“Hi, boys,” Aunt Carolyn greeted when they entered the dark foyer.

“Hi, Aunt Carolyn,” Kevin returned. He kept his fingers crossed that she wouldn’t realize they’d been out to the bluffs during the storm.

“You boys are drenched!” she exclaimed, noticing their wet clothes. “Where have you been?”

“Oh, we were just walking around outside, and it started raining,” Kevin said. One thing Kevin didn’t like to do was lie, but what he’d said wasn’t really a lie, was it? After all, they had been walking around outside, and it had started raining. So it wasn’t really a lie at all.

And where had Aunt Carolyn been anyway, for all the time that had passed after their fathers had left the lodge to go on their fishing hike?

All of a sudden, it seemed to Kevin that there were several really strange things going on around here.

“Well, it’s too bad about the rain,” Aunt Carolyn said. “But it does seem to rain a lot around here this time of year. You could have gone out to the bluffs for some kite-flying.”

Kevin didn’t say anything.

“But I think,” Aunt Carolyn went on, “it might be a good idea for the two of you to go back up to your room and get changed into some dry clothes. Dinner will be ready in less than an hour.”

“Okay, Aunt Carolyn.”

“And tell your sister, too.”

Kevin nodded, then he and Jimmy headed up the wide, winding stairs to their room.

“I still want to know what that Wally guy was doing digging holes in the woods,” Jimmy said.

“Yeah,” Kevin agreed. “Right in front of that forked tree, and while it was still raining!” What could he possibly have been digging for? What could be so important that he’d be digging holes in the rain?

They changed into dry jeans and flannel shirts, then combed out their wet hair. By then, the storm had started up again; Kevin could hear the thunder slowly rumbling outside, and then heavy rain began to patter against the roof. It wasn’t the thunder or the rain that bothered Kevin the most—it was the lightning, and the way it would crack and boom in the sky without any notice.

Kevin knocked on his sister’s closed bedroom door. “Hey, Becky!”

“Yes, Kevvie?” she asked from the other side.

I HATE it when she calls me that! “Dinner will be ready soon.”

“I’ll be down in a little while,” her snide voice replied. “I still need a little more time to get ready.”

“Get ready?” Kevin questioned. “What do you mean?”

“Just mind your own business, you little twerp!”

Kevin and Jimmy headed for the stairs. “What does she have to get ready for?” Jimmy asked.

But Kevin thought he already knew. “I’ll bet she’s in there putting on her best clothes, in case that Wally guy comes back around.”

“Jeeze, girls are weird.”

“Tell me about it,” Kevin said. “You ought to have one for a sister.”

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

Aunt Carolyn, holding the curtains open a few inches, was glancing out one of the front bay windows when they boys came downstairs. “My,” she said, “your fathers certainly picked a terrible day to go camping and fishing. I hope they decide to come back to the lodge.”

“They probably won’t, Aunt Carolyn,” Kevin said. “They’re die-hard campers. And, besides, they brought ponchos and rubber boots and lots of other kinds of rain gear.”

“Well, it doesn’t make much sense to me,” Carolyn went on. Her white hand released the heavy drapes, which fell back into place just as another spike of lightning crackled across the sky. “They could catch terrible colds in weather like this.”

“I wouldn’t worry about it,” Kevin said.

She turned then, with a strange look on her face. Kevin couldn’t believe how pale she was, and her black clothes and long black hair made her look even more pale. “Is your sister coming down?” she asked.

“She’ll be down soon,” Kevin said. “I think she’s up there getting all dressed up.”

“I can’t imagine why.”

“She’s got a crush on that Wally guy,” Jimmy said.

“Oh, I see,” Aunt Carolyn coyly remarked. “Well, he seems to be a nice enough young man.”

A nice enough young man? Kevin thought in objection. He’s creepy, just like Bill.

A few minutes later, they were all seated in the big, gloomy dining room. In the high windows, they could see the lightning flashing. Eventually, Becky came down, dressed ridiculously in one of her very best dresses, and her blond hair pulled back in a ponytail with a bow on it. Kevin and Jimmy smiled at each other.

“He’s not here,” Kevin said.

“Who?” Becky smirked her reply.

“Wally, your Prince Charming.”

“Oh, you’re so stupid,” Becky moaned, and sat down.

“And he won’t be here any time soon, either,” Jimmy said. “He’ll probably get washed away in the rain. We just saw him in the woods, digging holes.”

“Digging holes?” Becky said.

“That’s right,” Kevin added on. “In the middle of the woods, in the rain.”

“Why would Wally be digging holes in the woods?” Becky countered from her place at the table. “I’ve never heard anything so stupid in my life. You two are just making it up, like you do everything else.”

“It’s true,” Jimmy said. “We saw him out there about an hour ago.”

“You did not!” Becky exclaimed.

“We did too,” Kevin said.

“What’s this about digging holes?” Aunt Carolyn suddenly remarked, appearing from the kitchen. She set down steaming dinner plates before each other them: t-bone steaks, baked potatoes, buttered lima beans.

Becky smirked. “Kevin and Jimmy said they saw Wally digging in the woods a little while ago.”

“Not just digging,” Kevin corrected. “He was digging a big oblong hole. Coffin shaped.”

“There you go with your stupid vampires again,” Becky scoffed.

“Hey, I didn’t say anything about vampires,” Kevin came right back. “All I said was that the hole was shaped like a coffin, and it was your big lover boy Wally who was digging the hole.”

“Kevin, shut up!”

“Now, kids,” Aunt Carolyn interrupted. “The dinner table is no place to argue.”

But Becky grumbled on, “All Kevin ever talks about is stupid vampires, I’m sick of listening to him.”

Aunt Carolyn looked up very slowly and smiled. “So Kevin’s interested in vampires?”

“Well, sort of,” Kevin admitted. “I think they’re pretty cool.”

Aunt Carolyn’s smile seemed to hover before her face. “Well, then, tonight, before you go to bed, remind me to tell you about the local legend.”

“What local legend?” Kevin asked over his steak.

“The local vampire legend,” Aunt Carolyn said.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

Kevin could scarcely think of anything else all throughout dinner. A vampire legend? Here? What could it be? And could it have anything to do with the strange painting he’d seen in the foyer? The painting of the men in the rowboat, with the box of gold bricks and—

And the coffin? he wondered.

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