Arc II, Chapter 91: Sunflowers
I looked Benny right in the face. Underneath the grease, he had one of those cherub faces that looked the best when it was smiling. His thinning hair was curly but well-kept. Though he kept casting glances back at the green sedan that had caused him so much pain, he was polite and attentive and seemed, to the best of my understanding, very concerned about the missing child.
“Yeah, it was me and my boy,” he said as Kimberly held the microphone in his face. “We’ve seen that girl coming around here a lot. She likes looking at the farms and the plants and the trees in the fields. Nice girl, never done anything wrong. And on this day, I remember she looked upset. That’s what I told the cops. Normally, she’s smiling and skipping like the sun is her best friend, but that day, she was sad, and I could see she had been crying. I wish I had called out to her to see what was wrong. I had no way of knowing, you understand,” Benny started to say before the words caught in his throat. He almost got caught up in his emotions. His brow was heavy, and his eyes were clear due to a thin covering of tears.
“And this was three days ago?” Kimberly said.
“Right.”
“Yes, ma’am. Three days. Me and the boy been out in the woods and the fields looking for her. We’ve been doing our part. She was headed back toward town. I just don’t know what could have happened to her.”
“So you’ve heard it here, a tragedy in Eastern Carousel. Tamara Cano remains missing. If you have any information on the missing girl, please call the Sheriff’s Department number on your screen,” Kimberly said to the camera. “Citizens of Eastern Carousel like Mr. Benjamin Harless are out in droves searching for the missing girl, and hope remains high that she will be found and returned to her mother. This is Kimberly Madison with Carousel News 9.”
“And we’re clear,” I said. I wasn’t actually sure if news producers were supposed to say “cut” or not, but I vaguely remembered someone saying something like “and we’re clear” when I was watching April O’Neil do a news report in a Ninja Turtles movie.
I didn’t even know if that film was being broadcast. Nick took care of everything. I just wore headphones and looked intense to try and seem like I was working.
~-~
“How did I do?” Benny asked earnestly. “You think this is going to help find that girl? Tamara used to come around. She used to play with my son, Rustle. I don’t know what I’m going to tell him if something’s happened to her.”
“Your son?” Kimberly asked. “He knows Tamara? Is there a chance that we’ll get to meet him?”
“I suppose that’d be all right, but you gotta know he… he had a hard life before he came to us, and he don’t talk. But he can understand you, and he’s real smart. The thing is, he gets nervous around some people, so if he don’t want to talk to you, it ain’t gonna happen. Hope you understand.”
“I totally understand,” Kimberly said. “I’d just like to see if maybe he has something to say… in his own way.”
We were still On-Screen, so we didn’t have the opportunity to talk about anything with each other, but things were moving forward at a very organic and slow pace, so I felt comfortable.
Kimberly was in her element. While she didn’t have the natural warmth of Anna, she was good at talking to people and knew all the right places to sigh and look sad. That was a skill in and of itself.
“Let me do the talking,” she said as Benny led us around to the other side of his shop.
“You realize you aren’t the only one with… moxie, right?” I said.
“I realize,” she answered.
As we rounded the shop, my jaw dropped at the reveal of one of the most beautiful and intricate gardens I had ever seen. It was late fall, so most of what was still green were the plants that held squashes, pumpkins, and corn along with as many different kinds and colors of sunflowers as I had ever seen.
“This is wonderful,” Kimberly said.
“Well, thank you,” Benny answered. “But I can’t take credit; that’d be my wife and my boy.”
As soon as he mentioned them, I saw them out in the garden. His son was small, but if I were to guess, he must have been around ten years old.
As I watched the sun shining off his face, he was pulling a large worm or perhaps a caterpillar off one of the sunflowers. He looked at the worm in awe and wonder and dropped it into an old coffee can as he continued to search for more worms.
On the red wallpaper, his name was Rustle, not Russell, but Rustle as in what leaves do in the wind. The woman next to him noticed us as we arrived. Her name was Rose Harless. Both of them were NPCs.
Rose gave new meaning to the term flower child. She was wearing a tiara of white flowers and a sundress that I thought only the fae were known to adorn. She was barefoot and her hair was long and flowing. She looked at Rustle like he was the sun to her flower.
From the way Benny had talked, Rustle was not biologically related to them but was adopted. To look at him, that sounded accurate. The Harlesses had dark hair and Mediterranean features, whereas Rustle had pale skin and hair so fine it was almost white.
Benny went over to his wife to discuss the arrangement. I couldn’t tell what they were saying, but she was clearly hesitant. Despite this, she relented. She grabbed Rustle by the hand, and she and Benny led him back to Kimberly and me.
“No cameras,” Rose said. “And I don’t know if Benny told you this, but if Rustle doesn’t like you, there’s no talking to him. That’s that.”
“Absolutely,” Kimberly said. She knelt down to around Rustle’s height and said, “How about it, buddy? Do you think you could talk to me about your friend Tamara? I’m just trying to find her, is all.”
Rustle got close to Kimberly and looked her in the eye. Quietly, I saw an eerie intelligence in his eyes. They were piercing dark—so dark I couldn’t find his pupil. After a moment of intensity, Rustle smiled. He looked back at his mother and nodded. Then he looked at me and then back at his mother.
“Well, all right then,” Rose said. “Go put on your baseball cap, honey.”
Rustle listened and went to fetch a small blue and white cap from out in the garden. He placed it on his head and twisted it around so that the bill faced backward. He was a thin and athletic ten-year-old. True to his father’s words, he never spoke, but he definitely communicated in other ways.
“We have a table and chairs out on the deck,” Rose said. “Let me go get some herbal tea.”
She pointed toward a comfortable set of furniture that looked like it had been made by hand. Benny, Rustle, Kimberly, and I found our seats while Rose went to prepare the drinks. As soon as she was gone, Benny turned to us and said, “So, your friend doesn’t do anything to maintain that car, does he?”
