Authors: Dan Poblocki
room. “Obviously not.”
“You mean …?”
“What you said on the bus last night, Timothy
… You were right. Al of this … everything that
has happened … It al makes sense. Someone
has that jawbone and has been using it against
us.”“Why?” said Timothy. “What did we do?”
Abigail closed her eyes and shook her head.
“I don’t know.”
Timothy stood up, “But, Abigail, if the
jawbone is a weapon, then we have our
defense.” He wandered to the back of the chair,
trying to sort out the situation. She stared at
him quizzical y. “Your Nightmarys. Stuart’s
him quizzical y. “Your Nightmarys. Stuart’s
monster. Al of it. Fear. It’s not real.”
“We don’t know that,” said Abigail. “It al
seems pret y real!”
Timothy paused to think. “Wel , what do we
know? Stuart ended up in the hospital. Mr.
Crane cal ed me about the specimen jars. You
nearly fol owed those girls out into the rain….
Maybe it doesn’t mat er what’s real. Maybe al
that mat ers is what we believe? The jawbone
controls fear. And fear controls us.”
“Yes!” Abigail said. “If my grandmother
hadn’t shown up at the elevators when she did
last night, I’d be in big trouble right about now.
It’s not the Nightmarys who want me to fol ow
them. It’s someone else. If the jawbone gives
the user the ability to read minds, he’s
control ing my fear of them to get me where he
wants me.”
“Where would that be?” said Timothy.
Abigail shook her head. “My grandmother
said Hesselius wrote her a let er from his cel ,
promising that someday, she would pay for
promising that someday, she would pay for
tel ing on him.”
“Pay how?”
A cold draft swept past them. The oor
creaked slightly. Timothy and Abigail both
spun. The plastic tarp outside made a crinkling
sound. A tal silhouet e stood framed in the
opening. Timothy felt the room start to spin.
He clutched the back of the leather chair, as
Abigail leapt to her feet. A deep voice said,
“What are you doing in here?”
33.
“We were—” Timothy began, but the man
interrupted with a wave of his hand.
“Save it.” He stepped inside. His dark hair
and beard were salted with white. He wore
black jeans, an untucked dress shirt, and a dark
blazer. “Wendy told me she gave a couple of
visitor passes to some middle-school students
earlier this morning. I didn’t see anyone
downstairs who fit that description, so I thought
I’d do a lit le exploring, and what do I nd?”
The man smiled, revealing crooked yel ow
teeth. “Trespassers.”
“Um, sir?” Timothy raised his hand.
“Technical y, we’re not trespassing. There
wasn’t a keep-out sign on the door.”
“I guess common sense is a di cult concept
for today’s youth,” said the man. “Come on.
Time to go.”
Time to go.”
“We’re wicked sorry,” said Timothy, heading
toward the door. “We didn’t mean any harm.”
“Yeah, total y no harm meant,” Abigail
whispered, trailing behind him.
When they reached the door, the man
stopped Abigail. “What’s this?” he said,
glancing at the framed basebal cards.
“Oh, that’s, um …,” said Abigail, but she
wasn’t quick enough.
The man took the frame from her. “I recal
these sit ing in front of the safe on that
bookshelf over there. At least, that’s where they
were the last time I checked.”
The safe? thought Timothy. What safe? He
glanced at Abigail. She looked as shocked as he
was. The man brushed past them, crossed
through the room, and slid open a smal wood
panel in the bookshelf. Inside the cupboard
was a metal door, a combination lock plugged
into its center. “Locked,” said the man, closing
the door and replacing the frame. “Strange, if
you ask me,” he continued, “but then again, in
you ask me,” he continued, “but then again, in
my opinion, this whole situation is strange.
Beyond strange.” The man ushered Timothy
and Abigail out the door, past the plastic
curtain, and onto the landing. “You’d think
after almost fty years, the col ege would have
left this room alone,” said the man. “They were
the ones who put up this wal in the rst place.
But no. Now we need space. Space! We cannot
waste the space! And I have to deal with the
mess.”
“You mean,” Abigail said, fol owing the man
down the stairs, “the col ege put up that wal ?”
“One of the old librarians asked them to,”
said the man. “Sealed that of ice right up.”
“But why?” said Timothy.
Once they reached the bot om of the stairs,
the man stopped and turned around. “And I’d
be tel ing you for what reason?” He squinted at
them.
“Actual y,” said Abigail, “it’s kind of weird,
but we’re here doing research about the man
who used that of ice.”
who used that of ice.”
“Dr. Hesselius?” said the man. Surprised, the
kids nodded. Abigail pul ed the micro che
pages from under her arm and handed them to
him. The man ipped through them with a
curious expression. “Why would you want to
know about him?”
A few minutes later, Timothy and Abigail were
behind the front desk, helping the man, who’d
introduced himself as Gavin Engstrom, load
heavy books onto a wobbly cart. Abigail had
convinced Gavin to tel them the history of
Hesselius’s strange o ce in exchange for a
round of reshelving. He’d sent the blond
assistant away for the moment.
Gavin leaned against the desk and folded his
arms. “The plans began last year when
someone up in the admissions building noticed
the window anomaly.” Both Abigail and
Timothy stared at him. “There were more
windows outside than we could account for on
the inside,” Gavin continued. “The O ce of
the inside,” Gavin continued. “The O ce of
Building and Development soon rediscovered
the room at the top of the stairs. As I was
saying, space is quite a commodity at this
institution. Of course, I’ve been ful y aware of
the room ever since I started here. After the
library erected the wal , the abandoned o ce
was secret sta knowledge, passed down
through these last few generations, like an
heirloom. I had come to the conclusion that the
room had actual y become invisible.”
