|
Author’s
notes:
In Part One, we
learned that Brian, Mart, and Jim are away at camp. Matthew and Honey Wheeler
have moved to Sleepyside after Madeleine’s death. They are preparing to take
a horseback ride to explore their property. Katie and James Frayne are still
alive in this universe, although there were hints that Uncle James isn’t in
the best of health. Now, for the second part of “The Secret of the Other
Mansion.”
Chapter 4
Matthew and Honey turned their horses northeast,
following one of the many trails in the forest preserve. Matthew led the way
on his big black gelding, Jupiter, while Honey followed on her horse,
Strawberry. Both were relatively quiet as they took in the sights of the land
around them.
“Where are we riding to, Daddy?” Honey asked, breaking
the silence.
“I want to show you the game preserve,” her father explained.
“Someday, I’ll hire a gamekeeper to put out salt blocks. That way, we’ll be
able to watch the deer that come to lick them.”
“And will we just watch the deer, or do you have more
sinister intentions?” she giggled, knowing her father’s love of hunting.
Matthew grinned. “My lips are sealed, sweetheart.”
It was good to hear Honey’s laugh.
She had been a jovial baby, quite good-natured and well-behaved. Once she was
old enough, Madeleine shipped her off to boarding school and summer camps. It
was then that his daughter’s health problems began. Matthew suspected that
her poor health stemmed from unhappiness, but he knew Madeleine would not
believe him.
It had been almost a year since his wife had died. In
that time, Matthew and Honey had grown closer. He refused to send her back to
her boarding school, instead hiring Miss Trask to be her instructor, as well
as her governess. Honey liked that arrangement, and slowly, her health began
to improve. Matthew wasn’t sure where she would attend school this coming
year, but it was only July. He had over a month to worry about that.
“So, how do you like the property?” he inquired.
Honey looked around at the forest and smiled at the
wonder of it all. She had been used to city life, and the woods here seemed
like something out of a fairy tale. “I love it,” she replied honestly. “Do we
own all of it?”
“Most of it. And if I have my way, we’ll own all of it,”
he said with a grin. He had plans to offer Elijah Maypenny a good chunk of
change for the pie-shaped parcel of land in the center of the preserve. He
was sure the old hermit would take him up on his offer. “Do you like the
servants?”
Honey nodded. “Yes, they’re all very nice. I don’t think
Rachel is happy, though. I heard her complaining to Miss Trask about the late
supper hour. She’s used to preparing dinner much earlier.”
“Well, if she wants to quit, I’m sure we can find another
cook to replace her.”
Honey shyly glanced at her father. “How do you like the servants, Daddy?” she
asked nonchalantly.
Matthew glanced suspiciously at his daughter. “Any
particular servant you’re wondering about?”
Honey giggled. “I was just wondering how you liked
Celia.”
He groaned and rolled his eyes. “I specifically told the employment agency that I didn’t want any
single ladies to be suggested for any
position. A wealthy widower must be on the lookout for scavengers. But, what
do they send me? A young, pretty blonde on the prowl for a husband.”
Honey tittered at her father’s disdain. “Oh, so you think
she’s pretty,” she teased. Her father gave her a stern look and playfully
tapped her knee with his riding crop.
“Yes, she’s pretty, but she’s a bit too young,” Matthew
admitted. “And I’m wagering that she has dollar signs in her eyes.”
“There’s more to you than money, Daddy,” she argued. “For
an old guy, you’re very handsome.”
Matthew grinned and shook his riding crop at his
daughter. “For an old guy? I’m only
thirty-six! I don’t think the nursing home is ready for my application, yet.”
“You know what I mean, Daddy. I think you’re very
good-looking. I don’t blame Celia a bit for flirting with you.”
“I have half a mind to fire her…”
“Oh, Daddy! You wouldn’t fire Celia, would you?” Honey
interrupted, worry evident in her voice. “I know she bothers you, but she’s
been very kind to me. Most of the servants are stuffy, but she’s been a real
friend. I like her.”
“Well, if you like her so well, I suppose I’ll give her a
second chance. Maybe I’ll just hire a young, handsome chauffer take her mind
off of me,” Matthew suggested with a wink.
They came to a fork in the path. The horses stood still
waiting for their riders to choose a direction.
“Which way do we go, Daddy?” Honey asked.
“Let’s try this way,” he answered, turning Jupiter to the
wooded path to the east. They hadn’t gone far before they realized the wooded
path led to a driveway. Matthew spied the name “Frayne” on the mailbox and
his curiosity got the better of him, as he remembered his best friend from
college.
