Finn Wakefield’s mind drifted as the old Toyota chugged around the Orleans rotary. Almost one year to the day when he and David made the same trip in October. The car made a complete loop, missing the Eastham exit as it began its second rotation. Finn saw the exit sign this time, but it didn’t register in his brain. The car began its third loop, barely going 20 miles per hour. An Amazon van entering from Route 6a honked, yanking his mind back into the here and now.
Finn cocked his head, as if shaking off water after an ocean swim. He was lucky he didn’t hit the van. The mental lapses were getting worse. At the end of third loop he made sure he got off at the exit. Once he entered Eastham, he took deep, slow breaths and lowered the window, letting the ocean air wash over him.
He lowered the passenger window to let a cross breeze wash over him. The salt air felt good. With most of the roadside beach shops closed for the season, the Outer Cape became a different place. A few pickup trucks parked at a roadside diner and the odd service van passing by were reminders that the summer traffic was over.
As he passed the National Seashore Park Information Center on the right, a pothole appeared in the middle of the tarmac. He swerved to the side to avoid it, spewing loose gravel over the embankment. Seconds later he saw a familiar white sign in black letters, Entering Wellfleet, 1763. Then it happened.
The panic attack came without warning. Finn’s heart felt like it wanted to jump out of his body. His hands turned moist, barely able to grip the steering wheel. The lorazepam was in his travel bag in the back seat. He took his foot off the gas pedal and let the car coast to the upcoming exit for Marconi Beach. The car rolled to a stop at the end of the exit. He immediately recognized the sign for White Cedar Swamp Trail. He knew the place from childhood and remembered there was a small parking lot nearby.
He cut the engine and leaned over the seat to grab his travel bag. His hand shook so much he spilled the white pills all over the passenger seat. He took one and put it under his tongue and took a deep breath.
Finn wondered if he had to endure the panic attacks for the rest of his life. The therapist reminded him ad infinitum that David’s death wasn’t his fault. Yet, he knew David was fragile in the last year of his life when he was putting together a collection of his murals for a major art exhibition. Finn usually checked in on him once a week, a text or phone call, sometimes stopping by, but David had become more withdrawn about face-to-face visits. The last week of his life Finn didn’t check in. He was too consumed with his own writing. He had to meet a deadline for a major piece he was working on about corruption in big pharma. He missed David’s goodbye voicemail the day he killed himself.
Finn took a deep breath and started the engine again. In the rear-view mirror he noticed a large Rottweiler sitting on its haunches, growling, with its eyes fixed on him. Finn felt a shiver run down his spine but managed to drive the car another 300 yards to a deserted parking space next to the cedar swamp trail head.
He got out of the car and sat down on the pavement, breathing slowly, and waited for the medication to take effect. His body felt drained, but his heart had stopped racing. He remembered walking on the trail with his parents and David, collecting deep blue Spiderwort wildflowers. That was the first time he realized his brother had artistic talent, sketching the flora and fauna as they walked. It was the first tine Finn started writing in a journal. Little did he know that walk would be a harbinger of their future passions; David becoming a mural artist and him a freelance investigative journalist.
The memories dissolved when a sudden wind blew through the scrub pine. Clouds moved in to block the sun. It looked like it might rain but just walking a bit more would do him some good. Finn wondered what triggered the panic attack this time? The road sign for Wellfleet? It made no sense. There were no bad childhood memories from the many times he had vacationed here with his family. Trying to figure it out got him nowhere.
In a few minutes he’d reach the seashore. A soft mist began to waft through the trees. The closer he got to the beach the denser the mist became. It seemed to hang in the air. Finn’s panic was gone, but he had a strange sense of disorientation as the mist wrapped around his ankles.
When the trail opened up onto a sand dune, the mist stayed behind among the cedars and pine. Finn stood on the dune watching the waves crash on the sand. No rain yet, but the wind and the fury of the waves signaled a storm. Gray clouds carpeted the sky. The bright October sun seemed like a distant memory.
Finn turned around, eager to get back to the car and make his way to the Airbnb. Once he stepped back on the trail the mist enveloped him, but the wind from the beach did not enter the forest. There was a stillness in the air. As he walked, the mist parted, only to collapse behind him in a miasmic curtain of gray. He could barely see the wooden boardwalk. Everything else turned into shifting shadows.
A filtered light made its way through the mist. He’d be out of the forest in seconds. He picked up his pace As soon as he did, he felt the presence of two people on either side of him. Must be his imagination in overdrive, but he still didn’t want to look to his side. The light became stronger now but so did their presence. One of the beings seemed hundreds of years old, the other one much younger, but both seemed blood related. He thought he heard a collective moan from them.
