're assured the luck of the Irish. This very ring saved Paddy from a different Wallace and foiled a different Hagmann.”
And he launched into the tale of how.
Solly interrupted. “Sorry, but what are we going to do to get the best of Chester Hagmann? We only have until the end of the day.”
Finn told him to listen very carefully. He should go straight to the giant oak in the center of Hangmen Court. He should circle the base of its trunk until he spied a hollow formed by its gnarled roots. Tucked into that hollow he would find a wrought-iron door knocker bearing the same symbol as the ring he was now wearing. He should rehang the knocker on the door of No. 13, in its original holes. Any neighborhood cop or firemanâthey were all Irishmen in Bostonâwho saw the knocker would think an Irish family still lived there, and would do his best to protect the house from harm.
“Harm? What kind of harm?” Solly said.
“Just hang that knocker and everything should be fine,” Finn said. “Then wait up in your room. Neither you nor your mam should answer the door for anyone.”
“Until when?” Solly said. “Until I hear from you?”
“That may take a while,” Finn said.
“What about Tu B'Shevat?” Solly said. “The ceremony is at sunset.”
Finn tugged at one of Solly's curls. “With any luck, you'll still get to plant that tree,” he said. He checked his pocket watch. “I'd better go. I don't have much time.”
“For what?”
“Trust me,” Finn said. “You'll know soon enough.” He escorted Solly to the door. He shook his hand and wished him
mazel tov!
on his birthday. He strode down Charter Street without looking back.
Solly glanced at the upper right-hand corner of the doorpost. He had already found the knocker. He'd dusted it off. He'd fitted it into its original holes in the doorâones he'd never really noticed beforeâso it looked as though an Irish family lived at No. 13.
Except for the mezuzah in the upper-right corner.
Should he take it down? Did he dare?
He knew from his bar mitzvah studies that moving a mezuzah was against Talmudic law. The whole point was to proclaim that Jews lived within who believed in the one true God. The
mezuzah case was inscribed with the Hebrew letter
shin
, the first letter of the
Shema Yisrael
prayer.
Hear O Israelâ¦
Trust me. That's what Finn had said.
Solly pried the mezuzah out of the rotting wood with his penknife. He opened the case. He pulled out the prayer scroll inside it and tucked it into his pocket, knowing the mezuzah was now deconsecrated. At least this way, whatever happened, he would be carrying his faith with him wherever he went. Out of his back pocket he dug the handful of sugar he'd taken from the bowl in the kitchen. He placed a pinch inside the case instead, and chanted a Hebrew prayer for protection against his foes, one Mameh had taught him from the Old Country:
In the name of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob â¦
He repeated this eight more times. He slipped Finn's ring off his finger. He couldn't possibly wear it to the tree planting. Instead, he placed it in the case for safekeeping. Now it was a supersugared mezuzah-Irish-good-luck-charm double whammy. He looked for a place to hide it near the front door. He spied a loose brick where the stoop joined the building. He scraped at the crumbling mortar with the knife until he could pull the brick away. He shoved the case into the cavity, then chipped off the back of the brick so there would be room to slide it into place.
He headed up to his room in the attic.
Now he must wait to hear from Finn. He decided to change into his best suit, just in case he got to go to the tree planting.
Prayer scroll
. He took the scroll out of his other pants pocketâGod forbid Mameh should wash it with the weekly laundry!âand looked around for a place to keep it.
On the spiral. Now.
When he set it on the slab of slate, he got a faint static shock, heard the echo of a boy's voice.
This could take ages.
He turned to discover two strange boys sitting on the floor, watching him.
What a terrible, awful
shanda
he'd made of his thirteenth birthday.
ow, did you hear that?” Angelo said to Tony. “Not only have the Hagmanns been after this place for
generations
, but they think it rightfully belongs to them, and they're not above a little double-crossing to get it back.”
“Like, say, accusing my dad of forcing you to sign Number Thirteen over to me,” Tony said. “But now I'm wondering something else.”
“What?” Angelo said.
“If it was Benedict Hagmann
himself
who murdered you, then framed the dirty deed on Dad.”
“Murder?” Solly said.
Tony filled him in on Hagmann's allegations against Michael.