“This is somebody’s driveway,” Honey remarked nervously.
“What if they don’t like us riding our horses up here?”
“I just want to see where it leads,” her father
explained. Suddenly, a large gray and yellow house appeared. It was almost as
large as Manor House and had been recently painted. Colorful flowers lined
the beds in front of the house. The hedges were neatly trimmed and the grass
was freshly mown.
“What a beautiful house! I wonder who lives here,” Honey
said.
“I’m not sure. The only neighbor I’ve met so far has been
Peter Belden, the banker.”
“Is he the one with the daughter?” she asked hopefully.
“Yes,” her father answered distractedly. He was wondering
who by the name of Frayne lived here.
Could
it be some of Win’s family? he thought to
himself.
“I hate to cut our ride short, Daddy, but what if his
daughter comes by the house? I wouldn’t want to miss her visit. Maybe we
should head home.”
Matthew looked curiously at the gray and yellow mansion,
and then at his daughter’s pleading eyes. “All right, Honey. Let’s go home.”
He turned Jupiter down the path leading to the Manor House.
I’ll
come back later and meet these neighbors, he thought.
Chapter 5
Trixie
spent her morning caring for her six-year-old brother, Bobby. She wistfully
stared out of the living room window, wondering how her day might have been
different if she had a friend that lived close by. The Beldens and Fraynes
lived farther out in the country than most of her friends at school, so with
Jim and her brothers being away at camp, Trixie was quite lonely.
As Trixie and Bobby finished their lunch, the phone
rang. Mrs. Belden hurried into the
room and answered the phone.
“Belden residence,” she politely
answered. “Hello, Katie…How awful! I’m sorry to hear that…Yes, maybe you can
make the next one…Hope he gets to feeling better…Let us know if you need
anything…Good-bye.”
Mrs. Belden hung up the phone. “That
was Mrs. Frayne. It seems Uncle James has become quite ill, and she needs to
take him in to see Dr. Ferris. He collapsed after he returned home from your
walk.”
“Gleeps!” Trixie exclaimed. “I
hope he gets better. I sure would hate for anything to happen to Uncle James,
especially with Jim away.”
“Katie will take good care of him,” Mrs. Belden assured,
trying to hide the worry from her voice.
“Oh, Moms, I’m so glad that Jim’s mom is there! Why, if
she hadn’t been nearby, Uncle James might’ve collapsed in the driveway and
just laid there!”
“Yes,” Mrs. Belden agreed. “Katie and Jim’s presence has
been the best medicine for James.”
“I ‘dore Uncle James. He lets
me chase Queenie,” Bobby replied, finishing up his
Crabapple Special. “Me an’ Reddy almos’ caughted her, too.”
Trixie smiled. Before Jim and his
mother moved here, Uncle James would have never allowed that. Quite often, he had chased Mart and Trixie
out of his yard.
“Bobby, you be careful,” his
mother cautioned. “That nasty old hen could scratch you.”
“Oh, Moms!” Trixie giggled. “Bobby can’t catch Queenie, anyway. But he sure has fun trying. And if you
ask me, Uncle James almost has as much fun watching.”
“Uncle James readed Peter
Rabbit to me a zillion times when I was sick last summer from eatin’ that poison ivy,” Bobby proclaimed, wiping his
mouth with the back of his hand. Somehow, he had managed to smear peanut
butter and crabapple jelly in his blond eyebrows.
Mrs. Belden sighed. “I remember that. I hope you learned
your lesson and never do that again.”
Bobby’s eyes grew wide, and he vigorously shook his sandy
curls. “I learnded my lesson, Moms. But it wasn’t
my fault. I heared Mart an’ Brian talkin’ ‘bout the Indians gettin’
‘munity by doin’ that,
an’ I thoughted I try it. I won’t ever do it
again.”
He took a rather noisy gulp of his
milk. “Mart an’ Brian don’t know nuffin’, anyways,”
he continued after wiping off his milk moustache. “I still gotted poison ivy after I eated
it.”
“What did Mart teach you about poison ivy, Bobby?” Trixie
asked.
Bobby stuck up three gooey fingers. “Leaflets three, let
‘em be.” The sticky little boy grinned impishly and
started giggling. “Or as Mart put it, ‘Avoid trifocal leaves’.”
Trixie laughed, as well. “You mean ‘trifoliate’, not
‘trifocal’.”