“That would be my guess,” I said. “He’s more of a camera guy.”
Benny nodded. “Yeah, I could tell just listening to it running down the street. I don’t know what he’s done to it. Normally, I can tell just like that,” he said as he snapped his fingers, “but we got multiple things happening under that hood. You mark my words—it’s a party of bad maintenance and bad parts, let me tell you.”
“So, how long have you been a mechanic?” I asked.
“Since before I knew the word ‘mechanic,’ I was under hoods busting knuckles. The Harlesses get to work young. Rustle here has been working in the garden since he was real little, haven’t you, buddy?”
Rustle nodded with a smile. He pointed out at the sunflowers and then pointed back to himself.
“What’s that, buddy?” Benny said. “Oh, he’s trying to tell you that he was the one who found the sunflowers. He likes to go tramping through the woods, and he found some sunflower seeds that he planted last year, and then this year, he planted the seeds from those seeds, and now we got ourselves a whole forest of sunflowers.”
“That is so cool,” Kimberly said. “They’re so pretty.”
Rustle beamed.
As I scanned the garden, I saw something that made my heart jump. It was a scarecrow. This one looked like a normal scarecrow with overalls and an old plaid shirt stuffed with straw. It had no gloves and no name tag. The face, though—the face with its buttons and its little sewn-on hat—was the same scarecrow head that I recognized from Benny the Haunted Scarecrow. It was not sun-bleached or threadbare like I remembered, but it was the same one.
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This scarecrow did not fly or cut people’s heads off. It just hung from a little wooden cross, scaring away crows.
~-~
We talked for an hour or so.
“Really, we were just glad that he had found a friend. So many of the children around here can be judgmental. Tamara was different. They had their own little silent language. She would come over here, and they would play in the fields, and she would help Rustle with his work in the garden,” Rose said.
“Rustle has been very upset since we found out she had gone missing,” Benny said. “I don’t know why they didn’t spend time together that day. Normally, she only leaves to get home before dark. I don’t know why she left early that day.”
Rustle sat in his seat and looked down at the table. His bottom lip was firmly tucked in between his teeth as he chewed on it, a nervous gesture.
“I was just wondering,” Kimberly said, “is there someplace that you and Tamara would go? Maybe a clubhouse, a cave, or a special spot that you would go out to in the woods?”
Rustle shook his head.
“We’ve actually been all through the area that they would have gone together,” Benny explained. “They did have some stomping grounds over near the creek and through the forests and the fields out north, but we didn’t find her there. We had a whole search party in that area; no one saw a thing.”
Trying to talk to Rustle was difficult. Part of it was because he was nonverbal; another part was because he just didn’t want to tell us everything, or at least that’s how his mother, Rose, put it. He was a very secretive boy, and that had nothing to do with his not talking.
Rose stared off into the distance, not making eye contact with either of us as she said, “I know my son, and if he knew anything about this girl’s disappearance, he would say something. He’d find a way.”
And so the conversation went on with mostly pleasantries. Kimberly and I hadn’t had a chance to make a plan of attack since we had gotten here. We were just talking and trying to dig further.
As Rustle played in the garden, we continued to talk to Rose. Benny was already waist-deep in Nick’s car, trying to fix all that ailed it.
“I don’t know if this is rude to ask,” Kimberly said, “but why exactly doesn’t he speak? Does he have autism or some sort of learning disability?”
“No, it’s fine to ask,” Rose said. She looked away from Kimberly as she spoke. “He has what the doctors are calling aphasia voluntaria. The fact is, he should be able to speak—that’s what they tell us. The truth is, he came to us when he was four or five years old. We have no idea what happened to him before that. Doctors think maybe he wasn’t exposed to language or, worse, maybe it’s some sort of trauma response. One doctor said it was a symptom of severe anxiety. He was tested for all sorts of things like brain damage and autism, and they all came back negative. The truth is, me and Benny prayed for a child for so long. I don’t care if he ever talks. Benny says there ain’t nothing wrong with him. That some people are just different. I believe it. He is the way he is.”
Kimberly looked at me. If we weren’t On-Screen and if we were actually able to leave, we probably would have continued our search elsewhere, but the fact that we were On-Screen and our car was in pieces meant there was something here for us to learn. There had to be.
“This may be very personal, but when you say he came to you, does that mean you adopted him, or is he a foster child?” Kimberly asked.
Rose wore a blank expression on her face and didn’t meet Kimberly’s eyes. “No, no,” she said. “We found him in the field, naked as the day he was born, covered in mud up to his eyebrows. We don’t know where he came from. He was abandoned. No one claimed him, no one reported him missing. We did everything we could to keep him when no one else tried. Like I said, we had always prayed for a child.”
At that, Rose looked back at Kimberly in the eye and smiled. “Would you like some more tea, dear?”
“I would love that,” Kimberly said. “Thank you so much.”
As Rose went inside the old farmhouse, Kimberly started to lean over and whisper something to me, but before she could, we heard a hollering out in the garden and a screaming that sounded like it was coming from a child.
We were up and out of our seats and running toward the sound before we even had a chance to speak.
As we got closer, we saw what was screaming. It wasn’t a child; it was a rabbit. It was caught inside of a metal trap, the kind that an animal might wander into and then get stuck in—a no-kill trap.
Rustle had picked up the trap and was walking away from the garden while banging on it with a stick. The rabbit screamed and screeched. I had never even heard a rabbit make a noise like that. It was somewhere between a child yelling and a baby screaming.
“What the heck is he doing?” I asked.
He continued walking the cage toward the road, up past the automotive shop. He banged on it loudly and constantly, terrorizing the poor little rabbit inside. When he set the cage down on the ground and opened the trap up, the rabbit bolted out of the cage at a speed most animals will never reach in their lifetime. It was across the road and lost in the thick brush almost immediately.
Kimberly and I were both speechless.
“Oh, don’t look so alarmed,” Benny called from inside his shop. “You gotta scare the animals, or they’ll just come back and eat your crop. Rustle knows that. The only way to protect them is to scare the heck out of them.”
