The Body in the Sleigh

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Authors: Katherine Hall Page

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The Body in the Sleigh

A Faith Fairchild Mystery

Katherine Hall Page

To Librarians Everywhere

Especially the late Inabeth Miller

and the late Ruth Rockwood;

Jeanne Bracken, Emily Howie, Micheline Jedrey,

Dottie MacKeen, Carol Mahoney, Barbara Myles,

Virginia Stanley, Ruth Rogers,

and Anne Walker-Hennessy Cifelli

Myrrh is mine, its bitter perfume
Breathes a life of gathering gloom;
Sorrowing, sighing, bleeding, dying,
Sealed in the stone-cold tomb

—
REVEREND JOHN HENRY HOPKINS J R
.,

WE THREE KINGS

Contents

Prologue

The Christmas Eve sky was filled with stars when Mary…

Chapter 1

Faith Sibley Fairchild slipped quietly out of bed, although nothing…

Chapter 2

“I'm so sorry to bother you. You must be in…

Chapter 3

Miriam opened her eyes and promptly closed them again. The…

Chapter 4

It didn't make sense. Although, Faith thought, sense was a…

Chapter 5

Pulling up to Mary's house was a relief. Instead of…

Chapter 6

He had been in love with her his whole life—or…

Chapter 7

When Mary heard that Faith wasn't going to be able…

Chapter 8

As Faith crunched across the snow toward the house, she…

Chapter 9

“I'm sorry, but I don't operate my bed and breakfast…

Chapter 10

The driving hadn't been too bad until she turned off…

Epilogue

The New Year's Eve sky was filled with stars when…

The Christmas Eve sky was filled with stars when Mary Bethany found a baby in her barn. They hadn't had a real snow yet; the island never got the kind of accumulation the mainland did, but it was cold. She had pulled a woolen overcoat that had belonged to her father over her winter jacket and grabbed an old shawl of her mother's, draping it around her head. Her small herd of goats was letting her know that it was milking time, holiday or no holiday.

Mary hadn't been leaving a festive gathering. She hadn't been leaving any gathering at all. Just a cup of hot cider, a slice of the fruitcake sent by her cousin Elizabeth, and a few cats for company and to keep the rodent population down. Walking the short distance from the old farmhouse to the small barn she'd built when the herd got too large for the shed, Mary had remembered the legend about animals being able to speak on Christmas Eve. She'd allowed herself to speculate about what her goats would have to say. They were Nubians, pretty, long-eared goats that gave rich milk with the highest butterfat content and protein of any breed. Her pretty nannies. Her neurotic nannies. Temperamental, easily miffed divas, they let her know with resounding bleats when some
thing was even the slightest bit wrong. She was afraid that given human voices, their conversation would be a litany of slights and sorrows. Or perhaps not. Perhaps they would tell her how much they depended on her, how much they loved her. She had entered the warm barn smiling, and her smile grew broader when she saw the large basket with a big red bow, nestled against a bale of hay. It must be a gift from a neighbor. She hadn't thought she would be getting any presents. Even her sister Martha's yearly Swiss Colony cheese log had not arrived. A tag hung from the bow: “For Mary Bethany.” She ignored the goats for a moment and knelt down before the gift.

It was an afghan in soft pastel colors. That would be Arlene Harvey who crocheted so beautifully. The summer people always snapped up her work at the Sewing Circle's annual fair in August. How kind, Mary thought. It would be just the thing to throw across her lap at night when she sat up late reading. But so unexpected. She hadn't seen or spoken to the Harveys since she'd brought some of her rose-hip jelly over in early September. It had been a wonderful summer for the
Rosa rugosa
bushes that surrounded the house and had seeded in what passed for a lawn and, beyond it, the pasture. Mary had gathered the large, bulbous bright orange hips and put up jelly, made soup, even dried some for tea. Looking at the gleaming jars on the pantry shelf, she had decided to bring some to Arlene and Doug—her nearest neighbors, a mere six acres of fields and woods away.

But this was too much! It must have taken Arlene a long time to make; the stitch was intricate and the wool so fine. Then she heard a tiny sneeze. The merest whisper of a sneeze. She pulled back the blanket and she uncovered—a baby! Eyes squeezed shut, a newborn—tiny—about the size of a kid. She rocked back on her heels in amazement, letting the cover drop from her hands. A baby?

The goats were crying louder, insistently. There was nothing
human about their speech, but Mary knew what they were saying. She would have to milk them or they would wake the child. Whose child? And what was it doing here in her barn? Mary touched the baby's face gently. It was soft and warm. A beautiful child with rosy cheeks—
Rosa rugosa
cheeks—and shiny dark fine hair, like cormorant feathers, escaping from the hooded snowsuit. A blue snowsuit, new, not a hand-me-down. It must be a boy. His eyelids fluttered at her touch, but he slept on. Mary stood up shakily. She would milk the goats, then take the baby inside. That was as far ahead as she could think at the moment. In all her forty-seven years, nothing remotely like this had ever happened. Nothing unusual at all, unless you thought an old maid who kept to herself, raised goats, and made cheese was unusual—or odd—as some did. But nothing really unusual.

