Witch, p.1

Witch, page 1

 

Witch
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Witch


  Witch

  Elizabeth Peters

  Writing as

  Barbara Michaels

  For Katie and Cal

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  ACCORDING TO THE DIRECTIONS ELLEN HAD RECEIVED from the real…

  Chapter 2

  “YOUR HOUSE HAS A WHAT?”

  Chapter 3

  THE NEXT TWO MONTHS PASSED WITH UNBELIEVABLE speed. At the…

  Chapter 4

  THE FOLLOWING EVENING ELLEN DRESSED FOR HER dinner engagement with…

  Chapter 5

  BY THE END OF THE WEEK ELLEN HAD ALMOST FORGOTTEN…

  Chapter 6

  LUCKILY THERE WAS LITTLE TRAFFIC ON HIGHWAY 624. Ellen drove…

  Chapter 7

  WILL CAME BY THE NEXT MORNING TO REPAIR THE screen…

  Chapter 8

  IT WAS SEVERAL DAYS BEFORE ELLEN GOT BACK TO town.

  Chapter 9

  THE NEXT DAY WAS THE KIND VIRGINIANS BRAG about and…

  Chapter 10

  ELLEN WAS BECOMING ADEPT AT RATIONALIZING the eccentricities of her…

  Chapter 11

  ELLEN WAS AWAKENED BY THE SOUND OF MORRIE’S snores. Squinting…

  Chapter 12

  ELLEN WENT TO THE WINDOW. TIM HELD THE DRAPERIES back…

  Chapter 13

  ELLEN WAS STANDING BY THE KITCHEN WINDOW when Jack came…

  About the Author

  Praise

  Other Books by Barbara Michaels

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Chapter 1

  ACCORDING TO THE DIRECTIONS ELLEN HAD RECEIVED from the real estate agent, the house was in a clearing in the woods. Gently perspiring in the hot office, Ellen had thought wistfully of cool forest glades. April in Virginia is unpredictable; this particular day might have been borrowed from July, and the small-town office was not air-conditioned.

  An hour later, after bumping down rutted lanes so narrow that tree branches pushed in through the car windows, Ellen was inclined to consider “clearing” a wild exaggeration. She started perspiring again as soon as she turned off the highway. No breeze could penetrate the tangled growth of these untamed forests; moisture weighted the air.

  At any rate, this must be the house, though it more resembled a pile of worn logs overgrown by honeysuckle and other vines. There was a window, shining with an unexpected suggestion of cleanliness; presumably there was also a door somewhere under the tangle of rambler roses in front. Ellen switched off the ignition and sat staring at the structure. Amusement replaced her initial chagrin over her car’s scratched paint and abused shock absorbers.

  Clearing or glade, the place was beautiful. Pale-white stars of dogwood shimmered against the green background of pines, and sprays of wild cherry and apple shook feathery branches over the car. Bright-yellow daffodils persisted through clumps of harsh weed, and some of the overgrown bushes threatening the house were lilacs. One was a mass of lavender bloom; the piercing scent triumphed over the smell of her exhaust.

  Now that the car’s engine was stopped, the place had an uncanny quiet. It was an eerie spot altogether, as mysterious in its way as a gloomy Gothic castle under midnight skies. In these woods time had no meaning. They had not changed in centuries, and there was a feeling of occupation not wholly human. It was a fairy-tale place; but the creatures who came here for twilight revels would not be the sequined, muslin, and cheesecloth sprites of children’s stories. Hooved and feathered and furred, they would move upright, with slitted unblinking animal eyes peering out of narrow human faces.

  Ellen leaned back and reached in her purse for a cigarette. She enjoyed her fantasies, and she was in no hurry to confront the problematical inhabitant of the house. With a smile, she recalled the warning of Rose Bates, the real estate agent who had sent her here.

  “I can’t even show you the house,” Rose had grumbled. “Ed won’t let anybody but him take people there. You’ll have to go to his place first. I sure do hate to let you go there all alone. I’d go with you, only that old rascal won’t let me in.”

