The Irish Castle: Ghosts
Page 21
George Moriarty, his ancestor.
Seamus clenched his fist. There were plenty of skeletons in his family closet, but he hadn’t known about this one. Charles Moriarty had killed those in the glen who he thought were part of an uprising, a movement that would become the failed Fenian Rising. He’d killed anyone he found suspect, including his oldest child and namesake, who’d been with his cousins when the soldiers came. When Charles’ mistress heard what he’d done, she’d killed the youngest two in a fit of rage.
Seamus took a small black book from his desk. It was the journal of young George, started aboard a ship bound for England with one or two small painstakingly written child-like notes. Unlike his siblings, he’d been spared, off at private lessons with the priest. From its pages, it was clear he never knew the truth of what happened to his family. Toward the end, when he returned to Ireland as the Lord of Glenncailty he talked about how he hated the Irish, hated his family there. Someone had filled the boy’s head with lies about how the O’Donnabhains, his mother’s family, and Mac Gearailts, his uncle’s family, had killed his brothers because they were half English.
Séan had read George’s diary many times before, and until now he’d believed the account in the pages. Now he knew the truth. The other boys had been killed by their own parents, before his father killed his mother. His father had turned the boy against his Irish relatives.
And maybe that hatred had been kinder than the truth—that both mother and father were murderers, that he had brothers who hadn’t been given the dignity of graves.
Carrig Mac Gearailt married Carol O’Donnabhain, whose sister, Mary, became mistress to Charles Moriarty. Both Carol and their brother, Aoghan, disowned Mary when she chose to dishonor herself with the Englishman.
Seamus smiled ruefully. He wondered when Séan Donnovan would realize that the ghost who’d possessed him, the brother to Mary and Carol, was that of Aoghan O’Donnabhain. O’Donnabhain…which would later be changed to Donnovan. It seemed that his family was more tangled with Séan’s than he’d ever realized.
The mystery of what was behind the door had been solved.
Seamus turned in his chair, looking out his study window to the unused chapel that sat beside his house, beyond the back wall of the Glenncailty grounds.
He’d turned the castle into a hotel hoping to answer questions, to bring light to some of the secrets, but as he sat there, he wondered if there weren’t some secrets that should be left in the shadows.
The End
Preview the next book
Bones
Glenncailty Castle, Book 4
Lila Dubois
Chapter 1
Biting her lip, Melissa pushed through the pain. Her biceps strained, her elbow creaked and her fingers shook. With a little hiss of frustration, she dropped the soup can. The innocuous can hit the floor and rolled under the vanity in the little guest room of her grandmother’s house.
Trembling from the effort, Melissa gingerly sat back on the bed. Unfortunately, that put her level with her own reflection in the mirror. Her face was flushed and there were tears in her eyes. Irritated with herself, she wiped them away with her right hand while her left lay limp on the bed.
She was wearing a thin sleeveless undershirt, and the mirror showed the long, jagged scars that started midway down her upper left arm, coated her elbow and stopped mid-forearm. Besides the scars, her arm looked skinny and weak, the muscles atrophied after months with her arm braced to her side. The physical therapy was helping, though it was humiliating that she found a simple soup can so hard to lift.
“Melissa?”
Her grandmother’s voice snapped her from her brown study. She grabbed an embroidered hip-length jacket she’d bought in China and pulled it on. The long sleeves hid her scars. She carefully bent her left arm, feeling her elbow creak as she slid the knotted buttons through the loops. Her mangled arm didn’t bother her grandmother, but Melissa was more comfortable with it covered up.
“Melissa?”
“Coming, Granny.”
Bouncing to her feet she left the little room on the second floor of the terraced Dublin house and bounded down the stairs, taking them two at a time just to prove her legs still worked. Granny waited in the wood-paneled hallway at the bottom.
Her normally smiling grandmother looked grim.
Melissa pulled up short. “Granny?”
The older woman reached out for Melissa’s arm, but pulled her hand back. “Follow me.”
A lump forming in her stomach, Melissa shuffled behind her grandmother through the small, twisting halls of the two-hundred-year-old house until they reached the kitchen. It had been remodeled and enlarged in the ’70s, and there was just enough space for a table. Her grandmother shooed her into a seat, then took one herself.
“I need to ask you a question, and I’m very serious about this.”
“Very well,” Melissa said, no idea what this could be about. Up until the time that she went away to university, Melissa had spent almost every summer in Dublin with her grandmother and loved her ferociously. Returning to London each August had been heartbreaking, and for weeks she’d wander her parent’s house with an affected Irish accent quite unlike her own public-school British one. She’d finally gotten a chance to stay here more permanently when she’d come to live with her grandmother to attend University College Dublin, where she’d gotten a degree in Archaeology before the discovery of the bog bodies had shifted her interest to Forensic Anthropology.
“A man from the Garda Síochána called, and he was looking for you.”
“The…oh, the police. Why?”