Rustle picked up the trap and looked back at Kimberly and me, then casually walked back toward the garden as if nothing had happened. Kimberly and I looked at each other, unsure of what to make of what we had just seen.
~-~
We were On-Screen and Off-Screen throughout the next few hours as Benny worked on the sedan. He made quick work of it; he identified the problems and fixed them almost immediately.
“Now I’m going to set you up with this for free, and you gotta go out there and you gotta help find that girl,” Benny said as he was finishing up.
“For free?” Kimberly asked.
“Got to do my part,” Benny answered.
While he spoke, I looked back at the car he had been polishing when we had arrived, and he caught me staring.
“Oh, you like that, do you? An Imperial Phantom 1948. A year too old to be the kind that collectors are after, unfortunately, on account of their bad transmissions and brake design. It’s a shame; I love that car. Can’t keep fixing it, though. She’s too pretty to scrap, but Rose is tired of looking at it, tired of me messing with it on the weekends. She said I either had to get it to run or junk it. Really is such a shame.”
“Can’t find a buyer?” I asked.
“Not for the ’48, you can’t. Sure, I got offers for the seats because those were the same as the ’50 and the ’52, which are the real collectors’ items, but I’m not going to just strip the seats out of it, no, no. Ain’t got the heart for it. I got old Tugg Montgomery coming to haul it off. He’s a regular mercenary; ain’t much for fixing them up, but he can tear them down with the best of them. Sad to see. Still shines like new because I take care of my vehicles,” he said, eyeing the green sedan and Nick who stood beside it.
As we stood there, Kimberly noticed that Rustle was staring at her, which she took as an invitation to have a conversation with him that didn’t include his overbearing mother. She walked back past the mechanic shop toward the garden, and I followed.
“Hey, Rustle,” Kimberly said, “Is there something you want to tell me?”
Rustle looked down at the ground and then back up at Kimberly. There was clearly something on his mind.
“You can tell me,” Kimberly said.
Still, Rustle didn’t look like he could trust her, but he did look upset.
“I’ll tell you what,” Kimberly said. “Whatever you have to say to me, I promise I will not judge you, whether it’s good or bad. Do you believe me?”
Rustle looked at her. At that moment, his face took on a more ancient visage, a look of wisdom far beyond his years, a look forged by distrust. He started to walk away and then looked over his shoulder back at Kimberly and me, then continued walking.
We followed.
He led us to the other side of the mechanic shop, where a field of sunflowers with beautiful orange and red petals was planted. They were the only batch like them in the whole garden. He pointed at them. At first, I didn’t know what he was pointing at, but then I realized that he was pointing at ten or so stems that had been cut and their flowers removed.
“Did someone take the flowers?” Kimberly asked.
Rustle nodded his head and then pointed at himself.
“What did you take the flowers for, sweetie?” Kimberly asked.
Rustle didn’t answer, but Kimberly seemed to be connecting dots before I did, and she pulled out a folded-up copy of the missing poster.
“Did you give the flowers to her?” she asked.
Rustle chewed on his bottom lip and stared at the picture of Tamara. I couldn’t read his face.
“Hey, folks,” Benny called from over near the mechanic shop. “We got someone here that would love to speak to you.”
I turned to see Benny walking over to us in his greasy coveralls. Hot on his heels was Dina, dressed not in a dress or skirt like Kimberly or Rose, but in jeans. They weren’t ripped jeans like the ones she normally wore, and her leather jacket was replaced with a brown one with a ridged fabric. I could see that she had an apron tucked into her pocket, as one of the strings and the neck loop was hanging out.
“Miss Cano,” Kimberly said, “I recognize you. My name is Kimberly Madison. I’m with Carousel News 9. We’re currently investigating your daughter’s disappearance.”
Kimberly stuck out her hand to shake Dina’s. Dina, playing her part, kept her arms folded for a time and then reached out and shook Kimberly’s hand.
“Are you here to be vultures?” she asked.
“I’m sorry,” Kimberly said. “I don’t know what you mean.”
“The news people. They come here to feast off the dead. To make a living off of other people’s misfortune. Is that what you’re here for?”
“No,” Kimberly said. “I’m here to find out what happened to Tamara.”
Dina and Kimberly locked eyes and stared at each other for a moment.
“Well, at least somebody is,” Dina said at last. Her eyes went past Kimberly and past me, and she saw the beautiful sunflowers next to Rustle. She rushed toward them.
“Tamara has been giving me flowers just like this for the last few weeks. Is this where she’s been getting them?”
Credit to Dina, who normally put very little effort into acting. She was on the verge of tears as she spoke, and moments later, the tears broke, and she started to cry.
Benny rushed to his son’s side. “Rustle, have you been giving Tamara these flowers?”
Rustle nodded.
Dina, who had started to cry and was trying to stop, turned away from Benny and put her head in her hands.
“Well, ma’am, we’re searching all over for your daughter, and we really hope that you find her safe,” Benny said, close to tears of his own. He pulled a pocket knife from his coveralls and moved toward the sunflowers. He grabbed one of them that was right for cutting and started to take it down, but Rustle pushed his arm away and stood between him and the sunflower, shaking his head.
“Son, I know you don’t like things messing with the garden, but this is what these flowers are for. We give people beautiful things to make them feel better, you understand?”
Rustle’s eyes began to tear up and he pleaded with his father not to cut down the sunflower. When Benny finally relented, Rustle grabbed the pocket knife, put it inside his own pocket, and then ran back inside the house.
Benny turned to Dina and said, “Ma’am, I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s going on, but Rustle sure did care about your daughter, and he’s having a hard time with it.”
“It’s okay. It’s okay,” Dina said. “All I care about is finding Tamara.”
“We’re gonna,” Benny said. “She’s… she’s gonna be just fine.”
Dina dropped to her knees and said through tears, “I don’t think she is. I can feel her. I don’t think she’s coming home.”
