“Yeah, that has to be it,” Tessa agreed.
He kissed her and ran for the car. “Gotta hurry. It’s getting late and the library may close. See you in an hour or so. Call my cell if you need me.”
Tessa waved to him as a light rain began to fall. A soft sheet of rain dropped from the gray cloud above. The sun still warmed her as water collected on her face.
Eric’s car fired up and he was off, driving almost as fast as the cop did fifteen minutes before.
Time to get back to painting the bedroom.
Tessa turned toward the house and started for the porch, but stopped in her tracks.
Steam rose off the roof as the rain water hit it. She stepped closer and examined the porch railing. It was happening there too.
Weird.
It reminded her of what water did when it hit the burner on the stove after overflowing from a pot of potatoes, sizzling and bubbling up, and finally disappearing. She touched the railing to see if it was hot, her fingers coming away cool, but not wet.
As fast as the rain started, it slowed and then stopped with only the occasional drip here and there.
Tessa walked into her house and discounted what she’d just witnessed. It had an explanation, she just didn’t know what. Probably the house had heated up with the direct sun all day and the warm rain only dissipated faster than expected.
Who knows,
she thought.
I’m going to paint and not worry about dead rats and sizzling rain.
Chapter 4
Friday, June, 1, 2012…
Officer Clayton stared up at the facade of the house. The house that the area was now calling
The Burning Chalet
. It looked like any other summer home in the Banff area, but he’d been on the police force long enough to know that strange things happened around it.
“Strange things indeed,” he mumbled under his breath as cars pulled up behind him. He took off his sunglasses and watched the line of seven vehicles crawl up the drive, with Arthur McKay bringing up the rear. Good old Arthur — the longest standing resident still alive in the National Park. Clayton was pretty sure Arthur would hit ninety-five this year but people had stopped asking his age a dozen years ago. He was still spry, still eating bacon and eggs and driving his car, but Clayton suspected this would be the last year Arthur did any more driving.
The vehicles broke left and right and parked where they could find room.
“Gather around,” he shouted as everyone filed out of their vehicles. “I want to talk to you all before we get started.”
The search team assembled in a loose circle around Clayton. He counted ten people including himself.
“Okay, here’s what we know. According to the real estate agent, a young couple bought this house and were supposed to arrive for the long weekend in May, a few weeks back, but as far as anyone knows, they never showed up. Here’s the problem … their family in Calgary said they did leave for Banff and came here on the seventeenth of May. I’ve asked you all here to search the area in grid formation. Once we’ve covered every square meter of the property and found nothing, we will all leave as a group and go home. I will report to the family personally with what we find, which I’m figuring won’t be anything. Got it?”
Heads bobbed up and down.
“Okay, we’ll start in that corner in a single line and walk the property. We’ve all done this before. Let’s go, let’s go.”
Arthur stood at the back, leaning on his cane. As the searchers started for the corner of the property line, Clayton walked over to Arthur.
“You sure you’re up to this?” Clayton asked.
Lately, Arthur’s old eyes watered constantly. In a high-pitched grandfatherly voice, Arthur said, “You’re damned right I am. No house will spook me.” He turned and started after the group, leaning into his cane more today than on other days.
The ensemble of volunteers started by ten in the morning and finished the left side of the property by the lunch hour. Everyone went back to their cars for food, where they sat on hoods and trunks to eat.
Mike Lewis gestured toward Clayton, the remnants of a tuna sandwich in his mouth. “You really think that couple came here?”
Clayton shrugged. “I have no idea. Everything points to the negative.”
“I heard everything that comes around here goes missing eventually,” Barbara added from a few feet over.
“We don’t want to encourage fairy tales,” Clayton said.
“What happened to that hunter last year?” Mike asked.
“Who knows?” Clayton bit into a gala apple. “People go missing all the time in the mountains.”
“Yeah, but I heard his rifle was found on the porch of this house.”
“Ghost stories,” Clayton said. “That’s all it is.”
“I don’t think so,” Arthur chimed in. “There’s something wrong with this house. I can feel it in my bones. Can smell it in the air.”
Clayton swallowed the chunk of apple and took a deep breath. “That’s just somebody nearby with a campfire. Probably roasting marshmallows or hotdogs.”
“I smell something burning,” Arthur said. “And it ain’t marshmallows.”
“Okay, folks. Let’s finish this up and get the rest of the search done. I want to be home in time for dinner.”
They gathered their garbage, tossed it into a bag Clayton had brought and assembled at the opposite corner of the property.
After two more search lines were covered, they came upon the old well near the back of the property line. In order to walk around the raised stones that marked the well, Clayton would have to move away from one of the volunteer’s on either side of him.
“Everyone, slow up. I want to scan the base of the well so we don’t have to revisit this spot.”
The line stopped. Clayton got down and circled the well, seeing nothing but overgrown grass and stone. He rose to his full height and looked down into the open hole of the well. Darkness covered the bottom. As far as he remembered, the old wells in these parts had dried up years ago.
He grabbed the flashlight off his belt, flicked it on and shined the beam down the hole. Something reflected off it near the bottom.
“What was that?” he asked out loud.
A moment later Mike stood beside him, leaned down and scanned the bottom of the well.
