“I’m afraid she’s not with us anymore.”
“Oh, I am sorry to hear that, Mr Sebastian. I am truly sorry.”
The air went quiet around them.
“You checked the plates, huh?” said Milo.
“One of the perks of being the sheriff,” Teddy answered. “Funny, your details mention nothing about you having a family.”
Milo nodded. “The kids were born out of wedlock. They’re very self-conscious about it.”
“Very,” said Glen.
“Your kids don’t look a whole lot like you,” Teddy said. “Also, from what I hear from a certain elderly librarian, your son is Irish.” He hooked his thumbs into his belt loops. “We get people like you passing through all the time. Oh, and by ‘people like you’, I don’t mean the Irish. I mean gawkers. What I like to call bloodhounds. They hear about our town, hear we used to have a serial killer, and they come sniffing around, thinking how exciting it all is, how fun. But the wounds that man made still haven’t closed over, and you walking around asking clumsy questions is just going to get people’s backs up.”
“It’s my fault,” said Glen, his shoulders drooping. “I’m not his son, I’m his nephew. Yes, I’m from Ireland. But I’m dying. I don’t have long left.”
“That so?”
“It is. I came over here to see America before I … before I pass on. And yeah, you’re right, I asked to come to Springton because of the serial killer. I’ve always been fascinated with that stuff. A kind of morbid curiosity, I suppose. But I never intended to upset anyone, Sheriff. I’m really sorry.”
“What’s your name, son?”
“Glen, sir.”
“Well, Glen, I’m sorry to hear of your ill-health. What have you got, if you don’t mind me asking?”
“Lupus,” said Glen.
Teddy frowned. “Is that fatal?”
“Oh yes,” said Glen. “Very.”
“You sure? I don’t think it is.”
“It’s not always fatal,” Glen said quickly. “If you get treatment for it, no, it’s not fatal. Rarely fatal. But I have a rare form of lupus that is very fatal.”
“Glen, forgive me for asking this, but do you know what lupus is? A friend of mine has lupus, a reverend. His joints get all swollen up, he gets rashes, he’s tired all the time, and his hair even fell out.”
Glen nodded. “I have the other kind of lupus.”
“The kind that has none of those symptoms?”
Glen bit his lip for a moment. “I get the feeling you’re not believing me.”
Teddy sighed. “You’re not too bright, son, and that’s okay. There’s no law against being stupid. There’s also no law against being a bloodhound, but I’m going to have to ask you to stop pestering people with questions – especially my daughter.”
“Your daughter?”
Teddy nodded. “She works in the library. She’s the librarian who is not elderly.”
“Ah,” said Milo. “Heather called you.”
“She may have mentioned it during one of our regular father-daughter chats.”
“So are you going to run us out of town?”
Teddy chuckled. “I don’t think I have to do anything quite so dramatic, do you? Quite the opposite, in fact. It’s getting late in the day and, as you folks aren’t from around here, I’d like to invite you to stay overnight in our little town.”
“That’s mighty Christian of you.”
“And to save you some money, you’ll be staying with us, my wife and I. Have a good home-cooked meal. That sound good?”
“We really couldn’t impose,” said Milo.
“It is not an imposition, I assure you,” said Teddy. “I insist on you staying with us. That okay with you?”
Milo glanced at Amber, and nodded. “Sure,” he said. “That’d be great.”
“Excellent,” Teddy said, beaming. “I’ll tell her to make up the rooms. Our bed-and-breakfast rates are quite competitive, just so you know.”
SHERIFF ROOSEVELT’S PLACE WAS a neat little house out on the edge of town. It had pebbles instead of grass in the front yard, and a path of cobblelock paving. Mrs Roosevelt – Ella-May – was a handsome woman who struck Amber as someone playing at running a B&B. She had a way about her, a way of asking questions and getting answers, that suggested a whipsmart mind, even in her advancing years. Running a B&B seemed a rather tame endeavour for someone like her.
The house looked like a picture-perfect amalgamation of various local tourism brochures. Everything was pretty, with a restrained, folksy charm. Milo and Glen had to share the twin beds in the double room, but Amber got a room all to herself. It had a small TV in the corner, the very opposite of a flatscreen.
Dinner was at eight. Amber had a bath to pass the time, and as she lay in all those bubbles she tried not to look at the countdown on her wrist.
438, it said now. Three days gone out of her twenty-one. Lots of time left. Plenty of time. Providing they find Dacre Shanks.
When eight rolled around, she was dressed and hungry. She went downstairs, following the aroma.
Teddy sat at one end of the table. Amber and Glen sat to his right, and Milo to his left. Glen kept his hand curled, hiding the Deathmark from sight in the same way that Amber’s bracelets hid her scar. When Ella-May was finished serving the food, she sat opposite her husband.
Teddy interlocked his fingers and closed his eyes. “Lord, thank you for this meal we are about to enjoy. Thank you for our guests – after some initial frostiness, they have proven themselves to be nice enough people, and they’ve paid in advance, which I always take as a sign of good manners. Thank you for no dead bodies today and no real crime at all, to be fair. Thank you for my beautiful wife, my wonderful daughter, and for the continuing wellbeing of my town. Amen.”
“Amen,” Amber muttered, along with Glen. Milo and Ella-May remained silent.
“So, Milo,” Teddy said as he reached for the potatoes, “what do you do for a living?”
“I get by.”
“That it? That’s all you do?”
Milo smiled like he was a normal, good-natured kind of guy. “I make ends meet, how about that?”
Teddy shrugged. “That’s fair enough. A man who doesn’t want to talk about his business shouldn’t have to talk about his business. Where you from, originally?”
“Kentucky,” Milo said.
“Aha,” said Teddy. “The Bluegrass State.”
“That’s what they call it.”
“You a farm boy, Milo?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Pigs? Cattle?”
“Some.” Milo’s smile was easy and his tone was relaxed. He was like a different person. “Ella-May, this is one humdinger of a dinner.”
Ella-May