Finally, after everyone had gone—with a menacing last remark from Chief detective Pierre Reaux,
“do not plan on leaving the country,” he said looking pointedly at Grant as if a warning, and then he had spun on his heel and left on the tail of the departing policemen.
Grant shut the door behind them and they watched from the window as the cops got into the police cars and Pierre Reaux disappeared across the street. They watched the police cars drive away soon followed by a silver nondescript sedan, the unmistakable profile of Pierre Reaux illuminated by the street light.
Grant had been holding apart the curtain at the window as they watched them depart, and now he dropped the sheer and then closed the heavy hunter green drape. He then went to each window to do the same. There were five windows that circled the front of the house and he went to each one after to do the same.
When he was done he sighed heavily and leaned against the wall by the last drapery of the bay window he had drawn shut. He stared dully at the floor. Or rather his own shoes. But he was not looking at his shoes, really, he was examining his own thoughts and still seeing Aunt Fiona in his thoughts as she had appeared when he first found her in the bedroom.
Faun’s first thoughts were out of concern for Grant, even as the shock of seeing a dead body which belonged to someone she knew—and had liked had left her quite shaken as well. Her first instincts were the need to find order among the chaos of everything; she relied heavily upon order, it was always her pillar and source of strength, but also, her desire to provide some means in which to be of help.
“Would it help if I made you tea?” she asked him
Her words seemed to make no sense to him. At first he blankly stared at her but he was not seeing her, he was still seeing Aunt Fiona and that horrid impression still left upon his inner mental retinas.
“Erm….” to pause to regain a lucid thought. Then he said, “not here….”
Yes. There was the burning need to leave the house as soon as possible.
Faun felt the same and looked around for where she had left her umbrella and clutch. When she spotted both, laid upon the entrance console by the gilt framed mirror to the left of the highly polished wood door she slowly walked towards this.
And cautiously Grant added with a sigh,
“but first, perhaps we had better look for King Leopold,” he raised his now bloodshot, shadowed-forest eyes as she turned to look at him.
Faun drew a gap in the drawn drapery and curtains to look again out the window nearest the console,
“it looks like the rain has finally stopped….” and then dropped the draperies to wait for him by the door, holding both her umbrella and clutch close to herself, repressing a chill that swept through her, “do you know where the house key could be?”
“Check the table drawer,” he suggested, remembering having seen it there often.
Faun found the key,
“we should lock up—make sure all the doors are locked.”
Once they had done they left together, shutting the front door, locking it, and went down the front path towards the chess pieces.
It seemed a life time had passed since they had walked past them when they had arrived now so many hours ago.
In silence they reached the gate and paused a moment.
“We can start looking around the block first—I think Arthur usually would walk him to the park thst is down that way—perhaps that’s where Leopold went….”
Faun followed where he pointed and turned as if to go but hesitated,
“Did the paramedic say it was carbon monoxide?” Faun asked him now
“He said it was not up to him to determine, or something like thst—I forget exactly what he said—I’d mentioned what the coroner told me earlier….”
“Oh,” Faun thought about that
For a few beats they stood paused at the gate still within the grounds
“What is that?” Grant asked slowly as he listened to something.
Faun strained her ears.
“Do you hear that?” Grant asked her
At first she hadn’t but after a moment she heard a sound. Like a movement. It sounded like a rustling in the bushes that lined the front of the house.
Faun reached for her phone and found the phone flashlight. They could see a skunk skulking in a run through the grass
Instinctively they both moved back a few inches, even as they were well enough away.
“Just a skunk,” Grant said opening the gate and waited to let her through first
“Yes,” Faun said as they started out
But then they heard a louder sound of bustling leaves as the thick hedge was disturbed, followed by a loud bark,
“King Leopold!” they both said together as they watched the huge black mastiff come galloping towards them with a terrified expression on its canine, aristocratic face
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