Fallen - Mia Sheridan Page 0,79

skittled under her skin, racing up her spine. Were the rest of them the men in Bancroft’s ministry? The ones who’d joined him in brutalizing and murdering the natives? She was tempted to use her fingernail to scratch Xs over each of their villainous faces.

Still, as with Hubert Bancroft’s photo, Scarlett turned it over and placed it face down in its frame.

The last photo was again of a group of men, all in white suits, standing in front of Lilith House. Only this photo was much more recent.

The sons of Farrow. They’ve held the moral line for centuries.

Scarlett frowned, looking closer. She didn’t recognize any of the men except one, the sheriff, though he looked about fifteen years younger. She turned the photo over but no information was written on the back, not even a date. She flipped it again. This must be a more recent photo of the Farrow Religious Guild. But if so, why were they standing in front of Lilith House? If the photo was fifteen years old or so, then Lilith House had been a reform school. What did these men have to do with that? For some reason—most likely because of the photo that had been hung directly next to the picture of the original Religious Guild in Sister Madge’s office—the old nun’s words about fallen women came back to her.

I like this depiction, because she’s seeking atonement by reaching for the blessing of a righteous man. So many do not, you know. Atone.

Was that what they’d been at Lilith House to offer? Some form of atonement? A religious ceremony wherein the girls might absolve themselves of their sins? And how exactly did that work? These were not prophets, nor deities. They were just men who’d joined some church group. How exactly were they qualified to offer atonement to anyone?

After a moment, she set the photos on the floor and knelt forward again, peering into the trunk once more. She removed one book, then another until she got to the musty, fabric-lined bottom. Nothing else remained.

Frowning, Scarlett glanced around at the books. Whose had they been? Who had been the keeper of Taluta’s and Narcisa’s stories? Who had obtained the old photos of Hubert Bancroft, Lilith House, and different generations of the Religious Guild? It all seemed . . . connected in some way she didn’t have enough information to understand. She hesitated a moment and then began placing the books back in the trunk. When she got to the Bible, she paused, opening it again and flipping to the back. Still no name. No information about who had once owned it.

Scarlett closed it and then used her thumb to flip through the interior pages, noting the underlined passages and the highlighted portions, one question mark after another in the margins. The reader of this Bible had struggled with questions of faith. She wondered if they’d ever been answered. Scarlett stopped suddenly when she spied something flattened in the middle. She opened it wide, pulling out the item and swallowing heavily.

With trembling fingers, she grasped it delicately, expecting it to crumble, but it didn’t. She held it up, bringing it close to her face so she could take in all the intricate details.

It was a bird.

Formed with a strand of grass.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

Scarlett knocked on the blue painted door, waiting a minute before turning back toward the street. She’d dropped Haddie off at Millie’s with the bird and the bunny, and then gone straight to the address where Millie told her the boy in the wheelchair lived with his parents. The child Haddie had evidently made scream bloody murder a few days before. She’d brought it up with Haddie, and though Haddie had looked confused and ashamed—just as she had after the church daycare incident—Scarlett had again, comforted herself with the belief that Haddie wasn’t a bully. She’d seek clarification from the boy’s mother before addressing it again.

Unfortunately, that day wouldn’t be today. No one was home.

Scarlett got back in her car, and pulled away from the curb. She purposely avoided looking at the house Camden had come out of the other day, and headed to the pet store where, apparently, she might want to consider signing up for a frequent shopper discount. “No more rescue pets please, God,” she whispered to the big guy in the sky. There was only so much Scarlett could take on, though she supposed it was her fault that she hadn’t considered what else came with owning a house at

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