Stranger Room
Stranger Room
Frederick Ramsay
www.frederickramsay.com
Poisoned Pen Press
Copyright © 2008 by Frederick Ramsay
First Edition 2008
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2007942875
ISBN: 978-1-59058-535-1 Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-61595-168-0 eBook
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
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Dedication
To Susan, again.
She started it all.
Author’s Notes
The title of this novel refers to a phenomenon associated with stagecoach travel in the early centuries of this country’s history. Because inns were frequently crowded and occasionally less than sanitary, by the standards of the day, wealthy or particular passengers would sometime lease rooms in adjoining homes for the night or short periods of time. As a rule, these rooms were not connected to the house proper, but had their own door to the outside which allowed the user to come and go without disturbing other occupants of the house. These travelers would be strangers to the homeowners, and thus, the term stranger room.
The home described in the book is modeled after one in Brownsburg, Virginia, probably built around 1820 and sited on the Brownsburg Pike. Because it is also built against a hillside, its basement is at grade with the road in front and the main floor is accessed by stairs to what appears to be a second-story porch. It, in turn, opens at grade in the rear. There is a building opposite that once functioned as a coach stop.
The Shenandoah Valley, in Virginia, had no railroads running north and south until 1870. Thus, prior to that date, the only commercial means of traversing its length from Winchester to Roanoke was by coach.
Finally, all the characters in this story are the invention of the author. Any resemblance to any persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Contents
Dedication
Author’s Notes
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
More from this Author
Contact Us
Acknowledgments
I suppose I will get used to this writing business someday but so far, for me, having a book published is still as close as it gets to being six years old on Christmas morning. My heartfelt thanks to The Poisoned Pen Press staff, to Robert Rosenwald, my publisher, and to my editor, Barbara Peters, who makes me write far better than I ever thought I could. Special thanks to Glenda Sibley who took on the daunting task of proofing and correcting these pages. To Susan who scours every manuscript for hitches and glitches, and all the folks who contributed to the development of this story. Thanks too, to Dick and Betsy Anderson, who introduced me to stranger rooms, and to the folks at Brownsburg, Virginia, who were willing to share their homes, friendship, and town.
Chapter 1
Though only an hour past dawn, the air was already hot and heavy with the aroma of wood smoke, frying fatback, and horses. Jonathan Lydell stepped through the front door onto his porch. He adjusted the brass buttons of his newly brushed and pressed gray uniform and took in the road below. Cato, the slave he rented by the day to Cartwright the innkeeper, had the coach horses in hand, leading them, snorting and stamping, from the barn at the rear of the inn across the road. The old man moved slowly, leading the wheel horses out first. The coachman held up his long coiled whip and saluted Lydell.
“Captain Lydell, your lodger up yet? We’ll be pulling out ’soon’s the boy gets us hitched up.”
“I haven’t heard a peep out of him all morning. I reckon he’s a heavy sleeper.”
“Well, pound on that door, if you please, sir. I’d hate to leave him behind. There’s worrisome news on the wire.”
“I’ll see to it. And if that nigra doesn’t move fast enough for you, why you just give him a touch with your coach whip. I reckon he’ll jump to, then. You hear that, Cato?”
“Yessuh.” The old man stepped a bit livelier at the threat. The coachman cracked his whip in Cato’s general direction and laughed when it made him jump as predicted. Lydell turned and pounded on the door to the stranger room. “Say, you in there. Your coach is fixing to leave. You up?”
The wheel horses, now harnessed, stamped and snorted, tails flailing. August brings out the flies early. Cato held them close for a moment, cooing at them. The coachman set the long brake.
“Well, come along then, boy. Fetch out them other hosses.”
“’Suh.”
The coach, stage to be precise, had a team of four. They were not well matched. In the old days, before the war, there would have been six, matched and fresh. But the war had taken all but the scrags. The stage line had to make do while its manager, Col. Michael Harman, fought the damyankees elsewhere. The two wheel horses, one gray and sway-backed, the other an ancient roan, its ribs clearly outlined through its shaggy, un-brushed pelt, stomped and nodded their massive heads impatiently.
Lydell pounded on the door again. “You there, your coach is about ready. It won’t wait.”
“You’d better open up that door,” the coachman said, and fed a withered apple to each of the horses.
“Door’s locked.”
“Ain’t you got a spare key?”
Lydell removed a key from his coat pocket and held it up for the coachman to see. He tried it in the lock.
“He’s locked the door from the inside and left the key part the way turned. I can’t turn her.” He pounded on the door again.
“I’ve got that man’s goods on the top here.” The coachman pointed to the vehicle’s roof. “I’ll have to unload them.” He didn’t look happy. “Try that key again, if you would, sir.”
