Ghosts of Greenglass House
Contents
* * *
Title Page
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Frost
The Bachelorette Party
To Clem and Georgie
The Heist
Picks and Locks
The Game of Maps
The Waits
The Raw Nights
The Invisible Assailant
Irresistible Blandishment
Doc Holystone
Meddy
The Emporium
Plums
Mistletoe and Holly
The Importance of Good Plumbing
The Reliquary
The Solitaire and the Crane
The Feather Locus
Too Normal
Talking To Girls
Fortresses and Fireworks
A Person of Interest
Blame Tradition!
The Saint in the Hallways
Sanctuary
Lucia and the Skull
False Assumptions
The Flight of Maps
more Persons of Interest
Cantlebone
Strange Things in the Woods
What the Moonlight Shows
Nothing Stays Buried
Violet Cross’s Secret Cache
Snow
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
Sample Chapter from THE BONESHAKER
Buy the Book
About the Author
Connect with HMH on Social Media
Clarion Books
3 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10016
Copyright © 2017 by Kate Milford
Illustrations copyright © 2017 by Jaime Zollars
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to trade.permissions@hmhco.com or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
Clarion Books is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
www.hmhco.com
Cover design by Sharismar Rodriguez
The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
Names: Milford, Kate, author.
Title: Ghosts of Greenglass House / by Kate Milford.
Description: Boston ; New York : Clarion Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, [2017] | Summary: “Twelve-year-old Milo is stuck spending the winter holidays in a house full of strange guests who are not what they seem–again! He will have to work with friends old and new to uncover clues in search of a mysterious map and a famous smuggler’s lost haul”—Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016049761 | ISBN 9780544991460 (hardcover)
Subjects: | CYAC: Mystery and detective stories. | Hotels, motels, etc.—Fiction. | Smuggling—Fiction. | Identity—Fiction. | Ghosts—Fiction. | Adoption—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Mysteries & Detective Stories. | JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Adoption. | JUVENILE FICTION / Fairy Tales & Folklore / General. | JUVENILE FICTION / Holidays & Celebrations / Christmas & Advent. | JUVENILE FICTION / Legends, Myths, Fables / General. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Friendship.
Classification: LCC PZ7.M594845 Gho 2017 | DDC [Fic]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016049761
eISBN 978-1-328-82892-7
v1.0817
To Tess, Evy Lou, and Zoey, at the start of their adventures, with love
one
Frost
FROST WAS PRETTY MUCH the worst. It was like a promise with nothing behind it. It was like not enough icing on a cookie, not enough butter on toast. It was like the big gilt-framed antique mirror in his parents’ bedroom: from a distance it was shiny and beautiful, but once you got close enough, you could see the plain old everyday wood peeking through the gold paint. Frost, at least when you wanted snow, was about as disappointing as anything in this world had a right to be—assuming you figured things had a right to be disappointing. Milo Pine wasn’t feeling that generous at the moment.
He knelt and leaned on the sill of one of the house’s two big bow windows, examining the yard critically through a circle of clear glass in the middle of one white-rimed pane. An English-Mandarin dictionary and a notebook lay forgotten by one knee. Admittedly, the current spectacle was pretty impressive. The frost perfectly mimicked a dusting of snow, and because the temperature outside was so frigid, it had lasted through the day. It had crunched satisfyingly underfoot, too, which was a nice complement to the clouds that had puffed into the air with each breath as he’d crossed the lawn after his last day of school, headed back to the big old inn he and his parents called home. But it wasn’t snow, which made it almost worse than nothing at all.
This was good. Being cranky about the weather was just what he needed to keep from thinking about the other things he didn’t want to let up from the mental depths at which he could just barely manage to ignore them.
His mom sat down on the loveseat behind him and held out a steaming cup. “Want to talk about it?”
“I hate frost,” Milo said in a tone that he hoped would signal to his mother to please not dare to suggest that the weather wasn’t what was really bothering him.
