a word.
chapter 7
Five weeks later I sat by the fire in Maggie’s living room watching her play chess with William. He often forgot the rules, and she patiently but firmly reminded him that his bishop could move only diagonally on the same color.
“No, William,” she said. “That’s your rook. It moves ahead or backward or to the side.”
The stimulation of someone new had made William more interested in his surroundings. Maggie was good for him. She had changed a great deal since our arrival as well. Every time I brought up the subject of leaving, she’d say something like, “Don’t worry about it yet.”
I thought about the hate-filled look on her face the night after we arrived, when she had told me to keep William out of her sight. Maybe she feared being forced to remember. William was such a stark image of the link between our own dead era and the present. We were all tied to the same dark secret: Maggie, Philip, Julian, myself, and Edward. William was the keystone, a blinding, undeniable example of what could be.
But Maggie surprised herself by discovering what I had always known. There was joy in William. He wasn’t an abomination. He was our history. It was okay to look him in the face and smile . . . and remember.
“Checkmate. I win.” She laughed.
“Eleisha lets me win.”
“Eleisha lets you cheat, and that’s why you win.”
He looked to me for support, his long, wispy hair hanging at odd angles around a narrow, once-handsome face. I did let him cheat. For some reason, Maggie found it very important that he play everything by the rules. I had little concern for most rules.
“Cheating helps him. It makes him think,” I said in my own defense.
“Yes, but he’ll never learn anything that way. You’ve spoiled him for anyone’s company but yours.”
Oh, that was rich, as if people were beating the door down to spend time with William. Maggie must have realized how stupid her last statement sounded because she dropped it.
“One more game?” she asked him.
“I’m tired. I’ll stoke up the fire.”
He didn’t know how to stoke or build a fire, but it was something he liked to talk about. A few minutes later he was sleeping in his chair.
“We’re going to have to call Julian pretty soon,” I said. “We’ve been here six weeks. He’ll need to know what’s going on.”
“He already does.”
“What?”
“I called Philip last week and told him what happened. He said he’d take care of it. Julian won’t care who you’re staying with as long as he doesn’t have to see William.”
I sat stunned for a moment, and then said, “You should have told me.”
“Why?”
“Because you don’t know Julian like I do.”
“Oh, spare me the martyr syndrome. He wants you out of sight and out of mind. That’s all.”
“No, I didn’t mean that. You just shouldn’t . . . You’re putting yourself at risk for us. What if you get hurt?”
The hard lines of her face softened. “Don’t worry. I can take care of myself.”
Guilt was a new emotion for me. I hated it.
“Maggie, there’s something else. Something I didn’t tell you.”
“What?”
“Do you remember me telling you about that cop who felt Edward die? The one who fell on the lawn?”
“I told you that’s impossible.”
“No, he felt it. I know because . . . I felt him.”
Her expression sharpened again. “What do you mean, you felt him?”
“He was inside my head. I didn’t want to tell you earlier because you might make us leave. He tracked me into a bar in Portland. That’s why I sounded so scared the night we came here. I was just sitting at a table in a bar, and pictures from his thoughts flashed into my head.”
“What did you see?” Her voice was tight.
“Half-decomposed bodies in Edward’s cellar, the photograph of me over his mantel, and the oil painting of me from his storage room. The police have all those things. He thought in scattered waves about his partner, Dominick, too. They both were chasing me.”
“How close was he before you felt him?”
“Inside the room.”
She sat back in her chair, thinking, staring at William’s sleeping form. She didn’t seem angry or anxious. Now that we were openly discussing this, I had a lot of questions. Except for Edward, I’d never had a chance to talk like this before—and he didn’t know much more than I did.
“Maggie, why do we see images when we’re feeding . . . I mean of our victim’s thoughts and life?”
Her head