Thursday, October 31, 2013

Keeper 2: Chapter 8

Happy Halloween everyone!  v

Chapter 8

As Jamie descended the stairs he realized his heart was pounding, his pulse racing.  The last time he had encouraged the basement to communicate he had learned important information, information he could not have found otherwise. He knew that House, a dwelling that was fairly sentient, if somewhat obtuse, had the remains of the former House of the Keeper incorporated into its foundations. He knew that House was probably just as active as his was now and probably once communicated in much the same manner. Now visual communication was all that remained. It all sounded logical to him once he wrapped his head around the way things worked.  Somehow the talking House was much easier to take than the basement that made him feel as though he had stepped into the middle of an ongoing play.

“Admittedly a play that didn’t know I had showed up,” he thought to himself, reaching the level surface of the basement floor. There was something more, unsettling about watching the event the basement though he needed to see.

Jamie moved to the center of the room and felt the air almost grow thicker around him as though he had gotten the basement’s full attention. Feeling somewhat foolish, Jamie cleared his throat.  If anything the sense of waiting intensified.

“I don’t suppose there is anything you would like to tell me?” he asked. It was as if someone holding their breath had just exhaled.  Around him the stout stone walls shimmered.  The empty basement faded for a moment, looking like a mirage.  Jamie blinked, feeling as though his vision had blurred. A moment later the world seemed to solidify, only now instead of the mostly empty basement, Jamie was looking into a bustling kitchen.  A brownie, dressed very much as Dell typically dressed, was moving around the kitchen.  He gathered ingredients heaping them seemingly at random into a large mixing bowl, occasionally giving the contents a stir.  Sunlight streamed in through an open window and the curtains stirred in a breeze that smelled of honeysuckle. 

When the brownie turned towards Jamie, he could see not all was sunshine and light.  The brownie, who Jamie recognized as Robin, was frowning, his eyes dark with concern.  He gave the bowl a few extra stirs and scattered a handful of flour across the table before turning the contents of the bowl out.  As he began to knead what Jamie tentatively guessed to be bread dough, the door swung open.

“Still sulking Robin?” the man said.

“I’m not sulking, Keeper,” Robin replied, sounding quite sulky. Jamie recognized the Keeper speaking although he was not as young as he had been when he had the former House built, nor anywhere near as old as when had it been destroyed. Both events oddly enough that Jamie had witnessed.

“No of course not,” the Keeper replied. He smiled wryly. His humor faded as he settled himself at the table across from where Robin was working. He stared at the industrious brownie for a moment.

“I know you do not approve,” the Keeper began. 

“It is not my place to either approve or disapprove,” Robin sniffed.

“Be that as it may,” the Keeper replied.  “You opinion matters to me.” Robin seemed to relax at the confession and he let out a deep sigh.

“It seems like borrowing trouble.  Trouble seems to follow them, always has.”

“Which is not their fault, and why they most need our help,” the Keeper replied, his voice still gentle. “Those capable of practicing human magic have always been targets.”

“Sometimes they make themselves targets,” Robin grumbled.

“Sometimes,” the Keeper agreed. “And sometimes they just lose control because they don’t know enough. We won’t be taking in those who relish the causing of trouble.  We will however be sheltering those who want to learn control.”

Robin nodded. “So no trouble makers?”

“No deliberate trouble makers,” the Keeper corrected with a smile. “I’m sure there will be some trouble, but at least here we can contain it.” As Robin nodded, the Keeper looked thoughtful. “Besides, there is a rather selfish reason for it as well as the altruistic one.”

“Oh?”

“Those who serve as Keepers need a touch of magic to them. By working with those who show promise, we increase the available pool from which the next Keepers will be born.”

“But I thought young Jonathan was to succeed you?” Robin asked with a frown as he patted his dough into neat loafs.

“He is, but things happen and it is always good to prepare for the worst,” the Keeper said. “Besides, I’m not the only Keeper who will need a successor.  Some of the others are having trouble finding suitable candidates.”

“Are they?” Robin asked as he slipped the rounded mounds of dough into the oven.

“Yes,” he was told, the Keepers voice sounding troubles. “Some a very difficult time indeed. Stability is what we need, Robin. Stability to hold back the howling wilderness as they say.”

Robin nodded and dusted off his hands. “Well then Keeper I’ll accede to your wisdom.  I think the east wing would serve admirably for our guests.”

As they two discussed room preparations, Jamie noticed the scene starting to fade. The image of the kitchen became semi-transparent, gradually resuming its present day demeanor. He noticed the sounds of their voices and the scent of honeysuckle and baking bread were the last to fade. Jamie sighed, the waiting feeling had faded from the basement.

“So the former Keeper once took in those capable of doing magic,” Jamie said to himself, wondering exactly why the basement felt it was important for him to know that.  “Um, Thank you,” he told the basement before turning towards the stairs and climbing back into the living room.

He closed and locked the basement door, wondering why the basement had felt the need to communicate. “Maybe it is just lonely,” he thought. “Maybe it just wants to be helpful.”

Jamie shook his head.  “And maybe I should find out more about human magic.”

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

break

Sorry for the break, will start posting again on Thursday, Oct 31. v

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Keeper 2: Chapter 7


Chapter 7

As the High Talbot had said all that he felt needed saying, he left shortly after. The unsettling feeling of disquiet didn’t leave with him and for a long while, Jamie sat alone drinking his tea, barely tasting the hot liquid. He knew he needed to figure out who had attempted to create a faux human.  He knew he needed to find out what was going on with Michael, and as ghosts seemed intent on adding the study of magic to his to do list he figured that was important too.

Instead, his mind seemed intent on focusing on the visilore and meeting the other Keepers. No matter what he started to think about, his thoughts invariably led him back.  What had started out as mere curiosity and the desire to possibly talk to someone who had been doing the job longer than him had morphed into something that felt urgent. He couldn’t explain why and somehow that bothered him more than anything else.

“Can it be a compulsion?” he wondered setting his cup aside finally and standing.  He thought about Reginald’s insistence that the book was his life’s work. Compelling someone seemed like something a magician ought to be able to do, although he in truth knew very little about it.

“Can a ghost even compel the living?” Jamie left the parlor.  He stopped by the stand in the hall and looked over his mail.  The top note was from Levas stating that he would be by mid-morning the following day to meet with Jamie. The second note smelled of lilacs and was from Queen Genevia stating that she would be pleased to take tea with him tomorrow at four.

