Fever Dream - Douglas Preston [60]
At the very end of the hall, they came to a locked door.
Pendergast slid out his lockpicking tools, jimmied the lock, and attempted to open the door. It wouldn’t budge.
“There’s a first,” said D’Agosta.
“If you will observe the upper doorjambs, my dear fellow, you’ll see that the door, in addition to being locked, has been screwed shut.” His hand fell from the knob. “We’ll return to this. Let’s take a look at the attic first.”
The attics of the old house were a warren of tiny rooms packed under the eaves, full of moldy furniture and old luggage. They made a thorough inspection of the boxes and trunks, raising furious choking clouds of dust in the process, but found nothing more interesting than some musty old clothes, piles of newspapers sorted and stacked and tied with twine. Pendergast rummaged through an old toolbox and removed a screwdriver, slipping it into his pocket.
“Let’s check the two towers,” he said, brushing dust from his black suit with evident distaste. “Then we’ll tackle the sealed room.”
The towers were drafty columns of winding stairs and storage niches full of spiders, rat droppings, and piles of yellowing old books. Each tower staircase dead-ended into a tiny lookout room, with windows like the arrow slits of a castle, looking down over the lightning-troubled forest. D’Agosta found himself growing impatient. The house seemed to have little to offer them other than madness and riddles. Why had Helen Pendergast come here—if she’d come here at all?
Finding nothing of interest in the towers, they returned to the main house and the sealed door. As D’Agosta held the light, Pendergast drew out two long screws. He turned the knob, pushed the door open, and stepped inside. D’Agosta followed—and almost staggered backward in surprise.
It was like stepping into a Fabergé egg. It was not a large room, but it seemed to D’Agosta jewel-like—filled with treasures that glowed with internal brilliance. The windows had been boarded over and nailed with canvas, leaving the interior almost hermetically preserved, every surface so lovingly polished that even a decade of abandonment could not dull the luster. Paintings covered every square inch of wall space, and the interior was crowded with gorgeous handmade furniture and sculptures, the floor spread with dazzling rugs, sparkling jewelry laid out on pieces of black velvet.
In the middle of the room stood a single divan, covered in richly tanned leather that had been tooled into an astonishing cascade of abstract floral designs. The ebb and flow of the hand-worked lines were so cunningly wrought, so hypnotically beautiful, that D’Agosta could scarcely take his eyes from them. And yet other objects in the room cried out for his attention. At one end, several fantastical sculptures of elongated heads, carved in an exotic wood, stood beside an array of exquisite jewelry in gold, gems, and lustrous black pearls.
D’Agosta walked through the room in an astonished silence, hardly able to focus his attention on any one thing before some fresh marvel drew it away. On one table stood a collection of small, handmade books in elegant leather bindings with gold tooling. D’Agosta picked one up and thumbed through it, finding it full of poems handwritten in a beautiful script, signed and dated by Karen Doane. The loom-woven rugs formed several layers on the floor, and they displayed geometric designs so colorful and striking that they dazzled the eye. He flashed the light around the walls, marveling at the oil paintings, landscapes lustrous with life, of the forest glades around the house, old cemeteries, vivid still lifes, and ever-more-fantastical landscapes and dreamscapes. D’Agosta approached the closest one and squinted, playing the light over it—observing that it was signed M. DOANE along the bottom margin.
Pendergast came up beside him, a silent presence. “Melissa Doane,” he murmured. “The novelist’s wife. It would appear that these paintings are hers.”
“All of them?” D