Chapter 11 (of 12) : Devils
The old black iron gates are open, as if we're expected. They're flanked on either side by pillars topped with stone sculptures so worn and chipped we could never work out if they were supposed to be ravens or gargoyles or something else entirely. As we pass through the gates the glare of the headlamps of Emma's bike washes over them and for a moment they almost look like crouching devils.
The Hall lies in darkness, an irregular, angular shadow that's barely visible against the deeper shadows of the trees at the back of the grounds. There's only one window lit up, on the upper floor. It's been five years since we were last here but I know that's the upstairs library.
The grounds in front of the house aren't actually that big. It's not like the huge, open country estates they always have in those British dramas on PBS. Up here the forest presses in close on all sides and the nearest trees send their branches clawing over the old stone walls surrounding the grounds and that only adds to the sense of being hemmed in. It also makes the house itself look even larger than it is, and it looms over us as Emma parks her bike next to Felix's Jaguar, which is the only car in the driveway, a little way short of the steps that lead up to the front doors.
Wilderwood Hall. Our ancestral home.
We've got so many good memories of this place. For years it really was like a second home to us and it was our favorite place in the world. We explored every inch of it, from the maze of attics all the way down to the cool, dusty cellars. At least we tried to. The internal layout is weird, especially on the upper floor and in the attics, and we could never quite match up every window on the outside of the house with every room inside, which led us to look for hidden rooms and secret passages, though we never found any. We were also kept us out of one wing of the cellars which Felix told us was too unstable to go wandering around in.
From here me and my sister would venture into Wilderwood Forest, often in the direction of, but never actually into, the valley below. Then we'd return late, laughing and arguing as we worked out what story we'd tell our parents this time to excuse us for staying out too long. So many good times, and even more so if it really was our friendship back then that turned into what we have now.
It's not a cold night but there's a slight wind in the air. It's close to the end of summer, and it feels like it's building up to one of the sudden storms that are so common at this time of year. As we start walking up to the house Emma shrugs her shoulders and pulls at the collar of her jacket, glancing over at me. Her expression is hard to read in the near dark, but I can hear how nervous she is in her voice.
"You ready for this, little brother?"
I reach out to her and our fingers interlock. "Right here, Sis."
We let go before we walk up the steps to the front doors. We're here to find out secrets, not to give away our own.
I hesitate for a moment before taking hold of the brass door knocker. After the time we spent upstairs at Lauren's place earlier I changed my clothes and I'm now in jeans and a t-shirt and sneakers, with a plaid shirt thrown on top. Standing here now I suddenly wish I was suited up like I was when I went up to the Newley Institute, dressing the part again. Emma is in a short leather skirt and fishnets, along with another of her infinite number of black t-shirts, as well as her Bad Girl belt and the fingerless leather gloves she wears when riding her bike. She's kept the collar on as well, and the metal fittings of it glint in the dim light of the lamps flanking the front doors.
Other than the few words we exchanged on Friday night we've never spoken to our great-uncle as adults. We've never been here, at the Hall, as adults. It feels like we're sliding back in time with every step we take, and all Uncle Nathan will have to do to answer us is to tell us to stop being and silly and go to our rooms. He still has that air of adult authority to him that our parents have long since lost.
Emma takes hold of the door knocker and raps it three times, and the noise of metal on metal sounds like gunshots in the quiet of the night. We don't have to wait long before Felix opens the door and gives us a faint smile.
"Hello, you two."
His shirt collar is open, he's not wearing a tie and his vest is unbuttoned, which is the most casual I've ever seen him. His red hair is a mess, but that's normal. Felix looks tired, even uncertain, and I don't remember ever seeing him looking that way before.
"We need to see him, Felix," Emma says.
He nods and steps aside to let us enter, closing the door quietly behind us. "Wait here," he says, "and I'll let him know you're here."
Felix turns and walks across the main hall and up the stairs. I look over at Emma.