Twilight was coming on, and he could sort of see her reflection in the glass. She had a look on her face that was both unimpressed and thoughtful, as if she had gotten the message and was debating whether or not to call him on it. But then, the glass was old, wavy and uneven, so maybe it was just twisting up her reflection funny. He reached back to take the cup.
On top of the hot chocolate was a float of unreasonably thick whipped cream that he’d heard Mrs. Caraway, the inn’s cook, making about ten minutes ago. The cream was dusted with smashed candy cane bits, which was probably his mother’s touch. He hazarded a look at her . . . she definitely knew he was upset about something other than weather. She was just waiting him out. Well, he could play that game too.
“Thanks,” he said, and turned resolutely back to the window.
“First hot chocolate of winter vacation.” Mrs. Pine raised her own cup. “Cheers.”
“Cheers.” As they sipped, footsteps approached on the stairs. Reluctantly, Milo pivoted to look over his mom’s shoulder, following the sound. The ground level of the inn was big and open, with one room flowing into the next, and from where he was, Milo could see pretty much the entire floor. “When’s he leaving?” he asked, watching the bottom of the staircase on the other side of the dining room.
“Tomorrow at some point. Supposedly,” Mrs. Pine said quietly. Then she turned to the young man who appeared at the bottom of the stairs, a pencil behind one ear and glasses askew on his nose. “Drinks on the stove if you’re done for the day, Mr. Syebuck.”
Emmett Syebuck, their only guest, sighed happily. “I could just stay here forever. This place is amazing.”
“Well, we’re so glad you’ve enjoyed your visit.”
“Hey, about that, Mrs. P.”
Oh, no. Milo stifled a groan. His mom patted his shoulder.
The young man crossed the dining room and came to lean on the back of the loveseat. “I was thinking,” he said. “One more day and I’ll have every window at least sketched. Would it be a huge pain in the neck if I checked out day after tomorrow?”
Milo slurped in a huge mouthful to keep himself from answering. Yes, yes, it would, actually. I, personally, would find it a huge pain in the neck.
His mother, of course, said what Milo had known she’d say. “That’s no problem, Mr. Syebuck.”
Their guest beamed. “Thanks, ma’am. And I wish you all would just call me Emmett.”
“You
’re welcome, and I’ll try, Emmett, but you know, old habits die hard.” Mrs. Pine glanced into the kitchen. “Mrs. Caraway leaves tonight, though, so just be aware that meals will be a little less fancy tomorrow.”
“It could be toast and instant noodle soup and I’d be perfectly content,” Emmett assured her. “I’m a simple fellow at heart. And in a pinch, some of my colored pencils are kind of tasty—not that I’ve tried them or anything.”
Milo’s mother laughed. “It won’t come to that.”
“Well, thanks again. And hey, thank you, too, Milo.”
Milo turned, surprised. “What for?”
“For letting me impose on your holidays. I promise I’ll be out of your hair before Christmas Eve. I know how it is.”
“It’s okay,” Milo said gruffly.
“Well, I appreciate it. And now that I don’t have to pack tonight, I think I’ll relax and just stare at the fire awhile.” He drummed a short ba-da-ba-bump on the back of the loveseat with his palms, then straightened and went into the kitchen.
“You think he’s really an art student?” Mrs. Pine asked in an undertone.
“Probably,” Milo said. “That or he’s Skellansen in disguise, wanting to make sure his precious chandelier’s being looked after properly.” They’d been amusing themselves with speculations like this since the day Emmett had showed up.
“He’s too young for Skellansen.”
Milo eyed the guest’s back critically. “Lots of makeup. And super-thin rubber prosthetics, like in the movies. You can do miracles with that stuff.”
“Hmm. Maybe.”
Among the many occurrences that had made last year’s winter break about the strangest time in Milo’s life was the discovery at Greenglass House of a cartoon: a valuable drawing of a stained-glass window by a mysterious artist named Lowell Skellansen. One of the inn’s guests at the time, Dr. Wilbur Gowervine, had presented the cartoon along with a lecture at Nagspeake’s City University over the summer. A couple months after that, Emmett Syebuck—student, artist, and Skellansen fanboy—had turned up toting enough art and photography supplies to open a store, eager to learn more about the house and its collection of stained glass.
