"Which you did?"
"Standard procedure. Somebody walks in here carrying a gun, I sure as hell want to know they're legit. So, yes, I personally called to verify Agent Hayes's identity." She frowned again. "Is this why he's here? Was he expecting to find skeletal remains in one of our gardens? Because I was told he was here on vacation, nothing more."
"Call it a busman's holiday." Nate sighed. "Quentin was a kid staying here twenty-five years ago when that first little girl was murdered. He never forgot it. And it never sat right with him that the case went unsolved. The last ten or twelve years, he's been coming to Leisure pretty regularly, looking for whatever information he could find on that and the other deaths and disappearances possibly connected to The Lodge."
Shrugging, Nate added, "And so he's pretty much the expert on all this. Carries the facts and details in his head."
"Sounds like a man obsessed."
"You could say that. I have."
Stephanie nodded slightly. "He'll be helping you investigate this child's death? All the deaths and disappearances?"
"Unofficially. Although he's going to tap Bureau resources to help us out with DNA and that sort of thing. The Leisure Police Department isn't really equipped to handle the kind of forensics work we're likely to need in investigating old crimes."
"I see. Well, I understand the point you made earlier about keeping this investigation as quiet as possible. Needless to say, I agree with that. So I'll allocate a room for your interviews, and I'll make available to you those employees who were here during the times you're investigating. I assume you'll provide a list with the relevant dates?"
"Of course," Nate responded, thinking of the busy night ahead of him.
"All I ask in return," Stephanie continued, "is that you do keep your activities as low-key as possible and don't disturb my guests any more than you absolutely have to."
"Agreed."
"I assume you mean to start first thing in the morning?"
Nate nodded. "Jeremy Grant was in the ground out there for ten years, so one more night isn't likely to change anything. The remains are on their way to the state medical examiner. So, yeah, we'll get started on the interviews in the morning. Plainclothes, no uniforms. We will do our best not to disrupt your routines any more than necessary."
"I appreciate that. And Agent Hayes?"
"Agent Hayes will be approaching you for permission to go through old employee records and other paperwork stored here at The Lodge. I'm asking that you grant that permission."
She sighed. "I'll check with the owners, but under the circumstances, I'm sure they'll okay it."
"Thank you." He got to his feet and was on the point of leaving her small office when he found himself hesitating. "Stephanie, I know this is not what you signed on for, and I'm sorry it's happening on your watch."
She smiled slightly. "Don't worry about me, Nate. I'm an army brat. We learn early to cope with the unexpected."
Nate was tempted, but in the end decided not to ask her if the unexpected included the paranormal.
He'd find out the answer to that soon enough. They both would.
"You don't understand." Diana's voice was rock-steady in a way that only those holding on to control with teeth and fingernails could manage. "I talked to him. I took his hand and — and it was warm and solid. Flesh and blood. He wasn't cold, or wispy, or any of the things a ghost is supposed to be."
Quentin stirred an extra spoonful of sugar into the tea and then put the cup into her hands. "Drink this."
She stared at the cup for a moment, then looked around her, frowning. The sitting room was surprisingly large and comfortable, occupying part of an open space that also included the kitchenette and a small dining table.
Both the big sofa and the oversized chair in which she sat were plushly comfortable, and were grouped along with a large, square coffee table around a gas fireplace with a plasma TV placed above the mantel.
"We're in my cottage."
"Yes. It was closest. Drink the tea, Diana."
"How long have we been here? Oh, Christ, I didn't black out, did I?"
Which, Quentin thought, answered at least one of Bishop's questions.
"Not as far as I could see," he said matter-of-factly. "But you're in shock, and no wonder. I'm told it takes quite a while for a medium to adjust."
"I'm not a medium." But for the first time, her protest was more defiant than certain.
Again keeping his tone prosaic even though what he was saying certainly wasn't, Quentin said, "You met and talked to Jeremy Grant, and he's been dead for ten years. Either you're a medium, or else you imagined the whole thing. I know damned well you didn't imagine it, at least partly because there's no way you could have known whose grave you had found."
"A hallucination—"
"Probably wouldn't have given you his name, don't you think? Not the correct name, at any rate."
She stared at him.
"Drink the tea, Diana."
After a moment, she took a sip of the steaming liquid and grimaced, either because it was so hot or because it was so sweet. "I... don't remember coming here," she said finally.
"Shock, like I said. After you told me you'd talked to Jeremy, you didn't say anything else. It seemed to me the best idea would be to get you inside and give you a little time to come to terms with all this."
"I'm sure that cop had questions."
"Oh, he has plenty."
"Then—?"
"He'll talk to you tomorrow. He and his people will be talking to everybody tomorrow. Or at least everybody who was here or might know something about what happened to Jeremy Grant ten years ago."
"I don't know anything about that."
"He didn't happen to mention how he died, huh?"
She stared at him wonderingly. "No."
"Yeah, they never do. My boss says it's the universe reminding us that nothing is ever easy." He took a sip of the coffee he had ordered for himself, and added, "I think it sucks, though, frankly. I mean, you have this cool — and scary — ability to communicate with the dead, and they seldom tell you anything you couldn't figure out for yourself."
Diana cleared her throat. "It doesn't seem...quite fair," she agreed.
"No. It's like most psychic abilities. They come along with limitations, just as the other five senses do. Mine, for instance, never work when I need them to. I can't look into the future and see who's going to win the World Series this year, or if it's going to rain tomorrow, or even whether I'll be able to solve whatever case I'm working on at any given time. Hell, I can't even reliably predict the turn of a card. In fact, using tests developed years ago to measure psychic ability, I score below average."
Intent now, she said, "And yet you're psychic."
"And yet," he agreed. "Sometimes I just know things. They don't appear in my mind in neon, and I don't get visions. Sometimes I hear a faint whisper, as though someone is telling me something. Other times I just... know."
"And you really believe that?"
Quentin smiled at her. "Of course. I've seen and experienced too much in the last twenty-five years not to."
"Twenty-five years. Since Missy died?"
He nodded.
"You weren't psychic before then?"
"I wasn't born an active psychic, no." He shrugged, keeping it as matter-of-fact as he could. "One theory is that most if not all humans have latent psychic abilities, unawakened senses, maybe left over from more primitive times when we needed that edge just to survive. It could be something we're evolving away from, since our survival as a species doesn't seem to depend on it."
"Is that what you think?"
"Not really. I think it's more likely that we're evolving toward the ability to more effectively use our brains. Maybe because of the increased levels of electromagnetic energy in the modern world. That's a viable theory."