quinta-feira, 21 de outubro de 2010

Ghost beach ( ingles )


1
I don't remember how we got to the graveyard.
I remember the sky grew dark — and we were there.
My sister Terri and I walked past rows of crooked, old tombstones,
cracked and covered with moss. Even though it was summer, a damp, gray
fog had settled on everything, sending a chill through the air.
I shivered and pulled my jacket closer. "Wait up, Terri!" I called. As
usual, she had plowed ahead. Graveyards get her all excited. "Where are
you?" I yelled.
I squinted into the gray fog. I could see her shadowy figure up ahead,
stopping every few seconds to examine a tombstone.
I read the words on the tombstone tilted at my feet:
In memory of John,
son of Daniel and Sarah Knapp,
who died March 25, 1766,
aged 12 years and 22 days.
Weird, I thought. That kid was about my age when he died. I turned twelve
in February. The same month Terri turned eleven.
I hurried on. A sharp wind swept in. I searched the rows of old graves
for my sister. She had disappeared into the thick fog. "Terri? Where did
you go?" I called.
Her voice floated back to me. "I'm over here, Jerry."
"Where?" I pushed forward through the mist and the leaves. The wind
swirled around me.
From nearby came a long, low howl. "Must be a dog," I murmured aloud.
The trees rattled their leaves at me. I shivered.
"Jer-ry." Terri's voice sounded a million miles away.
I walked a little further, then steadied myself against a tall tombstone.
"Terri! Wait up! Stop moving around so much!"
I heard another long howl.
"You're going the wrong way," Terri called. "I'm over here."
"Great. Thanks a lot," I muttered. Why couldn't I have a sister who liked
baseball instead of exploring old cemeteries?
The wind made a deep sucking noise. A column of leaves, dust, and dirt
swirled up in my face. I pinched my eyes shut.
When I opened them, I saw Terri crouched over a small grave. "Don't
move," I called. "I'm coming."
I zigzagged my way around the tombstones until I reached her side. "It's
getting dark," I said. "Let's get out of here."
I turned and took a step — and something grabbed my ankle.
I screamed and tried to pull away. But its grasp tightened.
A hand. Reaching up through the dirt beside the grave.
I let out a shrill scream. Terri screamed, too.
I kicked hard and broke free.
"Run!" Terri shrieked.
But I was already running.
As Terri and I stumbled over the wet grass, green hands popped up
everywhere. Thwack! Thwack! Thwack! Pop! Pop!
The hands rose up. Reached for us. Grabbed at our ankles.
I darted to the left. Thwack! I dodged to the right. Pop!
"Run, Terri! Run!" I called to my sister. "Lift your knees!"
I could hear her sneakers pounding the ground behind me. Then I heard her
terrified cry: "Jerry! They've got me!"
With a loud gasp, I spun around. Two big hands had wrapped themselves
around her ankles.
I froze, watching my sister struggle.
"Jerry — help me! It won't let go!"
Taking a deep breath, I dove toward her. "Grab on to me," I instructed,
holding out my arms.
I kicked at the two hands that held her.
Kicked as hard as I could. But they didn't move, didn't let go.
"I — I can't move!" Terri wailed.
The dirt seemed to shake at my feet. I peered down to see more hands
sprouting up from the ground.
I tugged at Terri's waist. "Move!" I yelled frantically.
"I can't!"
"Yes, you can! You've got to keep trying!"
"Ohhh!" I let out a low cry as two hands grabbed my ankles.
Now I was caught.
We were both trapped.
2
"Jerry! What's your problem?" Terri asked.
I blinked. Terri stood beside me on a rocky strip of beach. I stared out
at the calm ocean water beyond us and shook my head. "Wow. That was
weird," I murmured. "I was remembering a bad dream I had a few months
ago."
Terri frowned at me. "Why now?"
"It was about a cemetery," I explained. I turned back to glance at the
tiny, old cemetery we'd just discovered at the edge of the pine woods
behind us. "In my dream, green hands were popping out of the ground and
grabbing our ankles."
"Gross," Terri replied. She brushed her dark brown bangs off her face.
Except for the fact that she is one inch taller than me, we look like a
perfect brother-sister combination. Same short brown hair, same freckles
across our nose, same hazel eyes.
One difference: Terri has deep dimples in her cheeks when she smiles, and
I don't. Thank goodness.
We walked along the ocean shore for a few minutes. Tall, gray boulders
and scraggly pines stretched all the way to the water.
"Maybe you remembered that dream because you're nervous," Terri said
thoughtfully. "You know. About being away from home for a whole month."
"Well, maybe," I agreed. "We've never been away this long. But what could
happen here? Brad and Agatha are really great."
Brad Sadler is our distant cousin. Ancient, distant cousin is more like
it. Dad said Brad and his wife, Agatha, were old when he was a kid!
But they're both fun, and really energetic despite their age. So when
they invited us to come up to New England and spend the last month of
summer with them in their old cottage near the beach, Terri and I eagerly
said yes. It sounded great — especially since our only other choice was
the cramped, hot apartment where we live in New Jersey.
We had arrived by train that morning. Brad and Agatha met us at the
platform and drove us along the pine woods to the cottage.
After we had a chance to unpack and have some lunch — big bowls of creamy
clam chowder — Agatha said, "Now why don't you kids have a look around?
There's lots to explore."
So here we were, checking things out. Terri grabbed my arm. "Hey, let's
go back and check out that little cemetery!" she suggested eagerly.
"I don't know . . ." My frightening dream was still fresh in my mind.
"Oh, come on. There won't be any green hands. I promise. And I bet I can
find some really cool gravestones for rubbings."
Terri loves exploring old graveyards. She loves all kinds of scary
things. She reads scary mysteries by the dozen. And the weird thing is,
she always reads the last chapter first.
Terri has to solve the mystery. She can't stand not knowing the answer.
My sister has a million interests, but gravestone rubbings is one of her
stranger hobbies. She tapes a piece of rice paper over the gravestone
inscription and then rubs the design onto the paper, using the side of a
special wax crayon.
"Hey! Wait up," I called to her.
But Terri was already jogging up the beach toward the cemetery. "Come on,
Jerry," she called. "Don't be a chicken."
I followed her off the beach and into the small forest. It smelled fresh
and piney. The cemetery was just inside, surrounded by a crumbly stone
wall. We squeezed through the narrow opening in the wall that led inside.
Terri began inspecting the tombstones. "Wow. Some of these markers are
really old," she announced. "Check out this one."
She pointed at a small gravestone. Engraved on the front was a skull with
wings sprouting on either side of its head.
"It's a death's-head," my sister explained. "Very old Puritan symbol.
Creepy, huh?" She read the inscription: " 'Here lies the body of Mr. John
Sadler, who departed this life March 18, 1642, in the 38th year of his
age.' "
"Sadler. Like us," I said. "Wow. I wonder if we're related." I did some
quick calculations. "If we are, John Sadler is our great-great-greatgreat-
grandsomething. He died over 350 years ago."
Terri had already moved on to another group of markers. "Here's one from
1647, and another from 1652. I don't think I've ever gotten rubbings this
old before." She disappeared behind a tall tombstone.
I knew where we'd be spending the month. I'd had enough of cemeteries for
today, though.
"Come on. Let's explore the beach, okay?" I checked around for Terri.
"Terri? Where'd you go?" I stepped over to the tall tombstone.
Not there.
"Terri?" The ocean breeze rustled the pine branches above us. "Terri, cut
it out, okay?"
I took a couple of steps. "You know I don't like this," I warned.
Terri's head popped up from behind a tombstone about ten feet away. "Why?
You scared?"
I didn't like the grin on her face. "Who, me?" I said. "Never!"
Terri stood up. "Okay, chicken. But I'm coming back here tomorrow." She
followed me out of the cemetery and onto the rocky beach.
"I wonder what's down here," I said, heading along the shoreline.
"Oh, look at this." Terri stooped to pluck a tiny yellow-and-white
wildflower that had sprouted up between two large rocks. "Butter-andeggs,"
she announced. "Weird name for a wildflower, huh?"
"Very," I agreed. Terri Sadler Hobby Number Two: wildflowers. She likes
to collect them and press them in a huge cardboard contraption called a
plant press.
Terri frowned. "Now what's your problem?"
"We keep stopping. I want to go exploring. Agatha said there's a small
beach down here where we can go swimming if we want."
"Okay, okay," she replied, rolling her hazel eyes.
We trudged on until we reached a small, sandy beach. It was really more
rock than sand. Staring out to the water, I saw a long rock jetty
stretching out into the ocean.
"Wonder what that's for," Terri said.
"It helps hold the beach together," I explained. I was just about to
launch into my explanation of beach erosion when Terri gasped.
"Jerry — look! Up there!" she cried. She pointed to a tall mound of rocks
just past the jetty along the shoreline. Nestled high into the rocks, on
top of a wide ledge, sat a large, dark cave.
"Let's climb up and explore it," Terri cried eagerly.
"No, wait!" I remembered what Mom and Dad had said to me that morning as
we boarded the train: Keep an eye on Terri and don't let her get too
carried away with things. "It might be dangerous," I said. I am the older
brother, after all. And I'm the sensible one.
She made a face. "Give me a break," she muttered. Terri made her way
across the beach and toward the cave. "At least let's get a closer look.
We can ask Brad and Agatha later whether or not it's safe."
I followed behind her. "Yeah, right. Like ninety-year-olds ever go cave
exploring."
As we came nearer, I had to admit it was an awesome cave. I'd never seen
one that large except in an old Boy Scout magazine.
"I wonder if someone lives in it," Terri said excitedly. "You know. Like
a beach hermit." She cupped her hands around her mouth and called:
"Whooooo!"
Sometimes Terri can be such a dork. I mean, if you were living inside a
cave, and you heard someone go "whoooo," would you answer back?
"Whoooo!" My sister did it again.
"Let's go," I urged.
Then, from inside the cave, a long, low whistle pierced the air.
We stared at each other.
"Whoa! What was that?" Terri whispered. "An owl?"
I swallowed. "I don't think so. Owls are only awake at night."
We heard it again. A long whistle floating out from deep inside the cave.
We exchanged glances. What could it be? A wolf? A coyote?
"I bet Brad and Agatha are wondering where we are," Terri said softly.
"Maybe we should go."
"Yeah. Okay." I turned to leave. But stopped when I heard a fluttering
sound. From behind the cave. Growing louder.
I shielded my eyes with my hand and squinted up at the sky.
"No!" I grabbed Terri's arm as a shadow swept over us — and an enormous
bat swooped down at us, red eyes flashing, its pointed teeth glistening,
hissing as it attacked.
3
The bat swooped low. So low, I could feel the air from its fluttering
wings.
Terri and I dropped to the hard ground. I covered my head with both
hands.
My heart was pounding so loudly, I couldn't hear the fluttering wings.
"Hey — where'd it go?" I heard Terri cry.
I peeped out. I could see the bat spiralling up into the sky. I watched
it swoosh and dip beyond us. Then suddenly it went into a wild spin.
It crashed onto the rocks nearby. I could see one black wing flapping
weakly in the breeze.
Slowly, I climbed to my feet, my heart still thudding. "What made it drop
like that?" I asked in a shaky voice. I started toward it.
Terri held me back. "Stay away. Bats can carry rabies, you know."
"I'm not going to get that close," I told her. "I just want to take a
look. I've never seen a real bat close up." I guess you could say that my
hobby is science, too. I love studying about all kinds of animals.
"Here. Check it out," I announced, scrambling over the smooth, gray
boulders.
"Careful, Jerry," warned Terri. "If you get rabies, you'll get me in
trouble."
"Thanks for your concern," I muttered sarcastically.
I stopped about four feet from the bat. "Whoa! I don't believe it!" I
cried.
I heard Terri burst out laughing.
It wasn't a bat. It was a kite.
I stared in disbelief. The two red eyes that had seemed so menacing were
painted on paper! One of the wings had been ripped to shreds when it
crashed on the rocks.
We both bent over to examine the wreckage.
"Look out! It bites!" a boy's voice called from behind us.
Startled, Terri and I leaped back. I turned and saw a boy about our age,
standing on a tall rock. He had a ball of string in his hand.
"Ha-ha. Great joke," Terri said sarcastically.
The boy grinned at us, but didn't reply. He stepped closer. I could see
that he had freckles across his nose just like me, and brown hair the
same shade as mine. He turned back toward the rocks and called, "You can
come out now."
Two kids, a girl about our age and a little boy about five, clambered
over the rocks. The little boy had light blond hair and blue eyes, and
his ears poked out. The girl's hair was auburn, and she wore it in
braids. All three of them had the same freckles across their noses.
"Are you all in the same family?" Terri asked them.
The tallest boy, the one who had come out first, nodded his head. "Yeah.
We're all Sadlers. I'm Sam. That's Louisa. That's Nat."
"Wow," I said. "We're Sadlers, too." I introduced Terri and myself.
Sam didn't seem impressed. "There're lots of Sadlers around here," he
muttered.
We stared at each other for a long moment. They didn't seem very
friendly. But then Sam surprised me by asking if I wanted to skip rocks
in the water.
We followed Sam to the water's edge.
"Do you live around here?" Terri asked.
Louisa nodded. "What are you doing here?" she asked. She sounded
suspicious.
"We're visiting our cousins for the month," Terri told her. "They're
Sadlers, too. They live in the little cottage just past the lighthouse.
Do you know them?"
"Sure," said Louisa without smiling. "This is a small place. Everyone
knows everyone else."
I found a smooth, flat stone and skipped it across the water. Three
skips. Not bad. "What do you do for fun around here?" I asked.
Louisa replied, staring out at the water. "We go blueberry picking, we
play games, we come down to the water." She turned to me. "Why? What did
you do today?"
"Nothing yet. We just got here," I told her. I grinned. "Except we were
attacked by a bat kite."
They laughed.
"I'm going to do gravestone rubbings and collect wildflowers," Terri
said.
"There are some beautiful flower patches back in the woods," Louisa told
her.
I watched Sam skip a stone across the water. Seven skips.
He turned to me and grinned. "Practice makes perfect."
"It's hard to practice in an apartment building," I muttered.
"Huh?" Sam said.
"We live in Hoboken," I explained. "In New Jersey. There aren't any ponds
in our building."
Terri pointed back at the cave. "Do you ever go exploring in there?" she
asked.
Nat gasped. Sam and Louisa's faces twisted in surprise. "Are you
kidding?" Louisa cried.
"We never go near there," Sam said softly, eyeing his sister.
"Never?" Terri asked.
All three of them shook their heads.
"Why not?" Terri asked. "What's the big deal?"
"Yeah," I demanded. "Why won't you go near the cave?"
Louisa's eyes grew wide. "Do you believe in ghosts?" she asked.
4
"Believe in ghosts? No way!" Terri told her.
I kept my mouth shut. I knew that ghosts weren't supposed to be real. But
what if all the scientists were wrong?
There are so many ghost stories from all around the world, how can ghosts
not be real?
Maybe that's why I sometimes get scared when I am in strange places. I
think I do believe in ghosts. Of course, I would never admit this to
Terri. She is always so scientific. She'd laugh at me forever!
The three Sadler kids had clustered together.
"Come on. Do you guys really believe in ghosts?' Terri asked.
Louisa took a step forward. Sam tried to pull her back, but she brushed
him off. "If you go near that cave, you might change your mind," she
said, narrowing her eyes.
"You mean there are ghosts in there?" I asked. "What do they do? Come out
at night or something?"
Louisa started to reply, but Sam interrupted. "We've got to go now," he
said, scooting his brother and sister past us.
"Hey — wait!" I called. "We want to hear about the ghosts!"
They hurried on. I could see Sam yelling angrily at Louisa. I guess he
was upset because she mentioned the ghosts.
They disappeared down the beach.
Then, from inside the cave we heard that long, low whistle again.
Terri stared at me.
"It's the wind," I said. I really didn't believe that. Terri didn't
believe it, either.
"Why don't we ask Brad and Agatha about the cave?" I suggested.
"Good idea," Terri said. Even she looked a little scared now.
Brad and Agatha's cottage was a short walk from the cave. It perched by
itself on the edge of the pine forest, looking out toward the lighthouse.
I ran up to the heavy wooden front door and pushed it open. I peered
around the tiny front parlor. The old house creaked and groaned as I
walked over the sagging floorboards. The ceiling hung so low, I could
touch it when I stood on tiptoe.
Terri came up beside me. "Are they here?"
"I don't think so," I answered, looking around.
We stepped past the old sofa and wide stone fireplace and into the
cramped kitchen. Off the kitchen stood an old storeroom where I was to
sleep. Upstairs was Brad and Agatha's room with a "crawl-through" passage
into the space above the storeroom, which would be Terri's room. A tiny
back staircase led from Terri's room down to the yard.
Terri turned to the window. "There they are!" she said. "In the garden!"
I could see Brad bent over a tomato stalk. Agatha was hanging some
clothes to dry on the clothesline.
We raced out the kitchen door. "Where have you two been?" Agatha
demanded. She and Brad both had white, white hair, and their eyes seemed
faded and tired. They were so frail and light. Between them I don't think
they weighed more than a hundred pounds.
"We explored the beach," I told them.
I knelt down beside Brad. He was missing the top part of two of his
fingers on his left hand. He told us they got caught in a wolf trap when
he was young.
"We found an old cave in some huge rocks. Have you ever seen it?" I
asked.
He gave a little grunt and kept searching for ripe tomatoes.
"It's right by the beach and the big rock jetty," Terri added. "You can't
miss it."
Agatha's sheets fluttered on the line. "It's nearly suppertime," she
said, ignoring our questions about the cave. "Why don't you come inside
and give me a hand, Terri?"
Terri glanced at me and shrugged.
I turned back to Brad. I was about to ask him about the cave again when
he handed me the basket of ripe tomatoes. "Take these to Agatha, okay?"
"Sure," I answered, following Terri inside. I set the basket on the small
counter. The kitchen was small and narrow. Counter and sink on one side.
Stove and refrigerator on the other. Agatha had already put Terri to work
in the corner of the living room, setting the table.
"Now Terri, dear," Agatha called from the kitchen, "if it's asters you're
after, the best place to find those is in the big meadow down past the
lighthouse. Of course they're just coming out about now, so you can take
your pick there. I believe that's where you can find plenty of goldenrod,
too."
"Great!" Terri called back with her usual enthusiasm. I don't know how
she could get so pumped about flowers.
Agatha noticed the basket of tomatoes on the counter. "Oh, gracious! All
those tomatoes!" She opened a rattley old drawer and pulled out a small
knife. "Why don't you cut these up for a big green salad?"
I must have made a face.
"Don't you like salad?" Agatha asked.
"Not really," I said. "I mean, I'm not a rabbit!"
Agatha laughed. "You're absolutely right," she said. "Why ruin a
homegrown tomato with lettuce? We'll have them plain, with maybe a little
dressing."
"Sounds good," I grinned, picking up the knife.
I listened to Agatha and Terri discuss wildflowers for a few minutes to
see if the subject of the cave would come up again. It didn't. I wondered
why my two old cousins didn't want to talk about it.
After dinner Brad pulled out an old deck of playing cards and taught
Terri and me how to play whist. It's an old-fashioned card game that I'd
never heard of before.
Brad got a kick out of teaching us the rules. He and I played against
Terri and Agatha. Every time I got mixed up, which was most of the time,
he'd wag his finger back and forth at me. I guess it saved him from
having to say anything.
We went to bed after the card game. It was early, but I didn't care. It
had been a long day, and I was glad to get some rest. The bed was hard,
but I fell asleep as soon as my head hit the scratchy feather pillow.
The next morning Terri and I made our way to the woods to collect plants
and wildflowers.