“That’s what I need to know.” Bracing her elbows on the table, Bridget Ferguson leaned forward. “Did you steal a body, or maybe just some bones? Something you thought was interesting to study but might actually be the bones of a royal family somewhere, bones that would prove that the current rulers are impostors?” The older woman’s gaze was hard and focused.
“Wha… What bones? What ruling family?” Melissa stared at her grandmother in total confusion. They had the same hazel eyes, but Melissa had gotten her father’s fair hair, not the black of her mother and grandmother—though she’d seen a dye box in the bathroom, confirming her suspicion that her grandmother’s hair was no longer naturally dark.
“Or maybe you found something, a piece of jewelry, a letter, a trinket of some kind.”
Melissa narrowed her eyes. “Granny, have you been watching those crime shows again?”
“Well, of course I have. I have to know what my favorite granddaughter is doing while she’s running around all corners of Christendom.”
Melissa’s lips twitched. “Granny, I’ve told you, I’m not like the lady on the TV show. I don’t solve crimes. They usually know who did it before I get there.”
“And you’re sure that you didn’t accidentally bring back some mysterious bones?”
She looked so hopeful that Melissa hated to say, “No.”
“Ah, well then.” Her grandmother sat back with a little sigh of disappointment.
“Did the police actually call?”
“As if I’d make up something like that,” she humphed. “They did call, and they said something about some bones.”
“That’s odd.”
As a forensic anthropologist Melissa wasn’t like the character on the crime dramas her grandma watched, but she did travel all over the world looking for human remains. She’d gone out with the Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii, called CILHI, to help identify remains from the Korean War and Vietnam conflict, spent some time in South America helping to sort through the warehouses of remains that the state-run laboratories were holding but didn’t have time to work with, and then most recently had been in Bosnia and Africa to help process mass graves.
She rarely solved crimes. Usually she was the one confirming for the authorities that a crime had been committed.
“Did the policem—”
“The Guard.”
/> “Pardon me, the Guard, did they give you a number I could call?”
“The detective sergeant is coming around in a few minutes, so we’d best prepare for company. Do you know where the nice teapot is?”
“I do. I don’t think it’s ever moved.”
“And why would it?”
Melissa took the pretty china teapot out of one of the high glass-fronted cabinets with her right hand. “If you thought I had dangerous skeletal remains in my luggage, why did you invite the Guard for tea?”
“And how could I not? It would be highly suspicious if I didn’t. Highly. But don’t worry, I had an escape plan for you.”
“You did?” Melissa put the pot on the table and grabbed a tray.
She laughed as her grandmother outlined the escape plan. It was good to laugh. It was good to be home.
* * * *
“Dr. Heavey?” The detective sergeant wiped his feet before crossing the threshold into the house. He was a heavy-set man with a pronounced brow ridge and high cheekbones in an overall flat face. He had the fair coloring common in Ireland, but his eyes were brown. Melissa stared at him. Though he probably looked normal to anyone else, his face intrigued her.
“You have a very vertical chin and no maxillary prognathism, but fair coloring.” Melissa examined each feature, mentally stripping away flesh to reveal bone. “You have a grandparent who is Asian.”
“Uh, well, no. My grandmother was Indian.”
“As I said, Asian. You have a few distinctly Mongoloid features.”
There was a loud “AHEM” from the front room. Melissa jumped and remembered her manners.
“I’m Dr. Melissa Heavey. How do you do, Sergeant?”
“I’m well, thank you for having me.” He was looking at her oddly and speaking with deliberate care. “The name’s Detective Sergeant Oren.”
“And please, call me Melissa.” She added her best, most normal, smile.
Melissa led the sergeant into the formal front room. She’d only been in it a handful of times, as it was reserved for special guests. A detective sergeant come to talk about bones was certainly on that list. Melissa had changed from her jeans and Chinese jacket into black trousers and a green sweater. Her grandmother had changed too, into brown wool slacks, a cream sweater and her good gold jewelry.
“Detective Sergeant Oren, this is my grandmother, Bridget Ferguson.”
“It’s a pleasure, ma’am.”
Her grandmother nodded as if she were the Queen welcoming someone to her palace. Melissa took a seat by her, and after a quick look around, the detective sergeant chose the chair across from them.
“Tea, Detective Sergeant?”
Her grandmother poured the tea, adding milk and sugar to specification and passing cups.
Melissa bit down on her curiosity. Beside her, she could feel her grandmother vibrating with the need to know.
She’d grown up hearing “you need to know this” or “you’ve no need to know that”. That need to know, which was clearly a family trait, had driven her academic interests, leading to a career where she addressed other people’s need to know—”I need to know if my brother/father/son is there, if he’s dead.”
“You mentioned something to my grandmother about bones?” Melissa asked after they’d all taken a sip of tea.
“Ah yes, you see, we have a bit of an unusual case, and we were hoping you might help us.”
Melissa opened her mouth, but her grandmother beat her to it. “My granddaughter is here resting and recuperating after nearly being killed doing important humanitarian work.”
Melissa wanted to both hug and shush the older woman.
The detective sergeant looked startled. “Ah, well then.”
