The Dead Room. Heather Graham
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He extended a hand to Alice, as well, thanking her sincerely. She flushed and stuttered. “Y-you’re very welcome. I loved Genevieve. We all did. Do, I mean.”
“Yes, and now we all need to get back to work,” Manny said.
Joe gave Alice a wink, and she smiled broadly. He left.
He had his cell phone out and was calling Robert Adair before he even left the building. Luck was with him. He didn’t lose his signal in the elevator, and Robert answered immediately.
“I need to talk to you about Genevieve O’Brien and the missing prostitutes,” he said.
“What?” Robert said.
“I said—”
“No, I heard you. But…Genevieve wasn’t a prostitute.”
“I know. Humor me,” Joe said, quite sure that Robert had made the same connection he had but wasn’t about to give anything away.
“All right. I’m at the site. Can you meet me here?”
“What site?”
“What do you mean, what site? The new dig site. The Big New York Dig, they’re calling it.” Robert was silent for a second, then added, “Down by Hastings House.”
“I’ll be there in a few,” Joe said, and hung up.
Leslie was filthy, but she barely noticed and certainly didn’t care. She was alive with the thrill of discovery that had been part of her chosen vocation from the very beginning. This place was an archaeological gold mine.
In a matter of hours they had laid out their grid, and Laymon had taken on a number of professionals, using all the people from the museum who were already involved and twenty grad students from local universities. People were down on their knees with small trowels and delicate brushes, while heavy machinery stood silently by. Thus far, they had found shoe buckles, belt buckles and fragments of jewelry.
Leslie was sure there would be lots more.
At first she hadn’t known why she was drawn to a particular section of the grid. But then, as she dug and then dusted, she had looked up…
And seen the child.
She must have been about seven. She was hugging a handmade, unbleached muslin doll. Her hair was in a single braid. She was very thin, and her legs were slightly bowed. Rickets, Leslie thought. She had stared at the child for several seconds before she realized she was seeing someone none of the others could.
A ghost child.
She smiled, hoping no one noticed as she whispered, “Hello.”
The little girl had huge brown eyes. She was dressed in a calico print dress and a spotless apron. She hugged the doll more tightly and mouthed back, “Hello. You can see me?”
“Yes.”
“What did you say, Leslie?” Brad, just a few feet away but luckily with his back to her, asked.
“Uh, nothing. How are you doing?”
“Fine,” he replied, then turned back to his work.
Leslie smiled at the child again. “What’s your name?”
“Mary.”
“Beautiful name,” Leslie said.
“What did you say?” Brad demanded again.
“Nothing.”
“You’re talking to yourself again,” Brad said with a sigh, staring at her.
“I’m just singing. It passes the time.”
“Oh. Well…you can’t carry a tune, you know.”
“Thanks. I’ll avoid karaoke clubs, then.”
He made a grunting sound of irritation, rolled his eyes and went back to work.
She was afraid that Mary would be gone, but the ghostly child had remained. She was grinning. “I’m sure you sing just fine, miss.”
“Thank you.” She hesitated. “Are you lost?”
“I don’t know where my mother is.”
“Was she…sick?”
The little girl nodded gravely.
“And were you sick, too?”
She nodded and looked troubled. “I think my mother died. I think I came here with my father when she died. But I can’t find her now.”
“Do you think that her grave was here…right here, where I am now?”
The girl pointed a few feet away.
“I’ll find her. When I do, Mary, they’ll take her away for a bit. But…I’ll find you, too. And I’ll make sure, in the end, that they keep you together.” She took a deep breath. “Mary…you know that you’re…”
“I’m dead. Yes, I know. I just want my mother.”
Despite herself and everything she knew, Leslie felt a terrible chill. The sun was bright. It was a beautiful day. She was glad she was surrounded by people. Real live people.
Brad was standing, dusting his hands on his khakis.
She made a face at him. “I think I’m going to move right over there. Want to give me a hand? We’ll need to dig a bit.”
“How do you know?”
“A hunch. Instinct. I don’t know. But I want to try over there.”
He looked both skeptical and annoyed, but he joined her nonetheless.
They began to work in silence. Leslie looked up, intending to smile and reassure the child again, but the little girl was gone.
She didn’t know how long she worked, she was so absorbed in what she was doing. And then, at last, she hit a fragment of wood.
“Brad.”
“What?”
“Look.” She dusted the piece and handed it to him. “Coffin?” she asked softly.
“Let’s keep going.”
A minute later he let out a hoarse cry. He’d come across a piece so big it could actually be termed a board.
“We’re on it,” Leslie murmured.
“Delicately,