Automatically she milked the six goats and put out fresh water, more hay, and the grain mixture of oats, corn, and molasses she fed them. They complained at her haste and voiced their irritation. “I don't have time to coddle you tonight,” she told them, and something in her voice seemed to chasten them. At least, the noise level dropped. “Besides,” she added, “if anyone should be upset, it should be me. It's Christmas Eve. You're supposed to be able to tell me what happened here tonight.”

She brought the baby into the house, setting the basket down by the woodstove in the kitchen, then ran back for the milk, which went into the shed in the second refrigerator. She'd had to buy it after she'd started making cheese.

When she closed the barn door and let the latch drop, Mary looked up into the night sky. It was clear and the stars seemed close enough to touch. There was a large one directly overhead. She blinked and it was gone. Turning at the back door for a last look before she went into the house, she saw the star was back.

In the kitchen, Mary took off her coat and jacket, wrapping the shawl around her shoulders. The baby was awake and making little
mewing sounds like a kitten. He must be hungry, she thought, and reached in to pick him up. He settled into the crook of her arm, as if it had been carved just for him.

“You poor thing,” she said aloud. “Who are you? And how could anyone bear to give you up?”

Holding him tight, she pulled the afghan out of the basket. Underneath it were an envelope with her name on it, some baby clothes, cloth diapers, two bottles, and a package wrapped in brown paper—not the kind you buy on a roll, but cut from a paper bag. The letter wasn't sealed; the flap was tucked in, easy to open with one hand. Mary knew then that the baby's mother had tried to think of everything, even this small detail—that Mary would be holding the baby when she read the letter. It was short and typewritten:

Dear Mary,

Keep him safe and raise him to be a good man. His name is Christopher.

That was it. No signature. No further explanation. Mary picked up the package and peeled the tape from one end. A packet of bills fell out. She shook it, and more followed. Packets of hundred-dollar bills. A lot of hundred-dollar bills.

Faith Sibley Fairchild slipped quietly out of bed, although nothing short of a sonic boom—or conversely a whimper from one of the children—would awaken her husband, the Reverend Thomas Fairchild, from his deep winter slumber. She walked to the window overlooking the cove. The tide was high and the surface of the water was ablaze with the light from the moon. It had been full the night before, and tonight, Christmas Eve, it was just as luminous. It was so bright out that the snow covering the pines along the shore looked like frosted gingerbread cookies and the meadow in front of the cottage sparkled. Mainers considered their seasons fall, winter, mud, and July. Faith was glad to be experiencing winter, the one she'd missed. She turned from the scene and put on her robe and slippers. Sleep had eluded her. Perhaps a warm drink would help.

Downstairs in the kitchen that opened onto the living room with its row of plate-glass windows, Faith filled the kettle without turning on the lights. There was something magical about the way the moonbeams were streaming in, lighting her way.

A mug of chamomile tea soon in hand, she settled onto the
couch in front of the windows. Christmas Eve—or rather Christmas Day. She'd seen that it was past midnight by the clock on the stove.

They'd gone to the early children's service at the Congregational church in Granville and spent the rest of the night watching a video of Alastair Sim in
A Christmas Carol.
Although granddaughter, daughter, and wife of men of the cloth, she realized it was the first Christmas Eve service she'd attended where she had not been related to the robed figure in the pulpit. The experience had been oddly disconcerting, like visiting a foreign country, but one that spoke the same language as she did—“‘And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus, that all the world should be taxed.'”

It must have been a night like this, a starry, brilliant night. Poor Mary, so young and no doubt quite uncomfortable after the long journey on the donkey that ended not in a comfy queen-size bed, but a pile of straw. No midwife save Joseph and then all that company—shepherds, the Wise Men. They, at least, had an entourage and Mary didn't have to think what to serve them, one hoped. The shepherds, though, would have been ravenous after a cold night watching their flocks. Faith had been older than Mary when her firstborn was brought forth, but she well remembered being sore afraid in those last few hours and completely overwhelmed by the thought of the awesome responsibility she and Tom had taken on. Over the last twelve years, she'd continued to feel this way at times, but oh, the joy! For a moment she was tempted to get up and peek in on Ben and his sister, Amy, three years younger. She knew what she'd find. Her son, in his room, would be sprawled across the bed, having thrown off all his covers. Amy, on the other hand, would lie tucked securely under the covers like a letter in an envelope, in the exact position she'd been in when her eyes closed. Faith was sure that visions of sugarplums were dancing in both their wee heads. Her offspring would be
up in a very few hours, yet she stayed where she was, drinking the tea.

