breath, trying to figure out what she’d just seen – a massive dark shape, black eyes, flaring nostrils and pounding hooves.
A storm of questions flooded her mind as Mr Rinaldi and his men came charging down the aisle. The beast continued its terrible pounding and thrashing. The stable boss shouted instructions to his
men to reinforce the boards. Serafina quickly climbed out of the back of the stall and darted from the stables before they caught sight of her.
Those were the stallions!
There was no question now. Whoever it was, the second occupant of the carriage was here.
She scurried along the stone foundation at the rear of the house, pushed her body through the airshaft, crawled through the passage, pushed aside the wire mesh and entered the basement. Her
presence at the estate had become known to the Vanderbilts a few weeks before, so she could theoretically use the doors like normal people, but she seldom did.
She went down the basement corridor, through a door and then down another passageway. As she stepped into the workshop, her pa turned towards her.
‘Good mornin’,’ he began to say in a pleased, casual fashion, but when he got a look at her bedraggled state, he lurched back in surprise. ‘Eh, law! What happened to you,
child?’ His hands guided her gently to a stool for her to sit on. ‘Aw, Sera,’ he said as he looked at her wounds. ‘I said you could go out into the forest at night to spend
time with your mother, but you’re breakin’ my heart, comin’ home lookin’ like this. What’ve you been doin’ out there in them woods?’
Her pa had found her in the forest the night she was born, so she reckoned he must have had an inkling of what she was, but he didn’t like dark talk of demons and shifters and things that
go bump in the night. It was as if he thought that as long as they didn’t talk about those things they would not be real or come into their lives. She had told herself many times that she
wouldn’t bother her pa with the details of what happened at night when she went out, and normally she kept that promise, but the moment her pa asked it all just started gushing out of her
before she could stop it.
‘I had a terrible run-in with a pack of dogs, Pa!’ she said, choking up.
‘It’s all right, Sera – you’re safe here,’ her pa said as he took her into his thick arms and huge chest and held her. ‘But what dogs are you talking about?
It wasn’t the young master’s dog, was it?’
‘No, Pa. Gidean would never hurt me. There was a strange man in the forest with a pack of wolfhounds. He sicced ’em on me somethin’ fierce!’
‘But where did he come from?’ her pa asked. ‘Was he a bear hunter?’
She shook her head. ‘I don’t know. After he got out of the carriage, he sent the carriage on towards Biltmore. I think I saw the horses in the stables. And I saw a strange man with
Mr Vanderbilt this morning. Did anyone unusual arrive at the house last night?’
‘The servants have been jabbering on about all the folk comin’ in for Christmastime, but I doubt the man you saw was one of the Vanderbilts’ guests. I’ll wager it was one
of those poachers from Mills Gap that we ran off the estate two years ago.’
Serafina could hear the anger seething in her pa’s voice. He was riled up that someone had done his little girl harm. He kept talking as he examined the crusted blood on her head.
‘I’ll go speak with Superintendent McNamee first thing. We’ll take a party out there to confront this fella, whoever he is. But, first off, let’s get you patched up. Then
you rest a spell. Your lesson can wait.’
‘My lesson?’ she asked, confused.
‘For them table manners of yourn.’
‘Not again, Pa, please. I’ve got to figure out who’s come to Biltmore.’
‘I told ya. We’re fixing to hammer that nail till it’s sunk in deep.’
‘Sunk in my head, you mean.’
‘Yeah, in your head. Where else do ya learn things? Now that you and
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