“Katherine?” Lydia asked.
She went quickly to the door, threw the bolt back and opened it. Lydia was standing in the well-lighted corridor, wearing a flowing yellow bedgown, her face weary and lined more than it appeared to be in daylight. Alex stood behind her in a lounging robe and pajamas, his dark eyes swiftly assessing her condition and the state of the room beyond.
“What was the scream?” Katherine asked.
“I thought perhaps it was you,” Lydia said. She took Katherine's hand and squeezed it. “After that warning on your door last night…”
Alex interrupted, speaking in a clipped, nervous tone. “I told you, Mother, that it was a man's scream.”
To the left, Patricia Keene and her husband appeared, blinking sleepily, attired in nightclothes. “Is everyone all right?” she asked.
“Fine here,” Lydia said. “What was the noise?”
“Someone screamed,” Patricia Keene said. Her husband nodded.
Alex said, “Where is Yuri?”
“In his room?” Lydia suggested.
As a group, they went down the corridor and knocked at his door. When he did not answer, they opened it and looked in. He was not there or, as Alex reported, in his private bath either.
“I think the scream was downstairs,” Mason Keene said. His voice sounded thick, as if he had been drinking and was still a little tight, despite his sleep. Was that something else about Owlsden that had been hidden from her?
“I'll go look,” Alex said.
“No,” Lydia said. “We'll all go look.”
In a close train, they went down the grand staircase and found, almost immediately, that the front door was standing open, a furious whirl of snow pouring in on the foyer carpet. Alex went and closed it, came back and said, “There are footprints in the snow, leading away from the house.”
No one said anything until Katherine finally asked, “What next?”
“We check the rooms down here,” Alex said, leading the way.
They all knew what they were going to find. It was not any special extra-sensory perception, Katherine thought, not something you could call pre-cognition or “fey,” just a deep, animal dread that went even beyond the level of instinct.
In the main drawing room, the furniture had been pushed back to make a circle for the ceremony. The wine-colored carpet was now marked with a number of chalk designs, and several thick, black candles burned on endtables all around. Yuri lay at the edge of the markings, sprawled on his face, his hands outstretched in front of him as if he were desperately reaching for something. He was clearly dead.
Patricia Keene began to scream…
CHAPTER 11
“And then you found the body?” Cartier asked.
Alex said, “Yes.”
“Where it lies now?”
“Yes.”
“You didn't move it at all?”
“I didn't even touch it.”
Constable Cartier consulted a small, black notebook which he had been glancing at throughout his interrogations of the people gathered in the library. Once, when he passed Katherine's chair and was holding the book lower than usual, she saw that it did not contain any writing at all, that his long and thoughtful glances at the supposedly incriminating list of facts it contained were nothing but staged expressions, phony. Ordinarily, she would have been amused by this, but she could not find a smile as long as Yuri was lying dead in the drawing room, currently guarded over by one of the two deputies that Cartier had brought with him.
“Have you ever seen the knife before?” Cartier asked.
“No.”
“It is an antique knife, as you could have told from the handle, very ornate and lovely,” Cartier said. He looked in his notebook again, looked up when he adjudged a proper amount of time had passed. “It is just the sort of thing one might expect to find in the older rooms of Owlsden, the unremodeled rooms.”
“What are you suggesting?” Alex asked. He was clearly angry at Cartier's smugness.
“I am not suggesting anything,” the constable said, staring at the blank pages of the book. “All that I am doing is making an observation.”
Alex snorted and shook his head. “And it's a muddle-headed observation,” he said. Patiently, as if he were talking to a child, he said, “That knife did not come from Owlsden.”
“Alex, please see to it that you are more courteous to the constable,” Lydia said. She was sitting at her large desk, holding a cup of hot tea in both hands, though she had not, so far as Katherine had noticed, taken a single sip of the stuff.
Alex flashed her an obvious look of exasperation, but he did not say anything further to Constable Cartier.
The policeman turned to Katherine and said, “Miss Sellers, don't you find it odd that the devil's dances, the Satanic markings on your door, and now the murder of Yuri Selenov should all transpire in or around Owlsden?”
“I don't understand what you mean?” She shifted in her chair, uncomfortable.
He said, “Wouldn't it seem to you that there is more to this than a simple coincidence.”
“Of course,” she said. Anyone could see it wasn't a coincidence that someone had been in the drawing room making Satanic ceremonial patterns on the carpet when Yuri surprised them.
“Then, perhaps, someone in this house is a member of the cult that has, for eighteen months, been a nuisance around these parts.”
“Now just a damn minute—” Alex began, rising swiftly from his chair.
“Sit down, please,” Cartier said, suddenly embarrassed, jolted out of his previous delight in this abrupt switch of roles between the once-rich and once-powerful, and himself. He seemed to realize that he was not being entirely fair to them and that his bluntness had over-stepped some invisible boundary or other.
“You cannot—” Alex began.
“Alex, sit down, please,” Lydia said.
He looked at his mother, still furiously angry, then shrugged his shoulders and returned to his seat.
“Do you think anyone in Owlsden might be connected with this cult?” Cartier asked Katherine.
She barely managed to avoid looking at Alex as she said, “Perhaps not anyone here — but someone else who has a key.”
“Oh, for Christsake, we went through all of that before, Katherine!” Alex said.
“Go through it again, for me,” Cartier said. She did, and when she was finished, the constable turned to Alex and Lydia and said, “I would like to have a list of names, everyone who has a key to Owlsden.”
“That can be arranged,” Lydia said.
“To no purpose,” Alex mumbled.
When the constable had gotten the list and had taken time to look it over carefully, he said, “It would seem unlikely, but if we have any lead so far, it is one of the names on this list.” He tucked the list neatly in the notebook and put the notebook in his hip pocket. “I suppose we ought to be going now.”
“Mr. Cartier?” Katherine asked.
He turned, looking infinitely wearier than he had looked only a moment ago, no longer getting much enjoyment out of interrogating the wealthy. “Yes?”
“What will be done with — with the body?”
“We'll take it along with us,” he said. “We'll have to put it on ice until the state police have a chance to get into town and take the case from us.”
“Tomorrow?”
He shook his head. “Eight inches of new snow down already and as much as twenty more predicted, all dry as powder and blown by a good wind. In another couple of hours, no one could get up to Owlsden — and in another six hours, no one will be driving in or out of Roxburgh itself, not even the state police.”
“When will they get here?” she asked.
“Depends on the wind once the snow has stopped. Could be as much as a week if the weather's as bad as it sometimes gets.”