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Chapter no 15

Hidden Pictures

The next morning, I tell Teddy that Adrian is coming to the house for a lunchtime pool party, and we get to work preparing a mighty picnic feast: grilled chicken sandwiches, pasta salad, fruit salad, and fresh-squeezed lemonade. Teddy proudly carries everything out to the pool deck and I open the patio umbrellas so we can dine in the shade.

Iโ€™ve already briefed Adrian on the plan, and heโ€™s agreed to babysit Teddy while Mitzi and I attempt to use the spirit board. He arrives promptly at noon, dressed in a swimsuit and a red Scarlet Knights T-shirt, and Teddy runs across the pool deck to welcome him. Even though Teddy is less than four feet tall, heโ€™s somehow figured out a way to open the child-proof gate. Then he puts on his maรฎtre dโ€™ act, welcoming Adrian to our โ€œrestaurantโ€ and escorting him to our table.

Adrian marvels at all the food on display. โ€œI wish I could stay here and eat all day! But El Jefe only gives me an hour. After that heโ€™ll come looking for me, and that wonโ€™t be good for any of us.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll eat fast so we can swim,โ€ Teddy tells him. โ€œThen we can play Marco Polo!โ€

I give Adrian a ton of instructions. I repeatedly remind him that Teddy must wear his floaties, that the waterโ€™s too deep for him, even in the shallow end. Iโ€™m too nervous to eat anything. I keep glancing over at the cottage, where Mitzi has been working for the last hour or so, preparing for โ€œthe gathering.โ€ Sheโ€™s not positive the plan is going to work.

Under ideal circumstances, she says, Teddy would sit beside us at the spirit board. But she agrees that having Teddy some twenty yards away might be close enough, and thatโ€™s the only shot Iโ€™m willing to take.

Teddy is anxious to swim, so he eats only half a sandwich and says heโ€™s not hungry anymore. And Adrian knows Iโ€™m ready to get started, so he eats quickly, then uses a single arm to scoop Teddy off the ground.

โ€œAre you ready, Mr. T?โ€

Teddy shrieks and screams with delight. Now for the tricky part:

โ€œTeddy, would you mind if Adrian watched you for a little while? I need to do something in my cottage.โ€

As I expected, Teddy goes totally bananas. He runs to the far end of the pool deck, waving his arms like a maniac, absolutely thrilled that Adrianโ€”Adrian!!โ€”is going to babysit. โ€œPlease watch him carefully. You canโ€™t let him out of your

sight. Not for a second. If anything happens to himโ€”โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll be fine,โ€ Adrian promises. โ€œItโ€™s you that Iโ€™m worried about. Is this your first time using a Ouija board?โ€

โ€œFirst time since middle school.โ€

โ€œBe careful, okay? Yell if you need anything.โ€

I shake my head. โ€œDonโ€™t come anywhere near the cottage. Even if you hear us screaming. I donโ€™t want Teddy to know what weโ€™re doing. If he tells his parents, theyโ€™ll flip out.โ€

โ€œBut what if thereโ€™s a problem?โ€

โ€œMitzi says sheโ€™s done a hundred of these things. She says theyโ€™re totally safe.โ€

โ€œWhat if Mitziโ€™s wrong?โ€

I assure him everythingโ€™s going to be okay but Iโ€™m not sure I sound very confident. Mitzi has already called my cell phone six times today, alerting me to important precautions and restrictions. Sheโ€™s forbidden me from wearing any jewelry or perfume. No makeup, no hats or scarves, no open-toed shoes. Sheโ€™s sounded more and more manic with

every conversation. She explained that she uses THC to โ€œunblockโ€ her neural pathways, and I worry all the cannabis has made her paranoid.

