Chapter Thirteen
Lost Things
Felipe climbed back into the steamer and tried not to look as disappointed as he felt.
The whole morning had been one door shutting in his face after another.
The men at the mill did not want to talk about their deceased coworker, the foremen threatened to throw him off the premises for asking questions even after Mr. Allen intervened, and Ekland’s wife and Hogarth’s children were apparently too busy bickering over the business to answer questions, from Felipe or anyone else.
At least Oliver hadn’t been with him, Felipe thought as he scrubbed a hand over his jaw.
He would not have handled the hostility and raised voices very well.
Where Felipe could have used Oliver’s eye was down by the river.
As expected, it hadn’t yielded any obvious clues, but Oliver might have been able to deduce more after having seen the man’s corpse.
Felipe had only briefly glimpsed it swarming with insects, so there was no way he could have matched the piece of muddy fabric he saw clinging to a branch to the sheriff’s clothing.
He debated bringing it back for Oliver to look at, but he couldn’t reach it without risking life and limb.
It was far too cold to wade up to his thighs in the river for something that might be trash.
Besides, if that infernally itchy bug bite got infected after an ill-advised dip in the river, Oliver would never let him hear the end of it.
As Felipe pulled the steamer back onto the cobbled road and headed for Main Street, the tension in the tether loosened a fraction.
After decades alone, it still amazed Felipe at how much relief he felt knowing Oliver was nearby.
Glancing at the greying sky between the trees, Felipe hoped the weather would hold until Gwen and Oliver finished up at the cemetery.
In the distance, thunder rumbled like a dirge.
If it started to pour, he would cut his losses at the sheriff’s office and pick them up, Felipe decided as Mr. Allen instructed him to take another turn.
“I’m sorry you didn’t get anywhere with the men,” Mr. Allen said from the passenger seat. “I honestly thought they would be more cooperative.”
“It’s fine. Their bosses may have told them not to speak to us, and I can’t blame them for not wanting to lose their jobs. Are you sure you can get into the sheriff’s office?”
The innkeeper patted the pocket of his waistcoat.
“Got the key right here. I’ll give us cover when we go in, so no one bothers us.
I doubt anyone will, but Luther might get huffy if he catches us, not that he can do much about it.
Be sure to put the steamer on the side street.
We don’t have many in Aldorhaven, and someone’s liable to tell Luther. ”
Giving the tether two tugs as he hit the end of Main Street, Felipe suppressed a smile at the single one he got in return.
A tumult of emotions roiled on Oliver’s end of the tether, but Felipe couldn’t drive and parse them at the same time.
None felt dangerous or particularly sharp at least; he would check on Oliver later.
Passing the tavern, the bank, a tailor, and a general store, Mr. Allen pointed to a foreboding brick building on the corner that had been Sheriff Ridder’s office but now sat shuttered and dark.
Felipe took the next corner and parked the steamer further down the road, out of sight from Main Street.
As he opened the steamer door, the sensation of walking into a spider web fell over him, but when he touched his face, nothing was there.
Shutting the door, he found Mr. Allen grimacing with concentration as he motioned for him to stay close.
A woman crossing the street glanced their way, but her gaze slid over them as Mr. Allen unlocked the sheriff's office and urged him inside.
The smell of mildew, rotting garbage, and stale booze mixed with sweat hit Felipe first. The building had only been shut up for two weeks, but the smells had fermented in the absence of people.
As his eyes grew accustomed to the sudden darkness, Felipe surveyed the room.
The large, chipped desk in the corner was littered with papers and the refuse of daily use.
A used toothpick had been left beside the blotter, and the chair was half out.
Trash rotted in the wastebasket, and all but one of the darts still hung from the dart board on the far side of the room.
Its occupant was gone, yet the office stood waiting for a man who would never return.
“I’ll keep watch for any sign of Mayor Stills.” Mr. Allen perched on the thick rail near the door with his cane at the ready between his knees. “Do you want me to light the lamps for you?”
“No, I can manage without them.”