“I suppose I’ll have to remember to put on shoes for that one,” Jamie muttered to himself. Somehow he didn’t think any royal would be thrilled at someone wearing wool socks as slippers for their meeting. As fairies were overly sensitive, believing that people routinely slighted them due to their small physical stature, he imagined Queen Genevia would take less kindly than most to the implied disrespect of improper dress.

“The fairies seemed to know something about Michael,” Jamie remembered.  “At least the ones who tried to kidnap me anyway.”  That might give him some insight as to why Michael seemed drawn to the property. Although he hasn’t been around since the funeral.”  After the funeral, Jamie had attached an alarm to the gate so he could be notified if someone tried to come onto the property without permission.

Jamie smiled a little at himself.  The man who came to do the instillation had thought Jamie was trying to prevent poachers and had waxed poetic about the subject the entire time he was performing his installation. Apparently the man did a fair bit of hunting in his spare time and had an intense dislike of anyone who broke the rules. As correcting his interpretation of the situation would have meant explaining that Michael was under the influence of some Fae chemical, magic or some combination of the two and Jamie was looking for more information to help sever the connection didn’t seem the sanest of responses, Jamie had let his belief stand.

“Maybe she would be willing to help me since I helped her,” Jamie thought.  And as she sent me to the building where the vat was found, she might know more about the faux human as well.  Jamie shook his head, knowing that he was only repeating the information he had listed on his notepad. “And the vial has to go to someone else as well,” Jamie added out loud. “I don’t have the skills to deal with it. Jim might know something or someone.”

Knowing he would feel less guilty about focusing on the other Keepers if he at least set something in motion, Jamie slid his cell phone out of his pocket and pulled up Jim’s office number.

“Evers and Evers Law Offices,” a woman’s voice told him.  Recognizing it Jamie smiled.

“Lucy, hi this is Jamie Fulton I don’t suppose Jim is available?”

“Jamie, hi,” Lucy said, her professional voice edged with warmth.  “He should be, give me a moment to check.”

“Sure,” Jamie replied.  There was a staticy sort of silence as she put him on hold and Jamie found himself grateful that Lucy remembered how much he hated the hold music and left it off.

“He is in and I’ll transfer you back to him,” Lucy said a moment later.

“Thanks oh and thanks again for coming out to the funeral,” Jamie replied. “The flowers were lovely.” As she murmured appropriate replies before transferring him to Jim, Jamie wondered if he should return to Albe’s gravesite and remove what were sure to now be dead flowers from his grave.

“Jamie,” Jim said picking up the phone and pushing Jamie’s thoughts of graveside cleanup away.  “To what do I owe the pleasure?”

“Well I was hoping that you could help me with something as you seem to know pretty much everyone,” Jamie began.  “I have a lovely chemical concoction that I need analyzed. It was suggested I find a human alchemist, and although I believe a modern day chemist would be fine for the task, I have no clue what components are in the mix.”

“Which means you need someone who is sort of in the know?” Jim guessed with a laugh.

“Exactly.”

“Someone actually used the term alchemist?” Jim asked.  In the background Jamie could hear him moving something around on his desk.

“They did,” Jamie confirmed.  “Admittedly he also thought my digital camera was some sort of human magic.  I don’t suppose you know anyone with knowledge of goblin tribal markings?”

“Not offhand,” Jim replied.  “But I think I have someone who may help with your analysis.” Jamie sensed Jim’s reluctance to pass on the name of a client, even if they were friends.

“Excellent.  I need to come into town tomorrow,” Jamie told him.  “Perhaps I could drop it off with you if you would be willing to send it over.”

“That would be great,” Jim said sounding relieved. “Maybe we could get lunch while you’re here and catch up.”

“Sure,” Jamie said nodding at the phone and then rolling his eyes at himself when he remembered Jim couldn’t see him nod.  “I’ll be by around noon.”

“Great,” Jim told him. “Oh and I should warn you, Bella has been by several times.  She wants a copy of the will, bank statements and a copy of the house inventory. None of which I gave her of course.”

“I appreciate that,” Jamie replied.  He rubbed his forehead thinking his headache’s return was imminent. “I’ll talk to her and see if I can get her to leave you alone for a bit. Actually I had a question for you about that.” Jamie quickly related the family tree and birth certificate incident, deciding to leave out the ghostly visitations.

“I know that someone blacked out the information for a reason.  I’d like to know why as much as I would like to know what happened to my mother.”  Remembering the other blanked out spots he added, “And her family.” He sighed.  “I would also like to keep the search as quiet as possible in case it stirs anything up.”

“Well we do know how to be discrete,” Jim replied.  “I’ll see what I can find out.”

“Thanks. I’ll see you tomorrow then.” He and Jim ended their call and Jamie felt relieved that several items on his list had been set into motion. “Nothing like multitasking.”  Jamie stared at his phone for a moment wondering if he should call Bella now or put it off.

“Quick like pulling off a Band-Aid,” he told himself. He forced himself to press call before he could talk himself out of it.

“Well it is about time you called,” Bella said angrily as she picked up the phone proving that she had checked the caller id before answering. “I suppose you finally realized you need us and are calling for some favor or other.”

“Actually I am calling because Jim Evers let me know that you have been making a nuisance of yourself at his office,” Jamie said, in no mood for the verbal sparring that his calls home usually entailed. “As a friend he let me know so I could warn you before he had to report your harassment to the authorities.”

On the other end of the line he heard Bella sputtering in indignation.  Jamie knew she was unaccustomed to hearing stern tones directed at her, especially from him. Jamie’s usual method of dealing with his family involved avoidance or mute acceptance.  Since Albe’s death, neither had been options for him. It wasn’t just the Fae that had to deal with a new power structure. Bella seemed to be taking it no better than they were.

“I told Jim I would warn you and that if you did not heed the warnings, he should feel free to deal with you through normal legal proceedings.” Jamie told her.  “I hope you take the warning to heart.”

He heard her snort.  “And just when are you planning to finish that inventory?” she demanded.

“That is not your concern,” Jamie told her.

“Not my concern, not my,” Jamie could hear her pause and take a deep breath. “We cannot hold an auction until you complete the inventory.” She told him.

“There will be no auction,” he told her. “Just as there will be no land sale.” He knew Bella dreamed of selling Albe’s property to a large developer and reaping massive cash rewards. The fact that none of the land or property was hers had not even factored into her equation and she had even gone so far as to bring a developer to the house in attempt to pressure him.

“There is no need for you to be so selfish,” She hissed. Jamie sighed.

“Please stay away from Jim,” Jamie said flatly.  “This property is not yours and never will be. Goodbye,” he said.  Before Bella could respond, Jamie ended the call.  After a second’s contemplation of the darkened screen, Jamie turned the phone to silent mode.  If Bella called back to argue with him, he didn’t want to know.

