And the world outside the window was dark.
   As dark as it would be if a curtain had closed. I heard an audible gasp from Rose's lips.
   Or was it coming from my own?
   5 The Room Upstairs
   I remember a line I once read in a famous short store, calling truth "a hard deer to hunt." If ever sleep was a "hard deer to hunt," it was so this night. I closed my eyes and turned on my side with my back to my bedroom door. but I couldn't help anticipating the sound of it opening, and then seeing either Cinnamon or Ice or Rose herself there to tell me he had returned. At times my eves popped open and I stared at my own window. The darkness played tricks, metamorphosing into someone's silhouette and then turning back to nothing.
   Steven had been right about the house itself. It was so well built, sounds familiar to me from my own home back in Ohio were not audible here. Pipes didn't groan, boards didn't creak, shutters didn't tap a beat to the marching wind. At night this house tightened like a fist, not to open again until the first light of morning,
   The silence was not welcome, however. It caused me to feel shut up, entombed with my own childhood fears. I heard my own little groans, heard myself breathing. For hours I tossed and turned and fought with my pillows. Every once in a while, I glanced at the illuminated face of my clock and panicked a bit at the hour. I would get no sleep whatsoever, I thought, and tomorrow. I would be a mess and make one mistake after another during my violin lesson.
   Once. before I actually did fall asleep -- or, rather, pass out-- I heard what sounded like approaching footsteps in the hallway and lifted my head from the pillow, expecting the door to open. Whoever it was paused, but then turned and descended the stairs. Stillness overtook the echo of those steps, and once again. I was drowning in silence. I let out a breath, closed my eyes, and tried desperately to think only good thoughts, to visualize my beautiful little lake back on the farm. remember Chandler's laughter and smile and all the wonderful things we whispered to each other so I could drift into sleep.
   Sleep finally came, but like it would if I had been anesthetized. When sunlight streaked in. it stood at my bedside and waited impatiently for me to acknowledge morning. I knew that was true because when I finally did wake up. it was more than a half hour later than I needed to make my new schedule. After all. I had promised Mr. Bergman I could manage the earlier session. I had even bragged about how easy it was for me to be an early riser. Now what would he think of me?
   I literally threw off my covers and leaped off the bed, rushing around to get myself showered and dressed, and did it all in less than half the usual time. I practically flew down the stairs.
   There was still no one else at breakfast vet. Except for Mrs. Churchwell, there were no servants around either. Before I was finished eating, however, the girls and Howard began to stream into the dining room. I could see from the sleepy eves on all the girls that I was not the only one who had been in a desperate battle for some rest.
   Steven, who looked like a somnambulist himself and who was the last to come to breakfast, was oblivious to how the rest of us looked, but I could see Howard had suspicious eyes. He continually glanced from one of us to another and asked delving questions like. "Anyone hear a lot of moving about in the hallway last night?"
   Rose was the most obvious, turning constantly to Cinnamon for the answers. Finally, Howard came right out and asked what we were all up to.
   "Who says we're up to anything. Howard?" Cinnamon returned,
   "You look like a pack of conniving
   conspirators. Roman senators planning the
   assassination of Julius Caesar or someone of similar
   importance . "
   "Maybe you?" Ice said, smiling coolly. "Very funny. What's up. girls? What am I
   missing here? The silence speaks volumes." "We stayed up late comparing notes about old
   boyfriends," Cinnamon replied. "And decided that
   none of them compared to you."
   Steven laughed and Howard smirked and
   nodded.
   "Okay," he said. "Have your little girlie secrets.
   See if I care."
   "Thanks for giving us permission," Ice said.
   She didn't say much, but when she did, it carried the
   chill that her name suggested.
   Howard glanced at her and then quickly
   returned to his breakfast. There was no question she
   intimidated him far more than Cinnamon did. "I've got to get to an early lesson," I said. "I'll
   take care of my own dishes."
   "Butter him up for me, will you?" Steven cried
   after me.
   Actually, my morning went relatively better
   than I had expected it would. Somehow, when I put
   my fingers to my bow and held my violin, my fatigue
   took a back seat to my enthusiasm and I was able to
   play well enough for Mr. Bergman to give me a real
   compliment. However, it was couched in one of those
   between-the-lines type of remarks.
   "Madame Senetsky certainly has a gift for
   recognizing exceptionally talented young people." he
   said. He had taken me through what he called the
   basics, moving me along quickly because of his
   satisfaction with my performance at almost every
   level,
   "Thank you," I said. He looked at his planning
   book and kept his eyes glued to the pages, ignoring
   me, as if thank yous were unnecessary and even
   embarrassing for him.
   "We'll continue the same time tomorrow," he
   said as a way of dismissing me.
   I met Steven on my way out.
   "How is he?" he whispered.
   "Like a hungry raccoon," I said. "He'll tear
   through anything."
   "Huh?"