  Ellen felt a certain sympathy for the unknown Ed. Rose, who had insisted on first names from the start of their acquaintance, was a caricature of her professional type—energetic, cheery, insistent. However, Ellen couldn’t complain about Rose’s professional zeal. They had driven all over the county in a search for Ellen’s dream house. Once or twice Ellen had been rudely hilarious about a square red brick horror that Rose proudly presented as the latest in modern comfort. Rose obviously found her client an irritation and an enigma, and this last offering was one of desperation.

  “That house of Miss Highbarger’s that Ed just inherited sounds like it might be your cup of tea. It’s old enough, goodness knows; parts of it go back to the Revolution. There’s about thirty acres goes with it—right on the edge of the Blue Ridge, lots of trees and scenery and all that. Yes, it might do for you. But Ed…”

  “What’s wrong with Ed?” Ellen inquired. “He sounds rather eccentric; he wouldn’t—”

  “No, no.” The other woman blushed. “I wouldn’t let you get into anything like that. Ed hates women.”

  “That,” said Ellen, “is not necessarily a guarantee.”

  Rose gave her a shrewd, surprised look. The surprise was not at the sentiment, with which Rose clearly agreed, but at the fact that her client should be familiar with such a cynical truth.

  Ellen knew Rose considered her impractical and unworldly. She looked younger than her thirty-eight years; careful diet and professional beauty care, those luxuries of the middle classes, had kept her fair hair shining, had preserved the soft texture of her skin and the slim lines of her figure. It was not only her appearance that the older, country-bred woman unconsciously resented; it was her urban background, her accent, her clothes, her manner.

  “It’s no guarantee,” Rose agreed drily. “There’s Joe Muller, out there in Chew’s Corners; kicks dogs, shoots cats, beats his wife and abuses his kids. He has fourteen children, and not all by Mrs. Muller…. Well, but like I said, you don’t need to worry about Ed. He’s a mean old rascal, but he’s a gentleman. You’ll be all right with Ed—if you can find him. He lives off by himself in a kind of shack in the woods. Here, I’ll draw you a map.”

  The map had been adequate. Ellen glanced at it once more. Yes, this had to be the place, and she might as well stop procrastinating. There was still no sign of life from the house. Although she was mildly apprehensive about the eccentric Ed, she hoped he was at home; it would be maddening to have made the trip for nothing. She got out of the car, dropped her cigarette on the ground, and stepped on it; and then jumped back as a voice shook the air.

  “Madame! Kindly do not drop pollutants on my property!”

  Ellen glanced wildly about the clearing. There was no one in sight. However, a shuddering movement in the rose bushes suggested the possibility of a person behind them. Obediently she bent over and picked up her cigarette butt. Her white gloves were not improved by the gesture.

  A more violent shudder of the roses produced, obstetrically, a human form. This was no baby; it was a tall, erect old man with gold-rimmed spectacles and an incredible beard. As Ellen approached she noticed the spectacles were held together with tape and that the beard was curly. It was a gray beard, and it reached the man’s belt. His shirt sleeves—and, presumably, the rest of that garment—were of rough blue homespun. The eyes behind the spectacles were a vivid, piercing blue.

  “You have come, despatched by that abominable female in Warrenton, in regard to the house of my late aunt?” said a voice from amid the beard.

  “I have,” said Ellen.

  “Then you may come in.”

  The man stepped back, flinging a curtain of green leaves over his arm as the Scarlet Pimpernel might have flung his cloak. A door was disclosed. Ellen stepped under the roses and entered. The man followed. He did not close the door.

  “I am Edward Salling.”

  “Ellen March.”

  “Mrs. March? How do you do.”

  He bowed with courtly grace. With the same punctilious courtesy, Ellen was offered a chair and a cup of tea. She accepted both, although she was under no illusions as to her host’s real feelings. Ed was a gentleman, and would do the proper thing if it killed him, but he wasn’t enjoying her company. The haste with which he left the room, to prepare tea, closely resembled flight.

