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Authors: Katherine Hall Page

The Body in the Lighthouse

BOOK: The Body in the Lighthouse
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Katherine Hall Page
The Body in the Lighthouse

A Faith Fairchild Mystery

To
Tom, Trevor, and Valerie Wolzien,
who love “Sanpere Island”
as much as we do

…one fire burns out another's burning;

One pain is less'ned by another's anguish.

—
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE,
ROMEO AND JULIET

Contents

 

One

Sawdust and nails covered the floor. A piece of plywood…

Two

Ursula sighed and pushed her chair away from the table.

Three

“Thou desperate pilot, now at once run on the crashing…

Four

“It's the dog days.” Freeman Marshall was wearing a suit…

Five

“We have a major problem!” Jill Merriwether's panic traveled straight…

Six

Faith found Harold Hapswell's dead body wedged between two granite…

Seven

“It's the loneliest of all the lighthouse stations in the…

Eight

“Passed on? You mean dead? That's impossible! There wasn't a…

Nine

Faith had no idea where she was. She'd opened her…

Ten

Faith screamed and raced for the door. It seemed the…

Eleven

Mrs. Earl Dickinson had floated out of the Congregational church, the…

 

Sawdust and nails covered the floor. A piece of plywood had been set on two sawhorses as a makeshift counter. It bowed slightly under the weight of an ancient microwave, power tools, containers of coffee, and doughnut boxes. Mold was floating in the congealed cream on the cup Faith Sibley Fairchild had picked up, intending to heave it at her husband, Tom, who was smiling sheepishly at her from the doorway—a doorway Faith had thought was supposed to be the site for a fireplace. She put the cup down, grabbed a desiccated doughnut from the hand of her seven-year-old son, Benjamin, snatched an iridescent beef jerky stick from the lips of her three-year-old daughter, Amy, and spoke in a carefully measured tone. A very carefully measured tone. Each word enunciated. Each word weighing several tons.


Sweetheart,
I thought you told me that the house was almost finished. It doesn't look almost finished to
me.

She had been driving for five hours from the Fairchilds' home, the parsonage in Aleford, Massachusetts, to their summer cottage on Sanpere Island, off the coast of Maine. Five hours in a car with two children well below the age of reason or ability to retain liquids; children who required not only frequent pit stops but constant stimulation in the form of Raffi tapes. Ben, a curious soul, also needed to pepper his mother with questions, answerable and unanswerable: “Why is it called the Maine Turnpike—'cause it's in the state or 'cause it's main?” and “Why are they always working on it every time we drive to Sanpere?” Faith had often thought of offering her services as a consultant to the Massachusetts Department of Correction. Locking miscreants up in cells displayed a certain lack of imagination when it came to sentencing. Most parents could reel off dozens of alternatives, with no possibilities for recidivism.

“Honey,” Tom said, “I know how it looks, but, believe me, it really
is
close to the end. We've got the punch list. Mostly, what you're seeing just means painting, a little cleanup, and a few trips to the dump.” In contrast to his wife's words, Tom's rushed out in a torrent, and he tested the waters by moving a few steps closer to her. Clutching a child firmly at each side, she was standing as rigid as Niobe after the gods got to her.

She held up her hand, and Tom stopped in his tracks.

“There are no cabinets, as far as I can see,” she said, starting to tick off items with one finger, “nor counters, except for that.” Pointer went down as her gaze swept over the plywood, virtually igniting it. “I see you have apparently decided on a different location for the fireplace.” Another finger joined the others. “And…”

Before she made a fist, Tom strode over and put his arms around his family.

“Okay, okay. It's not as far along as we'd hoped, but I was sure you'd want to be here, want to be a part of it, make decisions—and besides, I missed you guys.”

Tom, the Reverend Thomas Fairchild of Aleford's First Parish Church, had been making the long commute to Maine whenever he could steal some time. The Fairchilds' cottage, a simple one-story square built before Amy was born and Ben reliably ambulatory, had been in desperate need of remodeling. From the beginning, the project had been dear to Tom's heart, and he'd spent the previous two weeks away from his family, nail gun in hand, having a ball. Caterer Faith had obligations and was, truth to be told, just as happy to avoid the mess. Yet she had missed Tom, too. She looked into his deep brown eyes. He had sawdust in his hair and was wearing a carpenter's apron from Barton's Lumberyard jauntily tied low on his waist, a badge of honor. She scrutinized his shirt to make sure it was well tucked
into his jeans—front and back. That other badge of honor, revealed when a workman bent to his task, and known locally as “The Sanpere Smile,” was safely out of sight.