Finn stepped off the trail and into the parking lot. It was overcast, but there was no mist or fog. He looked back at the forest trail but saw or heard no one. He leaned against the car, trying to figure out what just happened. He thought he had heard a plea for help whispered by both entities. His mother had always told him she thought his fantasies would be the death of him. Christ, he must be in worse shape than he thought.
He rubbed his face and took the car key out of his pocket. As he started the engine, a light rain began to fall.
•••
The sun ducked in and out of the clouds just as Finn passed the Entering Truro, Inc. 1709 sign. The Airbnb host had written that the turn off was a half mile after the sign, across from a secondhand bookstore on the other side of Route 6.
The bright morning light had returned so he could now see the bookstore on the left side of the road. To the right was the turnoff for the Airbnb. As he slowed down, the name of the bookstore caught his eye. La Lumière Libraire was engraved over the entrance. On an impulse he turned the car to the left and drove into the bookstore’s gravel parking lot.
Finn got out and walked to the entrance. The front door was solid oak, burnished into a deep tan. It seemed out of place with the cracked pine and birch shingles making up the store’s exterior. He pushed it open and stepped inside. The place had a musty smell, not overwhelming, but definitely different from other indie bookstores he’d been to.
He made his way through the cramped aisles of literary fiction, mystery, and biography until he came to a bookshelf labeled, Legends and Stories of the Outer Cape. On the top shelf, a cat stared down at him. Finn couldn’t resist reaching up to rub the tabby’s chin. He whispered, “Aren’t you a pretty one.” The cat jumped down from the shelf, rubbing its body against Finn’s legs. He bent down to give it a small pat. The cat let him do it but then vanished into another corner of the store.
Finn smiled and turned his attention back to the bookshelf. One paperback title caught his eye, The Demonization of ‘Goody’ Hallett, by Josephine Dumoix. The name Hallett made him pause. He remembered reading something about a local Cape woman during colonial times accused of witchcraft. Just the book he needed for some escape.
The sound of a loud click interrupted his thoughts. In the rear of the store a counter light turned on, bathing an older woman in a sepia glow. Finn walked to the woman, ready to buy the book and get going to the Airbnb.
The woman behind the counter might have been 20 years older than him, maybe in her late 50s. Her long, dark braided hair fell over her shoulders. She wiped a strand away from her eyes, and Finn noticed how her slender fingers resembled those of a concert pianist. The chestnut skin color of her face highlighted the deep green of her eyes. In short, she was stunning.
The woman spoke first. “You bought the last copy of the book.”
Finn stuttered, “Oh yeah, looked interesting. Here for a few days and wanted to get lost in a good story.”
“I’d like to think it’s an important story. Not sure how good it is; few people know why I wrote it.”
“You’re?”
She made the slightest of smiles. “Yes, I’m Josephine Dumoix.”
Finn shifted his feet, feeling like an embarrassed schoolboy. “Nice to meet you. I’m Finn Wakefield.”
Josephine nodded an acknowledgment but said nothing. The cat scooted out from the shadows and jumped up onto the counter, pressing herself against Josephine. Both seemed to study Finn, as if taking stock of him.
Finn broke the silence. “I guess you’re the owner of the bookstore also. A twofer.” God, what a stupid comment.
Josephine seemed to smile again. “Yes, I’m both. Wrote that book 15 years ago and have owned the store for a good 30 years. Actually, it’s been in the family one way or another for around 100 years.”
“One way or another?”
“That’s a long story. More than you would want to hear, and more than I want to tell, at least for now.”
Finn wanted to ask her what she meant for at least now but thought it best just to leave it.
“How much do I owe you?”
“I believe it’s eight dollars. I can’t remember what I wrote on the inside cover.”
Finn opened the cover. “You’re right.” He handed her his credit card, pretending not to be spellbound by this strange woman.
“Do you want the receipt?”
“No, I’m good. Thanks again. Looking forward to reading it.” Finn put the book in his shoulder bag and walked toward the door.
As he pushed it open, he heard her say, “Good-bye. Until next time.”
He stopped halfway through the doorway and turned around, but she was gone Only the cat remained on the counter, curled up, with her eyes fixed on Finn.
•••
Finn threw her book onto the passenger seat and started the engine. An orange light lit up on the fuel gauge. The car was close to empty. He remembered that a Mobil station was just a half-mile up Route 6 toward Provincetown.