Her thoughts drifted back to the chain of events that had brought them to Maine over a week ago—specifically to Sanpere Island in Penobscot Bay—from their home in Aleford, outside Boston. It was an unseasonable time of the year for the Fairchilds to be here. As usual, they'd closed up Columbus Day weekend, not expecting to return until May to air the place out, sweep up the dead flies, and resist the temptation to plant the garden too soon. Tonight, ghostly mounds gave indications of the perennial border in front of the house and she could just make out the raised vegetable beds to one side. They'd put away the fence that kept the deer from destroying their efforts.

She sipped some more tea, enjoying the sensation the warm liquid made as it traveled down her throat. How did we get here? How did
I
get here? Life took detours and she had yet to meet someone who hadn't faced them in some form or another—in varying degrees.

Everything had started just after Thanksgiving—and, despite the tranquil scene in front of her, the time on the island, meant to heal, had also not been without incident. She wasn't sleepy at all, but her gaze was blurring, and the events of these last weeks began to stream across her mind like a Technicolor dream.

It had been a difficult fall—they'd lost a good friend under tragic circumstances and Ben had had a very tough time adjusting to middle school—so when Tom started to have stomachaches and had no appetite, they'd told each other, “Stress.” It was also that time of year—the holidays. Early in their marriage they'd talked about how much they loved the Christmas season, starting with the lighting of the first Advent candle and continuing on to the joys of Christmas Day with its message of hope and peace. Loved it—and hated it. As a preacher's kid, albeit in a parish on Manhattan's East Side, Faith knew all about the tension Christmas
brought. This was not simply due to the increase in the number of church services—or the lack of private family time (a year-round dilemma)—but the problems that surfaced as lonely people compared their lives to television specials, and harried parents tried to combine work and assembling Notre Dame in gingerbread with their overstimulated offspring. Stress, they'd told each other. That was the trouble. Tom swigged Maalox and crunched Tums. They promised each other some time off in January. Then the pains moved to his back, and one bright picture-perfect winter morning complete with a cloudless blue sky and a shimmering dusting of snow, Faith got a call at Have Faith, her catering firm, from Emerson Hospital. Her husband was in the emergency ward. He hadn't wanted to worry her and had actually driven himself the few miles from the parsonage in Aleford to the hospital before collapsing in pain upon arrival.

It was pancreatitis, and the sight of him hooked up to an IV and heart monitor, pale as Marley's ghost, was almost more than she could bear. He tried for a grin, but it turned into a grimace. His doctor was reassuring in that ambiguous manner some doctors employ. Lucky to have caught it—but. Sound metabolism—but. They just needed to figure out why he'd developed it in the first place. Was her husband a heavy drinker? The shocked look on Faith's face had provided the answer to that one. Tom wasn't a teetotaler by any means, but the parish hadn't been going through an unusual amount of communion wine during his tenure. Family history? A quick call to her mother-in-law, who then promptly set out for the hospital, confirmed that Tom's was the only case so far as she knew. “Ah,” said the doctor. “Must be gallstones.”

And gallstones they were. After the CAT scan confirmed the diagnosis, they'd treated Tom for the pain and waited a week for the inflammation to subside before operating. Faith—and Tom—learned that there were an amazing number of things in life that
could be put on hold, that one simply didn't have to do. Things other people—Faith's assistant at her catering business, Niki Constantine; Tom's associate minister; the divinity school intern; the vestry—would do for you, or things one really hadn't needed to do at all. Postsurgical instructions were rest, a high-carb, high-fiber, low-fat diet—and “stay off the sauce for a while.” The doctor's bedside manner was similar to Groucho Marx's. So long as Tom watched for symptoms, he'd be better than ever—probably. The pancreas would repair itself—probably. It was just one of those things. The doctor slipped into Cole Porter mode and Faith had been unable to stop herself from retorting, “Hey, we're not talking about a trip to the moon on gossamer wings! Is my husband going to be all right or not?” He had smiled in that patronizing way some doctors do and patted her hand in that patronizing way some doctors do. “Time will tell.” Which, of course, was no answer at all.

Time had told, though. And whatever jolly old St. Nick delivered, Tom's steady improvement—what was she saying? Tom
himself
—would be the best present under the tree, now and forever.