Dina’s tropes allowed her to connect to her character’s dead loved ones. Perhaps some connections did more harm than good.
Kimberly hugged Dina, and Benny offered her his least greasy rag to wipe her tears, and then finally, we went Off-Screen.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Book Eight, Chapter 94: The Finale
- Book Eight, Chapter 93: The Quiet One
- Book Eight, Chapter 92: Aftershock
- Book Eight, Chapter 91: Shaping
- Book Eight, Chapter 90: The Gallery
- Book Eight, Chapter 89: Captives
- Book Eight, Chapter 88: Bobby
- Book Eight, Chapter 87: The Conduit
- Book Eight, Chapter 86: By Torchlight
- Book Eight, Chapter 85: Into the Cradle
- Book Eight, Chapter 84: Don't Remind Me
- Book Eight, Chapter 83: The Captives
- Book Eight, Chapter 82: Arrival
- Book Eight, Chapter 81: Chase
- Book Eight, Chapter 80: The Adventurer
- Book Eight, Chapter 79: Downtime
- Book Eight, Chapter 78: From Below
- Book Eight, Chapter 77: Unfolding
- Book Eight, Chapter 76: Boats
- Book Eight, Chapter 75: Debriefing
- Book Eight, Chapter 74: Interrogation
- Book Eight, Chapter 73: The Detective
- Book Eight, Chapter 72: Family Troubles
- Book Eight, Chapter 71: Remains
- Book Eight, Chapter 70: The Widow
- Book Eight, Chapter 69: Antoine Stone and the Sunken Cradle Part II
- Book Eight, Chapter 68: Last-Minute Prep
- Book Eight, Chapter 67: Choice as a Formality.
- Book Eight, Chapter 66: Forbidden Talk
- Book Eight, Chapter 65: The Speakeasy Revisited
- Book Eight, Chapter 64: The Adventurer
- Book Eight, Chapter 63: The Provisions
- Book Eight, Chapter 62: Campfire Story
- Book Eight, Chapter 61: Intermission
- Book Eight, Chapter 60: False End
- Book Eight, Chapter 59: The Final Gambit
- Book Eight, Chapter 58: Communication
- Book Eight, Chapter 57: Bobby II
- Book Eight, Chapter 56: The Spell
- Book Eight, Chapter 55: Over the River and Through the Woods
- Book Eight, Chapter 54: Logging Off
- Book Eight, Chapter 53: Backtracking
- Book Eight, Chapter 52: In the Dark
- Book Eight, Chapter 51: Down the Hall
- Book Eight, Chapter 50: Outpost
- Book Eight, Chapter 49: Wanderers
- Book Eight, Chapter 48: Assignment
- Book Eight, Chapter 47: Familiar Grounds
- Book Eight, Chapter 46: A Left Turn
- Book Eight, Chapter 45: Bobby
- Book Eight, Chapter 44: Waterfall
- Book Eight, Chapter 43: Keep Your Eye on the Ball
- Book Eight, Chapter 42: The Haul
- Book Eight, Chapter 41: Well Conducted
- Book Eight, Chapter 40: Dead in the Water
- Book Eight, Chapter 39: Overboard
- Book Eight, Chapter 38: Tangled
- Book Eight, Chapter 37: Drowned
- Book Eight, Chapter 36: Go Fish
- Book Eight, Chapter 35: Keep Swimming
- Book Eight, Chapter 34: Scathed
- Book Eight, Chapter 33: Into the River
- Book Eight, Chapter 32: No Right Choices
- Book Eight, Chapter 31: The Unwritten Rules
- Book Eight, Chapter 30: A Scripted Departure
- Book Eight, Chapter 29: Flyers
- Book Eight, Chapter 28: The Dream
- Book Eight, Chapter 27: Evasive Maneuvers
- Book Eight, Chapter 26: Dungeon Clearing
- Book Eight, Chapter 25: Walled In
- Book Eight, Chapter 24: Six Weeks Later
- Chapter 24: Six Weeks Later
- Book Eight, Chapter 23: The Astralist Part IV
- Book Eight, Chapter 22: The Astralist Part III
- Book Eight, Chapter 21: The Astralist Part II
- Book Eight, Chapter 20: The Astralist Part I
- Book Eight, Chapter 19: Interlude
- Book Eight, Chapter 18: Refusal of the Call
- Book Eight, Chapter 17: The River
- Book Eight, Chapter 16: Trespass
- Book Eight, Chapter 15: The Brain Teaser
- Book Eight, Chapter 14: The In-Between
- Book Eight, Chapter 13: Fire Trap
- Book Eight, Chapter 12: Red Jack
- Book Eight, Chapter 11: The Score
- Book Eight, Chapter 10: Drill
- Book Eight, Chapter 9: Demo Time
- Book Eight, Chapter 8: Estate Auction
- Book Eight, Chapter 7: red wood
- Book Eight, Chapter 6: Open House
- Book Eight, Chapter 5: Lark House
- Book Eight, Chapter 4: The Mission
- Book Eight, Chapter 3: Field Trip
- Book Eight, Chapter 2: Crawlspace
- Book Eight, Chapter 1: The Copy Job
- Book Six, Chapter 95: Pulling the Thread
- Book Six, Chapter 94: Knock Knock
- Book Six, Chapter 93: Return to Camp Dyer
- Book Six, Chapter 92: The Savings
- Book Six, Chapter 91: WHATEVER YOU WANT
- Book Six, Chapter 90: The Sacrifice
- Book Six, Chapter 89: Raised By Television
- Book Six, Chapter 88: Bobby III
- Book Six, Chapter 87: A World of Laughter
- Book Six, Chapter 86: Don’t drink the Kool-Aid
- Book Six, Chapter 85: Blue Bloods
- Book Six, Chapter 84: It Begins
- Book Six, Chapter 83: The Dark Secret
- Book Six, Chapter 82: Tom
- Chapter 81: The Props Department
- Book Six, Chapter 80: The Time Skip
- Book Six, Chapter 79: The End is Nigh
- Book Six, Chapter 78: The Employee Lounge
- Book Six, Chapter 77: Leftovers
