Spirit’s Key

Read Spirit’s Key Online

Authors: Edith Cohn

 

The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way.
Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author's copyright, please notify the publisher at:
us.macmillanusa.com/piracy
.

 

For Jer and our fur daughter Leia

 

T
ABLE OF
C
ONTENTS

 

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Map

 

  1
Mr. Selnick's Future

  2
My Today

  3
A Delivery from the Past

  4
A Surprise from the Past

  5
Floundering

  6
The Sacred Bird

  7
The Taste of Fear

  8
Poor Mr. Selnick

  9
The Key to Sky

10
Baldie Legend

11
My Great Gift

12
A Death at Sunset

13
Grave Tricks

14
Mrs. Fishborne's Future

15
A Quarantine

16
Trespassing

17
The Key to Home

18
Rotten Oyster

19
No Devil Hiding Here

20
Helping Mrs. Borse

21
Smelling the Future

22
The Call of the Woods

23
The Key to Survival

24
The Great Rope

25
An Adventure-Filled Day

26
Showdown

27
A Familiar Smell

28
Out There

29
The Baldies' Future

30
Our Future

 

Acknowledgments

Copyright

 

 

1

M
R
. S
ELNICK'S
F
UTURE

When I get home from school, every cabinet in the kitchen has been thrown open. There's a mess in the living room, too.

“Looking for something?” I ask Dad.

He runs his hands through his normally neat hair, which at the moment sticks frantic in every direction. “Have you seen the candles?”

“I think they're in my room. I'll check. Is the power going to go out?”

Dad shakes his head. “Someone's coming for a reading.”

My heart flip-flops with excitement. “Eder Mint?” Eder used to be Dad's best client. But not even Eder has been in for a reading lately. It's been two months, the longest stretch without business since we moved to this island. That was six years ago, before people came to trust that what Dad sees, happens.

“No, Mr. Selnick. He's coming any minute,” Dad says, “and I need those candles.”

I dash to my room. Most everything we own is hidden in boxes. Dad likes to order supplies in large quantities. His stockpiling has created mountains of cardboard that rise up every wall.

Each room in our house is painted a different color, and mine is purple. These days, though, I have to lean my head
waaay
back to see the color, because Dad's mountains go
waaay
up.

I dig fast, cutting the packing tape off box after box. “Found them!” I yell. Dad doesn't mess around. There are enough candles here to light the whole island. I grab two, along with a burgundy bedsheet.

“What's that?” Dad eyes the bedsheet with suspicion.

“I thought it might look nice draped on the table.” I shake out the sheet and cover the dinky card table with it. “See?” I stand back to admire it. “Now you have a little atmosphere.”

Dad frowns and mutters something about mumbo jumbo. Candles, atmosphere, and crystal balls are what Dad calls mumbo jumbo. That stuff is for hacks, and Dad is not a hack. He asks to hold a person's house key, the kind you use to open your front door, and as soon as the key is in his hand,
bam!
He
knows.

It used to be that simple.

It used to be Dad didn't need mumbo jumbo.

“You're tapping into your power, is all,” I insist. “And it might help to dress things up a bit.” I place the candles inside two holders and arrange them in the center of the table. “Nice, right?”

“I'm tired just looking at it,” Dad says.

I snap my fingers. “Coffee. You need coffee.” I rush to the kitchen to make him a pot.

Dad also didn't use to need coffee in the afternoon. But lately nothing's like usual. Dad is tired. He has trouble concentrating, and usually this soon after school I wouldn't be home to help him. I'd be out with my dog, Sky, running up and down the sand dunes. Or swimming in the ocean. Or bicycling, with Sky running alongside, or …

Well, the point is I'd be with Sky. And Dad would be breezing through his readings instead of scrunching up his face, worrying he won't get it right.

When the coffee is finished, I bring Dad a cup, but he doesn't drink it. He catches a glimpse of himself in the hall mirror. He tucks in his shirt and presses down his hair. He restacks some boxes to make them tall and orderly.

Finally, he sits down and takes a deep breath, but his foot doesn't stop tapping. There's sweat inside the wrinkles on his forehead, and when Mr. Selnick bangs on the door, Dad knocks over a chair standing up to answer.

When Mr. Selnick comes inside, I set the chair back upright. The big man takes off his hat and plops down like he's relieved to have the weight of the world off his feet. “Thanks, honey,” he says.

