The campsite was empty, destroyed by the storm. Jules’s chaotic mess of belongings was scattered on the ground covered in mud, along with branches taken down by the wind. Isabelle noticed the pallets of plants were missing.
Luke walked across the wet ground, awed by the amount of fungus. “This stuff is everywhere.” He wandered over to the collapsed tent, sidestepping pieces of scrap metal and bits of broken glass. He turned back to the woods and stared between the trees. “Where do you think they’ve gone?”
“Maybe they’re loading the boat.” Isabelle noticed the heavy drag marks of pallets and lines of a wheelbarrow leading to the woods.
“Oh shit!” Luke shouted, staring at something behind the tent.
Isabelle approached the area and saw a line of corpses lying chest-down in the dirt. Their bodies were flat and deflated in the center and their flesh was well preserved, mottled blue and hard as pottery. The heads were turned sideways and Isabelle could see their taut skin pulled back in a smile over protruding yellow teeth. She threw a hand to her mouth and unconsciously did a quick scan to make sure Sean was not among them. He wasn’t, and she stepped closer.
Luke whispered, “Jesus. Where did they come from?”
She shook her head.
“You think George did this?”
“No. He could never…” She moved closer. “They look so young.”
Each of the skulls had been partially removed, so the brain was exposed. The frontal lobes were black and each body had a thick black stripe running down the spine. The lines branched out into patterns that ran down the arms and legs like spiderwebs.
“What are those markings?” Luke asked, bending closer.
Isabelle shook her head. Then she scrutinized one of the bodies and stepped back. “It’s the fungus.” She pondered the webbing across the back and extremities and realized there was a familiar pattern. It was as if the fungus were following the circulatory system. “Do you see the branching? It looks to be following their veins and arteries.”
“No,” Luke said. “It’s concentrated at the brain and spine, but scarce at the heart and lungs. I’d say it’s following the nervous system.” He squatted on his heels and scanned the row of corpses. “There’s nine of them.”
“Maybe more under the tent. Help me pull it back.” Together they lifted the canvas, heavy with rain and mud, and dragged it away from the bodies.
Isabelle let out a cry of shock.
Ginny lay on the ground, dead. She was resting on her side in the fetal position. She looked small and featherlight as a child in a wet blouse and pants, her chin raised too far back as if her neck were broken. Her skull had been split. Her left hand was slightly raised, and tangled in her bloody, clenched fist was a gold chain. At the end of the chain, a diamond lay in the dirt.
Luke turned away and felt the last bit of acid rise to his throat. He’d already seen an image of the old woman dying, but reality was far worse. “Let’s go. Please.”
Isabelle looked at the trees with a scornful expression.
“Silent witnesses,” she whispered. “I wonder.”
“Can we go?”
“Yes.” She unconsciously rubbed her hands on her jacket, wiping away the foulness of the place. “We have to get off this island now. Let’s check the house once more for Sean and grab a few supplies.”
“What if Jules already took the boat?”
“That would be a good thing. But I’m pretty sure he hasn’t left the island.”
“How do you know?”
“Because we’re still alive.”
* * *
Sean was in the library when Isabelle and Luke returned to the house. He stood conspicuously in the middle of the room, whimpering, with a guilty expression on his face. Dark blood splattered his face and naked chest. It soaked his shorts and tennis shoes.
Isabelle was speechless.
Luke flew into a rage, shoving his brother against the wall of books. Sean caught his balance but didn’t fight back, even as Luke shoved him again and again, and an avalanche of books fell on top of them.
“Stop it,” Isabelle shouted and pulled Luke by the arm.
Sean sniffed and wiped his nose.
Luke punched him in the jaw and he fell on the floor.
“You killed her,” Luke yelled, pointing a hard finger. “You hated her and you killed her. That’s her blood on you.” He was crying. “That’s her blood!”
Sean fled from the room, his legs flailing spastically, and Isabelle ran to Luke.
He pushed her away. “I’m going to kill him.”
“No, no, he didn’t do it.”
“Then who did!”
Isabelle reached the breaking point. “I don’t know! Oh God, I don’t know what’s happening, Luke. I don’t know what kind of evil’s taken hold of your brother or Jules or this island, but I do know Sean’s not a killer. Something’s controlling their minds. You saw Ginny dead before it happened. I saw my father jump off the cliffs yesterday. It’s not just Sean.”
He shook his head.
“We’ve got to keep it together, okay?”
“How can we?” he replied. “Nothing makes sense anymore. It’s like Beecher was right. Maybe those plants are messing with our heads.”
“Yes, that’s it,” she said. “Perhaps it’s the plants.”
“You believe that? They want to kill us?” His eyes closed for a moment. “Monica said the same thing.”
“It sounds crazy, I know, but what other explanation could there be? Plants have been evolving defenses against animals for millions of years. Maybe it has something to do with that fungus; somehow they can reach into our minds. I think it’s possible that they could have turned my father’s work, his lifelong dream, into a way of destroying us.”
“He had no right to do that! I hate him.”
“I know how you feel. But I don’t think he meant for this to happen. He paid for that mistake with his life.”
“Good.” Luke wiped his face and stared at her, helpless. “So what do they want? Dr. Beecher said they had a message.”
She shrugged. “I’m not sure, but my father left a notebook, some kind of journal. Jules said it explained the whole experiment. There were maps showing a long trip George was planning to take. I think he was going to spread the fungus all over the world. Then at some point he realized they were controlling his mind, making him do unspeakable things, so he jumped off the cliffs to stop them.”
“Idiot. That didn’t stop them at all. He should have called the police, or told that lawyer what was going on. I mean, he must have known other people would come here. You’d think he’d leave some kind of warning.”
Isabelle’s eyes widened. She pressed a hand to her forehead and pulled the riddle from her back pocket. It was crumpled and damp. “Maybe he was trying to warn us. Give us some way to protect ourselves from the plants on the island.” She read from the paper. “‘Open The Book to find a link. The goddess Hanus, protector of all who think.’”
Luke scoffed, looking at the books that fell on the floor and hundreds of others on the shelves. “There’s like two thousand books in this house.”
Isabelle didn’t answer for a moment. Her gaze was cloudy and she was nodding. “No. There was only one book to him.”
* * *
Isabelle picked through the ruins in the lab until she found a thick book covered in brown leather. She carried the almanac on botany to the desk and spread it open. “To my father, this really was The Book .”
It was an alphabetic listing of species and she flipped to H . Her finger slid down the pages of old-fashioned type and ink sketches.
“Is there a species called Hanus?” Luke asked.
She scanned the names with her finger and paused on Helianthus annuus. She whispered, “Hanus.”
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