months, and I wished it would stay that way.
"I know," he replied. "I'm just playing around
with it."
He'd finished stripping the radiator, put a coat of
primer on it, and cleaned up, then spent some time on
the phone and afterward just picked at his lunch. Behind
him, early-afternoon sunlight slanted brilliantly
through the dining-room windows.
"Are you worried about your dad?"
Sam frowned, moving the planchette a fraction
toward the Yes corner of the board. "Daigle says lots
of people wanted to kill Reuben Tate. He says there
are, like, other possible suspects."
Which wouldn't stop a prosecutor from doing his
best to pin the deed on Victor. And until recently I'd
have been happy to see Victor impaled on a pin the size
of a railroad spike. But now that he was in trouble I
had to admit that, over the months since he'd moved
here, Victor had done the one thing I'd never expected
of him: he had behaved.
Oh, he was still about as easy to have around as a
sprained ankle, and all the emotional baggage I had
with him could have filled a boxcar. Still, he hadn't
engaged in any scandalous dalliances with Eastport
girls, or gotten into feuds with any of the town's leading
citizens. He hadn't, as I had been so much fearing,
made a public spectacle of himself.
And then there was Sam, whose personal transformation
over the past couple of years had been nearly
miraculous. Now all he wanted was some semblance of
a normal home life, or at any rate one that didn't feature
a father confined to prison.
What we needed, I decided, was one of those other
suspects Tommy Daigle talked about, preferably one
who was (a) not in any sense a member of my family,
and (b) the real perpetrator.
"How come you're not down at the boatyard?" I
asked Sam.
He shrugged. "Day off. I got twenty hours in,
Harpwell says that's enough for this week."
And Sam did, too, his expression telegraphed with
perfect clarity. Work on the local guys' boats was all
right, as far as it went. Sam enjoyed it, but it didn't
offer him much variety.
"Well, it won't be forever. You'll be at school next
year."
I hoped. He'd been accepted at Yale, into a special
program, then had discovered Yale wasn't among the
top training grounds for marine architects, which was
what he planned on being. In the end he'd turned them
down, deciding to put off college altogether for a year,
which I personally thought was a fine idea.
But now ... "I don't know, Mom. I'm just not
sure that stuff is for me."
I stifled impatience. Dan Harpwell, owner of East
port Boat Yard, was holding out a promise of a partnership
for Sam: better money, more interesting work.
Without advanced schooling, though, in computer
aided design, modern methods and materials, even
some business accounting, Sam's future at the boat establishment
--and in his chosen career--was limited.
"Did you hear," he asked wryly, "about the dyslexic
devil worshiper who sold his soul to Santa?"
Well, at least he could joke about it. We'd found
out about his dyslexia a few years earlier; it had turned
out to be an odd, refractory form of the disability.
He'd gotten through high school by dint of taped texts,
special therapy, and tutoring. But now with a year off
from school he was getting a taste of not having to
struggle so hard all the time, and was--temporarily, I
hoped--shying at the gate of any further education at
all.
"Sam," I began gently, but his shoulders stiffened.
Time for a change of subject.
"I think," I offered carefully, for Sam could be
touchy if you tried cheering him up too blatantly,
"George Valentine knows Morse code. He's a ham
radio enthusiast."
He brightened a little. "Yeah? Hey, maybe I'll ask
him about it. You think spirits could learn to send messages
in Morse?"
"I don't know," I said, again feeling obscurely
troubled. On the other hand, none of the odd events
we'd experienced in the house had been malicious. And
just at that moment I'd have rented a room to the headless
horseman, if it made Sam feel better.
"I think," he said in a wan attempt to make a little
joke, "it would depend on whether a spirit knew any
Morse code before."
He took his hands off the Ouija board and looked
up sideways at me, his grin the pale ghost of the one he
usually wore.
Whereupon I swear that dratted planchette
twitched.
That afternoon, Arnold drove Victor to the
courthouse in Machias, thirty miles to our
south. The prisoner's behavior was calm and
cooperative, Arnold reported; Victor allowed
himself to be fingerprinted, photographed, and
placed in a cell; he was given a phone call, which, as
promised, he had made to an attorney in Manhattan.
"And that," Arnold finished, "is that." Victor
would remain in jail to await arraignment, hearings,
and trial.
