The Village by the Sea (9 page)

BOOK: The Village by the Sea
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“Emma, dear. I know how glad you are. Do you know how glad I am? Today, I walked nearly half a mile along the hospital corridor. They really ought to plant a few trees. First hospitals scare the daylights out of you. Then they bore the daylights out of you.”

Her heart thumping, Emma thought: Scare you to death.…

“I'm coming home in two days,” he said. “And Mom's coming to get you Monday.”

“Is it all right?” she said breathlessly. “Is your heart all right now?”

“It's pretty good,” he replied. “Emma, I can draw a deep breath. It's wonderful. It's like drawing up a pail of fresh, cold water from a well.”

She drew a deep breath herself. “Just like that,” he said. “Tell me—how has it been? I've thought of you whenever they weren't fiddling around with me here. How is the terror?”

She lowered her voice. “They've been arguing about
stew
,” she told him. “Daddy, she's so mean! And, Daddy—did she used to drink a lot of brandy?”

He didn't answer quickly. She listened to him breathing, so happy at the even sound of it, she nearly forgot what she'd asked him.

Finally, he said, “Yes, she did. But she stopped. I admired her for that. But she has a habit of resentment. It's a kind of addiction, too, like brandy.”

“Is she especially mad at your mother because of the house in Connecticut?” Emma asked in a whisper. She had heard the sound of a chair being pushed across the floor.

“I think so,” he said. “She's been angry at my mother for a thousand years. It's pretty hopeless being mad at ghosts.” He paused, then, his voice filled with concern, asked her, “Has she been terrible to you?”

Emma thought a moment. “No, it's not that,” she said.

“Emma, your supper is getting cold, Crispin's wonderful stew!” shouted Aunt Bea, her voice carrying from the dining room.

“I heard that,” Emma's father said. “She always could say
wonderful
so it could slice you in half. Never mind. It's hard to believe, but she doesn't care what the target is—she wants to feel the stones leaving her hand—it won't be long, my duck.”

“I'm so glad, Daddy,” Emma said feelingly.

“So am I,” he said.

On her way back to the dining room, she passed the long table. Uncle Crispin's violin was elsewhere, but behind a pile of music books, she saw the tiny plastic deer. Without thinking she grabbed it up and stuck it in her pocket.

“It was Daddy,” she said to the two of them, sitting silently at the dining table. “Mom's coming to get me Monday. That's a day early.”

“He must be doing very well indeed,” Uncle Crispin observed. He looked quite tired, Emma thought.

“You might try to disguise how happy you are to get away from me,” Aunt Bea said, pouting.

“Oh, it's not that!” protested Emma. “It's going home, seeing them. It's—”

“All right, all right …” muttered Aunt Bea. “I know that.”

“I'm going home Monday,” Emma told Bertie.

“That's only four days,” Bertie said. “And I think we have to have a library, and a church for everyone, no special kind.”

“We ought to have a little forest, too,” Emma said, “behind the village, at the foot of the cliff, so that people can go on picnics in the summer. There has to be a wild place.”

“That's a good idea,” Bertie agreed.

“I have a wild creature to put in our forest,” Emma said, showing Bertie the deer.

“Did you find that on the beach?” asked Bertie.

“No,” Emma replied.

“But you said we should use only what we found lying around on the sand,” Bertie recalled.

“I know I did,” Emma said. Since she couldn't explain to herself why she wanted the deer to be part of what they had made, she could hardly explain it to Bertie. The deer was the right size, but she didn't think that was the whole reason. The doll's house furniture Bertie had offered would have been, too. She felt cranky suddenly as though Bertie was arguing about the deer—which she wasn't. But they weren't building doll's houses.

The village had taken on a life of its own. The tiny twigs and branches looked like real trees when they swayed in a breeze. The street of luminous shells gleamed. In the gardens behind the houses, the hedges and flowers stirred, and the studio skylight often seemed lit from within. It wasn't a place built for dolls with their hard little bodies and frozen faces.

She sighed. “The deer comes from a brandy bottle,” she said to Bertie. “They had a big fight about it.”