Oddly enough When Jamie looked up from his phone, he found himself standing to the doorway leading into the basement. “I must have walked while I talked,” he said frowning, not remembering leaving the hall. “Odd.”  He turned away from the door and returned to the map covered floor. As he had figured out that the golden lines crossing near towns were the most likely places to find houses of other Keepers, he picked up a notepad and made a list of the towns. There were twenty six total.

“And mine would make twenty-seven,” he said, straightening up and looking at the list.  He tapped his pen on the page as he read the items over.  The details he had read in the early morning flitted through his head as he tried to come up with a plan. He looked up from the notepad only to find that once again he had gone walking while his mind was occupied.  Once again he was standing in front of the door to the basement.

Jamie sighed and tucked his small notepad into his back pocket.  “I suppose I can take a hint.” He said.  He remembered the waiting feel to the basement when he had visited with Burr. “It’ll be worse if I ignore the hints I expect.”  He placed his hand on the door knob and opened the basement door wondering what the former House of the Keeper planned to show him this time.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Keeper 2: Chapter 6

Chapter 6

Jamie gave the High Talbot a moment to settle, not wishing to appear too eager.  He heard Del leave to fetch the tea cart and counted to twenty five. As he counted he wondered how many miles the tea cart went in a day.  While it only had to go from kitchen to parlor and back again, there were days when it made the trip more than a dozen times.

“Maybe I could attach a pedometer to it,” Jamie thought.  He navigated around the spread map and oddly placed furniture and crossed the hall into the receiving parlor. As he crossed the hall he noticed that several letters had been placed on the table in the hall next to his calling card holder.  He wondered if those were responses to his invitations to tea and reminded himself to check after the High Talbot left.

 As he entered the parlor, the High Talbot turned to look at him.  Jamie felt the High Talbot’s gaze taking in his appearance and he fought not to squirm. If the High Talbot wanted him to dress up for visits than fair warning would have to be given.  Jamie smiled welcomingly at his visitor.

“I trust Del will be returning with tea shortly,” Jamie said as he walked over to the free chair.  “High Talbot, welcome.  What may I do for you today?”

The High Talbot smiled and Jamie noticed that he looked tired behind his neutrally pleasant facial expression. It made him look oddly more human, although he doubted the High Talbot would appreciate such a sentiment.

“My apologies for not calling ahead, but unfortunately things have been somewhat unsettled as of late. I have come regarding the imposter,” he told Jamie.  Jamie nodded.  Del appeared in the doorway with the fully laden tea cart, In addition to the tea pot and various accoutrements the tray featured a three tiered tray laden with cookies and delicate pastries. They were silent as Del prepared their cups and presented each with a plate.  As they dealt with the social niceties, Jamie thought about the imposter.

The imposter had tried to kill Jamie and take his place as Keeper.  Unfortunately the Keeper had to be human.  Whatever else the imposter had been, it wasn’t human.  At best he had been a goblin-kin with clan markings no one had seen before.  In order to pass as human, he had created some form of human suit in a vat in one of Jamie’s outbuildings. Del finished serving and with Jamie’s thanks, he departed, closing the door behind him as he left.

“Unsettled?” Jamie asked as he stirred his tea.

The High Talbot sighed heavily and if possible looked even more exhausted than he had the moment before. “Yes,” he replied.  He took a sip of tea and then popped a small flaky pastry into his mouth. Once he finished, his intent to do no harm proven, he set the plate aside, but continued to drink his tea.  Jamie thought that the High Talbot was not going to elaborate on the unsettled nature of things, but after a brief silence he continued.

“There have been a great many rather influential people who have not been seen since the Lune Merdos,” The High Talbot said. Jamie kept quiet.  After the Lune Merdos Jamie and Del had visited the Lustan and found lots of small piles of ash and bone.  The backlash of power as the Brotherhood of Shadows tried to destroy the crossroads had been beautiful and terrible to behold.  Jamie was fairly certain of the fate of those who had tried to stand against it and didn’t think those missing people would be returning anytime soon.

“I see,” Jamie said as the High Talbot seemed to be waiting for a response.

“Do you?” he asked, lifting an eyebrow. “We see so little change.  Having this much at once is highly irregular, some are not adapting well.”

“No?” Jamie asked.  Considering the Fae tended to live for centuries he was willing to accept that their social structure changed little. “I suppose there are those pleased with the possibility for advancement just as there are those who dislike those now putting themselves forward?”

The High Talbot blinked at him in surprise.  “That is very perceptive,” he replied.  “Our power structure was stable and well established.  There was no reason to believe it would be changing anytime soon.”

“And now you have a power vacuum.” Jamie concluded.

“Indeed.” Came the response.

“Anything that should concern the crossroads?” Jamie asked when he seemed disinclined to continue.

“If anything, there should be less concern for you,” came the response.  “There will be no more permits issued for those wishing to work outside of our lands until matters are somewhat more settled. There are those who live in the crossroads and they will remain, but there will be much less traffic.”

“Ah,” Jamie replied.  Considering he had started his tenure by being thrown into the middle of things, a little quiet time didn’t sound like such a bad thing.

“I understand the tomte known as Levas has received a request from you,” The High Talbot continued. “He will be allowed to keep his appointment with you and either remain on this side or return through the crossroads to stay on our side until this matter is settled. As he has been cleared to work for the House of the Keeper in prior years and the permit was never revoked, it will stand.”

“Thank you,” Jamie replied.

The High Talbot inclined his head, accepting Jamie’s thanks.  “Now to the imposter,” he said. “The contents of the vat are still being analyzed. The ingredients are being checked against the registry. Several of the ingredients are somewhat unusual in nature, or at least to our nature.”  He pulled out a vial filled with a dark, oily looking fluid.

“It was thought that some of the human alchemists might be of use in such a task.” He handed the vial to Jamie, who set it to the side, far away from the tea tray.  Somehow placing it next to items meant to be consumed seemed like a bad idea, no matter how well sealed the stopper.

“I will have them look into it,” Jamie heard himself replying wondering if the yellow pages would be helpful in looking up someone capable of doing a chemical analysis or if he would just end up having to explain to the police that he wasn’t producing some form of illegal drug on the back of his property. 

“Excellent,” The High Talbot replied, unaware of Jamie’s current concerns. “I also have this for you.”  From one of his pockets he pulled Jamie’s digital camera.  “An ingenious device although I do not know how the images are recovered since they slid from view quickly.”