  Left alone, Ellen surveyed the room with pleasure. It was surprisingly clean and furnished with austere simplicity. The furniture was all out in the middle of the room, for every inch of wall space, except that occupied by windows and doors and fireplace, was covered with books.

  When Ed reappeared with a tray, Ellen was standing in front of one of the bookshelves. She had forgotten her host’s wariness; she turned with a broad smile.

  “You’ve got the Henty books! I haven’t read them for years; I used to love them.”

  The cold blue eyes softened a trifle, but Ed was not so easily wooed. He put the tray on the table and gestured, as a nobleman might have done, for her to pour.

  “I still read them,” he said. “I am able to indulge myself in a rare pleasure: to please myself in all things. You will observe also more intellectual volumes.”

  The touch of vanity tickled Ellen.

  “Yes, indeed,” she said. “Do you like Joyce? I’m embarrassed to admit I never could read Ulysses. I love his poetry, though.”

  She continued her assault on Ed’s susceptibilities and won a few more icy twinkles before he indicated that it was time to inspect his aunt’s house. They would take his truck.

  Like Ed’s other possessions, the truck was old and impeccably maintained. It lived in a shed behind the house, but did not appear to be frequently used. Ed carefully dusted off the seat before handing Ellen in. As he took his place, she remarked,

  “I’d have thought you would have a car with four-wheel drive. It must be hard getting out of here in the winter.”

  “I don’t get out of here in the winter,” said Ed.

  Ellen felt she ought to have anticipated the reply. She could picture Ed reveling in wood fires, books, and tinned soup, while the drifts piled up outside. Before she had time to feel snubbed, Ed added,

  “You seem to know something about motor vehicles, Mrs. March.”

  It was the first thing he had said that might be classified as a personal remark. Ellen had wondered at his reticence; a seller of property may legitimately question the antecedents of a prospective buyer. Now, to her consternation, she felt a familiar impulse steal over her.

  Ellen’s “Ancient Mariner seizures” were a well-worn family joke. Her eldest nephew had coined the phrase, claiming that Ellen’s glittering eye, as she captured an unwilling listener, was reminiscent of Coleridge’s sailor. Her narrative lacked the ghoulish interest of the poem; she talked about herself and her family, in the most innocuous fashion, but she told her victim far more about that subject than he could conceivably want to know. Ellen had become self-conscious about the attacks, but she was helpless to control them when they came on, even though part of her conscious mind remained detached and sarcastic, making silent comments on the imbecility of her conversation. This impish segment of consciousness now chuckled gleefully as Ellen took a deep breath and began.

  “Oh, I had to learn something about cars. My three nephews kept dragging home various old wrecks—jeeps, rusty trucks, cars without engines and engines without cars…. It was nice for me, they have always done most of the repair work on my cars, and they taught my daughter quite a bit. She’s younger than they are, you see, and she has always followed them around like a puppy. I’m going to miss all that service. I’ll miss them too, of course. But one has to let them go, doesn’t one?”

  “So the cliché informs us,” said Ed.

  “I’m too dependent on them,” said Ellen, ignoring this repressive comment. “It isn’t the kids who are dependent. They are ready and eager to go. My daughter is going to Europe this summer. Not alone, she’s only seventeen, I wouldn’t let her set off with a knapsack and her plane fare, like so many of these poor little souls. She’s going with a student group. Next fall, if I buy a house this far from Washington, she’ll board at the private school she has been attending as a day student. She can come down for weekends, and—”

  Her teeth bit painfully into her tongue as the car bounced over a rut in the road. Ed’s hands gripped the wheel as if he expected it to come loose. His eyes had a glazed look. The imp in Ellen’s mind sympathized, her inane chatter must be positively painful to a recluse who hated women. But Ellen was still in the throes of the seizure and went on remorselessly.