"What is it we're looking for again?" I asked Terri as I kicked aside
piles of dead leaves.
"Indian pipe," Terri replied. "It looks like small, pinkish-white bones
popping out of the ground. It's also called corpse plant because it lives
on the remains of dead plants."
"Yuck." I suddenly remembered the popping hands in my cemetery dream.
Terri laughed. "You should like these plants," she said. "They're a
scientific puzzle. They're white because they don't have any chlorophyll.
You know. The stuff that makes plants turn green."
"How interesting," I said sarcastically, rolling my eyes.
Terri continued her lecture anyway. "Agatha said Indian pipe only grows
in very dark places. They look more like a fungus than a plant."
She dug around for a few minutes. "The weirdest thing about them," she
continued, "is if they dry out, they turn black. That's why I want to try
pressing a few."
I poked around in the leaves some more. I have to admit she had me
hooked. I love freaks of nature.
I peered up at the heavy leaf canopy above us. "We're definitely as deep
into the woods as we can be. Are you sure this is where Agatha said you
can find them?"
Terri nodded. She pointed to a huge fallen oak tree. "That's our
landmark. Don't lose it."
I started toward the big tree. "Maybe I'll take a closer look over
there," I said. "There might be Indian pipe on that dead tree."
I knelt down by the snakelike tree roots and began carefully pushing dead
leaves aside. No wildflowers. Just bugs and worms. It was really gross.
I glanced back at Terri. She didn't seem to be having any luck, either.
Then, out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something white sticking out
of the ground. I scurried over to examine it.
A short plant stem stuck up from the soft ground. The stem was covered
with rolled-up leaves. I tugged at the stem. It didn't come up.
I pulled harder.
The stem rose up a little, bringing a clump of soft dirt with it.
It isn't a stem, I realized. It's some kind of root. A root with leaves.
Weird.
I pulled more of it up from the ground. It was very long, I discovered.
A hard tug. Then another.
Another hard tug of the strange root brought up a huge mound of dirt.
I glanced down into the large hole I had made — and uttered a sharp cry.
"Terri — come here!" I managed to choke out. "I found a skeleton!"
5
"Huh?" Terri raced to my side.
We both stood and stared down at it in silence.
The skeleton I had uncovered lay curled on its side, every bone neatly in
place. The empty eye socket in its gray skull gaped up at us.
"Is it a h-human?" Terri stammered in a low whisper.
"Not unless the human has four legs, genius!" I replied.
Terri stared down at it, her mouth open in an O of surprise. "Well, then,
what is it?"
"Some kind of large animal," I told her. "Maybe a deer."
I stooped to take a closer look. "No. Not a deer. It has toe bones, not
hooves."
I studied the skull, which was fairly large and had sharp incisors or
teeth. When I was nine, I had a thing about skeletons. I must have read
every book ever written about skeletons.
"My guess is a dog," I announced.
"A dog?" said Terri. "Oh, poor little doggy." She stared at the skeleton.
"How do you think it died?"
"Maybe an animal attacked it."
Terri knelt down beside me. "Why would anyone want to eat a dog?"
"They're high in protein!" I joked.
She shoved me hard. "Jerry! I'm serious. What animal around here eats
dogs?"
"A wolf maybe. Or a fox," I replied thoughtfully.
"Wouldn't a wolf or fox have crunched a few of the bones and left more of
a mess?" Terri asked. "This skeleton is in perfect shape."
"Maybe it died of old age," I suggested. "Or maybe someone buried it here
beneath that weird root plant."
"Yeah. Maybe it wasn't attacked by anything," Terri said. I could see the
color returning to her face.
We sat silently over the skeleton for a minute, thinking about the dog.
A shrill animal howl made us both jump to our feet. The frightening sound
filled the forest, echoing through the trees.
We held our ears as the howling grew louder.
"Wh-what is it? What's making that horrible cry?" Terri shrieked.
I stared back at her. I didn't know.
I only knew it was moving closer.
6
The howls stopped as suddenly as they started.
When I turned around to make sure we were safe, I saw them.
Sam, Nat, and Louisa were huddled behind a nearby tree. Laughing.
I glared at them. I realized instantly that they had been making the
howls. Who did they think they were?
It took them a long time to stop laughing. I couldn't believe how much
they were enjoying their little joke.
I glanced at Terri. She was blushing. My face felt hot. I guess I was
blushing, too.
When they finally stopped laughing, I invited them over to see the
skeleton.
Now it was their turn to be startled.
Sam's eyes grew wide. Louisa let out a short cry. Nat, the little one,
grabbed on to his sister's sleeve and started to whimper.
Terri dug into her jeans pockets for a tissue. "Don't worry," she told
Nat. She dabbed at his cheeks with her tissue. "It's not a person
skeleton. It's only a dog skeleton."
Those words made Nat burst into tears.
Louisa put her arms around Nat's trembling shoulders. "Shush," she said.
"It's all right."
But Nat couldn't calm himself down. "I know what happened to this dog,"
he sobbed. "A ghost killed it. Dogs can tell if someone's a ghost. Dogs
always bark to warn about ghosts."
"Nat," Terri said softly, "there's no such thing as ghosts. They're
pretend."
Sam stepped forward, shaking his head. "You're wrong," he told Terri,
narrowing his eyes at her. "There are lots of skeletons in these woods.
All because of the ghost. He picks the bones clean and leaves them lying
here."
"Give me a break, Sam," Terri muttered. "Are you trying to tell us that
there's a ghost around here?"
Sam stared back, but didn't reply.
"Well, are you?" Terri demanded.
Suddenly Sam's expression changed. His eyes grew wide with terror. "There
it is!" he cried, pointing. "Right behind you!"
7
I let out a shriek and grabbed Terri's arm.
But I knew immediately that I'd been fooled again. When was I going to
stop falling for Sam's dumb jokes?
"You two are too easy to scare," Sam said, grinning.
Terri put her hands on her hips and glared at Sam. "How about a truce,
guys? These jokes are getting pretty lame."
All eyes were on Sam.
"Yeah. Okay. A truce," he murmured. But he had a grin on his face. I
couldn't tell if he meant it or not.
"Sam, tell Jerry and me more about the ghost," Terri demanded. "Were you
serious about a ghost killing the dog, or was that one of your fabulous
jokes?"
Sam kicked at a clump of dirt. "Maybe some other time," he muttered.
"Some other time? Why not now?" I asked.
Louisa started to say something — but Sam tugged her away. "Let's go," he
said sharply. "Now."
Terri's expression changed to confusion. "But I thought — "
Sam stalked off through the trees, dragging Louisa with him. Nat hurried
to catch up to them.
"Bye," Louisa called. "See you later."
"Did you see that?" Terri cried. "They really do believe there's a ghost
in these woods. They didn't want to talk about it, so they left."
I stared down at the animal skeleton, lying so clean and perfect on the
ground.
Picked clean.
Picked clean by a ghost.
The words rolled through my mind.
I stared hard at the jagged teeth in the pale skull. Then I turned away.
"Let's go back to the cottage," I murmured.
We found Brad and Agatha sitting in rocking chairs under a shady tree.
Agatha was slicing peaches into a large wooden bowl, and Brad watched
her.
"Do you two like peach pie?" Agatha asked.
Terri and I replied that it was one of our favorites.
Agatha smiled. "We'll have it tonight. I don't know if your dad mentioned
it, but peach pie is one of my specialties. So did you find the Indian
pipe?"
"Not exactly," I replied. "We found a dog skeleton instead."
Agatha began slicing more quickly, the knife blade slipping over her
thumb as the soft peach slices slid into the bowl. "Oh, my," she
muttered.
"What kind of an animal would go after a dog?" asked Terri. "Are there
wolves or coyotes around here?"
"Never seen any," Brad answered quickly.
"Then how do you explain that skeleton?" I demanded. "It was perfectly
arranged, and the bones were picked clean."
Agatha and Brad exchanged a worried glance. "Can't say as I know," said
Agatha. Slice. Slice. Slice. "Brad? Do you have any ideas?"
Brad rocked back and forth for a minute. "Nope."
Very helpful, Brad, I thought.
"We also met three kids," I said. I told them about Sam, Nat, and Louisa.
"They said they know you."
"Yep," Brad replied. "Neighbors."
"They told us a ghost must have killed the dog."
Agatha set down her paring knife and leaned her head back against the
chair, laughing softly to herself. "Is that what they said? Oh, my. Those
kids were teasing you. They love to make up ghost stories. Especially
that oldest boy, Sam."
"That's what I thought," Terri said, glancing at me.
Agatha nodded. "They're nice kids. You should invite them to do something
with you some time. Maybe you can all go blueberry picking."
Brad cleared his throat. His pale eyes studied me. "You're too smart to
fall for ghost stories, aren't you?"
"Yeah. I guess," I replied uncertainly.
We spent the rest of the afternoon helping Brad weed the garden. Weeding
isn't exactly my idea of a thrill. But after Brad showed us which were
the good plants and which weren't, Terri and I had fun spearing the bad
guys with the special weeding tools he lent us.
We ate the peach pie for dessert that night, and it was delicious. Agatha
and Brad wanted to hear all about our school and our friends.
After dinner, Brad challenged us to another game of whist. This time I
did much better. Brad only had to wiggle his finger at me a couple of
times.
Later, I had a tough time falling asleep. The window of my little room
off the kitchen had long, flimsy, white cotton curtains that allowed the
light of the full moon to shine onto my face. It felt like staring into a
flashlight.
I tried covering my face with the pillow, but I couldn't breathe. Then I
tried resting my arm over my eyes, but my arm quickly fell asleep.
I pulled the sheet up over my head. Better.
I closed my eyes. The crickets were making a real racket.
Then I heard something thump against the wall outside. Probably a tree
branch, I told myself.
Another thump. I slid a little further down in my bed.
The third time I heard the sound, I took a deep breath, sat up, and
tossed off the sheet.
I took a careful look around the room. Nothing. Nada. Zip.
I lay back down.
Near the doorway, the floorboards creaked.
I turned to the window.
Behind the curtains, something moved.
Something pale. Ghostly.
The floorboards creaked again as the pale figure moved toward me.
8
I 1
I don't remember how we got to the graveyard.
I remember the sky grew dark — and we were there.
My sister Terri and I walked past rows of crooked, old tombstones,
cracked and covered with moss. Even though it was summer, a damp, gray
fog had settled on everything, sending a chill through the air.
I shivered and pulled my jacket closer. "Wait up, Terri!" I called. As
usual, she had plowed ahead. Graveyards get her all excited. "Where are
you?" I yelled.
I squinted into the gray fog. I could see her shadowy figure up ahead,
stopping every few seconds to examine a tombstone.
I read the words on the tombstone tilted at my feet:
In memory of John,
son of Daniel and Sarah Knapp,
who died March 25, 1766,
aged 12 years and 22 days.
Weird, I thought. That kid was about my age when he died. I turned twelve
in February. The same month Terri turned eleven.
I hurried on. A sharp wind swept in. I searched the rows of old graves
for my sister. She had disappeared into the thick fog. "Terri? Where did
you go?" I called.
Her voice floated back to me. "I'm over here, Jerry."
"Where?" I pushed forward through the mist and the leaves. The wind
swirled around me.
From nearby came a long, low howl. "Must be a dog," I murmured aloud.
The trees rattled their leaves at me. I shivered.
"Jer-ry." Terri's voice sounded a million miles away.
I walked a little further, then steadied myself against a tall tombstone.
"Terri! Wait up! Stop moving around so much!"
I heard another long howl.
"You're going the wrong way," Terri called. "I'm over here."
"Great. Thanks a lot," I muttered. Why couldn't I have a sister who liked
baseball instead of exploring old cemeteries?
The wind made a deep sucking noise. A column of leaves, dust, and dirt
swirled up in my face. I pinched my eyes shut.
When I opened them, I saw Terri crouched over a small grave. "Don't
move," I called. "I'm coming."
I zigzagged my way around the tombstones until I reached her side. "It's
getting dark," I said. "Let's get out of here."
I turned and took a step — and something grabbed my ankle.
I screamed and tried to pull away. But its grasp tightened.
A hand. Reaching up through the dirt beside the grave.
I let out a shrill scream. Terri screamed, too.
I kicked hard and broke free.
"Run!" Terri shrieked.
But I was already running.
As Terri and I stumbled over the wet grass, green hands popped up
everywhere. Thwack! Thwack! Thwack! Pop! Pop!
The hands rose up. Reached for us. Grabbed at our ankles.
I darted to the left. Thwack! I dodged to the right. Pop!
"Run, Terri! Run!" I called to my sister. "Lift your knees!"
I could hear her sneakers pounding the ground behind me. Then I heard her
terrified cry: "Jerry! They've got me!"
With a loud gasp, I spun around. Two big hands had wrapped themselves
around her ankles.
I froze, watching my sister struggle.
"Jerry — help me! It won't let go!"
Taking a deep breath, I dove toward her. "Grab on to me," I instructed,
holding out my arms.
I kicked at the two hands that held her.
Kicked as hard as I could. But they didn't move, didn't let go.
"I — I can't move!" Terri wailed.
The dirt seemed to shake at my feet. I peered down to see more hands
sprouting up from the ground.
I tugged at Terri's waist. "Move!" I yelled frantically.
"I can't!"
"Yes, you can! You've got to keep trying!"
"Ohhh!" I let out a low cry as two hands grabbed my ankles.
Now I was caught.
We were both trapped.
2
"Jerry! What's your problem?" Terri asked.
I blinked. Terri stood beside me on a rocky strip of beach. I stared out
at the calm ocean water beyond us and shook my head. "Wow. That was
weird," I murmured. "I was remembering a bad dream I had a few months
ago."
Terri frowned at me. "Why now?"
"It was about a cemetery," I explained. I turned back to glance at the
tiny, old cemetery we'd just discovered at the edge of the pine woods
behind us. "In my dream, green hands were popping out of the ground and
grabbing our ankles."
"Gross," Terri replied. She brushed her dark brown bangs off her face.
Except for the fact that she is one inch taller than me, we look like a
perfect brother-sister combination. Same short brown hair, same freckles
across our nose, same hazel eyes.
One difference: Terri has deep dimples in her cheeks when she smiles, and
I don't. Thank goodness.
We walked along the ocean shore for a few minutes. Tall, gray boulders
and scraggly pines stretched all the way to the water.
"Maybe you remembered that dream because you're nervous," Terri said
thoughtfully. "You know. About being away from home for a whole month."
"Well, maybe," I agreed. "We've never been away this long. But what could
happen here? Brad and Agatha are really great."
Brad Sadler is our distant cousin. Ancient, distant cousin is more like
it. Dad said Brad and his wife, Agatha, were old when he was a kid!
But they're both fun, and really energetic despite their age. So when
they invited us to come up to New England and spend the last month of
summer with them in their old cottage near the beach, Terri and I eagerly
said yes. It sounded great — especially since our only other choice was
the cramped, hot apartment where we live in New Jersey.
We had arrived by train that morning. Brad and Agatha met us at the
platform and drove us along the pine woods to the cottage.
After we had a chance to unpack and have some lunch — big bowls of creamy
clam chowder — Agatha said, "Now why don't you kids have a look around?
There's lots to explore."
So here we were, checking things out. Terri grabbed my arm. "Hey, let's
go back and check out that little cemetery!" she suggested eagerly.
"I don't know . . ." My frightening dream was still fresh in my mind.
"Oh, come on. There won't be any green hands. I promise. And I bet I can
find some really cool gravestones for rubbings."
Terri loves exploring old graveyards. She loves all kinds of scary
things. She reads scary mysteries by the dozen. And the weird thing is,
she always reads the last chapter first.
Terri has to solve the mystery. She can't stand not knowing the answer.
My sister has a million interests, but gravestone rubbings is one of her
stranger hobbies. She tapes a piece of rice paper over the gravestone
inscription and then rubs the design onto the paper, using the side of a
special wax crayon.
"Hey! Wait up," I called to her.
But Terri was already jogging up the beach toward the cemetery. "Come on,
Jerry," she called. "Don't be a chicken."
I followed her off the beach and into the small forest. It smelled fresh
and piney. The cemetery was just inside, surrounded by a crumbly stone
wall. We squeezed through the narrow opening in the wall that led inside.
Terri began inspecting the tombstones. "Wow. Some of these markers are
really old," she announced. "Check out this one."
She pointed at a small gravestone. Engraved on the front was a skull with
wings sprouting on either side of its head.
"It's a death's-head," my sister explained. "Very old Puritan symbol.
Creepy, huh?" She read the inscription: " 'Here lies the body of Mr. John
Sadler, who departed this life March 18, 1642, in the 38th year of his
age.' "
"Sadler. Like us," I said. "Wow. I wonder if we're related." I did some
quick calculations. "If we are, John Sadler is our great-great-greatgreat-
grandsomething. He died over 350 years ago."
Terri had already moved on to another group of markers. "Here's one from
1647, and another from 1652. I don't think I've ever gotten rubbings this
old before." She disappeared behind a tall tombstone.
I knew where we'd be spending the month. I'd had enough of cemeteries for
today, though.
"Come on. Let's explore the beach, okay?" I checked around for Terri.
"Terri? Where'd you go?" I stepped over to the tall tombstone.
Not there.
"Terri?" The ocean breeze rustled the pine branches above us. "Terri, cut
it out, okay?"
I took a couple of steps. "You know I don't like this," I warned.
Terri's head popped up from behind a tombstone about ten feet away. "Why?
You scared?"
I didn't like the grin on her face. "Who, me?" I said. "Never!"
Terri stood up. "Okay, chicken. But I'm coming back here tomorrow." She
followed me out of the cemetery and onto the rocky beach.
"I wonder what's down here," I said, heading along the shoreline.
"Oh, look at this." Terri stooped to pluck a tiny yellow-and-white
wildflower that had sprouted up between two large rocks. "Butter-andeggs,"
she announced. "Weird name for a wildflower, huh?"
"Very," I agreed. Terri Sadler Hobby Number Two: wildflowers. She likes
to collect them and press them in a huge cardboard contraption called a
plant press.
Terri frowned. "Now what's your problem?"
"We keep stopping. I want to go exploring. Agatha said there's a small
beach down here where we can go swimming if we want."
"Okay, okay," she replied, rolling her hazel eyes.
We trudged on until we reached a small, sandy beach. It was really more
rock than sand. Staring out to the water, I saw a long rock jetty
stretching out into the ocean.
"Wonder what that's for," Terri said.
"It helps hold the beach together," I explained. I was just about to
launch into my explanation of beach erosion when Terri gasped.
"Jerry — look! Up there!" she cried. She pointed to a tall mound of rocks
just past the jetty along the shoreline. Nestled high into the rocks, on
top of a wide ledge, sat a large, dark cave.
"Let's climb up and explore it," Terri cried eagerly.
"No, wait!" I remembered what Mom and Dad had said to me that morning as
we boarded the train: Keep an eye on Terri and don't let her get too
carried away with things. "It might be dangerous," I said. I am the older
brother, after all. And I'm the sensible one.
She made a face. "Give me a break," she muttered. Terri made her way
across the beach and toward the cave. "At least let's get a closer look.
We can ask Brad and Agatha later whether or not it's safe."
I followed behind her. "Yeah, right. Like ninety-year-olds ever go cave
exploring."
As we came nearer, I had to admit it was an awesome cave. I'd never seen
one that large except in an old Boy Scout magazine.
"I wonder if someone lives in it," Terri said excitedly. "You know. Like
a beach hermit." She cupped her hands around her mouth and called:
"Whooooo!"
Sometimes Terri can be such a dork. I mean, if you were living inside a
cave, and you heard someone go "whoooo," would you answer back?
