Iâve got the bayou side!â Toby Keaton said. âBorders my property.â
âIâll take the cemetery,â Frazier said.
âYou will not. Itâs dark and dangerous in there,â Ashley told him.
âNot for me, dear. Itâs memories for me,â he said softly, and quickly turned away. Neither of them wanted to think about Ashleyâs parents, entombed in the majestic family vault.
âGrampa, pleaseâyou need to be here as everyone returns,â Ashley said.
âIâll take the cemetery,â Ben offered. âIâm really familiar with the living and the dead,â he added and winked. âJust give me one of the big old flashlights at the back door. Iâll be fine.â
Ben would be fine. He was a big, strapping man in his mid-forties. Besides, heâd attended funerals for both her parents and knew the cemetery well.
Ashley wanted to take the cemetery herself; that dream had to have been a sign.
No, that would be insane. Ben knew what he was doing. She wasnât going to let a dream dictate what she did in her life.
âOkay, so where are we going?â Beth asked Ashley.
âThe stables?â Ashley suggested.
âIâll come with you and stand there, but Iâm not going near the horses!â
An hour later, they had finished the actual search as best they could in the night.
Ramsay went to speak with the guests who were staying in the rooms that had been the old stables, and the Yankee contingent spoke with those in theother outbuildings. Cliff went to his office, wondering if Charles might have slipped in there to rest.
They all searched, from the river to the road, from the sugar fields to the bayou, but there was no sign of Charles Osgood. By midnight, all the searchers were back at the house.
âAshley, really, he must be out somewhere else,â
Cliff told her.
She looked at Ben. âYou searched everywhere in the cemetery? There are so many paths, little roads between all the vaults.â
Ben sighed. âAshley, I searched. But we can all take another look.â
She nodded.
âThat was actually not a suggestion,â Ben said.
âItâs all right. Iâll go myself,â Ashley said.
âWeâll help,â Ramsay said, tugging at Cliffâs sleeve.
âIâve still got the key, so Iâll come, too,â Ben said.
Ashley led the way, wondering why she thought that sheâd really find Charles in the cemetery, just because sheâd had a dream.
But she was determined.
Ben opened the lock on the gate, though, of course, they could have all crawled over the stone wall.
Ashley headed straight for her family tomb. The real Marshall Donegal had died there.
The last interment had been her fatherâs. The usual little pain in her heart sparkedâit always came whenshe thought about him, and her mother. And tonight, especially, she missed Jake.
There was no sign of Charles there, and no sign that he had been there.
She almost fell, she was so relieved.
The tomb glowed white beneath the gentle touch of the moon, dignified in its decaying majesty. She heard the three men calling to one another from different sections of the graveyard, and she followed a voice to reach Cliff. He looked at her. âAshley, Charles left. Whether he was spirited away by aliens or not, I donât know. But he isnât here. This isnât any parlor game, is it? Youâre really worried.â
âI am. Did you go in the chapel?â she asked.
âYou think that Charles is hiding in the chapel? Or kneeling down, still thanking the good Lord for the chance to be Marshall Donegal?â Cliff asked dryly.
âPlease, Cliff?â
He groaned. He walked around the ell that would lead them to the chapel, in the far corner near the embankment of the river. The chapel had carved oak double doors, which creaked when he opened them. He fumbled for the light switch, and light
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