Read The Garden of Dead Dreams Online
Authors: Abby Quillen
Tags: #Mystery, #Literary mystery, #Literary suspense, #Gothic thriller, #Women sleuths, #Psychological mystery, #Women's action adventure
Etta hadn’t seen Olivia since yesterday morning. Both Olivia and Jordan had skipped dinner last night. Etta always felt jumpy when her friends missed required meals at the same time. If the director found out about their relationship, they could be disciplined, perhaps expelled. Or maybe not. As Poppy liked to point out, Jordan’s father owned
The Drinking Gourd
, a literary magazine that regularly published short fiction and poetry by Buchanan alums, which seemed to gain Jordan special esteem at the academy. He was, for instance, the only student who didn’t have to share his cabin with a roommate.
Etta heaved open the door to the library. A wall of warmth met her as she stepped inside. The old radiators under the window hissed and clicked. The reading lamps on the glossy myrtlewood tables in the middle of the room were off, and the librarian’s office was dark. But sunlight flooded in through the row of narrow paned windows at the end of the room. Etta walked toward them, glancing up at the shelves that lined each wall.
Buchanan had collected a renowned private collection of literature about the American West. Last week Etta had discovered signed editions of Norman Mailer’s
Executioner’s Song
and Mary Austin’s
Land of Little Rain
. She’d searched for
Desert Solitaire
, hoping to read Edward Abbey’s famous 1969 inscription to Vincent Buchanan praising the Buchanan Academy as affirmation that the American novel would “defend itself against the ceaseless assault of commercialization.” But the books weren’t in alphabetical order, and if there was any sort of arrangement to them, Etta hadn’t discovered it.
Etta gazed down on the expanse of grass and the green house, trying to detect movements through the glass roof. Was Olivia helping Poppy tend the cymbidiums? The director’s orchids seemingly required more nurturing than a newborn. Poppy spent much of her unstructured time carting plants back and forth to the sink for watering and verifying that the humidity and light conditions were ideal.
The door creaked open. Etta swirled around and blinked, trying to adjust her eyes to the shadows.
“Hello there.”
Etta recognized Carl’s twang and stepped forward, blinking to make out his form.
After a minute the chef stepped to Etta’s side. His brown eyes flashed golden in the light. “Your hair’s on fire.”
Etta touched her ponytail then dropped her hand and smiled. “Have you seen Olivia?”
“Matter of fact, I have.” Carl nodded in the direction of the glass door to the archives room. “Saw her in there.”
Etta swirled around and peered at the dark room next to the librarian’s office. “In there? She wouldn’t be in . . .” Etta let the sentence die on her lips and stared at the embossed words on the door:
Buchanan Research Room. By appointment only.
The librarian had given the students a brief tour of Buchanan’s archives during orientation. What Etta remembered most was the smell—a pairing of dust and furniture polish.
“Why would Olivia be in there?”
“She was damn intent on reading something. Don’t think she even saw me. Must have been about four thirty this morning.”
Etta stepped toward the archives room. The collection contained editions of all Buchanan’s novels and correspondence, including letters from presidents and other famous authors. Uriah Winston Mills, or “the major,” as everyone called him, never smiled, and he’d looked even more grave than usual as he’d outlined the steps academic researchers took to gain access to the room. First they sent letters of intent to the director. If approved, they were given appointments, at which time Carl drove to Jackson to escort them to Roosevelt Lodge. Researchers were only allowed to take in a pencil and paper or a laptop and were chaperoned at all times. Etta imagined sitting in the cramped room under the librarian’s gaze and shivered.
She glanced outside. “Was the major in there with her?” The tree branches swayed just slightly in the wind.
“Didn’t see him,” Carl said.
Etta squinted into the tinted glass on the door. She could only make out shadows, but she recalled the basic layout of the room: the narrow antique case down the center that displayed World War II memorabilia: a rifle, a uniform, propaganda posters; Buchanan’s writing desk and chair and two leather armchairs in front of the tinted picture window; shelves of acid-free boxes and shiny Mylar-wrapped books; framed posters of the movies adapted from Buchanan’s books. Etta had recognized Gary Cooper in one poster and Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in another.
Etta turned back to Carl. “What were you doing here so early?”
“Needed something to read while I waited for the bread to rise.” Carl extended a book. The red cover was faded and Etta couldn’t make out the title.
“I got your heart.”
