Authors: Dan Poblocki
When Emma Huppert came home from the
beach, she threw her towel onto the back of a
chair in the kitchen. Bil had left the mail on
the table. Lying on top of the pile was a let er.
Emma gasped when she noticed the return
address. She hadn’t spoken to Zilpha Kindred in
years. She quickly tore open the envelope.
Inside was a newspaper clipping—the obituary
of the prosecutor in her sister’s case, along with
a brief note scrawled on a scrap of paper.
Emma, I thought you might nd this to be of
interest. Do with it what you wil . Much love,
Zilpha.
Tears wel ed in Emma’s eyes. Over the past
couple of months, ever since Delia began
couple of months, ever since Delia began
appearing to her, she’d been meaning to cal
the one old friend back in New Starkham who
might understand what the experience meant;
however, she’d been too frightened to even
speak of it to anyone at al .
But recently, Delia had suddenly stopped
“visiting.”
Emma prayed every day that Delia was at
peace now. She knew in her heart that her
sister didn’t blame her for what had happened
long ago. It had been none of their faults. And
despite the horri c vision in the Wal-Mart
dressing room, Emma stil thought about her
sister every time she put on her new bathing
suit and stepped into the cold Atlantic to go for
her now-daily swims. She wished, with her
entire soul, that Delia could have joined her.
On a Tuesday morning at the beginning of May,
Zilpha Kindred’s washing machine nal y died.
By that afternoon, two men had delivered a
By that afternoon, two men had delivered a
brand-new one. Three people were going to be
living in the apartment from now on, and it
would not do to simply keep repairing the old
clunker. Zilpha was no longer wil ing to use
the one in the basement.
Later that evening, with lit le Hepzibah at her
feet, Zilpha decided to test out the contraption.
The nightmare laundry experience of two
months ago seemed like a dream, the memory
of it fading even more quickly than Zilpha had
hoped it would. Thank goodness.
As the old woman loaded the basket and
poured in the detergent, she thought about
Abigail and Timothy and how the surreal
events of the past few weeks might linger in
their memories, or grow, or change. Zilpha was
surprised that the children had been able to get
out of bed that week. She gured that children
must have a natural resilience after these sorts
of things. It’s later, she thought, after time and
trouble and life itself have worn down our
resistance and the ghosts come back to haunt,
resistance and the ghosts come back to haunt,
that we must nd ways of tricking ourselves
into nal y subduing them. It was possible, she
now knew.
Zilpha closed the lid with a bang and
cranked the silver knob. The water ran and the
machine began to hum. “Come on, Hep,” she
said, heading down the hal way toward the
kitchen. “This thing can take care of itself.”
49.
Timothy waited at the edge of the bridge,
watching the tra c cross the river. Cars, packed
with boxes, books, and smal pieces of
furniture, sped through the green light. Down
the hil , on the campus, the ceremony wasn’t
over yet, but the col ege students,
underclassmen mostly, were already leaving
New Starkham. It wasn’t fair. He wished his
own classes ended at the beginning of May. If
the past week had felt like a mil ennium, the
month and a half left before summer break
would be an eternity.
Mr. Crane hadn’t come back to school. Word
had spread that he was “taking a sabbatical” for
the remainder of the year. Timothy didn’t
exactly understand what that meant. People
said the man had had a nervous breakdown.
Timothy knew what had real y happened,
and though he knew it wasn’t his fault Mr.
and though he knew it wasn’t his fault Mr.
Crane had tried to break into his house a week
ago, he felt strangely guilty about it. None of
what happened had been Mr. Crane’s fault
either. When he’d heard Randy and Brian
making fun of their absent teacher during
history class on Friday, Timothy had to keep
his hands under his desk to refrain from
whacking their skul s with his cast. If the boys
knew what any of them had been through, they
wouldn’t have snickered. However, they
quickly changed the subject when the substitute
entered the classroom and reminded the class
that their museum projects were stil due the
next week.
Timothy had glanced at Abigail. They’d
already decided on a di erent artifact than the
painting. Instead, they picked one of the
ancient cow-femur toothbrushes—less creepy.
From her seat two rows away, Abigail had
returned a slight smile.
Carla had raised her hand. “My partner’s
been absent. Maybe I should work with
been absent. Maybe I should work with
someone else.”
The sub smiled. “Stuart Chen wil return next
Monday. You’l stil have time to nish.” Carla
sighed—not the answer she’d been hoping for.
Stuart had come home from the hospital the
previous Sunday, the same day Mr. Crane had
been admit ed. Timothy stopped by the Chens’
a couple of times after school that week. Stuart
didn’t mention any more of what he’d said at
the hospital, and Timothy didn’t ask. Mrs. Chen
doted on the two of them, glad to have her
boys together again. She cooked and chat ed
and asked sil y questions about Timothy’s
feelings and assured him that he could tel her
anything if he needed to. Obviously, Mrs. Chen
had learned about Ben’s injuries. Only a few
weeks earlier, he’d believed that his parents
might be able to keep quiet such a big secret.