“May I ask who recommended me?” Melissa said.
“Adam O’Connell—he’s the state pathologist.”
“Of course, I’ve met him several times. Did he need a consult?”
“No, and there’s our problem. Based on the photos, he thinks the bodies are at least seventy years old, so even if he had the time or money, he might not handle the case.”
“He looked at photos?” Photos were rarely enough to go on with bones that hadn’t been cleaned.
“We found bones in a hotel out in the countryside. A place called Glenncailty.”
“Valley of the Lost,” Bridget translated.
“It’s more than my department can handle, and we’ve plenty of things that need investigation. I was hoping Dublin could help, but they too have more urgent matters.”
“That’s understandable,” Melissa said when the detective sergeant paused.
“What could be more important than laying someone to rest?” Bridget humphed. “It seems the Dublin Gardaí don’t have their priorities straight.”
Before Detective Sergeant Oren could say anything, Melissa spoke up. “Very few governments have the kind of forensic manpower it takes to sort through human remains, and people are always surprised at how often a body too old or too decomposed for the pathologist to work with turns up.” She turned back to the detective. “But why isn’t the National Museum handling this? If the bones are old, they should go to the museum.”
“The museum has been hurt by the budget. They said they might be able to send someone out in a few months.”
If the museum planned to examine the bones, Melissa wasn’t sure why Oren was here. “I spent some time at the National Museum and I’m sure they’ll do a wonderful job.”
The detective sergeant shifted, setting his cup down. “I didn’t realize you were on holidays. I shouldn’t have bothered you.”
Bridget clicked her tongue. “You don’t want to wait for the museum people.” She set her cup down and rubbed her hands together. “There’s something special about these, isn’t there? Something that means it can’t wait.”
He looked uncomfortable and nodded. “Yes, ma’am. The owner of the place where they were found has asked that this be taken care of right away. He offered to pay for the investigation himself.”
Melissa and Bridget exchanged a look. This owner must be politically connected in order to get the Gardaí and museum to agree to this. And he clearly wanted these bones dealt with ASAP.
Melissa looked back at the detective sergeant. “If the bones are very old, you may need an archaeologist, not an anthropologist.”
“No, the bones aren’t so old as that—one of them has on a green dress, and the furniture is like something you’d see now.”
“The furniture?” Melissa sat back. “Where exactly were these bones found?”
He looked down, cleared his throat and then said, “The bodies were in a room that had been bricked shut. It was a nursery—we think it’s a woman and two children.”
In unison Melissa and her grandmother sucked in a breath.
“When do you want her there?” Bridget said. “I’ll help her pack.”
* * * *
Melissa checked the directions she’d printed off the hotel’s website, then turned left off the main road. She was well out of Dublin in the Irish countryside. The road was lined with old trees and stone fences. Everything was green and soft after the hard, gray edges of London and Dublin. The road descended into a little valley, switchbacking its way down. She came around a corner and caught sight of the castle, which she recognized from the pictures on the website. The stones seemed as much a part of the landscape as the trees that lined the walls of the valley. Golden afternoon light gilded the windows.
Behind and around the main structure she saw several smaller buildings. It had said on the website that Glenncailty Castle was actually an old fortified manor home, which had once served as the seat of the English lord sent to rule this area before the Republic of Ireland won its independence. It was now owned by a local family and had only recently been reopened to the public. The structures around it were probably accessory buildings that had once been part of the estate.
From the look of the place it was certainly old enough to have some sec
rets. As she reached the bottom of the valley, she saw that long shadows covered half the glen, the dark patches a deep, velvety green-black, while the sun-drenched parts were a happy kelly green. She shivered a little as she followed the signs toward the castle and slowed as the curved drive took her past the wide front steps and iron-bound double doors. There were three main buildings, the center one appearing to be at least three stories, with smaller wings on either side, connected by covered glass hallways.
She headed into the parking area, which was hidden by trees. Grabbing her equipment kit, she hopped out and headed for the front doors, ignoring the little shiver of unease that went through her. She’d been to far worse and more dangerous places than this. Her kit was in her left hand—she’d grabbed it from the passenger seat out of habit. She hadn’t made it more than a few steps before pain from the weight of what she carried made her elbow and shoulder ache. She switched hands, flexing her left arm as she started up the steps.
The doors proved a challenge, too heavy for her weak left arm to manage. Hooking her arm through the pull, she used her body weight to heave it open, then slid inside, leading with her right shoulder. It would have been simpler to put the toolbox down or to ring the bell above the plaque that said “Céad Mile Fáilte, Please Ring Bell For Assistance,” but it wasn’t about easy, it was about proving to herself that she could still do everything she’d been able to do before the injury.
She was standing in a lovely foyer. Though the outside of the building looked almost medieval, the inside was decorated and furnished in a style she associated with some of the stately homes of England. The floor was a check pattern. Unlike floors found in modern dwellings, the blocks of black and white were actual stones, not facing or tile. The walls were mint green with white wainscoting and the ceiling was at least two stories up, with high windows letting in the light.