"Whoooo!" My sister did it again.
"Let's go," I urged.
Then, from inside the cave, a long, low whistle pierced the air.
We stared at each other.
"Whoa! What was that?" Terri whispered. "An owl?"
I swallowed. "I don't think so. Owls are only awake at night."
We heard it again. A long whistle floating out from deep inside the cave.
We exchanged glances. What could it be? A wolf? A coyote?
"I bet Brad and Agatha are wondering where we are," Terri said softly.
"Maybe we should go."
"Yeah. Okay." I turned to leave. But stopped when I heard a fluttering
sound. From behind the cave. Growing louder.
I shielded my eyes with my hand and squinted up at the sky.
"No!" I grabbed Terri's arm as a shadow swept over us — and an enormous
bat swooped down at us, red eyes flashing, its pointed teeth glistening,
hissing as it attacked.
3
The bat swooped low. So low, I could feel the air from its fluttering
wings.
Terri and I dropped to the hard ground. I covered my head with both
hands.
My heart was pounding so loudly, I couldn't hear the fluttering wings.
"Hey — where'd it go?" I heard Terri cry.
I peeped out. I could see the bat spiralling up into the sky. I watched
it swoosh and dip beyond us. Then suddenly it went into a wild spin.
It crashed onto the rocks nearby. I could see one black wing flapping
weakly in the breeze.
Slowly, I climbed to my feet, my heart still thudding. "What made it drop
like that?" I asked in a shaky voice. I started toward it.
Terri held me back. "Stay away. Bats can carry rabies, you know."
"I'm not going to get that close," I told her. "I just want to take a
look. I've never seen a real bat close up." I guess you could say that my
hobby is science, too. I love studying about all kinds of animals.
"Here. Check it out," I announced, scrambling over the smooth, gray
boulders.
"Careful, Jerry," warned Terri. "If you get rabies, you'll get me in
trouble."
"Thanks for your concern," I muttered sarcastically.
I stopped about four feet from the bat. "Whoa! I don't believe it!" I
cried.
I heard Terri burst out laughing.
It wasn't a bat. It was a kite.
I stared in disbelief. The two red eyes that had seemed so menacing were
painted on paper! One of the wings had been ripped to shreds when it
crashed on the rocks.
We both bent over to examine the wreckage.
"Look out! It bites!" a boy's voice called from behind us.
Startled, Terri and I leaped back. I turned and saw a boy about our age,
standing on a tall rock. He had a ball of string in his hand.
"Ha-ha. Great joke," Terri said sarcastically.
The boy grinned at us, but didn't reply. He stepped closer. I could see
that he had freckles across his nose just like me, and brown hair the
same shade as mine. He turned back toward the rocks and called, "You can
come out now."
Two kids, a girl about our age and a little boy about five, clambered
over the rocks. The little boy had light blond hair and blue eyes, and
his ears poked out. The girl's hair was auburn, and she wore it in
braids. All three of them had the same freckles across their noses.
"Are you all in the same family?" Terri asked them.
The tallest boy, the one who had come out first, nodded his head. "Yeah.
We're all Sadlers. I'm Sam. That's Louisa. That's Nat."
"Wow," I said. "We're Sadlers, too." I introduced Terri and myself.
Sam didn't seem impressed. "There're lots of Sadlers around here," he
muttered.
We stared at each other for a long moment. They didn't seem very
friendly. But then Sam surprised me by asking if I wanted to skip rocks
in the water.
We followed Sam to the water's edge.
"Do you live around here?" Terri asked.
Louisa nodded. "What are you doing here?" she asked. She sounded
suspicious.
"We're visiting our cousins for the month," Terri told her. "They're
Sadlers, too. They live in the little cottage just past the lighthouse.
Do you know them?"
"Sure," said Louisa without smiling. "This is a small place. Everyone
knows everyone else."
I found a smooth, flat stone and skipped it across the water. Three
skips. Not bad. "What do you do for fun around here?" I asked.
Louisa replied, staring out at the water. "We go blueberry picking, we
play games, we come down to the water." She turned to me. "Why? What did
you do today?"
"Nothing yet. We just got here," I told her. I grinned. "Except we were
attacked by a bat kite."
They laughed.
"I'm going to do gravestone rubbings and collect wildflowers," Terri
said.
"There are some beautiful flower patches back in the woods," Louisa told
her.
I watched Sam skip a stone across the water. Seven skips.
He turned to me and grinned. "Practice makes perfect."
"It's hard to practice in an apartment building," I muttered.
"Huh?" Sam said.
"We live in Hoboken," I explained. "In New Jersey. There aren't any ponds
in our building."
Terri pointed back at the cave. "Do you ever go exploring in there?" she
asked.
Nat gasped. Sam and Louisa's faces twisted in surprise. "Are you
kidding?" Louisa cried.
"We never go near there," Sam said softly, eyeing his sister.
"Never?" Terri asked.
All three of them shook their heads.
"Why not?" Terri asked. "What's the big deal?"
"Yeah," I demanded. "Why won't you go near the cave?"
Louisa's eyes grew wide. "Do you believe in ghosts?" she asked.
4
"Believe in ghosts? No way!" Terri told her.
I kept my mouth shut. I knew that ghosts weren't supposed to be real. But
what if all the scientists were wrong?
There are so many ghost stories from all around the world, how can ghosts
not be real?
Maybe that's why I sometimes get scared when I am in strange places. I
think I do believe in ghosts. Of course, I would never admit this to
Terri. She is always so scientific. She'd laugh at me forever!
The three Sadler kids had clustered together.
"Come on. Do you guys really believe in ghosts?' Terri asked.
Louisa took a step forward. Sam tried to pull her back, but she brushed
him off. "If you go near that cave, you might change your mind," she
said, narrowing her eyes.
"You mean there are ghosts in there?" I asked. "What do they do? Come out
at night or something?"
Louisa started to reply, but Sam interrupted. "We've got to go now," he
said, scooting his brother and sister past us.
"Hey — wait!" I called. "We want to hear about the ghosts!"
They hurried on. I could see Sam yelling angrily at Louisa. I guess he
was upset because she mentioned the ghosts.
They disappeared down the beach.
Then, from inside the cave we heard that long, low whistle again.
Terri stared at me.
"It's the wind," I said. I really didn't believe that. Terri didn't
believe it, either.
"Why don't we ask Brad and Agatha about the cave?" I suggested.
"Good idea," Terri said. Even she looked a little scared now.
Brad and Agatha's cottage was a short walk from the cave. It perched by
itself on the edge of the pine forest, looking out toward the lighthouse.
I ran up to the heavy wooden front door and pushed it open. I peered
around the tiny front parlor. The old house creaked and groaned as I
walked over the sagging floorboards. The ceiling hung so low, I could
touch it when I stood on tiptoe.
Terri came up beside me. "Are they here?"
"I don't think so," I answered, looking around.
We stepped past the old sofa and wide stone fireplace and into the
cramped kitchen. Off the kitchen stood an old storeroom where I was to
sleep. Upstairs was Brad and Agatha's room with a "crawl-through" passage
into the space above the storeroom, which would be Terri's room. A tiny
back staircase led from Terri's room down to the yard.
Terri turned to the window. "There they are!" she said. "In the garden!"
I could see Brad bent over a tomato stalk. Agatha was hanging some
clothes to dry on the clothesline.
We raced out the kitchen door. "Where have you two been?" Agatha
demanded. She and Brad both had white, white hair, and their eyes seemed
faded and tired. They were so frail and light. Between them I don't think
they weighed more than a hundred pounds.
"We explored the beach," I told them.
I knelt down beside Brad. He was missing the top part of two of his
fingers on his left hand. He told us they got caught in a wolf trap when
he was young.
"We found an old cave in some huge rocks. Have you ever seen it?" I
asked.
He gave a little grunt and kept searching for ripe tomatoes.
"It's right by the beach and the big rock jetty," Terri added. "You can't
miss it."
Agatha's sheets fluttered on the line. "It's nearly suppertime," she
said, ignoring our questions about the cave. "Why don't you come inside
and give me a hand, Terri?"
Terri glanced at me and shrugged.
I turned back to Brad. I was about to ask him about the cave again when
he handed me the basket of ripe tomatoes. "Take these to Agatha, okay?"
"Sure," I answered, following Terri inside. I set the basket on the small
counter. The kitchen was small and narrow. Counter and sink on one side.
Stove and refrigerator on the other. Agatha had already put Terri to work
in the corner of the living room, setting the table.
"Now Terri, dear," Agatha called from the kitchen, "if it's asters you're
after, the best place to find those is in the big meadow down past the
lighthouse. Of course they're just coming out about now, so you can take
your pick there. I believe that's where you can find plenty of goldenrod,
too."
"Great!" Terri called back with her usual enthusiasm. I don't know how
she could get so pumped about flowers.
Agatha noticed the basket of tomatoes on the counter. "Oh, gracious! All
those tomatoes!" She opened a rattley old drawer and pulled out a small
knife. "Why don't you cut these up for a big green salad?"
I must have made a face.
"Don't you like salad?" Agatha asked.
"Not really," I said. "I mean, I'm not a rabbit!"
Agatha laughed. "You're absolutely right," she said. "Why ruin a
homegrown tomato with lettuce? We'll have them plain, with maybe a little
dressing."
"Sounds good," I grinned, picking up the knife.
I listened to Agatha and Terri discuss wildflowers for a few minutes to
see if the subject of the cave would come up again. It didn't. I wondered
why my two old cousins didn't want to talk about it.
After dinner Brad pulled out an old deck of playing cards and taught
Terri and me how to play whist. It's an old-fashioned card game that I'd
never heard of before.
Brad got a kick out of teaching us the rules. He and I played against
Terri and Agatha. Every time I got mixed up, which was most of the time,
he'd wag his finger back and forth at me. I guess it saved him from
having to say anything.
We went to bed after the card game. It was early, but I didn't care. It
had been a long day, and I was glad to get some rest. The bed was hard,
but I fell asleep as soon as my head hit the scratchy feather pillow.
The next morning Terri and I made our way to the woods to collect plants
and wildflowers.
"What is it we're looking for again?" I asked Terri as I kicked aside
piles of dead leaves.
"Indian pipe," Terri replied. "It looks like small, pinkish-white bones
popping out of the ground. It's also called corpse plant because it lives
on the remains of dead plants."
"Yuck." I suddenly remembered the popping hands in my cemetery dream.
Terri laughed. "You should like these plants," she said. "They're a
scientific puzzle. They're white because they don't have any chlorophyll.
You know. The stuff that makes plants turn green."
"How interesting," I said sarcastically, rolling my eyes.
Terri continued her lecture anyway. "Agatha said Indian pipe only grows
in very dark places. They look more like a fungus than a plant."
She dug around for a few minutes. "The weirdest thing about them," she
continued, "is if they dry out, they turn black. That's why I want to try
pressing a few."
I poked around in the leaves some more. I have to admit she had me
hooked. I love freaks of nature.
I peered up at the heavy leaf canopy above us. "We're definitely as deep
into the woods as we can be. Are you sure this is where Agatha said you
can find them?"
Terri nodded. She pointed to a huge fallen oak tree. "That's our
landmark. Don't lose it."
I started toward the big tree. "Maybe I'll take a closer look over
there," I said. "There might be Indian pipe on that dead tree."
I knelt down by the snakelike tree roots and began carefully pushing dead
leaves aside. No wildflowers. Just bugs and worms. It was really gross.
I glanced back at Terri. She didn't seem to be having any luck, either.
Then, out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something white sticking out
of the ground. I scurried over to examine it.
A short plant stem stuck up from the soft ground. The stem was covered
with rolled-up leaves. I tugged at the stem. It didn't come up.
I pulled harder.
The stem rose up a little, bringing a clump of soft dirt with it.
It isn't a stem, I realized. It's some kind of root. A root with leaves.
Weird.
I pulled more of it up from the ground. It was very long, I discovered.
A hard tug. Then another.
Another hard tug of the strange root brought up a huge mound of dirt.
I glanced down into the large hole I had made — and uttered a sharp cry.
"Terri — come here!" I managed to choke out. "I found a skeleton!"
5
"Huh?" Terri raced to my side.
We both stood and stared down at it in silence.
The skeleton I had uncovered lay curled on its side, every bone neatly in
place. The empty eye socket in its gray skull gaped up at us.
"Is it a h-human?" Terri stammered in a low whisper.
"Not unless the human has four legs, genius!" I replied.
Terri stared down at it, her mouth open in an O of surprise. "Well, then,
what is it?"
"Some kind of large animal," I told her. "Maybe a deer."
I stooped to take a closer look. "No. Not a deer. It has toe bones, not
hooves."
I studied the skull, which was fairly large and had sharp incisors or
teeth. When I was nine, I had a thing about skeletons. I must have read
every book ever written about skeletons.
"My guess is a dog," I announced.
"A dog?" said Terri. "Oh, poor little doggy." She stared at the skeleton.
"How do you think it died?"
"Maybe an animal attacked it."
Terri knelt down beside me. "Why would anyone want to eat a dog?"
"They're high in protein!" I joked.
She shoved me hard. "Jerry! I'm serious. What animal around here eats
dogs?"
"A wolf maybe. Or a fox," I replied thoughtfully.
"Wouldn't a wolf or fox have crunched a few of the bones and left more of
a mess?" Terri asked. "This skeleton is in perfect shape."
"Maybe it died of old age," I suggested. "Or maybe someone buried it here
beneath that weird root plant."
"Yeah. Maybe it wasn't attacked by anything," Terri said. I could see the
color returning to her face.
We sat silently over the skeleton for a minute, thinking about the dog.
A shrill animal howl made us both jump to our feet. The frightening sound
filled the forest, echoing through the trees.
We held our ears as the howling grew louder.
"Wh-what is it? What's making that horrible cry?" Terri shrieked.
I stared back at her. I didn't know.
I only knew it was moving closer.
6
The howls stopped as suddenly as they started.
When I turned around to make sure we were safe, I saw them.
Sam, Nat, and Louisa were huddled behind a nearby tree. Laughing.
I glared at them. I realized instantly that they had been making the
howls. Who did they think they were?
It took them a long time to stop laughing. I couldn't believe how much
they were enjoying their little joke.
I glanced at Terri. She was blushing. My face felt hot. I guess I was
blushing, too.
When they finally stopped laughing, I invited them over to see the
skeleton.
Now it was their turn to be startled.
Sam's eyes grew wide. Louisa let out a short cry. Nat, the little one,
grabbed on to his sister's sleeve and started to whimper.
Terri dug into her jeans pockets for a tissue. "Don't worry," she told
Nat. She dabbed at his cheeks with her tissue. "It's not a person
skeleton. It's only a dog skeleton."
Those words made Nat burst into tears.
Louisa put her arms around Nat's trembling shoulders. "Shush," she said.
"It's all right."
But Nat couldn't calm himself down. "I know what happened to this dog,"
he sobbed. "A ghost killed it. Dogs can tell if someone's a ghost. Dogs
always bark to warn about ghosts."
"Nat," Terri said softly, "there's no such thing as ghosts. They're
pretend."
Sam stepped forward, shaking his head. "You're wrong," he told Terri,
narrowing his eyes at her. "There are lots of skeletons in these woods.
All because of the ghost. He picks the bones clean and leaves them lying
here."
"Give me a break, Sam," Terri muttered. "Are you trying to tell us that
there's a ghost around here?"
Sam stared back, but didn't reply.
"Well, are you?" Terri demanded.
Suddenly Sam's expression changed. His eyes grew wide with terror. "There
it is!" he cried, pointing. "Right behind you!"
7
I let out a shriek and grabbed Terri's arm.
But I knew immediately that I'd been fooled again. When was I going to
stop falling for Sam's dumb jokes?
"You two are too easy to scare," Sam said, grinning.
Terri put her hands on her hips and glared at Sam. "How about a truce,
guys? These jokes are getting pretty lame."
All eyes were on Sam.
"Yeah. Okay. A truce," he murmured. But he had a grin on his face. I
couldn't tell if he meant it or not.
"Sam, tell Jerry and me more about the ghost," Terri demanded. "Were you
serious about a ghost killing the dog, or was that one of your fabulous
jokes?"
Sam kicked at a clump of dirt. "Maybe some other time," he muttered.
"Some other time? Why not now?" I asked.
Louisa started to say something — but Sam tugged her away. "Let's go," he
said sharply. "Now."
Terri's expression changed to confusion. "But I thought — "
Sam stalked off through the trees, dragging Louisa with him. Nat hurried
to catch up to them.
"Bye," Louisa called. "See you later."
"Did you see that?" Terri cried. "They really do believe there's a ghost
in these woods. They didn't want to talk about it, so they left."
I stared down at the animal skeleton, lying so clean and perfect on the
ground.
Picked clean.
Picked clean by a ghost.
The words rolled through my mind.
I stared hard at the jagged teeth in the pale skull. Then I turned away.
"Let's go back to the cottage," I murmured.
We found Brad and Agatha sitting in rocking chairs under a shady tree.
Agatha was slicing peaches into a large wooden bowl, and Brad watched
her.
"Do you two like peach pie?" Agatha asked.
Terri and I replied that it was one of our favorites.
Agatha smiled. "We'll have it tonight. I don't know if your dad mentioned
it, but peach pie is one of my specialties. So did you find the Indian
pipe?"
"Not exactly," I replied. "We found a dog skeleton instead."
Agatha began slicing more quickly, the knife blade slipping over her
thumb as the soft peach slices slid into the bowl. "Oh, my," she
muttered.
"What kind of an animal would go after a dog?" asked Terri. "Are there
wolves or coyotes around here?"
"Never seen any," Brad answered quickly.
"Then how do you explain that skeleton?" I demanded. "It was perfectly
arranged, and the bones were picked clean."
Agatha and Brad exchanged a worried glance. "Can't say as I know," said
Agatha. Slice. Slice. Slice. "Brad? Do you have any ideas?"
Brad rocked back and forth for a minute. "Nope."
Very helpful, Brad, I thought.
"We also met three kids," I said. I told them about Sam, Nat, and Louisa.
"They said they know you."
"Yep," Brad replied. "Neighbors."
"They told us a ghost must have killed the dog."
Agatha set down her paring knife and leaned her head back against the
chair, laughing softly to herself. "Is that what they said? Oh, my. Those
kids were teasing you. They love to make up ghost stories. Especially
that oldest boy, Sam."
"That's what I thought," Terri said, glancing at me.
Agatha nodded. "They're nice kids. You should invite them to do something
with you some time. Maybe you can all go blueberry picking."
Brad cleared his throat. His pale eyes studied me. "You're too smart to
fall for ghost stories, aren't you?"
"Yeah. I guess," I replied uncertainly.
We spent the rest of the afternoon helping Brad weed the garden. Weeding
isn't exactly my idea of a thrill. But after Brad showed us which were
the good plants and which weren't, Terri and I had fun spearing the bad
guys with the special weeding tools he lent us.
We ate the peach pie for dessert that night, and it was delicious. Agatha
and Brad wanted to hear all about our school and our friends.
After dinner, Brad challenged us to another game of whist. This time I
did much better. Brad only had to wiggle his finger at me a couple of
times.
Later, I had a tough time falling asleep. The window of my little room
off the kitchen had long, flimsy, white cotton curtains that allowed the
light of the full moon to shine onto my face. It felt like staring into a
flashlight.
I tried covering my face with the pillow, but I couldn't breathe. Then I
tried resting my arm over my eyes, but my arm quickly fell asleep.
I pulled the sheet up over my head. Better.
I closed my eyes. The crickets were making a real racket.
Then I heard something thump against the wall outside. Probably a tree
branch, I told myself.
Another thump. I slid a little further down in my bed.
