After the pool party, Teddy goes up to his bedroom for Quiet Time and I stay downstairs in the den. Maybe I donโt want to know what heโs doing up there. Maybe things will be better for me if I stop asking so many questions.
In the afternoon we take a long walk in the Enchanted Forest. We follow Yellow Brick Road to Dragon Pass and down to Royal River, and I try to spin a new story about Princess Mallory and Prince Teddy. But all Prince Teddy wants to discuss are spirit boards: Do they need batteries? How do they find the dead person? Can they findย anyย dead person? Can they find Abraham Lincoln? I keep saying โI donโt knowโ and hope that heโll lose interest. Instead he asks how much it costs to buy a spirit board, if itโs possible to make one.
Caroline gets home from work at her usual time and I hurry out for a long run, eager to get away and burn off stress. Itโs nearly seven oโclock when I get home, and Ted and Caroline are waiting on my front porch. And as soon as I see their faces, I know that they know.
โGood workout?โ Ted asks.
His tone is light, like heโs determined to keep things pleasant.
โPretty good. Almost nine miles.โ
โNine miles, really? Thatโs remarkable.โ
But Caroline has no interest in making small talk. โDo you have anything you want to tell us?โ
I feel like Iโve been dragged into the principalโs office and forced to empty my pockets. All I can think to do is play
dumb: โWhatโs wrong?โ
She pushes a sheet of paper into my hands. โI found this drawing before dinner. Teddy didnโt want to show me. He tried to hide it. But I insisted. Now you look at this picture and tell me why we shouldnโt fire you on the spot.โ
Ted rests a hand on her arm. โLetโs not overreact.โ
โDonโt patronize me, Ted. Weโre paying Mallory to watch our child. And she left him with the gardener. So she could play Ouija board. With the pothead who lives next door. How am I overreacting?โ
The drawing looks nothing like the dark sinister pictures that were left on my porch and refrigerator. Itโs just a bunch of Teddyโs stick figure charactersโme and an angry woman whoโs obviously Mitzi, gathered around a rectangle covered in letters and numbers.
โIย knewย it!โ
Caroline narrows her eyes. โKnew what?โ
โAnya was here! At the sรฉance! Mitzi accused me of pushing the pointer thing, but it was Anya! Sheย wasย moving it. Teddy saw her. The picture proves it!โ
Caroline is bewildered. She turns to Ted and he raises his hands, pleading with us to settle down. โLetโs all take a deep breath, okay? Letโs unpack what weโre hearing.โ
But of course theyโre confused. They havenโt seen everything Iโve seen. Theyโll never believe me without seeing the pictures. I open the door to my cottage and urge them to follow me inside. I get out the stack of drawings and I arrange them on my bed in a grid. โLook at these. You recognize the paper, right? From Teddyโs sketch pads? Last Monday I found the first three drawings on my porch. I asked Teddy and he said he had nothing to do with them. The next night, I went out to dinner with Russell. The door to my cottage was locked. But when I came home, there were three more drawings on my refrigerator. So I hid a camera in Teddyโs bedroomโโ
โYou didย what?โ Caroline asks.
โA baby monitor. From your basement. I put the camera in his room during Quiet Time and I watched him draw.โ I point to the next three pictures. โI watched him make these. He was using his right hand.โ
Caroline shakes her head. โIโm sorry, Mallory, but we are talking about a five-year-old boy. We all agree that Teddyโs gifted but thereโs no way heโs capableโโ
โYouโre not understanding me. Teddy didnโt draw these pictures. Anya did. The spirit of Annie Barrett. Sheโs visiting Teddy in his bedroom. Sheโs using him like a puppet. Somehow sheโs controlling his body and she draws these pictures and she brings them to my cottage. Because sheโs telling me something.โ
โMallory, slow down,โ Ted says.
โWe tried the sรฉance so Anya would leave Teddy alone. I wanted to communicate with her. Directly. Keep Teddy out of it. But something went wrong. It didnโt work.โ
I stop to pour myself a glass of water and gulp it down. โI know it sounds crazy. But all the proof you need is right here. Look at these pictures. Theyโre coming together, theyโre telling a story. Help me make sense of it, please.โ
Caroline sinks into a chair and buries her face in her hands. Ted manages to stay composed, like heโs determined to resolve the conversation. โWe are committed to helping you, Mallory. Iโm glad youโre being open and honest with us. But before we make sense of these pictures, we need to agree on a couple of facts, okay? And the biggest one is that ghosts donโt exist.โ
โYou canโt prove they donโt.โ
โBecause you canโt prove a negative! Look at the flip side, Malloryโyou have no proof that the ghost of Annie Barrett is real.โ
โThese pictures are my proof! Theyโre on Teddyโs sketch pad paper. If he didnโt draw themโif Annie didnโt magically deliver them to my cottageโhow did they get here?โ
I see that Carolineโs attention has drifted to the small end table beside my bed, where I keep my phone, my tablet computer, my Bibleโand the blank sketch pad that Teddy gave me a month ago, when I first started working for the Maxwells.
