she could run in her best dress, and that thought was
   unnerving. Quickly she reminded herself she was being
   silly. Someone was in the woods, and all she wanted to do
   was learn who they were. They did not need to see her.
   Near silence entombed the wood. Insects whined close
   to her ears, but she brushed them away. The scents of
   greenery, which would have been so enticingly fresh in
   spring, now stank autumn’s decay.
   Not sure exactly where she would find the private glade
   she sought, Darcy pushed through the undergrowth. Briars
   caught on her heavy cape, but she pulled the wool off the
   bushes. She tried to keep her steps soundless and to watch
   where she walked. The ground might drop off here, too.
   She smiled as she emerged into a clearing. The muted
   light of the moon, fading behind clouds, pooled in its center.
   To one side a small brooklet whispered secrets. She did
   not stay to admire it when she noticed a path leading out
   of it. Lights bounced in that direction.
   She followed the path through the trees, ready to jump
   into the deeper shadows if a light came too close. When
   she heard chanting in front of her, she slowed. Were the
   chanters the ones who had brought the torches?
   Hesitating, she shivered as she heard the music’s
   frantic rhythm. It sounded so primitive. Suddenly she
   wanted nothing more than to hurry back to a haven in
   Rosewood Hall. She had seen and heard enough to be able
   to tell Simon a group was using the wood for some sort of
   ceremony.
   Retracing her steps, she paused when she heard an
   exultant cheer from behind her. Although she could not
   submerge her curiosity to find out what was happening,
   she kept walking. Simon could send for the constable to
   banish the trespassers from the wood.
   A shadow moved in front of her, becoming a human
   form. She was seized from behind. When she opened her
   mouth to scream, a cloth was stuffed into it, cutting off
   her cry. She struggled to escape, but could not keep another
   cloth from being tied over her eyes. She was shoved to the
   ground. A sharp pain from her right knee raced up her leg,
   and she moaned. Those same hands pulled her up and
   forward. Where were they taking her? She tried to lash
   out with her feet, but hit nothing. Her arms were wrenched
   back around the full base of a tree and her wrists bound.
   Footsteps faded into the distance. She might be alone,
   or there might be others still here. She heard the chanting
   begin again, but no closer than before. What was going
   on? Why had someone ambushed her and left her here?
   Her anger and frustration escalated into terror as
   coolness oozed up from the damp ground and soaked her
   dress. She tried to wiggle into a more comfortable position,
   but each motion added to the ache burning across her
   shoulders and the anguish of her knee. Her jaw hurt from
   the gag. She leaned her head back against the rough trunk.
   Whoever had bound her had known well how to keep her
   from escaping.
   The chanting voices, speaking some language she did
   not recognize, became more feverish. The music leaped
   through the trees like a stag. A lone voice—a man’s voice—
   could be heard over the others. Then it was silent.
   Completely and frighteningly silent. Whatever was
   happening must be over. Bushes rustled, and she tensed.
   No one came near. Was she going to be left here?
   The crack of a single branch reverberated through the
   night like thunder. A broad hand gripped her right shoulder,
   fingers digging painfully beneath it. When those same
   fingers began to undo the buttons on her dress’ modest
   collar, she forgot the agony. Her cries came out as a muffled
   moan. Again she tried to kick at someone. Again her feet
   found nothing.
   When she pressed her chin to her chest, the only way
   she could halt those fingers, her face was grasped and her
   head pushed back into the tree. The fingers continued to
   loosen the buttons, one very slowly after another. Her
   almost numb hands tried to clench behind the tree, but the
   motion was no longer possible.
   She recoiled when the fingers brushed her breast,
   sickened by what had been so luscious when Simon
   touched her there. One finger slipped beneath her gaping
   gown, and she tried to press so far back against the tree
   she could put space between her and that touch.
   It lifted her necklace from under her dress. No! No
   one must be allowed to steal her necklace. The gold would
   be valuable to a thief, but she prized it as her only
   connection to Jaddeh and the life she had lost. The pendant
   dropped back against her, and she gasped. If she was not
   about to be robbed, then what was happening here?
   “It is Thoth, I see,” came a man’s voice close to her
   right ear.
   She kicked in that direction, but it was as useless as
   before.
   “Sit still,” he hissed like a giant serpent. “Never come
   here again, woman, or you will be the next to face the
   wrath of the god.”
   She wanted to ask what he meant, but moaned as her
   arms were released. They fell heavily to her sides. She
   tried to make her deadened fingers work so she could pull
   the gag away. Dropping it to the ground, she coughed as
   she drew in a breath. A hand clapped over her mouth.
   “Make a sound, and you will die now.”
   She nodded, fearing he would do just as he threatened.