- Book Six, Chapter 76: Undercover Shopper
- Book Six, Chapter 75: Getaway Car
- Book Six, Chapter 74: Benched
- Book Six, Chapter 73: The Gala
- Book Six, Chapter 72: Bobby II
- Book Six, Chapter 71: Bobby I
- Book Six, Chapter 70: The Stone Show
- Book Six, Chapter 69: Eternal Savers Club
- Book Six, Chapter 68: The Game Plan
- Book Six, Chapter 67: The Circus
- Book Six, Chapter 66: Bowling
- Book Six, Chapter 65: Parking Lot Lookout
- Book Six, Chapter 64: Interlude
- Book Six, Chapter 63: Rescue Scouting
- Book Six, Chapter 62: A Chance of Rain
- Book Six, Chapter 61: Wedding Gifts
- Book Six, Chapter 60: Till Death
- Book Six, Chapter 59: Tangles
- Book Six, Chapter 58: Patio Furniture
- Book Six, Chapter 57: Silver Fox
- Book Six, Chapter 56: Daphne V
- Book Six, Chapter 55: Andrew Interlude
- Book Six, Chapter 54: The Axe
- Book Six, Chapter 53: Kimberly Interlude
- Book Six, Chapter 52: Daphne Part IV
- Book Six, Chapter 51: A Part to Play
- Book Six, Chapter 50: Smoking Kills
- Book Six, Chapter 49: The Body
- Book Six, Chapter 48: Husband and Wife Team Up
- Book Six, Chapter 47: Smoke Break
- Book Six, Chapter 46: Daphne Part III
- Book Six, Chapter 45: The Lightbulb Moment
- Book Six, Chapter 44: Runaway Bride
- Book Six, Chapter 43: Photo Op
- Book Six, Chapter 42: Autopsy of a Blackmailer
- Book Six, Chapter 41: Daphne Part II
- Book Six, Chapter 40: Honey
- Book Six, Chapter 39: Daphne Interlude Part I
- Book Six, Chapter 38: Wedding Bells
- Book Six, Chapter 37: Cold Cuts
- Book Six, Chapter 36: A Close Shave with a Haircut
- Book Six, Chapter 35: The Extra Player
- Book Six, Chapter 34: Meet the Parents
- Book Six, Chapter 33: The Gambler
- Book Six, Chapter 32: Homibridal Part II
- Book Six, Chapter 31: A Change in the Winds
- Book Six, Chapter 30: A Proper Greeting
- Book Six, Chapter 29: Deviled Egg
- Book Six, Chapter 28: Drinks!
- Book Six, Chapter 27: The Wait
- Book Six, Chapter 26: Ravel
- Book Six, Chapter 25: The Paycheck
- Book Six, Chapter 24: Equivocation Part II
- Book Six, Chapter 23: Equivocation Part I
- Book Six, Chapter 22: The Frat Guy
- Book Six, Chapter 21: The Real Night Terror
- Book Six, Chapter 20: The Gorging
- Book Six, Chapter 19: The Fever Dream
- Book Six, Chapter 18: A Downward Direction
- Book Six, Chapter 17: The Devil's Laundry
- Book Six, Chapter 16: The Road to Hell is Paved with Pizza Dough
- Book Six, Chapter 15: Shift work.
- Book Six, Chapter 14: 555-7468
- Book Six, Chapter 13: The Promotion
- Book Six, Chapter 12: By the Trash Cans
- Book Six, Chapter 11: The Break Room
- Book Six, Chapter 10: Nightmares
- Book Six, Chapter 9: Recon
- Book Six, Chapter 8: The Fire Ferret
- Book Six, Chapter 7: Hot Head
- Book Six, Chapter 6: The Summer Job
- Book Six, Chapter 5: By the Slice
- Book Six, Chapter 4: By the Slice
- Book Six, Chapter 3: The Performance
- Book Six, Chapter 2: The Lineup
- Book Six, Chapter 1: Urban Foraging
- Book Five, Chapter 143: The Show Must Go On
- Book Five, Chapter 142: Rewards
- Book Five, Chapter 141: The Standing Ovation
- Book Five, Chapters 140: The Fight of Many Lifetimes
- Book Five, Chapter 1̵̙̔͗̀2̴̦̕6̴̤̪͙̀:: The Many Mothers of Gabriel Cano
- Book Five, Chapters 137 & 138
- Book Five, Chapter 136: The Diorama
- Book Five, Chapter 135: The Tower Climber
- Book Five, Chapter 134: The Barker
- Book Five, Chapter 133: The Scientist
- Book Five, Chapter 132: The Long Red Hallway
- Book Five, Chapters 130 & 131: Willpower is Magic
- Book Five, Chapters Chapter 130:& Chapter 131: Willpower is Magic
- Book Five, Chapter 129: The Signal
- Book Five, Chapter 128: The Meteor Finder 9000
- Book Five, Chapter 127: Unconventional Layoffs.
- Book Five, Chapter 125: The Hospital
- Book Five, Chapter 124: Watch your step
- Book Five, Chapter 123: A Mid-Torture Lesson
- Book Five, Chapter 122: Room Service
- Book Five, Chapter 121: A Barrel of Monkeys
- Book Five, Chapter 120: The Scholar
- Book Five, Chapter 119: Hey ya, Fella
- Book Five, Chapter 118: Night Watch
- Book Five, Chapter 117: A Short Rest
- Book Five, Chapter 116: The First Jump
- Book Five, Chapter 115: Into Time
- Book Five, Chapter 114: First Bloodless
- Book Five, Chapter 113: The Guided Tour
- Book Five, Chapter 112: Vetting the Impossible
- Book Five, Chapter 111: E Cola
- Book Five, Chapter 110: The Final Girl
- Book Five, Chapter 109: The Girl in the Videos
- Book Five, Chapter 108: daylight dance
- Book Five, Chapter 107: Post-Traumatic
- Book Five, Chapter 106: Jailhouse Blues
- Book Five, Chapter 105: Timely Preparations
- Book Five, Chapter 104: A Rescue in Review
- Book Five, Chapter 103: Watch Party
- Book Five, Chapter 102: Side Storyline: Goodnight Neighbor
- Book Five, Chapter 101: While we were gone...