He made it to the station in less than a minute and started pumping gas into the Toyota. As he waited for the tank to fill up, he glanced over at Dumoix’s book. The cover had an image of a pine forest bathed in moonlight. In the background was a ghost like figure of a young woman running across the dunes. The click of the nozzle told him the tank was full, but he had a hard time taking his eyes away from the cover’s image until a car behind him honked to let him know it was waiting its turn. The credit card machine was broken so he rushed over to the convenience store to pay the bill. When he came out, he picked up a free magazine in the newsstand next to the door
Back in the car he dropped the magazine onto the seat next to Dumoix’s book. He could tell the guy behind him was annoyed he’d taken so long. Finn waved an apology and turned the car around to go back to the turn off for the Airbnb.
At the turnoff he made a left onto a dirt road that was littered with small potholes. The bumpy ride sent the magazine sliding over onto his lap. As he reached down to place it under the book, he noticed the cover image depicted a mural exhibit of mural art at the Provincetown Library. He slammed on the brakes. The memory of David’s planned art exhibit flooded into his mind. The mural on the magazine cover was nothing like David’s work. His murals focused on migrants crossing the Rio Grande into the United States. The Provincetown exhibit was of Commercial Street during a winter storm.
He sat in the car with the engine idling. His eyes darted back and forth between the magazine’s cover and the cover of Dumoix’s book. Both images collided in his mind to produce a sense of profound sadness, even though they had nothing to do with each other. Almost a half hour went by before he could press his foot down on the gas pedal.
•••
Dumoix’s book fell on the porch floor when Finn rolled out of the hammock. The Airbnb was in a perfect spot. No view of the sea, but you could hear the distant sound of waves at high tide. What he could see was salt marsh and scrub pine facing east toward the water. The late afternoon October light made the grasses shift in color from deep amber to light green and back again. He wished he had a partner to share the moment. With David’s loss he’d felt he didn’t deserve to be with someone.
Finn’s mind went back to Dumoix’s book. Her last lines haunted him. The sins of the past are with us today. Mehitable Hallett was not the demonic witch people claimed her to be. There are forces that are keeping her true story buried.
He wanted to go back to ask her what they meant, but he needed to walk along the beach and breath the air of the sea. A wooden path led from the cottage, cutting through the marsh until it reached the dunes. He finished the tea, put on some tick spray, and grabbed a pair of binoculars provided by the Airbnb host.
The marsh grasses poked up in between the wooden slats of the beach trail. Finn wondered what it would be like in the summer without long pants. The edges of the grass looked sharp. In October though the grass felt good rubbing against his legs. He wished he had more than a few days to spend in Truro.
The marsh turned into the familiar scrub pine as he neared the ocean. The trail then turned into worn earth and beaten down moss. Tree roots emerged from the earth, ready to trip up eager beach goers. Finn walked to the side of the trail to avoid them. Heat penetrated the soles of his shoes. Finn thought there might have been a fire, but he saw no evidence of charred vegetation.
He was about to walk on, but he stopped himself, thinking he heard a sound coming up from under the spot where he felt the heat. He stood quietly, but there was no sound except for the waves in the near distance. Finn tried to identify in his mind what he’d heard or thought he’d heard, but it eluded him.
He started walking again, this time picking up his pace. The sea had to be nearby. Less than a minute later the trees melted away into sand and dunes. A few more steps, and there it was. Finn took off his sneakers and ran down the dune toward the incoming tide.
Finn let the water chill his feet. The cold ran up the back of his legs. The drowsiness from the nap was gone now. He stood there letting the tide roll back and forth over his feet. At least for this one moment he felt alive without all the guilt and loneliness that stalked him after his brother’s death.
Finn wanted to get back to the cottage and write in his journal. He walked back to the top of the dune. As he bent down to put on his shoes, he noticed out of the corner of his right eye an odd shape. He squinted to get a better look. A stone structure jutted out from the forest. He took the pocket binoculars out of his jacket for a better look. It was a tower with a turret at the top, like that of a medieval castle. This was National Seashore. It shouldn’t be here.
There were still a few more hours of sunlight left so he thought he’d check it out, but it would mean leaving the trail and cutting through the thicket. He began to retrace his steps back to the cottage, hoping to see if there was a passage through the trees. Thirty yards in from the dunes he made out what could have been a path. The underbrush was cleared away from a line of beaten down twigs and moss that seemed to lead toward where he had seen the tower. He’d give it a try.
