Jolene picked up the notebook and a pen, and walked down the steps to the basement. It was chilly and damp, but that was not what made her shiver as she passed beneath the floor of the kitchen. No, it was the feeling of the place, the emotional rather than physical atmosphere. Maybe she'd been conditioned by too many movies, but the vibe here was that of a haunted house, and she found herself wondering exactly where and how Chester Williams had died. Beneath her foot, a stair creaked. Ahead, the far corner of the basement lay in shadow, illumination from the single bare bulb unable to reach that section of the * room. She reached the bottom of the steps and looked * around. She'd been expecting a massive storehouse of C covered furniture and arcane treasures from Williams' t storied travels. Instead she found herself in a medium- sized space only slightly larger than her mother's living room, with a low bare wood ceiling, a dirty wooden floor, a workbench with tools along the west wall and few leftover household items scattered around the » open area in the middle.
Maybe it had been cleaned out before being donated to the historical society.
No. If that were the case, the basement wouldn't have been so dusty.
Most likely, this was an area of the house that simply hadn't been used for years, perhaps decades.
She walked slowly through the dark room, still feeling the strange sense of cold dread that had come over her as she'd descended the stairs. Up ahead, near the south wall, she could see a square outline on the floor.
Was that a trapdoor?
Jolene moved closer, pushed aside a wicker basket. Yes. The light here was dim, but that was definitely a recessed handle lying flush with the wood.
Was there a basement beneath the basement?
If there was, it had not been entered in quite some time. The floor here was covered by a coating of dust even thicker than that in the center of the room. Jolene heard Anna May's footsteps above her. She glanced up at the cobweb-covered ceiling, then looked down at the floor, wondering what was beneath it. She'd never heard of a double basement before and couldn't imagine what the reason for its existence might be, but whatever it was, she had the feeling it was not wholesome.
Wholesome?
What kind of word was that?
She didn't know, but it fit.
Jolene bent down, touched the handle of the trapdoor and jerked her hand away the second her fingers touched the cold metal, her heart pounding. She wasn't brave enough to open it herself, wasn't sure she even had the right to, so she called up to Anna May, and when she didn't get an answer she bounded back up the stairs to the sunlight and the real world. It felt as though she'd emerged from Dracula's dungeon. Windows had never been so welcome. Anna May was indeed in a hallway closet that appeared to be right over that section of the basement, and Jolene explained to the older woman what she had found.
Anna May's face lit up. "Oh, this is exciting! A secret cellar! This is the kind of find I live for." She put down her notebook on a closet shelf and followed Jolene back through the kitchen.
"Do you have a flashlight or something?" Jolene asked. "The basement itself is pretty dark and I'm not sure there's any light ... down there."
"I'll be right back!" Anna May ran out to the van and returned a few moments later with two flashlights. "A good historian is always prepared," she said as she handed one to Jolene.
The two of them descended the stairs.
Once again, Jolene experienced a profound uneasiness upon entering the basement, and as she led Anna May to the trapdoor, goose bumps accompanied what appeared to her to be a significant drop in temperature. They were prepared to work hard and pull together on the small handle in order to open the door, but it must have had some type of spring hinge because it came up fairly easily, revealing a primitive ladder bolted to the edge of the opening and going down six feet or so to a hard dirt floor. They shone their lights into the darkness and saw what appeared to be a bookcase in the center of an otherwise empty chamber. There seemed to be no books on the shelves, only a series of small unidentifiable items.
Jolene had even more trepidation about going into this lower cellar than she'd had about entering the basement they were in. She was not just wary of the room; she was afraid of it. But Anna May had already pushed her flashlight into the waistband of her pants and had started down the ladder, and the only thing Jolene could do was follow.
The air smelled dirty and old, like someone had gone to the bathroom down here a long, long time ago.
Anna May stood in front of the bookcase. "What's this?" she asked, puzzled. She picked up a rounded brown leathery object and its identical twin.
They were ears.
Jolene shone her flashlight beam. On the shelf next to the ears were several fingers and what could only have been a penis. Hanging on hooks from the ceiling at an angle, not visible from above, were scalps: long black braids and ponytails that must have been Indian.
"Oh, my!" Anna May exclaimed, and the utterance was so incongruous that Jolene almost laughed.
Almost.
But the sight was so gruesome that it killed all thoughts of humor, overwhelming everything with its inexplicable horror. Neither of them said anything more but simply shone their lights on the other shelves, illuminating more ears and fingers, toes and genitals, a hand, a foot, even what looked like a black shrunken heart. Why were these here? Had Chester Williams saved these body parts as souvenirs?
From what? A war? Or had he been some sort of serial killer, hoarding portions of his victims in this concealed cellar?
She'd had a gut feeling when she'd first seen the trapdoor that nothing good could be behind a room so secret, buried so deep in the earth, and she'd been right.
"What is this?" she asked.
She meant all of it-the subbasement, the shelves, the scalps-but Anna May assumed that she meant the specific object she was prodding with her finger, and she turned guilelessly around. "I think it's a dick."
Again, Jolene thought, under other circumstances, she might have laughed.
But not here.
Not now.
"Look at this," Anna May said excitedly. She was crouching down and shining her beam on the bottom shelf of the bookcase. Reaching out, she drew forth an object that was instantly recognizable. A book of some sort, a bound volume with a filigreed cover.
Anna May opened the book to the first page, began turning subsequent pages slowly while Jolene shone her light on it. "It's a diary!" she said. "It's Chester Williams' diary!" She turned to the last page. "No. It can't be. It starts in 1874 and stops in 1876. He wasn't even born yet. The name on the overleaf is Chester Williams, though. ... It must have been his father's! Or grandfather's!" She looked up at Jolene with a triumphant smile on her face. "Didn't I tell you this was fascinating work?"
Jolene tried to smile back, but she was more frightened than fascinated, and for some reason she kept thinking of that terrible face she and Skylar had seen in their bedroom window. The brown wrinkled head would lit perfectly on one of these shelves next to the fingers and toes.
"Let's go back up," she said. "It's getting a little stuffy down here, and I have allergies."
"Fascinating," Anna May murmured, looking at the book.
"I have an idea. Why don't we switch? You stay down here and do inventory, and I'll go upstairs."
"No, no. We'll both go back up. There's a lot I still need to show you. But I'm definitely coming down here later. There's so much food for thought." She looked around the small dark room. "What do you suppose this was? And why are all of these body parts here?"