A few of them laughed and applauded.
“Good point!” Alton Harle said.
Lena sighed and said, “But maybe the Satanists know the proper chants and all of that ritual stuff.”
“That doesn't make sense, though. Why should they know the proper magic words to summon up the Devil when no one knows the proper magic to call up God?” Katherine asked. “If one set of data exists, then the other should be as easily accumulated, don't you think?”
The room seemed to have gotten stuffy, the air still and thick and too warm.
Katherine put down her glass of wine and decided not to drink any more of it tonight.
“I guess so,” Lena admitted. “But you have probably just ruined any more supernatural novels I might pick up. They always seemed so real and spooky before. I guess, to continue enjoying them, I'll just suspend my critical judgment and let my emotions carry me away.”
“As usual,” John Kline said.
Everyone laughed, and that started them off on a new topic. The tension that had lain just below the surface while they had discussed Satanism dissipated in an instant.
Katherine found herself sipping the wine that she had said, only a short time ago, she did not want any more of. She frowned and put it down again.
The room was still stuffy, perhaps stuffier.
She remembered, suddenly, that she had not yet seen Yuri, had not had an opportunity to tell him about the footprints leading to Owlsden from the site of the devil's dance. She felt uneasy about being the only one with that information.
Paranoia…
She looked around at Alex's friends, but she found her judgment had not changed. Gloomy pessimists, a bunch of fault-finders. She did not care for them at all.
And she could not escape the nagging certainty that the whole conversation about Satanists had been carefully planned, that they had been…
Been what? Testing her?
Yes. It seemed almost as if they had posed a number of carefully worded test questions to ascertain where her sympathies lay, if she put any credence at all in superstitions.
But why?
It was as if they were feeling her out to see if she would like to—
“Don't you agree, Katherine?” Alton Harle asked.
She looked up, surprised that she had completely lost the thread of the conversation.
“I'm sorry,” she said. “I seem to be wool gathering. I've had a very long day, and I suppose I should be getting to bed.”
“It's only eleven,” Harle said.
“Yes,” Bill said. “We don't really get moving around here until after midnight.”
And what did that mean? Katherine wondered. Did it imply that these people were somehow connected to the cultists whose ceremonies began after the witching hour? Or did it mean nothing whatsoever, merely an unfortunate coincidence?
“Stay, Katherine,” John Kline said. “It's so pleasant to have a fresh point of view for a change.”
“Just the same,” she said, standing, “I really should turn in now.”
“Next week, we'll get together again,” Alex said.
“How could we survive in this backwoods place if we didn't?” Alton Harle asked.
Goodbyes were said quickly. In a moment, Katherine was standing in the main corridor with the door closed behind her. The air was still heavy and unpleasant. She had a sudden urge to lean with her ear against the door and hear if they were talking about her. Realizing how crude this compulsion was, she walked swiftly towards the main stairs before she could give in to it.
We don't really get moving around here until after midnight …
Do you think they really do summon up the devil, Katherine…?
Maybe the Satanists know the proper chants…
In her room, with the door locked after her, she remembered that she had yet to speak to Yuri. She reached for the bolt latch, then thought about prowling the many dark rooms of the mansion in search of him. It could wait. She could talk to him in the morning.
We don't really get moving around here until after midnight…
She undressed, put on her pajamas and got into bed. At first, she was going to let the bedside lamp burn. Then, when she realized that she must have soaked up some of the gloomy thinking that permeated the conversation in the recreation room, she reached out angrily and snapped the light off.
The darkness was not so bad at all. In fact, having overcome the momentary fear, she felt a great deal better. Aside from finding the prints in the snow, and aside from Alex's party, the day had been wonderful. More credits than debits. Tomorrow would be even better. She was sure of that…
CHAPTER 9
Again, Katherine woke because some noise had startled her, and she sat straight up in bed, listening intently to the stillness of Owlsden. The clock on the nightstand beside her read 3:08 in the morning; darkness lay in the room like thick syrup. Had the owls gotten exceedingly loud again? She listened for them, though she was certain that she had been awakened by something else altogether, something—
Like a knifeblade tapped against a hollow bone, someone knocked on her bedroom door, softly, quietly.
“Yes?”
No one responded.
“Who is it?”
When no one replied a second time, she wondered if she had imagined the noise — or if she had misinterpreted its source. Perhaps there wasn't anyone at her door, after all. She looked at the window and saw that nothing was out of place there…
The rap came again, softly, lasting a long time.
She got out of her bed and stepped into her slippers. The insides of the slippers were cold and made her shiver — or, at least, that was her own explanation for the tremors that raced up and down her spine.
“Lydia?” she asked.
No one answered.
She put on her robe, carefully buttoned it, taking her time, then she stood by the bed for a few moments, waiting for something more to happen. “Is that you, Alex?” she asked, ashamed at the quaver in her voice but unable to control it. What was she afraid of? “Yuri?”
Only silence.
She flicked on the bedside lamp and waited for the knocking sound to come again. When several long minutes had passed, she went to the door and pressed her ear so tightly against the wood that it pained her a little. She held her breath as she tried to detect the sounds of someone beyond, but she could not hear anything other than the profound silence of Owlsden.
“Who's there?”
When she still received no reply, she slid back the iron bolt on the door, gripped the antique knob and swung the portal outward onto the unlighted corridor.
The light from her own room plainly showed that there was not anyone nearby. Perhaps the darkness beyond the stairwell, in the other wing, concealed a watcher. But she did not feel much like walking down there in order to find out. Too, she had an undeniably strong suspicion that that was just what was wanted of her — to walk into the shadows down there…
Wondering if, after all, she had imagined it, she turned to enter her room and saw what had been done to the outside of her door. A large, dark circle lay in the center of the door, filled with Latin words which had been scrawled hastily in white chalk.
She looked quickly toward the far end of the corridor, hoping to catch someone unawares. She saw only the shadows.
Raising a hand, she tried to wipe away the markings. In the dim light, she had thought that the circle was drawn in a dark-colored chalk, but she now found that it was wet and sticky. Stepping back into her room, she held her hand out before her and looked at the rich brightness of fresh blood which had been used to paint the mark.