“I can’t make it out, but from here it looks like a woman’s purse.”
“What would a purse be doing at the bottom of a well?” Clayton asked no one in particular.
“No idea,” Mike answered.
“Okay everyone, continue the search without me. I’m going to get my fishing rod out of my trunk to see if I can hook that purse and bring it up.”
The group of volunteers formed their line again and moved away as Clayton walked out to his car.
Minutes later he stood at the lip of the old well, a large lure with a double hook at its base affixed to the ten-pound line.
He let the line go until the lure touched bottom and then began the monotonous work of trying to hook the purse in the little to no light at the bottom of the well.
The volunteers finished scanning the property and came up empty. There was no indication anyone had spent time at the house in the last few years.
Just as it was beginning to seem a fruitless effort, the hook caught in the front flap of the purse.
Gently, he pulled the fishing line up and began to reel it in. Mike grabbed the tip of the rod to stabilize it and reduce sway.
“You’re getting it. Slowly, slowly.”
Clayton paid attention to the line, making sure he didn’t jerk it.
“Five feet left. Someone reach down and grab it when it gets close.”
Clayton didn’t look up to see who volunteered. He just kept his attention on the rod. To get this close and accidentally drop the purse back into the well would really piss him off.
“Got it!” Barbara shouted.
Clayton let out a pent-up breath. He set the rod down and reached for the purse. It didn’t look old, but the strap was broken and the outside leather worn. However long the purse was in the well, it had been weathered beyond repair.
“Everyone, thanks for coming out. Time to go. I’ll have this and its contents analyzed and let you all know what I find, if anything. Thanks again. See you all in town.”
Clayton walked away, but not before Arthur grabbed his arm.
“I don’t think you’ll find anything in that purse. The house doesn’t want you to know.”
Clayton stopped walking. “What makes you say that?”
“Up there,” Arthur pointed at the second story windows with his cane. “When you got that purse into your hands, something was in the window, watching you.”
“What are you talking about? You think someone is in the house?”
“No, not someone. Something.”
“Now Arthur, I hope you’re not seeing things,” Clayton said as he turned to go.
Arthur grabbed his elbow with surprising strength and spun him back to face him. “Whatever it was I saw, I can tell you it was real and it was angry. I didn’t see eyes, but I felt it watching us. Then it glowed a fire-red and orange color. When you touched the purse, for a brief moment the whole second story of the house looked like it was on fire. Flames licked up the window panes — then turned a deep shade of red and by the time I was ready to point and tell you to look, it all went away.”
“Arthur,” Clayton lowered his voice and leaned in. “You didn’t see anything of the sort. Go home and get some sleep. Thanks for your help today.”
Officer Clayton walked away with the purse in his hand, wondering what he’d find in it.
He also wondered if Arthur had started brewing his moonshine again or if he was finally losing his mind to age.
When he reached his car, he stopped to look back at the house and saw Arthur in the open door.
“What are you doing now?” he asked.
“Going inside to
investigate
what I saw.”
Arthur snarled on the word
investigate
and Clayton knew what that meant. Clayton had heard that some people in the area didn’t think he did his job well enough.
“Hold up, just one sec.”
He set the purse down on the passenger seat and walked to the front door. Arthur stepped in ahead and Clayton followed.
It was dark and dismal with a nasty smell of burnt flesh. Sitting on the floor by the door was a small pile of luggage. On top of two suitcases sat a VHS videocamera.
Clayton examined it as Arthur stepped farther into the house.
“Hey, Arthur, hold up. Don’t go too far. We shouldn’t even be in here.”
“I’ll do what I want,” Arthur said.
Clayton hit the eject button and popped the cassette tape out.
More evidence.
“Hey Arthur, look at your shoes.” Smoke came off of Arthur’s feet.
The old man leaned on the wall to lift his foot. Half of the sole was missing.
“What the hell—”
Clayton felt heat in his boots too. Smoke also came out from under his feet.
“Arthur, we need to leave. Now!”
At his age, Arthur could still move fast. He skipped across the living room and together, they walked out the front door and down the steps to the gravel drive.
“What was in the floor?” Arthur asked.
“I have no idea,” Clayton said. “But I’ve got a VHS tape to watch. Maybe there’ll be something on here.”
Both men walked away with half their footwear still intact, but Clayton’s confidence wavering.
Chapter 5
Friday, May 18, 2012…
Tessa finished the first coat of paint in their bedroom. While washing her hands, she heard Eric pulling up to the front of the house.
Eager to hear what Eric had found out in town, she ran down the stairs, gave the kitchen a wide berth, and opened the front door.
Right away she could see the anger on his face.
“What happened in town?” she asked.
“Nothing,” he said, his voice confirming her suspicions of ire.
He had gotten out of the car and fiddled with something in the trunk.
“What do you mean,
nothing
? Wasn’t the real estate agent in? Did you get to the library?”
He popped his head out from behind the open lid of the trunk. “No, and no.”
He doesn’t have to be so bitchy to me.
“What happened then? Tell me. You sound pissed.”
“I am pissed.”
He slammed the trunk and she jumped at what he held in his hands.
A silver hand gun.