Teddy comes running back in our direction and slams into Adrianโ€™s knees, nearly knocking him into the pool. โ€œAre you ready yet? Can we swim now?โ€

โ€œYou guys have fun,โ€ I tell them. โ€œIโ€™ll be back in a little bit.โ€

 

 

By the time I reach the cottage, Mitzi has finished her preparations. Thereโ€™s a stack of reference books on my kitchen counter and sheโ€™s hung heavy black fabric over the windows to blot out all the sunlight. When I open the front door, blinking my eyes to adjust to the gloom, I catch her peeking outside and watching Adrian pull off his T-shirt. โ€œOh my my my. Where did you find this handsome Scarlet Knight?โ€

She doesnโ€™t seem to recognize Adrian without his landscaping gear, doesnโ€™t realize heโ€™s the same man she profiled as a rapist just a few weeks earlier.

โ€œHe lives down the street.โ€

โ€œAnd you trust him to watch the child? We wonโ€™t be disturbed?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll be fine.โ€

I close the door, and itโ€™s like sealing myself inside a tomb. The air is thick with the woodsy smell of burning sage; Mitzi explains this will reduce interference from unfriendly spirits. Sheโ€™s placed a half dozen votive candles around the room, giving us just enough light to work by. Thereโ€™s a black cloth draped over my kitchen table and the wooden spirit board sits in the middle, surrounded by a ring of tiny granular crystals. โ€œSea salt,โ€ Mitzi explains. โ€œKind of an excess precaution, but since itโ€™s your first time Iโ€™m not taking any chances.โ€

Before we start, Mitzi asks if she can review all the drawings Iโ€™ve received. At this point Iโ€™ve amassed quite a collection; earlier that morning, Iโ€™d awakened to find three new ones on the floor of my cottage, as if theyโ€™d been slipped under the front door.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mitzi seems particularly troubled by the last drawing, by the profile of the womanโ€™s face. She points to the silhouette on the horizon. โ€œWhoโ€™s this person walking toward her?โ€

โ€œI think sheโ€™s walking away from her.โ€

Mitzi shudders, struck by a chill, then shakes it off. โ€œI guess weโ€™ll just have to ask. Are you ready?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

โ€œDo you have to go to the bathroom?โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œIs your cell phone turned off?โ€ โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œThen youโ€™re ready.โ€

We take seats on opposite ends of the table. Thereโ€™s a third chair between usโ€”left empty for Anya. In the darkness of the cottage, it feels like Iโ€™ve left Spring Brook behind. Or rather, it feels like Iโ€™m in and out of Spring Brook at the same time. The air is different; itโ€™s thicker, harder to breathe. I can still hear Teddy laughing and Adrian shouting โ€œCannonball!โ€ and water splashing in the swimming pool but all these sounds are slightly distorted, like Iโ€™m hearing them over a bad phone connection.

Mitzi places a small heart-shaped planchette in the center of the board and invites me to rest my fingers on one side. The bottom of the planchette is equipped with three small wheels on tiny brass casters; the slightest touch makes it roll away from me. โ€œSteady now, you donโ€™t want to push it,โ€ Mitzi says. โ€œLet the tool do all the work.โ€

I flex my fingers, trying to relax them. โ€œSorry.โ€

Mitzi rests her fingers on the opposite side of the planchette. Then she closes her eyes.

โ€œOkay, Mallory, Iโ€™m going to start the conversation. Iโ€™ll make contact. But once we have a good rapport, Iโ€™ll let you ask your questions. For now, just close your eyes and relax.โ€ Iโ€™m nervous and a little self-conscious, but Mitziโ€™s voice is reassuring. I find myself mirroring her, matching her posture and breathing. The incense relaxes my muscles and quiets

my thoughts. All my everyday worries and concernsโ€”Teddy, the Maxwells, running, sobrietyโ€”everything starts falling away.

โ€œWelcome, spirits,โ€ Mitzi says, and I jolt back in my seat, startled by the volume of her voice. โ€œThis is a safe space. We welcome your presence. We invite you to join us in conversation.โ€

Outside the cottage, I can still hear the sounds of the swimming poolโ€”the sounds of frenzied kicking and splashing. But then I concentrate harder and manage to block them out. I relax my fingertips, keeping contact with the planchette without applying any pressure.