A moment of silence hung in the room, and then Carl grinned, the skin at the corner of his eyes pinching. “Well, shoot, Etta. I meant for Miss Atwell to get that.”
“Hey, where’s your hat?” Carl’s golden brown hair had grown since the last time Etta had seen it. It fell across his forehead, making him look boyish, even though a few silvery strands glittered in the sunlight.
“Wasn’t fixin’ to run into anyone.”
“You look better without it.” Etta’s cheeks flashed with heat when the words were out, and she dropped her gaze to Carl’s feet. He wore a pair of Nikes in place of his usual work boots. “Do you run?”
“Only if something’s chasing me.” Carl laughed at his own joke. “Hardin wants me to cover the grounds today. I can drive the truck for some of it, but I reckon I’ll be doing a fair bit of walking.”
“Cover the grounds? Do you do that a lot?”
Carl shook his head. “Hardin’s convinced someone’s been hanging out near that old cemetery. Probably just a hiker, and I can’t see what harm anyone could do to a bunch of old headstones. But that’s not the way Hardin sees it. I told him I’d check it out.”
Etta groaned. “Does this mean Candy’s making lunch?”
“Don’t worry, she can’t destroy sandwiches. I don’t think.” Carl grinned. Candy, a student at Portland Culinary Academy, was at Roosevelt Lodge for a six-month apprenticeship, and she didn’t seem to have yet
learned there were spices other than salt.
“Where’s this cemetery?”
“You mean to tell me you’ve never run that far?”
Etta smiled.
“It’s up past the swimming hole, off the trail a ways. Used to be a little town up that way, even
smaller than Jackson. Most of the graves are as old as things get in these parts. Vincent Buchanan’s buried there, and I’ve heard there are a few other newer graves—a rancher who lived up the road a piece, his wife. You could come with me if . . .” His voice drifted off as he realized that, of course, she couldn’t go.
Outside, the tops of the trees shook. Etta’s pulse fluttered against her wrists. Had they been talking for five minutes or fifteen? Had the mandatory writing session started? “I’ve got to go,” Etta said, as she twisted around and hurried down the aisle between the tables.
She hefted the door open, turned and gazed at Carl’s silhouette against the trees. Dust stippled the air around him. “Bye,” she called.
* * *
An hour later as everyone else made their way down to the dining room for lunch, Etta exited the stairs on the second floor, padded down the hall, slipped inside the library, and closed the door behind her, inhaling the dry heat from the radiators. She made sure the major’s office was dark before switching on the overhead lights. Then she crossed the room to the archives and gazed at the embossed letters on the door.
Etta twisted the brass doorknob. It didn’t budge. She pressed her face close to the glass, blinking at the outlines of the display case and shelves, the shape of the armchairs in front of the windows.
She’d seen Major Mills and Opal Waters in the room on separate occasions. Once when Etta had stopped at the library to print a critique, the novelist Ralph Powell, who was visiting the lodge for a few days on his book tour, was sitting in one of the leather armchairs next to the major. But students? Students didn’t go in the archives. Why did Olivia go in there at four thirty in the morning? How did she get in?
Etta squeezed her eyes shut. She’d been jealous of Olivia. She hated to even think of it, of that awful word “jealous” in reference to her own feelings. But it was true. Even before the resident authors had chosen Olivia’s play to be produced, Etta had envied her roommate’s silken hair and creamy complexion. She’d wasted many mornings peering into the cloudy mirror in their shared bathroom rubbing at the spatter of freckles on her cheeks and trying to comb her unruly nest just the right way to hide the mole on her neck. One morning she’d gone through half a tube of makeup trying to make the pearly scar next to her eye vanish, although she’d once considered the remnant of a gash she’d gotten while playing tackle football with her brothers as a badge of honor.
At some point in the last two months, though, Etta had stopped being jealous of Olivia. Maybe it was Olivia’s wide grin or the way she gripped Etta’s arm before revealing whatever piece of gossip she was dying to share. Or maybe it was the way Olivia pulled her crumpled T-shirts from the floor and smelled the armpits before putting them on. Or maybe it was the short story Olivia had written for her critique, which was dark and strange and impossible not to love—an edgy fairy tale written from the perspective of members of an extended family of pig farmers.
Of course, Etta knew it wasn’t any of those things.