Jamie smiled and took the camera from him.  He had explained how the camera worked so pictures could be taken but the High Talbot had insisted that he had no real use for human magic and beyond basic operation had not asked many questions.

“I can recover the pictures,” Jamie assured him.  “Did you record all of the clan markings?”

“We did,” he was told.  “The clan markings, the wounds, the seams where the, how did you put it, ah yes the human suit came apart, and the distinguishing features of the creature that emerged from within.  If you know anyone who can find information, they will provide you with a comparison. I thank you for providing this magic for use in the investigation.”

“You are welcome,” Jamie replied, not wanting to once again attempt to discuss technology with the High Talbot.  All previous attempts had just given Jamie a headache and as his skull still felt tender from his bout with the birth certificate, he wasn’t about to try again at the moment.  Like many of the older High Court Fae, the High Talbot had little to do with humanity except where it intersected the House of the Keeper of the Crossroads and still tended to think of humanity as it was in ages past. As Jamie set the camera to the side an idea occurred to him.

“Out of curiosity,” Jamie asked.  “Do you deal with all of the crossroads or just this one?”

“I only deal with this one,” the High Talbot replied.  “But do not worry, those who deal with the others will likewise be restricting access until our internal affairs are settled.”

Jamie smiled and nodded his understanding but was unable to shake the unease that seemed to have settled into his belly at the High Talbot’s words.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

New Release: Brownie Oxford and the Ashland Affair

Now out on Smashwords.com, Brownie Oxford and the Ashland Affair. Soon it should be up on Amazon for Kindle and in paperback as well.  I just wanted to give you guys first notice. The link and blurb are posted below.

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/367890


When Brownie Oxford found herself kidnapped and taken to the Ashland Cemetery instead of going on a  date as expected, she wanted to claim it was an unusual event.  Sadly after seven years working as an asset for the National Clandestine Services (NCS)  it is hardly the first time she has ended up surrounded by unsavory characters.

As her ability to raise and converse with spirits has been utilized by the NCS to interrogate those who would have otherwise been beyond their reach, Brownie has begun to accept the harsher aspects of her reality.  But this time it isn't a matter of National Security, but her own long lost family orchestrating the abduction. Can Brownie figure out what is going on before it is too late?

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Keeper 2: Chapter 5

Chapter 5

With the headache still throbbing in  his skull, Jamie was less than enthusiastic about settling down with the Huffington book.  As he feared Albe’s journals would have a similar spell attached to them, they too had lost some of their appeal. After swallowing a couple of aspirin, Jamie returned to the map room and after deliberately turning away from the family tree, he began searching for the location of the other Keepers. 

As cluttered and disordered as the map room appeared on first glance, Jamie soon realized there was a system in place with items grouped together.  He found a large stack of quad maps that not only covered all of Albe’s land, or at least the land on the human side of the crossroads, but maps of the surrounding areas.  Jamie flipped through the maps, double checking in case what he sought was misplaced or hidden.  He found Albe’s collection stretched through three entire counties.  In the quads where towns were listed, such as Centerville, Denerton, Makery, Loston and Foster, detailed maps showing the town’s layouts were interspersed with the quad maps. 

Jamie saw different areas marked on the quad maps and on the town maps.  He paused at the Centerville map and looked at one of the marked places.  On the northern side of town a section was outlined in red and then shaded with what looked like a pencil.  The marked off area included a section of a subdivision and a chunk of undeveloped land.  He checked the streets and frowned.

“That’s in Oak Hill,” Jamie said as he reviewed his mental map of Centerville.  As he said the name, he could hear Bella sniffing in distain at the thought of it.  Oak Hill was not on her list of acceptable places.  There was nothing wrong with the neighborhood as far as Jamie could tell.  Its houses were solidly middle class and didn’t really stand out in any way.  They looked as though they had been rolled out of a factory and placed on identical looking lots in the same way one would set up a neighborhood on a model train set up. 

“They even have the same landscaping,” Jamie remembered from one of his few visits there as a child. It had struck him as strange that every house had one large oak tree located thirty feet to the right of the front door.  With every house painted the same color, with the same mailboxes and the same neatly trimmed boxwood hedge across the front it had struck Jamie as very peculiar. He had asked Dave, the friend who lived in Oak Hill, how he managed not to get lost when everything looked the same. Dave had shrugged and told him it was just like every other neighborhood.

“And that was the last day Dave talked to me,” Jamie remembered. He remembered being puzzled when Dave began sitting at a different table for lunch and no longer acknowledged him in the hallway.  He remembered being upset at being shunned for what seemed to him to be no reason.

“All the Oak Hill kids are strange,” his friend Mike told him with a shrug.  “I never liked him anyway.” And that had been that.  Jamie had pushed Dave and Oak Hill out of his mind.

“I wonder if Oak Hill would look the same to me now,” Jamie wondered.  He turned the thought over in his mind as he continued his search. In addition to the three local counties, Jamie found stacks of quad maps for various counties located throughout the United States. Some states had only one county marked while others had several and some had none.  Jamie ran through his mental list of states and found several missing.

“But Canada and Mexico are well represented, I see,” Jamie added finding additional stacks of maps. Jamie sighed and continued his search. “At least the headache is fading.”  Deciding to leave the stacks alone, Jamie shifted his attention to the individually rolled maps sticking out of repurposed umbrella stands, flower pots and other assorted containers. Behind what Jamie thought might have once been a large stock pot crammed with a multitude of rolled maps, he found an umbrella stand that looked as though it were made from an elephant’s leg. There was only one rolled map inside.

“I wonder why you warranted your own space,” Jamie asked as he pulled it out. The map was nearly as tall as he was and smelled of dust. “I guess you aren’t consulted much.  He started to unroll the thick paper and realized it was much longer than his arms could stretch.  He peeked into the roll and saw what he thought might be a world map.

“Promising,” He told himself.  Deciding there was no way to stretch it out completely in the map room, he took it to the front parlor.  Unlike the formal parlor where Jamie greeted guests and drank seemingly endless cups of tea, this parlor was meant more for family and was warmer and cozier. He spared a smile for the curio cabinet, remembering the multitude of stories Albe would tell about each object. Unlike when he was younger and just visiting Albe, he now knew that those stories were true.

Jamie turned away and began shifting furniture aside to create space for the map. As he was moving around, Del came in bearing a plate with a sandwich in one hand and a large glass of milk in the other.

“Another map?” Del asked watching Jamie shift a chair to the side of the room.