โ€œAnnie Barrett, we wish to speak with Annie Barrett,โ€ Mitzi says. โ€œAre you there, Annie? Can you hear us?โ€

The longer I sit in the hard wood-backed chair, the more Iโ€™m aware of all the points where it contacts my bodyโ€”the seat beneath my bottom, the crossrail pressing on my shoulder blades. I study the plan-chette, waiting for the slightest signs of movement. The burning sage crackles and pops.

โ€œHow about Anya? Is there an Anya present? Can you hear us, Anya?โ€

My eyelids feel heavy and I allow myself to close them. I feel like Iโ€™m being hypnotized, or like Iโ€™ve reached those final moments at the end of the day, when Iโ€™m lying in a warm bed under a comfortable blanket, ready to drift off to sleep.

โ€œAre you there, Anya? Will you speak with us?โ€ No answer.

I donโ€™t hear the noises in the backyard anymore. All I hear is Mitziโ€™s labored breathing.

โ€œLet us help you, Anya. Please. Weโ€™re listening.โ€

And then something brushes the back of my neck. As if a person has passed behind my chair. I turn and no oneโ€™s thereโ€”but when I look back at the Ouija board, I feel someone behind me, leaning over me. Soft long hair falls

past my cheek, grazing my shoulder. And then an invisible weight pushes down on my handโ€”a gentle, prodding pressure, nudging the planchette forward. One of its wheels makes a tiny squeak, like the soft cry of a mouse.

โ€œWelcome, spirit!โ€ Mitzi smiles at me, and I realize she has no idea whatโ€™s happening; she clearly doesnโ€™t see or sense whateverโ€™s behind me. โ€œThank you for answering our call!โ€

Warm breath tickles the back of my neck and goose bumps spread across my skin. Thereโ€™s more pressure on my hand and wrist, guiding the planchette across the board in slow sweeping circles.

โ€œIs this Anya?โ€ Mitzi asks. โ€œAre we speaking with Anya?โ€

The board is illustrated with a standard alphabet and the numbers zero to nine, and the top corners have the wordsย YESย andย NO.ย I watch passively, spectating, as the planchette stops briefly at the letterย I, then moves back toย Gย and then

E. Mitzi keeps four fingers on the planchette, but sheโ€™s holding a pencil in her free hand to transcribe the results on a notepad:ย I-G-E? Sweat beads across her forehead. She glances at me and shakes her head, undaunted.

โ€œSpeak slowly, spirit,โ€ she says. โ€œWe have plenty of time.

We wish to understand you. Is this Anya?โ€

The planchette moves toย Nย and thenย Xย and thenย O. โ€œYouโ€™re leaning,โ€ Mitzi whispers, irritated, and I realize

sheโ€™s talking to me. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œOn the table. Youโ€™re pushing, Mallory.โ€ โ€œItโ€™s notย me.โ€

โ€œSit back in your chair. Sit up straight.โ€

Iโ€™m too scared to argue with her, to tell her the truth. I donโ€™t want to interrupt whateverโ€™s happening.

โ€œSpirit, we welcome your message! We welcome any information youโ€™d like to share.โ€

Thereโ€™s more pressure on my hand and the planchette moves faster, veering across the board, stopping at one

random letter after another, a string of spiritual static:ย L-V-A-J-X-S. Mitzi is still recording everything but she seems more and more annoyed. The results look like alphabet soup.

The wood planchette is thrumming with energy, like the racing heartbeat of a small frightened animal. Itโ€™s flying all over the board and Mitzi can barely keep up with her one-handed annotations. The air is so thick itโ€™s suffocating; my eyes are watering and I donโ€™t know why my smoke detector isnโ€™t going off. Then Mitzi lifts her fingers and the planchette keeps moving. My hand pushes it across the board and it flies off the edge of the table, clattering to the floor. Mitzi stands up, furious. โ€œI knew it! You were pushing! This whole time, you were pushing!โ€

All the weight leaves my hand and suddenly Iโ€™m out of the trance. The room snaps back into focus. Itโ€™s twelve forty-five Wednesday afternoon and I can hear Adrian out in the backyard counting โ€œSix Mississippi, Seven Mississippiโ€ฆโ€ and Mitzi is glaring at me.