   His hand lifted from her lips. Struggling to untie the cloth
   over her eyes, she drew in a steadying breath. She began
   to cough and cough.
   Darcy looked around her. She was alone. Who was
   the man who had spoken to her? His snakelike whisper
   had distorted his voice so much she doubted she would
   recognize his real one. He had spoken of a god. Was some
   sort of pagan cult using this wood for their ceremonies?
   Rising cautiously, she swayed. She grasped the tree
   as she struggled to stay on her feet, then retched when
   everything seemed to whirl around her. Pushing herself
   away from the tree, she lurched through the woods, wanting
   to find the quickest way back to Rosewood Hall and safety.
   She entered a clearing. It was not the one she had found
   before. She choked back her horror when she stared at the
   stamped-down grass. She had blundered into the place
   where the ritual had been held. In the clearing’s center
   was a stone table long enough for her to lie on. It was
   shadowed by overhanging branches. Some bits of a mineral
   encrusted in the stone sparkled in the evaporating
   moonlight.
   She had to leave here before one of them came back.
   Gathering up her dress and cloak as high as she could, she
   ran. Her weak legs failed her. She threw out her hands to
   catch herself as she fell. Her cheek scraped the stone table.
   Darcy shuddered and drew her hands away from the
   cold stone. 
Something was wet on her fingers, and her
   stomach rose in disgust.
   Blood!
   She wiped her hands on the grass. Edging away from
   the stone table, she pushed herself up and fought not to be
   ill when she saw a dead cat on top of the stone. Its throat
   had been slit.
   You will be the next to face the wrath of the god. The
   man’s strange whisper echoed through her head. Now—
   as she stared at the dead cat—she understood what he
   meant.
   Twelve
   Darcy’s side ached as she reeled across the uneven
   ground toward Rosewood Hall. Pressing her hand to her
   ribs, she stumbled forward. She wanted to believe what
   she had just experienced was nothing more than a horrible
   nightmare.
   But how could it have been a fantasy? It had been
   real, appallingly real.
   The black bulk of Rosewood Hall appeared out of the
   maze’s shadow. She never had been so grateful to see a
   house. She slowed to a rapid walk, her breath puffing
   loudly. Her right knee hurt more on each limping step.
   She began to button her dress, a formidable task because
   her fingers trembled so violently she could barely grasp
   each small button.
   Once she told Simon what she had seen and heard, he
   would send for the constable. The man with the snakevoice
   would be punished. Then—only then—could she
   feel safe again.
   Long fingers closed around her neck. She screamed
   and pulled away. Her arm was seized as it had been in the
   woods. She screamed as she was whirled about by a
   strange, half-human being. The body belonged to a man,
   yet its head was an odd shape she could not see well in the
   dark. But she saw enough to know it was not human.
   Victorious laughter grated in her ears. “The hunter
   finds its prey,” came the horrible voice.
   “No!” she shrieked. Terror gave her the strength to
   break his hold on her arm. She pulled off her torn cloak
   and threw it over his head. Then she ran toward sanctuary
   of Rosewood Hall.
   Behind her, she heard a snarled curse and harsh
   breathing as the creature chased after her. Her frantic
   heartbeat filled her ears. Her right slipper flew off. She
   did not slow. Wincing when she stepped on a sharp pebble,
   she hoped she could run all the way to Rosewood Hall
   before the beast caught her. She cut a twisting path through
   the rose beds, and the thorns snagged at her gown. Tearing
   the satin away, she did not care if she left bits of cloth in
   her wake.
   She ran up the steps to the upper terrace and across it.
   She grasped the knob of the French door opening into the
   library. Throwing it open, she rushed inside. She struck
   someone and screamed as long fingers grasped her arms.
   Had the creature gotten into Rosewood Hall?
   “What in the blazes—?”
   Darcy’s head snapped up. The single lamp burning in
   the library glistened off silver-white hair. Hastings!
   A door crashed against a wall, and she heard shouts.
   Simon! She was not sure if she shouted that aloud or only
   in her mind.
   He whirled her out of his father’s grasp, but she pulled
   away from him and ran back to the glass door. She looked
   out across the garden. It was empty. Where was the
   creature?
   “Darcy, was that your scream?”
   At Simon’s question, Darcy threw her arms around
   his shoulders and pressed her face to his shoulder, not
   caring if her outrageous actions could cost her this position
   and any future ones. She needed to be held by someone
   who was wholly human.
   “Put your arms around me,” she whispered. “Please.”
   They curved around her. She realized how hard she
   was quivering when his arms were still, steel bars against
   her back.
   “Darcy, what’s wrong?” he asked more softly.
   “It was horrible.”
   “What?” He drew her back a step and frowned. “What
   happened to you?”