The third time I heard the sound, I took a deep breath, sat up, and
tossed off the sheet.
I took a careful look around the room. Nothing. Nada. Zip.
I lay back down.
Near the doorway, the floorboards creaked.
I turned to the window.
Behind the curtains, something moved.
Something pale. Ghostly.
The floorboards creaked again as the pale figure moved toward me.
8
I1
I don't remember how we got to the graveyard.
I remember the sky grew dark — and we were there.
My sister Terri and I walked past rows of crooked, old tombstones,
cracked and covered with moss. Even though it was summer, a damp, gray
fog had settled on everything, sending a chill through the air.
I shivered and pulled my jacket closer. "Wait up, Terri!" I called. As
usual, she had plowed ahead. Graveyards get her all excited. "Where are
you?" I yelled.
I squinted into the gray fog. I could see her shadowy figure up ahead,
stopping every few seconds to examine a tombstone.
I read the words on the tombstone tilted at my feet:
In memory of John,
son of Daniel and Sarah Knapp,
who died March 25, 1766,
aged 12 years and 22 days.
Weird, I thought. That kid was about my age when he died. I turned twelve
in February. The same month Terri turned eleven.
I hurried on. A sharp wind swept in. I searched the rows of old graves
for my sister. She had disappeared into the thick fog. "Terri? Where did
you go?" I called.
Her voice floated back to me. "I'm over here, Jerry."
"Where?" I pushed forward through the mist and the leaves. The wind
swirled around me.
From nearby came a long, low howl. "Must be a dog," I murmured aloud.
The trees rattled their leaves at me. I shivered.
"Jer-ry." Terri's voice sounded a million miles away.
I walked a little further, then steadied myself against a tall tombstone.
"Terri! Wait up! Stop moving around so much!"
I heard another long howl.
"You're going the wrong way," Terri called. "I'm over here."
"Great. Thanks a lot," I muttered. Why couldn't I have a sister who liked
baseball instead of exploring old cemeteries?
The wind made a deep sucking noise. A column of leaves, dust, and dirt
swirled up in my face. I pinched my eyes shut.
When I opened them, I saw Terri crouched over a small grave. "Don't
move," I called. "I'm coming."
I zigzagged my way around the tombstones until I reached her side. "It's
getting dark," I said. "Let's get out of here."
I turned and took a step — and something grabbed my ankle.
I screamed and tried to pull away. But its grasp tightened.
A hand. Reaching up through the dirt beside the grave.
I let out a shrill scream. Terri screamed, too.
I kicked hard and broke free.
"Run!" Terri shrieked.
But I was already running.
As Terri and I stumbled over the wet grass, green hands popped up
everywhere. Thwack! Thwack! Thwack! Pop! Pop!
The hands rose up. Reached for us. Grabbed at our ankles.
I darted to the left. Thwack! I dodged to the right. Pop!
"Run, Terri! Run!" I called to my sister. "Lift your knees!"
I could hear her sneakers pounding the ground behind me. Then I heard her
terrified cry: "Jerry! They've got me!"
With a loud gasp, I spun around. Two big hands had wrapped themselves
around her ankles.
I froze, watching my sister struggle.
"Jerry — help me! It won't let go!"
Taking a deep breath, I dove toward her. "Grab on to me," I instructed,
holding out my arms.
I kicked at the two hands that held her.
Kicked as hard as I could. But they didn't move, didn't let go.
"I — I can't move!" Terri wailed.
The dirt seemed to shake at my feet. I peered down to see more hands
sprouting up from the ground.
I tugged at Terri's waist. "Move!" I yelled frantically.
"I can't!"
"Yes, you can! You've got to keep trying!"
"Ohhh!" I let out a low cry as two hands grabbed my ankles.
Now I was caught.
We were both trapped.
2
"Jerry! What's your problem?" Terri asked.
I blinked. Terri stood beside me on a rocky strip of beach. I stared out
at the calm ocean water beyond us and shook my head. "Wow. That was
weird," I murmured. "I was remembering a bad dream I had a few months
ago."
Terri frowned at me. "Why now?"
"It was about a cemetery," I explained. I turned back to glance at the
tiny, old cemetery we'd just discovered at the edge of the pine woods
behind us. "In my dream, green hands were popping out of the ground and
grabbing our ankles."
"Gross," Terri replied. She brushed her dark brown bangs off her face.
Except for the fact that she is one inch taller than me, we look like a
perfect brother-sister combination. Same short brown hair, same freckles
across our nose, same hazel eyes.
One difference: Terri has deep dimples in her cheeks when she smiles, and
I don't. Thank goodness.
We walked along the ocean shore for a few minutes. Tall, gray boulders
and scraggly pines stretched all the way to the water.
"Maybe you remembered that dream because you're nervous," Terri said
thoughtfully. "You know. About being away from home for a whole month."
"Well, maybe," I agreed. "We've never been away this long. But what could
happen here? Brad and Agatha are really great."
Brad Sadler is our distant cousin. Ancient, distant cousin is more like
it. Dad said Brad and his wife, Agatha, were old when he was a kid!
But they're both fun, and really energetic despite their age. So when
they invited us to come up to New England and spend the last month of
summer with them in their old cottage near the beach, Terri and I eagerly
said yes. It sounded great — especially since our only other choice was
the cramped, hot apartment where we live in New Jersey.
We had arrived by train that morning. Brad and Agatha met us at the
platform and drove us along the pine woods to the cottage.
After we had a chance to unpack and have some lunch — big bowls of creamy
clam chowder — Agatha said, "Now why don't you kids have a look around?
There's lots to explore."
So here we were, checking things out. Terri grabbed my arm. "Hey, let's
go back and check out that little cemetery!" she suggested eagerly.
"I don't know . . ." My frightening dream was still fresh in my mind.
"Oh, come on. There won't be any green hands. I promise. And I bet I can
find some really cool gravestones for rubbings."
Terri loves exploring old graveyards. She loves all kinds of scary
things. She reads scary mysteries by the dozen. And the weird thing is,
she always reads the last chapter first.
Terri has to solve the mystery. She can't stand not knowing the answer.
My sister has a million interests, but gravestone rubbings is one of her
stranger hobbies. She tapes a piece of rice paper over the gravestone
inscription and then rubs the design onto the paper, using the side of a
special wax crayon.
"Hey! Wait up," I called to her.
But Terri was already jogging up the beach toward the cemetery. "Come on,
Jerry," she called. "Don't be a chicken."
I followed her off the beach and into the small forest. It smelled fresh
and piney. The cemetery was just inside, surrounded by a crumbly stone
wall. We squeezed through the narrow opening in the wall that led inside.
Terri began inspecting the tombstones. "Wow. Some of these markers are
really old," she announced. "Check out this one."
She pointed at a small gravestone. Engraved on the front was a skull with
wings sprouting on either side of its head.
"It's a death's-head," my sister explained. "Very old Puritan symbol.
Creepy, huh?" She read the inscription: " 'Here lies the body of Mr. John
Sadler, who departed this life March 18, 1642, in the 38th year of his
age.' "
"Sadler. Like us," I said. "Wow. I wonder if we're related." I did some
quick calculations. "If we are, John Sadler is our great-great-greatgreat-
grandsomething. He died over 350 years ago."
Terri had already moved on to another group of markers. "Here's one from
1647, and another from 1652. I don't think I've ever gotten rubbings this
old before." She disappeared behind a tall tombstone.
I knew where we'd be spending the month. I'd had enough of cemeteries for
today, though.
"Come on. Let's explore the beach, okay?" I checked around for Terri.
"Terri? Where'd you go?" I stepped over to the tall tombstone.
Not there.
"Terri?" The ocean breeze rustled the pine branches above us. "Terri, cut
it out, okay?"
I took a couple of steps. "You know I don't like this," I warned.
Terri's head popped up from behind a tombstone about ten feet away. "Why?
You scared?"
I didn't like the grin on her face. "Who, me?" I said. "Never!"
Terri stood up. "Okay, chicken. But I'm coming back here tomorrow." She
followed me out of the cemetery and onto the rocky beach.
"I wonder what's down here," I said, heading along the shoreline.
"Oh, look at this." Terri stooped to pluck a tiny yellow-and-white
wildflower that had sprouted up between two large rocks. "Butter-andeggs,"
she announced. "Weird name for a wildflower, huh?"
"Very," I agreed. Terri Sadler Hobby Number Two: wildflowers. She likes
to collect them and press them in a huge cardboard contraption called a
plant press.
Terri frowned. "Now what's your problem?"
"We keep stopping. I want to go exploring. Agatha said there's a small
beach down here where we can go swimming if we want."
"Okay, okay," she replied, rolling her hazel eyes.
We trudged on until we reached a small, sandy beach. It was really more
rock than sand. Staring out to the water, I saw a long rock jetty
stretching out into the ocean.
"Wonder what that's for," Terri said.
"It helps hold the beach together," I explained. I was just about to
launch into my explanation of beach erosion when Terri gasped.
"Jerry — look! Up there!" she cried. She pointed to a tall mound of rocks
just past the jetty along the shoreline. Nestled high into the rocks, on
top of a wide ledge, sat a large, dark cave.
"Let's climb up and explore it," Terri cried eagerly.
"No, wait!" I remembered what Mom and Dad had said to me that morning as
we boarded the train: Keep an eye on Terri and don't let her get too
carried away with things. "It might be dangerous," I said. I am the older
brother, after all. And I'm the sensible one.
She made a face. "Give me a break," she muttered. Terri made her way
across the beach and toward the cave. "At least let's get a closer look.
We can ask Brad and Agatha later whether or not it's safe."
I followed behind her. "Yeah, right. Like ninety-year-olds ever go cave
exploring."
As we came nearer, I had to admit it was an awesome cave. I'd never seen
one that large except in an old Boy Scout magazine.
"I wonder if someone lives in it," Terri said excitedly. "You know. Like
a beach hermit." She cupped her hands around her mouth and called:
"Whooooo!"
Sometimes Terri can be such a dork. I mean, if you were living inside a
cave, and you heard someone go "whoooo," would you answer back?
"Whoooo!" My sister did it again.
"Let's go," I urged.
Then, from inside the cave, a long, low whistle pierced the air.
We stared at each other.
"Whoa! What was that?" Terri whispered. "An owl?"
I swallowed. "I don't think so. Owls are only awake at night."
We heard it again. A long whistle floating out from deep inside the cave.
We exchanged glances. What could it be? A wolf? A coyote?
"I bet Brad and Agatha are wondering where we are," Terri said softly.
"Maybe we should go."
"Yeah. Okay." I turned to leave. But stopped when I heard a fluttering
sound. From behind the cave. Growing louder.
I shielded my eyes with my hand and squinted up at the sky.
"No!" I grabbed Terri's arm as a shadow swept over us — and an enormous
bat swooped down at us, red eyes flashing, its pointed teeth glistening,
hissing as it attacked.
3
The bat swooped low. So low, I could feel the air from its fluttering
wings.
Terri and I dropped to the hard ground. I covered my head with both
hands.
My heart was pounding so loudly, I couldn't hear the fluttering wings.
"Hey — where'd it go?" I heard Terri cry.
I peeped out. I could see the bat spiralling up into the sky. I watched
it swoosh and dip beyond us. Then suddenly it went into a wild spin.
It crashed onto the rocks nearby. I could see one black wing flapping
weakly in the breeze.
Slowly, I climbed to my feet, my heart still thudding. "What made it drop
like that?" I asked in a shaky voice. I started toward it.
Terri held me back. "Stay away. Bats can carry rabies, you know."
"I'm not going to get that close," I told her. "I just want to take a
look. I've never seen a real bat close up." I guess you could say that my
hobby is science, too. I love studying about all kinds of animals.
"Here. Check it out," I announced, scrambling over the smooth, gray
boulders.
"Careful, Jerry," warned Terri. "If you get rabies, you'll get me in
trouble."
"Thanks for your concern," I muttered sarcastically.
I stopped about four feet from the bat. "Whoa! I don't believe it!" I
cried.
I heard Terri burst out laughing.
It wasn't a bat. It was a kite.
I stared in disbelief. The two red eyes that had seemed so menacing were
painted on paper! One of the wings had been ripped to shreds when it
crashed on the rocks.
We both bent over to examine the wreckage.
"Look out! It bites!" a boy's voice called from behind us.
Startled, Terri and I leaped back. I turned and saw a boy about our age,
standing on a tall rock. He had a ball of string in his hand.
"Ha-ha. Great joke," Terri said sarcastically.
The boy grinned at us, but didn't reply. He stepped closer. I could see
that he had freckles across his nose just like me, and brown hair the
same shade as mine. He turned back toward the rocks and called, "You can
come out now."
Two kids, a girl about our age and a little boy about five, clambered
over the rocks. The little boy had light blond hair and blue eyes, and
his ears poked out. The girl's hair was auburn, and she wore it in
braids. All three of them had the same freckles across their noses.
"Are you all in the same family?" Terri asked them.
The tallest boy, the one who had come out first, nodded his head. "Yeah.
We're all Sadlers. I'm Sam. That's Louisa. That's Nat."
"Wow," I said. "We're Sadlers, too." I introduced Terri and myself.
Sam didn't seem impressed. "There're lots of Sadlers around here," he
muttered.
We stared at each other for a long moment. They didn't seem very
friendly. But then Sam surprised me by asking if I wanted to skip rocks
in the water.
We followed Sam to the water's edge.
"Do you live around here?" Terri asked.
Louisa nodded. "What are you doing here?" she asked. She sounded
suspicious.
"We're visiting our cousins for the month," Terri told her. "They're
Sadlers, too. They live in the little cottage just past the lighthouse.
Do you know them?"
"Sure," said Louisa without smiling. "This is a small place. Everyone
knows everyone else."
I found a smooth, flat stone and skipped it across the water. Three
skips. Not bad. "What do you do for fun around here?" I asked.
Louisa replied, staring out at the water. "We go blueberry picking, we
play games, we come down to the water." She turned to me. "Why? What did
you do today?"
"Nothing yet. We just got here," I told her. I grinned. "Except we were
attacked by a bat kite."
They laughed.
"I'm going to do gravestone rubbings and collect wildflowers," Terri
said.
"There are some beautiful flower patches back in the woods," Louisa told
her.
I watched Sam skip a stone across the water. Seven skips.
He turned to me and grinned. "Practice makes perfect."
"It's hard to practice in an apartment building," I muttered.
"Huh?" Sam said.
"We live in Hoboken," I explained. "In New Jersey. There aren't any ponds
in our building."
Terri pointed back at the cave. "Do you ever go exploring in there?" she
asked.
Nat gasped. Sam and Louisa's faces twisted in surprise. "Are you
kidding?" Louisa cried.
"We never go near there," Sam said softly, eyeing his sister.
"Never?" Terri asked.
All three of them shook their heads.
"Why not?" Terri asked. "What's the big deal?"
"Yeah," I demanded. "Why won't you go near the cave?"
Louisa's eyes grew wide. "Do you believe in ghosts?" she asked.
4
"Believe in ghosts? No way!" Terri told her.
I kept my mouth shut. I knew that ghosts weren't supposed to be real. But
what if all the scientists were wrong?
There are so many ghost stories from all around the world, how can ghosts
not be real?
Maybe that's why I sometimes get scared when I am in strange places. I
think I do believe in ghosts. Of course, I would never admit this to
Terri. She is always so scientific. She'd laugh at me forever!
The three Sadler kids had clustered together.
"Come on. Do you guys really believe in ghosts?' Terri asked.
Louisa took a step forward. Sam tried to pull her back, but she brushed
him off. "If you go near that cave, you might change your mind," she
said, narrowing her eyes.
"You mean there are ghosts in there?" I asked. "What do they do? Come out
at night or something?"
Louisa started to reply, but Sam interrupted. "We've got to go now," he
said, scooting his brother and sister past us.
"Hey — wait!" I called. "We want to hear about the ghosts!"
They hurried on. I could see Sam yelling angrily at Louisa. I guess he
was upset because she mentioned the ghosts.
They disappeared down the beach.
Then, from inside the cave we heard that long, low whistle again.
Terri stared at me.
"It's the wind," I said. I really didn't believe that. Terri didn't
believe it, either.
"Why don't we ask Brad and Agatha about the cave?" I suggested.
"Good idea," Terri said. Even she looked a little scared now.
Brad and Agatha's cottage was a short walk from the cave. It perched by
itself on the edge of the pine forest, looking out toward the lighthouse.
I ran up to the heavy wooden front door and pushed it open. I peered
around the tiny front parlor. The old house creaked and groaned as I
walked over the sagging floorboards. The ceiling hung so low, I could
touch it when I stood on tiptoe.
Terri came up beside me. "Are they here?"
"I don't think so," I answered, looking around.
We stepped past the old sofa and wide stone fireplace and into the
cramped kitchen. Off the kitchen stood an old storeroom where I was to
sleep. Upstairs was Brad and Agatha's room with a "crawl-through" passage
into the space above the storeroom, which would be Terri's room. A tiny
back staircase led from Terri's room down to the yard.
Terri turned to the window. "There they are!" she said. "In the garden!"
I could see Brad bent over a tomato stalk. Agatha was hanging some
clothes to dry on the clothesline.
We raced out the kitchen door. "Where have you two been?" Agatha
demanded. She and Brad both had white, white hair, and their eyes seemed
faded and tired. They were so frail and light. Between them I don't think
they weighed more than a hundred pounds.
"We explored the beach," I told them.
I knelt down beside Brad. He was missing the top part of two of his
fingers on his left hand. He told us they got caught in a wolf trap when
he was young.
"We found an old cave in some huge rocks. Have you ever seen it?" I
asked.
He gave a little grunt and kept searching for ripe tomatoes.
"It's right by the beach and the big rock jetty," Terri added. "You can't
miss it."
Agatha's sheets fluttered on the line. "It's nearly suppertime," she
said, ignoring our questions about the cave. "Why don't you come inside
and give me a hand, Terri?"
Terri glanced at me and shrugged.
I turned back to Brad. I was about to ask him about the cave again when
he handed me the basket of ripe tomatoes. "Take these to Agatha, okay?"
"Sure," I answered, following Terri inside. I set the basket on the small
counter. The kitchen was small and narrow. Counter and sink on one side.
Stove and refrigerator on the other. Agatha had already put Terri to work
in the corner of the living room, setting the table.
"Now Terri, dear," Agatha called from the kitchen, "if it's asters you're
after, the best place to find those is in the big meadow down past the
lighthouse. Of course they're just coming out about now, so you can take
your pick there. I believe that's where you can find plenty of goldenrod,
too."
"Great!" Terri called back with her usual enthusiasm. I don't know how
she could get so pumped about flowers.
Agatha noticed the basket of tomatoes on the counter. "Oh, gracious! All
those tomatoes!" She opened a rattley old drawer and pulled out a small
knife. "Why don't you cut these up for a big green salad?"
I must have made a face.
"Don't you like salad?" Agatha asked.
"Not really," I said. "I mean, I'm not a rabbit!"
Agatha laughed. "You're absolutely right," she said. "Why ruin a
homegrown tomato with lettuce? We'll have them plain, with maybe a little
dressing."
"Sounds good," I grinned, picking up the knife.
I listened to Agatha and Terri discuss wildflowers for a few minutes to
see if the subject of the cave would come up again. It didn't. I wondered
why my two old cousins didn't want to talk about it.
After dinner Brad pulled out an old deck of playing cards and taught
Terri and me how to play whist. It's an old-fashioned card game that I'd
never heard of before.
Brad got a kick out of teaching us the rules. He and I played against
Terri and Agatha. Every time I got mixed up, which was most of the time,
he'd wag his finger back and forth at me. I guess it saved him from
having to say anything.
