I woke up on the floor.
Where in the house, I didn’t know.
All I knew when I regained consciousness was that I was somewhere inside Baneberry Hall, flat-backed on the floor, my joints stiff and my head pounding. It wasn’t until I opened my eyes and saw the portrait of Indigo Garson staring down at me that everything came rushing back.
Me in the Indigo Room.
Scraping at the painting.
Seeing the snake in Indigo’s hands.
A snake that, the longer I looked at it, the more unnerved I became. I wanted to believe Indigo’s pose with the snake was one of those Victorian-era eccentricities. Like death masks and taxidermied birds on hats. But my gut told me there was something far more sinister behind it.
That the snake represented Indigo’s true nature.
A predator.
I assumed it was William Garson who’d ordered it painted over. An attempt to hide the truth about his daughter. I suspected he couldn’t bear to paint over the whole portrait. The artist—poor, besotted Callum Auguste—had done too good a job for that. So the rabbit replaced the snake, an ironic reversal not found in nature.
Now the snake was exposed again. With it came grim understanding that I’d been wrong about so much.
It wasn’t William Garson making fathers kill their daughters inside Baneberry Hall.
It was Indigo.
I understood it with icy clarity. Just like the snake in her hands, she slithered her way into the minds of men who lived here, making them obsessed with what happened to her. I didn’t know if she died by her own hand or her father’s. In the end, it didn’t matter. Indigo was dead, but her spirit remained. Now she spent her days seeking vengeance for what her father had done. She didn’t care that he, too, was long gone. To her, every father deserved punishment.
So she made them kill their daughters.
Six times that had happened.
There wasn’t going to be a seventh.
I made my way back to the kitchen slowly, too sore from my night on the floor to move quickly. After hobbling down the steps, I found myself in front of the bells once more.
“Curtis,” I whispered, fearful Indigo was also nearby. Lurking. Listening. “Are you there?”
Three familiar bells rang.
YES
“It was Indigo, wasn’t it? She made you kill Katie.”
Another three rings.
YES
“What can I do?” I said. “How can I stop her? How can I tell if she’s here?”
Five bells rang a total of six times. At the final chime—the first bell on the first row—I realized he had spelled a word new to this weird form of communication.
CAMERA
I knew what he was referring to. The Polaroid camera in the study.
“Thank you, Curtis.” As I whispered it, I realized I was never going to hear from him again. He’d told me everything he could. The rest was up to me. So before leaving the bells, I added a somber, sincere “I hope this frees you from this place. I really do. I hope you find peace.”
With that, I made my way up three sets of stairs, my joints creaking the entire climb. In the third-floor study, I found what I was looking for in the closet.
A blue shoebox full of Polaroids.
I sorted through them, seeking the ones I’d neglected to look at the day I discovered the box. Photo after photo of Curtis Carver’s increasingly haunted face. I wondered if, when he took them, he felt as helpless as I did. If he was as worried and racked with the same guilt that weighed on me.
The images of Curtis were so similar that I needed to look at the dates scribbled below them to indicate which ones I hadn’t already seen. July 12th. That was one was new. As were pictures from July 13th and 14th.
The last Polaroid sat facedown at the bottom of the box. Flipping it over, I saw that, like the others, the date it had been taken had been written across the bottom of the photo.
July 15th.
A year to the day since Curtis Carver killed himself.
My gaze moved from the date to the image itself. At first, it looked like the others. But a second glance revealed something different from the rest of the photos. Something deeply, deeply wrong.
Someone else was in the room with Carver.
A dark figure tucked into a far corner of the study.
Although Maggie had called her Miss Pennyface, I knew her by another name.
Indigo Garson.
She looked exactly like the woman in the portrait. Same purple dress and ethereal glow. The only difference between her painting and her ghost was her eyes.
They were covered by coins.
Yet it was clear she could still see. In the photograph, she stared at the back of Curtis Carver’s head, almost as if she could read his thoughts.
I was still studying the picture when a presence entered the room, invisible yet palpably felt.
“Curtis, is that you?”
I received no response.
Yet the presence increased, filling the room with a heat so strong it was almost suffocating. Inside that menacing warmth was something even more disturbing.
Anger.
It burned through the room like fire.
I grabbed the camera from the desk and took a self-portrait similar to the ones Curtis had taken.
The shutter clicked.
The camera hummed.
A picture slid out, its pristine whiteness slowly giving way to an image.
Me.
Arms extended. Staring at the camera. Expanse of study behind me.
Also behind me was Indigo Garson, edging into the frame. I saw a slender arm, the curve of her shoulder, stringy strands of blond hair.
She was there.
And she was waiting.
Not for me.
For Maggie.
“Keep waiting, bitch,” I said aloud.
I raised the camera and took another picture.
Click.
Hum.
Slide.
In that photo, Indigo had moved to the other side of the study. She pressed against the wall, slightly hunched, her coin-covered eyes peering at me through a veil of hair. Her lips were twisted into a grin so sinister it turned my blood cold.
The only thing that kept me from fleeing the house was the knowledge that she didn’t want to hurt me. Not yet, even though that moment would surely arrive. But for the time being, she needed me to get to Maggie.
Convinced I was out of harm’s way for the short term, I moved to the closet, grabbed all the packages of film sitting inside, and carried them back to the desk.
I remained there as the pale light of morning changed to the golden sun of afternoon. Every so often, I’d take another picture, just to keep track of Indigo’s whereabouts in the room. Sometimes she was in a far corner, facing the wall. Other times she was just a sliver of purple on the edge of the frame. In a few photos, she wasn’t visible at all.
But I knew she was still there.
I felt the angry heat of her presence.
I continued to feel it until the daylight outside the office widows had given way to the lonesome blues of twilight. That’s when Indigo suddenly vanished—an instant cooling.
I grabbed the camera and took another picture.
Click.
Hum.
Slide.
I snatched the Polaroid from the camera and held it in front of me, watching the image take shape.
It was just like all the others—me and a woman standing in the background.
Only this time it wasn’t Indigo.
It was Jess. Standing just inside the study. Every muscle in her body tensed. Confusion streaking across her features like lightning.
I turned around slowly, hoping she was just an imagining brought about by hunger, thirst, and a need for sleep. But then Jess spoke—“Ewan? What are you doing up here?”—and my heart sank.
It meant she was real and that Indigo’s patience had paid off.
Maggie had come home.