“It is,” Jamie told him.  “Although not as much of a puzzle as the last one.”  The last time Jamie had stretched a map across the parlor floor it had not been in one large roll.  It had been in several detailed squares that had to be assembled like a puzzle. It had also helped him figure out why people were intent on trying to kill him.

With the space cleared, Jamie placed the rolled map on the floor.  As it had been curled up for quite some time, Jamie knew it would want to spring back up into its accustomed position.  He moved the discarded chair closer and used it to hold down one corner of the map. A second chair held down the second corner of that edge and Jamie stretched the map across the floor, securing the other edge with the coffee table and part of the fainting couch.

“There,” Jamie said as he looked at the map stretched across his floor.

“Very nice,” Del told him.  “Now perhaps you’d like to eat while you look it over?”

“Huh?” Jamie said.  He saw the brownie holding a plate out to him “Oh, yeah sorry,”  He took the plate and glass of milk.  He set them on the coffee table and picked up half of the sandwich, taking a big bite as Del looked over the map.

“So what is it you are looking for?” Del asked as Jamie swallowed and washed the bite down with some milk.

“The Houses of the other Keepers,” Jamie told him. “Have you ever met any of them?” he asked remembering that not only was Del several hundred years old, he had spent a great deal of time wandering around.

“No,” Del replied, dashing his hopes.  “I’ve always used this crossroads.”

“Oh,” Jamie said, trying not to sound disappointed. He took another bite of his sandwich and looked over the map as he chewed.  The map was a map of the world and appeared to be hand drawn using colored inks.  The artistry that went into it was amazing.  Jamie stepped closer and frowned as he noticed something odd about the map.

“Those aren’t latitude and longitude lines,” Jamie said pointing to the golden lines that crisscrossed the map. His knowledge of latitude and longitude came from a middle school geography class but even he knew that there were certain rules those lines followed.  The golden inked lines that crossed his map seemed to have no sort of set guidelines, looping across the page seemingly at random.  

“Do you know what they are?” he asked Del, figuring it might be something the Fae used.

“Not a clue,” Del replied shaking his head. Jamie continued to study the map as he ate his lunch.

“Major cities aren’t marked,” Jamie said between bites.  “Not even just capitols.”

“Some Cities are marked,” Del replied as he looked at the map.  “See there,” he pointed to the United States.  Jamie stepped close and peered at the spot Del indicated.  He nearly choked on his sandwich as he tried to swallow and laugh at the same time. The only city marked on the United States map was Centerville.

“And people think no one knows where our little town is,” he said when he finally stopped coughing and sputtering.

“Well it is the closest town to the crossroads,” Del pointed out.

“True,” Jamie replied as he finished the last of his sandwich and drained the last of his milk from the glass, finishing his lunch before any more surprises hit him. “So it would stand to reason that the other cities marked are the ones located nearest to crossroads as well.”

“Unless they are important for another reason,” Del added. Jamie conceded the point.

“How many crossroads do you think there are?” He asked seeing quite a few towns marked, now that he was looking for them. Del shrugged. As he scanned the map, the gold lines drew him again and he found his gaze tracing them. He followed one that flowed across the map very near Centerville. Just to the north of Centerville it crossed a second looped line of gold.

“Hey,” he said, half to himself.  He began tracing other lines and noticed that many of them crossed near towns.  None of them crossed exactly on a marked town but it was close.  The other towns marked on the map were actually located along one of the golden lines but not near the crossing points.

“Crossroads,” Jamie said to himself. Even though he knew that his title was the Keeper of the Crossroads a part of him had always envisioned the crossroads as a sort of gateway.  He had come across a book dealing with the crossroads and nothing he had read in its pages had changed his perception. “So what are these lines?”

A knock on the door startled him from his contemplation and he and Del both jumped. “I wonder who that is?” Jamie said.  “We aren’t expecting anyone are we?”

“Keeper, the High Talbot has arrived,” House told him.  “He seems agitated.”

“Thank you, House.”  Jamie replied. “It’s the High Talbot,” Jamie told Del.  Del looked surprised and quickly tugged his shirt straight and brushed himself down, lest an errant crumb be visible and offensive.  Jamie smiled as Del rushed to the door.  The High Talbot was an extremely fastidious man who detested any sort of mess. When dealing with errant magic intent on killing Jamie his shirt had become rumpled.  The rumpling seemed to bother him more than the death magic.

Jamie’s smile dropped as he remembered that House claimed the High Talbot was agitated.  Somehow that did not seem like a good thing. He heard Del usher the man into the receiving parlor and Jamie took a moment to brush himself down.  As he did so he realized that he had neglected to put on shoes and his feet were still clad only in the thick woolen socks. Jamie sighed.

“Well if they won’t make appointments ahead of time they will just have to take potluck.”  Jamie told himself unconvincingly.  Somehow he had the feeling the High Talbot would not break protocol by arriving uninvited without a good reason.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Keeper2: Chapter 4

Hopefully the new layout is easier to read.  Let me know if anyone is still having problems.  Thanks V.

Chapter 4

Jamie looked up from his desk as he heard a start of surprise from the doorway. Del stood framed in the doorway, apron spotted with flour from the morning’s baking. “You’re up a bit early,” Del said, surprise and worry mingling in his voice.

“Nothing is wrong, I just couldn’t get back to sleep,” Jamie told him. Apparently he was not the only one remembering their early morning boulder in the bedroom. As a brownie, Del was entrusted with the care of all those who lived in the house he looked after.  He had taken very poorly to the attempted assault on occupants sleeping under his chosen roof.

Del relaxed at Jamie’s comment.  “Well breakfast is ready and unless things have changed drastically overnight, it’ll be a good idea to get a fair amount in you before the world goes haywire again.”

“Agreed,” Jamie replied.  His hand was cramping from the unaccustomed note taking and even though he was only readying the highlighted passages, his head felt full to bursting from the elaborate prose. Reggie apparently refused to allow any sentence that didn’t take up at least four lines space in his book. While Jamie didn’t consider himself stupid, with all of the foreign concepts cloaked in flowery terms, he often had to read sentences through a few times before he was able to distill the actual meaning from the words.

He thought about the meaning he had managed to find as he followed Del back to the kitchen.  From what he gathered the visilore could either be used as a sort of magic mirror to see a specific location or it could be used as a portal, where the person using it could just step through. If one wanted to actually speak to someone at a separate location then they too needed to have a vislore and activate it like connecting a telephone to a network.

“But if I find the location of the other Keeper’s Houses there should be a way to contact them and get them to activate their visilores,” Jamie mused.  The book had thus far hinted at such a function but Jamie had yet to find the instructions. As Del chuckled, Jamie realized he had spoken out loud. “Sorry,” he apologized.

