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Chapter no 17

Hidden Pictures

When I return to my cottage, thereโ€™s a two-word text on my phone from Adrian:ย good news. I call him back and he answers on the first ring.

โ€œThe library found something.โ€ โ€œSomething like a photo of Annie Barrett?โ€

โ€œBetter. A book of her paintings.โ€ I can hear other voices in the background, men and women laughing, like Iโ€™ve reached Adrian in a bar.

โ€œDo you want to meet up?โ€

โ€œYes, but I need you to come here. My parentsโ€™ house. Theyโ€™re hosting a dinner and I promised to eat with their friends. But if you come over, Iโ€™ll be off the hook.โ€

Iโ€™m still in my running clothes, I havenโ€™t done any of my stretches, and after 8.78 miles I am insanely thirsty and hungryโ€”but I say Iโ€™ll be there in thirty minutes. One day without stretching wonโ€™t kill me.

I chug another glass of water, fix a quick sandwich, and hop in the shower. Three minutes later, Iโ€™m stepping into one of Carolineโ€™s prettiest outfitsโ€”a mint-green minidress with a white babyโ€™s breath floral print. Then I hurry over to the Flower Castle.

Adrian answers the door instead of his parents, and Iโ€™m relieved. His clothes are country club casualโ€”a pink polo shirt tucked into belted khaki pants.

โ€œPerfect timing,โ€ he says. โ€œWe just put out dessert.โ€ Then he leans closer and whispers: โ€œBy the way, my parents want to know why weโ€™re so interested in Annie Barrett. So I said

you found some sketches in your cottage, hidden under the floorboards. I said youโ€™re trying to figure out if Annie drew them. A little white lie seemed easier than telling the truth.โ€ โ€œI understand,โ€ I tell him, and I really do, more than he

knows.

The Flower Castle is much bigger than the Maxwellsโ€™ house but inside it feels smaller and warmer and more intimate. All the rooms are decorated with mission-style furniture; the walls are adorned with family portraits and maps of Central and South America, and it feels like his family has lived here for years. We pass an upright piano and a curio cabinet full of pottery, and there are leafy green houseplants growing in every window. I want to stop and linger over everything but Adrian marches into a noisy dining room with a dozen middle-aged people. Theyโ€™re gathered around a table thatโ€™s covered in wineglasses and dessert plates. There are five different conversations happening at once, and no one notices that weโ€™ve arrived until Adrian waves his hands and calls for their attention.

โ€œEverybody, this is Mallory,โ€ he says. โ€œSheโ€™s working as a nanny this summer, for a family on Edgewood Street.โ€

At the head of the table, Ignacio raises his glass in a toast, sloshing red wine on his hand and wrist. โ€œAnd sheโ€™s a Big Ten athlete! Sheโ€™s a distance runner for Penn State!โ€

These people react like Iโ€™m Serena Williams fresh off my latest victory at Wimbledon. Adrianโ€™s mother, Sofia, is circling the table with a bottle of Malbec, topping off glasses, and she rests a sympathetic hand on my shoulder. โ€œPardon my husband,โ€ she says. โ€œHeโ€™s a littleย achispado.โ€

โ€œShe means tipsy,โ€ Adrian translates, and then he points around the dining room, introducing me to everyone. There are too many names for me to rememberโ€”the chief of the Spring Brook Fire Department is there, along with a lesbian couple who run the bakery in town, and a couple of neighbors from down the block.

โ€œI understand youโ€™re here for a library book,โ€ Sofia says.

โ€œYes, but I donโ€™t want to interruptโ€”โ€

โ€œPlease, Iโ€™ve known these people thirty years. We have nothing left to say to each other!โ€ Her friends laugh, and Sofia grabs a file folder off the counter. โ€œLetโ€™s go talk in the yard.โ€

She opens a sliding glass door and I follow her outside to the most extravagant backyard garden Iโ€™ve ever seen. Itโ€™s the middle of July and everythingโ€™s blooming: blue hydrangea, bright red zinnia, yellow daylilies, and a host of exotic flowers Iโ€™ve never seen before. There are benches and stepping-stones and archways draped with purple morning glories; there are birdbaths and brick paths and rows of sunflowers taller than my head. In the center of everything is a cedar gazebo with a table and chairs, overlooking a koi pond with a softly splashing waterfall. I wish I had more time to admire everythingโ€”I feel like Iโ€™m walking through Disneylandโ€”but I can tell that for Adrian and Sofia, itโ€™s just their backyard, itโ€™s no big deal.

