โWhat kind of determination would it take to stab a blade into your flesh over and over again? What kind of person could kill his own flesh and blood and then calmly turn the knife on himself?โ
I pictured myself holding a bloodied knife, pictured myself turning it inward, pictured the light glistening off the blade.
โIโm afraid Mr. Lowell is unavailable.โ The home health aide who answered Lowellโs front door couldnโt tell us much more than that. The old man had taken his leave shortly after Agent Sterling had interviewed himโ and hadnโt told a soul where he was going.
As I paced Lowellโs house, looking for some shred of evidence, something to confirm Sloaneโs theory that heโd killed his daughter and son-in- law, then turned the knife on himself to bar suspicion, I couldnโt help remembering the statement heโd given to Agent Sterling about the murdered animals.
You said that you believed that Mason had watched. I pictured the knife again, picture myself holding it.ย It must have pleased you to be able to say those words, knowing Agent Sterling wouldnโt see the truth behind them. You werenโt talking about the way Mason watched Darren Darby kill those animals. You were talking about what your grandson watchedย youย do.
โWhat are you thinking?โ Dean asked, slipping in beside me.
โIโm thinking that maybe Nightshadeย didย see his parents murdered.
Maybe heย didย watch.โ I paused, knowing that my next words would hit home for Dean. โMaybe it was a lesson. Maybe when Kane arrived later, Nightshade threw suspicion on Darrenย becauseย little Mason Kyle had learned that a boy who tortured animals wasnโt worthy of following.โ
Dean was quiet then, the kind of quiet that told me heโd gone to a dark and cavernous place in his own memory the moment Iโd said the wordย lesson. Eventually, he clawed himself out.
โMy daughter was a disappointment.โ When Dean spoke, it took me a moment to realize that he was speaking from Lowellโs perspective. โI tried to raise her right. I tried to raise her to be worthy of my name, but she ended up being just another whoreโpregnant at sixteen, defiant. They lived with me,
Anna and her pathetic husband and the boy.โ
The boy. The one who would grow up to be Nightshade.
โYou thought Mason was cut from your daughterโs cloth,โ I said, picking up where Dean had left off. โAnd then he started sneaking out.โ By Malcolm Lowellโs own admission, he had tried to cage his family. Heโd tried to control them. Iโd assumed that the proud old man would have considered Masonโs behavior an affront.
But what if you didnโt?ย Air entered and exited my lungs. I took a step forward, even though I didnโt know what I was walking toward.ย What if you considered Masonโs little pastime a sign?
โWhen the animals started turning up,โ Dean mused, his voice sounding uncannily like his fatherโs, โI thought it might be the boy. Perhaps he had potential after all.โ
โBut it wasnโt Mason.โ I pressed my lips together as I thought about Kane, broken and hollow. โIt was Darren Darby.โ
โA disappointment,โ Dean said harshly. โA sign of weakness. One that required an object lesson for my grandson about who he was and where he came from.ย We are not followers. We do not watch.โ
Deanโs words coated me like oil, bringing me back to my own encounter with Malcolm Lowell as a child.
You knew what it was like to feel the life go out of your victims. You knew the power. You wanted Mason to see you for what you really were, to know exactly whose blood ran in his veins.
Out loud, I let myself take that thought to its logical conclusion. โTo kill his own family, to plan it out so coldly, to go as far as to calmly and brutally attackย himselfโฆBy the time of the Kyle murders, Malcolm Lowell was already a killer.โ
Dean waited a beat and then took my statement a step further. โAlready a Master.โ
A chill spread slowly down my spine, like the cracking of ice.ย You were tested. You were found worthy. Youโd already killed your nine.
โThe timing doesnโt add up,โ I said, pushing down the urge to look over my shoulder, like the old man might be there, watching me the way he had when I was a child. โThe poison Master who trained Nightshadeโthe one who chose him as an apprenticeโdidnโt become a Master himself until yearsย afterย the Kyle murders.โ
And that meant that if my instinctsโand Deanโsโwere correct, Malcolm Lowell was not the poison Master.