โOh come on,โ I tell her. โYou thinkย Iโmย drawing them?โ
โI never said that,โ Caroline says. But I can see her mind working, I can see sheโs probing the theory.
After all: Wasnโt I prone to memory lapses?
Didnโt a box of Teddyโs pencils go missing last week? โLetโs ask your son,โ I tell them. โHe wonโt lie.โ
It only takes a minute to cross the yard and get upstairs to Teddyโs bedroom. Heโs already brushed his teeth and changed into his fire truck pajamas. Heโs down on the floor next to his bed, building a Lincoln Log house and filling its
bedrooms with plastic farm animals. Weโve never confronted him like thisโall three of us entering his bedroom, amped up and stressed out. Immediately, he knows something is wrong.
Ted walks over to the bed and tousles his hair. โHey, big guy.โ
โWe need to ask you something important,โ Caroline says. โAnd we need you to answer with the truth.โ She takes the pictures and fans them out on the floor. โDid you draw these?โ
He shakes his head. โNo.โ
โHe doesnโtย rememberย drawing them,โ I tell her. โBecause he goes into a kind of trance. Like a twilight sleep.โ
Caroline kneels beside her son and starts playing with a plastic goat, trying to keep the tone light. โDid Anya help you make these drawings? Did she tell you what to do?โ
Iโm staring at Teddy, trying to get him to make eye contact, but the kid wonโt look at me. โI know Anya isnโt real,โ he tells his parents. โAnya is just a make-believe friend. Anya could never draw real pictures.โ
โOf course she couldnโt,โ Caroline says. She puts her arm around his shoulder and squeezes him. โYou are absolutely right, sweetie.โ
And I start to feel like Iโm going crazy. Itโs like weโre all willfully ignoring the obvious, like weโve all suddenly decided to agree that 2+2=5.
โBut you all smell something in this bedroom, right? Look around you. The windows are open, the central air is running, his bedsheets are clean, I washed them today, I wash them every day, but thereโs always a bad smell in here. Like sulphur, like ammonia.โ Caroline shoots me a warning with her eyes but sheโs missing the point. โItโs not Teddyโs fault! Itโs Anya! Itโs her scent! Itโs the smell of rot, itโsโโ
โStop,โ Ted tells me. โJust stop talking, okay? We understand youโre upset. We hear you, all right? But if weโre going to fix this problem, we need to deal with facts. Absolute truths. And Iโm being honest with you, Mallory: I do not smell an odor in this room. I think Teddyโs bedroom smells perfectly fine.โ
โMe, too,โ Caroline says. โThereโs nothing wrong with the way his bedroom smells.โ
And now Iโm certain Iโm going crazy.
I feel like Teddy is my only hope but I still canโt get him to look at me. โCome on, Teddy, we talked about this. You know the smell, you told me it was Anya.โ
He just shakes his head and bites his lower lip and suddenly he explodes into tears. โI know sheโs not real,โ he tells his mother. โI know sheโs make-believe. I know sheโs just pretend.โ
Caroline puts her arm around him. โOf course you do,โ she says, trying to comfort him, and then she turns to me. โI think you should go now.โ
โWaitโโ
โNo. Weโve talked enough. Teddy needs to go to bed, and you need to go back to your cottage.โ
And with all of Teddyโs tears, I realize sheโs probably right, thereโs nothing else I can do for him. I gather up the pictures and leave the bedroom and Ted follows me downstairs to the first floor.
โHeโs lying to you,โ I tell Ted. โHeโs saying what you want to hear, so he doesnโt get into trouble. But he doesnโt believe it. He refused to look at me.โ
โMaybe he was afraid to look at you,โ Ted says. โMaybe he was afraid youโd get angry if he told the truth.โ
โSo what happens now? Are you and Caroline going to fire me?โ
โNo, Mallory, of course not. I think we just take the night to cool off. Try to clear our heads. Does that sound good?โ
Does it? I donโt know. I donโt think I want to clear my head. Iโm still convinced that Iโm right and theyโre wrong, that Iโve collected most of the puzzle pieces and now I just need to assemble them in the correct order.
Ted puts his arms around me.
โListen, Mallory: Youโre safe here. Youโre not in any danger. I will never let anything bad happen to you.โ
And Iโm still sweaty from my runโIโm sure I smell terrible
โbut Ted pulls me closer and smooths the back of my hair with his hand. And in just a few moments it goes from comforting to weird; I can feel his warm breath tickling my neck, I can feel every inch of him pressing against me and Iโm not sure how to break free of his grip.
But then Caroline comes stomping down the hallway. Ted springs away and I move in the opposite direction, slipping out the back door so I wonโt have to see his wife again.
I donโt know what just happened but I think Ted is right. Someone definitely needs a night to cool off.