behind her. He stood, flicking his tail
unconcernedly.
“Actually, a Wolf killed my horse a
couple of months ago. I rented this one
from the livery in town and hoped
someone would return him for me,”
Maralee said, glancing up at Billy
hopefully.
He smiled. “I’ll take him back right
now.” Billy stepped around her to take the
horse’s reins.
“Let me give you something for your
trouble,” she offered, reaching into her
cloak pocket for her coin purse.
Billy shook his head. “It’s my
pleasure, Miss Decatur,” he told her. “It is
reward enough just to see your beautiful
face again.” When Maralee’s eyes
widened, the broad shouldered stable
master chuckled. “Don’t look so shocked,
Miss Decatur, surely you realize that I’ve
been in love with you since the first
moment I saw you.” She shook her head.
He laughed. “Well, I must have been all of
four years old at the time.”
“Billy, you shouldn’t say such things to
me,” Maralee admonished, her cheeks
flaming with embarrassment.
Billy laughed again and mounted the
rented horse. “I suppose you’re right, but
it doesn’t mean it’s not true. Gidyup!”
The horse trotted forward, hooves
clomping on the bricked floor. Billy
turned the horse towards the open stable
door and offered her a cheery salute
before directing the horse out of the
stables.
Maralee watched him leave, more than
a little out of sorts. After a moment of
staring after him completely dumbfounded,
she smiled and actually found the ability
to laugh aloud. She really was home and it
felt more wonderful than she had ever
imagined it could.
Maralee stood outside of the front door of
the main house, took a deep breath and
turned the doorknob. She stepped inside
the entry hall and was assailed by
memories of lifeless bodies and bloody
paw prints. She closed her eyes and gave
herself a mental shake. That was the past.
This was her future. Move forward, not
backward.
“Aunt Bailey,” she called cheerily,
having already decided to pretend that she
was blissfully ignorant of the entire
situation. “I’m home!”
There was the sound of breaking glass
from the parlor just ahead, the same parlor
that had an uncommonly dark crawlspace
hidden beneath it. Thumping footsteps
approached and Aunt Bailey appeared in
the doorway. Maralee couldn’t decide if
Bailey was shocked by her unexpected
appearance or truly terrified. In any case,
the woman was as pale as a ghost, which
stood in sharp contrast to the black fur
stole draped across her narrow shoulders.
“M-M-Maralee, what brings you
home?”
Maralee
smiled
warmly
and
approached her aunt, giving the waxy-
looking woman a kiss on the cheek. “Well
you told me to come home if I wanted to
see the rest of those ancient books,”
Maralee reminded her, “and well, I must
admit I was a bit homesick.”
Maralee glanced around the room and
took note of the expensive tapestries and
furnishings that filled the room to
overflowing. They seemed completely out
of place. Maralee’s mother had decorated
with sparse care. The few ornaments that
had once decorated the manor house had
each held special meaning. Now it seemed
that the manor was screaming with
possessions chosen for their sheer
monetary value.
“You should have warned me of your
homecoming in advance,” her aunt said,
lifting a hand to her throat. Maralee’s
attention fell on numerous obscenely large
gemstones bedecking each of Bailey’s
long, bony fingers. Her aunt moved her
hand to a more obscure location behind
her back. “I could have had your room
aired out and a suitable dinner prepared.”
“I’m sure we’ll make do,” Maralee
said. “Would you mind if we caught up a
little later? I’ve had a long trip and I’d
like a hot bath and a long, peaceful nap
before dinner.”
“Um…um…well, I sort of had your
room converted into a closet,” she said,
“but my old room has been converted into
a guest room which I’m sure you’ll find
comfortable.”
Maralee bit the inside of her lip so she
didn’t tear into the woman with vicious
words. After a long second, she smiled
with simpering sweetness. “So, where
then, will
you
sleep?”
“Well it seemed sort of ridiculous for
the master suite to go unused so—”
“I see,” Maralee interrupted, knowing
that she was likely to attack the woman if
she stayed in her presence any longer.
How dare her self-important aunt claim
her parents’ chambers as her own? During
her childhood, Maralee had insisted her
parents’ room remain untouched. “I’ll see
you at dinner then, Aunt Bailey.”
“Of course, my dear. I’m looking
forward to hearing what you’ve been up
to,” she said with a false smile.
“I’ll be looking forward to hearing
what you’ve been up to as well,” Maralee
said, her tone as cold and hard as her
heart felt at that moment.
Her
aunt
swallowed
hard,
but
managed to keep the false smile from
sliding off her face.
Maralee
headed
to
the
curved
staircase and made her way upstairs. She
glanced behind her to make sure her aunt
was not following and began to check the
each room on the upper floor. Her
brother’s room, just at the top of the stairs
was full of the furniture Maralee
remembered. It was stacked neatly, much
of it covered with sheets. She was glad
her aunt hadn’t sold it. The room next door
used to be hers, but she found her aunt had
not lied about its conversion into a closet.
