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  The Dead Lands

  A Mockingbird Bay Mystery

  By

  Rick Hautala

  JournalStone

  San Francisco

  Copyright © 2014 by Rick Hautala

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  JournalStone books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:

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  The views expressed in this work are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

  ISBN: 978-1-940161-30-3 (sc)

  ISBN: 978-1-940161-31-0 (ebook)

  ISBN: 978-1-940161-32-7 (hc)

  JournalStone rev. date: February 7, 2014

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2013952623

  Printed in the United States of America

  Cover Design: Denise Daniel

  Cover Art: Glenn Chadbourne

  Edited by: Elizabeth Reuter

  Mockingbird

  Bay

  Prolog

  Busted

  “And just where have you been, young man?”

  Busted, Mike thought, freezing the instant he heard his mother’s voice behind him.

  He turned and saw her standing in the kitchen doorway, both hands planted firmly on her hips. He’d been trying to sneak into the house undetected so he could go up to his room and pretend he’d been up there all along. He could claim he’d been sleeping on the patio out back and hadn’t heard her call him to help carry in the groceries.

  He should have known she’d catch him red-handed.

  “Umm … nowhere.”

  “And where’s your sister? She’s supposed to be watching you.”

  “I don’t need—” Mike started to say, but his voice died away.

  A sharp pain stabbed him between the shoulders when he shrugged, holding his hands palms up as if he were absolutely helpless.

  “She’s supposed to be keeping an eye on you … not the other way around.”

  As always, Mike thought his mother lost her patience with him a lot more than she did with his older sister. Maybe it was because Megan’s last name, McGowan, wasn’t the same last name as his—Ryder. That was because his mother, Caroline, had divorced her first husband, James, who was Megan’s real dad.

  “I hope you two weren’t out at Fort Williams.”

  Mike didn’t answer her right away.

  He couldn’t.

  He sure as heck wasn’t going to lie, but he couldn’t very well tell the truth without getting both him and Megan into some deep, deep trouble.

  “Please tell me you weren’t out at Fort Williams!”

  Mike bit down hard on his lower lip, trying not to blurt out the truth. If he lied now, his mother would find out the truth sooner rather than later.

  She always did, and after what he had seen …

  “Umm … yeah, well … kinda,” he said, knowing even as he said it that his answer wasn’t going to satisfy his mother.

  “What do you mean kind of? You either were or you weren’t.”

  His mother’s eyes fluttered as she took a shuddering breath and then let it out with a heavy sigh of frustration.

  “You know you’re not supposed to go out there, not without an adult.”

  “We weren’t really at the fort.”

  Mike narrowed his eyes, silently praying that his mother would be satisfied with that and stop grilling him. He was t-h-i-s close to breaking down and saying what had happened—what he thought had happened—and then both he and his sister would be in deep doo-doo. They’d be grounded for weeks, at the least, and it would be even worse when, later, Megan took out her anger on him.

  When she gets home …

  If she gets home …

  He was worried because he had seen … something—he wasn’t exactly sure what—out at the park … something that frightened him so much he wasn’t sure if it had been real or if he had imagined it.

  “You weren’t fooling around out on the cliffs, I hope.”

  Mike narrowed his eyes, wishing he could disappear as he shook his head in denial.

  “How many times do I have to tell you I don’t want you going out there? Those cliffs are dangerous.”

  “I wasn’t on the cliffs … Honest!”

  At least he wasn’t lying about that! He had spent most of his time climbing around the rocks of the old World War II fortress.

  “How about your sister? … Did she go with you?”

  Mike shrugged tightly even though he knew perfectly well that his sister had done worse … much worse. She had actually gone out to the cliffs. She went out there all the time. Just last night she had told him she was going there today to meet someone. When he had asked who, she’d told him to mind his own damn business.

  And that’s what he’d done.

  Sort of.

  Earlier today, he’d followed Megan to see what she was up to until she started down one of the winding dirt paths that led out onto the rugged cliffs overlooking the ocean. Remembering his mother’s repeated warnings, he’d started off in another direction. He wasn’t going to get into trouble like Megan was when—not if, when—their mother found out.

  “I asked you a question, young man.”

  Mike shrugged again, staring blankly at the floor and bracing himself for what was coming next.

  “Do I need to give you a lickin’? Is that it? You’re ten years old, for God’s sake. I would think you’d be too old for spankings.”

  “I am,” Mike said, involuntarily covering his butt with both hands as if that would protect him.

  “When was the last time you saw her?”

  “You mean Megan?”

  “Of course I mean Megan!”

  “I … I’m not sure.”

  He could see that his mother was really more worried than angry, and he wondered how much angrier she would be if he told her he’d gone looking for Megan but had run straight home after he found one of her sneakers, the left one, on the trail.