   I laughed as I hurried away.
   With the time I had in between my violin lesson
   and my next session. I mailed out the letter to Uncle
   Simon and then finished cleaning and organizing my
   room. While I was doing so. I heard footsteps above
   and paused to listen. It was the first time I had heard
   anything above me. There was a shuffling and even
   the squeaking sound of something metallic being
   opened and closed. Both Howard and Cinnamon
   should be in their drama class with Mr. Marlowe. I
   thought. Ice was in her vocal lesson. Rose was at
   dance class, and I knew where Steven was, Mrs. Ivers
   was in the laundry room and Mrs. Churchwell was in
   the kitchen. I had seen Madame Senetsky and Laura
   Fairchild conversing in Madame SenetsWs office
   below when I had hurried to the stairway. Who was
   that up there?
   Daddy used to say curiosity could often be like
   a worm to a fish, dangling on a hook, drawing you
   closer, drawing you into trouble, but it was hard to
   resist.
   I checked my watch, saw that I still had some
   time, and went to the stairway leading up to the third
   floor. All I had been told was there was a costume
   room up there. I had vet to see it. I listened for a while at the foot of the short stairway, but heard nothing.
   Then I slowly ascended.
   The third floor was quite unlike the rest of the
   house in which we lived and worked. There was only,
   a single light fixture in the center of the ceiling,
   halfway down the corridor. It was a weak light at that,
   casting thin, soft shadows that caused the gray walls
   to look like stone.
   Apparently there was only one room up here. I
   paused at the door, listened again, and then opened it.
   The slight illumination from the hallway spilled in
   b 
					     					 			efore me to reveal rows and rows of costumes. They
   began just inside and ran the length of the room. I
   found a light switch on the right side and flipped it on.
   A series of bigger and brighter fixtures in brass lamp
   shades lit up the room well enough for me to see
   everything. On shelves above the costumes to my left
   were all sorts of hats and helmets. Against the right
   wall was another set of shelves, upon which were
   props-- the swords Cinnamon and Howard were
   playing with the day I arrived, the armor, canes and
   magic wands, as well as crowns with imitation jewels.
   Below that were pairs and pairs of shoes and boots,
   slippers, and Indian moccasins.
   The room felt dusty. Stepping into it, I sensed that once I moved something., a parade of particles would begin to float through the air, swimming from one set of costumes to another. The smell was musty, stale, as if the door to the room hadn't been opened in
   years. Of course. I knew otherwise.
   If this was the only room up here and there
   were no other doors, who had been moving around?
   To do what? No one had come down the stairs. "Hello?'" I called, wondering if someone was
   deeper in the room, perhaps behind some costuming.
   There was no response. I walked in further and then
   followed the aisle on my right, past the rows of
   costumes organized by century and style, from the
   Middle Ages to the Roaring Twenties, with lots more
   from other eras and styles on the opposite side of the
   room.
   I reached the rear of the room and started to go
   around the other side in order to return to the doorway
   when I saw what I realized was another door, behind a
   pair of gowns that looked like they could have been
   worn by Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind. Where did this door go? It had a key in the
   lock. Why was it practically hidden from sight, I
   wondered. and I lifted the gowns away to turn the lock
   and then try the knob. It turned, but the door opened to another door. Still curious. I put my ear to that door and listened. I thought I could hear someone singing to the music of what sounded like a mandolin. I knew
   the sound well. It was a form of lute.
   "Who's in here?" I heard, and spun around to
   see Laura Fairchild in the doorway. She seemed to
   swell in the doorway, her neck stretching, her eyes
   beaming with rage.
   As quietly as I could. I closed the door, locked
   it again and stepped out into the aisle.
   "Honey? What are you doing here?" she
   demanded.
   "I was just curious," I said. "I heard about the
   costumes and wanted to see them."
   "I've already instructed Howard and Cinnamon
   not to touch anything in here again until they are told
   to do so. You had no permission to be up here." "I'm sorry." I said. "I didn't really touch
   anything."
   She pursed her lips and gazed at me skeptically,
   after which she looked into the room as if she would
   be able to tell in an instant if I had moved a single
   dress or boot.
   "There's no reason for you to be on this floor,"
   she emphasized. "I thought I heard someone above my room, and thought it might be one of the others," I explained. I knew it couldn't possibly be one of my fellow students, but she made me feel so guilty, her eyes narrowing with cold suspicion. that I thought I had better come up with some other sensible explanation, even though all I was guilty of was
   curiosity.
   "Isn't it time for your next session?" she asked,
   or more like commanded.
   "Yes."
   "Then you had better get going."
   I started out and she went further in. I hesitated
   in the doorway. What was she doing? Was she really
   checking to see if I had taken anything? How could
   anyone keep track of all that was in here anyway?
   And why would I take anything from the room? I lingered in the doorway and watched her trace
   my steps toward the rear. Then she surprised me by
   lifting away the old gowns as I had done and then
   testing to see if the door was still locked. Suddenly
   she spun around, as if she could feel my eyes on the
   back of her neck.
   "What are you doing?" she demanded. "Nothing," I said quickly and hurried away and
   down the stairs. Where did that door go? Was
   someone singing behind it? Who?
   Curiosity was certainly a warm on a hook for
   me. I thought. And like the perennial fish, it would
   Zet me in trouble. too. I felt sure of that.
   After our speech lesson, during which we were
   each recorded reading a selection from James Joyce's
   Ulysses for Mr. Masters. I pulled Cinnamon aside and
   told her what I had heard and what I had done. "I didn't see any door in the rear of the
   wardrobe room when Howard and I went up there,"
   she said. "But maybe that was because I didn't go all
   the way back and didn't look behind those costumes
   you said were hanging in front of it. Howard and I got
   excited over the armor, which was close to the front,
   and got into that. Our Ms. Fairchild did tell Howard to
   tell me to stay out of the room until we were
   instructed to go there for a specific thing, but I didn't
   think much of that. You said you distinctly heard
   footsteps and then you heard someone singing?" "Yes. I'm sure that's what it was," I said. "Of
   course, it could have been someone listening to
   music.'
   "You're sure of what?" Ice asked, catching up
   with us. I told her all of it briefly. She didn't look
   surprised.
   "I've heard someone above at night," she
   revealed. "or what I thought was someone above, but I
   haven't heard anyone singing or any music playing." "I never did before." I said.
   "Ice's room is directly under the costume
   room," Cinnamon remarked.
   "I'm sure I heard footsteps, but there was no
   one there in the costume room." I said.
   "Did you try to open the second door?"
   Cinnamon asked.
   "I didn't have a chance. Ms. Fairchild appeared
   as suddenly as a ghost. I closed the first door and
   locked it again as quickly and as quietly as I could." Ice moaned.
   "Let's not think it's Howard's ghost of Mr.
   Senetsky again," she pleaded.
   Cinnamon thought a moment. Rose was coming
   along with Steven.
   "Don't say anything to Rose just yet. She's
   spooked enough by what we found last night." We agreed and went on to our vocal class. Mr.
   Littleton had decided to turn us into a little chorus.
   with Ice, of course, singing lead. We had an
   opportunity to really hear her vocalize, and all of us.
   even Howard, were very impressed.
   Later, when we confronted each other in dance
   class in our dance costumes. Steven took a lot of
   ribbing from Howard, who baptized him Mr.
   Toothpick Legs. Mr. Demetrius employed Rose as his
   assistant to help us develop fundamental moves and
   exercises. She truly had a striking figure, and moved
   with such grace and east, she was inspiring to watch
   and to try to emulate. She seemed made of rubber,
   able to turn, twist and mo 
					     					 			ve in defiance of gravity
   itself.
   While we were working in the studio.
   Cinnamon nudged me and nodded toward the
   doorway.
   There, apparently observing us for some time.
   was Edmond Senetsky. Rose saw that we were
   looking behind her and turned and saw him there as
   well. She suddenly became very nervous. A moment
   later, he was gone. She looked back at us and then
   caught Howard gazing at her, a big fat Cheshire cat
   smile spread over his face.
   "Did y'all see him?" Rose asked immediately at
   the end of the dance session. "Maybe he returned to
   the school to get his scarf."
   "Not in the daytime." Cinnamon insisted. "He
   couldn't risk being seen up there. He'd have no
   explanation for it."
   "One of us has a real fan," Howard Rockwell
   sang as he walked by us. He rolled his eyes and
   laughed.
   "Stuff it. Howard," Cinnamon called after him. "There's no doubt in my mind that if Howard
   found out what we've discovered and planned to do,
   he would make more trouble for us." Ice remarked,
   glaring after him with eves that looked capable of
   drilling a hole through a steel wall.
   "Forget about him," Cinnamon said. "We'll
   follow our plan tonight."
   After we completed the school day, we all went
   up to shower and rest before dinner. Tonight, we were
   told, we would be enjoying a French meal, and we
   would be given a lecture about wines as well.
   Madame Senetsky would be at this dinner to observe
   us. Laura Fairchild said.
   "French food happens to be her favorite," she
   added. "Everyone is to be on his or her best behavior
   and look presentable."
   After I took my shower and lay down to get
   some rest. I fell into a deep sleep. I was that exhausted
   from tossing and turning, fretting in and out of
   nightmares the night before, and now, equally tired from a day of tension as well. Unfortunately. I slept so deeply. I didn't wake even when the others were talking and making noise outside my room. I didn't even hear Cinnamon knocking on my door. I woke
   only when I felt her shaking me vigorously. "Whaaa...?"
   I gazed at all three of them, dressed and ready
   for dinner, standing beside my bed.
   "Oh, no!" I screamed and sat up. "What time is