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"I will. Got a question. You know everyone around here, right?"
"Pretty much. Figure it's my job."
"I'm trying to find a woman named Gwen Lancaster. She's only been here a couple of weeks, tops."
"Pretty blonde? Writing some sort of paper?"
"That's her."
"You might check The Guesthouse. Why're you looking for her?"
Avery hesitated. She didn't want to lie. But she didn't want to let on what she was thinking. Not yet. She
settled on a partial truth. "She was asking some questions about Dad, I want to find out why."
"That's odd. What kind of questions?"
"I thought it odd, too."
If he noticed her evasiveness, he didn't let on. "Good luck then. Let me know if you need anything else."
Avery thanked him and after promising to stop out for dinner in the next night or two, hung up. She
started upstairs to dress. As far as she was concerned, there was no time like the present to call on
Gwen Lancaster, ungodly hour or not.
A mere twenty minutes later, Avery crossed The Guesthouse's wide, shady front porch. The Landry
family had owned The Guesthouse for as long as she could remember. They had converted the huge old
Victorian, located right across from the square, into a guesthouse in the 1960s when they neither needed
nor could afford to maintain the structure as a single-family residence.
The family occupied two-thirds of the first floor; the upstairs had been converted into four units consisting
of a bedroom/sitting room combination, a kitchenette and bath. The remaining third of the main floor
housed the same as the rooms above, with the addition of a small, separate parlor.
She stepped inside. The small registration area occupied the far end of the foyer. The young woman
behind the desk looked up and smiled. The next-generation Landry, Avery thought. She was a
mirror image of both Laurie, one of Avery's friends, and her older brother, Daniel.
"Hi," Avery said, crossing to the desk. "I bet you're Danny's daughter."
"I am." The teenager popped her gum. "How did you know?"
"I grew up here. Was a friend of your aunt Laurie's. You look just like your dad."
The girl pouted. "Everybody says that."
"I' m looking for Gwen Lancaster. I think she's staying here."
"She is. She's in 2C."
"Thanks." Avery said goodbye, then climbed the stairs. Room 2C was located on the left side of the hall,
at the end. She reached the door and knocked, hoping it was still early enough to catch her in.
It was. Gwen opened the door, still bleary-eyed with sleep. She had awakened her, Avery realized
without apology.
She laid a hand on the door, just in case the other woman tried to slam it on her. "Why are you so
interested in my father's death? I want to know the truth. The whole truth."
The woman gazed unblinkingly at her a moment, then opened the door wider and stepped aside. "Come
on in."
Avery did. Gwen shut the door behind her, then yawned. "Coffee?"
"No, thanks. I'm full up."
"Sorry, but I need a cup." She motioned toward the small seating area. "I'll be back in a jif."
True to her word, in less than five minutes Gwen sat across from her, cup clutched in her hands. Avery
didn't even give her time to sip. "What you told me yesterday was bullshit. Talking to the coroner about
my father's death would tell you nothing about his supposed role in The Seven. Obviously, you're
interested in his death. Why?"
Gwen met her gaze. "Okay, the straight shit. I wonder if your dad's death was a suicide."
An involuntary sound slipped past Avery's lips. She brought a hand to her mouth and stood, turning her
back to the other woman, struggling to compose herself.
"I'm sorry," Gwen murmured.
Avery shook her head but didn't turn. "Why?" she asked. "What makes you think "
"For such a small town, Cypress Springs suffers a disproportionate number of suicides."
Avery turned. Met the woman's eyes. "Excuse me?"
"The population of Cypress Springs is around nine hundred. Correct?" Avery agreed it was. "In the last
eight months, six of her citizens have taken their own lives. A rather large number, particularly for a
community that purports to be such a great place to live. To give you an idea how huge that is, the annual
total for Louisiana is 1.2 per thousand, per year. To stay within the state average, Cypress Springs
should have about 1.2 suicides annually."
"Your figure can't be right."
"But it is. In addition," the woman continued, "there've been a number of strange disappearances."
"Disappearances?" Avery repeated.
"People picking up and moving in the night. No word to anyone. Not to family or friends." She took a sip
of coffee. "The accidental death rate is also high. Hunting accidents. Car wrecks. Drownings. Most of
them in the last year."
"And before that?"
"Much lower. All categories."
Avery struggled to assimilate the information. To place it in the framework of what she believed to be
true. "I'll have to check this out myself."
"Be my guest."
She fell silent a moment. Craziness. What she was thinking was insanity. "Why would someone want to
kill my father?"
"I don't know. I'm thinking he knew too much."
"About The Seven?"
"Yes."
"Then what about you?"
Gwen seemed startled by the question. "What do you mean?"
"It seems to me that you might know too much about this group. If it actually exists, that is."
"It exists," Gwen said, following her to her feet. Avery saw that she shook. "And they're getting bolder.
Not even trying to cover up their work with an accident."
"What are you talking about?"
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