  And there was no way he could tell her what else he had seen because he was so scared he was no longer sure himself.

  Abby

  There are times when I’m really dead, but they don’t last long.

  What happens is this. A mockingbird sings above my grave, and its song wakes me up. Not that I’m really asleep. For much of the time, I might truly be dead. Even though I died over a hundred years ago, I’m still not sure what being “dead” really means.

  But when the mockingbird sings above my grave, I wake up, and I know there’s something I have to do. Someone who has died more recently than I have needs help. So I leave my grave, find whoever it is, and do what I can to help them.

  I like helping people, even if they’re dead, but I should probably tell you a little about myself, first.

  My name is Abigail Cummings. When I was alive, everyone called me Abby. I was born in 1867 and was raised, an only child, on a small farm outside of Waynesboro, Virginia.

  I died in a shipwreck, off the coast of Maine in 1883.

  My mother’s name was Ruth Cummings. Everyone called my father Justin, but his real name was Justinius. Both of my parents passed before I did, and I haven’t seen
them since. That’s probably because I was a long way from home when I died.

  After my parents were dead, leaving me alone, I was going to live in Maine with my uncle, the Reverend George Wheeler, and his wife, my Aunt Lillian. She was my mother’s younger sister.

  I’m buried in the Old Settlers’ Cemetery, on a grassy bluff overlooking Willard Beach, in South Portland, Maine. I’m buried there, I suppose, because it’s close to where I died. The Faire Child, the ship that was bringing me to Maine, ran aground off Cushing’s Island during a storm. You can see the island from the cemetery.

  My uncle, Reverend Wheeler, and everyone else on board also died in the shipwreck. None of them are buried here in the Old Settlers’ Cemetery, and I don’t see any of them anymore, except for my uncle.

  I wasn’t ready for my life to end.

  I don’t think anyone really is, but I was only sixteen years old, and I had my whole life ahead of me. I wanted to get married and have children. And now I can’t.

  In many ways, I feel stuck here. I haven’t aged, so I’m still and always will be sixteen years old.

  Of course, I’ve experienced and learned a lot in the last hundred or so years, and I’ve changed in so many ways. I’m amazed how much people and how they talk to each other and treat each other has changed. I try to keep up.

  I’m still not certain what ultimately happens to our souls when we die. I don’t know because I’m still stuck here, halfway between life and death in this place I’ve come to call the Dead Lands.

  When I was young, my friends and I used to frighten ourselves by telling ghost stories.

  Now … I guess I am one.

  The mockingbird is singing.

  Chapter 1

  Awakening

  —1—

  The mockingbird sat on a branch in a stunted apple tree overhanging a weathered gravestone, its song filling the late October evening. The crisp, clear notes rose above the hissing sound of waves rushing against the shore and the distant cry of seagulls wheeling high overhead. The wind coming in off the ocean stirred the dry sea grass, making it clatter and snap. The apple tree’s limbs, lined with golden fire from the setting sun, creaked like old bones.

  Lying in her grave, her hands folded primly across her chest, Abby Cummings drifted closer and closer to consciousness. Then, after a timeless moment, her eyes opened, and she found herself staring up at the solid wall of darkness. The blackness flickered and hummed with coils of darker energy that tingled through her like electricity.

  But even this emptiness, Abby knew, wasn’t eternal.

  Even in death, there was no real death … at least, not for her.

  She lost all sense of time as she lay in her coffin and listened to the faint echoes of the mockingbird’s song. It could have been minutes or hours or even days or months as the melody continued.

  Her mind gradually cleared, and the sound awakened within her deep feelings and even deeper memories. Wave upon wave of sadness swept through her as she remembered and longed for everything she had lost so long ago … so long ago.

  Without conscious effort, Abby rose through the vacuum, floating like a misty vapor on the sea, like a feather being tossed about by errant breezes, a dandelion puff.

  Her mind cleared. She remembered with a shock that she was lying only six feet below the surface of the ground, but the journey up to the land of the living always seemed to take infinitely long. It was like flying through an endless tunnel with an impossible number of twists and turns.

  She closed her eyes, but that didn’t change anything. The darkness inside her mind was just as dense, just as deep, just as eternal as the nothingness around her. Bone-deep chills ran through her until—

  Finally!

  —she saw a hazy blur of bluish gray light spreading above her.

  “Welcome back to the Dead Lands,” she thought.

  —2—

  “What do you mean, you don’t know where she is? You were with her, weren’t you?”

  Mike withered beneath his father’s angry glare as he sat hunched on his bed, his hands folded and wedged between his knees. He was terrified of what might come next.

