124453.fb2 Legacy of Lies - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 18

Legacy of Lies - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 18

“Where did you put it?” she demanded as if I’d just admitted guilt.

Indignation flared up in me. But I had moved myself without realizing it; how could I be sure I hadn’t moved a clock? And the fragment of my dream, a circle with marks on it-wasn’t that like the face of a clock?

“I don’t remember putting it anywhere,” I told her honestly.

“Have you asked Matt?”

“No, of course not. I can’t trust him anymore.”

“Why not?” I asked, walking over to the library door, scanning the shelves and tabletops.

“He has other loyalties now.” She said the words slowly, as if they held great meaning.

I moved across the hall to the dining room, my eyes sweeping that room-side tables, windowsills, mantel-any ledge that could support a small clock.

“Grandmother, it’s obvious that he loves you and wants to help you however he can. Though I don’t know why, when you’re so mean to him.”

I walked down the hall and looked in the front parlor. “You were awful last night,” I went on. “Matt has a learning disability. It has nothing to do with intelligence, but it makes school hard. You had no right to embarrass him the way you did.”

Grandmother raised her head, like a cat picking up a new scent. “Well, now, instead of going after Matt with that smart little mouth of yours, you’re defending him.”

“I can do both.”

“Have you become friends? I believe you have,” she said before I could answer. “You’re working together, aren’t you?

He’s siding with you now.”

I shook my head in amazement and passed her in the hall, crossing over to the music room.

“You two are playing tricks on me!”

“No, Grandmother, we are not.”

“Where is the clock?” she asked.

My eyes surveyed the room one more time. “1 have no idea.”

Fortunately, I had agreed to work for Ginny from ten to three that day and could get away from the house for a while. I didn’t mention to her the strange things that had been happening, afraid that she might call my mother or insist I stay with her. I was spooked, but determined to figure out what was going on, which meant I had to stay at the house.

Before I knew it, it was three-fifteen and Ginny was shooing me out the door of Yesterdaze. I walked up High Street and had just passed Tea Leaves, when I heard a girl’s voice calling to me.

“Megan. Hey, Megan. Up here!” From a second-story window in the next building, Sophie’s ponytail dangled like a fiery flag. “I want to ask you something. Can you come up?”

“Sure,” I replied. “Is this where you live?”

Sophie laughed and I stepped back to look at the brick building. It was long, with a porch roof running from end to end, extending over the sidewalk. Next to the front door was a brass lantern and sign: The Mallard Tavern, 1733.

“It’s a B and B, bed and breakfast,” Sophie explained.

“Mom cleans it and I help out after school. Door’s open.”

I entered the front hall and climbed the carpeted steps, following the sound of a vacuum cleaner. When I arrived on the second floor, the machine shut off and Sophie stuck her head out a door. “The weekenders are gone,” she said.

“Mom’s down washing sheets and towels. Come on in.”

The room she was cleaning was homey, with red and white wallpaper, a canopy bed, and chairs pulled close to a small fireplace.

“I looked for you at the dance Saturday night,” Sophie said.

I figured she had invited me up to ask about my cousin.

“I’d like to have gone, but Matt doesn’t want me hanging around his friends. Like I said before, there’s really not much I can tell you about him.”

“Her,” Sophie corrected me.

“Excuse me?”

“It’s a her I want to ask about.” She shook out a clean bottom sheet. “Avril Scarborough. Do you know her?” She watched my face and waited for my response.

“You mean the ghost?”

“Have you seen her?” she asked.

I walked to the other side of the double bed, caught the edge of the sheet, and slipped it over two corners of the mattress. “Have you?”

“I asked you first,” she said, then laughed. “Once I did.”

“When? Where?”

“Back in sixth grade,” she replied, tugging down her corners and smoothing the sheet. “1 was still hanging out with Kristy then and she had a sleepover. We paid her older sister to drive us to Scarborough House at four in the morning. Avril usually shows up just before dawn in the back wing.”

My breath caught. Then I reminded myself that people would expect to see a ghost in an abandoned part of a house, and people saw what they expected. I had seen what I expected after hearing Alice’s story.

“It was a bust,” Sophie continued. “Everybody got tired and whiney. Kristy’s sister got mad, piled us back in the car, and headed toward town again.”

“So when did you see her?”

“That same night, when we were crossing the bridge over Wist Creek.”

Sophie shook out a top sheet. We worked together to slip it under the lower end of the mattress and pull it up evenly.

“How do you know what you saw?” I asked. “How do you know it was Avril, or even a she?”

Sophie tossed me a pillow, then thought for a moment. “I guess there was something about the shape. It was thin and moved in a graceful kind of way. She seemed more like a girl than a woman.”

“Did anybody else see her that night?”

“Nobody. I got teased a lot,” Sophie added, then shrugged. “I’ve always seen things other people don’t, now I just don’t tell anyone.” We pulled the spread up over the pillows. “I guess you know how that is.”