We move into the gazebo and Adrian uses an app on his phone to brighten the party lights strung across the ceiling. Then we all take seats and Sofia gets down to business.

โ€œThis is a difficult project to research. The first challenge is that the storyโ€™s very old, so nothingโ€™s on the internet. The second challenge is that Annie Barrett died right after World War II, so all the newspapers were still obsessed with Europe.โ€

โ€œHow about local news?โ€ I ask. โ€œDid Spring Brook have some kind of daily paper?โ€

โ€œTheย Herald,โ€ she says, nodding. โ€œThey published from 1910 to 1991 but we lost their microfilm in a warehouse fire. Everything went up in smoke.โ€ She gesturesย poof!ย and I glimpse a tiny tattoo on her left forearm: a slender long-stemmed rose, tasteful and elegant, but Iโ€™m still surprised. โ€œI checked the library for physical copies but no luck. Nothing before 1963. So I figured Iโ€™d reached a dead end, but one of my coworkers pointed me to the local authors

shelf. Anytime someone in town publishes a book, we usually order a copy. Just to be nice. Mostly itโ€™s mysteries and memoirs, but sometimes itโ€™s local history. And thatโ€™s where I found this.โ€

She reaches inside the folder for a very slender volumeโ€” itโ€™s more of a pamphlet, really, thirty-some pages with a cardstock cover and bound with thick, rusted industrial staples. The title page looks like it was produced on an old-fashioned manual typewriter:

THE COLLECTED WORKS OF ANNE C. BARRETT (1927โ€“1948)

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t in our computer system,โ€ Sofia continues. โ€œI donโ€™t think this book has circulated in fifty years.โ€

I hold the book close to my face. It has a musty, pungent odorโ€”like its pages are rotting. โ€œWhy is it so small?โ€

โ€œHer cousin self-published it. Just a small run for friends and family, and I guess someone donated a copy to the library. Thereโ€™s a note from George Barrett on the first page.โ€

The cover feels old and brittle, like a dried husk, ready to crack between my fingers. I open it carefully and begin to read:

In March of 1946, my cousin Anne Catherine Barrett left Europe to begin a new life here in the United States. As a gesture of Christian kindness, my wife Jean and I invited โ€œAnnieโ€ to live with our family. Jean and I do not have any siblings, and we looked forward to having another adult relative in our householdโ€” someone to help raise our three young daughters.

Annie was just nineteen years old when she arrived in the United States. She was very beautiful but like many young women also very foolish. Jean and I made countless efforts to introduce Annie into Spring Brook

society. Iโ€™m an alderman for the town council and I also serve on the vestry of St. Markโ€™s Church. My wife Jean is very active in the local Womanโ€™s Club. Our closest friends welcomed my cousin into the community with many kind and thoughtful invitations, but Annie turned them all down.

She was silly and solitary and described herself as an artist. She spent her free time painting in her cottage, or walking barefoot in the forest behind our house. Sometimes I would spot her down on her hands and knees, like an animal, studying caterpillars or sniffing at flowers.

Jean compiled a short list of daily chores for Annie to complete, in return for her room and board. Most days, these chores went unfinished. Annie showed no interest in being part of our family, part of our community, or even part of the great American experiment.

I had many disagreements with Annie about her choices. Many times, I warned Annie that she was behaving irresponsibly or even immorally, that all of her bad decisions would catch up with her. I take no satisfaction in knowing that circumstances have proven me correct.

On December 9, 1948, my cousin was attacked and abducted from the small guest cottage at the back of our property. As I write these words nearly a full year later, Annie is presumed dead by the local police, and I fear her body is buried somewhere in the three hundred acres behind my home.