At times Finn either had to bend down or climb over broken branches. Trees were twisted into curved stick figures from the relentless winds coming in from the sea. The sun didn’t provide much light through the tree cover. He began to think this was not a smart move after all. He had a hard time figuring out how far ahead the tower was, if, in fact, he was even going in the right direction.
His body stiffened when he felt heat radiating through his shoes. This time it was like a warm ocean current rising up through his legs. Instinctively, he ran, pine needles scratching his arms as he stumbled forward. Then, out of nowhere, the forest ended, and a small meadow opened up. He tripped and fell onto cool moss. The heat was gone. The tower stood on the other side of the meadow casting a long shadow over his prone body.
Lying on the ground made the tower seem even more immense than it probably was. Still, a good 100 feet tall. Gray slabs of granite blocks rose to a crenelated roof.
He stood up and scanned the meadow. The brush and trees in front of the tower looked impenetrable. A little to his left, he saw a path, more formed than what he had just been on. Finn walked toward it, but hesitated for a second, jittery about the possibility about stepping on heated earth again. Was there some gas main underneath this part of the Cape? He’d never heard of that.
With a sigh he took his first step and then another. He walked quickly to find out if it circled around the tower. A minute later it opened into another clearing. Finn saw a small parking lot in front of a one-story metal warehouse. A pickup truck and bulldozer were parked to the side of the building. A black steel door guarded its entrance.
Finn walked across the parking lot toward the building. As he got closer, he saw a flickering yellow glow through a wire mesh window. Finn pressed himself against the window. The strange light came from a desk lamp on one of those old roll top desks. A man slid the lamp back and forth with one hand as his other hand furiously scribbled on a pad of paper. Behind him metal file cabinets lined the wall. It looked like a factory office out of the 1950s.
He stepped back from the window and went over to a rusting metal door and knocked.
He waited. No answer, but he thought he heard footsteps and furniture moving. The door muffled the sounds, even though the metal of the building itself seemed thin and cheaply made. He knocked again and waited. Still nothing. He was about to go back to the window when the door creaked open.
The man at the desk appeared. He was much bigger than Finn had imagined. Bent over the desk made him appear diminished, but now in front of him, he seemed like a bear on his hind legs. Finn took a step backwards.
The man’s feral eyes locked onto Finn as if they were coils of rope. Finn’s heart raced as he shifted back and forth on his feet.
The man broke the silence. “Yes, what is it? Why are you here?”
His tone was accusatory, a low, deep voice that almost felt like a gust of wind hitting Finn’s body. Finn tried to break eye contact with the man. He looked down at the ground before looking back up at him.
“Sorry to bother you. I was walking on the beach and saw this tower in the middle of the forest, so I’d thought I’d check it out. Went off the trail and ended up here by accident.”
The man’s eyes stayed locked onto Finn, but his voice became more conciliatory. “That tower’s a mistake. Put up years ago by a wealthy crack pot for some damn reason. It’s in bad shape. You should stay away.”
As the man spoke, Finn tried to size him up. The guy wore dirty work pants and a faded denim shirt. A name tag on the shirt pocket read, R.I.P. Cerberus, Groundskeeper.
“Oh, okay. So you work for the National Seashore?”
“Something like that. I just keep a lid on things around here.”
He paused and smirked before he said, “That road will take you back to where you belong.” He pointed to the far side of the building and turned to go back inside.
Finn thought better of asking more questions. Everything the guy said creeped him out.
The door shut, sounding like a bank vault being locked up for the night. The light from the desk lamp went out. An inky blackness filled the room.
Finn started walking toward the road. He stopped and said out loud,” Really? What am I doing?”
Finn turned around and walked across the clearing toward the path that led to the beach trail. He had the feeling the man was staring at him through the window. Without looking back, he stepped onto the path. The earth now felt cold as hell, but he didn’t stop walking.
•••
Finn got to the bookstore nearly an hour before it opened. His mind was on fire. He couldn’t wait to talk to Josephine Dumoix. What he saw with his own eyes, what he experienced in the forest, and his interaction with Cerberus cracked open another world. Dumoix was the only person he could talk to about what had happened.
He turned off the engine and stepped out of the car. The store’s front door was partly open. The cat sat in the open doorway. The cat cocked her head as Finn approached, but it didn’t run away. He bent down and stroked her chin. The cat leaned into his hand, clearly liking this greeting.
A voice from back of the store called out, “Mehty, bring Finn back here.”
The cat turned with tail pointed upright and sauntered toward Dumoix’s voice. He followed her through the dimly lit book aisles to the rear of the store. Dumoix sat at a round wooden table in a small open-air patio. A batch of raisin scones were placed on the table, along with a French press cannister of coffee.