  “Two of my nephews are already in college and the third one is going next fall. So I felt this was the right time for me to make a change. The family is breaking up anyhow. And with Jack taking an overseas assignment…. He offered me the house—it’s in Bethesda, and it’s a lovely house, but it wasn’t ever my house. It was Jack’s and Louise’s. My sister’s. She loved it so much, and I missed her so, I couldn’t bear to change anything. She was so young. We never imagined there was anything wrong with her heart…. Well, it’s been almost ten years, you’d think I could accept it. Jack hasn’t, not really. But he’s always been wonderful; so cheerful and competent…. I was glad I could help him and the boys. Of course it was nice for me too. Penny and I were living in a cramped little apartment in town. I always got along well with the boys, and they really did need someone living at home, you know how boys are. Jack would have had to hire a housekeeper, and it isn’t easy to find a good one.”

  All right, all right, said the inner imp; you don’t have to convince Ed Salling of the purity of your motives for moving into your sister’s house, with her husband and her sons. You can’t even convince yourself, can you? Go on, tell him about Jack. How wonderful he is, how important. You’re dying to talk about him.

  “The house,” Ellen said aloud. She spoke too loudly, combating the silent inner voice, and Ed gave her a puzzled glance as he shifted down, preparatory to turning into the highway. “I’ve never had a house of my own, not really. First the apartment, and then Louise’s house. Now I mean to indulge myself. I inherited some money, you see—from an aunt….”

  Not from Louise, said the imp, jeering. Make sure he understands that. Nothing that would have belonged to Louise.

  “So you don’t need to wonder whether or not I can pay you,” Ellen went on, with a feeble laugh. The seizure was wearing off. “I mean, we haven’t discussed—”

  “I leave that sort of thing to the agent,” said Ed disdainfully. “Mrs. March, you don’t have to tell me all this.”

  The mood collapsed, as it always did, into depression and self-contempt.

  “I know,” Ellen said despondently. “I’m sorry. I get started and I just can’t stop. It must be so boring for people.”

  “I wouldn’t say it was boring, exactly.”

  Ellen glanced at Ed. The beard hid his mouth, but his voice sounded as if he might be smiling.

  “If your conversation has any defect, it is not lack of interest,” Ed said. “It is lack of coherence. Brevity, too, is conspicuously absent. If I understand you correctly, you have been keeping house for your widowed brother-in-law and his three sons. You have one daughter. Your brother-in-law is with one of those indecent federal agencies that interferes in the affairs of foreign nations. Now that your nephews are of college age and your brother-in-law is going abroad, in order to interfere further, you have decided to buy a quaint old house in the country. Here you will search your soul…. I beg your pardon. I am becoming personal, and ironic. I permit myself the latter folly, but not the former. Here, let us say, you will make a life for yourself. An admirable intention. I am strongly in favor of living one’s own life. I do not approve of interfering with the lives of others. However, I am about to make an exception. It astonishes me that I should wish to do so…. Are you a widow, Mrs. March?”

  “Divorced,” said Ellen, reeling under the sudden spate of words. “Years ago.”

  “Then I will give you a piece of advice. If you should decide to settle here, do not mention your divorce.”

  “You mean, lie?”

  “Lying is the most admirable of the social graces. If I do not recommend it in this case, it is only because it is impracticable. You would be found out. I merely suggest reticence.”

  “You have good reason to suggest that,” Ellen said, laughing. “I don’t always talk this way. Some situations bring it on; I don’t know why.”

  “I would think you are a naturally candid person. You can afford to be; you don’t strike me as the sort of woman who has guilty secrets. However, you must make allowances for the old-fashioned attitudes of small towns. Look about you, Mrs. March. We are coming into Chew’s Corners. A euphonious name, is it not? This will be your marketing center, if you purchase my house.”

  Ellen looked. She had come from the other direction, so this was her first glimpse of the village. It was only a few blocks long. The houses were elderly and sedate, sitting back from the road and surrounded by fine old trees. There were sidewalks. Along them children rode tricycles and women pushed baby carriages. Ed had slowed, obeying the speed limit posted on the outskirts, and Ellen saw that their stately progress attracted stares from the pedestrians they passed. Ed appeared to be concentrating on his driving, but after a moment he commented.

  “They are staring at me, Mrs. March, not at you. I seldom come here. I am, you know, the town eccentric.”

 

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