“Don’t matter to me,” Del replied. He pushed open the swinging kitchen door and Jamie’s belly rumbled at the delicious smells wafting towards him.

“Ah see,” Del said triumphantly.  “I told you a good breakfast wouldn’t go amiss.” In complete agreement, Jamie piled his plate with biscuits, ham and eggs.  Del filled his plate and for a few moments they ate in companionable silence.

“Do you know anything about ghosts?” Jamie finally said as he split a second biscuit in half and began to add butter and strawberry jam to it.

“Ghosts?” Del asked as he picked up his morning mug of tea. “Can’t say I’ve ever thought much about them. Seem to be more of a human thing than a Fae thing,” Dell added.  “Maybe because you die more often than we do.”

Jamie nodded.  “Good point,” He told del.  “I hadn’t thought of that.”  Although Del looked like he was only a little older than Jamie, he knew the brownie was at least a couple of hundred years old.  Thus far he hadn’t gotten up the courage to ask just how much older.

“Did you see a ghost then?” Del asked.

“I’m not certain,” Jamie said slowly.  “At the moment that seems to be the sanest solution I can think of.  Although to be honest it doesn’t sound much like any ghostly encounter I’ve ever heard of.”  Jamie thought of the ghost hunting shows that seemed quite popular. Idly he wondered what would happen if they tried to scan his house with their multitude of electrical gizmos.  Somehow he didn’t think that would be too good an idea. From what he had seen on the shows they seemed overly fond of  recounting horrific events that took place within the building they were scanning.  Jamie had the feeling House would quickly become offended and retaliate.

“So what happened?” Del asked as he took a forkful of his eggs.

Jamie quickly recounted his dream and how, upon waking he had found the extra notes and bookmarked pages. “And the notes with the booklist is done with the same handwriting as the dedication in the book I’m reading.” He concluded.

Del nodded.  “Well, I don’t know about hauntings in general, having never really been exposed to them or having seen the television shows you mentioned,” Del began.  “But I do know that the Keeper of the Crossroads is not like the average person and the House of the Keeper certainly isn’t like any other House.”

“That is for certain,” Jamie interjected.

“Exactly,” Del confirmed with a nod and a smile.  “So why should a ghost here be like a ghost elsewhere?” he concluded.

“I suppose it shouldn’t,” Jamie answered.

“And with the House’s shields active and functioning as they ought, I doubt anything with ill intent could enter, even if it was a ghost.” Del seemed satisfied with his logic and Jamie concluded he was probably right. He finished his breakfast and Del shooed him out of the kitchen when he attempted to help clean up.  Leaving the brownie to his work, Jamie made his way into what he had always referred to as the map room.

The map room had started out life as a formal dining room, and Jamie was fairly certain that under the weight of maps, the dining table still lurked.  Maps were stretched out across its surface in layers several inches thick.  They were rolled into tubes and bundled in a multitude of small containers that lined the wall.  A large map showing the current property line took up a large chunk of one wall.  Across from the property map was one of the few documents in the room that was not a map of any sort and it was to this document that Jamie went first.

The item looked more like a mural than a document and when Jamie looked he could see his family tree in its complex entirety covering the wall. For a moment his eyes ran over the various branches, surprised at how many of them terminated so abruptly after only a few generations of separation from the main branch.

“Maybe they stopped adding after second and third cousins died off,” Jamie said softly to himself. Somehow seeing all of those birth and death dates listed in one place was somewhat daunting. He Shook himself, and the slight feeling of unease that settled in on him away and began tracing the tree’s branches down to himself, surprised that he had never actually looked for his name on the tree before. His name was listed towards the bottom of the chart, as expected.  It was rather close to the floor.

“Not much space for the next generation he said, tapping his own name on the wall. As he did, his name shifted upwards to the center of the wall, rising about three feet as though the family tree was like a window shade that had just been rolled upwards.  Jamie straightened, pleased that he would not have to shift a multitude of maps out of the way to read what was written on the wall, but slightly unsettled by the wall’s actions.

“Thank you,” he said automatically, not wanting to seem ungrateful. In response Jamie watched as the blank space under his name was suddenly filled with empty boxes.  There was a blank space that looked like it was waiting for his wife’s name and twelve spots for children. Each of the children had space for their prospective spouses and twelve children of their own as well.

“I think that’s a bit unrealistic,” he told the helpful wall. The wall seemed to shimmer and Jamie blinked.  There were now only three spots for children under his name.  Under the blank spot left for his first child there was only one spot, his second child had, like him three spots for children and his third child had five spaces for children as well as two spots for spouses.

“Optimistic considering how long it’s been since my last real date,” Jamie commented. The wall shimmered again as though processing this information.  When the shimmering stopped, the wall remained the same.  Jamie decided to stop questioning it. Instead of looking to his future, Jamie concentrated on his past. His father’s name and bloodline were clearly written out. When he looked at the space where his mother’s name should be, he saw a name written there but for some reason it seemed out of focus. 
 
Jamie squinted his eyes trying to read the name, as though this were an eye exam.  The name didn’t become any clearer.  He stepped closer, still nothing.  Thinking of how the wall reacted when he touched it, he gently tapped his mother’s name.  He felt a jolt of electricity bite and jerked his hand away from the wall, shaking his finger to lessen the pain.  Having learned early on that in this house words had very definite meanings and repercussions, he clamped his mouth shut around the words that wanted to escape.

He clenched and unclenched his stung hand to help work out the pain as he shifted his gaze to the spots where his mother’s parents should have been listed. Again, he could tell something was written in the space and he could even tell it was a name of some sort, but he simply couldn’t make it out. It was as if his brain refused to let his eyes focus on the words. He let his eyes wander over the branch holding his mother’s family.  They were all the same way.  Jamie leaned back in thought for a second. The wall seemed to respond to his voice so he decided to make a test.

“Albrecht Fulton, please” Jamie said to the wall, feeling only slightly silly.  The wall became a blur and Jamie blinked as his eyes threatened to cross.  He looked at the wall and Albe’s name was in the center, Jamie’s own having been shifted down.  All of the names were clearly written and quite legible.

“Thank you,” Jamie told the wall.  Recalling the overheard conversation Jamie once again looked at the tree. “Reginald Huffington the fourth, please” Jamie asked. Again the wall blurred as its contents moved. Jamie blinked hard as a different section of the tree took center stage.  The brackets holding the names were printed in crisp clear ink, but the names they contained were blurred and illegible.