Felipe didn’t think it was dark enough to make his eyes gleam, but he kept his back to the innkeeper just in case.
Moving between the pieces of furniture without touching them, Felipe searched for any signs of a struggle as Mr. Allen kept watch near the front window.
Nothing seemed amiss in the front room or in the closet that doubled as gun storage.
Every rack was filled and the cabinet locked, so Felipe shut the door behind him and followed the stench of sweat and piss down the hall to the empty jail cells.
After being shut up for weeks, the rooms stunk.
At least no one had been left in them too long after the sheriff disappeared.
He fleetingly wondered what they were doing with the town drunks or those who got into fights, but if that was the worst crime they had in Aldorhaven, perhaps the sheriff really hadn’t been missed.
Returning to the front room, Felipe eyed the wastebasket he would need to pick through before turning his attention to the desk.
He yanked open one drawer after another to find them crammed with all manner of junk.
The papers were coated in dusty grime that might have been cigarette ash or flakes of chewing tobacco, but Felipe wasn’t willing to put them to his nose to find out.
When he lifted the first pile out of its drawer, a spent bullet along with a petrified cockroach carcass slipped from the pile and tinked against the straw-scattered wood floor.
It was going to be a long afternoon.
***
AS OLIVER AND GWEN walked out of the heart of town and made their way up Cemetery Hill, neither said a word.
The plan they discussed that morning had been to check the graves of those who had risen from the dead to see if their plots had been dug up or if they had all been in mausoleums. Even after months, there might have been some evidence left behind by whomever awakened them, but it hadn’t taken long for Oliver’s mind to return to his mother.
He had meant to find her in the graveyard records before they left that morning, but Gwen had beaten him to it.
When Oliver arrived downstairs for breakfast, she had already finished with the book, made a map, and had Mr. Allen return it to the storeroom.
Oliver could have asked for it. He should have asked to see it, but he couldn’t come up with an excuse to do so before the conversation turned elsewhere and it was too late.
Now, as they lingered outside the locked cemetery gates, their unspoken thoughts from the pharmacy thickened the air between them.
Standing beside her, Oliver could see Gwen feeling her way through the tumblers as she picked the lock with her powers.
Every once in a while, she hazarded a glance in his direction and didn’t say what was on her mind.
Oliver hated it. He hated that they were both dancing around what he didn’t want to hear, though he hated himself more for grasping onto the only thing he could think of to get Gwen to drop it for now.
“Can we look for my mother’s grave while we’re here?” Oliver blurted.
The lock jerked and the chain fell to the ground with a clang as Gwen did a doubletake. For a long moment, she merely stared at him as if his question didn’t match what she had anticipated him asking. Finally, she sighed and nodded.
“Yeah, we can do that.”
The knot in Oliver’s chest loosened as she gave him one of those familiar half-sorrowful, half-affectionate looks and ushered him inside.
He would happily take her exasperated sympathy if it closed the distance between them.
Pulling the map from his pocket, Oliver plotted their course toward Mr. Ekland and Mrs. Lindstrom’s burial sites.
As they wove through the crooked lines of meandering graves, Oliver’s gaze slid over the weather-worn headstones for any variation of Joanna.
When the sky darkened and the wind howled between the trees, Gwen pulled her coat closer and shivered.
The trees shook in warning, sending a volley of droplets onto the graves below.
They would have to move quickly if they wanted to avoid getting drenched when the storm arrived in earnest.
“Are you disappointed that we haven’t found any actual vampires?” Oliver asked softly, stopping to check a grave with the right name but the wrong description. His mother hadn’t been born a Harrison.
“Yes and no. I think I got my hopes up a little too soon when I heard about the case, but I knew finding a real vampire was highly improbable. Revenants or whatever you want to call the dead here are pretty close to vampires, so I can probably still use this case for something. Perhaps, I’ll write an appendix or companion volume that discusses vampire-like creatures and how to tell them apart from true vampires. ”
“That could be useful. I wouldn’t mind helping you with it. If you need my help that is.”