THE HOUSE WAS COMPLETELY silent.
Christina looked into Michael and Benj’s room before she entered her own. How terrifying empty beds were. The neatness of the sheets and blankets was like the neatness of a mowed and trimmed graveyard.
Anya lay alone in her room, staring at the poster of the sea. The poster shimmered in the dusty dark of early evening, neon tremors of life struggling to be free. “Anya, at least turn on the lights,” said Christina.
“You can’t see the poster smile except in the dark,” explained Anya.
Christina’s hair lifted on her head. She could actually feel the colors of her own hair: brown, silver, and gold, trembling for Anya.
“I can’t leave the room, either. The poster will come back off the wall again. I’ll drown in a paper sea.”
Christina backed into the hall, hands feeling the walls, stretching for the banisters of the balcony. She’s already drowned. She drowned inside her mind.
Behind her the house lay quiet, dark, and expectant.
Christina turned to face the house, and the house seemed to whirl behind her, laughing. She turned again, and again, spinning dizzily at the top of the stairs, trying to keep safe, as though something might attack her from behind.
She ran into her room, the house closing at her ankles, catching at her hair, and she dived, fully clothed, into her bed.
Under the covers, under her mother’s quilt, she wept till she could weep no more, for Anya and for herself — unloved and alone. Out in Candle Cove the tide began to hum. Ffffffffff.
The wind rose and cried out, and the house seemed to talk back, so they were screaming at each other, as if the house and the sea had different plans for the dark of night. Tonight, Christina, tonight! they both said.
There were nights when the dark seemed to be her friend, keeping her company through the night — Christina and The Dark — but now the dark was her enemy, keeping her prisoner.
She could feel the evil in the house gathering its forces. Alone she was weaker. She had been separated from her allies, from Michael and Benj and Jonah and Blake — like a gazelle cut from the herd by the lions who would destroy it.
She could not get warm. The bed was piled with blankets and still the cold got under the covers with her and entered her bones.
Chrissie! Chrissie!
It was the tide calling.
It was the poster of the sea beckoning to her.
Christina whimpered under the covers. Then she remembered that she was granite, not a tern. That Mr. Shevvington did not have the eyes of a mad dog, but of a man who wore contact lenses.
Christina slid out of bed. She wrapped her mother’s quilt around herself like a huge calico cape. Within the hood of the quilt she felt protected by her mother’s love.
Christina stepped into the hall.
Christina’s head and ears filled and pulsed with the huffing. It whirled around her like fans in summer. Humming like bees. Chrissie, said the house, Chrissie, Chrissie.
Her eyes and spine burned with fear. Anya was right. The house truly spoke. The sea kept count. It was demanding Christina herself.
A weapon, thought Christina. I need something to hit it with.
She would smother it in the quilt.
Christina walked forward, holding her quilt out like butterfly wings to wrap it in.
She walked into Anya’s room. It was wet in there.
The sea is already in here! thought Christina, fear closing over her eyes like lashes. She heard the sea speak her name.
“Chrissie,” moaned Anya, “Chrissie, something is wrong. Chrissie, I’m afraid of the poster.”
The window was open. Anya was dampened by the rain coming in like cotton waiting to be ironed. The sea said nothing but its usual crash of wave and rock. It was Anya speaking her name.
Christina yanked the sash down, holding the quilt in her teeth so it would not slip off her shoulders.
Then she faced the poster of the sea. Its terrible fingers, its dim, drowning figures, stared back at her.
“I’m in charge here,” she said to it. She kept her eyes fastened on the poster. She felt around in Anya’s desk and came up with a handful of tacks. She swung the quilt off her shoulders and held it up as if to a charging bull. She rushed the poster.
Outside the wind screamed and the tide rose and Candle Cove fought a war with the rocks and the waves.
Christina covered the poster with the quilt. She tacked the quilt firmly right into the wall. The poster was gone. Calico squares and triangles and tiny firm stitches covered it.
“So there,” said Christina.
Anya looked stunned.
“Come on, Anya, let’s go downstairs. It isn’t healthy up here.” Christina dragged Anya out of the bedroom. They marched down to the kitchen, where Christina had her book bag. Anya sat in front of a TV she did not remember to turn on.
Christina tried to read.
From the school library Christina had checked out a murder mystery Vicki and Gretch had been talking about. At the time she had thought she could read her way into the friendship. It seemed unlikely now. She held the book with her left hand and set the table with her right. Almost before there was a murder, she had figured out who the murderer was. How annoying to be able to add up the clues as easily as third-grade arithmetic.
Mrs. Shevvington had made eggplant lasagne.
“But — but my mother sent baked beans,” Christina said.
“You should have refrigerated it,” Mrs. Shevvington said. “I had to throw it out. It was no good.”
