"Yes, Eloise," Elora said, answering her friend's barely formed question, "It's me, Susan."
This didn't help Eloise much. Not at all, in fact. All she could do was goggle at the Dining Room Hostess, barely recognizable as the woman she used to be, yet unmistakably her just the same. She'd undergone such a transformation that, if she didn't know better, Eloise would have believed her to be Susan Quinn's sister. Not only were her facial features, hair colour and body different, but now her eyes were green. Even her height was different as she stood before her, at least three inches taller than she had been.
George's reaction to their unexpected visitors, Elora in particular, wasn't much different from Eloise's. Her lower jaw sagged before she could remember why that wasn't such a good idea and make it snap shut.
Bess, while surprised and even concerned, wasn't overly put off by the sudden arrival of these people, the first thought in her head being what a great orgy this situation could evolve into. Nancy, on the other hand, was quite concerned.
"What's going on here!?" she demanded, trying to put authority into her tone while a part of her mind wondered at what Elora and her aunt were talking about.
"You've been trying to figure that out since you've arrived, no?" Hildebrandt pointed out. "And you're really no closer now than you were then."
"Not for lack of trying, though," Sherriff Durant put in, a little distracted by Nancy in her provocative beachwear.
Knowing when it was time to put her cards on the table, at least most of them, Nancy retorted, "We came here looking for my Aunt's friend, Susan Quinn, who checked into this hotel over a week ago before completely disappearing!"
"I haven't disappeared at all," Elora said while Eloise continued to stare, her jaw moving as though she'd said something, but no sound came out.
"What do you mean!?" Nancy asked, now centering her attention on Elora.
"I am, or was, Susan Quinn, the woman you've been looking for."
Baffled by this, Nancy looked at her aunt, who was still staring aghast at Elora, asking, "Aunt Eloise? Is this true?"
"Y- uhhh... yes... Susan, what...?"
"What happened?" Elora finished for her in a tone that held no guilt, shame or hesitation. "Well, Eloise, by now I'd think you could figure that out for yourself. I came to Cinder Bay, I liked it here, it liked me, I decided to stay."
This simplified explanation, however, clearly wasn't enough, Eloise's expression stating as much and prompting Elora to go on.
"I was never in any danger and I'm sorry if you were worried, but after our last conversation in River Heights, I honestly thought you would put the past to rest when I stopped calling. It wasn't until your niece and her two adorable friends arrived that I realized how... serious you were about me, that you would actually send them looking. I see now that I should have given you some closure, however, things seemed to have worked out very well just the same."
"You knew who we were?" an astonished Nancy asked.
"Of course I knew," Elora replied. "Your last name was an obvious giveaway and, once we had a little chat with Miss Marvin, we knew you were here to snoop until you had answers. Then the entire town ran you around in circles."
Nancy, George and Eloise all looked accusingly at Bess who could only look from one to another with utter confusion, claiming, "I have no idea what she's talking about!"
"Of course you don't," Elora said, looking to Nancy as she continued. "Bess is loyal. She never would have betrayed your confidence if we hadn't broken her down first with some very entertaining methods. She doesn't even remember the conversation. Whenever she tries, she only comes to the conclusion that she's a very pretty young woman and that Cinder Bay is a great place to be. Isn't that right, Bess?"
"What?" Bess asked, looking worried and frightened. "What do you mean, 'broke me down'?"
"You enjoyed it," Elora told her with a smirk. "And after you told us everything about yourself and your two adorable little friends, you even wanted more. Perhaps we'll let you watch the recording that we-"
"You brainwashed Bess!?"
Nancy exploded.
Elora rolled her eyes and was about to reply, but it now seemed to be Mr. Carmody's turn as he held up his hands in a silent plea for calm before speaking.
"Ladies," he officiously cut in with a diplomatic smile for Nancy in particular. "If we could calm ourselves, I think it's time we explained things. As I'm sure you've already guessed, Cinder Bay is a unique locale. Our town plays host to what one might call... an unexampled species. As far as biology goes, Dr. Bolton is much more suitable in explanation than I am, but what I can tell you is the story you've mostly already heard from our beloved Colonel Marks. Unfortunately, at this late date, the story is mostly conjecture so, without iterating too much of the Colonel's tale, won't you please allow me to tell the story by the addition of a few details that will explain much? It begins with the young wife of Tiberian Faldor, the man who built this hotel.
"As the Colonel has said, Faldor's wife wasn't very happy with her life, or her husband, and would often take it out on him in some very inappropriate ways that involved other men. Needless to say, this wasn't exactly the type of behaviour that a man desires in his wife and it was widely accepted, both now and at the time of her mysterious disappearance, that Faldor had killed her. As a man who'd been suffering from constant personal failure, his adulterous wife would not have helped his outlook on life. I'm sure he had a difficult time putting up with her and the laughing stock she'd made of him and, though it was known that he'd treasured her, he most likely murdered her in a fit of rage, as it is also known that he was an impatient man with an explosive temper. I suppose it was his love for her, not to mention guilt, that made him decide to seek her spirit, possibly to apologise, to gain for himself some absolution for his crime, but this is why he came to invite practitioners of the occult to the hotel.
"At this point in the Hotel's history, the wonderful columns of crystal that grow from the pool that both you and your aunt have... experienced, had already broken through the floor of the basement and had begun to spread throughout the hotel. Of course, this crystal growth would have been of significant interest to Faldor's new friends. This is why they held their sΓ©ances there in the basement, declaring that area off limits to everyone else, and also why they began excavating there in an attempt to reach the source of the columns. We have no idea what they expected to find, even given the fact that they surely would have sensed something from the fledgling spires, but we do know that
they
were aware of the human excavation and were already working in their own way to meet them in the middle. And the work was only just completed when something that at first would seem so meaningful, monumental even, struck from out of the blue, as it were."
"The lightning strike," Nancy surmised."
"The lightning strike," Carmody confirmed with a slight nod. "Dr. Bolton, if you would?"
Without verbal acceptance of Carmody's introduction of her, the attractive, older doctor in the sharp, sexy business suit stepped forward, her tight skirt short enough to draw Eloise's lesbian attention as she began in her rather cold, almost unemotional tone.
"Assuming that none of you are experienced medical researchers or senior biologists, I'll attempt to communicate the conclusions of my work in layman's terms. Also, please keep in mind that even I don't understand all the mysteries of the organism that lives in the crystal pool and, of what I do understand, time is a constraint that must also be kept in mind.
They
are eternal,
we
are not.
"As it is assumed by some that, millions of years ago, a lightning strike to a pool of methane, water, ammonia, and hydrogen created the simple amino acids from which all life on Earth evolved, I theorize that the lightning strike to the Faldor enabled an evolutionary step forward for the long existing, though simple organisms. While they were capable of invading and controlling the growth of the crystal, there are no reports of the crystal that was slowly invading the Hotel emitting heat. It's true that caves of crystal are unbearably hot due to the heat of the earth in which crystals best grow, but the crystal in the Faldor Hotel now puts out its own heat