full of gardening ideas for their new home.
It had been Sandra who had handled the sell, but she wouldnât touch the house again. Sandraâs imagination was a little too thorough to allow her to go back to the place where her clients were slaughtered.
Abbie had been given the job because she specialized in the hard-to-sell. Hadnât she sold that monstrous rundown Victorian to that young couple who wanted to fix it up, and that awful filthy Peterson house? Why, she had spent her days off cleaning it out so it would sell, and it had sold, for more than they expected. And Abbie was determined that she would sell this house as well.
She admitted that mass murder was a very black mark against a house. And mass murder with an official cause of demon possession was about as black a mark as any.
The house had been exorcised, but even Abbie, who was no psychic, could feel it. Evil was here like a stain that wouldnât come completely up. And if the second owners of this house fell to demons, then Abbie and her Realtor company would be liable. So Abbie would see that the house was cleansed correctly. It would be as pure and lily-white as a virgin at her wedding. It would have to be.
The real problem was that the newspapers had made a horrendous scandal of it all. There wasnât a soul for miles around that didnât know about it. And any prospective buyer would have to be told. No, Abbie would not try to keep it a secret from buyers, but at the same time she wouldnât volunteer the full information too early in the sales pitch either.
She hesitated outside the door and said half aloud, âCome on, itâs just a house. Thereâs nothing in there to hurt you.â The words rang hollow somehow, but she put the key in the lock and the door swung inward.
It looked so much like all the other houses that it startled her. Somehow she had thought that there would be a difference. Something to mark it apart from any other house. But the living room was small with the extra vaulted ceiling and brick fireplace. The carpet had been a beige-tan color that went with almost any décor. Sheâd seen pictures of the room before. There was bare subflooring, stretching naked and unfinished.
The flooring was discolored, pale and faded, almost like a coffee stain, but it covered a huge area. Here was where they had found Marion Garner. The papers said she had been stabbed over twenty times with a butcher knife.
New carpeting would hide the stain.
The afternoon sunlight streamed in the west-facing window and illuminated a hole in the wall. It was about the size of a fist and stood like a gaping reminder in the center of the off-white wall. As she walked closer, Abbie could see splatters along the wall. The cleanup crew usually got up all the visible mess. This looked like they hadnât even tried. Abbie would demand that they either finish the job, or give back some of the deposit.
The stains were pale brown shadows of their former selves, but no family would move in with such stains. New paint, new carpeting; the price of the house would need to go up. And Abbie wasnât sure she could get anyone to pay the original price.
She spoke softly to herself, âNow what kind of defeatist talk is that? You will sell this house.â And she would, one way or another.
The kitchen/dining room area was cheerful with its skylight and back door. There was a smudge on the white door near the knob but not on it. Abbie stooped to examine it and quickly straightened. She wasnât sure if the cleanup crew had missed it or just left it. Maybe it was time to hire a new cleaning crew. Nothing excused leaving this behind.
It was a tiny handprint made of dried blood. It had to belong to the little boy; he had been almost five. Had he come running in here to escape? Had he tried to open the door and failed?
Abbie leaned over the sink and opened the kitchen window. It seemed stuffy in here suddenly. The cool spring
J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper