The Crossroads
If I die, she might miss me.
She might really miss me!
“Back so soon?”
Gerda Spratling met the search party in the front hall. Ben Hargrove shoved the warrant under her nose.
“Mary Beth?” he said to the female officer restraining Zipper.
“I’m on it.” The officer unclipped the dog’s collar and let him loose.
“If that dog does his business on my rug…”
“Your house will smell a whole lot better.” Judy couldn’t resist.
Zipper raced up and down the hallways, darted in and out of rooms. The police officer followed.
“Got anything, boy?”
Zipper barked, as if to say “No. Nothing.”
“We’ll find him, Zip.” She offered the dog some water from a kidney-shaped bottle she kept strapped to the back of her utility belt.
Zipper didn’t drink any. He was too busy.
He needed to find his boy.
“My son is missing, too!” Sharon cornered Hargrove and Judy in the portrait gallery. “Miss Spratling sent her chauffeur down to the carriage house to steal him!”
“Where’s this chauffeur now?” Hargrove asked.
“I don’t know!” Sharon’s voice was shaky.
Hargrove spoke into his walkie-talkie. “Betty?”
“Go ahead,” a voice crackled back.
“We need to issue an APB for…” He turned to Sharon.
“Willoughby!” she screamed. “Rodman Willoughby!”
It was almost two a.m.
Judy doubled back to Miss Spratling’s bedchamber in the mansion’s massive library. Between bookcases, she noticed one wall panel was slightly larger than all the others. She pushed against it and the whole wall slid open.
“Hello?”
She walked down the dark corridor and into the chapel.
“Oh, my,” she gasped when she saw all the statues.
“Handsome, isn’t he?”
Miss Spratling was standing behind her in that yellowing bridal gown, a lacy cape draped across her withered shoulders.
“Where’s Zack?” Judy demanded. “What have you done with my son?”
Miss Spratling ignored her, moved to another statue.
“Where did you take Zack, you old witch?”
“Such language? In a chapel?” Miss Spratling clucked her tongue. “Shame on you, Mrs. Jennings! Shame, shame, shame.”
“Where is he?”
“Well, dearie, I imagine he is burning in hell!”
“Sheriff?” Judy yelled up the hallway. “She’s in here!”
“Yes, I imagine he’s down there paying for the sins of his hideous grandfather.”
“You know what, Miss Spratling? Your father was right. You are ugly. Not your face—even though it does sort of look like a withered old apple. No. I’m talking about your soul. It’s beyond ugly. It’s hideous.”
“How dare you speak that way to me!”
“I know how your father bought you a boyfriend.”
“He did no such thing!”
“Yes, he did. He paid Clint Eberhart to be nice to you.”
“Go! Leave here now!”
“Or what?”
“Judy?” Sheriff Hargrove came into the chapel.
“Officer! Arrest this woman! She is being verbally abusive!”
Judy smiled. “The truth hurts, doesn’t it?”
“Arrest her this instant!”
“Judy?” Hargrove put his hand on Judy’s shoulder. “Back off. She’s not worth it.”
“She has Zack.”
“We found her; we’ll find him. You’ve done enough.”
Much to Miss Spratling’s delight, Sheriff Hargrove took Judy’s elbow and led her out of the chapel.
A young cop escorted Judy out of Spratling Manor.
“My vehicle’s parked over this way, ma’am.”
“Where are we going?”
“Sheriff Hargrove says you need to calm down. I’m taking you over to headquarters so you can, you know, calm down.”
Calm down? Judy absolutely hated it when people said that to her. And this guy said it twice.
They headed toward the driveway. A dog started barking in the forest.
“That sounds like Zipper!” Judy said. “Maybe he found Zack!”
The officer reached for his walkie-talkie.
“Officer? Officer!” A boy they couldn’t see called out from the trees.
“Yeah?” The young cop moved toward the dark thicket, unsnapped his holster.
“Down here! In the woods! Jiminy Christmas, this galdern dog smells something!”
Zipper barked louder. Judy knew who was hidden in the trees with him. Davy.
“Hurry, Officer!”
The cop turned to Judy. “Mrs. Jennings? Wait right here.”
“Yes, sir.”
The young cop stepped into the underbrush.
Judy gave him a ten-second head start. Waited for his flashlight to disappear behind the dense foliage. Then she took off. She ran across the lawn, found a pebbled path, and followed it downhill to the river and an old, sagging boathouse. She pushed the door open and heard water lapping against the pilings underneath the floorboards.
About two minutes later, she heard Zipper panting.
“Howdy, Mrs. J.,” said Davy from the shadows. “I hope that galdern police officer don’t find himself in too big a pickle. He sure did take off a runnin’ when he heard old Zip, though, didn’t he?”
“What do you mean she ‘slipped away’?” Sheriff Hargrove yelled at his bumbling young deputy.
“Well, sir, I proceeded down through the sticker bushes to pursue and apprehend—”
“She’s trying to escape!” Sharon came running out of the mansion. “Miss Spratling stole my car!”
“When?” asked Sheriff Hargrove.
“I don’t know!”
“Then how do you know she’s the one who stole it?”
“She dropped this!” Sharon held up an antique blue garter—the kind a bride might’ve worn fifty years ago. “It was right where I parked my car!”
Hargrove nodded. “What type of vehicle are we looking for, ma’am?”
“A silver Hyundai.”
“Okay, everybody,” Sheriff Hargrove barked to his troops. “Let’s roll!”
“What about Mrs. Jennings?” asked the young deputy.
“We’ll worry about Judy later. She couldn’t have gone too far because she doesn’t have a car!”
“You sure, Chief?”
“Yes, I’m sure! I drove her over here, didn’t I?”
All the police officers climbed into their vehicles to chase after the one woman they knew was currently driving a car: Miss Gerda Spratling.
“Davy?” Judy asked. “Where’s Zack?”
“In a whole heap of trouble. We figure he might be up against ol’ Clint Eberhart himself.”
“The man who ran the bus off the road?”
“You done your homework, I see.”
“Yeah. I usually do.”
“Well, Eberhart is the sorriest soul you could ever meet. A black-haired devil…”
“With blue, blue eyes? Slicked-back hair?”
“That’s the feller! You seen him?”
“No, no. So far I’ve only seen his statues.”
“Statues?”
“Yeah. Tons of them.”
“Dang. Where they at?”
“Inside the chapel.”
“Chapel? Don’t tell me Gerda Spratling built that dirty dog another dag-blasted memorial!”
“So it would seem, Davy.”
“Well, Mrs. J., I reckon we need to burn that one down, too.”
The old man shoved rusty gears to one side of the long table. Heavy cogwheels and hardware clanged and banged on the floor.
“A little quieter, if you please, Mr. Willoughby,” Miss Spratling said as her loyal chauffeur cleared off the greasy workbench.
She moved to Zack. The boy
was sitting on the cracked concrete floor, his wrists bound behind his back, his arms chained to the steel pole.
“I’ll wager your stepmother has already forgotten you,” she said with a dramatic sigh. “And your father? Why, he could care less. I’m told he’s out of town on business, couldn’t be bothered.”
Zack didn’t say anything. He was biding his time because he had a hunch about how to beat Clint Eberhart when he got there. It was an idea based on what Davy Wilcox had taught him—actually, what Davy had shown him.
“Hey, Gerdy. What’s shaking, doll?”
The ghost of Clint Eberhart limped into the room. He tried to smile, tried to swagger, but Zack could see he was wounded. Weak.
Miss Spratling’s hand fluttered over her heart. “Are you all right, my love?”
“Yeah. But we need to hurry, doll.”
“Yes, dear. Mr. Willoughby?”
Willoughby had the knives and saws spread out on the workbench.
“Put the kid up on the table, Gerdy.”
“Mr. Willoughby? I will require your assistance.”
“Hurry.” Eberhart winced. He was getting weaker every second.
The old chauffeur groaned as he bent down to unlock the chain.
It was almost time. The lock snapped open.
Now!
Zack rolled sideways and cut the old man’s legs out from under him. Willoughby toppled to the floor. Zack had used the rolling-tackle move before—playing Madden NFL on his PlayStation. It worked in real life, too.
Zack had been twisting at the duct tape binding his wrists, stretching it out while his hot sweat worked to dilute the glue. Now it was easy to slip free.
“Clint?” Miss Spratling cried. “Do something! Please?”
“Don’t move, kid!” Eberhart screamed, but he didn’t do anything.
Zack’s theory was correct! Eberhart couldn’t hurt him, couldn’t touch him, couldn’t do anything except make noise and order these two old farts around. Just like Davy Wilcox couldn’t do anything. Davy never hammered a nail or drilled a hole or even ate a hamburger. Davy told Zack what to do and then stood around and watched Zack do it because Davy couldn’t do anything.
“Don’t let that kid—”
Eberhart groaned in agony. He doubled over and clutched his stomach.
“Clint? Sweetheart?”
“Accckkk…”
“Clint?”
Now Zack tore the tape off his legs.
Eberhart fell to his knees and slumped forward. But before his body hit the floor, he vanished into a swirling puff of dust.
Zack was getting used to these vanishing acts, so he didn’t skip a beat to watch Eberhart vamoose into the vapor. He was up and ready to run. He could’ve gone straight for the door, could’ve saved himself, but he wanted to save the baby, too. So he ran back to the center of the big room to grab the handle on the Tote ’n Go car seat.
The old lady snagged him, wrapped her bony fingers tight around his wrist. Then she pressed a serrated knife blade against his throat.
“And just where do you think you’re going, young man?”
“Smash the galdern windows, too!”
Judy had used candles to set the altar cloth on fire. She had thrown a dozen votives to the floor to start the carpet burning. Now the chapel was filling with toxic fumes, but Davy was right: There was still time to shatter the stained-glass windows and destroy a few more statues.
“This will weaken him?”
“You bet, Mrs. J. Ol’ Clint Eberhart’s probably clutchin’ his gut right now and wonderin’ why he feels so galdern weak!”
Zipper tore apart the velvet cushion in the front pew with his teeth: It still had Spratling’s scent on it.
Judy slammed a statue through a stained-glass window. “You ever do any work, Davy?”
“Can’t, I reckon. But I’m full of good ideas, ain’t I?” A bell chimed in the distance. “They want me back, Mrs. J.”
“Tell me what I need to do.”
“Can’t do that, neither.”
“Really? Who writes all these rules?”
“Folks upstairs. Frustratin’, ain’t it?”
Zipper snarled.
“What do you two think you’re doing in here?”
Clint Eberhart grasped a marble pedestal and struggled to keep standing.
Judy looked at the statue in her hand. Looked at Eberhart. She slammed the statue against the hard edge of a pew.
“Hey! Lady! Easy!”
She banged it again. The blows struck Clint as if she were wielding a plaster voodoo doll.
“Put that thing down! Come on. Cut me some slack, doll.”
Judy turned to Davy. “Is he a ghost, too?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Judy swung the statue she was holding like a baseball bat at the knees of another statue. Eberhart crumpled to the floor.
“Stop! Ouch! That hurts!”
Judy hacked a cough. She was inhaling too much smoke. Currently, Judy and Zipper were the only two creatures in the room who actually needed to breathe. Therefore, they also needed to leave.
“Davy?” Judy peered through the haze. It stung her eyes. “We need to get out. Now.”
Davy didn’t answer.
He’d disappeared.
It was just Judy, the dog, and the demon squirming on the floor.
She stood over him. Raised her statue high.
“Where’s Zack?”
“Where you’ll never find him!”
“Where?”
Eberhart moaned.
“Come on, Mrs. J.!” It was Davy. Somehow, he had transported himself out of the chapel and into the library at the other end of the secret passageway. “You best get out before the fire gets you!”
Eberhart struggled to his feet. “Where’s your son?” he snarled. “On his way to hell!”
Judy turned. “Which way, Davy?”
The boy was gone. Again.
“Come on, Zipper! Run!”
They had at best a ten-step lead.
And no one left to help them.
Gerda Spratling was on her knees, ferociously praying to revive Eberhart’s wounded soul.
The baby kicked and screamed.
“Miss Spratling?” Willoughby held his head. “The baby?”
Miss Spratling kept mumbling prayers.
“They’re going to arrest you, too,” Zack said to Willoughby. He was chained to the pipe again. “Accessory to murder, I figure.”
“Be quiet!”
“They’ll probably give you one of those lethal-injection deals.”
“Miss Spratling?”
“You know how they do that? Well, they have this huge needle,” Zack said. “I hear it’s like three or four feet long.”
“Miss Spratling?”
“They stick that needle in your butt.”
“Miss Spratling!”
The baby screeched.
“And that needle’s full of rat poison.”
“Miss Spratling?”
The baby sent his bottle skidding across the floor and let loose a squeal. Willoughby lunged toward Spratling and shook her.
“Miss Spratling!”
“How dare you interrupt my prayers!”
“I can’t do this! I can’t!”
“Pray with me, Mr. Willoughby.” Her right hand disappeared under the folds of her gown.
“I don’t want to die from a lethal injection!” He shambled over to the pole, fumbled in his pocket for the keys.
“Rodman?”
The old chauffeur undid the lock behind Zack’s back.
“What do you think you’re doing?”
“What I should have done ages ago: say no to one of you miserable Spratlings!”
“Mr. Willoughby? Are you forgetting certain documents I keep locked in Father’s safe?”
“I don’t give two hoots about it anymore! I’m old! I have no children! Who cares if you blackmail me?”
While the old folks argued, Z
ack slowly slid across the floor…easing over to…the baby…the portable car seat….
“Why, you ungrateful, insolent old man!”
Miss Spratling reared up. The knife blade came out from under her wedding gown and glinted over her head.
“Don’t do it!” yelled Zack. He grabbed the handle on the baby seat. “Leave Mr. Willoughby alone or I swear I’ll take this baby so far away, you and your boyfriend will never find him!”
“Hah! You wouldn’t get far! I’d catch you!”
“Really? And just how fast can you run in that wedding dress?”
The old lady slowly lowered the knife but kept it aimed at Mr. Willoughby’s heart. “Fine. We’ll simply wait for Clint to return. He’ll deal with you,” she sneered. “He’ll deal with you both!”
Judy and Zipper raced back into the mansion’s library.
Davy had disappeared again and so had Eberhart. But it seemed some other tormented spirit was in the room with them because Judy heard ghostly moaning from somewhere up near the ceiling.
Zipper ran over to the rolling ladder attached to the towering bookcases.
“Hello?” Judy called out. She saw the faint outline of a man standing near the top of the ladder. “Who are you?”
The man held a sputtering candle. He turned slowly and looked down.
Judy recognized the man because she had seen his face in the old newspaper clippings: Julius Spratling. Gerda’s dead father. He was dressed in a dark blue business suit. There was an anguished look on his waxy face.
He blew out the candle and something fluttered through the air: a glowing square of soft light, a phantom sheet of paper. It drifted down lazily like a tumbling leaf. When it finally hit the library floor, it bounced up half an inch and slid underneath one of the massive bookcases.
Judy hurried over to where the thin rectangle of light had disappeared. She bent down and saw an ancient binder. It was covered by almost an inch of dust.
Was it the report from the safe-deposit box?
She reached in. Grabbed the slender book. Read its cover.
The Greyhound Bus Incident
A Search for Justice
Yes! It was the same report. Only this wasn’t a carbon copy. This had to be the original Grandpa Jennings had presented to Julius Spratling on the night he committed suicide. The pages were yellowed. The plastic spine had faded. It had, apparently, been hidden under the bookcase for the past twenty-five years.