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Chapter no 31

Bad Blood (The Naturals, #4)

โ€ŒThe best place to find people who wanted to talk was the local watering hole. In this case, we quickly zeroed in on a diner. It was just far enough away from the historic part of town to serve primarily locals, but not so far that they didnโ€™t get the occasional touristโ€”perfect.โ€Œ

MAMA REEโ€™S NOT-A-DINER.ย The sign above the door told me pretty much everything I needed to know about the establishmentโ€™s owner.

โ€œBut Cassie,โ€ Sloane whispered as we stepped into the restaurant. โ€œItย isย a diner.โ€

A woman in her early sixties looked up from behind the counter and gave us the once-over, as if sheโ€™d heard Sloaneโ€™s whispered words. โ€œHelp yourself to any table youโ€™d like,โ€ she called after sheโ€™d finished studying us.

I opted for a booth by the window in between a pair of senior citizens playing chess and a quartet of even older women gossiping over breakfast. Sloane wasnโ€™t kidding when sheโ€™d said the average age of Gaitherโ€™s citizens was on an incline.

Lia and Sloane slid into the booth beside me. Dean and Michael took the other side, and Sterling and Judd helped themselves to stools at the counter.

โ€œWe donโ€™t do menus.โ€ The woman whoโ€™d told us to take a seatโ€”Mama Ree, I was guessingโ€”set five waters down on our table. โ€œRight now, itโ€™s breakfast. In about ten minutes, itโ€™ll be lunch. For breakfast, we have breakfast food. For lunch, we have lunch food. If you can think of it, I can cook it, so long as youโ€™re not expecting anything fancy.โ€

She saidย fancyย like it was a dirty word.

โ€œI could go for some biscuits and gravy.โ€ Deanโ€™s Southern accent got a smile out of the woman.

โ€œSide of bacon,โ€ she declared. It wasnโ€™t a question. Dean was nobodyโ€™s fool. โ€œYes, maโ€™am.โ€

โ€œFrench toast for me,โ€ Lia requested. Ree harrumphedโ€”my gut saidย Frenchย cut too close toย fancyโ€”but wrote down Liaโ€™s order nonetheless before turning her attention to me. โ€œAnd for you, missy?โ€

Those words took me back. This wasnโ€™t my first time at the Not-A-Diner.

I could see myself in a corner booth, crayons spread out on the table.

โ€œIโ€™ll have a blueberry pancake,โ€ I found myself saying. โ€œWith strawberry sauce and an Oreo milkshake.โ€

My order caused the unflappable woman to pause, as if that combination was familiar to her, the way the apothecary garden had been to me.

Youโ€™re not the type to gossip with outsiders, I thought.ย But you might share some interesting tidbits with one of Gaitherโ€™s own.

โ€œYou probably donโ€™t remember me,โ€ I said, โ€œbut I used to live in Gaither with my mother. Her name wasโ€”โ€

โ€œLorelai.โ€ Ree beat me to it. Then she smiled. โ€œAnd that would make you Lorelaiโ€™s Cassie, all grown up.โ€ She gave me another once-over. โ€œYou favor your mother.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure whether that was supposed to be a complimentโ€”or a warning.

Get her talking, I thought.ย About Mom. About the town. About Mason Kyle.

โ€œI donโ€™t remember much about living here. I know it was probably only for a couple of weeks, butโ€”โ€

โ€œA couple of weeks?โ€ Ree raised both eyebrows so high that they nearly disappeared into her graying hairline. โ€œCassie, you and your mama lived here for almost a year.โ€

A year?ย I felt like sheโ€™d punched me in the stomach. I could forgive myself for forgetting a couple of weeks out of a largely transient childhood, but a year? An entire year of my life thatโ€”if Iโ€™d even remembered the townโ€™s nameโ€”might have given the police a lead on my motherโ€™s case years ago?

โ€œYou were a bitty thing,โ€ Ree continued. โ€œSix or so. Quiet. Well-behaved, not like my Melody. You remember Melody?โ€

The second I heard the name, I got a flash of a young girl with pigtails. โ€œYour granddaughter. We were friends.โ€

I never had friends. I never had a home. These were the truths of my childhood.

โ€œHowโ€™s your mama doing these days?โ€ Ree asked.

I swallowed and looked down at the table in front of me. โ€œShe died when I was twelve.โ€

Another truth of my childhood that had turned out to be a lie.

โ€œOh, honey.โ€ Ree reached out and squeezed my shoulder. Then, with the no-nonsense manner of a woman whoโ€™d raised multiple generations of children, she turned to Sloane and Michael and took their orders.

You know grief, I thought.ย You know when to comfort and when to let things be.

Once Ree made her way into the kitchen, Michael offered an observation. โ€œShe was fond of your mother, but thereโ€™s anger there, too.โ€

If my mother and I had lived here for nearly a year, what had made us hit

the road again? And what, exactly, had my mother left in her wake?

Our food arrived, and I spent the entire meal trying to decide how to get Ree talking. I needed detailsโ€”about my motherโ€™s life in Gaither, about Mason Kyleโ€™s.

As it turned out, I didnโ€™t have to ask Ree to talk. Once weโ€™d finished breakfast, she pulled up a chair. โ€œWhat brings you back to Gaither?โ€ she asked.

Murder. Kidnapping. Centuries of systematic torture.

โ€œWe brought Cassieโ€™s momโ€™s ashes,โ€ Lia answered on my behalf. โ€œLorelaiโ€™s body was discovered a few months ago. Cassie said this was the place she would have wanted to be lain to rest.โ€

Iโ€™d already admitted to not remembering much about my time in Gaither, but Lia was Lia, and Ree believed every word out of her mouth.