- Book Five, Chapter 100: The Bounty
- Book Five, Chapter 99: Clara- Part II
- Book Five, Chapter 98: Clara- Part I
- Book Five, Chapter 97: Not Quite The End
- Book Five, Chapter 96: The Athlete
- Book Five, Chapter 95: A Test of Hustle
- Book Five, Chapter 94: A Wolf's Howl
- Book Five, Chapter 93: The Introduction of Chaos
- Book Five, Chapter 92: Blue Moon Rising
- Book Five, Chapter 91: Moonlit Charge
- Book Five, Chapter 90: The Pack
- Book Five, Chapter 89: Preparations
- Book Five, Chapter 88: The Soldier
- Book Five, Chapter 87: The Hunter
- Book Five, Chapter 86: Familiar Fratricide
- Book Five, Chapter 85: Last-call Return
- Book Five, Chapter 84: A touch of chemistry...
- Book Five, Chapter 83: Always in the Forest
- Book Five, Chapter 82: Rolling Silver
- Book Five, Chapter 81: The Tomb
- Book Five, Chapter 80: A Werewolf Kiss
- Book Five, Chapter 79: There has been a murder!
- Book Five, Chapter 78: A Tentative Plan
- Book Five, Chapter 77: A Nursery Rhyme
- Book Five, Chapter 76: Return to Camp
- Book Five, Chapter 75: Armed with Knowledge
- Book Five, Chapter 74: Exploration and Research
- Book Five, Chapter 73: The Stacks
- Book Five, Chapter 72: The Stone Fort
- Book Five, Chapter 71: The Eye Candy
- Book Five, Chapter 70: Caged Wolves
- Book Five, Chapter 69: The Werewolf Curse
- Book Five, Chapter 68: Silverware
- Book Five, Chapter 67: The Host
- Book Five, Chapter 66: An Invitation
- Book Five, Chapter 65: The Lineup
- Book Five, Chapter 64: Mental Health Day
- Book Five, Chapter 63: The Flea Market
- Book Five, Chapter 62: A Walk Down Memory Lane
- Book Five, Chapter 61: Strike!
- Book Five, Chapter 60: Carousel Family Video
- Book Five, Chapter 59: The Thing about Werewolves
- Book Five, Chapter 58: The Speakeasy
- Book Five, Chapter 57: Baby Steps
- Book Five, Chapter 56: Happened A-Pawn Again
- Book Five, Chapter 55: Broken Conduit
- Book Five, Chapter 54: Tea Party
- Book Five, Chapter 53: The Forty-Dollar Fortune
- Book Five, Chapter 52: Twisted Threads
- Book Five, Chapter 51: Shopping
- Book Five, Chapter 50: Sensitive Measures
- Book Five, Chapter 49: The Crooked Hallway
- Book Five, Chapter 48: Therapy
- Book Five, Chapter 47: The Test
- Book Five, Chapter 46: By the Campfire
- Book Five, Chapter 45: The Farmhouse
- Book Five, Chapter 44: The Cargo
- Book Five, Chapter 43: The Femme Fatale
- Book Five, Chapter 42: Defensive Protocols
- Book Five, Chapter 41: Mutagen 6
- Book Five, Chapter 40: Bigger and Bigger
- Book Five, Chapter 39: Red Herring No More
- Book Five, Chapter 38: The Rerun
- Book Five, Chapter 37: The Chatbot
- Book Five, Chapter 36: If at first you don't succeed...
- Book Five, Chapter 35: Walk of Shame
- Book Five, Chapter 34: On Theme
- Book Five, Chapter 33: Rodeo
- Book Five, Chapter 32: Dark Aura
- Book Five, Chapter 31: Theme Puzzle
- Book Five, Chapter 30: The Farm
- Book Five, Chapter 29: Rise and Shine
- Book Five, Chapter 28: Bitten
- Book Five, Chapter 27: Deep Sleep Tech
- Book Five, Chapter 26: Countdown to launch
- Book Five, Chapter 25: Itch
- Book Five, Chapter 24: Before the Rescue
- Book Five, Chapter 23: Moon
- Book Five, Chapter 22: Horrific Events Through the Ages
- Book Five, Chapter 21: Hard Scouting
- Book Five, Chapter 20: Lairs and Libraries
- Book Five, Chapter 19: A Party Divided
- Book Five, Chapter 18: The Fallen
- Book Five, Chapter 17: Dissociation
- Book Five, Chapter 16: Looting
- Book Five, Chapters 15: The Reaper
- Book Five, Chapter 14: Blades
- Book Five, Chapters 13: The Patchers
- Book Five, Chapter 12: Tamara
- Book Five, Chapter 11: Killer on the Loose
- Book Five, Chapter 10: Ten Years Later
- Book Five, Chapter 9: Off the Case!
- Book Five, Chapter 8: Strange Collision
- Book Five, Chapter 7: Search Party
- Book Five, Chapter 6: Sunflowers
- Book Five, Chapter 5: Harless Automotive
- Book Five, Chapter 4: Scouting
- Book Five, Chapter 3: A Call with Sal
- Book Five, Chapter 2: A Knock in the Night
- Book Five, Chapter 1: Grocery Shopping
- Arc II, Chapter 94: Off the Case!
