Nada.
After ten minutes, and Jan and Rick arriving and silently watching after Zack shushed them, Lina sat, dejected, on the bed.
“What, exactly,” Zack said, “are you doing?”
She handed him the note she retrieved from the step.
“Where did this come from?”
“There was a secret compartment under a step. That’s what she meant by the squeak in the other letter. Lacey knew what the squeak meant and pointed me to it.”
“Oh. That’s clear as mud.”
“The step squeaked.”
“Okay.”
The four of them stared at the animals for another ten minutes. Lina felt close to tears. “I don’t understand what she’s trying to tell me!”
“Calm down, lovely,” Jan soothed. “We’ll figure it out.” He studied the figurines, then turned, slowly looking around the room, his eyes scanning from floor to ceiling. He stopped, a wide smile breaking across his face. He looked back at the shelf, then at Lina.
“I’ve got it.”
“Well, explain it to me, please.”
He walked over to a bookshelf on the far side of the room. On a shelf exactly across from the figurines sat several pictures. Jan reached over to one and picked it up. A group picture, it featured Bertholde and four older men, apparently taken at some sort of meeting, or maybe a past Gathering.
Jan carried the picture over to Lina and handed it to her. “That’s Jim Aruks, Paul McThomas, Jayden Aslo, and Davis Cannady.”
“Yeah, so?”
Rick grinned and pointed at each man in turn again. “Wolf, dragon, panther, and bear shifters.”
She stared at him, then turned the picture over and popped the back off the inexpensive frame. Behind the picture, she found a small piece of paper.
“This is getting old.” She took it out and unfolded it.
On it, a single, hand-drawn symbol.
%
“What the fuck is that?”
Zack took the paper, smiled, and walked over to the windows. He looked outside for a moment, then turned to them. With a fake, pompous British detective accent, he hooked a thumb under his armpit and said, “I do believe, Watson, that I have solved the mystery.”
“I’m hungry and crampy, Zack,” she groused. “Don’t piss me off.”
He laughed. “It’s the apothecary symbol for the ounce.”
She blinked. “Huh?”
“Ounce. You know, ‘O-Z. Oz.’”
“Sorry, Zack,” Jan said. “I’m not following you, either.”
He grinned and waved them over to the window. “‘Follow the yellow brick road,’” he chanted.
Outside, a path of pale pavers with a yellow hue to them led the way to gardens behind the house.
“No,” she said. “You really think she’d keep it that close to her?”
He shrugged. “Maybe she moved it without anyone else knowing.”
They all headed outside. The paving stones didn’t look big enough to be the tablet. And there were literally thousands of them.
“This will take forever,” Lina said.
“Look,” Zack interrupted, “let’s eat dinner first. Keep this to ourselves until we have a chance to fill in everyone else. Once our tummies are full, we’ll come back to it.”
Before dinner, she had time to get Brodey alone for a few minutes. “Can I ask you a personal question?”
He gave her an appraising look. “I’d hope so, sugar, after all we’ve been through.”
“Feel free to tell me to go fuck myself, but how did your parents die?”
His face clouded. “Car wreck. Highway Patrol declared it a one-car wreck.”
“But you aren’t convinced?”
“Nope. Why?”
“I had a dream.”
“Did you see who did it?”
“No. I saw the immediate aftermath. But there’s got to be a reason I saw it in the first place. It was just a brief flash. I wanted to know if it was your parents.”
“Okay. If you see anything else—”
“Absolutely.”
He nodded and gave her a strong hug, then hurried outside for some fresh air.
She suspected he wanted to get himself under control.
After dinner, they led the others outside to the pavers. Zack explained. “We’re not even one hundred percent sure this is the place she was pointing us to, but we’re going with it.” They spread out and took separate sections.
It was nearly dark when Lina found it. At the edge of the walk, half concealed by a bush, lay one paver set a little differently than the others. Lina called for the rest of their group. Brodey knelt down and pulled it out of position, flipping it over.
A roughly chiseled V had been embossed in the bottom.
“What does that mean?” Lina asked. “What does ‘V’ stand for?”
Zack shook his head. “Put it back exactly the way you found it, Brodey.”
He did. “Now,” Zack instructed, “tip it up, toward the bush.”
He did. Now the V pointed down the path. Lina set off ahead of the others. At the end of the walk was a gravel circle ringed by low bushes. In the middle of it, a sundial. On top of it sat a V-shaped pointer.
“I don’t get it,” Lina said.
Callie laughed and stepped over the bushes and into the circle with her. Carefully tipping the sundial over off its pedestal, she then moved the pedestal. Beneath it lay four pavers surrounding a fifth, which had totally been concealed by the sundial’s pedestal.
Daniel joined them in the circle and pulled up the center stone. He turned it over and held it up. “Is this what you’re looking for?” He grinned.
In his hands, he held the Tablet of Trammel.
The entire events of its creation rushed back into Lina’s mind.
Lina fainted.
Lina awoke in a sitting room. Someone had carried her inside and laid her out on a comfortable sofa. Zack knelt next to her and placed a cold, wet cloth on her forehead. “What the hell was that about, sweetheart?”
She felt woozy. “I don’t know.” She seemed to have developed an annoying habit of fainting unexpectedly. “I hope I’m not turning into one of them damn fainting goats,” she grumbled.
Jan and Rick, standing nearby, both laughed. “No chance of that, sweetheart,” Rick said.
She carefully sat up. “The tablet? Where is it?”
“Right here,” Brodey said. Someone had brushed the dirt off of it. It now sat on a towel in the middle of a table.
Lina stood, wobbled on her feet for only a moment before she felt steady again, and made her way over to the tablet.
It seemed hard to believe that just a few days earlier, she’d taken part in the creation of it. It looked weathered, some of the engravings a little smoother than they’d originally been, but in good shape overall. Running her fingers over it, she felt none of the power present at its creation.
It was just a rock.
The giggles started deep in her throat, bubbling and rising up until she had to lean on the table for support she was laughing so hard.
“Um, you okay?” Zack asked.
She nodded even as she continued laughing. It was several minutes before she was able to regain her senses. “We’ve been worried…about…that!” She broke out into another giggle fit.
She realized everyone was exchanging worried looks. She waved them away. “I’m not crazy, I swear.” She took a deep breath, let out one final round of snickers, then turned to face everyone. “It’s just a rock now. At the time, it was a powerful spell, yes. After the battle ended, it became meaningless.” She ran her hands over it again.
Nope, nothing. She could get more sensation from concrete block. Still…
“We need to take it back to America with us,” she said. “We can hide it in the Pack compound in Maine.”