   She looked down as he did to see the rips in the ruffles
   along her skirt. Dirt and leaves stained the front. The toes
   on her right foot were visible through her torn stocking.
   Her left slipper was wet and filthy.
   Simon lifted one arm off his shoulder and stared at
   the swollen red streaks where the rope had cut into her
   wrists. Tilting her hand, he ran his finger along her
   bloodstained one. “Is this blood?”
   “Blood?” choked his father.
   Looking at the older man, Darcy saw that the footman
   she had taken with her into the garden stood next to him.
   Quietly, she said, “Yes.”
   “Where did it come from?”
   She started to reply but gasped when renewed pain
   sliced through her right knee.
   Simon lifted her into his arms. “Father, I think Darcy
   should rest after what appears to be a harrowing
   adventure.”
   “Take her up to her room.” Hastings’ face creased into
   a smile, and she could not hide her shock that he could
   find anything at all amusing about this. “I shall ring for
   Mrs. Pollock to join you.”
   “Excellent.”
   Darcy added, “Thank you.”
   “At least you didn’t lose your pendant,” Hastings said,
   lifting the golden rectangle.
   With a gasp, she looked down at her gaping dress.
   She had forgotten to finish rebuttoning it when she thought
   she was safe in the garden. Stuffing the Thoth pendant
   back beneath her open collar, she held her dress closed.
   Simon said nothing, and she could not guess what he
   was thinking. Although his body was rigid with tension,
   she again rested her head on his shoulder while he carried
   her to her rooms. She spoke only when he headed directly
   to her bedroom.
   “Simon, I think it would be best if you put me on the
   settee in my sitting room.”
   Doing so, he closed the door. She stared at what he
   was wearing. His open-necked shirt was tucked into black
   riding breeches, a very enticing sight, but she stared at his
   boots. They were soaked. Not from her gown, because
   she could see where the hem had swept drops off his boots.
   Then she looked at his hands. The day of her arrival,
   she had noticed his long, artistic fingers. Were they as long
   as the creature’s? She was no longer sure what she had
   seen in the dark wood.
   “Did you go outside, too?” she asked cautiously.
   “Outside?” He glanced down at his boots, then sat
   beside her. “Yes, I did go outside. When a footman came
   to me all upset that you’d asked him to check something
   by the woods, I went out to see if you were on the terrace
   and then searched the upper garden. When I saw a lamp
   lit up here in your room, I guessed you had returned
   already.”
   “A lamp in my room?” She grimaced as she sat
   straighter. “I always leave a lamp on here. Did you see
   anything interesting when you were outside?”
>
   He frowned. “Why are you interrogating me? Do you
   hope to divert me so I won’t remember you haven’t
   answered my questions about what has happened to you?”
   He grasped her hand and held it up so the bloodstains were
   in front of her eyes. “About this?”
   Darcy wanted to share with him every bit of the horror
   that had surrounded her and to beg him to find a way to
   keep that thing away from her. But, if he knew about the
   creature already . . . Could he be part of that cult chanting
   beneath the moon before leaving the cat’s corpse in the
   wood?
   “I fear I jabbed myself on the roses when I went past
   them,” she said, cradling her bloodied hand in her other
   one. She had not guessed lying could become so easy. If
   she had learned to avoid the truth while at Miss Mumsey’s
   and Kincaid Fells, she would have had an easier time.
   “You should be more careful. Wandering about at night
   can be very dangerous.”
   “I found that out.” She bit her lower lip, wanting to
   ask him to assure her he had not been part of the madness.
   “It seems you were more careful during your walk.”
   “I know these gardens well.” His frown did not lessen.
   “Why did you have a footman checking something by the
   woods?”
   “The lights were near there.”
   “Darcy, will you stop with that nonsense? It—”
   The door opened, and Mrs. Pollock bustled in. Her
   eyes widened when she saw Darcy’s dishevelment. “Miss
   Kincaid, what happened to you?”
   “She was out in the woods,” Simon replied sharply
   before she could answer.
   “Tonight?” The housekeeper’s face became as ashen
   as the footman’s when Darcy had asked him to help her.
   “You went into the woods tonight?”
   “Chasing mysterious lights.” He grumbled something
   more under his breath, then added, “Mrs. Pollock, she
   seems to have hurt her leg. Please tend to it right away.”
   “Yes, of course.” She gulped on each word as if she
   found it difficult to swallow. “If you’ll excuse us, sir, I
   shall tend to her.”
   He reached for the doorknob, but paused when Darcy
   said, “Don’t leave, Simon.”
   “Mrs. Pollock must tend to your leg.”
   “If you’ll be a gentleman and not watch . . .”
   “You ask much of a man.” He walked to where she
   
 
 Ferguson, J. A. - Call Back Yesterday.txt Page 20