- Arc II, Chapter 93: Strange Collision
- Arc II, Chapter 92: Search Party
- Arc II, Chapter 91: Sunflowers
- Arc II, Chapter 90: Harless Automotive
- Arc II, Chapter 89: Scouting
- Arc II, Chapter 88: A Call with Sal
- Arc II, Chapter 87: A Knock in the Night
- Arc II, Chapter 86: Grocery Shopping
- Arc II, Chapter 85: The Remainder
- Arc II, Chapter 84: The Loft
- Arc II, Chapter 83: The Narrator Part Two
- Arc II, Chapter 82: The Narrator Part One
- Arc II, Chapter 81: The Tape
- Arc II, Chapter 80: The Lillian Scorned Contingency
- Arc II, Chapter 79: The Cynic
- Arc II, Chapter 78: Late Casting
- Arc II, Chapter 77: The Outsider Returns
- Arc II, Chapter 76: Double Team
- Arc II, Chapter 75: Mirror Match
- Arc II, Chapter 74: Gray
- Arc II, Chapter 73: Hard Mode Initiated
- Arc II, Chapter 72: Manor's Blaze Eve
- Keep reading the series on Kindle Unlimited and Audible!
- Arc II, Chapter 71: Them
- Arc II, Chapter 70: The Secret Sixth Principle
- Book Two moving to KU! (The story is currently at the end of Book Four)
- Book Two moving to KU!
- Arc II, Chapter 69: A Slight Change of Plans
- Arc II, Chapter 68: Moonlight
- Arc II, Chapter 67: Up to Speed
- Arc II, Chapter 66: Sparks Fly
- Arc II, Chapter 65: On the Fence
- Arc II, Chapter 64: Dreary Street
- Arc II, Chapter 63: The Peeping Tom
- Arc II, Chapter 62: A Close Shave
- Arc II, Chapter 61: Grease Fire
- Interlude--Ramona Part Three
- Interlude--Ramona Part Two
- Interlude--Ramona Part One
- Arc II, Chapter 60: The Empty Frame
- Arc II, Chapter 59: Fire
- Arc II, Chapter 58: The Flask
- Arc II, Chapter 57: Carlyle
- Arc II, Chapter 56: The Die Cast
- Arc II, Chapter 55: Cycles
- Arc II, Chapter 54: The Séance Part Four
- Arc II, Chapter 53: The Séance Part Three
- Arc II, Chapter 52: The Séance Part Two
- Arc II, Chapter 51: The Séance Part One
- Arc II, Chapter 50: Don't Pull Any Threads
- Arc II, Chapter 49: A Game Within a Game
- Arc II, Chapter 48: The Murder House
- Arc II, Chapter 47: Reply the Departed, Classic
- Arc II, Chapter 46: Heart's Desire
- Arc II, Chapter 45: The Graveside Chat
- Arc II, Chapter 44: Time to Wait
- Arc II, Chapter 43: The Prescription
- Arc II, Chapter 42: Medical History
- Arc II, Chapter 41: Stairway Death Scene
- Arc II, Chapter 40: The Beauty Queen
- Arc II, Chapter 39: The Unveiling
- Arc II, Chapter 38: The Frog Trap
- Arc II, Chapter 37: Escape the Fray
- Arc II, Chapter 36: Cecilia
- Book One is Available Now!
- Arc II, Chapter 35: Out of Hand
- Arc II, Chapter 34: The Doctor's Visit
- Arc II, Chapter 33: The Secret Staircase
- Arc II, Chapter 32: An Illegal Search
- Arc II, Chapter 31: Bobby's Other Wife
- Arc II, Chapter 30: The Ribbon Cutting
- Arc II, Chapter 29: Cold on the Trail
- Arc II, Chapter 28: Not the Worst Ending
- Arc II, Chapter 27: Early Morning Poker
- Arc II, Chapter 26: The Carousel Spins On
- Arc II, Chapter 25: Play it cool
- Arc II, Chapter 24: What Came Before
- Chapter Forty-Four: The Detour [Start of Book II]
- Book One will be moving to KU
- Chapter One: Silas the Mechanical Showman
- Arc II, Chapter 23.5: The Late Check Out
- Arc II, Chapter 23: The Off-Screen Death
- Arc II, Chapter 22: The Weakness
- Arc II, Chapter 21: Strander Blake
- Arc II, Chapter 20: Ready Player Ten
- Arc II, Chapter 19: The Ghost Collector
- Arc II, Chapter 18: Let's Split Up, Gang
- Arc II, Chapter 17: Ghost Story
- Arc II, Chapter 16: Connection Terminated
- Arc II, Chapter 15: I have no arm but I must wave...
- Arc II, Chapter 14: Exploring in the Dark
- Arc II, Chapter 13: Reply the Departed, Updated
- Arc II, Chapter 12: Stranger Still
- Arc II, Chapter 11: The Librarian
- Arc II, Chapter 10: The Cut Scene
- Arc II, Chapter 9: Carousel Loves Families!
- Arc II, Chapter 8: Nondescript
- Arc II, Chapter 7: A History in Flames
- Arc II, Chapter 6: The Night Before
- Arc II, Chapter 5: The Founder's Tale
- Arc II, Chapter 4: Seeing is Believing
- Arc II, Chapter 3: Late Arrivals
- Arc II, Chapter 2: The Keepsake
- Arc II, Chapter 1: Now Playing
- Tales of Carousel: I'll Love You Till the Day You Die
- Tales of Carousel: You've Got Mail
- Tales of Carousel: The Guest House
- Chapter 118: Back to Where It All Started- Part IV
- Chapter 117: Back to Where It All Started- Part III
- Chapter 116: Back to Where It All Started- Part II
- Chapter 115: Back To Where It All Started- Part I
- Chapter 114: Dead Man's Fall
- Chapter 113: The Bigger Bad
- Chapter 112: The Damsel in Distress
- Chapter One Hundred and Eleven: Blood Red Sunset
- Chapter One Hundred and Ten: Permanent Vacancy
- Chapter One Hundred and Nine: The Warning
- Chapter One Hundred and Eight: Planning a Run
- Chapter One Hundred and Seven: closed fur renovations
- Chapter One Hundred and Six: In Plain Sight
- Interlude: In Time--Part Two
- Chapter One Hundred and Five: A Bridge Too Far
- Chapter One Hundred and Four: Goforth and Prosper
- Chapter One Hundred and Three: Dearest Mr. Gray Amber
- Chapter One Hundred and Two: By the Fire
- Chapter One Hundred and One: Party Favors-Part Two
- Chapter One Hundred: Party Favors-Part One
- Chapter Ninety-Nine: Who's Pulling the Strings?