We went to bed after the card game. It was early, but I didn't care. It
had been a long day, and I was glad to get some rest. The bed was hard,
but I fell asleep as soon as my head hit the scratchy feather pillow.
The next morning Terri and I made our way to the woods to collect plants
and wildflowers.
"What is it we're looking for again?" I asked Terri as I kicked aside
piles of dead leaves.
"Indian pipe," Terri replied. "It looks like small, pinkish-white bones
popping out of the ground. It's also called corpse plant because it lives
on the remains of dead plants."
"Yuck." I suddenly remembered the popping hands in my cemetery dream.
Terri laughed. "You should like these plants," she said. "They're a
scientific puzzle. They're white because they don't have any chlorophyll.
You know. The stuff that makes plants turn green."
"How interesting," I said sarcastically, rolling my eyes.
Terri continued her lecture anyway. "Agatha said Indian pipe only grows
in very dark places. They look more like a fungus than a plant."
She dug around for a few minutes. "The weirdest thing about them," she
continued, "is if they dry out, they turn black. That's why I want to try
pressing a few."
I poked around in the leaves some more. I have to admit she had me
hooked. I love freaks of nature.
I peered up at the heavy leaf canopy above us. "We're definitely as deep
into the woods as we can be. Are you sure this is where Agatha said you
can find them?"
Terri nodded. She pointed to a huge fallen oak tree. "That's our
landmark. Don't lose it."
I started toward the big tree. "Maybe I'll take a closer look over
there," I said. "There might be Indian pipe on that dead tree."
I knelt down by the snakelike tree roots and began carefully pushing dead
leaves aside. No wildflowers. Just bugs and worms. It was really gross.
I glanced back at Terri. She didn't seem to be having any luck, either.
Then, out of the corner of my eye, I noticed something white sticking out
of the ground. I scurried over to examine it.
A short plant stem stuck up from the soft ground. The stem was covered
with rolled-up leaves. I tugged at the stem. It didn't come up.
I pulled harder.
The stem rose up a little, bringing a clump of soft dirt with it.
It isn't a stem, I realized. It's some kind of root. A root with leaves.
Weird.
I pulled more of it up from the ground. It was very long, I discovered.
A hard tug. Then another.
Another hard tug of the strange root brought up a huge mound of dirt.
I glanced down into the large hole I had made — and uttered a sharp cry.
"Terri — come here!" I managed to choke out. "I found a skeleton!"
5
"Huh?" Terri raced to my side.
We both stood and stared down at it in silence.
The skeleton I had uncovered lay curled on its side, every bone neatly in
place. The empty eye socket in its gray skull gaped up at us.
"Is it a h-human?" Terri stammered in a low whisper.
"Not unless the human has four legs, genius!" I replied.
Terri stared down at it, her mouth open in an O of surprise. "Well, then,
what is it?"
"Some kind of large animal," I told her. "Maybe a deer."
I stooped to take a closer look. "No. Not a deer. It has toe bones, not
hooves."
I studied the skull, which was fairly large and had sharp incisors or
teeth. When I was nine, I had a thing about skeletons. I must have read
every book ever written about skeletons.
"My guess is a dog," I announced.
"A dog?" said Terri. "Oh, poor little doggy." She stared at the skeleton.
"How do you think it died?"
"Maybe an animal attacked it."
Terri knelt down beside me. "Why would anyone want to eat a dog?"
"They're high in protein!" I joked.
She shoved me hard. "Jerry! I'm serious. What animal around here eats
dogs?"
"A wolf maybe. Or a fox," I replied thoughtfully.
"Wouldn't a wolf or fox have crunched a few of the bones and left more of
a mess?" Terri asked. "This skeleton is in perfect shape."
"Maybe it died of old age," I suggested. "Or maybe someone buried it here
beneath that weird root plant."
"Yeah. Maybe it wasn't attacked by anything," Terri said. I could see the
color returning to her face.
We sat silently over the skeleton for a minute, thinking about the dog.
A shrill animal howl made us both jump to our feet. The frightening sound
filled the forest, echoing through the trees.
We held our ears as the howling grew louder.
"Wh-what is it? What's making that horrible cry?" Terri shrieked.
I stared back at her. I didn't know.
I only knew it was moving closer.
6
The howls stopped as suddenly as they started.
When I turned around to make sure we were safe, I saw them.
Sam, Nat, and Louisa were huddled behind a nearby tree. Laughing.
I glared at them. I realized instantly that they had been making the
howls. Who did they think they were?
It took them a long time to stop laughing. I couldn't believe how much
they were enjoying their little joke.
I glanced at Terri. She was blushing. My face felt hot. I guess I was
blushing, too.
When they finally stopped laughing, I invited them over to see the
skeleton.
Now it was their turn to be startled.
Sam's eyes grew wide. Louisa let out a short cry. Nat, the little one,
grabbed on to his sister's sleeve and started to whimper.
Terri dug into her jeans pockets for a tissue. "Don't worry," she told
Nat. She dabbed at his cheeks with her tissue. "It's not a person
skeleton. It's only a dog skeleton."
Those words made Nat burst into tears.
Louisa put her arms around Nat's trembling shoulders. "Shush," she said.
"It's all right."
But Nat couldn't calm himself down. "I know what happened to this dog,"
he sobbed. "A ghost killed it. Dogs can tell if someone's a ghost. Dogs
always bark to warn about ghosts."
"Nat," Terri said softly, "there's no such thing as ghosts. They're
pretend."
Sam stepped forward, shaking his head. "You're wrong," he told Terri,
narrowing his eyes at her. "There are lots of skeletons in these woods.
All because of the ghost. He picks the bones clean and leaves them lying
here."
"Give me a break, Sam," Terri muttered. "Are you trying to tell us that
there's a ghost around here?"
Sam stared back, but didn't reply.
"Well, are you?" Terri demanded.
Suddenly Sam's expression changed. His eyes grew wide with terror. "There
it is!" he cried, pointing. "Right behind you!"
7
I let out a shriek and grabbed Terri's arm.
But I knew immediately that I'd been fooled again. When was I going to
stop falling for Sam's dumb jokes?
"You two are too easy to scare," Sam said, grinning.
Terri put her hands on her hips and glared at Sam. "How about a truce,
guys? These jokes are getting pretty lame."
All eyes were on Sam.
"Yeah. Okay. A truce," he murmured. But he had a grin on his face. I
couldn't tell if he meant it or not.
"Sam, tell Jerry and me more about the ghost," Terri demanded. "Were you
serious about a ghost killing the dog, or was that one of your fabulous
jokes?"
Sam kicked at a clump of dirt. "Maybe some other time," he muttered.
"Some other time? Why not now?" I asked.
Louisa started to say something — but Sam tugged her away. "Let's go," he
said sharply. "Now."
Terri's expression changed to confusion. "But I thought — "
Sam stalked off through the trees, dragging Louisa with him. Nat hurried
to catch up to them.
"Bye," Louisa called. "See you later."
"Did you see that?" Terri cried. "They really do believe there's a ghost
in these woods. They didn't want to talk about it, so they left."
I stared down at the animal skeleton, lying so clean and perfect on the
ground.
Picked clean.
Picked clean by a ghost.
The words rolled through my mind.
I stared hard at the jagged teeth in the pale skull. Then I turned away.
"Let's go back to the cottage," I murmured.
We found Brad and Agatha sitting in rocking chairs under a shady tree.
Agatha was slicing peaches into a large wooden bowl, and Brad watched
her.
"Do you two like peach pie?" Agatha asked.
Terri and I replied that it was one of our favorites.
Agatha smiled. "We'll have it tonight. I don't know if your dad mentioned
it, but peach pie is one of my specialties. So did you find the Indian
pipe?"
"Not exactly," I replied. "We found a dog skeleton instead."
Agatha began slicing more quickly, the knife blade slipping over her
thumb as the soft peach slices slid into the bowl. "Oh, my," she
muttered.
"What kind of an animal would go after a dog?" asked Terri. "Are there
wolves or coyotes around here?"
"Never seen any," Brad answered quickly.
"Then how do you explain that skeleton?" I demanded. "It was perfectly
arranged, and the bones were picked clean."
Agatha and Brad exchanged a worried glance. "Can't say as I know," said
Agatha. Slice. Slice. Slice. "Brad? Do you have any ideas?"
Brad rocked back and forth for a minute. "Nope."
Very helpful, Brad, I thought.
"We also met three kids," I said. I told them about Sam, Nat, and Louisa.
"They said they know you."
"Yep," Brad replied. "Neighbors."
"They told us a ghost must have killed the dog."
Agatha set down her paring knife and leaned her head back against the
chair, laughing softly to herself. "Is that what they said? Oh, my. Those
kids were teasing you. They love to make up ghost stories. Especially
that oldest boy, Sam."
"That's what I thought," Terri said, glancing at me.
Agatha nodded. "They're nice kids. You should invite them to do something
with you some time. Maybe you can all go blueberry picking."
Brad cleared his throat. His pale eyes studied me. "You're too smart to
fall for ghost stories, aren't you?"
"Yeah. I guess," I replied uncertainly.
We spent the rest of the afternoon helping Brad weed the garden. Weeding
isn't exactly my idea of a thrill. But after Brad showed us which were
the good plants and which weren't, Terri and I had fun spearing the bad
guys with the special weeding tools he lent us.
We ate the peach pie for dessert that night, and it was delicious. Agatha
and Brad wanted to hear all about our school and our friends.
After dinner, Brad challenged us to another game of whist. This time I
did much better. Brad only had to wiggle his finger at me a couple of
times.
Later, I had a tough time falling asleep. The window of my little room
off the kitchen had long, flimsy, white cotton curtains that allowed the
light of the full moon to shine onto my face. It felt like staring into a
flashlight.
I tried covering my face with the pillow, but I couldn't breathe. Then I
tried resting my arm over my eyes, but my arm quickly fell asleep.
I pulled the sheet up over my head. Better.
I closed my eyes. The crickets were making a real racket.
Then I heard something thump against the wall outside. Probably a tree
branch, I told myself.
Another thump. I slid a little further down in my bed.
The third time I heard the sound, I took a deep breath, sat up, and
tossed off the sheet.
I took a careful look around the room. Nothing. Nada. Zip.
I lay back down.
Near the doorway, the floorboards creaked.
I turned to the window.
Behind the curtains, something moved.
Something pale. Ghostly.
The floorboards creaked again as the pale figure moved toward me.
8
I opened my mouth in a low, terrified scream. Then I pulled the sheet
back over my head.
The room grew silent. I was trembling all over.
Where was the ghost?
I peeked out from the sheet.
Terri stepped out from behind the curtain. "Gotcha," she whispered.
"You creep," I choked out. "How could you do that to me?"
"Easy," she replied, grinning. "All this ghost talk has you freaked out —
hasn't it."
I let out an angry growl, but didn't reply. My heart was still thudding
in my chest.
Terri sat down on the edge of the bed. She pulled her robe around her
more tightly. "I just couldn't resist," she said, still grinning. "I came
down to talk to you, and I saw you lying there with the sheet over your
head. It was too tempting."
I glared at her. "Next time pick on someone your own size," I said
angrily. "I had the sheet pulled up because I was having trouble falling
asleep."
"Me, too," Terri said. "My mattress is really lumpy." She stared out the
window. "And, besides, I was thinking about that ghost."
"Hey — you're the one who doesn't believe in them — remember?" I
insisted.
"I know. I really don't believe in ghosts. But Sam, Louisa, and Nat
obviously do."
"So?"
"So I want to find out why. Don't you?"
"Not really. I don't care if I ever see those kids again," I said.
Terri yawned. "Louisa seems nice. Much more friendly than Sam. I think we
can get Louisa to tell us more about the ghost if we ask her. She almost
told us today."
"Terri, I don't believe you," I replied, pulling the sheet up to my chin.
"You heard what Agatha said. Sam likes to make up stories."
"I don't think this is a story," Terri said. "I know I'm supposed to be
the scientific one in the family. But I think something strange is going
on here, Jerry."
I didn't answer. I was picturing the animal skeleton.
"I'm going to ask them about the ghost again tomorrow," Terri announced.
"How do you know they'll show up?"
Terri grinned. "They always do, don't they? Haven't you noticed? No
matter where we are, they always seem to be there." She paused. "Do you
think they're following us?"
"I hope not," I said.
Terri laughed. "You're such a wimp."
I threw off the covers. "Am not!"
Terri started tickling me. "Wimp! Wimp! Wimp!"
I grabbed her arm and twisted it behind her. Then I started tickling her
back. "Take it back," I said.
"Okay, okay!" she cried. "I didn't mean it."
"And you'll never call me a wimp again?"
"Never!"
As soon as I let go of her arm, she ran to the doorway. "See you in the
morning — wimp!" she called. She disappeared through the kitchen.
At breakfast the next morning, Agatha asked, "What do you kids have
planned for today?"
"A swim, I guess," I replied, glancing at Terri. "Down at the beach."
"Be careful of the tide down there," Brad warned. "It can sweep a fullgrown
man off his feet."
Terri and I glanced at each other. I don't think we'd ever heard Brad put
two full sentences together before.
"We will," Terri promised. "We'll probably do more wading than swimming."
Agatha handed me a banged-up metal pail. "Might want to pick up some sea
urchins or sea stars."
A few minutes later, I took the pail and a couple of old beach towels,
and Terri and I headed down the twisty path along the shoreline.
We scrambled up and down the rocks until we came to a spot not far from
the sandy beach and the cave.
We slid down the giant rock underneath us and then climbed on all fours
across a few smaller rocks until we reached a wide, mossy, tide pool
about three feet from the water's edge. The tide pool was about the size
of a kiddie pool.
"Wow, Jerry!" Terri exclaimed, staring into the water. "I see tons of
stuff in here." She reached into the green, slimy water and pulled out a
sea star. "It's so tiny. Not even the size of my palm. Maybe it's a
baby."
She turned it over. Its legs wiggled. "Hello, cute little sea star," she
sang.
Yuck. "I'll go get the pail, okay?" I said. I climbed back over the rocks
to where we left our things.
Guess who was bent over our stuff? Snooping. "Find anything good?" I
called sharply.
Sam glanced up slowly. "I was wondering whose towels these were," he said
casually.
Nat and Louisa came bounding over the rocks. "Where's Terri?" Louisa
asked.
I motioned toward the water. "Down by the tide pool." I grabbed the pail.
They followed me back down. Terri smiled when she saw us. I could tell
she was happy to see Louisa and her brothers. "Look at all the cool stuff
I found in here," Terri declared.
Along the smooth surface of a large, flat rock she lined up the baby sea
star, two sea urchins, and a hermit crab.
We crowded together to see. Terri held out the sea star. "Aren't its feet
cute?" she asked Nat.
He giggled.
We spent a few minutes examining everything. Nat started rattling off
everything he'd ever learned about crabs. Louisa finally had to cut him
off.
"I want to hear more about the ghost," Terri told Louisa.
"Nothing more to tell," Louisa replied softly. She glanced nervously at
Sam.
Had he warned her not to talk about it anymore?
Terri refused to give up. "Where does the ghost live?" she demanded.
Louisa and Sam exchanged glances again.
"Come on, guys. It has to live somewhere!" Terri teased.
Nat gazed toward the beach and the cave. A breeze fluttered his fine,
blond hair. He slapped a green fly on his skinny bare arm.
"Does the ghost live on the beach?" Terri asked.
Nat shook his head.
"In the cave?" I guessed.
Nat pinched his lips together.
"I thought so," Terri said. "In the cave." She flashed me a triumphant
grin. "What else?"
Nat's face turned red. He hid behind Louisa. "I didn't mean to tell," he
whispered.
"It's okay," Louisa told him, petting his hair. She turned to Terri and
me. "The ghost is very old. No one has ever seen him come out."
"Louisa!" Sam said sharply. "I really don't think we should talk about
this."
"Why not?" Louisa shot back. "They have a right to know."
"But they don't even believe in ghosts," Sam insisted.
"Well, maybe you can change my mind," Terri replied. "Are you guys sure
there's a ghost? Have you really seen it?"
"We've seen the skeletons," Louisa said solemnly.
Nat peeked his head out from behind Louisa's leg. "The ghost comes out
during the full moon," he announced.
"We don't know that for sure," Louisa corrected. "He's been in the cave
up there forever. Some people say for three hundred years."
"But if you haven't seen him," I said, "how do you know he's in the
cave?"
"You can see a light flickering," Sam replied.
"A light?" I hooted. "Give me a break! That could be anything. It could
be a guy in there with a flashlight."
Louisa shook her head. "It's not that kind of light," she insisted. "It's
different from that."
"Well, a flickering light and a dog skeleton aren't enough to convince
me," I said. "I think you're just trying to scare us again. This time,
I'm not falling for it."
Sam scowled. "No problem," he muttered. "You don't have to believe it.
Really."
"Well, I don't," I insisted.
Sam shrugged. "Have fun," he said softly. He led his brother and sister
back toward the woods.
As soon as they were out of sight, Terri punched me in the side. "Jerry,
why did you do that? I was just starting to weasel some good stuff out of
them."
I shook my head. "Can't you see they're trying to scare us? There's no
ghost. It's another dumb joke."
Terri stared hard at me. "I'm not so sure," she murmured.
I gazed up at the enormous black hole of the cave. Despite the morning
heat, a chill ran down my back.
Was there an ancient ghost in there?
Did I really want to find out?
Agatha made a really great old-fashioned chicken potpie for dinner. I ate
all of mine except for the peas and carrots. I'm not into vegetables.
Terri and I were helping Agatha with the dishes after dinner when she
said, "Jerry, I seem to be missing one of the beach towels. Didn't you
take two with you this morning?"
"I guess we did," I replied.
"Did we leave one at the beach?" Terri asked.
I tried to remember. "I don't think so. I can go take a look."
"Don't bother," Agatha said. "It's getting dark out. You can look
tomorrow."
"I don't mind," I told her. I threw down my dish towel and bolted out the
back door before she could say anything else.
I was glad for an excuse to escape. That tiny kitchen was suffocating me.
There was hardly any room to turn around in there.
I walked along the path to the water's edge, happy to be alone for a
change. Terri is okay, especially for a kid sister. We get along
amazingly well. But sometimes I like to be by myself.
I found the big rock where we'd left our towels that morning. No sign of
the missing towel. Maybe Sam took it, I thought. Maybe he planned to
drape it over his head and jump out at us.
I gazed up at the big cave, dark against the blue-black sky.
"Huh?"
I blinked — and took a step closer.
Was that a light flickering in the cave?
I took another step. It had to be the reflection of the moon, just rising
over the pine trees.
No. Not the moon, I realized.
I took another few steps. I couldn't take my eyes off the flickering
light, so pale, so ghostly pale, in the black cave opening.
Sam! I told myself. Yes, it's Sam. He's up there right now, lighting
matches. Hoping I'll fall for his trick.
Should I climb up there?
My sneakers sank into the sand as I took a few more steps toward the
cave.
The light glimmered in the cave opening. It hovered so near the entrance.
Floating. Flickering. Dancing slowly.
Should I go up there? I asked myself.
Should I?
9
Yes. I had to climb up there.
The light glimmered brighter, as if calling to me.
I took a deep breath, then jumped across a tide pool and over some mossy
rocks. Then I started up.
The cave stood high above me, embedded in the boulders. I leaped and
scrambled over slippery, small rocks until I reached the next big
boulder.
A halo of yellow moonlight shone down on the rocks, making it easy to
see. What was it Nat said about the moon? Something about the ghost
coming out when it was full?
I scaled the next rock, and kept climbing.
I could see the ghostly light floating above me in the cave entrance.
Up, up I climbed over the scraggly rocks, slippery from the evening dew.