My name isn't Honey. It's Spirit. Spirit Holden. But Mr. Selnick calls everyone honey. Mr. Selnick is our neighbor three houses down and one across. I wonder what's up. Dad has regulars, and then there are people who come only if something's wrong.

Mr. Selnick hands Dad his house key, which is my cue to skedaddle. But my foot lands on one of Sky's squeak toys. It makes the worst kind of noise in the silence and brings back the pain of Sky's death like a crashing wave.

Dad doesn't notice. He's busy lighting the candles. The light reflects off the bedsheet and casts a strange red color on Mr. Selnick's face.

I pick up the squeak toy, a stuffed pheasant. Sky's things are still the way they were when he was alive. The pheasant seems to look at me sternly with its yellow-stitched eyes, like it would disapprove if I threw it away. It was Sky's favorite toy.

I set it on the bookcase. I'm about to leave, but I pause when I hear Dad say something about a baldie.

“I don't think this dead baldie in your yard means a negative future for you personally.” Dad scratches his head. “But I'm not sure.”

I shouldn't eavesdrop. Dad caught me once when I was little, and he said listening to his private readings was like peeking at someone's diary.
Holding a person's key,
he said,
I see everything they lock up. People trust me with their most private secrets.

Even though I wouldn't tell anyone, it isn't fair for me to know Mr. Selnick's inner secrets.

But another dead baldie? Baldies are what people call the wild island dogs. We have bald eagles, too, which is how Bald Island got its name. But people call eagles sacred creatures. The dogs are the baldies, because they're unique to our island. No one else in the world has dogs like ours.

Sky was a baldie. And anything to do with Sky has to do with me, so I don't leave. I press up against the wall next to the bookcase with Sky's pheasant.

“Not sure?” Mr. Selnick asks. “Is there something wrong with my key? This one's a copy. Victor made it for me. Did Hatterask mess up my key?”

“No, no, your key's fine. Don't worry.” But Dad pushes Mr. Selnick's folded money back across the table. “This reading is on the house.”

Dad never does readings on the house. His readings
pay
for our house and every box in it. I get that same sweaty feeling I got the day Sky wasn't waiting for me after school. Like something's bad wrong and I need to stick my head in the freezer to cool off and think clear.

Mr. Selnick is about twice as big as Dad. His gut sticks out under his folded arms like a shelf, and his large shoulders square back like he means not to leave until Dad spits out something more specific. “Whatever it is, you best lay it to me straight.”

Dad takes a sip of coffee, then picks up Mr. Selnick's key again. He closes his eyes and begins to rock. Back and forth. Back and forth. Then he shakes like he's cold, shivering until he jumps up and drops the key on the table like it burned him. “There's danger ahead.”

“Dag-nab-it! I knew that baldie paws up in my yard was an omen.” Mr. Selnick shakes his finger at the air. “I told my wife:
The devil's after us.

“Get Jolie and the kids. Pack your bags.”

“What?” Mr. Selnick looks dumbfounded.

Dad walks to the door. “You have to leave the island.” He stares hard at Mr. Selnick. “Tonight.”

 

2

M
Y
T
ODAY

“Leave the island?” Mr. Selnick repeats, as if Dad can't possibly be serious. He lifts his large body out of his chair like he's got time to spare. “I've lived on this island since I set foot on this earth. I'm not a-goin' anywhere. If the devil wants me, he knows which house is mine.”

But after a moment, Mr. Selnick doesn't look so sure. He picks up his hat and twists it like it's wet and needs wringing. “What did you see? Tell me what I'm up against so I can be ready.”

“The best advice I can give you is your own,” Dad says. “Leave this island.”

I suck in a breath and hope this means what I think it means.

“I told you I'm not a-goin' anywhere.” Mr. Selnick shakes his head. “I never said I was.”

“I saw your face covered in dirt so black I almost didn't know it was you,” Dad says. “You were wearing the same blue plaid shirt you're wearing right now, and you turned to Jolie and said,
We should've left the island.

Other books

Chasing Glory by Galbraith, DeeAnna
The Healing by Frances Pergamo
Tríada by Laura Gallego García
Missing by Gabrielle Lord
Hellfire Crusade by Don Pendleton
Bestias de Gor by John Norman