I gripped the telephone, not yet quite able to believe
that it was all so cut-and-dried, or in fact that any
of it was real. But of course it was.
"State guys'll be around," Arnold went on, "talk
to you and Ellie about finding the body. About what
you saw and heard at La Sardina, too. And," he added
reluctantly, "they'll want to have a word with Sam."
Which was the part that I was most emphatically
not looking forward to. But it was coming; the state's
mobile crime lab was in town and the bodies were on
their way to the police forensic unit in Augusta; the
physical-evidence-gathering part of the program, Arnold
felt, would be completed by nightfall.
"Cops're saving your interviews until last," he
said. "They know none of you are going anywhere.
That'll wrap it up."
"But," I protested, "won't there be further investigation?
Isn't there anyone who thinks someone besides
Victor is guilty?"
I took a deep breath. "I mean, Arnold, if Victor
ever wanted to kill somebody, he'd come up with some
goofy plan full of clever, unworkable details. Full," I
went on, "of self-glorifying intellectual flourishes and
literary-thriller stuff he'd read somewhere and wanted
to imitate. A victim," I was practically pleading now,
"would die of natural causes, before Victor ever even
got around to doing the actual murder."
Arnold harrumphed unhappily. "Well, if you say
so. But Jacobia, that's beside the point. State guys
heard what they heard, they got orders of their own,
and the orders said go get Victor. I had to twist some
arms, even to talk them into letting me do it."
His tone softened. "And listen, Victor threatened
the guy. A lot of people heard him. Now it turns out
Reuben was threatening Victor, he had information
that Victor didn't want getting around."
A vehicle pulled into the driveway; Monday got up
and padded to the hall vigilantly, in case it contained
any burglars she could lick or nuzzle to death.
"Later," Arnold went on, "the guy gets found with
his throat cut and the weapon is Victor's. And Victor's
got no alibi for his whereabouts at the time of the
crime. And you've got to admit he's done some guilty
looking activities: washing up, getting rid of clothes,
and so on. So I ask you," Arnold finished reasonably,
"what's left, besides a confession?"
It did look awful. "But what about all the others
who wanted Reuben out of their hair? Sounds to me
like he had a grab bag full of mortal enemies."
"Yeah, but Reuben, he wasn't blackmailing them."
In the back hall, Monday's wag-o-meter shot up to
redline as Wade came in, home from the harbor. But
his face didn't look right to me; it was even more troubled
than I'd expected.
Also, he wasn't carrying his soft canvas gun bag.
When he is not on a boat, Wade restores and repairs
firearms in a workshop he has built into the storeroom
ell of my house. Thus, in addition to a fragrance of
camellias that tends to appear for no reason like a calling
card from a time gone by, the house often smells of
gun oil, hot soldering compound, and the bright, sharp
reek of metal being machined to produce close tolerances
in the working parts of deadly weapons.
But this time no weapons were in evidence. Puzzled,
I turned back to the phone. "Thanks, Arnold, for
keeping me posted. How's Clarissa?"
In answer, I heard the latest details of Arnold's
impending fatherhood. Arnold's wife, a criminal attorney
who would have been defending Victor if she
hadn't been about to deliver a baby practically that
minute, was enormous, elated, and, according to Arnold,
so impatient to get it all over with that he
"dassn't even look cross-eyed at her."
Which reminded me that somewhere in the world,
someone was happy, an assurance I sorely needed. I
told Arnold to give her all our love and he promised to,
and we hung up.
Out in the kitchen, Wade sat at the table looking
thoughtful, a bottle of Sea Dog ale in front of him.
He'd gotten the news on our crime wave, I could see
from his expression, from the guys at dockside. I sat
down with him and told him the rest of it, still wondering
what else was eating at him.
"That's a lot of money," he said mildly when I had
explained what could happen if Victor remained in custody.
He'd known of my investment in the trauma-center
project; just not how much.
"You know that whatever you do about money,
it's all right with me. Don't you?" Wade added.
"Yes." It was part of our ongoing success in being
together, that neither of us meddled in the other's finances.
We just knew we'd have given each other the
world, no strings attached.
"Still," he went on, "I'll bet it galls you. Having it
a lot more at risk than you planned."
"Right. And that's an understatement."
Wade understood that I was a little crazy about my
financial security. Well, maybe a lot crazy: even aside