Bertie nodded as though she knew all about that. Emma supposed she did. By now, they knew each other's feelings about Aunt Bea. They didn't talk about her much. When they did, Emma didn't feel uneasy as she had at first. In fact, it was a relief. Yesterday, she had mentioned to Bertie how Aunt Bea only looked really happy when she was watching a television program.

Bertie had said, “Granny thinks she's usually happy when she's watching all her enemies.”

“Who are her enemies?” Emma had asked.

“Oh—everybody,” Bertie had said vaguely. “Everybody out there in the world.”

Remembering that, Emma said, “Your Granny must really hate her.” They were gathering round stones for the library.

“Oh, no,” Bertie said. “She thinks she's funny. But she said she supposed she wouldn't find her so funny if she had to live with her.”

“We could use a horseshoe crab for the church,” Emma suggested. “Its tail would make a good spire.”

They couldn't find a horseshoe crab so Bertie said they could build a Greek temple for people to go into and be quiet for a while. “That's a good idea,” Emma said, “and we can use sticks for columns and one of those flat, slatey stones for the roof.”

They set off on a search. Emma wasn't cranky anymore. She was thinking only of what they might find, half-buried in the sand, waiting to be discovered.

On Friday, Aunt Bea was alone when Emma went to the house to get a glass of milk. She insisted Emma look at some things of hers she had been saving for a surprise.

Moving heavily, panting a little, she led Emma up the stairs to one of the rooms Emma had looked into. Inside it was the old-fashioned trunk.

“It's from the Civil War,” Aunt Bea said proudly. “It belonged to my great-grandfather who was an officer, of course. See his initials? K.B.? And here are spots of melted wax from the candles he stuck on it so he could write letters to his wife, whom he adored. Now …” and she flung open the lid. A smell of must and age, of old cloth, filled Emma's nostrils. Her eyes widened at the quantity of laces and silks, frail as moths' wings, that billowed up.

Aunt Bea stared at her triumphantly. “These marvelous things belonged to his wife,” she said. “Look at the tiny stitches! Look!” She held up a garment whose seams were nearly invisible. “No machine could do that,” Aunt Bea said. She picked up a large fan, opened it, fluttered it in front of her face and peered over it at Emma. “This is beyond price,” she said. “Irreplaceable!” Reverently, she put back what she'd taken from the trunk.

“Your grandmother tried to steal this,” she said harshly. “But I wouldn't let her. This trunk is my one triumph!”

“It's beautiful,” Emma said desperately, feeling she might not get out of the room with its dry ghost smell of clothes, the possession of a vanished woman, the trunk sitting there like a tomb. Anger had pinched Aunt Bea's face. Her eyes narrowed as she looked in a corner of the room as though the person who had enraged her was standing there, visible only to her.

Suddenly she smiled, not turning her head. “I suppose you want to get back to your mud pies with old Bert,” she said scornfully.

Emma started to protest that they weren't making mud pies, that “old Bert” was Bertie, tall and thin and sweet. But she said nothing. She had suddenly noticed that Aunt Bea was wearing not one but two of the old robes she had found in the thrift shop and the buckles were missing from the sandals on her feet. Her face was flushed as though she'd been running. Maybe she didn't drink brandy anymore, but something in her mind was making her drunk.

“I'll go now,” Emma said quietly. She left the room, then the house.

Bertie was waiting, standing at the edge of the village, her hands on her hips. Emma began to tell her about the trunk, but Bertie held up her hand. “Wait! Just look!” She pointed at the beginning of the main street. Emma saw an animal print. The artist's studio had been knocked apart, and there was a trail of paw marks leading to the forest.

“Oh!” she exclaimed.

“A dog,” Bertie said grimly. “While I went up for lunch with Granny, someone took their dog for a walk or let it out of the house. Can you beat that? It's all wrecked.”

“It isn't wrecked,” Emma cried. “It's a little shaky. And that's all. Come on. We can fix it.”

There were tears on Bertie's cheeks. Emma forgot about Aunt Bea and her old, sour anger.

“Bertie, it isn't that bad. Honestly. Look, he only ran over a little bit of the street and a couple of the houses.”

Bertie didn't move. Emma squatted down and picked up the studio skylight. “Come on, help me,” she said. “Things always happen. It isn't just our beach.”

