Read Aunt Dimity Goes West Online
Authors: Nancy Atherton
armed to the teeth and meaner than a bear with a blis-
tered paw. I remember one time . . .”
I gave Toby an amused, sidelong glance as he went
on to describe a hair-raising battle with a gang of des-
peradoes. I was no expert on American history, but I
was pretty sure that the great cattle drives had ended
in the late nineteenth century, when ranchers began
transporting livestock by rail. If Toby could remember
those days, he was remarkably well preserved, but I sus-
pected that he was simply introducing the boys to the
fine western tradition of telling tall tales.
“How high is Bluebird?” I asked, when the twins
had fallen into a bedazzled silence.
“About eight thousand feet,” Toby replied.
“Eight thousand feet,” I said weakly. The caffeine
had definitely worn off. “How long will it take us to
get used to living at eight thousand feet?”
“No more than a few days,” he assured me. “It’s
normal to feel a little lightheaded at first, but if you feel a headache coming on—a serious headache, that
is, as if someone were driving a chisel into your
Aunt Dimity Goes West
41
skull—let me know right away. It could be a sign of
altitude sickness, and that’s no laughing matter.”
I closed my eyes and decided that it would be
much better for my peace of mind if I refrained from
asking any more questions. When I opened them
again, I was swaying slightly from side to side and
squinting in the glare of oncoming headlights.
The broad interstate and the wide open spaces had
vanished, replaced by a two-lane highway that wound
halfway up the wall of a twisting, serpentine canyon.
In the dim light of the dying day, I could see a white-
water stream foaming below us, while above us pine
trees appeared to cling by their root tips to whatever
soil they could find in the rocky terrain.
The road seemed to be made up entirely of blind
curves bordered intermittently by bent and dented
guardrails. As cars, campers, and trucks hurtled toward
us out of nowhere, it became bloodcurdlingly clear to
me that my husband had been both wise and farsighted
to hire a local driver for us. Had I been foolish enough to take the wheel, I would have sent the van crashing
into the canyon wall or plummeting into the rushing
stream before we’d rounded the first bend.
I must have flinched, because Toby noticed that I
was awake.
“Enjoy your nap?” he asked softly. He jutted his chin
toward the backseats. “The others have dozed off, too.”
“I wish I were still asleep,” I confessed, tightening
my seat belt. “I enjoyed the drive more when I was
unconscious.”
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“It takes getting used to,” Toby conceded, “but
we’re almost there, and you wouldn’t want to miss
this next part.”
He’d barely finished speaking when the canyon
opened out onto a scene of such startling beauty
that I caught my breath. We’d entered a long valley
surrounded by high mountain ranges. A black lake
filled the valley floor, reflecting the handful of stars that had appeared in the darkening sky.The lights of a town
twinkled at the lake’s western tip, like birthday candles set in black velvet, surmounted by the serried silhouettes of peaks backlit by the setting sun.
“Welcome to the Vulgamore Valley,” said Toby.
“Bluebird’s just ahead. Nice, isn’t it?”
“It’s gorgeous,” I said softly. “Absolutely gorgeous.
I didn’t expect a lake.”
“Technically, it’s a reservoir,” said Toby. “But we call it Lake Matula, in honor of Annabelle Matula, the first
woman to settle in the Vulgamore Valley.”
“Are there fish?” asked a sleepy voice behind us.
“Lots of them,” Toby replied. “And you’ll find fish-
ing poles at the cabin.”
“Good,” murmured Will. “I like fishing.”
“Me, too,” Rob chimed in, though he sounded even
more drowsy than his brother.
When I next looked over my shoulder, they were
both nodding in their booster seats, fast asleep. It had been a long day for my little guys.
The two-lane highway followed Lake Matula’s
northern shore, but trees grew right down to the edge
Aunt Dimity Goes West
43
of its southern shore. Search as I might, I could dis-
cover no glimmer of light in the forest, no sign of
habitation anywhere but in the cluster of buildings to
the west. It looked as though every human being in the
Vulgamore Valley lived in Bluebird. Where, I won-
dered, was the cabin?
The posted speed limit fell from fifty to twenty
when we reached Bluebird, at the far end of Lake
Matula. The town had looked tiny from a distance, but
it was at least three times larger than Finch. I could
tell at a glance that it differed from Finch in many
other ways as well. The golden limestone used to
build Finch’s houses had come from one quarry, so
the village possessed a pleasing homogeneity that at-
tracted world-class artists to its cobbled streets.
The same could not be said of Bluebird, which
seemed to pride itself on the helter-skelter individuality of its dwellings. We drove past tiny Victorian cottages, stark cinderblock huts, ramshackle wooden houses, and
at least one geodesic dome. It was too dark to pass judgment on the church, and I had only the briefest glimpse
of the business district, but the gas station was a brightly lit eyesore flanked by heaps of dirty snow.
Toby turned left at the gas station onto a side street
that became a dirt road at the edge of town. The stars
vanished from view as we entered the dense, pitch-
black forest bordering Lake Matula’s southern shore.
Toby followed the dirt road for about fifty yards, then
slowed the van to a crawl and turned onto an even
narrower dirt road that zigged and zagged upward.
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“Lots of deer in these woods,” he explained. “I
wouldn’t want to hit one on your first night here.”
“Or any other night,” I said, and peered anxiously
ahead, hoping that our bouncing, juddering headlights
would discourage all woodland creatures from cross-
ing the road.
After what seemed an eternity, we reached a level
clearing in the forest. Toby promptly shut off the en-
gine and doused the headlights.
“Wait here,” he said. “I’ll be back in a minute.”
I waited nervously while he disappeared into the
gloom, wondering if bears knew how to open car
doors; then I shrank back, blinking, as a blinding blaze of light drove away the darkness.