“It’s all right Finn Wakefield. Come and sit down while the scones are still warm.”
Finn walked through the open glass doors of the patio. The morning sun bathed Dumoix in a halo of white light. Lilac colored aster hung from flowerpots around the edge of the patio, emitting a faint but pleasant aroma Finn couldn’t place.
“Please sit.”
Josephine put a scone on a small plate and pushed it across the table to him.
“Coffee?”
Finn nodded. She poured the deep black liquid into an expresso cup and slid it toward him.
“Black? This dark roast is best black.”
“Yeah, that’s fine.”
Finn sipped the brew, the taste velvety and slightly bitter. Feeling more collected, he looked down at the cat lying next to a flowerpot and said, “Mehty, a little like the character in your book?”
Josephine smiled, “More than a character, but yes, a little like in the book. And, your next question, was how did I know you would come here before the store opened? Just say, I put two and two together.”
“Two and two together?”
“I had a hunch you’d start reading my book and would have a lot of questions. And, well, once you started walking around that part of Truro, you’d have other questions. As for expecting you to come to see me this early, well, let’s leave it at intuition.”
Finn bit into the scone while she spoke. It tasted so good, warm, and not too sweet, that he didn’t feel like pressing her more about how credible her explanation was. After another bite, he said, “Right, should I tell you what happened after I left you yesterday?”
“I’m listening.”
•••
In the next 20 minutes Finn managed to eat two scones and give a detailed account of what happened in the forest and at the tower. Josephine listened with her eyes closed, taking in every word.
“Sorry, for going on. I don’t know. I just said a lot to a person I don’t really know.”
Josephine said softly, “I understand.”
“Look, I have a hundred questions about what I just dumped on you, I don’t even know where to begin.”
“I think it begins with Mehitable Hallett, my own flesh and blood.”
Finn’s mouth quivered. Stunned, he said, “I guess it’s my turn to listen.”
“I had to make sure you were the person I think you are. You risked your life yesterday, and you came back to me for answers. And now, you deserve to know about my history and my connection to Mehitable.”
Josephine arched her back and said. “My grandparents came up from New Orleans back in the 1900s. They were, what you call, mixed race, or Creole I suppose. My grandfather was a violinist and my mother had been a teacher. With their modest savings they were able to buy a small piece of land and turn an old cottage into the bookstore where we sit today.”
Finn blurted out, “Why did they leave New Orleans and come all the way here?”
Josephine nodded, “Yes, why? It wasn’t just because it was a vicious time for black folk in the South. It was vicious everywhere, though this part of the Cape was supposed to be more accepting for, what should I say, outsiders and people of the Bohemian persuasion. I only found out later in life, right before my mother died, that there was another reason they settled here, something more pressing.”
She paused again before speaking. “They came to make things right. To free Mehitable and clear her name. To do deal with Cerberus.”
Finn’s mouth turned dry. “I’m sorry. You lost me there.”
“When you told me what happened near the tower, I think you will be able to hear at least part of what I am going to say. In my book I mention that the legend of ‘Goody’ Hallett has her giving birth to a child from her pirate lover, Black Sam Bellamy. The legend says the baby died shortly after childbirth. This never happened. The baby lived and the baby was bi-racial. Black Sam Bellamy, the pirate, was of African descent, at least partially.”
“What happened to the child. Nothing I read on the Net about Bellamy said he was black or of mixed race.”
“Well, when it comes to race in this country, a lot of things are left out of history books and with legends even more so. I will just say that the baby was taken away from the Cape and ended up in New Orleans where she grew up as a free person of color.”
Josephine stood up and walked over to Finn, who looked dazed by what he’d heard. She put her hand on his shoulder.
“I sense you carry your own pain with you. I see it written on your face. I also have my own pain. Generations of my family have passed it on over the years, All my people have it in this country. In a way you have your own place in this history, which I believe you will come to understand. A first step in that understanding is to go back to that tower and confront Cerberus. Together.”
All of this was beyond what he could take in, but he trusted this woman, this woman who he just met yesterday. Maybe he was losing it, but it didn’t matter, he needed to know more. There seemed to be a story here, something that needed to be uncovered. As an investigative journalist that intrigued him.
“Okay, I’ll go back with you to that place, but you’ll have-”
She cut him off, “We need to go at midnight. I will meet you at your cottage. I will be at your side through it all.”
Finn nodded, not sure what through it all meant, but feeling strangely more alive than at any time since David’s death.
