We drive back to Spring Brook and get right down to business. I grab all the drawings that I found in my cottage, plus the three pictures I took from Teddyโs bedroom. Adrian has the one drawing left on his desk, plus all his photographs of the Maxwellsโ den. Heโs already output the images on an inkjet printer so we can add them to the sequence. There are less than forty-eight hours before Russell comes to pick me upโand before that happens, Iโm determined to convince the Maxwells weโre telling the truth. We arrange all the pictures on the pool patio, using stones or pinches of loose gravel to hold them in place. Then we spend half an hour moving them around, trying to arrange them in order, looking for some kind of narrative
that makes sense.
After much trial and error, we arrive at this:
โThe first picture is the hot-air balloon,โ I begin. โWeโre in some kind of park or field. An area with a lot of wide-open space. Big skies.โ
โSo definitely not Spring Brook,โ Adrian says. โThereโs too much air traffic out of Philly.โ
โWe see a woman painting a picture of the hot-air balloon. Letโs assume for now this is Anya. Judging from her
sleeveless dress, Iโm guessing itโs summer, or maybe weโre in a warmer climate.โ
โThereโs a girl nearby, playing with toys. Possibly Anyaโs daughter. Teddy mentioned Anya has a daughter. It doesnโt seem like Anya is watching her closely.โ
โThen along comes a white rabbit.โ
โThe little girl is intrigued. Sheโs playing with a stuffed rabbit, but here comes a real one.โ
โSo she follows the rabbit down into a valleyโฆโ
โโฆ but Anya doesnโt notice the girl walking away. Sheโs too absorbed in her work. But you can see the little girl off on the horizon. Leaving her toys behind. Does that all make sense so far?โ
โI think so,โ Adrian says.
โGood, because hereโs where it gets confusing. Something goes wrong. The rabbit is gone, the girl looks lost. She might be hurt. She might even be dead. Because in the next pictureโฆโ
โSheโs approached by an angel.โ
โAnd the angel leads the little girl toward the light.โ
โBut someoneโs trying to stop them. Someoneโs chasing after them.โ
โItโs Anya,โ Adrian says. โItโs the same white dress.โ โExactly. Sheโs running to save her little girl, to stop her
from being taken away.โ
โBut Anyaโs too late. The angel wonโt give her back.โ โOrย canโtย give her back,โ Adrian says.
โExactly. Now here comes a gap.โ
โThe angel and the child are gone. We donโt see them anymore. And now someone is strangling Anya. This is the one piece of the puzzle weโre still missing.โ
โTime passes. Itโs nighttime. Anyaโs easel is abandoned.โ
โA man arrives in the forest, carrying tools. They look like a pick and a shovel.โ
โThe man drags Anyaโs body through the forestโฆโ
โHe uses his shovel to dig a holeโฆโ
โAnd then he buries the body.โ
โSo the man strangled Anya,โ Adrian says.
โNot necessarily.โ
โHe moves her body. He buries her.โ
โBut the story starts in the daytime. The man doesnโt show up until later, until dark.โ
Adrian starts moving the pictures around againโ arranging them in a different sequenceโbut Iโve tried every possible order, and this is the only one that comes close to making sense.
Except somethingโs still missing. Itโs like the feeling of working through a jigsaw puzzle, putting the whole scene together, only to discover the box has three or four missing pieces, and theyโre all right in the middle.
Adrian throws up his hands. โWhy doesnโt she just spell it out for us? Skip the stupid pictures and use words? โMy name is Rumpelstiltskin. I was murdered by the archduke.โ Or whoever. Why is she being so cryptic?โ
Heโs just venting, but I realize Iโve never stopped to ask myself this question: Whyย isย Anya being so cryptic?
Instead of using Teddy to draw pictures, why not use words? Why not write a letter? Unlessโ
I think back to all the one-sided conversations I overheard in Teddyโs bedroomโall the guessing games he would play during Quiet Time. โTeddy says Anya talks funny. He says sheโs hard to understand. What if she doesnโt speak English?โ
Adrian seems ready to dismiss the idea, but then he reaches for the library bookโThe Collected Works of Anne
C. Barrett. โAll right, letโs think this through for a minute. We know Annie came from Europe after World War II. Maybe she doesnโt speak English. Maybe Barrett isnโt even her real name. Maybe itโs a westernized version of something like Baryshnikov, one of those long impossible-to-pronounce Eastern European names. And the family changed it, just to blend in.โ
โExactly,โ I tell him, warming to the theory. โGeorge writes like heโs been in the United States for a long time.
Heโs already assimilated. Heโs a deacon at the church, heโs an alderman on the town council. But suddenly his Bohemian cousin shows up in Spring Brook. Sheโs a reminder of where heโs from, and heโs ashamed of her. His letter in the book is so condescending, all his talk about her slight achievements and her foolishness.โ
Adrian snaps his fingers. โAnd this explains the spirit board! You said her answers were gibberish! You called them alphabet soup. But what if she was spelling in a different language?โ
I think back to the gatheringโto the feeling of being entombed inside the cottage, with the planchette trembling beneath my fingertips.
Iย knewย we werenโt alone.
Iย knewย someone was moving my hand and choosing each letter very deliberately.
โMitzi wrote everything down,โ I tell him.