“There's something I don't understand,” Angelo said. “If it's
true that Number Thirteen once belonged to the Hagmanns, why would Finn make a pact with friends
not
to let them get it back?”
“Not only that, but Finn made Solly swear the same thing on his ring,” Tony pointed out.
“Who then asked Mama to make the exact same promise at my birthday dinner,” Angelo added.
They both turned to Solly.
“Finn didn't say why he made the pact,” Solly said. “He just said I'd understand one day. He wouldn't even tell me how he planned to get the best of Chester Hagmann.”
The house suddenly rumbled and shuddered. Tony and Solly ducked for cover.
“What's wrong?” Angelo said. Obviously, he hadn't felt a thing.
“I think we're having an earthquake,” Tony said. He grabbed his cell phone and scrambled to his feet.
“In Boston?” Angelo said.
“It sounded more like an explosion,” Solly said, jumping up as well.
Solly and Tony dashed out the bedroom door. All Angelo could do was sit tight till they got back. Both boys had vanished into their own times as soon as they reached the stairwell.
At garden level, Tony peered out the door of the mother-in-law room. Whoa, the back deck was no longer there! Nor was any of the furniture Julia and the twins had moved onto it. He spied the three of them on the weedy patio below, toeing the rubble of rotted timber, smashed chairs, and broken glass.
“What happened?” Tony said.
“Isn't it obvious?” Julia said.
“Mikey and me were on that deck a minute before it went,” Angey said.
“Good thing
you
were at the lawyer's, Two-Ton,” Mikey said, “and not on the deck with us. We'd be goners, for sure.”
“Better get down here,” Julia said.
“How?” Tony said. “The stairs fell with the deck.”
“Through the basement,” Julia said.
“Basement?” Tony said. “I thought garden level
was
the basement.” So there
was
another floor below the street.
“Look behind the door at the bottom of the staircase,” Julia said.
Tony took a rickety old staircase down to a dank cellar. The place was coated in dust and festooned with cobwebs. There were
definitely
rats down there. No wonder Michael had left this level off his welcome tour.
Gingerly, Tony made his way past stacks of faded Christmas decorations, filing cabinets spilling over with paperwork,
a gigantic furnace, and a workbench covered with rusty tools. Finally he reached the welcome shaft of light streaming through an open bulkhead door.
“Where's Dad?” Mikey said as soon as Tony had climbed the steps and joined them on the patio.
“He, uh, went to look at beds,” Tony said. “For my room.”
“Maybe you better call him,” Angey said to Julia.
Julia burst into tears. “I don't know how much more of this I can take!” she wailed. “I knew moving here was a terrible idea. I just knew it! Why did I ever let your father talk me into it?” She rushed into the house, sobbing.
“Wow,” Angey said. “She
never
cries.”
“This is all your fault,” Mikey said to Tony.
“How is this
my
fault?” Tony said.
“If you hadn't sucked up so much to Zio Angelo at Thanksgiving,” Mikey said, “he would never have left you this death trap. We would all still be living in some nice rental in Ann Arbor. Me and Angey would be training for freshman soccer. And you'd be out of our hair at some fat camp on the Upper Peninsula.”
Tony bit his lower lip. Secretly, he sort of agreed: Life would be a heck of a lot easier in Ann Arbor. Plus Mikey didn't even know the
half
of what was going on. “How about we clean up this mess?” Tony said. “Getting into a fight right now is definitely not going to do much for Mom's stress level.”
“He's right,” Angey said to Mikey.
Mikey stared at Angey in disbelief. But as soon as Angey began stacking rotted timbers, Mikey pitched in by piling broken bricks. Meanwhile, Tony tried to puzzle together which arms and legs went with which chairs. A moment later, his cell phone cuckooed with a message. Who could
that
be? Julia was upstairs bawling her eyes out, and Michael was still being interrogated by the police. He checked the display screen.
New Message from: Pickles.
He called up the actual text:
Update. Stop by shop.
“Who's that?” Mikey said. “You don't have any friends.”
“Wrong number,” Tony said, stowing the phone.
That was when Julia wandered back out, dabbing her eyes with a tissue. Tony gave her a hug; she definitely looked like she could use one. “Pity party's over,” she said. “Thanks for holding it together, you guys.”