In the aftermath of this tragedy, many of my Spring Brook neighbors have reached out to offer their prayers and fellowship. I have compiled this book as a token of appreciation for their support. Despite my differences with my cousin, I always believed she had a creative spark, and this volume is a memorial to her

slight achievements. Collected here are all the finished paintings left by Anne Catherine Barrett at the time of her demise. When possible, I have included titles and dates of composition. May these paintings stand as a tribute to a sad and tragic life cut short.

George Barrett November 1949

Spring Brook, New Jersey

I start turning the pages. The book is filled with blurry black-and-white photographs of Annieโ€™s canvases. Paintings calledย Daffodilsย andย Tulipsย have wiggly rectangles that donโ€™t look anything like flowers. And a painting calledย Foxย features diagonal lines slashed across the canvas. Thereโ€™s nothing remotely realistic in the bookโ€”just abstract shapes and splatters and blobs of paint, like something off the spin-art machines at a church carnival.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Itโ€™s a massive disappointment. โ€œThese look nothing like the drawings in my cottage.โ€

โ€œBut painting is one thing and drawing is another,โ€ Sofia says. โ€œSome artists use different styles for different mediums. Or they just like to mix it up. One of my favorites, Gerhard Richter, he spent his whole career moving between very abstract and very realistic paintings. Maybe Annie liked both.โ€

โ€œBut if thatโ€™s true, the book doesnโ€™t answer anything.โ€ โ€œAh, but wait,โ€ Sofia says. โ€œThereโ€™s still one more thing I

need to show you. Yesterday I called over to the courthouse, because thatโ€™s where they keep the old wills. Theyโ€™re a matter of public record, anyone can view them. And youโ€™d be amazed by the things people are willing to share after theyโ€™re dead.โ€ She opens the folder and removes a pair of blurry photocopies. โ€œI didnโ€™t expect Annie Barrett to have a willโ€”she died much too youngโ€”but I did find the last will and testament of George Barrett. He passed in 1974 and left everything to his wife, Jean. And hereโ€™s where things get really interesting. Jean retired to Florida and lived until 1991. And when she passed, she left most of her estate to her daughters. But she also left fifty thousand dollars to a niece, Dolores Jean Campbell of Akron, Ohio. Now, do you know why I find that surprising?โ€

And at once I understand why the book is such a revelation. โ€œBecause Jean and George didnโ€™t have siblings. George said so in his introduction.โ€

โ€œExactly! So who is this mystery niece and where did she come from? I wondered to myself: What if Jeanย thinksย of this girl as a niece, but sheโ€™s really the child of a cousin? What if sheโ€™s a consequence of Annieโ€™s โ€˜irresponsibleโ€™ and โ€˜immoralโ€™ behavior? I started wondering: Maybe thereโ€™s more to the story than George is letting on. Maybe Jean felt some obligation to look after the girl.โ€

I do the arithmetic in my head. โ€œIf Dolores was born in 1948, she wouldnโ€™t be that old. She could still be alive.โ€

โ€œShe could indeed.โ€ Sofia pushes a small square of paper across the table. It has the name โ€œDolores Jean Campbellโ€ and a ten-digit phone number. โ€œThatโ€™s the area code for Akron, Ohio. Sheโ€™s living in a retirement community called Rest Haven.โ€

โ€œYou talked to her?โ€

โ€œAnd deny you the thrill of calling this number? Not a chance, Mallory. But Iโ€™m very curious to know who answers the phone. Iโ€™d love to hear what you find out.โ€

โ€œThank you. This is incredible.โ€

From inside the house, thereโ€™s a sound of breaking glass, followed by uproarious laughter. Sofia glances at her son. โ€œI think your fatherโ€™s telling dirty jokes again. I should get inside before he embarrasses me.โ€ She stands up. โ€œBut tell me again why youโ€™re interested in all of this?โ€

โ€œMallory found some pictures in her cottage,โ€ Adrian says. โ€œStashed under her floor. We already went over this.โ€

Sofia laughs. โ€œMijo,ย you were a horrible liar at age four and youโ€™re even worse now. This morning you said Mallory found the pictures in a closet.โ€

โ€œUnder the floor of a closet,โ€ Adrian insists.

