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TWENTY-ONE

“MOTHER ANN HAD A HAND IN THESE DRAWINGS,” AGATHA said. “I have no doubt.”

“If she did, then there must be a message,” Rose said. “A coherent message. You are my only hope for deciphering it.” She rearranged the six drawings on Agatha’s desk, putting the two trees next to each other, followed by the headless serpent, the red-and-white checkerboard, the bejeweled bird, and the luscious foods.

“These last two don’t seem to fit,” Rose said.

Agatha leaned close to them, then sat back and closed her eyes. “The angels have often given gifts of celestial food,” she said. “This may have been their way of showing Mairin how much richer her life would become as she learned to follow Holy Mother Wisdom. What better picture of heaven could there be for a starved child than inexhaustible, wonderful foods?”

“That makes sense,” Rose said. “But what about the bird? I can’t imagine that would say anything meaningful to Mairin. She has lived a lot in trees, so she’s probably seen lots of birds, but why would she be directed to draw one like this?”

Agatha picked up the bird drawing and studied it. “You truly don’t know what this is?” she asked, with a gentle smile.

“Nay.”

“This lovely green-eyed bird is you, Rose. You have spread your protective wings around the child, and she feels safe with you. You are her guardian angel.”

“Oh.” Rose took the bird drawing. “Agatha, you know these things better than I, but . . . it would be helpful if I were a real angel. I have difficulty understanding her. I hope I don’t let her down.”

“You’ve been given the tools, Rose. You have only to use them.”

Rose pointed to the remaining four pictures. “What about these, then? What do they tell us?”

“What do you think they tell us, Rose?”

Agatha had always been her guide to the world of spirit, and it sounded as if she might be retiring. Rose had not felt so uncertain since she’d first become eldress. With trepidation, she picked up the checkerboard. “Well, I believe we’ve been shown that this is Mairin’s memory of the chair found in the orchard, which was broken and scuffed, either during Hugh’s suicide, or by a killer. It tells us only that she probably saw the event.”

Rose pulled the two trees and the serpent toward her and studied them together. She changed the order of the drawings, then changed them again.

“There’s a sequence here—look.” She moved the drawings closer to Agatha’s dim eyes. “The tree and the snake combine in the third drawing. They were separate and then somehow together. And the snake lost its head before climbing the tree, not after.” Rose frowned at the yellow-and-orange serpent. “We don’t have snakes of that color around here, do we? I didn’t think so. I wonder . . .” She traced back from the hacked neck to the end. “This isn’t a snake,” she said. “I’m sure of it Look at the end—neat but blunt, not tapering off, as a snake’s tail would. Now this looks more like a piece of hemp rope, like the one Hugh was hanging from.”

Agatha sat back in her rocker and was silent.

“One end has been hacked off crudely, while the other is neatly sliced, just as the brethren would cut it” She shook her head. “But what does that tell us, really? Either Hugh or the killer could have cut the rope, or somebody else could have done it earlier.”

“Rose,” Agatha said, “the drawings were sent by Mother Ann, if not by Holy Mother Wisdom. They would not send a meaningless gift.”

Rose slid back her chair and began to pace the room. She longed to open the window to air out the stuffy room and clear her head, but Agatha’s frail body could not tolerate the November chill.

“Quiet will serve better than agitation,” Agatha said, barely above a whisper.

Rose forced herself to sit and be still. She closed her eyes and envisioned the scene she had come upon Tuesday morning—Hugh’s lifeless body hanging from a branch of a plum tree.

“Something is puzzling me,” Rose said, opening her eyes and picking up the drawing of the rope. “It took very little rope to hang Hugh from such a low branch, yet this looks like quite a long rope. So what’s pictured climbing the tree must have been cut from a longer length.” She jumped from her chair in excitement. “Where’s the rest of that rope? If Hugh hacked it off, he would have done it in the orchard, once he saw how much would be needed. So whatever he cut with would have been found in the orchard. Also, the rest of the rope would have been there, too.”

She flung herself on Agatha’s bed. “I think this is just confusing me more,” she said, rubbing her hands over her face. “However,” she said, staring at the ceiling, “the rope used on Hugh is with the Sheriff. If I can locate the longer length of hacked rope, it might help convince the police that Hugh was murdered, either in the orchard or somewhere else and then moved to the orchard. Agatha, where do we keep most of our rope—in the barn?”

“We always used to,” Agatha said.

“Then I’m off to the barn.”

