“I only flew in from vacation this afternoon. Otherwise, I would have met you on your arrival.”
Lonna and I looked at each other, and he seemed to take our surprise as hesitation.
“Would you like my references?”
He handed me an envelope, and I gave it to Lonna. She slit it open with one long thumbnail and pulled the papers out. Gabriel lounged against the end of the banister, his arms crossed.
“It looks in order,” she said. “According to this, he was contracted by your grandfather six months ago.”
“Do you know when he’ll be home?” Gabriel asked.
I looked up from the papers. “Never. He’s dead.” Saying it finally drove the words home, and I felt my knees go weak. Until then, it had felt like he was just away somewhere and would return soon, and I would hear his confident step in the front hall before bolting down the stairs to meet him. A wave of dizziness washed over me, and I reached out with numb fingers to grab on to some sort of support. In an instant, Gabriel was there, his hand under my elbow, and helped me into the sitting room, where a fire blazed merrily.
“I’m sorry to hear that, Doctor Fisher. He was a very kind man.”
“When was the last time you spoke with Galbraith?” asked Lonna.
Gabriel shrugged again, his favorite gesture, I was to learn. “A month ago, perhaps two. He only wanted to confirm I was happy with the position and to let me know he’d renewed my green card. He told me there was no need to worry about anything and I was to arrive today.”
“If you’ll excuse me, I need to make a phone call.” Lonna went into the kitchen.
“Your grandfather spoke very highly of you,” Gabriel said. He walked to the bar, which faced the fireplace on the inside wall of the room, and began to sort through bottles. “I went into the wine cellar and found some of the reds he said you favored.”
“How…” All this was making my head spin. I took a deep breath and began again. “I haven’t seen my grandfather since I was a teenager. How could he know what I drink?”
“Ask your friend.” Gabriel inclined his head in the direction of the kitchen.
“My grandfather hired a private eye?”
Another shrug. “Perhaps. Or maybe he knew one of your colleagues.”
“If he did, why didn’t he tell me?”
“He was a smart, enigmatic man. He had his secrets.”
I recognized the evasion and decided on a different strategy. “How did you know him?”
“I did some work for him in Europe. He liked me and invited me over.”
“Your accent isn’t quite British?”
“Scottish.”
“I should’ve recognized it.”
“It’s become a bit muddled, I fear. I had to fake an English accent for a while to gain entry into the butler academy.”
I couldn’t help it—I giggled. He handed me a glass of Australian shiraz on a tray. I sipped it and studied him. He gazed into the fire, apparently lost for a moment in memory.
“Well, he’s legit,” Lonna said as she came through the door. She took the glass of wine he offered from the same silver tray.
“How do you know?”
“Called Galbraith. The poor man was asleep. I also checked with the National Registry of Domestic Help, and they were kind enough to verify that yes, he is a real butler with impeccable history.”
“Thank you, mademoiselle.”
“This just keeps getting weirder and weirder.” I yawned.
“Are you ready to retire?” asked Gabriel.
“I think so.” I rose with my half-finished glass of wine and headed toward the kitchen to put it in the sink. That was odd; I’d never been unable to finish a glass of wine before, but I was so exhausted I didn’t care. Maybe it was the half-bottle I’d had with dinner.
“I’ll take that, Doctor Fisher.”
“Oh, thanks.”
“I made up the bed in your old room and put your friend across the hall. Miss…”
“Marconi. Lonna Marconi.”
“Thanks.” I placed the glass on the tray. “I’m glad we didn’t have to go upstairs in the dark.”
Lonna and I climbed the stairs together. The first rooms were guest rooms. Mine was at the very end of the hall on the left. Fresh flowers stood in a vase on the bedside table, which was covered in a lacy cloth. My grandfather had decorated the room for a young girl, and it hadn’t changed at all since my first visit twenty- something years before except the twin bed had been replaced by a queen-sized one. Stenciled pastel carousel horses careened across the top of the cream-colored walls. Each horse was different and at a different place on its pole to mimic the motion of the carousel. I picked out my favorites—a blue unicorn directly across from the bed and a green stallion with peach-colored mane, tail and hooves over one of the French windows that opened onto the upper back balcony.
“Wow,” Lonna murmured. “Someone spent a lot of time in here decorating.”
“I think he had one of the local artists do them.”
We walked across the hall into the room that had once been my brother’s. The jewel-toned colors were more compatible with the tastes of little boys. The walls were painted cream, but instead of carousel horses, the top border was of vines and tree branches the clever artist had intertwined with berries and pinecones so it was impossible to tell where the pattern started or repeated.
“This is incredible.” Lonna was wide-eyed. The furniture, all of darkly stained wood, had brass fixtures. The bed was situated on the wall to the left facing the two windows that looked over the front lawn. No balcony. In between the windows was a large painting of a mother wolf with two cubs reclining in the brush.
“Your brother’s room?”
“Yes.” Andrew had loved wolves—the larger, gray kind—so my grandfather had decorated his room to be forest-like. Andrew had never seen it.
A heaviness hit my eyelids, and I bade goodnight to Lonna. I could see fresh towels in the bathroom off my room to the left, but I decided to wait until the morning to take a shower. I washed my face, brushed my teeth and crawled into the larger bed, grateful for the extra space. Part of me had been dreading sleeping in a twin bed again. My head hit the pillow, and I was asleep.
At three o’clock I was wide awake. Sure, I felt like someone had hit me over the head with a wine bottle, but something had awakened me, and for once it wasn’t the usual nightmare. Although at that time of night, it seemed like bad dreams couldn’t be too far away. No, it had to be something else, something external. I listened and discerned voices coming from outside. For a moment, I dismissed it as the usual hubbub outside my apartment, but then I jerked fully awake. I was at my grandfather’s manor in the middle of nowhere, Arkansas. The only people in the house were me, Lonna and the butler.
I put on my robe and slippers and tiptoed down the hall and stairs. My feet remembered the location of the creaky boards and avoided them. Instead of going through the front door, I crept through the kitchen and out the side door to the small kitchen garden.
The almost full moon illuminated the lawn and surrounding trees with weird shadows. I paused and crouched behind a hedge and tried to still the beating of my heart so my ears could pick up the voices again.
“Let Ronan make the kill,” one of them, a female argued. The voice sounded familiar. I peeked through the shrubs and saw a pack of wolves too large to be Arkansas red wolves or coyotes. Two of them, the largest and smallest, were black, and they were accompanied by a silver wolf and a golden one. They circled a deer, the animal’s eyes wide with fear at having been driven out into the open and surrounded by predators.
“He’s messy.”
“He’s young,” another replied.
“I don’t know, guys. We shouldn’t be here.”
“The old man always let us hunt here. Why should now be different?”