Page 65 of The Shape of Night

“She was fair-haired,” says Mrs. Dickens. “Like her mother, Michelle.”

And unlike me. Unlike all the other women who have died in Brodie’s Watch.

“Did you know the mother very well?” I ask.

“Michelle attended my church. Volunteered at the school. She did everything a mother’s supposed to do, yet she couldn’t keep her daughter from making astupidmistake. She died a few years after Jessie did. They said it was cancer, but I think what really killed her was losing her child.”

Maeve looks at me. “I’m surprised an accident like that didn’t make it into the local newspaper. I didn’t find anything about a girl dying at Brodie’s Watch.”

“There were no articles,” says Mrs. Dickens.

“Why not?”

“Because of who the other kids were. Six teenagers from the most prominent families in town. Do you think they wanted everyone to know their darling children smashed a window and broke into a house? Did lord-knows-what mischief in there? Jessie’s death was a tragedy, but why compound it with shame? I think that’s why the editor agreed not to publish the names or the details. I’m sure arrangements were made to repair any damage to the house, which satisfied the owner, Mr. Sherbrooke. The only thing that showed up in the newspaper was Jessie’s obituary, and it said she died from an accidental fall on Halloween night. Only a few people ever knew the truth.”

“So that’s why it didn’t turn up in my search of the archives,” says Maeve. “Which makes me wonder how many other women have died in that house that we don’t know about.”

Mrs. Dickens frowns at her. “There were others?”

“I’ve found the names of at least four other women. And now you’ve told us about Jessie.”

“Which makes it five,” Mrs. Dickens murmurs.

“Yes, five. All of them female.”

“Why are you asking all these questions? Why are you interested?”

“It’s for the book I’m writing,” I explain. “Brodie’s Watch plays a big part in it and I want to include some history of the house.”

“Is that the only reason?” Mrs. Dickens asks quietly.

For a moment I don’t respond. She doesn’t press me for an answer, but just by the way she watches me, I know she’s already guessed the real reason for my questions.

“Things have happened in the house,” I finally answer.

“What things?”

“They make me wonder if the house might be…” I give a sheepish laugh. “Haunted.”

“Captain Brodie,” Mrs. Dickens murmurs. “You’ve seen him?”

Maeve and I glance at each other. “You’ve heard about the ghost?” says Maeve.

“Everyone who grew up in this town knows the stories. How the ghost of Jeremiah Brodie still lingers in that house. People claim they’ve seen him standing on the widow’s walk. Or staring out the turret window. When I was a child, I loved hearing those stories, but I never really believed them. I assumed it was something our parents told us to make us stay away from that wreck of a place.” She gives me an apologetic look. “That was before you moved in, of course, when it reallywasa wreck. Broken windows, a rotting porch. Bats and mice and whatever other vermin lived inside.”

“The mice are still there,” I admit.

She gives a faint smile. “And they always will be.”

Maeve says, “Since you grew up in this town, you must remember Aurora Sherbrooke. She used to live in Brodie’s Watch.”

“I knew who she was, but I didn’t really know her. I don’t think many people did. She’d come into town every so often to buy groceries, but that was the only time anyone saw her. Otherwise, she stayed up there on that hill, all alone.”

With him. He was all she required for company. He gave her what she needed, just as he gives me what I need, whether it’s the comfort of an embrace or the dark pleasures of the turret. Aurora Sherbrooke would not have shared that detail with anyone.

Neither will I.

“When she passed on, I don’t remember any questions being raised about how she died,” says Mrs. Dickens. “The one thing I do remember is that she’d been dead for a few days when her nephew found her.” She grimaces. “That must have been an awful sight.”