rosemary anne "rosie" routledge: an investigation.
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@rosieroutledge
rosemary anne "rosie" routledge: an investigation.
dossier: google doc. skeleton. pinterest. playlist. insp tag.
Well, well, well... It's been a little while since we got to have a little chat, huh? We're all just DYIN' (too soon?) to know what's on your minds over here, so - what do you say to pullin' up a chair, and havin' a good little bout of Front Porch Gossip? Some say it heals the soul!
Here's the deal! You're gonna reblog this post to participate - and then you're gonna grace any little nasty question that comes your way with an HONEST answer... or at least as honest as you can stand to be. And don't you forget to send some questions over for me and my lovely Cherie too - you know we can never resist a little gossip.
Lou's eyes immediately widened when a sliver of something caught in her beam of light. Whatever it had been, it was fast, and definitely not her sister. But what did it mean if it had Mabel's voice? Did it have her? Her face? Lou felt uncharacteristically panicked, frustrated. Her eyes traveled to Rosie, cold air burning her lungs as she gulped it down. "Uh...Not really in the mood, Mabel!" She tried to go along with it, but motioned for Rosie to cover her ears without much context. After this, Lou sincerely doubted she was ever getting coffee with Rosie Routledge. "Come on now, where ya at?" She even crunched around random spots in the snow. It really would be ideal if they had the high ground, but seeing as the noise and shadows were being cast from a roof, they had no choice. Still, maybe they could gain the advantage. Without checking to see if Rosie had covered her ears, Lou pulled her gun from her waistband and shot it at one of the shingles on the museum roof.
"Come out 'n play, motherfucker!"
The monster didn't flinch at the gunshot, didn't scurry back like some lesser beast when the bullet splintered the shingles mere inches from where it crouched. Instead, it laughed.
Not Mabel Maeâs laughânot reallyâbut close enough. Close enough that for a split second, it might have been her, standing just out of reach. No, there was something wrong in the sound, something stretched too thin, too sharp. Something hungry.
The monster moved. Not down, not forward, but around, melting into the dark, slipping along the rooftop as though its body were made of shadow itself. It didn't break eye contact, its jagged teeth catching the faintest gleam of moonlight as it crept. Every motion was deliberate. Slow. It had time.
âYou always were stubborn,â it purred, still wearing Mabelâs voice, this time softer. Almost affectionate.
A whisper behind Louâs ear despite the distance, âAlways trying to be brave, Lou. Always trying to be strong.â
It clicked its tongue, the sound echoing unnaturally, bouncing from rooftop to rooftop, circling almost lazily. Like this was all a big game, like Lou brandishing a gun was all part of the plan. A gust of wind rattled the splintered wood of the museum sign. Snow crunchedânot beneath Louâs feet this time.
Something shifted behind her.
Too close.
Faster than a breath, faster than thought, the monsterâs clawed fingers dragged along the edge of Louâs jacketâjust enough pressure to let her feel it, to let her know it could have done more. Should have done more.
But it wanted to play. It liked to play.
And when it whispered again, its lips just barely brushing the shell of her ear, the voice was no longer Mabelâs. It was Lou's own.
âCome out ân play, motherfucker.â
And thenâsilence.
@loubriccant @rosieroutledge
The situation was spiraling out of control.
There was always a hint of chaos bubbling underneath the surface with Lou, the girl's unpredictable nature one of the things that had kept Rosie from claiming her as a friend in public, but the true extent of how unhinged she could get had always been hidden within the walls of the museum. Just then, with the taunting of a supernatural entity and the sound of gunfire still ringing in Rosie's ears? For the first time, Rosie was witnessing Lou's base instincts flying free.
And with the barely audible voice clearly not after her, Rosie knew she had to figure out a way to rein the girl in. No more going in guns a'blazin' - as much as she was loath to do it with the promise of answers still on the horizon, it was time to take things back inside.
"Alright!" Rosie called out, her voice as sharp as can be as she barreled towards Lou. The vise-like grip she had on her arm seconds later was unwavering. She was going to get her inside, come hell or high water.
"We're done here." Pull. "No more voices." Drag. "No more games." The adrenaline coursing through her veins had temporarily granted her enough strength to result in some progress, but would it be enough? It had to be. "You have a death wish? We're not playin' a game we can't win. And I have a whole archive full of articles sayin' we won't win."
@loubriccant
"Murder board?" she parroted, narrowing her eyes at the girl. At the very least, Lulu now had confirmation that it had been a good idea, after all, to stay away from Rosie Routledge; she wanted nothing to do with whatever investigation she was conducting. People in this town needed to stop playing detective and mind their own business, as far as she was concerned.