- Chapter Ninety-Eight: Self-Inflicted Injuries
- Chapter Ninety-Seven: Close and Personal with Mr. Red Rock
- Chapter Ninety-Six: Who, Why, and How
- Chapter Ninety-Five: The Casks and the Crime Scene
- Chapter Ninety-Four: A Fair Play Murder Mystery
- Chapter Ninety-Three: Mr. Evergreen in the Ballroom with the Knife
- Chapter Ninety-Two: Young Love
- Interlude: In Time
- Chapter Ninety-One: The Ballroom
- Chapter Ninety: Unintended Consequences
- Chapter Eighty-Nine: The Black Snow
- Chapter Eighty-Eight: Setting Up The Pins
- No Chapter Today
- Chapter Eighty-Seven: The Carousel Atlas
- Chapter Eighty-Six: Snowblind
- Chapter Eighty-Five: The Criminal and the Wallflower
- Chapter Eighty-Four: Worker's Compensation
- Chapter Eighty-Three: Curtains
- Chapter Eighty-Two: Sedation
- Chapter Eighty-One: A Fresh Breath of XEGOST-H Sulfide
- Chapter Eighty: Climbing Tension
- Chapter Seventy-Nine: A Ticket to the Show
- Chapter Seventy-Eight: The Distortion Manifests
- Chapter Seventy-Seven: Corporate Rat Race
- Chapter Seventy-Six: Too Many Unknowns
- Chapter Seventy-Five: Notes from Experiment 17
- Chapter Seventy-Four: Please Present Your Identification
- Chapter Seventy-Three: All in the Family
- Chapter Seventy-Two: A Bump in the Night
- Chapter Seventy-One: Night Shift
- Chapter Seventy: Superstition
- Chapter Sixty-Nine: Subject of Inquiry
- Chapter Sixty-Eight: Bet Your Life On It!
- Chapter Sixty-Seven: Make History Part of Your Story!
- Chapter Sixty-Six: The Brainstorm Montage
- Chapter Sixty-Five: A Theory
- Chapter Sixty-Four: Secrets of Carousel
- Chapter Sixty-Three: The Bad Luck Magnet
- Chapter Sixty-Two: A Lesson in Wishing Well
- Chapter Sixty-One: The Secret
- Chapter Sixty: The Cloven Women
- Chapter Fifty-Nine: They Come in the Night
- Chapter Fifty-Eight: The Akers Plot
- Chapter Fifty-Seven: What Does It Want?
- Chapter Fifty-Six: The Servants
- Chapter Fifty-Five: The Unknowable
- Chapter Fifty-Four: The Waters Below
- Chapter Fifty-Three: A Search in Vain
- Chapter Fifty-Two: The Last Truck Out
- Chapter Fifty-One: The Contradictions
- Chapter Fifty: The Rules of the Forest
- Chapter Forty-Nine: The Straggler
- Chapter Forty-Eight: A Message from High Places
- Chapter Forty-Seven: Happened A-Pawn
- Chapter Forty-Six: Letters from Carousel
- Chapter Forty-Five: The Wager
- Chapter Forty-Four: The Detour
- Chapter Forty-Three: Keeping Secrets
- Chapter Forty-Two: Rewards To Die For
- Chapter Forty-One: The Grotesque Angel
- Chapter Forty: Not-So-Divine Healing
- Chapter Thirty-Nine: Go. Faster.
- Chapter Thirty-Eight: Extended Arming Sequence
- Chapter Thirty-Seven: Whispers in the Dark
- Chapter Thirty-Six: The Red Mist
- Chapter Thirty-Five: The Rulekeeper
- Chapter Thirty-Four: A Plan Interrupted
- Chapter Thirty-Three: The Grotesque Kiss
- Chapter Thirty-Two: The Harbinger
- Chapter Thirty-One: A Family In Crisis
- Chapter Thirty: The Grotesque Lottery
- Chapter Twenty-Nine: To the Attention of Janette Gill
- Chapter Twenty-Eight: Chekhov's Balcony
- Chapter Twenty-Seven: The Immortal Mask Is Broken
- Chapter Twenty-Six: One Last Guess
- Chapter Twenty-Five: A Pattern Emerges
- Chapter Twenty-Four: The Usual Suspect
- Chapter Twenty-Three: The Public Accusation
- Chapter Twenty-Two: End of Scene
- Chapter Twenty-One: Ranger Danger
- Chapter Twenty: Delta Epsilon Delta
- Chapter Nineteen: An Outsider
- Chapter Eighteen: Souvenirs
- Chapter Seventeen: Black Magic Reanimation
- Chapter Sixteen: The Silver Solution
- Chapter Fifteen: A Waste of a Specimen
- Chapter Fourteen: The Code in the Lights
- Chapter Thirteen: The Astralist
- Chapter Twelve: Deus Ex-Terminator
- Chapter Eleven: Please, Don't Be a Vampire
- Chapter Ten: First Blood at Halle Castle
- Chapter Nine: Always Watching
- Chapter Eight: The Museum at Halle Castle
- Chapter Seven: Dyer's Lodge
- Chapter Six: The Oblivious Bystander
- Chapter Five: Will Someone Shut Them Up?
- Chapter Four: Benny
- Chapter Three: The Final Straw II
- Chapter Two: The Unanswered Plea
- Chapter One: Silas the Showman