Mrs. Belden smiled at her children. “It’s time for me to
leave for my Garden Club meeting. Will you two be all right here by
yourselves?”
Trixie nodded. “We’ll be fine, Moms.”
Mrs. Belden gathered her purse and car keys. “If you
could do some weeding in the garden, I’d appreciate it.”
Trixie followed her mother outside to the car. “I’ll do the weeding, and I’ll take good
care of Bobby, Moms.”
Mrs. Belden slid behind the wheel of the station wagon.
“You might keep him with you while you’re in the garden. You never can tell
what kind of trouble Bobby will get into. Don’t forget to gather the eggs and
feed and water the chickens. I made a big pitcher of lemonade. There are
plenty of cookies in the crock. You may want a snack later.”
Trixie
leaned into the car and gave her mother a swift kiss. “Have a great time, Moms!” She waved as her
mother pulled out of the crabapple tree-lined driveway.
Trixie
went back inside and washed the lunch dishes and did a little dusting. After
Bobby rested for a bit, she decided to take him outside so she could weed and
gather the eggs.
“Come on, Bobby. Let’s go outside for a little bit.”
The little boy pouted grumpily. “I don’t wanna go outside. It’s too hot.”
“I need to pull some weeds and gather the eggs,” Trixie
informed him.
“If we go out, can I put on my bathing suit an’ have you squirt me with the hose?” he inquired hopefully.
“Maybe later,” Trixie placated. “Right now, I need to
weed the garden. Can you be a big boy and help me?”
Bobby cheered up immediately. “I can holp.
Mummy let me holp her this morning.”
“Afterward,
we can have lemonade and cookies on the terrace,” she said, holding out a
sandal for Bobby to put on his foot.
His pout returned. “I don’t wanna
wear sandals. It’s too hot, an’ they make my feet stink.”
“That’s true,” Trixie giggled. “I suppose you can go
without them, if you promise to be careful.”
They made their way to the garden out back. Bobby ran
ahead of her and tripped over an exposed tree root.
“Oh, Bobby,” she cried impatiently. “Must you trip over
roots every single time?”
“Not every
single time. Once I tripped over a big black snake, right here. He was so
long,” he said, stretching out his arms full length. “An’ he didn’t even bite
me, or anything.”
“Of course he didn’t bite you. Snakes don’t go around
biting people.” Trixie left her little brother alone in the garden and went
to feed and water the chickens. She returned to the garden and began
carefully pulling out the weeds. “These tomato plants are awfully dry. I’d
better water them.”
She hurried to get the water hose from the side of the
house. While she was unwinding it, her eagle eyes caught a red blur moving
around the clearing at Ten Acres. Trixie squinted
her eyes and tried to focus on the blob. Could
Jim have come home early? she wondered.
Trixie moved closer to the
Belden-Frayne property border and tried to make out what she saw. Her curiosity getting the better of her,
she decided to investigate.
She ran back to the garden to get Bobby, but she did not
see him anywhere. “Bobby! Where are you?” she shrieked. “Bobby!”
Finally, she heard his scream. Panic seized her. His cry
sounded quite alarmed. When he sounded like that, it usually meant that he
was in trouble.
“What’s the matter, Bobby? Where are you?” she called.
“I’m here,” he called,
waving a forked stick. “I was chasin’ a snake, but
you scareded him away when you yelled.” Once again,
his pout returned.
“Is that all?” Trixie asked in exasperation. “I was
afraid you’d gotten hurt. Now, leave that stupid snake alone, and come with me.
We’re going to Ten Acres.”
“Why are we goin’ there?” Bobby
asked.
“I need to investigate,” she explained patiently. “I saw
something, and I want to see what it was.”
“After we’re done ‘vestigatin’,
can I poke that snake again?”
Trixie rolled her eyes and pulled her little brother
toward the path leading to the Fraynes’. The large copperhead that had been
ready to strike slithered off into the woods.

Author’s notes:
Thank you once
again to my stupendous editors, Kaye and Kathy! You all are the best! Love
you both!
Thank you to
Carol for finding the perfect graphics.
For the record,
I quoted some of “The Secret of the Mansion” as well as “The Gatehouse
Mystery.”
Since I’ve
tortured Bobby so much in some of my stories, I decided to let him skip the
snakebite. Who knows what awaits the Bobster in the
future!

Home | Other Fanfic | Recommended
Links
http://MistyCreation.net

|