You were something more.
โYou groomed your grandson for greatness,โ I said, my heart thumping in my chest. โYou saw the potential, and you made Mason a monster. You made him your heir.โ I paused. โYou sent him to live with a man who knewโ
intimately knewโthe thin line between medicine and poison.โ
Mason Kyle had left Gaither when he was seventeen years old. Heโd attempted to bury all traces of his identity. Heโd lived as a ghost for two decadesย beforeย heโd become an apprentice and then a Master.
He knew it was coming. He always knew what he was meant to be. Even thinking about Nightshade, I never left the old manโs perspective.ย You made him in your own image. You made him worthy.
A flicker of shadow was the only warning I had that Dean and I were no longer alone.
โBasements are actually relatively rare in Oklahoma,โ Sloane commented, popping up beside us. โBut this house has one.โ
My heart had leapt into my throat before Iโd realized that Sloane was the one whoโd joined us. It stayed there as I turned the wordย basementย over and over in my mind, thinking about the fact that Laurel had grown up inside and underground.
Thinking that Holland Darby might not be the only one in Gaither with shackles built into his walls.
I knew, logically, that it couldnโt be that simple. I knew that my mother had probably never been here, knew that wherever the Masters kept her, wherever they conducted their business, it probably wasnโt in one of their basements. But as I wound my way toward the basement, Dean and Sloane on my heels and Lia and Michael falling in beside us, I couldnโt push down the roar building in my mind, the incessant thumping of my heart as I thought,ย You built this house. For your wife. For your family. For what was to come.
The basement floor was made of concrete. The beams overhead were covered in cobwebs. A surplus of cardboard boxes made the roomโs function clear.
Just storage. Just a room.
With no idea what I was looking for, I began to open boxes and go through the contents. They told a storyโof a man whoโd gotten started on his family later in life. Of the local girl heโd married. Of the daughter whoโd lost her mother when she was six years old.
Six years old.
Suddenly, I was taken back to the day Malcolm Lowell had caught Melody and me in the apothecary garden.
โHow old are you?โ the man demands.
โIโm seven,โ Melody answers. โBut Cassieโs only six.โ
I was six years old when I met Malcolm Lowell. His daughter was six years old when her mother died. Mason Kyle was nine when he watched his grandfather murder his parents.
โSix,โ I said out loud, sitting down hard between the boxes, the concrete digging into the skin under my legs. โSix, six, and nine.โ
โThree plus three,โ Sloane rattled off, unable to stop herself. โThree times three.โ
The Masters kill nine victims every three years. There are twenty-sevenโ three times three times threeโFibonacci dates total. My hand brushed up against something etched into the concrete. I shoved a box to the side to get a better look.
Seven circles around a cross. It was the Mastersโ symbol, one Iโd first seen etched into a wooden casket and later seen carved into a killerโs flesh. Like Laurel, Beau Donovan had been raised by the Masters. Like Laurel, his mother was the Pythia.
โBeau was six years old when he was tested by the Masters,โ I said, looking up from the floor. โSix years old when they cast him out to die.โ
Beauโand Laurelโhad been born for one purpose and one purpose alone.
Nine is the greatest of us, Nightshade had told me months ago.ย The constant. The bridge from generation to generation.
I traced my fingers around the outside of the symbol. โSeven Masters,โ I said. โThe Pythia. And Nine.โ
If Laurel passed their tests, if she wasย worthy, someday she would take the ninth seat at the Mastersโ table.ย But whose seat is it now?
The greatest of us. The bridge from generation to generation. There had been awe in Nightshadeโs voice when heโd spoken those words. There had beenย warmth.
โI know that face, Colorado,โ Michael said, narrowing his eyes at me. โThatโs your holyย bleepย face. Thatโsโโ
I didnโt wait for him to finish. โWe were never looking for the poison Master who preceded Nightshade,โ I said, moving my finger from the outer circle to the inner cross. โWe were looking for someone whoโd been a part of the Masters for longer than twenty-seven years. Someone who held sway over the others. The whole timeโwe were looking forย Nine.โ