Except, she had experienced something out of the ordinary. Something that had come to her trailer in the middle of the night, sounding just like her brother crying for help. Something that had nearly ripped Knox to shreds.
It wasn't something to share with a girl she hadn't even thought about in years. Lulu hadn't even shared it with Major, nor anyone else outside the boy who had experienced it all with her. "What kinda shit outta the ordinary you askin' bout?" she prodded, taking a step closer.
"If this is about Baylor, I had nothin' to do with it, if that's what you're askin'. I was at that goddamn cemetery on that tour--you can read all about it in the paper." At least she had an alibi for people who were sticking their noses where they didn't belong. "And, if you want my opinion, that boy died of natural causes. Prob'ly fell asleep drunk in the snow."
It appeared as though her statement had the desired impact, Lulu's judgment immediately on display. But the execution had still been flawed. Because instead of driving the girls apart, the blonde departing with a disgusted frown or harsh words, Lulu hadn't been dismissive. She'd asked for clarification.
It was like a siren song to Rosie, the promise of an answer she hadn't even known to seek on the horizon. Just seconds ago she would've sworn that Lulu hadn't experienced anything at all, but that was before the girl had mentioned the cemetery - a known supernatural event. If she was seemingly willing to chalk that up to human interference, what else could she have dealt with?
As was her way, Rosie would not be able to rest until she learned all that she could.
"Anything odd you might've seen lately, somethin' that didn't feel quite right, nightmares keepin' you up at night," she explained with an attempt at nonchalance. Her eyes were too focused, though, her blinks few and far between as she tried to determine if any particular word shifted Lulu's expression.
"I wasn't askin' about Baylor - rest assured that I don't think you had anything to do with that. Though I disagree with your opinion. I don't always trust the quality of our local reporting, but I do believe they said he was showin' signs of recovery before his passin'. And with Siberee and Simon freezin' too, three deaths like that is a pattern that's hard to overlook. But no, what I want your opinion on is that night at the cemetery. I did read about it in the paper. Talked to someone who was there too. Seemed like a pretty out of the ordinary night to me. Care to comment? What'd you see?"
Kiera followed Rosieâs lead, eyes lingering on the roomâs final touch. The garland she had just hung. Itâd almost be easier if it started to warp the longer you looked at it. Sudden realisation one side was actually higher than the other and itâd just have to be taken down and redone! But the never came. Anywhere she scanned in the room was perfect. Despite the breakdown of them, there was no denying they still made a great team.
âThereâs probably a stash we could raid somewhere.â But no attempt was made to start a search. Especially considering circumstances that had Kiera a little more aware of her figure in recent months. âAlthough, I think itâs kinda nice to know thereâs not gonna be a brutal sugar crash on the fifteenth.â
Rosieâs next question made Kiera stumble a little. Surprisingly, not it the way that made her close right up. Just enough to notice how much she had been relying on Rosieâs name. Did anyone care enough to relay that back to the other girl? Should she be upfront about the assumption she had been spreading to anyone who cares to ask about the smile on her lips. âWell, there are some roses put to the side for someone.â Enough of a hint to hope intentions were obvious, but vague enough to deny if Rosie turned around with some âI didnât think we would do that this year,â dismissal.
Despite everything, thereâs a brief moment where Kiera just wants to spill to her ex best friend. Call it holiday nostalgia â or more accurately, the fact this year wasnât like all the others. But what was there to actually say? âWeâve been really busy, but Iâm sure itâs gonna happen!â The question was more of an assumption in Kieraâs mind. A potential. Except to say that, the question would come of who. Then how did he end up interested in you. Blackmail, stripping. The giddy excitement of telling Rosie there was finally a boy that liked her had to die in her throat.
Instead, a coy smile playing on her features. âAre you? With a valentine this year?â
"For you, maybe. I have located the stash and it's in my parents' kitchen. To have the level of energy necessary for grunt work, I will be having a sugar crash the likes of which Misty Mountain has never before experienced," Rosie quipped, the words not a total lie.
With all of the horrors she'd endured lately (the mysterious voice in the shadows with Lou, the troubling nightmare, etc.), sleep had been elusive. She was relying on candy to get through the day. But the exact level of her consumption was heavily exaggerated. A lighthearted comment, easy banter that was reminiscent of Before.
And maybe Kiera was feeling the shift too, because her question hadn't been ignored, the conversation cut short. Instead, Rosie watched her carefully to see how it was received. To note the exact tone and expression with which a response was delivered. Because while once upon a time she'd known Kiera even better than she knew herself, that was no longer the case. She needed some sign that their friendship, though strained, was not over. The carousel ride at the Flurry Festival had given her hope, but Valentine's? The holiday that meant the most? That was truly the deciding moment.