  “Um-hmm … yeah, well … kinda.”

  “What do you mean kinda? Either you were or you weren’t.”

  “We were together for a while … but then she … went off.”

  “Went off? … She went off where?”

  Mike shrugged as he glanced out the window. It was late in the afternoon, and night would come soon. Didn’t his father realize if he had the slightest clue where Megan was he would have told him by now?

  Did his father think he was stupid or something?

  “Was she with anyone else? Did she meet up with anyone?” His father was struggling not to yell at him.

  “Wha—what do you mean?”

  “Exactly what I said. Did you see her with anyone out there … Was there anyone with her?”

  His father’s face flushed deep red, and his left eyebrow started twitching the way it always did whenever he was about to lose his temper and get violent.

  “N-n-no …” Mike said. “Not that I know of … I-I-I dunno … Maybe—”

  Mike looked past his father to his mother, who was standing in his bedroom doorway. She was leaning against the frame, a worried, helpless expression twisting her features. Mike knew he wouldn’t be getting any sympathy from her, probably because she was afraid her husband might turn his anger on her, like he’d done a few times in the past. Mike knew he’d find no pity from either of them until they found out what had happened out there or until Megan showed up.

  “What if she’s been chatting on-line again?” his mother asked in a low, husky voice. “Some of those creeps who go on-line …” She shivered and hugged herself, her face a mask of worry.

  “We made it clear we want her to stop doing that.”

  “That doesn’t mean she did. Remember a while ago, when she was talking to that one guy?”

  Bob, her husband, glowered at her and started sawing his teeth back and forth across his lower lip. His face had gone pale except for the bright red vein lines on his nose and cheeks.

  “Maybe we should call the police,” Mike’s mother suggested.

  “They won’t do a damned thing. Besides, they can’t do anything for twenty-four hours.” He turned to Mike, his anger churning just below the surface like a geyser about to burst. “How about you and I take a little stroll out to the fort, young man, and you can show me exactly where you last saw her?”

  Mike’s throat closed off so he couldn’t speak, but he nodded his agreement. Anything to get himself off the hook.

  “Come on, then.”

  His father held out his hand and beckoned to him. Mike slid off his bed and started for the door, shying away from his father when he walked past him, afraid his father might swat him a good one on the way by.

  “I don’t know how many times I have to tell you two not to go out there,” his mother muttered, sounding thoroughly disgusted. She trailed behind them as they trod downstairs to the front foyer.

  When they were at the door, his mother asked if they wanted her to come with them.

  “No,” his father said, his voice snapping like a whip in the air. Mike turned to his mother, and for a split second was afraid again that his dad was going to take out his anger on her instead of him. “You have to be here in case she shows up. I’ll have my cell phone. Call me the second she shows up.”

  Mike’s mother pursed her lips and nodded curtly.

  “I will, but I still think we should notify the police now before too much time passes.”

  “That’s not necessary.”

  “But what if she arranged to … to meet one of those people from the internet … What if one of them’s a … a—”

  She couldn’t finish the thought, but she didn’t have to. Mike knew exactly what she meant, and the more he thought about it, the more worried he was because as much as he tried to forget it, he had seen someone out the
re. Even worse, with each passing moment he realized how it was already too late for him to tell them that he had found Megan’s left sneaker and had brought it home.

  It was hidden underneath his bed.

  That would have to remain his secret now, even if—God forbid—the police got involved.

  They were just heading out the door when the phone rang. Mike’s mother pivoted on her heel and strode into the kitchen. Mike winced when he heard her pick it up and say, “Hello.”

  There was a long pause during which all Mike could hear was his own pulse, thundering in his ears. He chanced to look at his father, whose face had gone pale, his eyes glazed. And then, from the kitchen, his mother let out a loud shriek that twisted up at the end until it no longer sounded human. And then she started screaming a single word over and over again.

  “No! … No! … No! … No! …”

  —3—

  Abby blinked and shook her head to clear it when she found herself standing in the long grass beside her tombstone. For a long while, she simply stared at her name and the dates of her birth and death carved into the weathered white marble. Once upon a time, the stone and inscription had been so sharp and new. Now, it was so worn she could barely read it.

  With a sigh, she turned and surveyed the Old Settlers’ Cemetery and its surroundings. The landscape was cast in a rich amber glow that froze everything in midmotion as the sun lingered on the western horizon.

  The strong breeze coming in off the ocean swirled like dark water around Abby. The long strands of her hair floated and twisted like tattered black silk in the wind, but she could not feel even the faintest trace of air across her skin.

  Oh, how she wished she could.

  A terrible sadness weighed down her heart as she tried to recall something as simple as how luxurious a cool breeze really felt as it caressed her face.