It wasn’t Dr. Gowervine’s fault. After much discussion with Milo’s parents, he’d promised to keep the location of the find between himself and his department chair. Still, when you took into account that not only Dr. Gowervine but five other guests had made their way to the inn last December by following different bits of the house’s history to its doorstep, maybe the only surprising thing was that more curiosity seekers hadn’t worked out where the mysterious Skellansen artwork had come from.
Not that the Pines had admitted to anything when Emmett had turned up, other than to confirm that yes, they had also attended the lecture, and yes, they suspected that the chandelier over the dining room table was a piece of Skellansen glass. But that had been enough for Emmett. The guy acted like a kid on Christmas morning. Every single day. And he’d been here a week already.
Of course, the other notable thing about last year was that none of the strangers who’d come to the inn that Christmas had been there for the reasons they’d claimed they were. Hence the Is Syebuck who he says he is? game, even though Milo was pretty sure that was all it was—a game. And really, Emmett’s presence was fine, as long as he did what he said he would and got the heck out before Christmas Eve.
The door swung open, letting in a gust of wind but—naturally—no accompanying swirl of snow. Stupid frost. Didn’t even blow around in the wind. Instead, the gust swept Milo’s father inside with an armful of firewood. Mrs. Pine got up. “Ben, Mr. Syebuck—Emmett—is going to stay on an extra night.”
“If that’s okay,” Emmett called from the kitchen, where Mrs. Caraway was busy ladling hot chocolate into his mug.
“Not a problem,” Mr. Pine called back as he kicked off his boots on his way to the fireplace.
Mrs. Caraway joined Milo’s parents in the living room. “Nora, Ben, you guys want me to stay on an extra night too?”
“No, no,” Mrs. Pine said immediately. “Isn’t Lizzie already coming to pick you up?”
“Probably, but she was out running errands anyway. I don’t think she’ll mind having made the trip. I might invite her to stay for dinner.”
“Of course.”
Mrs. Caraway turned to Milo. “Any requests? Grilled cheese and tomato soup? I have chili fixings . . .” She glanced at the dictionary on the floor. “Or I have some surprisingly good tomatoes that would be amazing in the egg-and-tomato stir-fry dish you like whose name I always mangle.”
“Xīhóngshì chǎo jīdàn,” Milo said promptly. There weren’t a ton of Chinese dishes he confidently knew the names of, but this one he’d made sure to memorize. “Yes, please. And maybe grilled cheese, too?” It wasn’t the kind of dinner she usually made when there were guests, but then Milo didn’t usually get asked for his input.
“Grilled cheese is my actual favorite sandwich,” Emmett said as he dropped contentedly onto the sofa in the living room. “And I’m generally a fan of tomatoes and eggs. This is great.”
“Well, good.” Milo dropped his chin into his hands, waiting for that special relief that usually came with getting home from school at the start of vacation. It hadn’t come yet, and the more he looked for it, the further away it seemed. Instead, he was tense and tight. And frustrated. And angry. And he wasn’t sure whether it was Emmett’s presence that was keeping him from feeling good or all the other stuff. Unfortunately, that uncertainty made all those worries he’d tried to cover with a layer of disappointing frost come bubbling back up.
You don’t have to feel this way, he told himself. Negret wouldn’t feel this way.
It didn’t help. Not even remotely. That was maybe the most frustrating thing of all.
His father sat down on the floor next to him. “Hey, pal.”
“Hey.”
“So your mom said when you first got home you mentioned that something happened at school today.”
“It was yesterday. I just didn’t want to talk about it.” Still don’t, he added silently.
“Do you—” His father stopped mid-question and shifted gears. “Was it social studies again?”
Milo scowled at the window and nodded stiffly.
His father started to speak, paused, then said, “I think if you could tell me what happened so Mom and I can talk to the teacher, it’s possible you might feel a little better.”
