Page 58 of Crazy Spooky Love

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“Charles Frederick delivered safely, Hull maternity hospital.” Next to it, she has written, “My first grandchild.”

I scour the diary for any further mention of the child, but there’s nothing. Who is he, and more important,whoseis he? It is as if she was reporting the birth of a stranger, and she certainly didn’t break out the knitting needles. She didn’t even break out the sherry. It can’t possibly be Lloyd’s son, because her diary is peppered with mentions of Lloyd’s upcoming wedding to his fiancée, Maud. All of this leads me to the only possible conclusion, and a new chunk of the puzzle that I need to slot into place somehow.

Isaac had a son.

Chapter

Sixteen

This feels too important to wait until Monday. I wish Agnes would come back and visit me again, but given how patchy her first connection was I don’t think she’ll make it through a second time. I have so many questions for her now, the most obvious one being about her first grandson. Who was his mother, and did Isaac marry her? Obviously, I’m planning to ask Isaac, but I need to think it through first. Why hasn’t he told me any of this himself? Is it simply because it’s irrelevant? Maybe it isn’t important, but I can’t shake the feeling that this is a vital part of the puzzle. I look at my watch. It’s only just after 7:00a.m., but I’m done sleeping. I have a ghost I need to quiz.

My heart sinks when Iarrive alone at Brimsdale Road. Two large, dark sedans lounge at the curb; I recognize one of them as Donovan Scarborough’s but I don’t think I’ve seen the other one before. Lestat rides shotgun next to me on the bench seat, and asBabs shudders to a halt he looks at me reproachfully. “Sorry, buddy,” I say. “I told you that you wouldn’t like it, but you wouldn’t have it.”

He’d insisted on coming this morning, and I relented in the end because I’m fast learning that it’s easier to give him what he wants than face the consequences.

“What do we do now?” I ask him quietly, scanning the house for movement. He stands up and puts his paws on the dash, as if he’s genuinely considering my question. It strikes me that if I go in there now, I’m going to have to take him with me. It’s enough to make me reach for the ignition, but I’m thwarted by the appearance of Donovan Scarborough storming down the path. There’s no doubt that he’s seen me; he’s heading straight for Babs and there’s no mistaking his expression either. He’s furious.

I surreptitiously push the door lock down with my elbow and then slowly wind the window down as he raps his knuckles onit.

“Mr. Scarborough,” I say, smiling. “Lovely morning.”

“No, it bloody well is not!” he says, far louder than is necessary, given that his face is less than a foot away from mine. Lestat moves to stand on my lap and eyeballs Scarborough, and for a moment they’re involved in a bulgy-eyed stare-off.

“I was just about to leave…” I say, but he shakes his head and rattles my door to try to slide it open.

“No, no, no you don’t,” he mutters, reaching his arm inside Babs and feeling around for the handle. By anyone’s standards this would be considered a gross invasion of privacy, and I’m no exception. I’m about to protest when Lestat takes matters into his own hands and lunges for Scarborough’s searching fingers. I silently vow to offer Lestat a bag of cheese and onion crisps to himself tonight; in Marina’s absence he’s stepped up to the plate as a most excellent bouncer.

“My dog would like it if you took your arm out of my vehicle,” I say, staying just on the right side of polite. He doesn’t afford me the same courtesy.

“Get in there and control those sodding ghosts,” he practicallyyells. “What exactly am I paying you and Snapes’s two-bit brother for? Neither of you have done a bloody thing!”

I’d like to reply that he hasn’t actually parted with a penny for either of us yet, and won’t unless one of us is successful, but I don’t because he looks like he might be about to pop a vein, probably the one in his forehead that’s pulsing like it has a life of its own.

“Is there a problem in there?” I look toward the house, closely mimicking Keira Knightley’s tone of voice because she’s cool and sophisticated and she can make people do whatever she wants.

“Is there a problem in there?” Scarborough repeats under his breath, but he adds a little unhinged laugh at the end as he looks away into the distance and his fingers drum, fast and furious, on the van’s window frame. “Yes,there’s a problem in there,” he barks. “The potential buyers wanted to check over some measurements inside the house, and they’re now holed up in the master bedroom refusing to leave because they’re goddamn terrified!” He bangs his fist down between his last three words for emphasis.

“But you knew we hadn’t finished the job yet,” I say calmly. “Would you like me to come in and see if I can help?”

He’s distracted from answering by the screech of brakes, and a second later Leo jumps from his car and runs over to join Scarborough beside Babs.

“You didn’t need to call both of us,” he mutters, scowling at me. “I told you I’d be here in fifteen minutes and here I am.”

“I didn’t call her,” Scarborough says irritably.

To be perfectly honest, they’re both starting to piss me off. It’s Saturday morning and I fully expected to have the place to myself, yet Scarborough is acting as if I’m on his payroll and Leo’s acting as if I’m in his way. Well, excuse me and my dog for breathing. Leo shoots me a filthy look and then gives Lestat a longer, curious stare.

“You got yourself a one-eared pug.” He speaks deliberately slowly, as if Lestat is the most shocking creature he’s ever laid his eyeson.

He isn’t a dog person. He isn’t an animal person really, unless it’sa cow, served medium rare with a decent Shiraz, or the mink trim on his vintage Russian Cossack hat. Leo’s world isn’t designed to accommodate pets—it’s glamorous and he is always the center of it. Vikki and Nikki are probably as close as he’ll get.

“He has two ears and he can hear just fine,” I grumble, unlocking my door and sliding it open. Lestat rolls out onto the pavement like a furry bowling ball, sniffing Donovan Scarborough’s expensive loafers with the kind of keen interest that usually means he’s about to cock his leg. I jump out of Babs and steer him away and, looking up at the two men who are now towering over me, make a mental note to get Marina to train me to walk in high heels without looking as if I’m playing dress-up. I only own one pair and I’ve never actually left the house in them, but I wish I had them on my feet right now so I could sashay away from these guys like a female assassin rather than schlep after them toward the house, with one lace undone as if they’ve just picked me up from school. Lestat isn’t helping. He’s wildly interested in his new surroundings and is charging ahead of us like a small, determined bull, piddling as he goes to mark his territory.

“Can’t you leave him in the van?” Scarborough turns to speak to me as we approach the house.

“Dogs die in hot cars.” I shoot him a withering “everyone knows that” look, which silences him.

Leo huffs at Lestat as we reach the front door and makes a last attempt. “Can’t you at least put him on a lead and tie him up out here?”