All that love stirred into the molasses, to stick to her ribs like a hug on the island.
Thrown into the trash.
Christina began to cry.
“Everything you do is wrong,” said Mrs. Shevvington. She put her hands on her hips, and her weight seemed to double. She rocked back and forth as if planning to topple onto Christina and crush her. “Take that silly baseball cap off.”
I need padding, thought Christina. I should wear a soccer goalie’s outfit around the house. She found Kleenex and blew her nose and mopped her eyes. Mrs. Shevvington caught the bill of the cap but Christina was ready for her. She whisked the cap behind her back, clutching it with white-knuckled fingers. It may be an anchor, Frankie, Christina thought, but what good is an anchor without a safe harbor?
There is nobody, she thought. I am a ship at sea without a crew, without a harbor. Nobody loves me. Not Anya, who is hardly even in the room because she hardly even exists. Not Michael or Benj — they never paid enough attention to see anything. Jonah and Blake aren’t here. My parents … Oh! my parents!
She knew she could never eat the eggplant. She wondered now if she could ever eat again. She felt cleaned out, like a scoured pot. There isn’t much left of me right now either, thought Christina.
“Christina, honey,” said Mr. Shevvington. He drew her close. He cared. His touch was loving, his embrace warm. Christina leaned on him, absorbing his kindness like a drug. Nothing else could evaporate loneliness. The texture of his jacket made her think of Blake and true love.
“Poor Chrissie,” he murmured. “It’s been a hard autumn, hasn’t it? A girl has daydreams about junior high, and none of them come true, and it’s hard to keep going, isn’t it?”
Christina nodded, sniffling. The silky tie touched her cheek like a cool finger soothing a fever.
“Tell me all about it,” said Mr. Shevvington. His hand closed over hers, warm and comforting.
How she wanted to blame her fears and failures on Mrs. Shevvington, or the seventh grade, or even Anya.
“What are you afraid of, Christina?” he said. “I’m here to help. I know you feel I’ve been against you, but it’s not true, Chrissie. You have me on your team, honey.”
His eyes welcomed her home, saying you’ll be safe now. Come to me.
Very softly, he whispered, “Tell me your fears.”
She had so many. They multiplied every day.
Being alone.
Having no friends.
The tide and the wet suit and the glass in the cupola.
The sea captain’s bride and the honeymooners and the boy on the bike.
Anya going crazy, Blake gone forever.
How safe were his fatherly arms. His blue eyes were like robins’ eggs in a nest, cozy in the tree.
“Tell me about Miss Schuyler,” whispered Mr. Shevvington. He patted her hair, dividing the strands into their three colors, and braiding them as her father used to do. “Is Miss Schuyler really tutoring you in arithmetic?” His fingers folded around the baseball cap. His eyes were as soft as a baby blanket.
Perhaps he had looked into Anya’s eyes like that, and Val’s.
“I have this terrible fear of fractions,” Christina told him. She put the baseball cap safely behind her back. “Miss Schuyler thinks she can conquer it. Also a fear of running out of popcorn. Nothing could be worse than going to a movie and they don’t have any popcorn, you know?”
“This is not a joke, Christina,” said Mr. Shevvington. His grip tightened. His fingers were half white, half tan. “I am trying to be kind, but I expect cooperation from you.”
Christina said, “I know about the girls before Val.”
The room turned utterly silent.
Mrs. Shevvington stood motionless at the stove. Mr. Shevvington’s eyes lay like stones in his head. Beneath the veneer of his blue contact lenses she could see his real eyes. They were not blue. They were ice in winter, gray and cruel.
The Shevvingtons pivoted. Slowly. They faced her. Their eyes drilled into her skull.
“All about them,” lied Christina. “All the ones before Val.”
She thought of her ancestors who had drowned at sea, and she knew now how they felt: how they saw the power of the wave and the density of the water and knew that their end had come; that their ships were only pitiful bits of kindling in a great and powerful sea.
She had made a mistake. She had gone to sea in a storm. The Shevvingtons would destroy her now as easily as the Atlantic destroyed a sandcastle.
But they did not move toward her. They did not squash her between them. They did not discuss the girls before Val. Instead their horrible eyes met above her head, and their little mouths smiled secretly, and she knew that they had plans she knew nothing of.
Outside, the storm quickened and raged.
All Maine went behind doors and shutters, hunkering down; there was nobody to hear a scream for help, nobody who would be looking out any windows.
They sat down to eggplant. Her mother’s casserole dish was on the sink. Scoured clean. Anya ate nothing. Christina ate only a roll. Nobody talked. A meal without conversation is an efficient thing. It was over in moments.
After supper Christina watched television. There was nothing on. This seemed unfair. On the island they hardly got TV at all, mostly watching rented movies on the VCR, and now when she needed electronic company and canned laughter, there was nothing on.