“Why?” Milo asked. “It won’t change that it happened.”
“That’s true, but would any part of you feel better knowing it won’t happen again?”
“You don’t know that,” Milo grumbled. “Even if you and Mom talk to him, you don’t know that.”
“I submit that it’s worth a shot,” Mr. Pine said. “If we don’t try, then we can be almost sure it will happen again, don’t you think? Or did you explain to him afterward, like you said you would last time he upset you?”
“No,” Milo admitted in a very small voice.
“Wasn’t that our agreement, though?” his dad asked gently. “You said you didn’t need Mom and me to do it because you wanted to try yourself.”
Milo nodded.
Mr. Pine nodded too. “Okay, well, how about this: how about we just start with you telling me what happened so you can get it off your chest?”
Getting it off your chest never did any good. That was a parent thing, thinking that talking about stuff helped. Because—and why did no one understand this?—nothing could change that the awful thing had already happened. That was why you felt crummy afterward, obviously—because it happened, not because you needed to talk about it and live through it all over again. But Milo didn’t have any better ideas, and his dad didn’t look as if he was going to leave.
“All right.” He took a deep breath. “We’re still studying Nagspeake history in the nineteenth century.”
“I remember.”
&
nbsp; “Well, I guess after I said the thing last week about how our house was built during the War of 1812 and Mr. Chancelor said what he said”—here Milo forced himself to soldier on and not think about the previous week’s debacle—“I guess after that, he must’ve gone home and done some research, because yesterday he came in and said some Nagspeake historian he knew had found something about a Chinese crew that came to the city much later, and Mr. Chancelor showed the whole class some written characters that I guess made up the name of the ship, and he asked me to translate them for everybody.” His voice had gone shaky. “And I didn’t know them. So then he read the Mandarin pronunciation out loud, and asked me to translate that.” He gulped air. “And I still didn’t know.”
His father sighed. “That is utter crap, Milo. I’m so sorry.”
It was three kinds of utter crap, if you wanted to get technical. In the first place, when Milo had raised his hand while they were discussing the War of 1812 to mention that Greenglass House—Lansdegown House, as it had been called then—had been built by a seafaring family with a Chinese child in it just before the war, Mr. Chancelor had said that in fact, there hadn’t been any Chinese crews to visit Nagspeake until much later in the century. Milo had started to explain that it hadn’t been a Chinese crew, it had been a British and Chinese blended family called Bluecrowne, but Mr. Chancelor had already moved on, as if he’d proved Milo wrong and that was that. This had been the cause of last week’s breakdown.
Then yesterday had been crummy for two separate reasons. First, Mr. Chancelor had acted as though finding a Chinese crew arriving in Nagspeake in 1835 proved for sure that Milo was wrong about the Bluecrownes and their Chinese family members getting there earlier. That alone would’ve been untenable, because Milo wasn’t wrong. Then the teacher had produced those characters and assumed Milo would be able to translate them just because he was Chinese, which had embarrassed him in front of his whole class. And that had been awful, not to mention unfair.
It was unfair because Milo did know a number of characters. He and his parents had been learning together for a while now, only they were learning Simplified Chinese characters, and from the looks of it, whatever writing system the ship’s name had been composed in two hundred years ago was vastly more complicated than what Milo was studying. It was doubly unfair because he and his parents were learning Mandarin, too—but he wasn’t a native speaker, in part because he’d grown up in Nagspeake, where the Chinese population still wasn’t that big, and in part because he’d grown up with a mom and dad who not only weren’t native speakers either, they were white. Plus there were a ton of distinct dialects used in China, so even if Milo had been a native speaker, Mr. Chancelor still shouldn’t have assumed he’d necessarily speak Mandarin. There was really no way to know whether even Milo’s own birth family had spoken it; he and his parents had chosen Mandarin to learn because it had been easiest for Milo’s school to find him a Mandarin tutor. And it was extra-super really unfair because Milo was pretty sure there were plenty of actual Chinese people who wouldn’t recognize every single Chinese character there was and plenty who couldn’t read them at all.