“But it did move, Thank you,” he told the wall.  “Rudolph Fulton, please,” Jamie asked, calling his father’s name to the center of the tree. “Thanks,” he once again told the wall as it shifted to accommodate him.

 Jamie was the only child listed under Rudy’s name.  There was no corresponding box, blurry or otherwise where Michael’s name could have been placed.

“Bella Fulton, please,” Jamie asked stating the name of the woman he had grown up believing was his mother. His heart beat fast.  If Bella’s name was the one blurred out then what he had always believed was true.  If it didn’t then she wasn’t his mother at all.  The wall stayed stationary.  There was no shifting of names.

“Thank you,” he told the wall. “So she isn’t my mother after all.”  Jamie studied the wall, his eyes continually drifting to the blurred out branch.  Clearly the helpful family tree was not going to be able to help with this one.  “That leaves the journals,” Jamie mused. A thought occurred to him.  Jim had been the family lawyer for a number of years.  While Jim had grown up with Jamie, he had taken over the practice from his father, who had taken it from his.  He was unsure how many generations the Evers law firm extended but their practice history certainly would have extended far enough that they might have some records.

“They have been the family lawyers forever,” Jamie said to himself.  “They would at least have copies of the wills. And probably death certificates as well.” He wasn’t certain how much a law office was required to keep on file or for how long but as the Evers family specialized in dealing with people who tended to live much longer than a normal human lifespan, he thought there was a chance their internal records went back further than the law required.

“And what about my birth certificate,” Jamie said with a start.  He stepped away from the wall and headed upstairs to his bedroom.  When he had come out to live at Albe’s place he had brought his lock box containing all of his important papers, including his birth certificate.  He had used his copy a number of times over the years whether it was using it as proof of citizen ship for his driver’s license or passport and no one had ever mentioned anything being off with it before.

“Somehow I think that the general strangeness of not being able to focus on a name would have stuck out in someone’s mind before now,” he said to himself. He reached his room and quickly pulled the lock box out from under his bed.  In a flash he had it unlocked and his birth certificate was unfolded and in his hands.  He scanned down the page reading all of the pertinent information.  Nothing seemed wrong.  He blinked as he got to the end of the page. He couldn’t recall reading his mother’s name.

Jamie looked at his father’s name and found it easily.  He looked to the line that should have his mother’s name and his eyes just sort of slid past it without taking the information in.  Jamie ground his teeth.

“My mother’s name is,” he said trying to focus on the line.  Again, his gaze seemed to slide off of the page without taking in any of the information.  He felt as though he had read the information and that it was all correct and in order, but he couldn’t for the life of him remember the name.  Jamie continued to stare at the page, feeling as though if he just concentrated enough, he would be able to get the information to stick. 

“My mother is…” he repeated.  A blinding pain between his eyes caused him to cry out and drop the page. The pain faded as soon as he was no longer looking at his birth certificate. “I don’t think so,” he told the page. He picked the paper up from the floor and as soon as he looked at the page, the pain flashed through his skull like a scalpel.  She could feel it cutting into him, trying to force him to accept that he had read the name and that everything was as it should be.

His eyes teared up through the pain but he continued to focus. He could see the lines of the form. He could see the typewritten letters that stated ‘mother’s name’ below a thick black line.  His vision wavered and he could see a blurred out handwritten name on the line above.  He focused all his attention on the line.  Jamie felt his vision start to darken at the edges and felt himself falling forward as the pain caused him to black out.

Jamie came to, half sprawled across his bed, the pain no longer searing as he was not trying to look at the page. A headache was pounding fiercely behind his eyes as though a drummer was using his optical nerve for practice. For a few minutes Jamie lay looking at the ceiling.

“It has to be a spell of some sort,” Jamie decided.  “Both on the wall and on the page.” He realized that what he knew about spells would fill a page much smaller than the one on which his birth certificate was printed.

“Although I did learn one thing,” he said, his voice a dry croak as he attempted to sit up. “Brute force, might not be the way to go.” His vision swam as he settled himself in a seated position and looked around.  His birth certificate was on the floor.  He bent to retrieve it and could feel the pain waiting, ready to begin round two.

“I’m just putting it away,” he said out loud. The feeling of eminent pain lessened as he folded the page and closed and locked the box.  When he slid the box under the bed, the feeling dissipated as though whatever was protecting the name from being read was satisfied it had done its job.

“Well if a house can be sentient, why can’t a spell achieve job satisfaction,” he said to himself. He rubbed his aching temple. “I think I’m going to find some aspirin.” Jamie sighed.  “Lesson learned, magic one, brute force, zero.”  Jamie wondered if Albe’s journals were similarly warded and found himself less than eager to peruse their contents looking for his mother’s name.” Maybe I’ll just try giving Jim a call first.”

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Keeper 2: Chapter 3

Chapter 3

The overly elaborate phrasing of the book followed Jamie into sleep, phrases circling in his mind in a repetitive loop. They started to fade as he drifted into dreams.  In his dreams he found himself standing at the open pocket door that divided the study from the library.  He was facing the desk in the study.

Jamie scanned the study, somehow knowing it was a dream, but not quite a dream.  There was a snap to the air, like an electric tingle of sorts.  It reminded him of the basement jet before it sent him images of a long dead Keeper or dreams of Albe’s teachings that had been sequestered away and had finally worked their way to the surface of his mind. He frowned, thinking something was different though. He stepped into the study , his eyes drawn to the desk.  On the surface of the desk he saw his notebook, complete with the list he had begun to make before Burr’s arrival. 

“Why would my notebook show up in a dream of the past?” he mused.  He blinked in surprise as he noticed an additional bullet point had been added to his list. “Study human magic,” had been added to the list, several books, listed alphabetically by author were placed below the bullet point.  The handwriting was not his, but it looked oddly familiar.

“I don’ understand why you couldn’t just leave well enough alone,” Jamie heard a voice say.  He turned in surprise to face the library.  In the library, a fire was burning merrily in the grate and he could see the tumble of his sneakers where they lay forgotten beneath the chair he had been reading in earlier.  Once again he had kicked them off as he read and abandoned them, despite reminding himself to be neater.  He knew Del was his housekeeper but her felt strange about leaving a mess for the brownie.

The thick tome he had been attempting to plow through, was no longer on the side table where he had left it.  That was not the only change, however.  Sitting in the chair he favored was a man with neatly combed hair, mutton chop sideburns wearing an old fashioned suit.  Or most of one anyway.  His jacket was flded over the back of the chair and his sleeves had been rolled up to his fore arms.  In one hand he held a brandy snifter, from which he would periodically sip.

