“Fine,” she ground out. “I’ll stay one day, and if I can’t find anything by then, forget it. I’m going back to New York.”

Exactly what he’d been hoping to hear. But as he looked at her, standing in the loft staring forlornly at all the boxes, he felt nothing but guilt. He didn’t want to leave her here alone with her work, which wouldn’t lead to anything anyway. He wanted to take her downstairs, bundle her into the feather bed, burrow under the down quilts and make love to her until neither of them could move.

“I guess I better call the B and B and let the sisters know I won’t be back tonight.” Sydney looked around for a phone but didn’t spot one. “Let me guess. No phone.”

“I do come here to get away from everything,” he reminded her.

“Good thing I remembered to bring my cell phone.” She reached into her jacket pocket and pulled it out. She’d just bought it a couple of weeks ago, the latest and greatest on the market.

Russ eyed it with interest. “I’ve never seen a phone like that.”

She held it out for his inspection. “Cool, huh? I can use it to read e-mail, do research on the Web, listen to music-it’s an mp3 player, too. With this thing I’m always connected, always at the office. I never miss a call.”

“Um, yeah, well, hate to break the news, but unless it’s a satellite phone, you won’t get service out here.”

“What? That’s ridiculous. Everyplace has cell coverage these days.”

“Not these woods.”

She checked the screen more closely. Sure enough, her phone wasn’t receiving a signal. “My father will be worried sick about me if I don’t call him tonight.” Sydney gnawed on her bottom lip, then reminded herself to stop. It was a nervous habit she thought she’d conquered years ago.

“I can let both the B and B and your dad know where you are,” Russ said.

She could just imagine. Some strange guy calls and claims Sydney is stuck in the middle of nowhere and can’t be reached, but don’t worry? “Why don’t you call my aunt instead?” Sydney suggested.

“Sure, no problem.”

Aunt Carol would be cool about it. She could keep her father calm if he got worried.

Russ wrote down the number Sydney gave him and stuck it in his pocket. “Have fun, I’ll see you tomorrow.”

She couldn’t believe he was leaving, just like that. But she couldn’t very well beg him to stay.

Russ started a generator, so she would have electricity. Then collected the dog from the porch and started the hike back to the car. Sydney watched him until he was out of the clearing, disappearing into the trees.

She felt abandoned and forlorn. When she’d first visualized herself going through all these boxes of historical papers, she’d thought Russ would be helping her-identifying people in photos or the authors of letters. It had sounded like so much fun, a treasure hunt.

Doing the job alone wasn’t nearly as appealing. But she kept the goal in mind-verifying the identity of the Oberlin heir. Maybe one of those boxes held a ten-million-dollar clue.

But before she could do anything, she had to use the bathroom. She wandered into the single downstairs bedroom, but the only door led to a closet which was, as Russ had promised, filled with spare clothes. Changing into a comfy pair of jeans and a sweatshirt sounded like a good idea-after the bathroom.

But there was no bathroom.

Sydney inspected every inch of that cabin. There was no bathroom. She ran out to the front porch.

“Russ!” she yelled as loud as she could. “Russ, come back! I have a problem!” But he must have been too far down the trail, because he didn’t return. Either that or he had chosen to ignore her.

That was when she spotted a small building off to the side, shielded by some sapling trees. “Oh, no.” It couldn’t be. Surely she was just missing something, a hidden door or something. Surely he didn’t expect her to…But, yes. As she drew closer to the small building, she saw the quarter moon carved into the door.

Chapter Six

When Sydney saw Russell Klein tomorrow, she was going to kill him. She gritted her teeth and opened the door to the outhouse. This experience would make for an amusing anecdote to tell her father, she realized with a faint smile. If it made him laugh, picturing his purely urban daughter stuck in the boonies without a flush toilet, the inconvenience would be worth it. Almost.

In the closet back in the cabin she found a pair of jeans and a flannel shirt that were miles too big but warm and comfy. She would have to remember to take a picture of herself with her phone. The snapshot of her dressed like a hillbilly would go well with the anecdote.

Finally, she climbed the stairs to the loft, eager to get on with her task. It was hard to know where to start, so she grabbed a box at random, sat cross-legged on the floor and started digging.

The first box appeared to be filled with receipts, all dated from the 1940s. The name on each and every receipt was Bert Klausen.

Bert Klausen? She’d heard that name before, she thought with a surge of excitement. Had it come up in previous research? Then her hopes fell as she realized Bert was the elderly gentleman who’d greeted her at Russ’s store, the one with the pickle.

Bert was the cousin?

She wondered what all these receipts were kept here for. Had Bert actually lived here? Obviously, because she couldn’t envision anyone hauling boxes of junk through the woods just for storage.

Other boxes yielded similar fare-mail, most of it of a business nature but a lot of it just purely junk mail. Why would anyone keep junk mail? She shuddered as she thought about those people who never threw anything away, the ones who let old newspapers, magazines and empty cans stack up in their houses floor to ceiling, until only a narrow path remained leading from room to room.

Actually, her father could easily grow into one of those people if someone didn’t keep tabs on him. He wanted to keep everything; he was always sure he might need it someday. In the first months after her mom died, his house and the office had become unbelievably cluttered and Sydney had to fight him every step of the way as she’d tried to purge the junk.

Lowell Baines never would have fought his wife-he knew Shirley had the business sense and had deferred to her. But Sydney was his little girl, who obviously knew nothing. He didn’t trust her to make decisions about his affairs. In fact, he was still trying to make decisions about her life.

Finally she found a box filled with old photo albums. She loved looking at old pictures, even if she had no idea who was in them. It always made her sad when she saw photo albums at estate sales or antique shops. Hadn’t some family member wanted those photos? She had loads of old albums that had belonged to her mother, each picture meticulously labeled, and she knew the stories behind them, too.

But not everyone shared her love for recording the past. These albums, for instance, were falling to pieces. Many of the old photos were faded and few had captions. The subjects that were identified featured first names only. But she did see a few photos, dated from the 1930s, with a little boy whose name was Bertram Jr. She could only guess this was the pickle-eating Bert and that the receipts had probably belonged to his father.

But no Kleins. No Oberlins. No Winnies or Winifreds or Sams.

The deeper she delved into the boxes, the more positive she became that these boxes had all belonged to Bert and had nothing whatsoever to do with Russ or any other Kleins.

She’d been had.

Why did he want her out of town so badly? What was he trying to hide?

She wasn’t going to kill Russ, though. That would be too quick and easy. Somehow, she was going to make him suffer for dragging her up here for no good reason.

“DO I REALLY HAVE TO buy that expensive shampoo?” asked Sylvia Grimes. She was one of Winnie Klein’s best, most regular customers. But she also asked the same question every time she walked into Winnie’s hair salon, the Cut ’n’ Curl.

“Darlin’,” Winnie said as she used a soft brush to sweep away the last few stray hair clippings from Sylvia’s shoulders, “you can use any kind of shampoo you want-if you want to be back here in a week begging for a new dye

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