Read The Splendour Falls Online
Authors: Unknown,Rosemary Clement-Moore
But when I retrieved the pages, and the book, I saw they'd slipped from the back, not from the binding. They looked like plain old paper. Fragile excitement fluttered against my ribs as I hoped, and then
confirmed, that the sheets were covered with my dad's handwriting. They'd been hidden among the end pages, like a note from the past.
On one page, he'd diagrammed the garden, in much more detail than I could make out from the photos in the book. Back when he was here, the pattern would have had twenty-five fewer years of neglect.
The second page was a list of plants, flowers and herbs that corresponded with the drawing. I could recognize about half of them easily, more with help from a book or the Internet.
Gigi raised her head suddenly, the jingle of her tags alerting me that someone was coming. Instinctively, I tucked Dad's pages into the back of the book and closed it. They were too special to share just yet.
Rhys came through the gap in the hedges. He didn't look surprised to see me, though maybe a little bemused at the way I was standing like a dope in the middle of the weeds, clutching
Notable Gardens of the South
to my chest like it was a holy relic.
âWhat are you doing?' he asked, eyeing me with suspicion.
âWho says I'm doing anything?'
âYou have a guilty look on your face.'
I wasn't feeling guilty so much as secretive, but I guess they amounted to the same thing. âI dropped the book, and I thought you were Paula.'
âI see.' Rhys looked amused, if not totally convinced. Gigi had run to greet him, and he squatted to scratch her ears. âI heard you went over to Cahawba today. Why didn't you visit the dig?'
His equable tone surprised me. âYou wouldn't have minded?' Tucking the book securely under my arm, I crossed the path to join him.
âWhy would I?' He paused in petting Gigi to look up at me curiously, seeming genuine. For now.
âBecause you're so touchy about your secret projects. You get all prickly when I mention them, and you start calling me princess in that infuriating way.'
A flicker in his eyes said I'd scored a hit, at least in regard to his favourite diversionary tactic. With a rueful expression, he stood. âEveryone knows I'm volunteering at the archaeological park. That's not a secret.'
I cocked my head, like Gigi did when she was figuring out how to finagle a treat. âBut the rock hunt?ing is?'
He grimaced, and his eyes slid away from mine, towards the stone and the vines I'd been molesting. âLet's just say that's an investigation I want to keep quiet.'
âOh!' The startled sound burst out as the pieces clicked together. I couldn't believe I hadn't thought of it before. âI know what it is! You're looking for more bluestone.'
His gaze snapped back to mine, equally startled, but not nearly as pleased with my intuitive leap. âWhat?'
âThe Preseli dolerite, or whatever its name is. If you found some just out' â I waved a nonspecific hand towards the woods â ' lying around somewhere, it would solve the mystery of where my rock came from.'
He lifted his brows at my word choice. â
Your
rock?'
âThe Davis rock. Whatever.'
There was a pause while he formed his answer. I'd noticed that if I could take him by surprise, I usually discovered more than if he had time to think. âFinding the same sort of dolerite here in North America,' he said, âwould be a significant discovery. It would negate
one
of my dad's Wales and Alabama connections, though.'
âOh.' I considered that for a moment. âI think I see. You don't want anyone else to scoop you on the find, if there's anything
to
find, and you don't want your dad to know you're trying to disprove his theory.'
âI'm not
trying
to disprove his theory. But still â¦' He lifted his hands in a âwhat can I do' sort of gesture.
âOK,' I said, feeling something ridiculously like a smile pulling at my mouth. A
giddy
smile. I'd solved another Rhys mystery, and it wasn't anything bad or, more important, anything
weird
. It wasn't even tragic, like the accident that I wasn't supposed to know about. â I'll keep that on the down low.'
With one of his rare smiles, he put out his hand to shake on it. Automatically I put mine in his, heady relief making me forget about déjà vu and Rhys's magnetism. My only sensation was the sting of his warm palm against mine.
I must have winced. In abrupt concern, Rhys turned my hand upwards, examining the welts, like rope burns, the vine had made. âWhat did you do?'
âNothing,' I said, making light of my fit of pique at the plants. Not that I'm much of a poker player, either. âGrabbed the wrong thing and it slipped through my fingers.'
âYou should get that cleaned up.' His thumb traced the edge of the score, and I shivered at the faint scrape of his finger on the delicate lines on my palm, and the care he took with my hand.
âI was just headed in, actually.' Though I made no move to pull away. He didn't release me, either.
âListen, Sylvie,' he said, holding my gaze as surely as he held my fingers. âI was thinking about last night.'
Wariness unravelled the moment. I suppose it was too much to hope that he wanted to discuss the scandalous fact of my being in his room in the middle of the night. âWhat about it?'
âJust that maybe you should leave off wandering around outside after dark.'
âDo you thinkâ' I broke off, because I wasn't sure what to ask. Did he think the house was haunted? That there was something more pedestrian and earthly going on? Both ideas alarmed me, and neither would sound very rational. And I had to, even with Rhys, sound rational.
He seemed to consider his answer a little too long, looking as if he regretted saying anything in the first place. âI just think you should be careful where you go and who you go with. That's the same in the city and the country.'
I finally pulled my hand from his, disappointed in his avoidance after we'd been â I'd thought â so candid. It stung almost as much as my cuts and made me cranky. âIf you're going to warn me about something, it might be more helpful if you actually, you know,
warn
me.'
His eyes narrowed. âWhat if I said, be careful whom you trust.'