โ€œIf thereโ€™s anything I can do for you,โ€ Ree said plainly, โ€œCassie, honey, you just let me know.โ€

โ€œThere is one thing.โ€ This was the opening Iโ€™d been waiting for. โ€œIf my mom and I were here for a year, thatโ€™s the longest we ever lived anywhere. I canโ€™t remember much of it. I know my mother loved it here, but before I scatter her ashesโ€ฆโ€ I closed my eyes for a moment, allowing the real grief that lived inside me to make its way to the surface. โ€œIโ€™d like to try to remember why.โ€

I wasnโ€™t anywhere near Liaโ€™s caliber as a liar, but I did know how to use the truth to my advantage.ย The longest we ever lived anywhere. I canโ€™t remember much of it. Iโ€™d like to remember why.

โ€œI donโ€™t know how much I can tell you.โ€ Ree was nothing if not frank. โ€œLorelai was the type to keep to herself. She swept into town doing some kind of balderdash dog and pony show, claiming she was psychicโ€”helping people โ€˜connect to their dead loved ones,โ€™ reading fortunes.โ€ Ree snorted. โ€œThe city council wouldnโ€™t have let her stay for long, but Marcela Waite is a sucker for that kind of thing, and sheโ€™s known for three things around these parts: loose lips, a rich, dead husband, and a tendency to badger city council members until they give her what she wants.โ€

So far, this story was a familiar one.

โ€œYour mama came in here two or three times those first couple of weeks, with you in tow. She was young. Skittish, though she did a good job hiding it.โ€ Ree paused. โ€œI offered her a job.โ€

โ€œWaitressing?โ€ I asked. Iโ€™d worked as a waitress at a diner before Briggs had recruited me to the Naturals program. I wondered if some part of me had remembered my mother doing the same thing.

Ree pursed her lips. โ€œI have a bad habit of hiring waitresses whoโ€™ve seen the ugly side of life. Most of them are running from something. I never knew what that something was for Lorelaiโ€”she didnโ€™t volunteer the information,

and I didnโ€™t ask. She took the job. I gave her a good deal on rent.โ€ โ€œThe blue house with the big oak tree,โ€ I said softly.

Ree nodded. โ€œMy daughter had recently vacated the premises. I had Melody and Shane with me, so it seemed a shame to let the house go to waste.โ€

Vacated the premises. I translated those words based on the way that Ree had said them:ย As in, took off and dumped her kids with you.

It was easy to understand why Ree might have had a soft spot for a young single mother struggling to support her daughter.

Home isnโ€™t a place, Cassie. My momโ€™s litany had stayed with me for years, but now I heard it differently, knowing thatโ€”however brieflyโ€”weโ€™d had a home once.

โ€œWas my mother close with anyone?โ€ I asked Ree, memories swirling just out of reach. โ€œInvolved with anyone?โ€

โ€œYour mama always did have an eye for good-looking men.โ€ This was Ree, trying to be diplomatic. โ€œThen again, she also had an eye for trouble.โ€

Not that diplomatic.

Ree narrowed her eyes at Dean. โ€œYou trouble?โ€ she asked. โ€œNo, maโ€™am.โ€

She turned to Michael. โ€œYou?โ€

He offered her his most charming smile. โ€œOne hundred percent.โ€ Ree snorted. โ€œThatโ€™s what I thought.โ€

The door to the restaurant opened then, and Widowโ€™s Peak from the apothecary museum walked in. Ree smiled when she saw him, the way she had when Dean had ordered biscuits and gravy.

โ€œYou remember Shane?โ€ Ree asked me. โ€œMy grandson.โ€

Shane. I could feel a memory hovering just out of reach. Ree started to stand.

โ€œDid my mother know a man named Mason Kyle?โ€ I asked before she could leave.

Ree stared at me. โ€œMason Kyle?โ€ She shook her head, as if trying to clear it of memories. โ€œI havenโ€™t heard that name in twenty-five years. He left Gaither when he was, what? Seventeen or so? Long before your mama came to town, Cassie.โ€

As Ree made her way toward the counterโ€”and her grandsonโ€”one of the older women at the table behind us clucked her tongue. โ€œShame what happened to the Kyle family,โ€ she said. โ€œDownright tragic.โ€

โ€œWhat happened?โ€ Sloane asked, twisting in her seat.

The old man playing chess on the other side of us turned to look at her. โ€œGot killed,โ€ he grunted. โ€œBy one ofย those people.โ€

What people?

โ€œPoor little Mason wasnโ€™t more than nine or so,โ€ the tongue-clucking

woman said. โ€œMost people hereabouts think he saw the whole thing.โ€

I pictured the little boy from the photograph, then thought of the monstrous killer heโ€™d become.

โ€œEnough.โ€ It was clear from the tone in Reeโ€™s voice and the immediate reactions of those around us that her word was law. With a nod, she turned back to her grandson. โ€œShane, what can I get yโ€”โ€

Before the question was out of her mouth, Shane saw something out the window. His whole body tensed, and he slammed out of the diner and charged into the street.

I looked out the window in time to see him striding toward a group of a dozen or so people. They walked in lines of four.ย Various ages. Various ethnicities. Every single one of them was dressed entirely in white.

Shane attempted to approach a girl standing behind the others, but a man with thick hairโ€”ink-black and shot through with grayโ€”stepped in front of him.

โ€œGoing to go out on a limb,โ€ Lia said, her eyes locked on the oncoming confrontation, โ€œand guess thatย those peopleย are emissaries from the friendly neighborhood cult.โ€

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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