Anya drifted upstairs alone.
She’ll be safe, thought Christina. I’ve locked the window and covered the poster. Sleep is what she needs anyhow.
She wrapped herself in an afghan. The Shevvingtons’ eyes followed her every move.
She read her mystery, bored because she already knew the ending, and afraid because the pages were littered with bodies in car trunks, bodies in alleys. With every page turn, the Shevvingtons’ eyes grew colder and the afghan protected her less.
But eventually they had to move. Mrs. Shevvington went to her room, Mr. Shevvington to the library.
She was momentarily alone. The rooms of black and gold creaked. Outside the wind lifted even more. She could hear metallic crashes as somebody’s garbage can was tossed down Breakneck Hill. Christina tiptoed from the TV room and into the hall, where she picked up the telephone. She dialed information and then she dialed the number they gave her. Less than one minute and Dexter Academy had connected her to Blake’s room. “Blake?” she whispered.
“Hello?” said Blake.
Christina burst into tears.
“Anya?” said Blake. “Is that you?”
Christina shook her head.
“I love you,” said Blake. “It’ll be all right. I’ll think of something. I haven’t yet, but I will.”
I love you.
“It’s me. Christina. Blake, I’m alone with them.”
“Chrissie, don’t cry.” His voice was rich with concern. “Tell me what’s happening. How is Anya?”
“Leaning on the washers and dryers soaking up the lint.”
“I don’t understand why she gave up,” said Blake. “Why didn’t she keep fighting?”
“She thinks the enemy is her, not them.” Christina could not bear to talk about Anya. She had to know whether Blake blamed her the way his parents did. “You don’t think I tempted you to die, do you?” You love me too, don’t you, Blake?
“Of course I don’t. I was trying to see who was in the wet suit. I’ve lived here for years, I know better than to go down a ladder into Candle Cove, I was just being stupid. My parents refuse to believe they raised a stupid son so they’re blaming it on you. Chrissie, I’ve thought and thought about it, and I think the man in the wet suit has a place to go. Under the cliff. Maybe even under Schooner Inne! Maybe that’s why the sea talks so loud inside the house. Maybe there’s actually a sea passage into the cellar!”
Christina found that almost more horrifying than Anya’s belief that the wet suit was the sea. But I’ve never been in the cellar, she thought. I’ve never even thought about the cellar.
Was the cellar full of water now — full of storm and tide, crawling up the walls of Schooner Inne to drown her in bed?
Christina tried not to cry. She wanted more than anything just to keep listening to Blake’s voice. His wonderful, rich, boy’s voice. She told Blake about trying to find the fear files and getting caught like a cheap thief. “You don’t think I’d steal money, do you?” she said anxiously.
“No, but you might do something else equally dumb. Leave it, Christina, just leave it. They’re bigger than you are. More powerful. The Shevvingtons had one talk with my parents — one! — and wham! I’m two hundred miles west. I try to tell them it was important to go down the cliff after that man in the wet suit and they tell me not to make things up and how much I’ll like boarding school.”
She could see him, all lean and handsome and windblown. I love you, she thought. It’s wrong and I’m going to stop tomorrow. She said, “We might get a hurricane.”
Even as she spoke she heard something come off the house — a shutter or a storm door perhaps — and rip agonizingly, and crash around in the alley.
“Take care of yourself, Chrissie,” he said. There was a catch in his voice. She treasured it. “Listen,” she began.
A thick, gnarled finger with chipped layers of red polish disconnected the phone.
“Christina,” said Mrs. Shevvington softly, “I have told you not to use the telephone without permission. Who were you calling? We will find out when the bill comes, of course, so do not fib.”
Christina did not fib. She did not speak at all.
“Bedtime,” said Mrs. Shevvington.
Christina walked up alone, into the waiting dark.
The Shevvingtons stood below on their balcony, their arms folded like chains, and smiled at each other.
She would never sleep. The winds outside were trying to throw the house into Candle Cove. Perhaps the passage in the cellar was undermining the house so it would cave in from the bottom as well.
Every hundred years, thought Christina, turning Frankie’s remarks over in her mind. I could read old newspapers, couldn’t I? And find out about the boy on the bike and the honeymooners and the sea captain, and even the weather and the tides.
She tugged her hair into a ponytail and stuffed it up under the baseball cap. She had a lot of hair. It made a puffy pillow on top of her head.
On the very last page of the mystery book she found out who the murderer was. She had misunderstood every hint. She had never realized at all who the bad guy was. Christina had been completely tricked.
Had she misunderstood every clue in Schooner Inne as well?