The entire room was packed with racks of
clothes, coats and stoles, stacked with
hatboxes and shoeboxes, and lined with
small drawers that housed her aunt’s
enormous collection of unmentionables. It
was
unrecognizable
as
Maralee’s
bedroom. She didn’t open the door to her
parents’ room, certain she would become
enraged by the changes bound to have
occurred there. Their bedroom had been
like a shrine to her after their deaths. She
had spent countless hours sitting in the
center of their wide bed imagining the
blankets draped around her were their
comforting embrace.
Maralee continued to the end of the
hall where the two guest bedrooms were
located. The first was the room her aunt
had once occupied and the second had
always been used as a guest room.
She ignored her aunt’s old room,
preferring to claim the second as her own.
It was a bit stuffy, but of all the rooms she
had glimpsed thus far, this one had
changed the least. She realized she was
still clinging to her past, longing to return
to a home unchanged in her absence. But it
should be her decision to change things in
her ancestral home, not her backstabbing
aunt’s.
Maralee crossed the room and opened
both sets of tall windows. This room had
once overlooked the forests behind the
house, but now had a spectacular view of
the new gardens. Maralee sighed and
tossed her knapsack on a nearby chair.
She opened the door to the connecting
bathroom. She was surprised to find the
bathroom had been fitted with new
plumbing and after a few moments of
fumbling with knobs, she was able to start
a flow of warm water out of the bathtub
tap. She wasn’t sure how expensive such a
setup was, but she was delighted by the
effects. No more waiting for servants to
lug heavy buckets of hot water up the
stairs. Once the tub was full, she shed her
clothes and climbed into the water,
sinking beneath the surface. Now, this was
bliss. She’d forgotten how good a hot bath
felt after having spent so much time at
Nash’s cabin washing with frigid water
from a hand pump.
She also forgot how likely one’s
thoughts were to wander when soaking in
a tub of warm water. For the first time
since she’d left the Wolf village behind,
she realized how lonely she was. God, she
missed Nash’s presence in her life. By the
time she found the frame of mind
necessary to wash her body rather than
stare off into space, her bathwater had
grown chilled.
She hurried through her wash and once
finished wrapped herself in a large, fluffy
towel before returning to her room. She
dug around in her knapsack until she found
the last of her clean clothes and hurriedly
dressed. She realized the servants were
better dressed than she was, but it didn’t
matter. She hoped to do a little snooping
around while her aunt assumed she was
napping. She would start by talking with
the servants, because of all the people at
the manor, no one knew more about what
was going on than they did. She hoped she
could trust them enough to keep her aunt
from guessing she knew about her
superfluous expenditure of Maralee’s
inheritance.
Maralee opened the door and checked
to make sure the corridor was empty.
Upon finding it vacant, she took the
servant’s stairs down to the kitchen. She
peeked into the kitchen and found the cook
and his helper working on their evening
meal. She knew the cook, his name was
Jean Bastille and he had become their
cook soon after the Decatur family
massacre. The younger man, who seemed
to be an apprentice of sorts, was not
familiar to Maralee. She paused in the
stairway to listen to their conversation
unobserved.
“…has been gone for over six years.
I’m sure things would have turned out
differently if she’d been around,” Jean
was telling the younger man.
“It is probably too late for her to
recover any of her wealth now, don’t you
think?” the younger man said.
“Watch what you’re doing, David.
Your heat is too high,” Jean chastised him.
After David had corrected his error, Jean
continued. “I doubt she even realizes what
her aunt has done. I don’t want to be the
one to tell her.”
“Well, I’m not going to tell her. I’ve
never even seen her before,” David said.
“Does she really travel around killing
those gigantic Wolves?”
“She does.”
“She must be some burly, hairy woman
with forearms like hams and nerves of
steel.”
Maralee was unable to stifle a giggle.
Jean heard her and came to investigate.
“Ah, here is our burly, hairy mistress
with forearms like hams,” the cook said,
smiling down at her as she sat perched on
the second stair.
“How are you, Jean?” Maralee asked.
“Forearms like hams?” She glanced down
at her arms appraisingly. “Surely I’m not
that burly.”
Jean chuckled and tugged her to her
feet so he could give her a proper hug.
“Now just how long have you been
eavesdropping?”
“Long enough,” Maralee said.
“Oh,” he said. “Well, then let me
introduce you to my chef in training,
David Caraway.”
David flushed. He was just beginning
to show the signs of manhood. Maralee
guessed his age to be fourteen or fifteen.
His dark brown hair was long but tied
back in a neat ponytail at the nape of his
neck. Maralee couldn’t determine the
color of his eyes because he couldn’t
seem
to
meet
her
gaze
out
of
embarrassment. She suspected the flush
staining his cheeks had very little to do
with the heat in the kitchen.
“Hello, David. I’m Maralee Decatur.
It’s nice to see Jean has someone new to