Timothy snickered. “Wel , that’s just…,” he
began. Just what? Sil y? A moment later,
Timothy realized it wasn’t sil y. After
everything he’d just learned, it was actual y
real y creepy.
“I’m assuming you know a bit about the
former occupant,” Gavin went on, nodding at
the pages Abigail had stacked on the book cart.
“Scary story, right?” Abigail and Timothy
nodded. “Supposedly, the librarians at the time
knew Hesselius pret y wel . They liked him.
Early on, during the trial, there had been talk
Early on, during the trial, there had been talk
about whether or not Hesselius might return, so
they saved his o ce for him, just the way he
left it. But after the government put him away,
no one wanted to go in there. With al the talk,
people didn’t know what to believe. I think it
was … Percival Ankh, the head librarian at the
time, who locked up the o ce. And so it
remained, for several years, a closed door,” said
Gavin. “Hesselius died. People said they heard
noises in there. Rumors of voices. Cults. Dark
magic. No one even used that staircase
anymore. Creepy. Mr. Ankh was a superstitious
man. I’m pret y sure it was his idea to seal up
the room behind the wal too.”
“Did people think Hesselius’s ghost was in
there?” Timothy asked. “Did you ever see
anything?”
“Me?” Gavin laughed. “No. I’m not the seeing
kind.”
Abigail bumped into the cart. It squeaked.
“Upstairs, you seemed a lit le freaked out.”
“Wel , yes, I was nervous,” Gavin said. “I
“Wel , yes, I was nervous,” Gavin said. “I
heard your voices. I didn’t expect to nd a
couple of kids up there gathering dust.”
“Then why’d you make us give back that
frame?” said Timothy.
Gavin laughed. “You wanna know why?” he
asked. “First of al , it didn’t belong to you.
Second of al … it didn’t belong to you!”
“Then it’s not cursed or anything?” Timothy
blushed.
“It very wel may be, if you believe in
curses,” said Gavin, “but that’s not my concern.
Nothing can leave that room. You see, there’s a
lawsuit. Turns out, news of the room’s
discovery got back to Dr. Hesselius’s relatives.
They insist everything in that room belongs to
them. No one’s supposed to touch it until the
col ege set les the issue.”
“Who are his relatives?” said Abigail.
“His son, speci cal y,” said Gavin. “A sweet
old guy who stil lives in New Starkham. I don’t
blame him for trying, the economy being what
it is.”
it is.”
“You’ve met him?” said Timothy.
“Sure,” said Gavin. “Came by the library a
couple months ago. He hobbled up those stairs
himself. Technical y, he wasn’t al owed, but I
gave him some time to look around. Unlike
some people I know, he left without touching a
thing. I actual y hope he gets everything he
wants, though most of what’s left in there is
worthless, in my opinion. Stil , I couldn’t help
feeling sorry for the guy. Losing his father the
way he did.”
“You mean, his father, the child snatcher?”
said Abigail, tossing a book onto the cart.
“Hey, careful with that,” said Gavin. He
sighed. “Please. You know what I mean. He lost
his twin brother too. Imagine how you would
have felt if you were him.”
“I don’t think I real y want to,” said Abigail
quietly, “but thanks anyway.”
Gavin stared at her for several seconds, then
shrugged. “People don’t inherit the sins of their
parents.”
parents.”
“Thank God,” said Timothy and Abigail at
the same time.
“Let’s go,” said the librarian. “Enough chat.”
He pushed the cart from behind the desk
toward the bookshelves. The squeaky wheel
echoed through the large room. “More action.”
Moments later, Timothy fol owed Abigail into
the Ancient Religions section. “We’ve got to get
back up there.”
“Where?” said Abigail. “The of ice?”
“That hidden safe,” said Timothy. “The
basebal -card frame was right in front of it. It’s
got a be a clue. We should check it out.” He
pul ed a book from the cart, matched up the
number on the spine, and shoved it into its
place on the shelf. “Besides, after everything
we’ve been through, there’s no way I’m leaving
those cards up there. I don’t care if Gavin tries
to stop us. I’d be wil ing to do some evasive
action to get past him. Whenever we play
basketbal in gym class, I play pret y good
basketbal in gym class, I play pret y good
of ense.”
“That won’t be necessary,” said Abigail,
lifting another book from the cart.
Timothy shook his head. “What do you mean,
not necessary?”
Abigail placed her book on the shelf. “The
evasive action already happened, sil y.” She
reached into her back pocket. “I doubt we can
get back up there without being noticed, but at
least we’ve got these.” When she pul ed out the
three basebal cards, Timothy had to cover his
mouth to keep from whooping. She held her
finger up to her mouth and said, “Shhh.”
34.
They nished shelving the books and returned
the cart to the front desk, where Gavin was
hunched over some paperwork.
“Excuse me one last time?” said Abigail. “Say
we wanted to … find Dr. Hesselius’s son?”
Gavin looked up, perturbed. “I’l ask again,”
he said. “Why should I be tel ing you this?”
With a tiny smile, Abigail simply waved the
micro che printouts. Gavin rol ed his eyes.
“Research. Right.” He sighed. “I think I have his
contact information in my o ce. Just a
second,” he said. He went through a door
behind the front desk. Moments later, he