Cato applied his shoulder to one of the wheel horse’s rumps to straighten it out, adjusted its harness, and went for the leads.
Lydell wrenched the key back and forth. “No luck. Say, you don’t suppose he’s sick or something, do you? He seemed fine last evening when he retired.”
“Can’t s
ay. Here, you boy, watch yourself, there.” Cato led the lead horses to the coach. They’d drifted a bit turning the corner and pushed the coachman back a step. He laid the coiled whip on the old man’s bent frame. Not hard, but still painful. Cato lowered his gaze.
“Yessuh. Sorry, Suh.”
“Captain, there’s no connection between your stranger room and the rest of your house…no window?”
“No sir. Didn’t see the need of a window for travelers and I surely don’t cotton to them imposing on my hospitality. If they wish to avoid the others in the inn, they may rent my room. If they feel the need of a window, well, there’s other rooms and houses. That’s all. If I know them, they may stay as my guest. But in these times…well, sir, there’re deserters and Yankee spies aplenty. I don’t take chances…Cato!”
“Yessuh?”
“You run fetch Big Henry and tell him to bring a log. I need this door broke down.”
“Yes Suh, Captain Lydell.”
“If he ain’t dead or damned near it, that fellow is going to buy me a new door.” Lydell applied his fist to the heavy pine door again.
Cato and an enormous black man, carrying a six foot log that had to weigh at least eighty pounds, climbed the steps from the road and shuffled on bare feet down the length of the porch. The slave handled the log with no more effort than if it had been a tooth pick.
“Henry, you just swing that there log at the lock and bust this door open.”
Big Henry cradled the log and then took hold of its end. He took a deep breath, swung the length of it back and then forward at the door, which flew open with a crash and splintering of wood.
“Get in there and see what the fellow is up to,” Lydell said to Cato.
A pair of legs, booted and still, were all they could see with the early morning light in the front portion of the room. The old man crept in the darkened room. “Oh Lordy, Lordy,” he said and scurried back into the daylight. “That man, he dead, Cap’n Lydell.”
“Dead? What do you mean, he’s dead? He can’t be dead. He’s asleep or drunk, or both, you stupid nigger.”
“No suh. He’s a-lying there face up. They’s blood everywhere, and his eyes…they dead man’s eyes.”
Lydell aimed a kick at the old man, but Big Henry stepped between them and took the blow instead. The look he gave Lydell would freeze a man’s soul. Lydell started to say something, saw the look, and turned away. The coachman had climbed the stairs by that time and peered into the room. Lydell lighted a lamp and they studied the dead man.
“Well, I don’t reckon he’ll be riding with us today. You, boy, get that travel trunk with the brass fittings on it down off the coach roof.”
“Yes Suh.” Cato shuffled off the porch and across the road.
“I’ll leave it with you, Captain Lydell. I reckon you’ll be fetching the locals and they can figure this out. Key was stuck in the lock on the inside, you say?”
“More’n I say. You can see for yourself. Turn that door around and have a look.”
The coachman did as he was told. “She’s still in there alright. I’ll have to write that in my paper work. Well, Captain, it looks like you got yourself a mystery on your hands. Who was that man, anyway?” The two men entered the room and studied the corpse.
“Don’t know and don’t care. Wished I’d never laid eyes on him. Cost me a very fine pine door, he did. Now I have to get some witnesses in here and make a determination as to the how of it. Though, for the life of me, I can’t figure how someone could get in here, shoot that man dead, and get out with the door being locked on the inside and no other way in or out.”
“Fireplace?”
“Only if our killer was thin as a snake. Franklin stove with a six inch flue.”
“Maybe he killed himself.”
“Doesn’t seem likely. Appears he’s been shot in the back, rolled over and maybe shot in the head to boot. I reckon there’s easier ways to kill yourself than that.”
“Well sir, as soon as that boy finishes harnessing them horses, I’m off. I’ll be wishing you a good day, sir.”
The coachman descended to the muddy thoroughfare, picked his way through the puddles that dappled the road, and began haranguing Cato. Thirty minutes later, one passenger short and a brass studded trunk lighter, the coach rattled south toward Roanoke. It would be the last trip on this coach road until after General Philip Sheridan had scorched the valley in “The Burning,” after Appomattox, and after the venerable Robert E. Lee had taken up residency in Lexington.
