Girls of Brackenhill(61)
“Okay, Hannah, just think about what you’re saying. You’re talking about three deaths in ten years that are only loosely connected. Even for a small town, that’s a negligible number. And Ruby was an accident, correct? She fell out of the second-story window. Ellie ran away; we have some old evidence. A bus ticket, security footage of her buying it.” He continued, “Your sister is the only real unsolved here.”
“What about the skeleton! At Brackenhill!” Hannah would not be made to feel like she was crazy. She would not be gaslighted.
“Of course that’s being investigated. I know I floated the idea of it being Ellie, and that could still be true, but officially, on the books, Ellie is a closed-case runaway. We don’t have an identity, because frankly, these things take time. Even if we had DNA, which we don’t yet, like I said, there’s no giant DNA database where everyone is logged and accounted for. She’d only be in the system if she committed a crime after 1997. But to blanketly just say Warren is connected and these deaths are connected would be irresponsible of me; that’s all I’m saying.”
“Fine, you’re not saying it. I’m saying it.” Hannah huffed.
“I’m not saying they’re unrelated. You get that, right? I’m just saying we don’t know that.”
“Why else would Warren get so mad? Why would he threaten me?”
“I have no idea what you said to him. If you brought up Ruby and Ellie and Fae, maybe you just pissed him off. He’s not known to be warm and fuzzy. And that’s a whole lifetime of pain. He’s at a bar. In the middle of the day. People do that to drown out hurt.”
Hannah deflated. He was right, maybe. She spun the scrying ring around her finger. Wyatt reached out and gently pulled her hand to him, his touch sending jolts through her arm, down her spine.
“Where did you get this?” he asked, his eyes suddenly intense, his voice low and rumbling. Almost suspicious. Hannah focused on the feeling of her hand in his.
“I—I found it. In the shed.” Hannah felt a stab of guilt, like she was hiding something. Which, of course, she wasn’t, but something about the way Wyatt looked at her made her feel on edge. Like she should keep whatever secrets she had buried. But the truth leaked out to him anyway.
“At Brackenhill?” Wyatt examined it, turned her hand one way, then the other. He leaned toward her to get a better look. He smelled like laundry detergent and pine and trees and earth and dirt.
“Yes. Why?” Hannah moved to pull her hand away, but Wyatt wouldn’t let her.
“Can I see it? Can you remove it?” he asked softly, and she complied. He pulled out his phone, shined the flashlight on the ring, and studied it. After a few moments, he sighed.
“What’s the issue with the ring, Wyatt?” Hannah asked nervously.
“Don’t freak out, okay? But look.” He unlocked his phone and turned it to show her. It was an evidence baggie on a plain white dry-erase background. The number 72 was scrawled next to it. Inside the baggie was a ring, a twin to her own: obsidian stone, flat with a handmade band.
“Where did you find it?” Hannah whispered, but she knew the answer before he said it.
“On the finger of the woman buried at Brackenhill.”
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO
Now
The bottom dropped out of Hannah’s stomach. “And you’re absolutely sure the remains aren’t Julia?” she asked again.
“We are one hundred percent sure.”
“But Wyatt, don’t you think this proves that Julia’s disappearance and this body, whoever it is, are linked? They both had scrying rings. I’m wearing Julia’s.”
“It’s possible.” He was maddeningly calm. “Listen, this doesn’t actually prove anything. Jinny sold those at her shop for five bucks, and every teenage girl in Rockwell had one. They changed with your mood. You could see the future. Conjure spirits. Some crap like that. We already know the remains are a teenage girl. I’m not sure it’s the smoking gun you think it is.” He looked impatient, his mouth set in a line.
Hannah shrugged, acquiescing, if only a little. She let the subject drop, but only for now.
Wyatt led her into the kitchen and insisted on making her dinner. She sat at the breakfast bar, watched him move around his small but functional kitchen.
“I like to cook, and it’s not like I do it for more than one person with any kind of regularity,” he offered as a reason.
Stainless steel appliances, a gas stovetop, a large copper sink, and cast-iron accents completed the cabin feel, but with more sophistication than she would have expected from a born and bred country boy. He had changed into jeans and kept the rumpled T-shirt with Hollins Ferry scrawled across the front in seventies cursive. She couldn’t bat away the sensation that this felt like a date.
“So no dates, then?” Hannah poured a glass of white from the chilled bottle and felt herself unspooling. Maybe Wyatt was right. Maybe the rings didn’t mean anything. Then again, perhaps they did, and she’d figure it out tomorrow. Either way, her stomach grumbled, and she was suddenly eager to relax. Forget rings and bodies and Warren and visions.
“Some.” Wyatt dipped his head as he seasoned the steak. She could see his small smile, perhaps at the fleeting memory. “I do okay for having such a small pool out here.”