Rosie had been so careful to make it a good day, to avoid any confrontation that could blow up in her face. But taking in the girl's words, she could only be thankful that she'd taken the chance. High risk, high reward. Because Kiera wasn't cruel. Flowers were their thing. She wouldn't have mentioned them unless it meant something.
"If she'll have me." She couldn't help the grin that had spread across her face.
"But romantically, no. After the few celebrations I endured back in high school, I think my Valentine's is better without all that."
Abilene arched a brow, watching Rosie work with practiced ease, effortlessly smoothing out the jagged edges of her own shaky attempt. She sighed in resignation and stepped back to give Rosie more space. It was a little infuriating how quickly she took over, but Abilene wasnât prideful enough to pretend she was doing a better job.
She rested a hand on her hip, tilting her head as she observed Rosieâs handiwork. It was delicate, precise, almost like she actually cared about it. "So you were one of those kids that spent all of February stuffing mailboxes with glitter and bad poetry?" There was a teasing lilt to her tone, but it was gentler than usual. They weren't friends by any means, but Abilene could push aside any animosity if it meant getting help.
"Kinda funny. I canât think of a single valentine I ever sent," she admitted, not out of bitterness or jealousy. It just wasnât something the Pryors did. Pillars of the community, sure, but Abilene was never sending Valentine's to those around her. Not when the holiday was filled with so much lust and indulgence.
She shrugged like it didnât matter. Like it never had. "Figure if anyone should be in charge of this whole mess, it oughta be you," a beat. Then, she followed through with a softer voice, "you make it look easy."
"I've never written a bad poem in my life," Rosie insisted, tone dripping with mock offense. "Hard to go wrong with Rosies love red, violets are blue, please be my valentine because I love you." The perfect heart appearing on the canvas in front of her as she spoke illustrated her point - the commercialized aspects of the day came easy to her. Cute little poems that incorporated her name, expertly painted hearts, and always at least one valentine (platonic), she'd staked her claim in Valentine's Day long ago, and so she was going to enjoy the fruits of her labor that day. It was nice to have the upper hand in whatever odd rivalry had developed between the two over the years. "Also, it's tasteful glitter. Unless we're enemies, and then you still get a card, but with considerably less glue to hold it all down."
One heart, two, three. She was speeding along at that point, the task likely to be completed in record time when her brush stopped midair. "Not one?" Rosie could hear the disbelief in her voice, but she couldn't stop it. "Not even to Buck?" It felt wrong to mention him so casually when their relationship had been the thing that drove Buck and Rosie's friendship straight into the ground, but she'd always seen them as an idyllic high school romance. The type that of connection that Valentine's was made for.
Huh.
For a moment, she was lost in her thoughts. But one little admission from Abilene and she was tuned right back in. With a halfhearted shrug and a growing satisfied smile, she did her best to be Totally Normal while taking the win.
"It is easy. For me, I mean. I like plannin' things, simple little art projects. But it's not like I haven't had a lot of practice. I'm sure it's only a matter of time until I plan the whole damn thing, but I'll take bein' a floater this year."
LOCATION : misty mountain cemetery. CLOSED STARTER : @rosieroutledge.
Liliana stood in the center of Misty Mountain Cemetery, the bright midday sun casting long shadows between the gravestones. Her eyes scanned the rows of weathered tombstones, a quiet unease coiling in the pit of her stomach. Rosie was somewhere nearby - still too close for Lilianaâs liking - but she's decided that she needs to talk to someone about that night. About the night that gnawed at her memory.
âIt was right here,â she gestured vaguely to the gravel beneath her feet. âit all happened here.â A shiver ran down her spine, unbidden, as she tried to piece together the fragments of the night that happened almost two months ago. Her mind kept slipping - one moment sharp, the next a fog. âIt came at us, and then⊠I don't remember anything after that.â
She looked at Rosie with a strange, unreadable intensity, as though trying to gauge if the other girl was even half as lost as she was. âAnd Mr. Ashbury...â she hesitated, as if the name itself was a weight on her tongue, "I donât even understand why he was arrested.â She moved her attention to stare ahead, not at Rosie, but at the grave markers scattered around them, as if the answers were carved into the stone itself. â... Is this something you can... I donât know... look into?â
It was months ago, but Rosie hadn't forgotten the newspaper article.
Mr. Ashbury allegedly orchestrating an imitation of supernatural occurrences on one of Tank's tours. Marshall pressing charges. Yet another thing going terribly wrong on Christmas Eve. In the haze of her own crisis, Rosie hadn't dug terribly deep into what happened that night for others, hadn't tracked down every last participant in the ghost tour or witness to the animal attack in town square. But as had been the case more and more lately, wait long enough, ask enough questions, and eventually someone'll seek you out to talk about it.
That it had been Liliana was a surprise, but at the same time... was it not a testament to their relationship? They'd grown up together, Rosie looking out for Lili as per her parents' demands. The behavior continued long past its expiration date, but somewhere deep, deep down, Lili must have trusted her.
And so she'd followed the girl into the cemetery with zero hesitation, mentally shuffling through the facts of the case as she knew them all the while.
"Okay, okay," she murmured, focus shifting with each passing moment between Liliana and their surroundings. I don't remember anything after that. Familiar. Connected to her Christmas Eve blackout?
Rosie made sure to follow Lili's line of sight, assess all that she could, but it felt like she was missing a key piece of the puzzle. And so, in what was surely the least surprising moment of the day, she turned to the younger girl with a question on her lips. "Yeah, it's something I can look into. But I have to ask some questions first. Like, when you say it, could you describe it for me?"
@rosieroutledge
As far as Pity was aware, there were only two floaters -- Rosie and Macy Mabel. While she would have preferred catching Macy Mabel for a myriad of reasons, she had yet to see her... and she'd been trying to find her for a while! (Of course, 'trying to find her' translating to 'standing still and just watching the crowd in the hopes that she would, at some point, see her within the sea of people.') Alas, you have to do what you have to do, and Pity had been putting this off for long enough -- any longer, she risked getting accused from The Powers That Be of not working... and there was no anger like the anger of a WASP. So she admitted defeat when her eyes landed on Rosie. After a whistle to catch her attention, Pity asked, "Got a moment t' look at this?" Pity had found a pretty effective way around having to socialize too much -- one that doubled as being rather efficient! When Buck and Sugar were focusing on the stage, she'd focus on the backdrop; when Buck and Sugar were focused on the backdrop, she'd focus on the stage. The idea that the two may, at some point, be focused on different things was rather horrifying, but the system had been working out pretty well thus far. Alas, it meant that the backdrop was the victim of Pity's artistic eye before the other two could do much... and everyone in town needed to pray that they had something else they could paint on -- or at least turn what Pity had been working on around! -- because she had gotten a C- in 'the easiest class' (it wasn't her fault that Ms. Kinkel thought her flower was a foot! art is subjective!), and that was with extra credit. If only art were something Rosie could have helped with... At least she could now! And the town needed her now more than ever... because the bow and arrow (the arrow, of course, having a heart at the end) looked a bit more like a D with... something phallic inside the open space. And Pity had spent over 45 minutes on it.
The current state of the St. Cupid's Festival decor was a testament to the need for arts funding in schools. And not in a good way.
Rosie, having no specific assignment, had made sure to float from group to group, offering unsolicited feedback where necessary and attempting to spread some holiday cheer. Had her presence resulted in immediate frowns from a few? Sure. But she wasn't letting anything ruin the celebration for her. It had to be perfect.
So it took her a moment to process what she was looking at when Serendipity called her over. One blink. Two. A few more for good measure. Rosie'd tutored the girl back in the day - to moderate success. They'd maintained a decent enough relationship since. So it did her no good to be honest.
"Lookin'..." But then again, she couldn't lie. Her face wouldn't allow for it, her immediate reaction already on record. Whatever Valentine's-themed image Serendipity had been going for, it did not look good.
Unless she'd been purposefully trying to paint a penis, in which case she'd done an excellent job.
"Picassoesque."
There wasn't much else Rosie found she could say about the image, the number of critiques too high to be appropriate. So instead she defaulted to what she did best - jumping into action to fix the situation.
"Hey, I applaud you for tryin' somethin' new, not just stickin' to hearts and flowers. But in the interest of time, what if I outlined somethin' and turned it over to you to paint in? Maybe we find some white paint, start with a blank canvas..."
đđđ: abilene pryor & @rosieroutledgeâââââ
đđđđ:ââ grunt work! grunt work! help abilene paint pls <333
đđđđđ:Â st. cupid festival, near the photobooth area
Abilene had never been particularly sentimental about St. Cupidâs Day. Love wasnât something she trusted - not the kind wrapped in pink ribbons and dipped in cheap chocolate, anyway. Anything romantic she touched turned into anything but, and honestly, love was one of those things in the Pryor house that didn't exist. Respect. Commitment. But, never love.
But the festival was a staple of Misty Mountain, and skipping out on volunteering wouldâve been a surefire way to get her name dragged through the church prayer chain for a lack of community spirit. So here she was, paintbrush in hand, squinting up at a half-finished display that still looked like a garish mess of red and pink.
Was now a good time to mention she would probably never have a career in artistry?
She exhaled sharply, rolling her shoulders back as she glanced toward Rosie. "You ever think this town takes holidays a little too seriously?" She mused.
She dipped her brush back into the red paint, then hesitated. "You any good at this kinda thing? 'Cause Iâll be real honest, I donât have a steady enough hand for designs this small," she gestured at the delicate trim of painted hearts they were supposed to be adding to the photobooth display.
It was a surprise to most, surely, that Rosie was so big on Valentine's. She'd never had much luck with relationships, and she'd certainly never been in love, but with a name like Rosie, how could she not appreciate the most rose-filled holiday in existence? Her parents had always made the day particularly celebratory for her, flowers and chocolates and cute little valentines distributed to her whole class. Over time she'd come to appreciate the day for the joyous occasion that it was - a moment to recognize the many ways that love exists. For Rosie, that was with her family and friends.
So that year, with her friendship with her forever valentine in flux, the St. Cupid's Festival was bittersweet. And observing Abilene Pryor making a mess of the photobooth display wasn't helping.
"There are worse things to take seriously. And I'll give 'em a pass on this one, since this is a holiday I actually like," Rosie answered from her spot several feet away. Her words were delivered without much thought, however, as she was busy dissecting the girl's movements. What was she doing wrong? Was it the brush? Or was Abilene lacking in artistic ability?
Since they had just reached a sort of truce, Rosie was determined to kept her mouth shut. But it was getting increasingly difficult the further they strayed from perfection. A few more seconds and maybe she would've said something, but before she could it appeared that Abilene saw the error of her ways.
"Happy to help. Don't know if you saw it last time you came in, but that display about the truffles at the museum? All me." Her smile was bright, her movements quick. A smaller brush was in her hand and she was correcting lines seemingly in the blink of an eye, relief evident in her expression. "When there's not much to do during the day, you learn to get crafty, but hearts I've always been good at. Sent around plenty of 'em back in school."
for @rosieroutledge
Despite telling anyone who asked about the flush of her cheeks and smile on her lips that Rosie would be her Valentine, just as she had been every other year prior, that was something still left up in the air. The uncertainty came as ringing in her ears when the work load dulled just enough to leave them alone together. No busy work to excuse themselves to.Â
âEverything looks really good, right?â It was an awful attempt at small talk, but the easiest start Kiera could find. âI donât remember set up taking this long when we were kids, though. Youâd just wake up one day and the town was all loved up.â But that was surely because they hadnât been the ones doing it.Â
Without a specific assignment for St. Cupid's prep, Rosie'd decided to do a little bit of everything. Coffee runs. Conversation to distract from tricky group dynamics. And finally, a little decorating.
She hadn't meant to seek Kiera out, but... force of habit. She'd naturally gravitated towards her oldest friend, and they'd been working in near silence ever since. And though others may have been around, an occasional murmur about the task at hand was the only sound out of Rosie's mouth for at least the past ten minutes.
She'd needed to concentrate, she reasoned. Roses are a particularly difficult flower to arrange. The excuses she used to reassure herself were flimsy at best. Truthfully, she simply didn't know how to approach Kiera anymore. While once upon a time she would have made a quip about the holiday or teased their upcoming plans, they hadn't spoken in weeks - since the Flurry Festival. Months ago.
What were you supposed to say when making small talk with the person you used to tell everything to?
"No, yeah," Rosie agreed, one final adjustment of the garland they'd just hung up punctuating her words. It was good to have something to focus her attention on, a reason to not turn to her friend with pleading eyes, begging for a return to years past. "If there's anything I've learned from my time at the museum, it's that Misty has to outdo itself ever year. I think we are spendin' more time setting up than they used to, but then again we also don't have a sugar rush from Valentines candy to make time go faster."
Chancing a glance in Kiera's direction, Rosie kept the breezy tone of the conversation going, even while asking a question that blurred the lines. "Speakin' of all loved up, will you be enjoyin' the festivities with a valentine this year?"
Buck barely had a foot through the damn door before someone nearly crashed into him. He took a slow step back, blinking as Rosie stumbled over her words in front of him. Iâve never seen anyone come in here before.
His brow ticked up. âWell, thatâs a hell of a thing to say to a man mindinâ his business,â he drawled, shoving his hands into the pockets of his worn denim jacket. His tone wasnât sharp, just amusedâmaybe a little tired, too.