Sofia gives me a look that says:ย Do you believe this kid?ย โ€œIf you guys donโ€™t want to tell me, thatโ€™s fine. But Iโ€™m going to suggest you both be careful. If you start poking your noses into family secrets, someone may bite them off.โ€

 

 

Iโ€™m tempted to call Dolores immediately, but itโ€™s late, nearly ten oโ€™clock, and Adrian suggests Iโ€™ll get better results in the morning. โ€œSheโ€™s probably asleep.โ€

I know heโ€™s right, Iโ€™m just impatient. I need information and I need it quickly. I tell him about my latest confrontation with the Maxwells. โ€œI showed them Anyaโ€™s drawings. I explained how the pictures keep turning up in my cottage. But they donโ€™t believe me, Adrian. And I mean of course

they donโ€™t believe me! It sounds crazy. I know it sounds crazy. Caroline acted like maybeย Iโ€™mย drawing the pictures, like Iโ€™m making up the whole story to get attention.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re going to prove youโ€™re telling the truth,โ€ Adrian says. โ€œBut first we should go to the house and get some churros.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œBecause theyโ€™re awesome, and they will make you forget about all your problems. Trust me.โ€

We return to the house and find the dinner party has kicked into a higher gear. Thereโ€™s Top 40 on the stereo, everyone has moved into the living room, and Ignacio seems moreย achispadoย than ever. Heโ€™s demonstrating the paso doble, a dance he claims to have mastered in his youth, and Sofia is his surprisingly game partner, shaking her skirts and following his lead. Their guests are clapping and cheering and Adrian just shakes his head, embarrassed and exasperated. โ€œThis happens every time they have people over,โ€ he says. โ€œMy dadโ€™s such a ham.โ€

We grab two cans of seltzer from the refrigerator. Then Adrian fills a plate with churros, drizzles them with chocolate sauce, and brings me outside for a walking tour of the garden. He says his fatherโ€™s been working on it for thirty years, that itโ€™s his own personal Versailles.

โ€œWhatโ€™s a Versailles?โ€

โ€œLike the palace? In France?โ€

He seems surprised that Iโ€™ve never heard of it, but what can I tell you? People in South Philly donโ€™t spend a lot of time talking about French royalty. Still, I donโ€™t want to look like an idiot, so I shovel on more lies.

โ€œOh,ย Versailles,โ€ I say, laughing. โ€œI misheard you.โ€

We wander the trails and Adrian introduces me to all the gardenโ€™s secrets: the family of cardinals nesting in the sour cherry tree. A small alcove for private prayer with a shrine to the Virgin Mary. And a wooden bench on the banks of the koi pond, next to the waterfall. We stop and share our

churros with some of the fish. There must be seven or eight of them, bobbing openmouthed on the surface of the water.

โ€œThis is a really special place.โ€

Adrian shrugs. โ€œIโ€™d be happier with a swimming pool. Like the Maxwells have.โ€

โ€œNo, this is better. Youโ€™re lucky.โ€

I feel his hand on my waist, and when I turn to look he kisses me. His lips taste sweet, like cinnamon and chocolate, and I want to pull him closer, I want to kiss him again.

But first I need to tell him the truth. I put my hand on his chest.

โ€œWait.โ€ He stops.

He looks into my eyes, waiting.

And Iโ€™m sorry but I donโ€™t know how to tell him. The whole scene is just too perfect: All the soft little lights are twinkling, the waterfall sounds like music, and the smell of the flowers is intoxicatingโ€”and itโ€™s another perfect moment I canโ€™t bring myself to ruin.

Because clearly I am past the point of no return. Lying to Adrian was bad enough. But now Iโ€™ve lied to his parents and even his parentsโ€™ friends. Once these people learn the truth, thereโ€™s no way theyโ€™ll ever accept me. My relationship with Adrian doesnโ€™t stand a chance. Weโ€™re like one of Teddyโ€™s playtime soap bubblesโ€”magical, buoyant, lighter than airโ€” and doomed to explode.