"Oh!" I cried out as I felt my legs give way. A mini-landslide had
started under my feet. Small rocks and sand tumbled down the hill behind
me.
Desperately, I grabbed at a fat root growing out between the rocks. I
held on long enough to get my footing.
Whew! I took a moment to catch my breath.
Then I pulled myself up onto a sturdy boulder and gazed up to the cave.
Now it was right above my head. Only another ten feet or so to go.
I stood up — and gasped.
Whoa! What was that noise behind me?
I stood frozen. Waiting. Listening.
Was someone else there?
Was the ghost there?
I didn't have long to wonder. A cold, clammy hand grabbed my neck.
10
I uttered a choking sound and struggled to turn around.
The cold fingers relaxed their grip. "Ssssh," Terri whispered. "It's me."
I let out an angry growl. "What do you think you're doing?"
"Never mind that," she shot back. "What do you think you're doing?"
"I — I'm looking for that beach towel," I stammered.
Terri laughed. "You're looking for a ghost, Jerry. Admit it."
We both raised our eyes to the cave. "Do you see the light?" I whispered.
"Huh? What light?" Terri demanded.
"The light flickering in the cave," I replied impatiently. "What's wrong
with you? Do you need glasses?"
"I'm sorry. I don't see any light," Terri insisted. "It's completely
dark."
I stared up at the cave opening. Stared up into total darkness.
She was right. The flickering light in the cave had vanished.
As I lay in bed later that night, I tried to use what Mr. Hendrickson, my
science teacher, calls my "critical thinking skills." That's when you
have to put together whatever facts you have and those you don't, and
then draw a logical conclusion.
So I asked myself: What do I know?
I know I saw a light. Then the light went out.
So what was the explanation? An optical illusion? My imagination? Sam?
Outside the window, a dog began to bark.
That's weird, I thought. I hadn't seen any dogs around here before.
I stuffed my pillow over my ears.
The barking grew louder, more emotional. It sounded as if it were right
outside my window.
I sat up, listening.
And remembered what Nat had told us. Dogs recognize ghosts.
Was that why the dog was barking so excitedly?
Had the dog spotted the ghost?
With a shiver, I climbed out of bed and crept to the window.
I peered down to the ground.
No dog.
I listened.
The barking had stopped.
Crickets chirped. The trees whispered.
"Here, doggy," I called softly.
No reply. I shivered again.
Silence now.
What's going on here? I wondered.
"Sssshhh. You'll scare them," Terri whispered.
The morning sun was still a red ball, low in the sky, as we approached
the seagull nest Terri had spotted the day before.
Bird-watching was Terri Sadler Hobby Number Three. Unlike gravestone
rubbings and wildflower collecting, she could do this one back at home,
right from our apartment window.
We crouched down to watch. About fifteen feet away, the mother seagull
was trying to herd her three babies back into the nest. She squawked
noisily and chased them first in one direction, then another.
"Aren't the babies cute?" whispered Terri. "They look like fuzzy gray
stuffed animals, don't they?"
"Actually they remind me of rats," I replied.
Terri poked me with her elbow. "Don't be a creep."
We watched them in silence for a few minutes. "So tell me again about the
dog barking last night," Terri asked. "I can't believe I didn't hear it."
"There's nothing more to tell," I replied edgily. "When I went to the
window, it stopped."
Down the beach I saw the three Sadler kids, in shorts and sleeveless Tshirts,
walking barefoot along the shore. I jumped up and started jogging
toward them.
"What's your hurry?" Terri called after me.
"I want to tell them about the flickering light," I called back.
"Wait up!" Terri shouted, scrambling after me.
We stumbled along the rocky beach toward the three kids. I saw that Sam
was carrying a couple of old fishing poles, and Louisa had a bucket
filled with water.
"Hi," Louisa said warmly, setting down the bucket.
"Catch anything?" I asked.
"Nope," Nat replied. "We didn't go fishing yet."
"What's in the bucket, then?" I asked.
Nat reached in and pulled out a small, silver fish. "Bunker. We use 'em
for bait."
I leaned down and peered into the pail. Dozens of little silver-gray fish
swarmed around inside. "Wow."
"Want to come?" Louisa asked.
Terri and I traded glances. Fishing sounded like fun. And maybe it would
give us a chance to ask casually about the light in the cave. "Sure," I
said. "Why not?"
We followed them down the sandy path to a shady spot on the water. "We
usually have good luck here," Sam announced.
He grabbed a bait fish out of the bucket, then steadied his fishing pole
against his leg. He expertly threaded the fish onto the hook, then handed
me the pole. The fish flipped back and forth on the hook.
"Want to try?" he asked. I wondered why he was suddenly acting so nice to
me now. Had Louisa gotten on his case? Or was he setting me up for
another joke?
"Sure, I'll try," I told him. "What do I do?"
Sam showed me how to cast the line out. My first try wasn't great. The
line landed about a foot from the shore.
Sam laughed and cast it for me again. "Don't worry," he said, handing the
pole back to me. "It takes a lot of practice to learn to cast."
This Sam was certainly different from the Sam we had seen before. Maybe
it just takes him a while to get friendly, I told myself.
"Now what do I do?" I asked him.
"Keep casting out and reeling in," he said. "And if you feel a tug,
yell."
Sam turned to Terri. "Do you want to try, too?" he asked.
"Of course!" she replied.
Sam started to grab a bunker for Terri from the bucket.
"That's okay," Terri said. "I can do it."
Sam stepped back and let Terri do the honors. I think she must have been
showing off. I'd never seen her bait a live fish before. She always hated
slimy things.
Terri started to cast out her line without any help. I was about to
accuse her again of showing off. But then her fishing line got tangled in
the tree branches above us.
That got everyone laughing — especially when the bait fish squirmed off
the hook and dropped down into Terri's hair. Terri shrieked, thrashed her
arms, and swatted the fish into the water.
Sam collapsed with laughter on the rock. The rest of us laughed, too. We
were all sprawled out on a big flat rock.
This seemed a good time to bring up the cave. "Guess what?" I started.
"Last night I came down to the beach, and I saw that flickering light you
were talking about in the cave."
Sam's smile faded instantly. "You did?"
Louisa's eyes grew wide with concern. "You . . . you didn't go in there,
did you? Please say no."
"No, I didn't go inside," I told them.
"It's really dangerous," Louisa said. "You shouldn't climb up there.
Really."
"Yeah. Really," Sam quickly agreed. His eyes burned into mine.
I glanced at Terri. I could tell what she was thinking. These three kids
really were frightened. They didn't want to admit it. They didn't want to
talk about it.
But they were terrified of the cave.
Why?
I only knew one thing for sure: I had to find out.
11
At dinner, we sat at the round table in the living room off the kitchen.
Brad was tackling a piece of corn on the cob with his knife, trying to
saw off all the little niblets so he could eat them with a fork.
"Brad . . . uh . . . I was wondering about the cave," I started, fiddling
with my silverware.
I felt Terri's foot nudge mine under the table.
"What about it?" Brad asked.
"Well . . . uh . . . the strangest thing . . ." I hesitated.
Agatha's head turned sharply. "You didn't go into that cave, did you?"
"No," I replied.
"You really shouldn't go into the cave," she warned. "It isn't safe."
"Well, that's what I wanted to talk about," I continued. I saw that
everyone had stopped eating. "Last night when I went to look for the
beach towel, there was a light flickering inside the cave. Do you know
what it was?"
Brad narrowed his eyes at me. "Just an optical illusion," he said curtly.
Then he picked up his corn and began sawing again.
"I don't understand," I told him. "What do you mean?"
Brad patiently put down his corn. "Jerry, did you ever hear of the
northern lights? Aurora borealis?"
"Sure," I said. "But . . ."
"That's what that flickering light was," he said, cutting me off. He
picked up his corn again.
"Oh," I replied. I turned to Agatha, hoping she'd help fill in the
blanks. She did.
"It happens at certain times of the year," she explained. "Something
electric gets in the air. The whole sky lights up in streamers."
She reached for the bowl of mashed potatoes. "More potatoes?"
"Sure, thanks." I felt Terri's foot bump me again from across the table.
I shook my head at her. Brad and Agatha were wrong. That couldn't have
been the northern lights. The light was coming from the cave, not the
sky.
Were they mistaken?
Or were they deliberately lying to me?
After dinner, Terri and I walked along the beach. Wisps of gray clouds
floated over the full moon. Shadows stretched and shifted in front of us
as we made our way over the pebbly sand.
"They lied to me," I insisted to Terri, my hands shoved deep into the
pockets of my cutoffs. "Brad and Agatha are hiding something. They don't
want us to know the truth about the cave."
"They're just worried," my sister replied. "They don't want us to get
hurt up there. They feel responsible, and — "
"Terri, look — !" I cried. I pointed up to the cave.
This time Terri saw the flickering light, too.
As we watched it floating above our heads in the cave entrance, the
clouds covered the moon and the sky darkened.
"It's not the northern lights," I whispered. "There's someone up there."
"Let's check it out," Terri whispered back.
Before we even realized what we were doing, we were climbing the rocks,
pulling ourselves up toward the cave. It felt as if I were being pulled
by a magnet.
I had to get closer, close enough to see what was causing that strange,
floating light.
Behind us, the ocean waves crashed against the lowest rocks, spraying
surf in every direction.
We were almost to the mouth of the cave. I glanced back and saw that the
beach lay far below. In the cave mouth, the light still flickered and
floated.
We pulled ourselves up the last few rocks and stood up.
We found ourselves standing on a wide ledge. The dark cave loomed up
ahead, towering over us.
I peered into the cave opening. How deep was the cave? I couldn't tell.
Squinting into the dim light, I thought I saw a tunnel leading off to one
side.
I took a step closer. Terri moved up close beside me. I could see the
fear on her face. She bit her lower lip. "Well?" she asked in a hushed
whisper.
"Let's go in," I said.
12
My heart thudded as we stepped into the darkness. Our sneakers slid on
the smooth, damp cave floor. I nearly choked on the sour, musty smell.
"Hey — !" I cried out as Terri grabbed my arm.
"The light — look!" she whispered.
It flickered near the back of the cave.
Staying close together, we took a few steps toward it. Our sneakers
squished loudly. The air grew warmer.
"It — it's a tunnel," I stammered.
The cave narrowed, then curved away. The dim light flickered from around
the corner, from somewhere deeper in the cave.
I swallowed hard. "Let's just go a little farther," I urged.
Terri lingered behind me. "That tunnel looks creepy," she uttered in a
tiny voice.
I heard a soft chittering sound somewhere up ahead.
"We've come this far," I urged. "Might as well go just a little bit
farther."
Following the light, we lowered our heads and stepped into the tunnel. I
could hear the drip drip drip of water nearby. The air grew even warmer,
steamy.
The tunnel curved, then suddenly widened into a deep, round chamber.
I stopped as I heard the chittering sound again. A soft flapping,
fluttering sound. Growing louder.
"What's that noise?" Terri cried. Her shrill voice echoed against the
cave walls.
Before I could answer, the fluttering became a deafening clatter.
"Nooooo!" My cry was drowned out by the horrifying roar.
I raised my eyes in time to see the black cave ceiling crumble and fall
over us.
13
"Noooooo!"
I was still wailing as I hit the wet cave floor. I covered my head with
both hands.
And waited. Waited for the crashing pain.
The clatter swirled over me. A shrill whistle rose up over the sound.
My heart thudding, I raised my eyes — and saw the bats.
Thousands of black bats, flapping and fluttering, swooping back and forth
across the chamber, darting low, then twisting away.
The ceiling hadn't fallen.
By entering their chamber, Terri and I had awakened the bats. They
whistled and hissed as they swooped wildly over our heads.
"L-let's get out of here!" I cried, helping Terri to her feet. "I hate
bats!"
"This is why Brad and Agatha warned us away," Terri cried, shouting over
the roar of fluttering wings.
We both turned to leave. But the flickering light at the far end of the
chamber made me stop.
Just a few feet farther. If we made our way a few feet deeper into the
chamber, we could solve the mystery.
And never have to think about this frightening cave again.
"Come on," I shouted. I grabbed Terri's hand and tugged.
The bats swooped and darted over our heads, chittering and whistling. We
ducked our heads as we ran under them.
To the back wall of the chamber. Into another narrow, curving tunnel. I
pressed my back against the tunnel wall and edged forward, still holding
Terri's hand.
The pale light grew brighter.
We were getting close.
The tunnel opened into another large chamber, about the same size as the
first chamber. Terri and I had to shield our eyes. The entrance glowed
with a bright, flickering light.
I took a few slow steps in, giving my eyes a chance to adjust to the
light.
Then I saw them.
Candles. Dozens of short white candles perched around the chamber on rock
ledges.
All of them lighted. All of them flickering.
"So that explains it," I whispered. "Flickering candlelight."
"It doesn't explain anything!" Terri protested, shadows dancing over her
pale face. "Who put the candles here?"
We both saw the man at the same time.
An old man with long, stringy, white hair and a beaklike nose. He sat
hunched over a crude table made from a log of driftwood.
Pale and terribly thin, his worn shirt hung loosely on him. His eyes were
closed. Shadows played over him. He seemed to flicker in and out with the
candlelight.
As if he were part of the light.
Part of the ghostly light.
Terri and I froze, staring at him. Did he see us? Was he alive?
Was he a ghost?
His eyes opened. Large, dark eyes sunk deep in their sockets.
He turned to us, stared back at us with those frightening sunken eyes.
Slowly he curled a bony, gnarled finger. "Come here." His voice was a dry
whisper. Dry as death.
And before we could move, he rose up from the chair and began to come for
us.
14
I wanted to run. But my feet felt glued to the floor.
As if the ghostly figure were holding me there, keeping me from escaping.
Terri let out a low cry. She bumped me from behind.
I think she had stumbled. But her bump got us both moving.
I took one last glance back at the pale, flickering figure. His bony
frame shimmered in the eerie candlelight.
He started toward us, his mouth twisted into a strange grin. The dark
eyes gazed at us blankly, like black buttons on a snowman.
Then we turned and ran.
Terri sprinted ahead of me through the tunnel, her sneakers slapping the
wet floor. Slipping and stumbling, I struggled to keep up with her.
My legs felt as if they weighed a thousand pounds. The blood pulsed so
hard at my temples, I thought my head might explode.
"Go! Go! Go!" I shouted all the way.
I turned and glanced back.
He was coming after us!
"Noooo!" I screamed.
I shouldn't have turned back.
I stumbled over a jagged rock — and went sprawling on the hard floor.
I landed hard on my elbows and knees.
Gasping for breath, I spun around.
In time to see the ghost's bony hands reach out for my throat.
15
I let out a terrified howl, scrambled to my feet, and lurched away from
his bony, outstretched hands.
A few feet up ahead, Terri watched in horror, her mouth open, her eyes
wide with fright.
I heard the ghost groan as he reached out with both arms.
Somehow I found the strength to run.
Terri and I were both running now. Through the narrow, curving tunnel.
Through the bat chamber, silent and empty now.
To the mouth of the cave.
And then we were slipping and sliding, scrambling down the dew-wet
boulders. Down, down to the rocky, moonlit beach.
I turned back once. I couldn't help it.
The cave opening was dark now, I saw. Darker than the night sky.
We ran along the shore, then turned into the woods. We were both
breathing hard, panting loudly as we reached the cottage.
I pushed open the door, stumbled in after Terri, then slammed it hard
behind us.
"Terri? Jerry? Is that you?" Agatha's voice floated from the kitchen. She
came in, wiping her hands on a checkered dish towel. "Well?" she
demanded. "Did you find it?"
"Huh?" I gaped at her, still struggling to catch my breath.
Did we find the ghost?
Is that what Agatha was asking?
"Did you find it?" Agatha repeated. "Did you find the beach towel?"
She stared at us in bewilderment as Terri and I burst out in relieved
laughter.
I couldn't get to sleep that night. I kept picturing the ghost. His
stringy, white hair. His sunken eyes. His bony fingers reaching out for
me.
And I kept wondering if Terri and I had done the right thing by not
telling Agatha and Brad about him.
"We'll only get in trouble for going into the cave," I had told my
sister.
"They probably won't believe us anyway," Terri added.
"And why should we get them upset?" I said. "They've been so nice to us.
And we went into the cave when they told us not to."
So we hadn't told them about the frightening ghost surrounded by candles
in the creepy cave.
And now as I lay in bed, tossing and turning, my mind tossed and turned,
too. And I wondered if Terri and I should confess to our cousins what we
had done and seen.
Despite the summer heat, I pulled the covers up to my chin and stared at
the window. Behind the billowing curtains, pale white moonlight shimmered
brightly.
The moonlight didn't cheer me. It reminded me of the ghost's pale skin.
Suddenly, my troubled thoughts were interrupted by a soft tapping.
Tap tap. Tap tap tap.
I sat up quickly.
The sound was repeated. Tap tap. Tap tap tap.
And then I heard a ghostly whisper: "Come here."
Tap tap tap.
"Come here."
And I knew that the ghost had followed me home.
16
"Come here."
Sitting up in bed, rigid with fear, I stared helplessly as a face rose up
in the moonlit window.
First I saw a pale tuft of hair. Then a broad forehead. A pair of dark
eyes, gleaming blue in the bright light.
Nat!
He grinned at me through the window.
"Nat! It's you!" I cried gratefully, jumping out of bed, pulling my robe
over my pajamas, and lurching to the open window.
He giggled.
I peered out. Sam had Nat on his shoulders and was lowering him to the
ground. Louisa, in white tennis shorts and a loose-fitting gray sweater,
stood beside them.
"Wh-what are you guys doing out here?" I stammered. "You scared me to
death."
"We weren't trying to scare you," Sam replied, his hands on Nat's slender
shoulders. "We saw you and your sister running on the beach. We wondered
what happened."
"You won't believe it!" I exclaimed.
I realized that my voice was probably carrying up to Brad and Agatha's
room. I didn't want to wake them.
I motioned to the three kids. "Come into my room. We can talk in here."
Sam lifted Nat up to the windowsill. I pulled him in. Then the other two
climbed in after him.
They sat down on the bed. I paced excitedly in front of them.
"Terri and I went into the cave," I told them in a low voice. "We saw the
ghost. He was sitting in a back chamber filled with candles."
All three of them showed surprise on their faces.
"He was very old and scary-looking," I continued. "He didn't walk. He
kind of floated. When he saw us, he started to chase us. I fell, and he
nearly grabbed me. But I got away."
"Wow," Sam muttered. The other two continued to stare at me in amazement.
"Then what?" Nat asked.
"Then we ran back here as fast as we could," I told him. "That's it."
They stared at me for a long moment. I tried to figure out what they were
thinking. Did they believe me?
Finally, Sam climbed off the bed and walked to the window. "We didn't
want you to know about the ghost," he said softly, tossing back his brown
hair.
"Why not?" I demanded.
Sam hesitated. "We didn't want to scare you."
I let out a scornful laugh. "You scared Terri and me just about every
time we saw you."
"That was just for fun," Sam explained. "But we knew if you found out
about the ghost . . ." His voice trailed off.
"Have you seen him, too?" I asked, pulling my robe tighter around me.
All three of them nodded.
"We stay away from there," Nat told me, scratching his arm. "The ghost is
too scary."
"He's really dangerous," Louisa revealed. "I think he wants to kill us
all." Her eyes locked on mine. "Even you. You and Terri."
I shuddered. "Why? Terri and I didn't do anything to him."
"It doesn't matter. Nobody's safe," Sam said softly, glancing nervously
out the window. "You saw the skeleton in the woods, right? That's what
the ghost will do to you if he catches you."
I shuddered again. I was really scared now.