He hadnât planned on being here long. He was looking for something small, some trinket to bring back to his grandma to keep her from askinâ too many questions about what he'd been up to. But now, standing in the middle of the cluttered little shop with Rosie looking like sheâd just discovered a new species, he figured he might be here longer than expected.
His gaze flicked to the pile of supplies in her arms. Tacks, tape, sticky notesâlike she was setting up for some kind of investigation. It didnât take a genius to see she was up to something.
âYou planninâ a craft night, or should I be askinâ what kind of mess youâre gettinâ yourself into?â Buck asked, lips quirking up at the corner. He gestured toward the stack. â'Cause I gotta say, looks more like youâre huntinâ down a damn fugitive than makinâ a sweater.â
If she had to run into someone on her mission to untangle her thoughts, Rosie was relieved that she'd narrowly avoided a collision with Buck. Though he was an old friend, a connection so recently revisited that they were still shaking off the dust, the basic level of familiarity there had her exhaling in relief. An easy response was tumbling from her lips seconds later.
"Sorry. This place just always seemed a little like that chocolate factory of Willy Wonka's. You know - nobody ever goes in, nobody ever comes out. You kind of always wonder if it's a front for somethin,'" she explained, her quick glance around the store indicative of her belief that it could be true. It didn't take long for her eyes to settle back on Buck, though.
She'd been meaning to check in on him after his name appeared in the paper. Earlier, even. Sometime after the Flurry Festival. But with so much going on, terrifying nightmares haunting her both while asleep and awake, she'd developed a particularly one track mind as of late. Once again, she seemed to be deprioritizing friendships. And though she hadn't realized it until just then, it took no time at all for the guilt to set in. For the soft smile that spread across her face as she spoke to dim.
She should have called. Not... necessarily for answers, but as someone who wanted to check in. Though it had been a long time since they'd been considered close, she did care about him. And in a time when so many of her friendships were precarious, the least she could do was appreciate those still in her life. Especially those who knew which side of the aisle she came down on in the battle between fugitive and sweater.
"That depends. You want a real answer?" she asked, supplying one believable excuse as a means of delaying the inevitable. If they got to talking about her conspiracy board, she'd start asking questions. And then what? Like a mouse with a cookie, it could only spiral from there.
"Would you believe I'm plannin' a new display at the museum? Can't tell Marshall, but no one seems to be all that interested in truffles."
Wasn't there a place a girl could get some tape in this town? Specifically, duct tape: the fucking freezer wouldn't shut again, and the only thing she could think to fix it was trusty ol' duct tape. Misti's was expensive, and if she wasn't probably the only person in the store, maybe she would've just shoved it in her bag and left. But, Lulu didn't feel like needing to call Major for a bail-out if she got caught, and she was sure the holding cells were full of crazies the police thought were responsible for Baylor's death.
At least, she was the only person in the store, until someone came barreling in, nearly knocking the overpriced roll of tape out of her hands.
Rosie wasn't someone she had much in common with, in fact, they'd almost been friends. In other words, Rosie almost wanted to be her friend, and Lulu wasn't the kind of girl to keep those around. It'd felt like the girl had kept a vendetta against her ever since, coming to a strange head in the entryway of Misti's, where Rosie was here for god knew what.
"Yeah, well, only place around here that sells this," she held up the roll, "except the hardware store, and I don't feel like bein' cat-called this morning." Nor did she feel like talking to Rosie, but it was arguably the lesser of both evils. "Hope you weren't hopin' for this kinda tape, I think I mighta taken the last roll."
If there was one local Rosie was almost positive she'd never speak to again, it was Lulu Banks. It wasn't that they necessarily had a complicated past - if anything, it was quite simple - but they ran in entirely different circles. Rosie'd buddied up to Bobby Hugh lately and Lulu... well, Lulu had never been all that interested in a friendship with Rosie. Once upon a time, Rosie had reached out, made an attempt. She'd been strongly rebuffed. Such a rejection left a lasting impression.
So it was jarring, running into the Grinch of Christmas Past in a place that was supposed to be empty.
"As luck would have it, that's not what I'm after," Rosie informed the girl, skipping right over any talk of catcalling in favor of something designed to get them both out of an uncomfortable conversation. "I need red string for my murder board." Though it didn't feel great to weaponize what she was doing, people tended to shy away from her when she brought up her investigation. Or when she started asking questions. Or when she looked at them for a beat too long, trying to figure out if they had any role in Misty Mountain's increasingly spooky events. The latter of which she was currently doing, albeit halfheartedly.