She got out of bed and padded silently into Anya’s room, making no noise to disturb her. Standing in the dormer, Christina looked out at Candle Cove. The waves did not curl in pretty frothy fingers. Tons of black and green water sloshed to the cliff tops and fell back. Wind cut canyons through the water. Even as she watched, a dinghy and a small motorboat filled with water and sank. A larger boat tore loose from its mooring and was dashed against its neighbor, hitting it like a sledge, until they both splintered.
The tall utility poles along the parking lot above the wharf threw a thick, mustard-yellow light over the chaos.
There was only one human being visible. Not a fisherman struggling to save his boat nor a house owner trying to fasten a shutter.
Anya.
White as a bride, clinging to the Singing Bridge.
So many clues! thought Christina. I missed every one. Anya was cut away from the safety of the rest of us — not me. Anya is the endangered species — not me!
Robbie had said that whenever somebody drowned, the bridge sang. Over the fierceness of the storm Christina could not tell if the bridge was singing. She could not call to Anya to stop her.
Tonight, the tide had whispered.
But it had been Anya whispering.
Anya announcing her plans.
Christina ran down the stairs. She had to get to Anya. Fast.
The front door, of course, was locked.
Christina clung to the big brass handle, unable to think at all. How had Anya gotten out? How was Christina to get out?
She raced back up the stairs and pounded on the Shevvingtons’ bedroom door. (Did people like that sleep? Or just lie awake, gloating and planning?) “Open up!” she screamed. “We have to go save Anya. Unlock the front door. Get ropes. Call the fire department!”
The Shevvingtons did not open the door.
She shook it hard and kicked it. “I need you!” she screamed. “Help me get Anya.”
“Christina, Anya is sound asleep. Go back to bed. This house has withstood a century and a half of storms, and it won’t give way to this one.”
Christina beat on the door with her fists. “Anya is on the Singing Bridge. She’s going to step off into the Cove.”
Mr. Shevvington ripped the bedroom door open. He wore a long, dark maroon robe, like Christmas kings. “Stop this!” he roared, louder even than the sea. “Go to bed.”
“Look out the window!” cried Christina. She was sobbing now and it was hard to get a deep breath. What if Anya had already gone to the sea?
“We have had enough of your nonsense,” said Mr. Shevvington.
She stared at him. “But Anya — ”
“Is fine.”
“Is going to drown!” she screamed, as if volume could convince, screaming so loudly she was raw in her throat just from those four words.
Mr. Shevvington folded his arms. He stood in the bedroom door staring down at Christina. It seemed to her that the corners of his mouth wanted to smile. Mrs. Shevvington, sitting up in the bed, did smile. Then she pushed the remote control button for her television.
Christina whirled and ran down the stairs to the kitchen. From her book bag she ripped her house key and flew back through the black-and-gold halls to the front door. She jabbed her key in the lock.
It did not fit.
“Your key fits only from the outside, Christina.” How mocking was Mrs. Shevvington’s voice. How sure of victory!
But victory would be Anya’s plunge into Candle Cove. Anya, who thought the sea was keeping count … when all along it was the Shevvingtons.
Christina ran to the windows in the living room. Shuttered on the outside against the storm. She ran into the dining room. Shuttered and barred. The kitchen door was locked; the side door locked.
“Stop this!” she screamed. “Let me out! If you won’t save Anya, let me!”
Behind their door, the Shevvingtons laughed.
She had thought that in the end they would be Good. That when push came to shove, they were grown-ups; they might be mean, but they would not stand by and let Anya walk off the cliff.
She had been wrong.
She did not live with people who knew the meaning of Good.
Trembling on the stairs, Christina tried to think. She cast her eyes up for some other kind of help. The glass in the cupola winked.
I can get out the top, thought Christina; they haven’t closed the bottle entirely.
How long the ladder was. How many rungs there were. As if she were passing into another world, another time.
Christina pushed open the window through which Anya had talked to the sea. She slid out. There on the top of the house — so high it felt like the top of Maine — she stood, a tiny girl on a tiny ledge above the entire Atlantic Ocean.
The gale had gathered the sea and all its creatures and was hurling it mercilessly against the cliffs, reaching for the house. She stood on the roof like a twig in a blender.
I’m here, she thought, but how do I get down? Anya is still on the Singing Bridge, but she can’t hear me over the storm!
“Blake!” whispered Christina. She did not have a real voice anymore. She spoke only with the ghost of her lungs. “Somebody — Mother — Daddy — Miss Schuyler — come get me, please!”
She yanked Frankie’s baseball cap down hard on her forehead to keep it from blowing away.
Nobody will come get me, Christina thought.
And if anybody is going to get Anya, it has to be me.
Behind her, the window closed. A tiny sound, audible because it was not part of the storm, told Christina the truth. The Shevvingtons had latched the window.
Christina turned, terrified, and lost her balance, slipping backward toward the sea, her bare feet sliding on the cruel roof.
In the cove the waves clapped.