Now he knew that some secrets speak
themselves aloud after a while.
“Hey!”
“Hey!”
Timothy was startled out of his daydream.
Across the highway, Abigail waved. He waved
back.
Seeing Abigail gave Timothy goose bumps.
He hadn’t been sure she would show up. On
the phone, when she’d asked him what this was
al about, he’d said he’d rather tel her in
person. She’d got en quiet but, after a moment,
agreed to meet him where he’d asked.
The stoplight changed, and Abigail crossed.
“Hey,” she said again. “You walk al the way
here?”
Timothy nodded. “My dad left to pick up my
mom at the airport. He said they needed some
alone time on the ride home. I don’t blame
them.”
“That’s generous of you,” said Abigail,
crossing her arms and smirking. She added
softly, “Then Ben’s real y awake. He’s coming
home?”
“Eventual y, he wil .” Timothy popped a
huge smile. “At least that’s what they tel me.”
huge smile. “At least that’s what they tel me.”
Abigail gave him a quick hug. “That’s
amazing,” she said. “He’s so lucky.”
“Yeah,” he said. “He is.” The army was
admit ing Ben to a veterans’ hospital in Rhode
Island for rehabilitation, not far from New
Starkham. “It’l be nice to see him. For real.
Final y.” Actual y, Timothy was terri ed at the
prospect.
“So, are we just going to stand here?” Abigail
asked. “Or are you going to tel me what this is
al about?”
Now Timothy was even more terri ed. He
winced as he reached into the pocket of his
jeans with his bandaged right hand, making
sure the smal warm piece of metal against his
leg was stil there. “Let’s walk,” he said.
Abigail seemed surprised when Timothy did
not cross back toward Edgehil Road but turned
toward the bridge instead. Stil , she managed to
fol ow close behind as he trundled along the
broken sidewalk. Several minutes later, they
were halfway across the bridge. “We’re not
were halfway across the bridge. “We’re not
get ing ourselves into another sticky situation,
are we?” Abigail added, “’Cause I’d like to be
prepared….”
Timothy stopped and leaned against the
rusted green railing, staring north, up the river.
The sun had passed the sky’s midpoint. The
wind whipped his hair away from his forehead.
The lighthouse sat below, upon its
outcropping on the western shore, oblivious to
the secrets buried within. The water crashed
against its rough rocks in swirling pools and
white-capped waves. Timothy wondered if a
place was capable of knowing its own history.
Like the people in it, New Starkham stil had
plenty of secrets.
“Timothy?” said Abigail, touching his
shoulder. “It’s over, you know.”
Timothy glanced at her. “That’s the thing I
wanted to tel you…. It’s not.”
“What do you mean, it’s not?” asked Abigail,
clutching the rusted green railing. Now the
wind plastered her black bangs to her forehead.
wind plastered her black bangs to her forehead.
Her light red roots were just barely beginning
to show. “Have you seen something again?”
“No,” said Timothy, glancing at the water.
“Nothing like that.” She waited for him to
speak. “Abigail … I did something last
weekend … something real y horrible. And
now I think I’m paying for it.”
“What did you do?” she said quietly.
Reaching into his pocket, Timothy pul ed out
the black piece of metal. He pinched it
between his thumb and fore nger, holding it
up for Abigail to see. Struggling to speak, he
said, “I lied to you.”
Timothy told Abigail his story—how he’d
taken both bones but switched out Mr.
Harwood’s for the real one. He told her what
he’d meant to do with it. He told her about Mr.
Crane knocking on his front door, and what
happened later when he went back to his room
to destroy the object, how he thought he’d seen
her appear in his bedroom, fol owed by the
Nightmarys, as the jawbone’s curse fought to
Nightmarys, as the jawbone’s curse fought to
protect itself from being broken.
Abigail simply watched him as he spoke, her
face unreadable. When he nished his story, he
thought she might punch him in the eye.
Instead, she plucked the metal shard from his
fingers and examined it more closely.
“It’s not glowing,” she said. Timothy nodded.
“So, it’s over,” she added, with nality.
“Whatever was inside this chip is gone.”
“You real y believe that?” Timothy asked.
“Can’t you feel it?”
“I guess so.”
Abigail handed the piece back to Timothy
and sighed. “I have a confession too,” she said,
staring at him. “At the hospital, I knew you
were lying.”
“You knew I gave you the wrong bone?”
Timothy shook his head in disbelief. Abigail
smiled. “But why’d you let me do it?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe it was the
curse. Maybe not. I guess, deep down, I thought
curse. Maybe not. I guess, deep down, I thought
you needed it for something.”
“I thought I did too,” said Timothy, palming
the tooth. Quickly, he turned his hand over.
The black chip fel , turning and glinting in the
sunlight, until it disappeared into the dark