“Okay, midnight.” He got up, and at the same time Mehty jumped down from her perch. As he walked to the door, the cat trailed behind him.
•••
A half-moon bathed the pine forest in shafts of iridescent yellow and white light. It was hauntingly beautiful, but Finn was not in the mood to appreciate the night. He got up from the porch chair and began to pace. Five of 12. She’d be on time.
Why was he ready to share her mission? He’d kept telling himself that it was just a good story that should be checked out, even if a bit kooky. Then it struck him. David might have wanted him to do this. Leave his self-pity and help someone else. David would have had little patience for him being mired in guilt.
Finn didn’t hear Josephine climb the stairs to the porch. She waited until he turned around before she spoke.
“It’s time.” She added, “Do you have better shoes than those?”
Finn was less startled by her silent appearance than her statement. “My shoes?”
“You know already the ground near that tower can turn hot and freezing cold without warning. It’s likely to get worse tonight.”
If he hadn’t experienced the heat and cold himself, he would have politely ignored her, but he knew she was right. He saw that she wore boots that laced up several inches above her ankles.
“I don’t have anything like what you have on, but I did bring another pair of hiking shoes.”
She nodded and turned to look at the marsh. Finn disappeared into the cottage, returning a half a minute later with shoes that were made more for urban walking, but at the least the soles were thicker than his sneakers.
Finn came up next to her standing at the porch railing. Josephine kept her gaze fixed on the marsh and forest.
He said, “What do you see, what are you thinking?”
Without turning to look at him, she said, “Come. It’s time to do this.”
This time he couldn’t see the pine and cedar trees. The forest edge appeared as a dark curtain. The moonlight was blocked.
Josephine paused at this line of demarcation. She took out a rope from her shoulder bag.
“Here, take this.”
She handed him the rope and took the other end and wrapped it around her waist. Finn did the same. The rope stretched about ten feet between them.
“Follow my lead. No flashlight and turn off your phone.”
“How will we see through the dark.”
“I will see for both of us. Once we get to the tower, we won’t need the rope. There will be light at the clearing.”
“You’ve done this before?”
“Not like this. Hold onto the rope and follow right behind. Stay on the path.”
Finn was about to speak, but Josephine disappeared into the darkness. The rope became taut. Finn swallowed hard as she pulled him into the void.
•••
The pitch black of the forest seemed to suck up all sense of time and light. Josephine had led them close to the clearing. He made out the first shafts of light. The outline of the clearing near the tower became more pronounced.
She stopped once she reached the edge of the clearing. Finn caught up and stood next to her.
Josephine whispered, “How did your shoes hold up?”
Finn figured he should whisper back, “Good enough. In a few places it felt like there was a slight tremor or movement below my feet.”
“That would make sense.”
It didn’t make sense, but Finn waited for what she would say next.
“Thank you for doing this?”
“Right, you’re welcome, but I am not sure what we’re doing?”
“Lancing a wound. It’s my family’s wound but also, it’s yours.”
“I get the first part but not that last part. Mine?”
Josephine kept her eyes glued to the tower while speaking to Finn. “I know a burden weighs on you, but you’re helping me with a wound that has been part of this country’s past since Mehitable’s time.”
He didn’t understand what she said in a logical way, but he was beginning to understand that there was an injury done that was deep and-.
Josephine tugged his sleeve and said softly, “Listen, do you hear that?”
In the still of the night Finn heard a faint rustling in the undergrowth near the tower.
Josephine pointed toward the tower. “Look, can you see that?”
In the darkness a crouched figure crawled along the ground, emitting a slight red glow as it moved toward the tower.
“Yeah, I see it.”
“Cerberus, he’s on the move. It’s our time.”
•••
By the time they got to the tower Cerberus had vanished. Finn wondered if their movement through the bracken had spooked him.
He whispered, “I think he’s gone.”
“No, he’s here.”
“What’s the plan then? What do you want to happen?”
Josephine turned and faced him. Looking straight at him she said, “I need you to listen carefully. Cerberus is trying to keep someone buried in there, but she’s alive. We can’t let him do that, but it will take both of us to stop him.”
“How?”
“Light, shining light on his crime.”
She took out a small flashlight, about the size of his middle finger.
“That’s the light?”
“It’s not just any light. I will need you to hold it and turn it on exactly when I give you a signal. Only then will I enter the tower and do what needs to be done. Don’t follow me in but shine the light when and where I tell you.”
“How will you confront him, he’s a big- “
“With the light and my presence it will be enough.”