To avoid delay, Rose decided to cut through the medic garden behind the Infirmary. One of these days, someone would notice how often she trod through the grass instead of following the neatly maintained paths. If she was very unlucky, that someone would be Elsa, who would delight in telling Wilhelm what a bad example Rose was setting.

As a reflex, she glanced to her right, toward the central path, and saw three brethren leaving the South Family Dwelling House. They were so engrossed in conversation that they did not look up. Rose’s impulse was to slip out of sight behind the Infirmary and go on with her task, but some instinct stronger than curiosity kept her rooted in place until they came close enough for her to be certain of their identity.

The men reached the path and stopped. They seemed wrapped up in their topic, sometimes all talking at once. Rose was certain that the tallest figure was Matthew and the shorter, plumper one was Archibald. The third man kept his back to her, but she guessed it was Benjamin, Andrew’s assistant in the Medicinal Herb Shop. Now her instincts were screaming at her. Benjamin had been disgruntled since the day he’d arrived. If those three had gone together to visit the New-Owenites, it did not bode well for village harmony.

Rose longed to hear their conversation. Their intensity was escalating, and it looked as if Benjamin and Matthew were arguing with Archibald. Matthew poked an angry finger in Archibald’s chest, pushing him backward a step. It was more than Rose could tolerate—Believers nearly coming to blows with each other. So much for their vow of nonviolence.

She began to walk toward them. She’d gone no more than a few steps when the door to the men’s entrance opened a crack and a sleek black head appeared. Celia called something that Rose couldn’t make out, and Matthew sprinted back to her. They conferred briefly—with their heads much too close together—and Matthew spun around. Rose realized he was looking directly at her. The other two men turned, as well. The dwelling house door closed. Rose stood her ground, refusing to sneak away as if this were not her village.

Something distracted her, perhaps a slight movement above the brethren’s heads, and Rose glanced up at the second-floor windows. She had only a moment, before the light curtain fell back into place, to see someone’s face behind the wavery glass. She hadn’t been able to make out the features, but whoever it was had been watching her. With a shiver, she wondered how many times before she’d been observed as she’d gone about her search for the truth.

Since it was Sabbathday morning, only one of the brethren was in the barn, doing some long-delayed tidying. The others were probably using the extra time to catch up on projects elsewhere. The barn wasn’t one of Rose’s usual haunts, so the brother started in surprise at seeing her. Without questioning her, he showed her where they kept the spare rope, then went back to his cleaning.

The ropes had not yet been straightened, so they were tangled in a pile. Rose set about disentangling them, one by one. She was used to a certain amount of manual labor, since the Ministry was expected to work alongside other Believers, as an act of humility; however, her hands began to blister after twenty minutes or so of sliding them over ropes, searching for the ends. So far, each end was neatly sliced. Just as she reached the bottom of the pile, she found it—a long length of rope with one neat end and one frayed, as if it had been hacked off with a dull blade. She rolled it up and hung it over her shoulder. Sheriff Brock might criticize her for taking it, but she feared that if she left it, the rope wouldn’t be there the next time she came to look.

She walked a little too fast toward the barn door and caught her left foot on the edge of a rut in the hard dirt floor. Once she’d righted herself and waited for her knee to calm down, she noticed the ruts ran deep from the side of the barn to a spot near the middle, in full view of the door. Puzzled, she called the brother away from his work and asked what might have caused the gouges.

“Sorry we haven’t had a chance to fill those in,” he said. “We noticed them, too. Looked like they might’ve come from a wooden box that was stored over against the wall there, but none of us remembers moving it, and it’s not something we’d forget easy.”

Rose looked above her head at the rafters. A person could certainly hang himself—or someone else—from those rafters, she thought, but why here? And if here, why move the body and hang it in the orchard? Her head was beginning to spin again.

“Rose?” Charlotte peeked inside the barn door. “I’m so glad I found you. The children are having a play break, so I thought I’d seek you out. Agatha said you might be here.”

Charlotte seemed calm, but Rose’s stomach tightened. Something wasn’t right.

“I was just wondering,” Charlotte said, “if you were planning to bring Mairin in for the lessons this morning—the ones to make up for Tuesday, do you remember?”

Rose stared at her, hoping she wasn’t hearing correctly.

“Rose?” Charlotte’s eyes widened.

“I brought her this morning,” Rose said, her voice husky with fear. “We were just a bit late, so I sent her in the back way. I watched her close the back door behind her.”

“She never made it to the classroom,” Charlotte said.