I jabbed my fists on my hips, but the sting of my palms wasn't enough to turn me from the headlong rush of frustration. âWhy don't you tell me anything until I drag it out of you? Like your rock hunting. Or yourâ' I caught myself before I broke my promise to his father. âOr why you're on a break from school. Is it such a big secret?'
He stiffened defensively, and parried my question with a thrust of his own. âYou're not exactly forthcoming yourself, princess. So I guess we're even.'
âOh, we are
so
not even,' I fired back. âWhat
I'm
not saying is nothing compared with what I suspect
you're
not saying.'
His mouth dropped open wordlessly â I guess trying to find a reply to that convoluted argument â and finally he just shook his head. âThat doesn't even make any sense.'
Of course it didn't. âSince I got off the plane, nothing has made any sense. Least of all
you,
Rhys Griffith. Come on, Gigi.' For the second day in a row, I left him standing in the garden. Though I suspect the majesty of my departure was undermined by the Chihuahua prancing at my heels.
I went into the house my usual way, through the den's side door, and stopped guiltily when I saw Paula at the desk, head bent over some paperwork. She looked up at the jingle of Gigi's dog tags, and frowned.
âI brushed her out and wiped her paws.' I defended her preemptively, my held-over frustration with Rhys
boiling back up. âShe's even had herbal flea treatment.'
Closing her eyes with a shudder at the mere mention of fleas, Paula said, âFine. Just ⦠not on the furniture.' She didn't wait on my agreement before adding, âI told Clara we'd be happy with sandwiches tonight. The Griffiths take care of themselves for dinner, and Addie is studying with friends.'
âThat sounds great.' I saw Gigi heading for the love seat, and picked her up, not wanting to push Paula any further. âI'm OK with leftovers or whatever. She doesn't need to cook every meal. At least, not for me.'
My cousin smiled wryly. âFood is Clara's passion. The cooking part of this business didn't just fall to her. It was her idea.' Paula sighed and shifted her papers. âProvided we ever open. For real guests, I mean.'
The steel was definitely absent from her magnolia voice. I had no idea what went into starting an inn, even if you didn't have major renovations. Paula seemed overwhelmed, maybe even as swamped as I'd felt in the garden.
I edged to the arm of the sofa, and half sat. âI was thinking about what I might do to stay busy.' Her brows climbed, but she couldn't have been more surprised than I was. I didn't realize I'd been thinking about it at all, but it made perfect sense. âI want to work in the knot garden, get it cleaned up.'
She laid her pen on the desk. âAre you sure, honey? That's hard work.'
I could point out that she'd said a productive occupation would be good for my mental health. Or that I
knew how hard it was, since it had been my dad's job. Or that I wasn't an idiot. But I was trying to make nice, so I only said, âI'm not planning on attacking it with electric hedge clippers or anything. I just want to do some weeding, see if I can uncover the old pattern.'
I saw her weighing the pros and cons, and added, a little slyly, âIt
is
a historical feature of the house. It might be nice if people could actually
see
the bluestone of Bluestone Hill Inn.'
Her tart look said my wiles hadn't gone unnoticed, but after a moment she gave in. âAll right. I think there are some clippers and some gardening gloves somewhere. But start tomorrow. You've already done a lot today, walking to Cahawba.'
With an unexpected flush of triumph, I thanked her and turned towards the foyer, Gigi still in my arms. At the threshold, though, I paused and pivoted back with a question. âPaula. I was wondering about my room. Who did it belong to?'
She looked up again from the desk, frowning in confusion. âYou mean, originally? How on earth would I know that, honey? Is there something wrong with it?'
âNo, it's great,' I reassured her. âWell, the mattress
has
seen better days.'
That got a wry nod of acknowledgement. âIt's been that way since I slept on it. Every summer when your dad and I would visit.' Her face softened, as it did when she talked about those halcyon days. âThe room always smelled of lilac soap. I tried to find some for you, but had to make do with rose.'
âLilac?' I parroted in shock. Paula looked at me strangely, and I schooled my expression to mild interest, while my mind spun in circles. âIs that why you put lilac potpourri in there?'
Her frown deepened. âWhat do you mean?'
Oh crap. Way to advertise your olfactory hallucinations, Sylvie.
I kept that out of my airy tone, though, as I tried to cover my slip. âNothing. It must be the new detergent I used before I packed. I'm not used to Dr Steve's stuff.'
With a wave, I ducked out before she could call me on this somewhat improbable lie. My relief, though, lasted only until I reached my bedroom door. I opened it with trepidation, worried what I would sense, expecting the smell to rush out and attack me. But there was nothing unusual about the air in the room. Rose soap on the washstand, my own dusting powder on the shelf. Warm breeze through the barely opened window.
Placing the garden book and Dad's pages on the desk, I sank into the reading chair with Gigi in my lap. Either the phantom flowers were, for lack of a better word,
real,
because Paula had smelled them too, or I was somehow picking up a past scent that wasn't there now.
Both ideas were impossible. But it was getting harder to ignore all the impossible things that kept happening to me.
âGod, what a day.'
Gigi whined softly, picking up on my distress. I drew a long breath, then let it out, centring myself the way I did before a performance. âHere are my options, Gee,' I said, stroking her fur to soothe us both.
âEither I'm crazy, in which case there's nothing I can do about it, except try to keep people from finding out. Or there's something ⦠supernatural going on here, in which case I can investigate it and try to regain control over my senses.'
There. I'd said âsupernatural' out loud. And nothing snapped in my head. If anything, I felt better having decided to stay open-minded to the possibility that not everything that was true had yet to be proven.
Gigi barked and pawed at my right hand, and I nodded. âI agree. Anything that gives me an illusion of control gets my vote, too.'