“We’ll try to contact a living descendent of each family, and send out invitations for a centennial birthday celebration,” she told Robyn.
“Do you think there will be enough guests to make it all worthwhile?” Robyn asked, playing devil’s advocate.
Lynette gave a dismissive wave of her hand. “We’ll include special people in the area who have been connected with the estate through the years. Stoneview has been the setting for a good many community projects, you know. People can wander around the place and see what changes have been made to the house and grounds. We can have the affair catered, and arrange for something special like a fireworks display on the lake for the evening.
“We’ll ask everyone to bring memorabilia, photos and stories to share,” she continued. “Maybe we could even think about writing a history of Stoneview Estate.”
The use of the pronoun “we” made it clear Lynette expected her granddaughter to devote time and energy in carrying out the preparations for the affair.
Robyn felt as if she’d been thrust on a runaway train with no way to stop it—or get off! A chill touched her body despite the warm Florida sunshine. Maybe stirring up the past wasn’t such a great idea. She remembered how the malicious murmuring of high school classmates had ruined the newly decorated bedroom her grandmother had prepared for her arrival.
Her first day, she’d been sitting in the cafeteria with three other girls.
“Really, Robyn, I don’t know how you can live in that place after what happened,” one of them said with a grimace.
“Doesn’t it give you the shivers?” asked another.
“You couldn’t pay me enough to have a sleepover there,” one girl agreed.
Robyn had looked blankly at the three of them. “What are you talking about?”
Instead of answering, they’d just groaned and rolled their eyes.
When Robyn repeated what they had said to her grandmother, Lynette dismissed the matter in her usual dogmatic manner.
“This lovely house had four families living in it before your grandfather and I bought it. I’m sure lots of happenings have taken place under this roof, good and bad. The past is past,” she had said firmly. “I don’t want to hear any more nonsense about it.”
Lynette didn’t know her granddaughter if she thought that put an end to the matter. As soon as Robyn had the chance, she went to the Chataqua town library. As she scanned the computers of the local Chataqua Sentinel, her search paid off. She found what she was looking for.
“Kidnapping and Murder at Stoneview Mansion.”
Robyn’s breath caught as the headline leaped out at her from the front page. Her heartbeat quickened as she read the account. An adopted infant girl of Darrel and Sybil Sheldon had been snatched from the nursery on the second floor of the Stoneview mansion. After a large ransom had been paid, the baby was left on the doorstep of a local doctor, James Donovan, but that same night, Heather Fox, the nursemaid of the baby, was found murdered on the lawn of the estate. She’d been strangled.
Robyn stared at the photo of a fair-haired young woman, Heather Fox, smiling as she held up a baby for the camera. Robyn could tell from the background that the nursemaid had been standing in front of the garden gazebo, not far from where her body had been discovered. Robyn had shivered as if a cold draft had touched her skin, and wondered if she’d ever be able to pass by that spot again without being reminded of a strangled woman lying there.
“The tragedy has nothing to do with you,” Lynette had lectured when Robyn confronted her with the newspaper account. “It’s over and done with!”
Robyn had wanted to believe her grandmother, but when they’d stripped the old wallpaper from her bedroom and discovered her room had once been the nursery, the nightmares began. She’d jerk awake in the middle of the night, hearing sounds of a baby crying. Robyn would stare into the shadows, every nerve ending vibrating with an awareness that danger still lurked there. Once, she’d run from the room, trembling, but her grandmother had dismissed her behavior as childish. As a result, Robyn suffered her torment in silence. More than anything she wanted to please her grandmother.
Robyn knew her grandmother’s habitual strong Scotch “nightcap” insured her an uneventful, peaceful night’s sleep. Although Robin wasn’t into drinking as a teenager, one time she’d secretly fixed herself a similar bedtime drink. Her hopes that the liquor would knock her out were foiled even before she consumed half of the glassful. Terribly sick, she’d spent the night in the bathroom, and the next morning had to lie to Lynette about her bedraggled appearance.
Later, when Robyn went away to college and eventually became a professor of romance languages, she was too embarrassed to tell her grandmother that she’d like to change bedrooms when she came back for visits.
Even now, a twenty-six-year-old adult, she hesitated to express any disapproval of her grandmother’s ideas. Appearing to be anything but a confident woman in charge of her own life was out of the question for Robyn. Her parents had expected it—her grandmother demanded it!
“We need to get the invitations sent as soon as possible,” Lynette declared, either unaware or totally ignoring her granddaughter’s lack of enthusiasm. “By the time I return to Stoneview in June, we should know which families will be staying in the mansion. We can arrange for lodging in Chataqua for the remainder of the guests.” She paused. “I think the first week in July would be a perfect time for the celebration, don’t you?”
Robyn knew the question was purely rhetorical. As far as her grandmother was concerned the matter was settled. The possibility that she might not be ready and willing to drop all her summer plans and help carry out the festivities wasn’t worthy of consideration.
Robyn silently sighed. No wonder I don’t have a life of my own, she thought. During the school year, the responsibilities of her teaching position demanded total dedication. Every romantic relationship she’d hoped to nurture had died in the bud, smothered by too many other obligations. Several eligible men had shown some interest in dating her, but about the third time she broke a date, it was bye-bye.
“We’ll need to mail the invitations as soon as possible,” Lynette said as she laid out a timetable for all the preparations.
“Getting current addresses may not be all that easy,”
Robyn protested once again. “What about the descendants of Hugo Koleski, who built the house?”
“Well, several branches of the family lived on the estate until the lumber mill closed in about 1955. I believe that when the property was sold, all the Koleski family moved away.”
“Maybe they went back to Poland?”
“We’ll have to find out.”
“What about the other three owners of Stoneview, before you and Grandpa bought it? How will you track them down?”
“Don’t worry. I have friends in high places who have access to public records. I’ll make some calls,” Lynette assured her, as if that took care of the matter. “After I locate someone in each family, I’ll send you the addresses. In the meantime you arrange to have the invitations printed, and be ready to send them out.”
“Are you sure about this, Grandmother?” Robyn could not stifle a growing apprehension that such a reunion might dredge up dangerous and conflicting emotions. She didn’t know how to explain to her grandmother that on some deep level she sensed there were remaining energies