Gina Ranalli - House of Fallen Trees

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“Two men have the carcass.” These words, heard over a crackling telephone line, change writer Karen Lewis’s life for the worse. Months earlier, her brother went missing in the small rural town of Fallen Trees, Washington. And now she finds out he willed his half of a bizarre bed and breakfast to her. “Two men have the carcass.” Is this ominous phrase enough to draw her into the mystery of Fallen Trees? Is the answer to her brother’s disappearance located there? Or is it just a trap, something designed to draw her into a nightmare world and break her sanity? What horror awaits Karen in the House of Fallen Trees?

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“Jesus,” Karen said. “The poor thing.”

“Yeah, I tried to catch her a couple times myself, but no go. I don’t think she likes men much and I can’t say I blame her.”

“And Dusty just lives out here? How does she eat?”

“I guess she must hunt. Not sure,” Saul answered. “I suppose she might trek into town at night, get into trash cans and whatnot, but nobody ever sees her down there anymore.”

Karen watched the dog as it kept pace with them, keeping a safe distance. She thought Dusty definitely had an air about her — she seemed ready to bolt at the slightest hint of danger.

“One time,” Saul went on, “I was out in the woods and she damn near attacked me.”

“Really?” Karen asked. “She seems so timid.”

“She is. Problem was, some ruffian from in town must have had his way with her and then left her high and dry.” She looked at him, confused. Saul laughed. “She had a litter of pups. I was just wandering around like I do, minding my own business, and I got too close to where she’d hid ‘em. Get this — they were inside a hollowed out log.”

“Wow.” Karen was impressed. “Is that where she lived?”

He shrugged. “I guess it’s where she slept at the time. Eventually, when they were old enough, I gathered ‘em up and brought them into Indigo Bend with me. Found ‘em good homes.” Apparently Saul was able to read Karen’s face quite well by now because he quickly followed up with, “It was for the best. Can’t have a whole litter running around these woods. Something would have eaten them sooner or later. Not to mention they would have bred like rabbits, making the situation even worse.”

She thought about that, then asked, “But what about Dusty? Didn’t she wonder where her babies went?”

Saul smiled sadly. “I’m sure she did for a while. Not a lot you can do about that though.”

Karen sighed. “She must have been worried sick. Thinking that a cougar or something got them.”

“Okay,” Rory cut in. “Enough, you two. Animals don’t have the same emotions as people. You don’t have to get all teary eyed about her feelings .”

Neither Saul nor Karen responded to this remark but they exchanged a knowing glance that said, shows what he knows. After a few minutes, the dog fell back, but continued to trail behind them for the rest of their journey. It wasn’t until they came into the clearing where the house was that she disappeared for destinations unknown. The house itself was a sight to behold.

Karen’s breath caught in her chest when they stepped out of the brush and there it was, looming before them like the fossil of some prehistoric colossal beast. It seemed hugely out of place here in a vast green forest, the way London Bridge must have looked in the middle of the desert.

“Home sweet home,” Rory smiled. “Not what you were expecting?”

“It’s…” Karen started. “It’s a ship.”

“Amazing, huh? The guy who built it was a captain and known to be quite eccentric.”

The three of them moved forward across a long grown-over and mostly dissolved circular driveway, Karen with her head back, gawking up at the stern.

“Amazing is one way to put it,” she agreed. “It looks like a real ship.”

“From the outside, it is a real ship,” Rory agreed. “But there are only a few rooms inside where the shape of the house is obvious.”

Karen nodded, mute.

“The guy’s name was Captain Frank Storm. Legend has it he was a pirate.”

At this, she had to laugh. “In 1899 America? And people actually believe that?”

“I don’t know if people believe it,” Rory said. “But I’m pretty sure they don’t disbelieve it either.”

“Interesting,” Karen said. “And Frank Storm is a great character name. Surely it’s made up.”

Neither man responded, already climbing up the rickety steps to the wide wraparound porch, which was built to look like a ship’s deck, the railings finely scrolled and weathered as if they’d spent many years at sea; water, wind, and sun sanding them down to a velvety softness.

Saul saw her admiring the railings. “We’re gonna keep all that. Beautiful, huh?”

“Very.”

Unlocking the front door, Rory stepped aside, making a grand gesture with his hand. “All aboard.”

Karen stepped over the threshold first, into darkness that was almost, though not quite, complete.

“Light switch on the right,” Rory said, coming up behind her.

She reached out, touching the wall with her fingers until they found the old-fashioned switch with two copper buttons. She had to push the top button hard to get it to depress and then the front room filled with an orangey glow, as if it had been lit suddenly by candles rather than electric lights.

Moving into the room, Karen shivered. “A little drafty,” she said, more to herself than to anyone else. The temperature change was odd though, as it felt colder inside than it had outside.

Rory and Saul followed her in and Saul closed the door behind them. All three of them immediately set the bags they’d been lugging over their shoulders on the hardwood floor with sounds of relief.

“You should’ve seen it when I had to bring tools up here,” Saul told her cheerfully. “Just about broke my damn back.”

The foyer they were in was a relatively small room, coat racks hanging from one wall, a basket in the corner containing a single twisted mahogany cane and a black umbrella, a rubber mat on the floor beside it, most likely the place where Frank Storm had placed his boots after coming in from particularly wet or muddy adventures.

“Is all this original?” Karen asked. It certainly looked original.

“This stuff is, yeah,” Rory said. “The place came furnished, if you can believe that. Some of the stuff was crap though and we carted a lot of it out into the little barn at the back of the property.”

“Stable,” Saul corrected him.

“Whatever. But Sean and I really wanted to salvage as much of the Captain’s stuff as we could, thinking it would lend an air of authenticity to the B&B.”

“Do you actually get tourists up here?” Karen asked.

His face fell, as if this was a sore subject with him. “Not many at this point, but that’s because Fallen Trees doesn’t have much to offer yet. I’m working on that.”

“Rory really will own Fallen Trees when all is said and done,” Saul said, giving Rory a pat on the back. “He’s a regular entrepreneur.”

Karen smiled. “Very impressive.”

“Yeah, well, we’ll see,” Rory said. “Let me show you the rest of the place.”

CHAPTER TEN

The most extraordinary feature of the Captain’s bedroom was not the huge, wrap-around windows stretching from floor to ceiling. Nor was it the antique Persian rug decorating the floor, currently unprotected though Karen had no idea why. Nor did she care. Her attention was instead fixed on the mural painted on the ceiling above the historic four-poster bed.

“It’s astounding,” she said quietly, as though she’d entered a church and did not wish to disturb the parishioners.

“Yes, it is,” Rory agreed, standing beside her, his head bent back, his eyes shining with pride. “It’s his wife.”

“He must have been heartbroken to lose her,” Karen said. “To paint her portrait on the ceiling above his bed. I’ve never heard of such a thing.”

“It may have been painted before her death,” Rory told her. “We’re not sure yet.”

“Hmm.” Karen looked down at the large bed. It looked inviting, with its over-sized pillows and old-fashioned blue and white patchwork quilt. “May I?”

“Be my guest.” Rory smiled.

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