She'd been stunned by his illness. Tom Fairchild was the picture of health, one of those perennially big hungry boys whose tall, rangy frame burned calories as fast as the woodstove across the room consumed logs. At the thought, she got up to add some more to the sturdy Vermont Castings Defiant model—she liked the name: “Take that, Cold!” They didn't really need the stove anymore, since they'd put in a furnace when they'd remodeled the cottage several summers ago. But the crackling birch smelled heavenly and filled the room with the kind of warmth no furnace could duplicate. She'd been opposed to putting a furnace in—why spend the money when they would never be on Sanpere Island in the wintertime? She'd suspected it was Tom's idea of the proverbial thin end of the wedge. He'd spend every vacation on Sanpere
if he could. While Faith loved the island too, there were others called Saint Barts and Mustique that beckoned more seductively in cold weather.

But here they were. Thank God. It was, of course, where Tom wanted to recuperate, and it had been a perfect choice. The days they'd been here and the days that stretched out ahead filled with nothing more taxing than the
New York Times
daily crossword puzzles and the Audubon Christmas Bird Count made her slightly giddy with relief. Tom would be fine, better than ever. The words had become a kind of mantra she repeated to herself whenever her husband looked tired or she thought there was a new crease on his forehead. They'd pulled the kids out of school over a week early and she'd expected them to object to the notion of being so isolated—no friends, a TV that only played DVDs and videos. In fact, they'd quickly adapted to the slower pace. She had a feeling it was a respite, particularly for Ben. Their teachers had supplied them with work and it was finished in the first two days, leaving the rest to spend almost totally outdoors—they'd brought their snowshoes and cross-country skis. Inside the kids curled up with
Swallows and Amazons
and Jane Langton's captivating chronicles of the Hall family. Faith never wanted the reason for all this to happen again—she planned that she and Tom would go gently into that good night someday far, far in the future at the exact same moment. She couldn't bear to think of life without him, but now that he was on the mend, she knew she would always treasure this Christmas and the time the four of them were spending together. The kids had been worried about him too, of course, and watching him return to his good, old Daddy self was reassuring.

Coming to Sanpere: a perfect choice, yes—until she'd come upon the body in the sleigh.

She pushed the scene fast-forward and instead struggled to concentrate on others. The Christmas season on Sanpere Island was similar only in the barest outlines to Christmas in Aleford,
or New York City—the standard by which Faith gauged most things. Holiday decorations, the guy in the red suit, Jesus, Mary, Joseph, the manger, and presents were accounted for in all three places. In Aleford, people put up wreaths in late November, which remained securely in place until Easter, never out of synch with the weather. Some of the town's more jovial residents strung a few lights on their yews, which the less jovial viewed as commercializing Christmas and, worse, a waste of electricity just when the planet was teetering on the edge of destruction.

In Sanpere, however, every yard was crowded with snowmen, reindeer, elves, and Santa, of course. Colored lights outlined every house, glowing “icicles” dripped from the roofs, and even more wattage lit up the trees. Faith knew there was a contest each year for Best Holiday Display, but she'd never suspected the contestants would rival Rockefeller Center. They'd had to make several tours of the island to revisit the kids' favorites—the basketball hoop that had sprouted a fully trimmed tree outside a bedecked trailer; lobster boats in and out of the water outlined in lights and looped with fir garlands. The hands-down favorite was the “tree” constructed of fifty lobster traps, trimmed with pot buoys and topped with a huge star in one of the fishermen's front yard. At night, its rope lighting could be seen from miles away.

The merchants in Granville and Sanpere Village, the smaller of the island's two main towns, had given over their windows to the season, even stores that were closed in the winter. The photo studio, a fixture for at least two generations, featured a gingerbread village made by the island's kindergarten class. A local artist had created a Nativity scene in another store, and a life-size Santa stood on the roof of the bank. Sanpere's lone electrician, whose business had formerly housed one of the small markets that used to dot the island, had filled the front window with a cozy scene of Santa in a rocker sitting in front of a colorfully trimmed tree, all bathed in soft orange lighting that mimicked firelight. Sanpere's
paper,
The Island Crier,
ran its annual “What Christmas and the Holidays Mean to Me” supplement filled with artwork, poems, and prose from the island's schoolchildren. This year many focused on what one's cat and/or dog would do or had done in the past—“Lucky will probably knock the tree down. He will also probably shred the presents.” “Inkspot left paw prints all over the icing on the cake my grandma made.” One fourth-grader had been refreshingly frank: “Easter is really my favorite holiday, then Halloween, but I like Christmas all right too.” Must be something about being in fourth grade; another cut straight to the chase: “Christmas means my uncle Roger coming. He once played football and could have gone pro, but he turned down his chance.”

Holiday flags fluttered, and having spent many hours making the fragrant balsam wreaths that were shipped all over the country, islanders had also turned out plenty for themselves. Everywhere one looked there was some sort of decoration. There was nothing restrained about celebrating the season on Sanpere, culminating in the biggest difference between a Down East Christmas and Aleford's: Santa arrived via lobster boat.

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