"Think he knows?"
My sister shrugs. "Felix the Fixer knows everything, right?"
She sounds uneasy and it's not hard to guess why. We never really knew Uncle Nathan back when we used to come up here. He was friendly enough in a stiff way, and much more tolerant of our escapades than our parents, but he was still reserved and distant. Felix, on the other hand, was an ally, and the thought that he might be involved in all of this is somehow more unsettling than the certainty that our great-uncle is. Seeing as Felix has been Uncle Nathan's right hand man for at least ten years it's hard to believe that he doesn't know what's going on. Impossible really.
There's no one else around. There were always at least a few staff up at the Hall but at this time of night I guess they must all be asleep elsewhere in the house.
The front hall is dominated by the staircase that leads up a gallery that wraps around above us in an inverted U shape, with hallways leading off from it to the rooms on the first floor. Right now the hall is lit only dimly by a couple of small lamps, so most of the big space is lost in shadows.
One of the unusual things about this place -- one of many -- is that it's mostly done in gray wood, in every shade from near white to near black and everything in between. Emma and I used to joke that Wilderwood Hall looked like the big houses you see in old black and white movies -- literally. The contrasts aren't anywhere near as extreme as the white and black interior of Lauren's house and there's plenty of color in the drapes, carpets and furnishings, but it's still an unusual effect I haven't seen elsewhere.
Emma nudges me. "Think we'll be asked to stay the night?"
I smile. "It would be separate bedrooms if we did."
"Fine. I'll just use the secret passages to sneak into your room."
"There aren't any secret passages."
"Yes there are," says Emma, "we just never found them."
She returns my smile, but she's definitely nervous. I know I am. I reach out slightly and brush the back of my fingers against the back of hers. It's as close as we can be right now.
The sound of footsteps, accompanied by the tap of a cane on the floorboards, draws our attention away from each other and upward. Our great-uncle, smartly dressed even at this hour, wearing a burgundy smoking jacket over his shirt and tie, walks to the top of the stairs and looks down at us.
"Well," Uncle Nathan says, "it's rather too late for a social call, so I assume we have something to talk about."
* * * * *
He stands there, calm and assured, the literal lord of the manor looking down upon us, with Emma and I made small by his height advantage and by the size of the front hall. It feels intentional, and if it is it works because me and my sister just stand there for a moment, whatever confidence we had draining out of us under that steady gaze. It really is like we're kids again, and the head of the family is giving us a stern look and telling us to explain our latest mischief.
Emma breaks the silence first. "We know about Alex Trowley."
She says it quietly, though her voice carries easily in the big hall.
No reaction. "And what, exactly, do you know?"
"You got him to make that video about Dad," I say, and once I start talking I just run with it, wanting to get it all out before he can silence us with another look. "You've known for years that Dr. Dunning up at the Institute has been screwing with Trowley and you used that to point him at Dad. You probably even made sure it went out when it did so that it would do the most damage, didn't you?"
I'm not sure what I'm expecting. That he'll deny it, or evade the question, or laugh. That he'll compliment us on how imaginative we are, or tell us that he's very disappointed in us and threaten to send us to bed without any supper.
He doesn't do any of that. He just nods and says, "Yes, I did."
"Holy shit, Uncle Nathan." The shock of him just straight up admitting it gives me some of my energy back. "Why?"
He starts descending the stairs, talking as he does so, relinquishing his height advantage like he's rewarding us for being smart enough to work it out.
"My arrangement with Dr. Dunning is motivated by self interest rather than any relish for his methods. The doctor is an extremely twisted individual, as utterly lacking in morals as he is in ethics. I sincerely hope he is unaware that you've learned of his peculiar hobby."
Emma nods. "He doesn't know."
"Good. I will certainly not inform him." A faint smile plays over Uncle Nathan's lips as he reaches the bottom of the stairs and looks us more evenly in the eye. "I admit I'm curious as to how you learned about this."