“It will be wonderful when it's done,” she admitted, returning his hug and looking through the three large plate-glass windows at “the view.” People in Maine prized their views, or, if they didn't have much of a one, drove or hiked to one. The Fairchilds' view would have been “Worth a Journey” in any Michelin guide. The tide was still coming in and the late-afternoon sun had turned the water's surface to gold. A heron was perched on a granite ledge in the cove. The tip of a long sandy beach, one of few on the island, curved to an end at their property. Sea lavender, grasses, and bayberry grew in abundance above the high-tide mark, giving way to a small meadow surrounded by tall pines and slender birches. A few sailboats dotted the expanse of water that extended as far as the eye could see—Swans Island and Isle au Haut distant on the horizon, large rounded shapes like slumbering beasts.

“Come on, let me show you the rest. You're going to love it!” Tom enthused. “And don't worry about dinner. I've got everything under control.” His relief was palpable—and contagious. Faith doubted the dinner part, but, after the initial shock, she could see that the room was going to work, and she began to feel happy. They'd gutted the original house, leaving the tent ceiling with its Adirondack-like bead board in
tact. She noted that under the debris, the hardwood pine floor had been installed. This one large room, with all its windows bringing the outdoors in, would serve as kitchen and living room area. There was an island divider in place, waiting for the drop-in stove, and their refrigerator had been enclosed in its new location.

“Home Depot's delivering the cabinets and counters tomorrow. It won't take long to install them. Lyle's hired some extra crew members to help. But all the electrical work is finished, and most of the plumbing. See?” He proudly led them through the dining area, which connected the “old” house with the new addition, and flung open a door. The bathroom tile they'd picked out looked better than Faith had hoped, and all the fixtures were in place. Ben was hopping up and down. Maybe he was excited, maybe not.

“Ben, you go first,” Faith said, ushering the rest of the family out.

Downstairs, there were three bedrooms, one for each child and the third for guests. No walls had been painted, but windows were in place. All the new furniture—most of it still in flat IKEA boxes—was in the garage, which the original builder, Seth Marshall, had insisted the Fairchilds build, despite their protests that it was almost as big as the cottage.

“You have to have a shed for stuff. Make it a garage, even though you'll probably never have room for a car in it,” Seth had told them prophetically.

Seth had moved up to larger projects and given them Lyle Ames's name. Lyle didn't build new houses, preferring additions and remodeling jobs to what he called the “million-dollar mansions” that had started to invade even remote Sanpere.

Children drained, they climbed to the second floor, its master bedroom overlooking the water. The high, sloping ceiling echoed the pitch of the roof on the original half of the house. There was a large alcove to the rear for Tom's study, and a master bath with an extra-long tub. Tom Fairchild liked to stretch out and soak. So did Faith. At the moment, the tub was filled with scraps of wallboard, not rubber duckies. It was Amy who noticed that it, as well as the sink, lacked faucets. All of them plainly noted the missing toilet.

“We can certainly make do with one bathroom,” Faith said, deciding not to scream until she found out whether Tom had put a bottle of Chardonnay in the fridge or not. “But where are we going to sleep—and eat? How am I going to cook?”

There had been an odd assortment of chairs—most certainly from the “take it or leave it” at the dump—in the living room/kitchen. Besides the microwave oven, she thought she might have spied a hot plate, but three meals a day for a family of four? Faith considered roughing it a non-convection oven and no Cuisinart.

“Didn't you notice I've set us up downstairs? The kids are in what will be Ben's room, and we're in Amy's.”

Faith led the way to inspect the accommodations. The reason she'd missed them previously was that she'd assumed the sleeping bags spread out on thin, very thin, mats were drop cloths left by the workers.

“It will be fun,” Tom said in earnest. He was a born camper. “There's going to be a gorgeous sunset tonight, and the picnic table is where it's always been. We can eat there, then put the kids to bed and…” Faith knew what the “and” was. It had been two weeks.

“These mats look mighty comfy to me,” she said. “Now, how about you find me a drink? Anything. Quickly.”