There, in the clearing, illuminated by a constella-
tion of floodlights, stood Danny Auerbach’s log cabin.
It wasn’t a shack.
Five
D anny’s cabin was unlike any building I’d ever
seen. It sprawled across the clearing and
climbed up the hillside like the roots of a
gigantic tree, bending itself around boulders, bridging
small gulleys, and encircling saplings.
In some places the cabin was one story tall; in
others it rose to three, but each level bristled with
balconies, decks, and porches. There seemed to be
hundreds of sparkling windows, and they came in all
shapes and sizes: portholes, stars, octagons, massive
sheets of plate glass, tiny panes of leaded glass. At least six stone chimneys, three weathervanes, and a flagless
flagpole rose from the irregular roofline. The largest
chimney belonged to the cabin’s central feature: a
soaring A-frame structure, with a front wall made al-
most entirely of glass, that extended into the clearing
like the prow of a ship.
“Wow,” I said faintly.
“Pretty cool, huh?” said Toby.
“It’s . . . it’s
wonderful,
” I managed, wishing I could think of a bigger word. “It’s magical, incredible, better than I—” I broke off, pricked by a sudden suspicion,
and turned toward Toby so quickly that the seat belt
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snapped taut across my chest. “Does a crazy neighbor
live nearby? With a shotgun?”
Toby eyed me in puzzlement. “The Auerbachs have
owned the south side of the valley for five generations, Lori.They’ve never allowed anyone else to build here.
Our nearest neighbor is Dick Major, and he lives at
the edge of town, where the dirt road begins.” Toby
pointed to the east end of the cabin. “My apartment’s
behind the garage, and I don’t own a shotgun.”
“Just checking,” I said, and settled back, relieved to
know that two of my biggest worries had failed to ma-
terialize. The cabin wasn’t a dilapidated shanty, and I
wouldn’t have to deal with a crazy neighbor. So far, so
good, I thought. Now we’ll see about the drains.
Toby restarted the engine, drove past the central
A-frame, and parked the van in front of a short, broad
staircase that led to an imposing wooden door in-
cised with images of soaring eagles.
“Welcome to the Aerie,” he said. “I’ll get the lug-
gage while you and Annelise bring the boys in. We can
take them straight to bed, if you like.”
I turned to look at the twins, who were still fast
asleep. “Bed is where they need to be, but I can’t
lift either one of them. I hurt my shoulder a few
weeks ago and it’s still a little weak, so would you
mind . . . ?”
“No problem,” Toby said and stepped out into the
crisp night air.
<
Aunt Dimity Goes West
47
An hour later, the boys were in bed, Annelise was en-
joying a well-earned bubble bath in a bathroom fit for
a queen, and Toby and I were sitting on a huge, soft
leather sofa in the great room, sipping hot chocolate
in front of a roaring fire.
“Are you
sure
we’re supposed to use the family’s bedrooms?” I asked for the third or fourth time.
Toby nodded. “James left a note instructing me to
put you in the family rooms. He thought you’d like be-
ing on the same corridor, but if you want to move—”
“No, no,” I said hastily. “I don’t want to change a
thing.”
Will and Rob would have disowned me if I’d moved
them from the room James Blackwell had assigned to
them. The boys’ bedroom was a
boy’s
bedroom. The furniture was child-sized and made from rough-hewn logs.
The chest of drawers had horseshoe handles, the twin
beds had cartwheel headboards, and the metal bases of
the bedside lamps were shaped like bucking broncos.
The wide-planked floor was covered with Navajo-style
rugs, the beds with Navajo-style blankets, and colorful
paintings of hardworking cowboys hung on the walls.
The pièce de résistance was the open archway in
the rear wall that led to an enormous playroom. The
playroom’s cupboards were filled with toys and board
games, and a freestanding tent stood in the back cor-
ner, but the main attraction was the log fort with its
rope ladder, slide, and tower. Annelise and I agreed
that the fort would be a godsend if summer blizzards
kept the twins cooped up indoors. The playroom also
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had a large picture window, but, thankfully, no porch,
deck, or balcony from which my adventurous off-
spring could tumble.
Annelise, too, would have objected to any sugges-
tion that she move from the room James Blackwell
had selected for her, for practical as well as aesthetic reasons. Her bedroom was conveniently located directly across the hall from the twins’ and next door to
a splendid family bathroom, but it was also charm-
ingly furnished and had its own little balcony.
The master suite, at the end of the same corridor,
was sparely but beautifully furnished with simple pine
furniture. White curtains hung at the windows, fluffy
white rugs covered the polished plank floor, and the
king-sized bed was draped with a crocheted white cov-
erlet over a white duvet. A pair of white-upholstered
armchairs sat before a corner fireplace made of smooth
river stones, and the bathroom was a spacious oasis of
comfort, with a cedar-clad Jacuzzi tub, a glass-walled
shower stall, and double sinks set into an antique side-
board. A set of French doors in the bedroom led to a
deck that overlooked the clearing in front of the Aerie.
I had no desire whatsoever to exchange the master suite
for another room.
“It’s just a bit strange,” I said, turning to Toby. “I
mean, there are clothes hanging in the closets. I feel as if we’re intruding.”
“You’re not,” he assured me. “James Blackwell was
supposed to ship the Auerbachs’ stuff to them, but I
guess he never got around to it. I’ll take care of it
Aunt Dimity Goes West
49
tomorrow. But if you want to move to one of the guest
suites—”
“No, thanks,” I said firmly. “James Blackwell made
the right call. I like being near my sons and Annelise.
How many children does Danny Auerbach have?”
“Three,” he replied. “Two young sons and a teenaged
daughter.”
I looked around the great room and sighed. “They
must be the happiest kids on earth.”
The great room was the A-frame structure at the