It didn't take long to repair the damage, to smooth away the dog's knobby paw marks.

“I suppose it could have been worse,” Bertie admitted after they saw that everything was back where it had been. “The dog probably thought it was a public facility for dogs.”

That afternoon, they finished the library. It looked to Emma like the one built of fieldstone in the town near the cottage in upstate New York.

Bertie found a large flat slab of slate for their temple almost as soon as she started looking for one. They had a lovely time making the forest, drawing with a small stick a network of tiny paths leading to a clearing for picnics.

“Tomorrow, we'll make everything perfect,” Emma said. “We ought to build a fireplace in the clearing so people can cook there.”

“We need a sign for the inn,” Bertie remembered. “I could print one when we decide on the name.”

“Maybe we'll find something tomorrow,” Emma said.

They took a short swim. It had been a good day's work. Emma had even liked fixing the damage done by the dog.

Just before they parted, Bertie said, “We could call the inn
The Sign of the Deer
.”

Emma said they ought to think of something else. She didn't tell Bertie, but she wanted the deer to be hidden in the forest.

“We're lucky there haven't been any high tides,” Bertie said as Emma started up the stairs. “Just one, and everything would have been washed out to the bay.”

Looking down on the village, Emma felt exhilarated. They had built it in a place full of dangers: tides, a storm, wandering animals, anything could have destroyed it. But it was there, smaller than life, but just as strong.

For supper that night, there were scrambled eggs and sliced tomatoes. Uncle Crispin had had too many lessons to do much shopping or cooking. Aunt Bea piled up a saucer with ice cream. She grinned at Emma as she ate great spoonfuls of it.

“It's divine,” she murmured.

“How's your beach project?” Uncle Crispin asked.

“It's great,” Emma replied. “When we finish it tomorrow, will you come down and look at it?” She was looking at Uncle Crispin, but because Aunt Bea's grin had seemed so friendly, she turned to her and asked, “Will you come, too?”

“I can't wait to see it,” Uncle Crispin said. “I remember building a tree house when I was a boy. A friend and I. His name was Bob. Yes … Bob and I built a wonderful roost, like Tarzan's. It was the best time of my life.”

“Really,” Aunt Bea said in a rather buttery voice.

“As a child,” Uncle Crispin said.

“I read and painted,” Aunt Bea said, holding her head stiffly. “I never did things like that, sticking my hands in dirt or nailing old sticks together and pretending I was doing something important.”

“Oh, Bea …” Uncle Crispin said in a hopeless way.

She giggled suddenly. “Oh, Crispin! Can I have a touch more of ice cream? It's
so
delicious!”

Emma's father phoned just as they finished the last of the ice cream. He sounded calm and as if he were at home. Some friends were coming to visit him that evening so their conversation was a short one. It felt to Emma almost as though it was the time before he had become sick, even though he was still in the hospital.

As she started back through the living room to help Uncle Crispin clean up the supper dishes, she heard him say, “There, there, my dear …”

She paused near the fireplace.

Aunt Bea's voice was soft, murmuring. Then it rose a little. “My trunk …” Emma heard. “My mother …” Then it surged like a wave at its crest. “Oh, Crispin,” she said. “When I woke up this morning, I thought my heart was broken!”

There was silence. Emma went to the entrance of the dining room. Uncle Crispin was crouched next to Aunt Bea, his arms around her waist. She rested her cheek on his head, the fall of her gun-metal hair hiding his ear and neck. They both looked up at Emma, their faces bewildered as though they hadn't known anyone else was in their house.

9

Vandal

“You won't believe this even when you see it!” cried Bertie who was waiting on the beach for Emma Sunday morning.

She held out a two-inch square of balsa wood. “Careful!” she warned as Emma took it. “It's almost falling apart.”

One side of the square was blank; on the other, faded but legible, was one word:
Lodgings.

“It was way down there,” Bertie said, pointing at a spot on the beach where several people were pushing a large raft into the water. “It must have been in the sand since last summer … from some kid's building set.… I was walking around there early this morning. I dropped my apple, and when I bent down to pick it up, I saw a plastic house roof. Underneath it was the sign.”

BOOK: The Village by the Sea
12.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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