We walk across the backyard to Mitziโs house. I rap my knuckles on the front door but thereโs no answer. Then we walk around to the back of the house, to the rear entrance used by her clients. The back door is open and we can see through the screen door into the kitchen, to the Formica table where Mitzi served me coffee. I bang on the screen door and the Kit-Cat Klock stares back at me, its tail wagging. I can hear the TV playing inside the house, some infomercial for commemorative gold dollars: โThese coins are highly prized by collectors, and guaranteed to hold their value.โฆโ
I shout Mitziโs name, but thereโs no way sheโll hear me over the sales pitch.
Adrian tries the handle and the door is unlocked. โWhat do you think?โ
โI think sheโs paranoid and she owns a gun. If we sneak up on her, thereโs a good chance sheโll blow our heads off.โ
โThereโs also a chance sheโs hurt. Maybe she slipped in the shower. If an old person doesnโt come to their door,
youโre supposed to check on them.โ I knock again but still no answer. โLetโs come back later.โ
But Adrian insists on opening the door and calling to her: โMitzi, are you okay?โ
He steps inside, and what else can I do? Itโs already past three oโclock and the day is passing too quickly. If Mitzi has information that can help us, we need it as soon as possible. I hold the door open and follow him into the house.
The kitchen stinks. It smells like the trash needs to be taken out, or maybe itโs all the dirty dishes piled up in the sink. Thereโs a frying pan on the stovetop filled with congealed bacon grease. There are tiny paw prints scattered across the surface, and I donโt want to think about all the vermin that might be living behind the walls.
I follow Adrian into the living room. The TV is tuned to Fox News and the hosts are arguing with a guest about the latest threats to American security. Theyโre shouting at each otherโshouting over each otherโso I grab the remote and mute the volume.
โMitzi? Itโs Mallory. Can you hear me?โ Still no answer.
โMaybe she went out for a bit,โ Adrian says.
And left the back door open? No way, not Mitzi. I move toward the back of the house and check the bathroomโ nothing. At last I come to the door of Mitziโs bedroom. I knock several times, calling her name, and then finally open it.
Inside the bedroom, the shades are drawn, the bed is unmade, and there are clothes all over the floor. The air is sour and stale and Iโm afraid to touch anything. The door bangs against a wicker wastebasket, knocking the basin on its side, and crumpled wads of Kleenex tumble out.
โAnything?โ Adrian asks.
I get down on my knees and look under the bed just to be sure. Thereโs more dirty laundry but no Mitzi.
โSheโs not here.โ
As I stand up, I notice the surface of Mitziโs nightstand. Along with a lamp and a telephone I see a handful of cotton balls, a bottle of rubbing alcohol, and a length of latex tourniquet.
โWhat is it?โ Adrian asks.
โI donโt know. Probably nothing. We should go.โ
We walk back to the living room and Adrian finds the notepad on the sofa, tucked beneath the heavy wooden spirit board.
โThatโs it,โ I tell him.
I flip past shopping lists and to-do items before arriving at the last used pageโher notes from the sรฉance. I rip the page from the pad, then show it to Adrian.
I took Spanish in high school and I had friends who took French and Mandarin, but these words donโt look like any language Iโve ever seen. โThe name Anya sounds Russian,โ Adrian says. โBut Iโm pretty sure this isnโt Russian.โ
I take out my phone and google IGENXO just to be certain
โand it might be the first time Iโve googled a phrase that doesnโt return a single result.
โIf Google doesnโt know it, itโs definitely not a word.โ โMaybe itโs some kind of cryptogram,โ Adrian says. โOne
of those puzzles where every letter is substituted by a different letter.โ
โWe just decided she canโt speak English,โ I tell him. โDo you really think sheโs making up brainteasers?โ
โTheyโre not complicated if you know all the tricks. Give me a minute.โ He grabs a pencil and sits down on Mitziโs sofa, determined to crack the code.
I start poking around the living room, trying to imagine why Mitzi left the house with her TV on and her back door open, when something crunches beneath my sneaker. It sounds like Iโve stepped on a beetle, some small insect with a hard brittle shell. I lift my foot and see that itโs actually a thin plastic tube, orange and cylindrical, about three inches long.
I lift it off the floor and Adrian looks up from his work. โWhat is that?โ
โA cap for a hypodermic needle. I think sheโs been injecting herself. Hopefully with insulin, but this is Mitzi weโre talking about so who knows.โ As I move around the room, I discover three more needle capsโon a bookshelf, in a wastebasket, on a windowsill. When you factor in the rubber tourniquet, Iโm pretty sure we can rule out diabetes.
โAre you finished yet?โ
I look down at Adrianโs notepad and it doesnโt seem like heโs made any progress.
โThis is a tough one,โ he admits. โNormally you look for the most frequent letter and you replace it withย E. In this
case, there are fourย Xs, but when I change them toย Es, it doesnโt help any.โ
I think heโs wasting his time. If Iโm right about Anyaโs language barrierโand Iโm pretty sure I amโthen communicating in English would be enough of a challenge. She wouldnโt try writing in code. Sheโd want to make things easier for us, not harder. Sheโd try to make her message clearer.
โGive me another minute,โ he says.
And then thereโs a knock at the back door. โHello? Anybody home?โ
Itโs a manโs voice, unfamiliar.
Maybe one of Mitziโs customers, visiting to have his energy read?
Adrian stuffs the sheet of notepaper into his pocket. And when we enter the kitchen, I see the man at the back door is wearing a police uniform.
โIโm gonna need you to step outside.โ