Olivia had cried, twice that Etta had heard, late at night as Etta lay staring at the ceiling. They were soft sobs, so low and sad that Etta couldn’t bring herself to say anything to her new roommate. But, as it turned out, hearing a person weep in the night made it impossible to envy her in the morning.
Etta stepped into the dining hall a few minutes later. When she glimpsed Olivia sitting at their usual table next to Poppy, tension melted from her neck and shoulders. Olivia was so messy in most ways that her perfect posture always took Etta by surprise. Olivia’s hair was coiled into a loose twist at the nape of her neck.
“Excuse me,” a voice came from behind Etta.
Etta spun around and was standing face to face with Chase Quinn. “Hi Chase.”
He said nothing.
Etta stepped out of his way, and he strode past her, his red hair disappearing into the swirl of people moving about the room. Etta remembered a few sentences from her critique of “Ancient Soldier,” and a hollow ache spread through her stomach and into her chest. She wrapped her fingers around the doorframe. Why had she been so cruel?
Etta looked up, and Olivia was waving at her and grinning. Etta smiled and propelled herself toward their table. She plunked her book bag on the floor and winced at the scrape of her chair as she yanked it out.
Poppy blew on her beef stew—a medley of shredded meat, carrots, potatoes, and green beans—that might look appetizing, except that morning Carl had mentioned that he’d be covering the grounds again, leaving Candy to prepare lunch.
“Where’s Jor?” Etta asked.
Olivia produced a slice of French bread from the basket on the center of the table and extended it to Etta. “Either the lid fell off Carl’s salt shaker, or Candy’s cooking today.”
Etta groaned. She thought about telling Olivia and Poppy about Carl’s whereabouts, but focused on unwrapping a pad of butter instead. “You don’t know where Jor is?”
Olivia shook her head and tore a piece of bread off her slice. She rolled it between her palms, forming a ball.
Maybe he’s mad at you for sitting with Robert North yesterday,” Poppy said.
Etta opened her mouth to discount Poppy’s comment. Did Poppy have a doctorate in saying the wrong thing to people? Then Etta thought of the way Jordan acted before he disappeared from their porch yesterday. “Are you and Jor fighting?”
“Of course not. Listen . . .” Olivia lowered her voice. “I’m about to burst. I have some gossip.” Her dark eyes jetted back and forth. “But you have to swear on your lives that you won’t tell anyone. Promise?”
“On our lives?” Poppy raised a thin eyebrow and grinned. “Wow, this must be good.”
“It is,” Olivia whispered and glanced behind her. She set the bread ball, which had taken on a grayish hue, next to her stew and leaned forward. “Do you promise?”
Etta nodded and inched her chair closer to the table. Olivia glanced over both shoulders again, and Etta reached for the glass of ice water in front of her. She was salivating, partly from hunger, but mostly from the suspense Olivia seemed to be reveling in creating. She took a gulp and plunked the glass down too hard. Water sloshed over the sides. Etta yanked on her napkin to mop up the puddle, and her spoon clattered to the floor. She closed her eyes. “Please just tell us, Liv.”
Poppy shoved Jordan’s spoon toward Etta. “By the time Jor gets here, his soup will be a big slimy salt lick anyway.” She giggled. “A slippery stewsicle.”
“That’s disgusting,” Etta said with a groan.
Poppy stuck her tongue out and bulged her eyes, pretending to lick a Popsicle. Etta laughed.
Olivia leaned forward. “So you guys have to promise you won’t tell anyone . . .”
“Okay,” Etta said.
“Because if you do . . .”
“You’ll slaughter us in our sleep.” Poppy giggled again.
Olivia narrowed her eyes at Poppy. “I’m serious.”
Poppy managed to compose her face, although she looked as though she might dissolve at any second. “Sorry,” she said. “We won’t tell.”
“It’s about . . .” Olivia mouthed something Etta guessed was Opal.
“Opal?” Poppy asked. Olivia spun toward the table where Opal Waters ate. Opal wasn’t there. The seat between Director Hardin and Major Mills was empty.
Olivia glared at Poppy and surveyed their surroundings again.
“Sorry,” Poppy whispered.
Finally Olivia leaned back in and waved Etta and Poppy closer, until their faces were inches from each other’s. “Opal is having an affair with someone at the academy . . .” The words all ran together and Etta couldn’t make out the last few.
“Who with?” Etta whispered.
Olivia’s eyes shifted from Etta to Poppy. “A student.”