Did Rosie think that Lulu'd experienced anything creepy lately, like she and Lou had at the Museum? No. But if it was likely to bring about an end to their tĂȘte-Ă -tĂȘte, it didn't hurt to check.
"Experienced anythin' out of the ordinary lately, Lulu?"
The dream unfolded like an old film reel, flickering at the edges, washed in sepia and shadow. Rosie stood in the middle of a house she almost recognized - almost. The bones of it were the same, the arch of the doorways, the way the staircase curled upward like a beckoning finger. But something was wrong. The walls were warped, stretching too high, too thin, breathing in and out like a living thing. The air smelled of dust, of rain-soaked wood, of something left too long in the dark.
She turned a corner, and the lights buzzed weakly, casting long, sickly shadows that didnât match their sources. A shape waited at the end of the hallway, hunched and unmoving. Rosieâs throat went tight. She knew better than to call out. But the thing shifted, and her breath hitched.
It was a chair. A rocking chair, old and familiar, its wood smooth from years of use. It swayed forward, backward, slow and steady, though no one sat in it. A lullaby whispered through the air, threading through the house like a draft.
She stepped closer. A single candle flickered to life beside the chair. And there - oh, God - there was someone sitting in it now.
The woman looked like she was from the 1930s - had Rosie ever seen her before? In an archival photo or book once before? The woman's head lolled too far to the side, eyes glassy and wrong, mouth stretched in something that wasnât quite a smile. Her hands rested in her lap, empty palms turned up as if waiting for something.
The rocking chair moved in time with the hum. Rosie could not breathe. The woman's lips parted.
"You left me behind," the words rasped out, dry as old paper. The candlelight made her skin look waxy, her face shadowed in places it shouldnât be. The rocking slowed. "Just like grandma."
Rosieâs feet were rooted, her body caught between running and sinking. The air had thickened, pressing in tight against her ribs, her skull. "You have always enjoyed running from your problems, haven't you?"
A hand rose from the woman's lap, lifting towards Rosieâs cheek, but before it could touch her - the candle sputtered. The rocking chair groaned. The woman's face changed. Her mouth opened wide, far too wide, a gaping black pit stretching and stretching....
Rosie woke up choking on the sound of her own scream.
.
The monster crouched lower, pressing its sinewy body flat against the icy tiles as the beam of the flashlights swept closer. It hissed softly, retreating just enough to stay out of sight, its claws scraping faintly against the roof with every deliberate movement. The sound, sharp and metallic, echoed in the stillness, slicing through the cold night air.
From its vantage point, it peered down at them, the faint glimmers of their flashlights bouncing off the snow below. It could see the tension in their stances, the way Lou's grip tightened around her flashlight, the slight quiver in Rosie's voice as she tried to sound brave. The monster's jagged grin widened.
With a fluid motion, it tilted its head down at an unnatural angle, leaning just far enough forward to let the edge of its face catch the faintest glow of Lou's light - a cruel tease, a flicker of a nightmare before it withdrew again into the shadows.
Then, in the voice of Mabel Mae, the same voice Lou hadnât heard in years but could never forget, it called out.
âLou... come play with me.â
Lou's eyes immediately widened when a sliver of something caught in her beam of light. Whatever it had been, it was fast, and definitely not her sister. But what did it mean if it had Mabel's voice? Did it have her? Her face? Lou felt uncharacteristically panicked, frustrated. Her eyes traveled to Rosie, cold air burning her lungs as she gulped it down. "Uh...Not really in the mood, Mabel!" She tried to go along with it, but motioned for Rosie to cover her ears without much context. After this, Lou sincerely doubted she was ever getting coffee with Rosie Routledge. "Come on now, where ya at?" She even crunched around random spots in the snow. It really would be ideal if they had the high ground, but seeing as the noise and shadows were being cast from a roof, they had no choice. Still, maybe they could gain the advantage. Without checking to see if Rosie had covered her ears, Lou pulled her gun from her waistband and shot it at one of the shingles on the museum roof.
"Come out 'n play, motherfucker!"
Whatever was happening at that moment was definitely creepy, but the more they heard from the voice, the longer Rosie had to rifle through the rolodex of supernatural creatures in her brain. Banshees, mothmen, wendigos... she'd been studying up on all things spooky and scary in Misty Mountain for this moment.
The problem was, it was way easier to think of things in the abstract. When it came to a real life encounter with something that should not exist, how were you supposed to be sure what you were facing? And how much did being able to identify it help, anyway? There was nothing in the archives about being able to outsmart Carolina's folkloric creatures - just reminders of what happened when you couldn't.