Across from him sitting in what Jamie liked to think of as the guest chair, was a man similarly clothed.  He was however clean shaven, with a head of hair that looked like it was beginning to thin.  A pair of wire rimmed glasses was perched on his nose. His eyebrow was lifted as he stared at the other man.

“You know very well why I couldn’t just leave well enough alone, Edwin,” The spectacled man replied, neither man seeming to notice Jamie as he took a few steps towards them.  As he neared, Jamie noticed that the man with the spectacles held the pretentious tome and was slowly flipping through the pages, occasionally leaving a marker behind as if to mark a passage.  He shook his head in disgust. “Clearly this is the first time this book has ever been opened,” he told Edwin. “The pages are still clipped together from the printers.  I can’t believe you didn’t at least look it over.”

Edwin smiled. “You know I find it pointless, Reginald.”  Edwin took a sip of his brandy and then chuckled to myself.  “I mean Reggie,” he said. Reginald looked up from the book.

“I find that name to be a bit too familiar,” Reginald replied stiffly.  “And we’ll see how smug you are when the boy starts referring to you as Eddie.”

Edwin waved the comment off indulgently.  “Times change, old friend. It will hardly affect my standing in the social pages,” Edwin replied. “Besides, we’re all family aren’t we? At least that’s what you keep reminding me.”

“Nice to hear you acknowledge it, although one would never have guessed from the state of the family tree now would we? One would, if so inclined, believe you were ashamed of the connection.” Reginald replied stiffly.

“Now Reginald,” Edwin began, his good humor fading.  “You know why that was done.  You know why it had to be done.”

Reginald sighed and looked back to the book.  “Just as you know why this needs to be done.”

“The Keepers have no need to communicate with each other.  Each functions independently. I see no need to bother learning to use the visilore. It is a waste of time.” Edwin replied somewhat crossly.

“In our time perhaps.  But as you pointed out, Eddie, times change,” Reginald replied.  Edwin acknowledged the point with a lift of his glass.

Jamie took another step closer. “I don’t suppose you would care to just tell me how to use the visilore?” Jamie asked.  Neither man gave any sign that they heard him.  “Hello?” Edwin continued to sip his brandy while Reginald continued to mark pages.

“You couldn’t have at least broken the corner connections to make me think you had bothered to read the book that is the culmination of my life’s work?” Reginald asked crossly. Jamie was now close enough to reach out and touch Edwin’s shoulder.  He found himself unaccountably afraid.  Goosebumps broke out on his arms and he fought the urge to rub them as he extended his hand forward. His hand passed straight through Edwin’s shoulder as though he were not even there. Jamie pulled his hand back quickly.

His hand felt icy and tingly as though he had spent far too long outside in the cold without gloves and was only now beginning to thaw.  He rubbed his hand as his flesh warmed up and started to ache.

“I did quite well without magic of my own,” Edwin told Reginald, giving no indication that he had felt Jamie’s hand move through him at all.  Jamie took a step back.

“But you had the magic of others to rely on,” Reginald pointed out, still marking random pages. “And while you didn’t need the…shall we say overt magic that is like my own, you have used the magic of your office often enough. I dare say if you had a larger degree of magic in your blood you would find some way to make it useful.  You are quite adept at making excellent use of whatever tool comes to your hand.”

“My dear Reginald,” Edwin said with a laugh. “Was that actually a compliment?”

“Credit where credit is due,” Reginald replied, cracking a smile for the first time.

“Very well,” Edwin said.  “I suppose giving the boy another tool he can use if the need strikes would not go amiss.”

“So glad you agree to see reason,” Reginald replied. “This time.”

Jamie blinked and realized that the two men were growing indistinct. Before, he could see the texture of their clothing and could almost smell the air cream Edwin used to slick his hair in place.  To his eyes they looked solid and undeniably real. Now, he could nearly see through them.  They were fading, even as he watched, slowly moving to shadows, even though he could still hear them good naturedly bickering over who saw reason and when. Their voices remained a moment after their images had faded, as though he were listening around a corner to two people walking away from him. Gradually even that died off and Jamie was left alone in the library. All at once the fire died out.  Jamie shivered and woke, finding himself alone in his bed.

Jamie sat up in bed and looked around the room. He glanced at the clock and realized it was barely four in the morning.  Normally that would be far too early for him to rise, but he knew he wasn’t going to be getting back to sleep any time soon. Resigned to the early start to the day, and still turning the not quite dream over in his mind, Jamie got up, took a quick shower and dressed in faded jeans and a long sleeved t-shirt.  He slipped on a thick pair of woolen socks he found in his dresser drawer.  The socks were unfamiliar to him but he had noticed that as the weather outside grew colder, more and more knitted items were appearing.  Socks, scarves, gloves and sweaters had all started showing up in his dresser drawer. Del had looked uncommonly pleased whenever Jamie donned one of the new items so he didn’t question their arrival too closely.

Thus dressed, Jamie opened his door.  Remembering previous early mornings, Jamie glanced down the hall before stepping out of his room.  For a second, his eyes rested on the closed door to Albe’s bedroom.  The door remained closed, no ominous sounds emanating from the room behind it. Jamie relaxed and stepped into the hall. He walked to the study, reminding himself that House’s defenses were all operational.  While he mentally accepted this safety, the memory of the giant boulder splintering Albe’s bed still left him wary. 

In the study, Jamie pressed the button for the lights and blinked in the sudden glare as they came to life.  He looked around the room, noticing that nothing was out of place.  He walked over to his desk and found his notebook had been closed.  Jamie frowned, not able to remember if he had closed the notebook earlier or not.  He reached out and flipped the pages to his makeshift to do list.  There, just as he had seen in his dream, was the additional bullet point, complete with booklist below.

“Well that answers that,” Jamie said.  “Not just a dream then.”  He thought of  the book Reginald had been marking and, notebook still in hand, he walked over to the library.  The book was as he had left it, closed and sitting on the side table.  However, even from where he stood a few feet away, Jamie could see various markers protruding from the closed book.  He set his notebook down on the table and picked up the book.  He opened it to the first marker and saw that on that page a few paragraphs seemed to glow as though they were highlighted with light rather than a pen. Unsurprisingly, he found a mention of the visilore in the first sentence of the highlighted text.

“Not exactly a subtle hint,” Jamie said. “But I suppose I know what I’ll be doing until breakfast at least.”  Jamie took the book and his notebook back to the desk in the study.  He opened the notebook to a fresh page, took a pen out of the drawer and began to make notes as he read through the marked passages.