Blackwood Farm - Anne Rice [29]
“Oh, it was a powerful mystery,” said Aunt Queen. “ ‘What if his gold built this house?’ I kept it secret what he’d said. I didn’t want my mother to take the cameos away. She wasn’t a Blackwood, of course, and that’s what they always said of her, ‘She’s not a Blackwood,’ as though that explained her intelligence and common sense. But the point was, my room upstairs was full of clutter. It was an easy thing to hide the cameos away. I’d take them out at night and look at them and they bewitched me. And so my obsession began.
“Now, my grandfather did within a few months’ time get right up out of this room and stagger down to the landing and put himself right into a pirogue and row off with a pole into Sugar Devil Swamp. Of course the farmhands were hollering at him to stop, but he went off and vanished. And no one ever saw him again, ever. He was forever gone.”
A stealthy trembling had come over me, a trembling of the heart perhaps more than the body. I watched her, and her words ran as if written on ribbons being pulled through my mind.
She shook her head. She moved the cameo of Rebecca at the Well with her left hand. I could no more dare to read her mind than I would to strike her or say a cross word to her. I waited in love and full of old dread.
Lestat seemed quietly entranced, waiting on her to speak again, which she did:
“Of course eventually they declared him officially dead, and long before that, when they were still searching for him—though no one knew how to get to the island, no one ever even found the island—I told my mother all he’d said. She told my father. But they knew nothing of the old man’s murder confession or his strange accomplice, the mysterious he, only that Grandfather left behind him plenty of money in numerous deposit boxes in various banks.
“Now maybe if my father had not been such a simple and practical man he would have looked into it, but he didn’t and neither did my aunt, Manfred’s only other child. They didn’t see ghosts, those two.” She made this remark as if Lestat would naturally regard this as peculiar. “And they had a strong sense, both of them, that Blackwood Farm should be worked and should pay. They passed that on to my brother Gravier, Quinn’s great-grandfather, and he passed it on to Thomas, Quinn’s grandfather, and that was what those men did, the three of them, work, work, work Blackwood Farm all the time, and so did their wives, always in the kitchen, always loving you with food, that’s what they were like. My father, my brother and my nephew were all real countrymen.
“But there was always money, money from the Old Man, and everybody knew he’d left a fortune, and it wasn’t the milk cows and the tung oil trees that made the house so splendid. It was the money that my grandfather had left. In those days people really didn’t ask where you got your money. The government didn’t care as they do in this day and age. When this house finally fell to me, I searched through all the records, but I couldn’t find any mention of the mysterious he, or a partner of any sort, in my grandfather’s affairs.”
She sighed and then, glancing at Lestat’s eager face, she continued, her voice tripping a little faster as the past opened up.
“Now, regarding the beautiful Rebecca, my father did have terrible memories of her, and so did my aunt. Rebecca had been a scandalous companion to my grandfather, brought into this very house, after his saint of a wife, Virginia Lee, had died. An evil stepmother if ever there was one, was this Rebecca, too young to be maternal, and violently mean to my father and my aunt, who were just little children, and mean as well to everyone else.
“They said that at the dinner table, to which she was allowed to come in all her obvious impropriety, she’d sing out my poor Aunt Camille’s private verses just to show her she’d snuck into her room and read them, and one night, gentle though she was, Aunt Camille Blackwood rose up and threw an entire bowl