 

With no shades on the windows, the little Fairchilds were up with the sun. Her back stiff and limbs aching, Faith was pouring milk when the carpenters showed up at 6:00
A.M
. Another item Tom had forgotten to mention: work hours. For a while, the traffic in the cottage was straight out of a Marx Brothers movie as large men moved large pieces of wallboard and other objects past small children in various stages of undress and one very weary mother coming to terms with the fact that she wasn't going to get to shower. One of the carpenters, younger than the others, tall, skinny, and with little more than peach fuzz over his upper lip, blushed fiery red at the sight of Faith still in her nightgown. A very decent nightgown—the others were at home, stowed away for the rare occasions she
and Tom were sans children. Her nightclothes were further obscured by a long sweatshirt. She glanced at his left hand—no ring, a blackened thumbnail moving toward the blue spectrum. He stood frozen in his tracks, clinging to the bundle of molding strips he was carrying, until Lyle called, “Kenny!” and the spell was broken. It would have been funny at, say, nine o'clock in the morning.

“I'll take the kids with me to the IGA, then drop them off at day camp,” Faith told Tom, who nodded absently, eyes glued to the level before him, his expression similar to the one he wore when approaching the altar.

The day camp, relatively new to the island, ran from 9:00
A.M
. until 3:00
P.M
. and served both natives and summer people. Faith had viewed it as a godsend, but now she wondered what she was going to do all day without the kids to tend, and the house unfit for habitation. Long walks—definitely not long swims in these frigid waters—read all the books she'd meant to read since college, and…Her closest friend and neighbor from Aleford, Pix Miller, who had lured the Fairchilds to Sanpere in the first place, was away for the month. The oldest Miller, Mark, had graduated from the University of Colorado, and since they were all going to be out there, they had decided on one long, grand family vacation to celebrate. They'd be camping their way across the Rockies, into the Pacific Northwest, returning through Canada. Faith had thought a grand tour
meant Paris, London, and Rome, but the Millers were not cut from the same cloth.

It was a perfect Maine day. Warm, but not too warm. Blue sky, clear air, which seemed to bring everything into sharp focus, and the sea, always the sea. Route 17, the main road that encircled the island, was never far from shore, and every turn brought a glimpse or flat-out breathtaking vista of Penobscot Bay. Gulls, crook-necked cormorants, and one regal osprey flew overhead.

The IGA didn't offer too many choices, so Faith was counting on the small stands set up by local gardeners in their front yards to provide fresh produce. You selected your tomatoes, then left the money in a jar or coffee can, making change as need be. There was one on the way to day camp.

“I won't be a moment, chickadees,” she promised, thinking of panzanella—that simple Italian salad of ripe tomatoes, rough cubes of bread, a little salt, pepper, olive oil, vinegar, and fresh basil—a one-dish meal, as she stopped the car by the side of the road and got out.

The cupboard was bare. Or almost. A few sad-looking cukes lay next to a zucchini the size of a baseball bat. Try as she might, she hadn't been able to convince the island growers that bigger was not better when it came to squash. Spying the proprietress deadheading her tuberous begonias, Faith called out, “Any tomatoes today?”

“No, nor none likely. Lettuce, neither. Guess you've been away. We haven't had a drop of rain since early July. Don't want the well to run dry, so
the only things I've been trying to keep going are my begonias.” She walked out toward Faith.

“For the fair, you understand,” she explained.
Fair
came out as two syllables, not unlike
ayuh
—a Maineism Faith had yet to hear.

Disappointed, Faith returned to the car, fervently wishing this particular gardener had been after a blue ribbon for veggies at the Labor Day weekend Blue Hill Fair, and not prize blossoms. Still, there were other stands, and every Friday morning, there was a farmers' market in the parking lot of the Congregational church. In addition to locals, it drew purveyors from the mainland, who might have deeper wells. With a short growing season anyway, the news of the drought, further limiting supply, was depressing. Faith's aunt lived in New Jersey. As she drove, Faith fantasized about getting some Big Boys. Aunt Chat—and the rest of the state—claimed Jersey tomatoes were next to none, and Faith tended to agree. How would ripe beefsteaks do in the mail? Cheered by the image of love apples by post, she dropped off the kids at camp. Neither of them had ever displayed any separation anxiety whatsoever, a fact that pleased Faith—her kids were secure, adaptable, ready for adventure—and ever so slightly displeased her. One small hesitant backward glance, a hastily whispered “Mommy, I'll miss you” wouldn't kill them.

Kids settled, she left, and soon after, she pulled up to the cottage. Toting her groceries, she was surprised to see the entire crew, Tom included,
sitting outside the house. Coffee break? Except no one seemed to be drinking any.

“Hi, what's up?” she called out.

One of the older men answered succinctly. “Skunks.”

“Skunks!”

“Yup. Skunks in your crawl space. Elwell went down the hatch in the bedroom closet and stepped on one. Came up like salts through a goose. Thinks it's a mumma and a few babies.”

BOOK: The Body in the Lighthouse
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