***
THE STAUNTON SPECTATOR
August 23, 1864
Mysterious doings. We are in receipt of correspondence from Bolton Township to the south of us that a great mystery has been visited on that fair city. Captain Jonathan Lydell, Commander of the Home Guard, reports that a traveler resting for the night in his stranger room was found robbed and foully murdered. The method of the deed remains a mystery at this time. The room had no access to the rest of the house and the door was locked from the inside. The traveler is reported to have been a Mister Franklin Brian of undetermined address. He had no baggage and no apparent reason to be in the Valley in these perilous times.
§ § §
Sad news. Reports from Richmond describe the massacre of a company of General Jubal Early’s cavalry, under the command of Captain Lane Duckett, on the Covington road last week. Details are sketchy but early reports suggest that a spy revealed the troop’s bivouac position to a detachment of Sheridan’s cavalry operating in the valley. In a surprise attack at dawn, the entire company of fifty-six good and loyal men was set upon and all killed, except for one brave bugler, Harry Percival, aged 14, of Bristol, Tennessee. We sincerely hope the Yankees involved in this dastardly display of cowardice will soon suffer some of the same. Our brave General Early most recently viewed the sights of Washington in his last foray north. We await in anticipation his return to that dismal city and a proper lesson meted out.
§ § §
A later bulletin from Bolton reports that a slave, Big Henry, a buck Negro known to be a hard case, was found with twenty Yankee greenback dollars and a map to Pennsylvania on his person shortly thereafter. The Home Guard took him into custody and promptly hung him for a traitor and an enemy collaborator. It should be a warning to any slave contemplating dealings with the Yankees. Slaves should be kept close at night and reminded that any contact with the enemy will not be tolerated.
Chapter 2
Jonathan Lydell IV stood on his front porch and watched as the sun lumbered upward into the eastern sky, red and blurred. He gathered his coat around his shoulders against the early morning chill. He rubbed his eyes and extricated his glasses from his waistcoat pocket. A gold, and obviously new, Cadillac with Michigan license plates pulled around from the parking lot at the rear of the building across the street. Someone had been calling his name. The car turned north toward Brownsburg. He peered across the street. Mrs. Antonelli waved to him. Antonelli, now there was a name that resonated oddly in the depths of Old Virginia. She and her husband had moved to Bolton two years previously from New Jersey, or some such place, and started a bed and breakfast in the old Cartwright House. That building began its life in the late eighteenth century as an inn on the coach road and now, after more than two centuries, had returned to that usage.
“Jonathan? Can you hear me?”
He did not like being addressed by his Christian name. He considered informality an unwelcome intrusion into the culture, but something to which the valley’s newcomers seemed addicted. There were forms of address that were correct, he believed, and modern casualness irritated him immensely. At least Mrs. Antonelli refrained from calling him Jon like that odious Wilson woman down the street.
“Yes, Mrs. Antonelli, I can hear you.”
“Well, you might try to wake your lodger. He asked me specifically to call him before six. His breakfast is ready.”
“I will knock on his door, Mrs. Antonelli.” Lydell tapped on the door. No re
sponse. He knocked harder. “You awake in there?” Still no response. “I’m afraid I cannot rouse him, Mrs. Antonelli. Perhaps you should defer his breakfast until later.”
Rose Antonelli frowned, and sighed. “I will see to my other guests. Will you try again, soon, Jonathan?”
Lydell nodded, and reentered his house.
***
By ten, at Rose Antonelli’s worried insistence, Jonathan Lydell had tried several times to rouse Anton Grotz. She began to pound on the door as well.
“Jonathan, I think we should open this door and see what the trouble is.”
“Door’s locked, Mrs. Antonelli.”
“Call me Rose. Don’t you have a spare key?”
“I do.” He went into the house and returned with a large iron key that had to be at least two hundred years old.
“My word, that must be the original.”
“When I restored the house and the stranger room, I retrieved many of the original locks and keys.” He attempted to insert the key in the lock. “It’s locked from the inside and that key’s still in there. I cannot unlock the door.”
“There’s no access to the room from your house?”
“No. When I set out to restore the house, I sealed this room off from the remainder—part of the whole project to qualify for my historical plaque.” He nodded toward the signage on the front of the house.
Rose pounded on the door with her fist. “Mr. Grotz, are you all right? Mr. Grotz?”
Lydell stood back and scratched his head. “You know, this is very odd.”
“Mr. Grotz, are you in there?”
“Of course he’s in there. The key is in the lock on the inside. I’ll have to have this door broken down.” He walked to the end of the porch and leaned over the rail. “Henry? You there?”
A wiry twenty-something with a long, spiked Mohawk haircut and goatee, both dyed scarlet, strolled to the street. “Yo. Wassup?”
“Henry, get a log or something and come on up here. We have to break into the stranger room.”
Henry climbed the steps with what appeared to be a log, a leftover from a cabin.
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