"There's a way to get rid of the ghost," Louisa said, breaking into my
troubled thoughts. She was nervously clasping and unclasping her hands in
her lap. "But we need your help," she continued. "We can't do it without
you and Terri."
I swallowed hard. "What can Terri and I do?" I asked.
Before she could answer, we heard creaking above our heads. Voices.
Had we awakened Agatha and Brad?
Louisa and her two brothers hurried to the window and lowered themselves
to the ground. "Meet us at the beach — tomorrow morning," Sam instructed.
I stood at the window and watched them disappear into the woods.
The room fell quiet again. The curtains fluttered gently. I stared out
into the gently swaying pine trees.
How can Terri and I help to get rid of an ancient ghost? I wondered.
What can we do?
17
I woke up the next morning to the sound of rain. I jumped out of bed and
ran to the window. The rain swirled in a gusting wind. In the garden,
narrow rivulets of water had formed between the vegetable rows and
trickled off into the yard. A thick fog had settled on the trees.
"Do you believe this weather?" Terri asked, coming into my room.
I spun away from the window. "Terri — listen. I have something to tell
you." I told her about my late-night talk with the three Sadlers.
When I finished, Terri stared out the window. "So what do we do now? How
can we meet them on the beach if it's raining this hard?"
"We can't," I said. "We have to wait till it stops."
"I hate suspense!" Terri moaned. She hurried back to her room to get
dressed.
I pulled on my old faded jeans, torn at both knees, and a gray
sweatshirt, and hurried to join everyone for breakfast. Agatha cooked us
oatmeal with big lumps of brown sugar and butter on top.
After breakfast Brad built a big cozy fire and Terri worked on her
wildflower collection on the floor in front of the fireplace.
While Terri glued dried flower samples onto sheets of cardboard, I sat
around and waited for the rain to stop. Stupid rain.
The sun didn't come out until after lunch. As soon as we could get away,
Terri and I hurried to the beach.
We waited there for nearly an hour. I practiced skipping stones, and
Terri scrounged around for shells. No sign of Sam, Nat, and Louisa.
"Now what?" I asked, kicking at a small rock. The whole day had been a
big waste.
"I brought my gravestone-rubbing stuff," Terri replied. "Let's go over to
the cemetery."
We made our way to the small graveyard, climbed over the old stone wall,
and took a good look around. The graves were so old. Many of the
gravestones had been knocked over, or broken, or covered with weeds.
The forest had started taking over. A couple of big trees had sprouted on
top of graves, and one giant tree had crashed across the wall, knocking
over several tombstones.
"I'm going to look for something interesting by that big fallen tree,"
Terri announced.
Terri ran ahead, and I poked along at my own speed. The last time we were
here, we stuck to the edge of the cemetery. Now I made my way into the
middle.
I started reading the names on the tombstones. The first one I stopped at
read: HERE LIES THE BODY OF MARTIN SADLER.
That's strange, I thought. Another Sadler. I remembered that Sam had told
us Sadler was a common name around here. Maybe this was the Sadler family
section or something.
The gravestone next to Martin Sadler belonged to Mary Sadler, his wife.
Then a couple of Sadler kids, Sarah and Miles.
I moved to the next row and continued reading the inscriptions. Another
Sadler. This one was named Peter. Beside Peter lay Miriam Sadler.
Whoa! I thought, starting to get the creeps. Didn't anyone else ever die
around here?
I moved to another section. All Sadlers, too. Hiram, Margaret, Constance,
Charity . . .
Was this a whole cemetery of Sadlers?
Terri's scream cut through the air. "Jerry! Come here!"
I found her near the fallen pine tree. Her face was twisted in confusion.
"Look!" she instructed, pointing to a cluster of gravestones at her feet.
I lowered my glance to two large stones. THOMAS SADLER, DIED FEBRUARY 18,
1641, and PRISCILLA SADLER, WIFE OF THOMAS. DIED MARCH 5, 1641.
"Yeah, I know," I told Terri. "The whole cemetery is filled with Sadlers.
Creepy, huh?"
"No. No. Check out the kids' graves," Terri said impatiently.
I saw three small, identical stones lined up beside the parents. The
three stones stood up straight. They were clean and easy to read. As if
someone had taken care of them.
I hunched down to read the names. "Sam Sadler, son of Thomas and
Priscilla."
I straightened back up. "So?"
"Read the next one," Terri instructed.
I lowered myself again. "Louisa Sadler."
"Uh-oh," I murmured. "I bet I can guess the last name."
"I bet you can, too," Terri replied in a trembling whisper.
My eyes moved to the last marker. "Here lies Nat Sadler, who died in his
fifth year of life."
18
I stared at the three stones until they blurred before my eyes.
Three stones. Three kids.
Sam, Louisa, and Nat.
All dead in the early 1600s.
"I don't get it," I murmured. I felt dizzy as I climbed to my feet. "I
just don't get it."
"We have to ask Brad and Agatha about this," Terri said. "This is just
too weird!"
We ran back to the cottage. I kept seeing those three stones as we ran.
Sam, Louisa, and Nat.
We found Brad and Agatha out back, under the trees in their matching
rocking chairs.
Agatha laughed as we came running up to them breathlessly. "You kids run
everywhere, don't you? Wish I had your pep."
"We were in the cemetery," I blurted out. "We have to ask you about
something."
She raised her eyebrows. "Oh? Were you working on gravestone rubbings?"
"We didn't get that far," Terri told her. "We were reading the stones.
They were all Sadlers. All of them."
Agatha's chair rocked back and forth steadily. She nodded, but didn't say
anything.
"You know those kids we met on the beach?" I broke in. "Well, we found
tombstones for Sam, Louisa, and Nat Sadler. They died in 1640-something.
But those are the same names as the kids we met!"
Agatha and Brad rocked in unison. Back and forth. Back and forth. Agatha
smiled up at me. "Well, what's your question, Jerry?"
"How come there are so many Sadlers in that graveyard?" I asked. "And how
come those stones have our friends' names on them?"
"Good questions," Brad muttered quietly.
Agatha smiled. "It's nice to see you're both so observant. Sit down. It's
sort of a long story."
Terri and I dropped down onto the grass. "Tell us," I urged impatiently.
Agatha took a deep breath and began. "Well, in the winter of 1641, a
large group of Sadlers, practically the whole family, sailed from England
and settled here. They were Pilgrims who came to start a new life."
She glanced at Brad, who continued to rock, staring out at the shimmering
trees. "It was one of the worst winters in history," Agatha continued.
"And, sadly, tragically, the Sadlers were unprepared for the cold. They
died, one by one, and were buried in the little cemetery. By 1642, there
were almost none left."
Brad tsk-tsked and shook his head.
Agatha, rocking in a steady rhythm, continued. "Your friends Sam, Nat,
and Louisa are your distant cousins. Like Brad and me. They were named
for their ancestors, the children buried in the cemetery. We were named
for our ancestors, too. You'll find gravestones for an Agatha and
Bradford Sadler in the cemetery, too."
"We will?" Terri cried.
Agatha nodded solemnly. "That's right. But your cousin and I aren't quite
ready for the boneyard, yet. Are we, Brad?"
Brad shook his head. "No, ma'am!" he replied, grinning.
Terri and I laughed.
Relieved laughter.
I was so glad there was a good explanation for what we had seen. I
suddenly felt tempted to tell Brad and Agatha about the ghost in the
cave.
But Terri started talking about wildflowers, and I settled onto the grass
and kept my thoughts to myself.
We finally ran into Sam, Louisa, and Nat on the beach the next morning.
"Where were you guys?" I asked. "We waited for you here all afternoon."
"Hey, give us a break," Sam protested. "It was raining. We weren't
allowed outside."
"We were at the little graveyard yesterday," Terri told them. "We saw
three old gravestones with your names on them."
Louisa and Sam exchanged glances. "Those are our ancestors," Sam said.
"We were named after them."
"Jerry said you have a plan to get rid of the ghost," Terri broke in. My
sister always likes to get down to business.
"We do," Sam said, his expression turning serious. "Come with us." He
began walking quickly over the pebbly sand toward the cave.
I hurried to catch up. "Whoa! Where are we going? I'm not climbing back
inside that cave again. No way!" I cried.
"Me either," Terri agreed. "Being chased once by a ghost was enough for
me."
Sam's hazel eyes locked on mine. "You don't have to go into the cave
again. I promise."
He led us to the rocks below the cave. I gazed up, shielding my eyes
against the bright sunlight.
The cave looked a little less frightening in the daytime. The smooth,
white stone gleamed. The dark entrance didn't seem as deep and
forbidding.
Sam pointed up at the mouth. "See all those big rocks piled on top of the
cave?"
I squinted. "What about them?"
"All you have to do is climb up there and push those rocks down. The
rocks will cover the mouth of the cave, and the old ghost will be trapped
inside forever."
Terri and I stared at the enormous, white rocks. Each one must have
weighed about two hundred pounds. "You're kidding, right?" I said.
Louisa shook her head. "We're very serious," she murmured.
"We cover the cave mouth with rocks?" I repeated, staring up at it. The
dark hole seemed to stare back at me like a giant, black eye. "And that
will keep the ghost inside? What will stop him from floating out? He's a
ghost, remember. He can float right through the rocks."
"No, he can't," Louisa explained. "The old legends say that the cave is a
sanctuary. That means that if something evil gets trapped inside, it
can't escape through the ancient rocks. The ghost will be trapped inside
forever."
Terri frowned. "So why didn't you ever go up and push the rocks down?"
"We're too scared," Nat blurted out.
"If we mess up, the ghost could come after us," Sam said. "We live here.
He could find our house — and get revenge."
"We've been waiting for outsiders to come help us," Louisa added, gazing
at me with pleading eyes. "We've been waiting for someone we could
trust."
"But what about us?" I demanded. "If we try to trap the ghost tonight and
we mess up, won't he come out looking for us?"
"We won't mess up," Sam replied solemnly. "We'll all work together. If
the ghost comes out, Nat, Louisa, and I will distract him. We won't let
him see that you're up on top."
"Will you help us? Please?" Louisa begged. "Our whole lives, the old
ghost has terrified us."
"You would make everyone around here happy if you agreed to help trap
him," Sam added.
I hesitated. So many things could go wrong.
What if the rocks wouldn't budge? What if the ghost floated out and found
Terri and me up there? What if one of us slipped and fell off the top of
the cave?
No, I decided. No way. We can't do it. It's just too risky.
I turned to tell them my decision.
"Of course we'll help you," I heard Terri say.
19
We spent the afternoon picking blueberries with Agatha. Then we made
blueberry ice cream using an old-fashioned churn. It tasted better than
any ice cream I'd ever eaten. Agatha said it was because we picked the
blueberries ourselves.
As it got closer to suppertime, I started feeling more and more
frightened. Were we really going to try to trap a ghost tonight?
Dinnertime finally came. I hardly ate a thing. When Agatha stared at me,
I explained I had filled up on ice cream.
After dinner, Terri and I helped Agatha with the dishes. Then Brad
insisted on showing me how to tie sailor knots. By this time, my stomach
felt more knotted up than Brad's rope!
Finally, Terri and I said we were going to the beach to get some fresh
air. And we hurried out to meet our three friends.
It was a clear, cloudless night. Thousands of stars twinkled overhead. A
heavy dew was falling. The full moon made it easy to see without a
flashlight.
Terri and I padded in silence along the path down to the beach. Neither
of us felt like talking. I kept thinking about Mom and Dad's warning to
me before we left home to keep Terri from getting into trouble.
Well, we're in trouble now, I thought grimly. Deep trouble. Both of us.
Maybe all five of us.
Sam, Louisa, and Nat stood waiting at the edge of the shore. The
moonlight made the dark water sparkle. I suddenly wished it weren't so
bright out. What we were about to do needed darkness.
The knots in my stomach seemed to tighten as I greeted our three friends.
Sam raised a finger to his lips and motioned for us to follow him.
Silently, we picked our way across the rocks to the base of the cave.
"Hey — look," I whispered, staring up at the cave. The light flickered
brightly in the entrance.
The ghost was home.
I stared up at the cave and planned our route. We'd go up the same way we
had the other night. But instead of entering the cave, we'd keep climbing
around the side until we reached the top.
Terri fidgeted beside me. "Ready?" I whispered.
She nodded grimly.
"We'll wait down here," Sam whispered. "If the ghost comes out, we'll be
ready to distract him. Good luck."
The three of them stood huddled together. Their expressions were tense,
frightened. Nat gripped Louisa's hand. "Bye, Terri," he said in a tiny
voice. I think he had a little crush on her.
"See you in a few minutes," Terri whispered back to him. "Don't worry,
Nat. We'll get rid of that bad ghost. Come on, Jerry."
My legs felt rubbery as Terri and I made our way over the rocks. We
climbed steadily. Carefully.
I glanced back at Terri, a few feet behind me. She was breathing hard,
her eyes narrowed in concentration.
We reached the mouth of the cave. The light inside shone brightly.
I pointed to our right. Terri nodded. She followed me up the rocks on the
side of the cave.
The rocks were damp from the evening dew, and slippery. We were hunched
on all fours as we climbed. It was steeper than I had thought.
I struggled to keep from trembling. I knew that one slip could cause a
rock slide. The ghost would know something was up.
Hand over hand we climbed.
Carefully. Steadily.
I stopped to catch my breath and gazed down to the beach. Our three
friends hadn't moved.
Holding on to a rock with one hand, I waved to them with my other. Nat
waved back. The other two remained still, staring up at Terri and me.
I reached the smooth rock surface of the top of the cave. Turning, I held
out my hand and helped Terri up onto the narrow ledge.
Together we checked out the situation. The rocks we were supposed to roll
over the mouth of the cave weren't as big as I'd thought. They were piled
in a solid wall. It didn't seem that difficult to get behind them and
push them over.
As I started to move behind the rock wall, I caught a glimpse of our
three friends down below. To my surprise, Sam was waving his arms and
jumping up and down. Louisa and Nat were also motioning frantically.
"What's wrong?" Terri cried. "Why are they doing that?"
"They're trying to tell us something," I replied, feeling a chill of
terror freeze every muscle.
Had the ghost appeared in the cave mouth?
Were Terri and I caught already?
I took a deep breath and, ignoring my fear, leaned over the edge to peer
down at the mouth of the cave.
No one there.
"Jerry — stand up!" Terri cried. "You'll fall!"
I stood back up and peered down at the three kids. "Hey — !" I cried out
as I saw them running to the woods.
A stab of terror made me gasp. "Something's gone wrong," I croaked.
"Let's get out of here!"
I turned in time to see the ghost step up behind us.
His entire body shimmered, pale in the bright moonlight. His vacant,
sunken eyes glared angrily at us.
He grabbed me by the shoulder and wrapped his other bony hand around
Terri's waist.
"Come with me," he said in a dry whisper, a whisper of doom.
20
He dragged us down to the cave entrance.
He's so strong, I thought. So strong for someone old and frail-looking.
The rocks slid under my feet, a gray blur. The ground appeared to tilt
and sway. Long shadows seemed to reach out to me, to pull me down.
I tried to cry out, but my breath caught in my throat.
I tried to jerk free of his grasp. But he was too strong for me.
Terri uttered loud, sobbing gasps. She thrashed her arms, struggling to
free herself.
But the old ghost held her tightly.
Before I knew it, we were stumbling through the dark, twisting tunnels.
The flickering candlelight grew brighter up ahead. We were too frightened
to fight him, too frightened to break away.
My shoulder scraped against the narrow tunnel wall. Terror tightened my
throat. I couldn't even cry out from the pain.
The ghost released us as we reached the candlelit chamber. Glaring at us
sternly, he motioned with a bony finger for us to follow him to his
driftwood table.
"Wh-what are you going to do to us?" Terri managed to choke out.
He didn't reply.
He brushed the long, stringy white hair from over his face. Then he
motioned for us to sit down on the floor.
I dropped down quickly. My legs were shaking so hard, I was grateful not
to have to stand.
I glanced at my sister. Her lower lip was trembling. Her hands were
clasped tightly in her lap.
The old ghost cleared his throat. He leaned heavily against the crude
table. "You are both in serious trouble," he said in a thin, reedy voice.
"We — we didn't mean to do any harm," I blurted out.
"It is dangerous to get involved with ghosts," he said, ignoring my
words.
"We'll go away," I offered desperately. "We'll never come back."
"We didn't mean to disturb you," Terri added in a shrill voice.
His sunken eyes suddenly widened in surprise. "Me?" A strange smile
played across his pale face.
"We won't tell anyone we saw you," I told him.
His smile grew wider. "Me?" he repeated. He leaned forward on the large
chunk of driftwood. "I'm not a ghost!" he cried. "Your three friends
are!"
21
"Huh?" I gaped at the old ghost in disbelief.
His smile faded. "I'm telling you the truth," he said softly, rubbing his
pale cheek with a bony hand.
"You're trying to trick us," Terri replied. "Those three kids — "
"They're not kids," the old man interrupted sharply. "They're over 350
years old!"
Terri and I exchanged glances. The blood was pounding so hard at my
temples, I couldn't think clearly.
"Allow me to introduce myself," the old man said, lowering himself onto
the table edge. His lined face flickered in the shifting candlelight.
"I'm Harrison Sadler."
"Another Sadler?" I blurted out.
"We're Sadlers, too!" Terri cried.
"I know," he said softly. He coughed, a dry, hacking cough. "I came here
from England quite a while ago," he told us.
"In 1641?" I demanded.
He is a ghost, I realized with a shudder.
My question seemed to amuse him. "I haven't been here that long," he
replied dryly. "After college, I traced my ancestors here. I study ghosts
and the occult." He sighed. "It turned out there was plenty to study
here."
I stared hard at him, studying him. Could he possibly be telling the
truth? Was he human — not a ghost?
Or was this an evil trick?
His black, sunken eyes didn't reveal anything to me.
"Why did you drag us in here?" I demanded, climbing to my knees.
"To warn you," Harrison Sadler replied. "To warn you about the ghosts.
You are in great danger here. I have studied them. I have seen their
evil."
Terri let out a low cry. I couldn't tell if she believed the old man or
not.
I realized that I didn't believe him at all. His story didn't make any
sense.
I climbed to my feet. "If you are a scientist studying the occult," I
said, "why are you shut up here in this weird cave?"
He slowly raised his hand and motioned toward the shadowy ceiling. "This
cave is a sanctuary," he murmured.
Sanctuary? That was the word that Sam had used.
"Once inside this cave," Harrison explained, "ghosts cannot escape
through the rocks."
"So that means you are trapped in here," I insisted.
His eyes narrowed at me. "My plan is to trap the ghosts in here," he
replied softly. "That is why I stacked the rocks above the entrance. I
hope some day to trap them in here forever."
I turned to my sister. She stared thoughtfully at Harrison.
"But why are you living here?" I demanded.
"I am safe here," he replied. "The sanctuary keeps me safe. The ghosts
cannot surprise me by coming through the rocks. Didn't you wonder why
they sent you up here instead of coming up themselves?"
"They sent us up here because they're terrified of you!" I shouted,
forgetting my fear. "They sent us up here because you're the ghost!"
His expression changed. He pushed himself away from the driftwood table
and moved quickly toward Terri and me. His deep, sunken eyes glowed like
dark coals.
"What are you going to do?" I cried.
22
Harrison took another menacing step toward us. "You don't believe me, do
you?" he accused.
Terri and I were too frightened to answer.
"Wh-what are you going to do?" I repeated, my voice tiny and shrill.
He glared at us for a long moment, the candlelight flickering over his
pale face. "I'm going to let you go," he said finally.
Terri let out a cry of surprise.
I edged back, toward the tunnel.