Finn nodded, not convinced, but he told himself she must know things that he couldn’t yet grasp.
Josephine motioned to him to move a few yards to the left so they could see through the opening in the tower. The thrumming had gotten louder, obscuring the sound of their movement.
They crouched in the underbrush no more than 15 feet from the tower’s entrance. In the chamber’s dim light Finn could see Cerberus bent down on all fours, muttering words he couldn’t understand. The floor of the tower appeared to be made of exposed earth. Cerberus circled on all fours around the spot where the ground started to open.
Josephine handed him the flashlight. “When I nod, you shine the light on both Cerberus and me.”
She shimmied on her stomach toward the tower opening, reaching the outer wall on one side of the entrance. Josephine stood up and pressed her back against the stone slabs of the tower, poised to thrust herself through the opening.
As she moved into position, Cerberus’s growling became louder. It competed with another sound Finn heard. A plaintive cry ricocheted off the interior walls of the tower. The cry turned into a woman’s voice. It emanated from underneath the ground.
“Why, why,” the voice repeated.
Finn could see Cerberus stand up and begin to stomp on the shifting ground beneath his feet. A bony finger sprouted up from the soil and moved back and forth.
Finn saw it as a sign for help. The same motion David had made when he found him dying on his bedroom floor.
Finn bolted through the opening before Josephine had a chance to give the signal to shine the light. He hurled himself at Cerberus, shouting, “Stop you bastard!”
The twilight inside of the tower chamber instantly turned into the pitch blackness of the forest. Finn landed on the ground with the wind knocked out of him.
He heard Josephine shout from the tower opening, “No, no! You didn’t wait for my signal.”
Finn sat up, bewildered, and confused. He reached for the flashlight in his pocket and clicked on the light. A pale green glow revealed a circular stone chamber with graffiti tags littering the walls and the remains of charred wood in a pit with scattered beer bottles piled up. No Cerberus, no finger protruding from the ground.
Josephine stood over him. “It was too soon Finn. Almost, but too soon.”
It was not a reprimand, more a voice of exhausted sadness. Finn felt feverish, his mind dizzy. He dropped the flashlight, losing the light once it hit the ground. The void wrapped itself around him and filled the chamber with a suffocating blackness.
•••
When he woke up the next morning, the sun was already high over the eastern horizon. Finn looked over at his phone, a little after 10 am. His head felt like it was going to explode. For a brief moment he thought he must have gotten drunk and just woke up from a terrible nightmare. He was fully clothed and smelled awful.
As he sat up, the headache became a low thrumming in his ears. Then he realized it was not a nightmare. His heart raced. Fragments of memory crashed back into his consciousness. The finger beckoning him, rushing toward Cerberus, Josephine’s lament.
The only thing that made any sense was to go back to the bookstore and talk it through with Josephine. He needed her. Was it forgiveness for what he had done? Was it to take away the rising feeling of a new kind of guilt, even heavier than what he had carried for his brother?
He threw his clothes into his backpack, leaving the cottage in a mess. His hand trembled as he pressed the key to open the car lock.
•••
The Toyota shot across Route 6 into the parking lot of La Lumiere Libraire. It screeched to a stop in front of the bookstore. Finn realized he hadn’t looked to see if cars were coming. He reached for a pill in his top pocket and put it under his tongue and waited for it to take effect.
Minutes later he stepped out of the car and walked up to the bookstore. A Closed for the Season sign hung from a hook on the door. He stepped back to the side to peer through the windows, but wooden shades blocked the view. Finn hurried around the back to check out the patio. He looked over the property fence and saw chairs sitting upside down on the coffee table.
Finn leaned against the fence. How could she leave? He had questions that needed answers. Why would she just up and go? Was she that angry she wanted to avoid me? But why close the store for the rest of the year?
Then he thought that she might have been hurt or that Cerberus did something to her. Should he go to the police? As he pondered the possibilities, a furry ball of brown and white flew by him. Mehty. The cat ran to the front tire of the Toyota and sat upright waiting for Finn to return to the car.
“Mehty, what are you doing here? Where’s Josephine?”
The cat rolled on its backside, inviting a good rub. He bent down and obliged her. He took his hand away, but the cat meowed, clearly not wanting him to stop. Finn resumed rubbing her tummy and contemplated his next move. Before going to the police he’d stop at the nearby Mobil station and ask who might know why the bookstore suddenly closed.
He got up and said a farewell to Mehty, figuring the cat would eventually reunite with her caretaker, He opened the door but didn’t see her scoot behind his legs and jump into the back seat underneath a pile of dirty clothes.