โ€œAnya did that. Not me.โ€

โ€œI watched you, Mallory. I saw you!โ€ โ€œEight Mississippi!โ€

โ€œAnya moved my hand. She was guiding me.โ€

โ€œThis isnโ€™t a slumber party. Itโ€™s not a game. This is my livelihood, I take it very seriously!โ€

โ€œNine Mississippi!โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ve wasted my time. Youโ€™ve wasted the whole day!โ€

And suddenly Iโ€™m blinking into the daylight. The door to my cottage has swung open and little Teddy is standing on the porch, peering into the darkness. He raises a finger to his lips, gesturing for us to be quiet. Out in the backyard, Adrian calls out, โ€œTen Mississippi! Ready or not, here I come!โ€

Teddy ducks inside and quietly closes the door. Then he looks around the cottage, marveling at the votive candles and the blacked-out windows and my kitchen table with its ring of sea salt. โ€œWhat are you playing?โ€

โ€œHoney, this is called a spirit board,โ€ Mitzi says, inviting him to take a closer look. โ€œIn the right hands, itโ€™s a tool for communication. To speak with the dead.โ€

Teddy looks to me for confirmation, like he canโ€™t believe Mitzi is telling the truth. โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œNo, no, no.โ€ Iโ€™m already out of my chair and guiding him back to the door. โ€œItโ€™s just a toy. Just a game.โ€ The last thing I need is Teddy telling his parents about a sรฉance. โ€œWe were just pretending. Itโ€™s not real.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s very real,โ€ Mitzi says. โ€œIf you respect its powers. If you take it seriously.โ€

I open the door and see Adrian across the yard, searching for Teddy in the trees along Haydenโ€™s Glen. โ€œOver here,โ€ I call out.

He comes jogging over and Teddy darts past my legs, sprinting across the grass, still caught up in their game of hide-and-seek.

โ€œSorry about that,โ€ Adrian says. โ€œI told him to stay on the pool deck. I hope he didnโ€™t ruin anything.โ€

โ€œIt was already ruined,โ€ Mitzi says. Sheโ€™s gathering her things, snuffing out candles and collecting trays of incense. โ€œThere are no spirits in this cottage. There never were. This is just a story sheโ€™s made up to get attention.โ€

โ€œMitzi, that is not true!โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve used this board a hundred times. Itโ€™s never acted this way.โ€

โ€œI swear to youโ€”โ€

โ€œSwear to your Scarlet Knight here, okay? Cry on his shoulder and maybe heโ€™ll feel sorry for you. But donโ€™t ask me to waste any more time.โ€

She shoves her books into her bag and then storms past me, nearly tripping as she descends the stairs of my cottage.

โ€œWhat just happened?โ€ Adrian asks.

โ€œAnya was here, Adrian. She was inside the cottage. I swear to you, I could feel her standing over me. Moving my

arm. But the letters were gibberish. We couldnโ€™t spell anything. And then right in the middle Mitzi lost her shit. She started screaming at me.โ€

We watch from the porch as Mitzi wobbles across the lawn, veering left and then overcompensating to the right, unable to maintain a straight line.

โ€œIs she all right?โ€ Adrian asks.

โ€œWell, sheโ€™s pretty high, but supposedly thatโ€™s part of her process.โ€

A dejected Teddy comes walking across the yard. He seems to understand that something bad has happened, that the grown-ups are upset. In a hopeful voice, he asks, โ€œDoes anyone want to chase me?โ€

Adrian apologizes for leaving but says he has to go. โ€œI need to get back or El Jefe will flip.โ€

โ€œI can chase you,โ€ I tell Teddy. โ€œJust give us a minute.โ€

Clearly this isnโ€™t the answer Teddy wants. He trudges across the yard to the pool patio, unhappy with both of us.

โ€œAre you going to be all right?โ€ Adrian asks.

โ€œIโ€™m fine. I just hope Teddy doesnโ€™t say anything to his parents.โ€

But Iโ€™m pretty sure he will.

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