"I'm going to let you go," Harrison Sadler repeated. "So that you can
examine the east corner of the old graveyard." He waved a bony hand. "Go.
Go now. To the graveyard."
"You — you're really letting us go?" I stammered.
"Once you've seen the east corner, you'll come back," Harrison replied
mysteriously. "You'll come back."
No way, I thought, my heart pounding.
No way I'll ever come near this frightening cave again.
"Go!" the old ghost cried.
Terri and I spun around and scrambled out of his chamber. Neither of us
looked back.
As we hurried out of the cave and down the rocks, I couldn't get
Harrison's face out of my mind. I kept picturing his glowing, evil eyes,
his long, stringy hair, his yellow teeth when he flashed us that eerie
smile. With a shudder, I remembered the inhuman strength of his grip as
he dragged Terri and me into his chamber.
I also couldn't stop thinking about Sam, Louisa, and Nat. There was no
way they were ghosts. They were our friends. They had tried to warn Terri
and me that the ghost was sneaking up behind us.
They said they'd been terrified of Harrison their whole lives. And I
remembered Nat's sad face as he told us how much he was scared of ghosts.
Harrison Sadler is a liar, I thought bitterly.
A 350-year-old ghost of a liar.
Down on the beach, Terri and I stopped to catch our breath. "He — he's so
scary!" Terri gasped.
"I couldn't believe he let us go," I replied, bending over, pressing my
hands against my knees, waiting for the sharp pain in my side to fade.
I searched for our three friends. But they were nowhere to be seen.
"Are we going to the graveyard?" I asked.
"I know what he wants us to see," Terri replied, gazing back up at the
dark cave. "I know why he wants us to check out the east corner. That's
where we found the gravestones for Louisa, Nat, and Sam."
"Yeah, so?"
"Harrison is just trying to scare us. He thinks if we see the old graves,
it will prove to us that Louisa, Nat, and Sam are ghosts."
"But we already know the truth about those old graves," I said.
We stepped off the beach and into the trees. The air grew cooler.
Moonlight trickling through the branches overhead made strange shadows
stretch across our path.
We reached the cemetery entrance and stopped.
"Might as well check it out," Terri murmured. I followed her through the
graveyard, stepping over footstones and loose brush as we made our way to
the east corner.
A pale beam of moonlight played over the three old Sadler kids' graves.
"See anything strange?" Terri whispered.
My eyes roamed the area. "Nope."
We stepped up to the Sadler kids' graves. "These look the same as
yesterday," I said. "Neat, square . . . whoa!"
Something caught my eye in the corner.
"What's your problem?" Terri demanded.
My eyes struggled to see in the pale light. "I think there's something .
. ."
"Huh? Do you see something?" Terri cried.
"Some fresh dirt," I said. "In the corner. On the other side of that
fallen tree. It looks like a fresh grave."
"No way," said Terri. "I've checked out all these gravestones. No one's
been buried in here for the last fifty years."
We took a couple of steps toward the fallen tree.
"Jerry! You're right! It is a grave," Terri whispered. "A fresh grave."
We stepped over the fallen tree trunk, keeping close together. A narrow
shaft of moonlight lit up the freshly dug ground.
"It's two graves!" I gasped. "Two fresh graves with little markers on
them."
I squatted down to try to read them. Terri moved behind me. "What do they
say, Jerry?"
My mouth went dry. I couldn't answer her.
"Jerry? Can you read them?"
"Yes," I finally choked out. "It's us, Terri. The names on these markers
read, 'Jerry Sadler and Terri Sadler.' "
23
"Wh-what does this mean?" I stammered.
"Who dug these graves?" Terri asked. "Who put up these markers?"
"Let's get out of here," I urged, grabbing her arm. "Let's go tell Agatha
and Brad."
Terri hesitated.
"We have to," I insisted. "We have to tell them everything. We should
have told them a long time ago."
"Okay," Terri agreed.
I turned to leave — and gasped when I saw the three figures staring at us
from the shadows.
Sam stepped quickly over the fallen tree. "Where are you going?" he
asked. "What are you doing here?"
Louisa and Nat followed close behind him.
"We — we're going back to the cottage," I told them. "It's late, and — "
"Did you kill the ghost?" Nat demanded. His eyes peered up at me
hopefully.
I patted his hair. It felt real. His head was warm. He didn't feel
ghostlike at all. He was a real little boy.
Harrison Sadler is a total liar, I thought.
"Did you kill the old ghost?" Nat repeated eagerly.
"No. We couldn't," I told him. Nat let out a disappointed sigh.
"Then how did you get away?" Sam demanded suspiciously.
"We ran away," Terri told him.
It was almost the truth.
"Where were you guys?" I demanded.
"Yeah. You didn't do a very good job of distracting him," Terri added
sharply.
"We — we tried to warn you," Louisa replied, tugging nervously at a
strand of long, auburn hair. "Then we got scared. We ran into the woods
and hid."
"When we didn't hear the rocks fall, we got even more scared," Sam added.
"We were afraid the ghost got you. We were afraid we would never see you
again."
Nat uttered a frightened sob and took Louisa's hand. "We have to kill the
ghost," the little guy whimpered. "We have to."
Sam and Louisa tried to comfort their little brother. I gazed down at the
two fresh graves. A cool wind made the trees whisper and shake.
I started to ask Sam about the two graves. But he spoke before I had a
chance. "Let's try again," he said, staring hard at Terri then me with
pleading eyes.
Louisa rested her hands on Nat's tiny shoulders. "Yes," she agreed
softly. "Let's go back and try again."
"No way!" I cried. "Terri and I got away from there once. I'm not going
back and — "
"But it's the perfect time!" Louisa insisted. "He'll never expect you to
come back tonight. We'll catch him completely offguard. It will be a
total surprise."
"Please!" Nat begged in a tiny voice.
I opened my mouth, but no sound came out. I couldn't believe they were
asking us to do this.
Terri and I had risked our lives by climbing up there. We could have been
killed by that lying old ghost. We could look like that horrible dog
skeleton right now.
And here they were, asking us to climb right back up there and try again.
It was a ridiculous idea. No way I would agree to it. No way!
"Okay," I heard my sister say. "We'll do it."
Louisa and her brothers burst into happy cheers.
Terri had done it to me again.
24
Terri led the way to the beach. I scrambled to catch up with her. The
three Sadlers, talking excitedly among themselves, trailed behind.
The night suddenly seemed darker, as if someone had dimmed the lights. I
raised my eyes, searching for the full moon. But it had disappeared
behind heavy clouds.
I felt a large raindrop on my shoulder, then another on the top of my
head. The wind picked up as we neared the ocean.
"Are you totally crazy?" I whispered to my sister as we made our way over
the pebbly sand toward the cave. "How could you agree to do this?"
"We have to solve the mystery," Terri replied, glancing up at the cave.
It sat darkly above the rocks. No flickering light. No sign of the old
ghost.
"This isn't one of your dumb mystery books," I told her angrily. "This is
real life. We could be in terrible danger."
"We already are," she replied mysteriously. She said something else, but
the strong wind off the ocean carried her words away.
The raindrops started to come down faster. Large, heavy drops.
"Stop, Terri," I demanded. "Let's turn back. Let's tell the kids we
changed our minds."
She shook her head.
"Let's at least go back to the cottage and tell Agatha and Brad," I
pleaded. "We can trap the ghost tomorrow. During the day, maybe . . ."
Terri kept walking. She picked up the pace. "We have to solve the
mystery, Jerry," she said again. "Those two fresh graves — they really
scared me. I have to find out the truth."
"But, Terri — the truth is, we might get killed!" I cried.
She didn't seem to hear me. I brushed raindrops from my eyebrows. The
gusting winds were swirling the rain around us. The rain pattered against
the rocks, sounding like sharp drumbeats.
We stopped at the bottom of the rocks. Up above, the cave stood over us,
still completely dark.
"We'll wait down here," Sam said. His eyes kept darting up to the cave. I
could tell he was really frightened. "This time we'll do a better job of
distracting the ghost if he comes out."
"He better not come out," I muttered, lowering my head against the
falling rain.
A jagged bolt of white lightning crackled across the sky.
I shivered.
"Come up with us," Terri told the three of them. "You can't help us way
down here."
They hung back. I could see the fear on their faces.
"Come up to the cave entrance," Terri urged. "You can always run down the
rocks if the ghost appears."
Louisa shook her head. "We're too afraid," she confessed.
"We need your help," Terri insisted. "We don't want the ghost to know
we're on top of the cave. Come stand on the ledge in front of the cave.
Then — "
"No! He'll hurt us! He'll eat us up!" Nat cried.
"Jerry and I can't go up there again unless you come up to help us,"
Terri insisted firmly.
Louisa and Sam exchanged frightened glances. Nat clung to Louisa,
trembling. The rain swept down harder.
Finally Sam nodded. "Okay. We'll wait for you at the cave mouth."
"We don't mean to be so frightened," Louisa added. "It's just that we've
been afraid of him our whole lives. He — he — " Her voice trailed off.
We turned and started our climb. It was much harder this time. It was so
much darker without the moon. Rain kept blowing into my eyes. And the
rocks were slippery and wet.
I stumbled twice, fell forward, scraping my knees and elbows. The wet
rocks kept sliding under my sneakers, rolling down toward the beach.
Another jagged bolt of lightning stretched across the sky, making the
cave glow white above us.
We stopped at the ledge in front of the dark cave mouth. My entire body
trembled. From the rain. From the cold. From fear.
"Let's just warm up inside for a moment," Terri suggested.
The three Sadlers clung together. "No, we can't. We're too scared,"
Louisa replied.
"Just for a second," Terri insisted. "Just to wipe the rain from our
eyes. Look — it's coming down in sheets."
She practically shoved Louisa and her brothers into the cave. Nat began
to cry. He held on tightly to his sister.
A roar of thunder made us all jump.
This is the dumbest thing I have ever done, I thought, shivering.
I will never forgive Terri for this. Never.
And then a yellow light flared in front of us at the mouth of the cave.
And under the yellow light, the old ghost flickered into view. He carried
a flaming torch in one hand. A strange smile played over his pale face.
"Well, well," he uttered in a voice just loud enough to be heard over the
rain. "Here we all are."
25
"Nooo!" Nat let out a terrified wail and tried to bury his head in his
sister's wet T-shirt. Sam and Louisa froze like statues. The flickering
light of the torch revealed expressions of horror on their faces.
Harrison Sadler stood in the cave entrance blocking our escape. His dark,
sunken eyes peered from one of us to the next.
Behind him, the rain crashed down, glowing eerily from flashes of bright
lightning.
He turned his attention to Terri and me. "You brought the ghosts to me,"
he said.
"You're the ghost!" Sam cried.
Nat wailed, his arms wrapped tightly around Louisa's waist.
"You have terrified people long enough," the old man told the three
trembling kids. "More than three hundred years. It is time for you to
leave this place. Time for you to rest."
"He's crazy!" Louisa cried to me. "Don't listen to him!"
"Don't let him fool you," Sam added with emotion. "Look at him! Look at
his eyes! Look where he lives — all alone in this dark cave! He's the
three-hundred-year-old ghost. And he's lying to you!"
"Don't hurt us!" Nat wailed, clinging to Louisa. "Please don't hurt us!"
The rain suddenly slowed. Water splattered off the rocks outside and
dripped steadily from the top of the cave. Thunder rumbled, but in the
distance. The storm was moving out to sea.
I turned and caught the strangest expression on my sister's face. To my
surprise, Terri was actually smiling.
She caught me staring at her. "The solution," she whispered.
And I suddenly realized why she had agreed to come back to this
frightening cave, to face the frightening old man again.
Terri wanted to solve the mystery. She needed to solve it.
Who was the ghost?
Was it Harrison Sadler? Or was Harrison telling us the truth? Were our
three friends the ghosts?
My sister is really crazy, I thought, shaking my head. She risked our
lives because she had to solve the mystery.
"Let us go," Sam told the old man, breaking into my thoughts. "Let us go,
and we won't tell anyone we saw the ghost."
The torchlight dipped low as a strong gust of wind invaded the cave.
Harrison's eyes seemed to grow darker. "I've waited too long to get you
here," he said quietly.
Louisa suddenly reached out to Terri. "Help us!" she cried. "You believe
us — don't you?"
"You know we're alive, not ghosts," Sam said to me. "Help us get away
from him. He's evil, Jerry. We've seen his evil our whole lives."
I turned from Harrison to the three kids.
Who was telling the truth? Who was alive? And who had been dead for over
three hundred years?
Harrison's face hovered darkly in the dipping, waving torchlight. He
pushed his long, stringy hair off his forehead with his free hand. And
then he startled us all by puckering his dry lips and letting out a long,
high-pitched whistle.
My heart skipped a beat. I gasped. What was he doing? Why was he making
that shrill sound?
He stopped. Then whistled again.
I heard the scraping of footsteps, rapid footsteps on the stone cave
floor.
And then a low, dark figure came loping toward us out of the darkness.
26
A monster! I thought.
A ghost monster.
It uttered low, menacing growls as it neared. Its head bobbed low, and
two red eyes flared as the creature bounded into the light of the flaming
torch.
"Oh!" I cried out as I saw that it was a dog. A long, lean German
shepherd.
The dog stopped a few feet in front of us. When it saw Harrison, it bared
its teeth. Its growl became a ferocious snarl.
Dogs can recognize ghosts, I remembered.
Dogs can recognize ghosts.
The dog's red eyes caught the light of the torch as it turned to Louisa
and her two brothers.
It reared back on its hind legs — and began to howl and bark.
"They're the ghosts!" Harrison Sadler cried triumphantly to Terri and me,
pointing.
Snarling, the big dog leaped at Sam.
With a cry of fright, Sam raised both arms to shield himself.
The three kids edged deeper into the cave.
The dog barked fiercely, baring its jagged teeth.
"You — you really are ghosts?" I cried out.
Louisa let out a pained sigh. "We never had a chance to live!" she cried.
"The first winter — it was so horrible!" Tears rolled down her cheeks. I
saw that Nat was crying, too.
The dog continued to snarl and rage. The three kids backed farther into
the dark chamber.
"We sailed here with our parents to start a new life," Sam explained in a
trembling voice. "But we all died in the cold. It wasn't fair! It just
wasn't fair!"
The rain started up again. The wind blew sheets of water into the cave
entrance. The torch flame dipped and nearly blew out.
"We never had a life at all!" Louisa cried.
Thunder roared. The cave seemed to shake. The dog growled and snarled.
And as I stared at the three kids in the wavering light, they began to
change.
Their hair dropped off first. It fell in clumps to the cave floor.
And then their skin peeled away, curling up and falling off — until three
grinning skulls stared at Terri and me through empty eye sockets.
"Come stay with us, cousins!" Louisa's skull whispered. Her bony fingers
reached out toward us.
"Join usssss!" Sam hissed. His fleshless jaw slid up and down. "We dug
such nice graves for you. So close to ours."
"Play with me," Nat's skull pleaded. "Stay and play with me. I don't want
you to go. Ever!"
The three ghosts moved toward us, their skeleton hands outstretched,
reaching, reaching for Terri and me.
I gasped and stumbled back.
I saw a frightened Harrison stagger back, too.
And then the torch blew out.
27
The torchlight flickered and died.
The heavy darkness made me gasp.
I could feel bodies moving, scraping over the wet stone cave floor.
I could hear the whispered pleas of the three ghosts.
Closer. Closer.
And then a cold hand gripped mine.
I screamed before I heard her whispered voice: "Jerry — run!"
Terri!
Before I could catch my breath, my sister was pulling me through the
darkness.
Into the rain. Onto the slippery rock ledge.
"Run! Run!" Terri cried, her eyes wild, her cold hand still gripping
mine.
"Run! Run!"
The word became a desperate chant.
"Run! Run!"
But as we struggled to lower ourselves down the rocks, the roar of
thunder drowned out Terri's shouts.
The ground shook.
My legs nearly slid out from under me.
I cried out when I realized the roar in my ears wasn't thunder.
Half-blinded by the rain, Terri and I spun around in time to see the
rocks topple from the top of the cave.
The rain and wind must have loosened them. And now the big boulders
rumbled down, cracking, knocking against each other, bumping, and
rolling.
Rock after rock, thudding onto the stone ledge.
Until the dark cave mouth was completely covered.
Shielding my eyes from the rain with both hands, I peered up at the cave,
and waited.
Waited to see if anyone would come out.
But no one did.
No ghostly kids.
No old man.
Harrison Sadler had given his life to capture the ghosts.
The cave glimmered white in a flash of lightning.
Now it was my turn to pull Terri away. "Let's go," I pleaded.
But she didn't budge. She stood staring through the rain at the closed-up
cave.
"Terri — please. Let's go. It's over," I said, tugging her away. "The
mystery is solved. The terror — it's all over."
28
A few minutes later, Agatha threw open the front door of the cottage and
rushed out to greet us. "Where were you? Brad and I were worried sick!"
She ushered us in, fussing over us, shaking her head, talking excitedly,
glad we were back safe and sound.
Terri and I got dried off and into clean clothes.
The rain had stopped by the time we joined Brad and Agatha in the kitchen
for steaming mugs of hot cider. Outside the kitchen window, the wind
still blew the trees, sending water cascading down from the leaves.
"Now tell us what happened to you," Brad said. "Agatha and I really were
terribly upset that you were out in this storm."
"It's kind of a long story," I told them, warming my hands on the hot
cider mug. "I don't know where to start."
"Start at the beginning," Brad said quietly. "That's usually the best
place."
Terri and I did our best to tell them the whole story of the three
ghostly kids, the old man, and the frightening cave. As we talked, I
could see their expressions changing.
I could see how worried they were for Terri and me. And I could see how
unhappy they were that we had ignored their wishes and ventured into the
cave.
When I finished the story, the room grew quiet. Brad stared out the
window at the dripping rainwater on the glass. Agatha cleared her throat,
but didn't speak.
"We're really sorry," Terri said, breaking the silence. "I hope you're
not angry at us."
"The important thing is that you're both safe and sound," Agatha replied.
She stood up, stepped over to Terri, and gave her a warm hug.
Agatha started toward me, her arms outstretched — when a sound outside
made her stop.
Barking. Loud dog barking.
Terri lunged for the back door and pulled it open. "Jerry — look!" she
cried. "It's Harrison Sadler's dog. He got out of the cave. He must have
followed us here."
I moved to the open doorway. The dog had been drenched in the rain. Its
wet gray fur was matted to its back.
Terri and I reached out to pet the dog.
But to our surprise, it reared back and growled.
"Easy, boy," I said. "You must be really frightened, huh?"
The dog snarled at me and started to bark.
Terri bent down and tried to soothe the animal. But it backed away from
her, barking ferociously.
"Whoa!" I cried. "I'm your friend — remember? I'm no ghost!"
Terri turned to me, her expression puzzled. "You're right. We're not
ghosts. Why is it carrying on like that?"
I shrugged. "Whoa. Easy, boy. Easy."
The dog ignored my pleas, barking and howling.
I turned back to see Brad and Agatha huddled against the kitchen wall,
their faces tight with fear.
"That's only Brad and Agatha," I told the dog. "They're nice people. They
won't hurt you."
And then I swallowed hard. My heart began to throb.
I realized why the dog was barking like that. He was barking at Brad and
Agatha.
Agatha stepped into the doorway, shaking her finger at the snarling
animal. "Bad dog!" she cried. "Bad dog! Now you've given away our secret,
too!"
Terri gasped. She realized what Agatha was saying.
Agatha slammed the kitchen door hard and turned back to Brad. "What a
pity that dog had to show up," she said, shaking her head fretfully. "Now
what do we do with these two kids, Brad? What do we do with the kids?"

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