•••
Finn made sure he didn’t drive like a crazy man this time. He slowed down and turned into a parking spot at the Mobil station. As he got out of the car, he noticed a police cruiser parked near the front door of the adjacent Dunkin Donuts. A cop was coming out of the store with his coffee.
Finn walked quickly toward him, saying, “Officer, excuse me, could I ask you a question?”
The cop was a young guy, maybe early 30s, tall and lean. He stopped mid stride and stared blank faced at Finn.
Finn said, “Sorry to bother you. I’m looking for a friend. She owns the secondhand bookstore down the road, but the store just closed for the season. and she’s nowhere around.”
The man took a sip of his coffee and then smiled. “Well, you probably won’t find her. The store’s been closed for a while. I believe she moved out of town a year ago.”
Without waiting for an answer the officer opened the cruiser’s door to leave.
Finn uttered, “But…” and then stopped himself. Something about the cop’s manner told him not to pursue it. The way he spoke to him seemed off. The guy’s words were rushed, and he looked past Finn, focusing on the Toyota when he spoke. The cruiser pulled out of the parking lot, leaving Finn confused and shaken.
Finn turned around and started walking back to the Toyota. He saw Mehty sitting on the dashboard, her eyes tracking the police car as it drove out of the parking lot.
•••
Finn opened the door on the driver’s side. Mehty slid off the dashboard onto the passenger seat. Somehow, Mehty finding her way into his car did not seem surprising or strange at all, given everything. He looked at the cat and she looked back at him.
“Mehty, what do we do now? Where is Josephine? I think we both need to find her, don’t you?”
As if in response to his question, the cat made a low purr and crawled onto his lap. Her tail moving slowly back and forth across the center console.
Finn had to admit that Mehty on his lap was better than a pill under his tongue. Her head nuzzled into his chest as her tail continued to move back and forth. He half smiled, amazed at how adaptable these creatures were and almost hypnotized by the rhythmic movement of her tail.
He was about to put the key into the ignition, having no clue on where to go next, when he saw the white spot sticking out from the wedge between his seat and the console. He reached over and saw that it was a small envelope that must have fallen from the seat into the crack between the console.
Finn pulled it up and saw his name on it written in an elegant cursive script. For Finn Wakefield. He opened the envelope and read the message:
I brought you back from the Tower. I am sorry I had to leave, but I will be back. I hope you will return next October and help me finish our work. Until then Mehty will be a good companion. This struggle needs both of us, but You are stronger than you think.
Yours, Josephine Dumoix
He read it over several times, letting the words sink in. It didn’t matter that he didn’t understand everything or hardly anything. What was important was she was alive and seemed not to blame him for his impulsivity.
Finn looked down at Mehty, in full snooze mode on his lap. “Well Mehty, she thinks I’m stronger than I think. Not sure about that, but we can talk more about it when we get home.”
The Toyota pulled out of the parking lot and turned left. The same closed stores and odd bric a brac from the past summer lined the highway as he sped past the Wellfleet road sign. Minutes later the Toyota approached the turn off toward Marconi Beach in South Wellfleet. Mehty moved off his lap and raised her head.
Finn looked over at the exit, thinking this was where things began to turn strange. When he turned his attention back to the road, he slammed on the brakes. Mehty jumped off his lap onto the passenger seat. The same Rottweiler he had seen before stood in the middle of the road.
Time stood still. The dog showed its teeth, and its red eyes locked onto Finn. Finn felt like he was falling into a black hole. Mehty jumped onto the dashboard and arched her back, letting out a long-sustained hiss. The dog growled but lost its hold on Finn. It turned with its tail between its legs and slinked back into the cedar forest.
Finn blinked a few times and rubbed his face. Mehty jumped back onto the seat and then crawled back onto his lap.
“You’re more than just any old kitty. Aren’t you?” He pressed down on the gas pedal, thinking about what must be done next October.
a.l Dawson’s (he/him) short stories, Sacred Ground and The Keeper, were published in 2020 in Aphelion. Two short stores, The Crossing and Call Me Mathias, were published respectively in the anthologies, Bloodroot: Best New England Crime Stories, 2021 and Deadly Nightshade: Best New England Crime Stories, 2022. Dawson’s most recent story, Eurydice in the Flows, was published in the anthology, Unspeakable Crimes (2022). Dawson continues to write non-fiction essays for magazines and journals under the name of A. Stoskopf. Dawson’s counseling of refugees and immigrants has deeply influenced many of the themes and character constructions in his fiction writing.