He realizes somethingโ€™s wrong and pulls back.

โ€œSorry about that. I think I misread the moment. But if I talk long enough and fast enough we can just act like it didnโ€™t happen, right?โ€ He stands up, looking sheepish. โ€œWeโ€™ve got Ping-Pong in the garage. Do you feel like playing?โ€

I take his hand and pull him back toward the bench. This time, I kiss him. I put my hand on his heart and lean into his body so thereโ€™s no mistaking how I feel.

โ€œNo,โ€ I tell him. โ€œI donโ€™t want to leave here.โ€

 

 

But I do leave, eventually.

The dinner party breaks up around ten thirty. From our bench in the shadows of the garden, we can hear car doors slamming and engines starting and guests pulling out of the grand circular driveway.

Adrian and I stay in the garden past midnight. Eventually all the lights inside the house blink off and it seems his parents have gone to bed and I decide I should probably get going.

Adrian offers to walk me home. I tell him itโ€™s not necessary, that itโ€™s just a few blocks, but he insists.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t South Philly, Mallory. The streets of Spring Brook get pretty rough after dark.โ€

โ€œI have a stun gun on my key chain.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s no match for a drunk mom behind the wheel of a minivan. Iโ€™d feel much better if I walked you home.โ€

The neighborhood is silent. The streets are empty, the houses are dark. And as soon as we leave the garden, I feel like a spell has been broken. As the Maxwellsโ€™ house comes into view, Iโ€™m reminded of all my old problems, Iโ€™m reminded of the person I really am. And once again I feel compelled to be honest. Maybe I canโ€™t muster the courage to tell him everythingโ€”not tonight, not yet. But I want to say at least one thing thatโ€™s true.

โ€œI havenโ€™t had a boyfriend in a while.โ€ He shrugs. โ€œIโ€™veย neverย had a boyfriend.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m just saying, we shouldnโ€™t rush into anything. Until we get to know each other better. Letโ€™s take things slowly.โ€

โ€œWhat are you doing tomorrow night?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m serious, Adrian. You might learn some things about me that you donโ€™t like.โ€

He takes my hand and squeezes it. โ€œI want to learn everything about you. I want to change my major to Mallory Quinn and learn as much as I can.โ€

Oh you have no idea, I think to myself. You really have no idea.

He asks if Iโ€™ve ever eaten at Bridget Foyโ€™s, his favorite restaurant in all of Philadelphia. I say I havenโ€™t been to Philly in six weeks and Iโ€™m in no hurry to get back. โ€œThen how about Princeton? The town, not the university. They have a really good tapas place. Do you like tapas? Should I get a table?โ€

By this point weโ€™ve crossed the Maxwellsโ€™ yard and weโ€™re standing outside my cottage and of course I say yes, I tell him I can be ready by five thirty.

And then weโ€™re kissing again and if I close my eyes itโ€™s easy to pretend weโ€™re back in the castle gardens, that Iโ€™m Mallory Quinn Cross-Country Superstar with a promising future and no worries in the world. Iโ€™m leaning against the side of my cottage. Adrian has one hand in my hair and another hand moving up my leg, sliding under my dress, and I donโ€™t know how Iโ€™m going to tell him the truth, I really donโ€™t.

โ€œThis is not taking things slow,โ€ I tell him. โ€œYou need to go home now.โ€

He lifts his hands from my body, steps backward, and takes a deep breath. โ€œIโ€™ll be back tomorrow.โ€

โ€œFive thirty,โ€ I tell him.

โ€œSee you then. Good night, Mallory.โ€

I stand on the porch and watch him walk across the yard, vanishing into the blackness of the night, and I know I must tell him the truth. I decide I will tell him everything over dinner tomorrow in Princeton. So even if heโ€™s upset, he wonโ€™t be able to leave me, heโ€™ll be forced to drive me home. And in that time, maybe I can convince him to give me a second chance.

Then I unlock the door to my cottage, turn on the light, and discover Ted Maxwell lying in my bed.

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