With metallic clicks coming from the roof of the museum, Rosie had no choice but to admit that they'd blown past a human explanation and were firmly in monster territory. The beam of a flashlight catching on something was only further proof. But Rosie'd barely had time to process the blink and you miss it moment when Lou gestured for her to cover her ears. Extreme action was taken seconds later.
"Jesus Christ, Lou!" Rosie called out, the warning she'd been given so nonspecific that she hadn't complied. An unpleasant ringing in her ears now accompanying the fear she'd been avoiding confronting, the girl at least managed to shine her flashlight up at the roof once again. Was there movement? Anything?
God, how was she going to explain all of this to her dad??
It didn't matter. Not yet, at least. Because if there was one thing that was abundantly clear after Lou's Annie Oakley moment, it was that she had to be the voice of reason in the situation. Whatever they were up against, it wasn't after her, it wasn't attempting to lure her in using the voice of someone she cared about.
"If we want answers, maybe we need to play the game. Get it talkin'. Not provoke it."
There was something about the gift shop that August couldn't help but find a little comforting â the changing yet stationary nature of it, the nearly insufferable levels of kitsch, and especially when the town wasn't exactly in peak tourist season it was almost peaceful roaming the overly cluttered shelves. It was mostly a bunch of junk, for sure, but once in a while he got lucky and stumbled across something actually worth looking at. If nothing else, they always stocked the brand of incense he liked, right alongside those "healing crystals" he was pretty sure were actually made out of resin. He wouldn't have paid much mind to the door opening if it weren't for the way Rosie came blustering in all in a tizzy, nearly running into him where he was perusing the postcard rack. He raised an eyebrow and took a step back, trying to give her more space, though it wasn't like there was a ton of room to maneuver in the tiny shop. "Could say the same to you," he pointed out, "But it's usually a good idea to look where you're goin' regardless." He hadn't really seen Rosie since the fiasco at the hospital â not that he had much reason to â but in a way he guessed it was good she was here, because after a second he added, "Hey, I been meanin' to talk to you. You hear from the Sheriff, lately?"
If running into someone in normally deserted shop wasn't enough of a surprise, recognition of the person she'd been on a collision course with was enough to completely stop Rosie in her tracks.
August Ives - someone she both did and didn't know. He'd flown under her radar back in school, their lives never quite intersecting. But she'd known what her classmates thought of him back in the day. And she'd never intervened. There was a guilt that came with her interactions with him these days, an attempt to be better. But it wasn't outweighed by her curiosity, and the way he'd been so willing to jump in and get to the bottom of things with her and Bobby Hugh had her wanting to ask far too many questions.
"And if I wasn't havin' a yarn emergency, I absolutely would've," she nodded, defensiveness creeping into her tone at the advice. She was usually the type to at least look where she was going before she hit the ground running, but desperate times...
It didn't take long for her eyes to land upon exactly what she needed in the shop, but one mention of the Sheriff and she was observing August carefully instead, yarn emergency temporarily forgotten. As far as she could tell there was only one reason for him to bring Buddy up - he'd been questioned, same as her. But was there more behind the question?
Thankfully, there didn't even seem to be anyone working at Misti's at the moment, so Rosie was free to be as nosy as she'd like.
"Very recently, unfortunately. I'm assumin' you did too? He ask you 'bout Baylor?"
WHAT: Knox on a walk with his dog somewhere in Misty Mountain. WHO: open!
The shepherd mix, Delilah, loped along beside Knox, her tongue lolling out of her mouth happily as her feet crunched into the snow. His own hands were shoved deep in the pockets of his coat, head bowed while his thoughts raced. Considering everything that had happened lately, it probably wasn't a good idea to be walking around so distracted at night, but, well. Knox hadn't been known recently for his good choices.
It was about that time that Delilah's enthusiastic gait came to a sudden halt. Her head lifted, ears forward and alert. Knox stopped a half second later, taking in the dog's stiff body language that screamed THREAT.
Knox was immediately on alert, his fingers gone pale as they tightened around the leash. He should have known better than to be without anything but his useless pocketknife and a compact mirror, but there was that pesky bad choices thing again.
A figure suddenly cut an imposing silhouette against the night and Delilah let out a low rumble in the back of her throat. She also liked to growl at leaves through the window as they blew across the yard, but that was neither here nor there.
The figure shifted, the orangey fluorescent glow illuminated their face and Knox deflated on a breath. "You keep skulking around at night like that and Delilah's gonna think it's open season."
With all that'd been going on lately, it was probably stupid of Rosie to have declined her father's offer of a ride home when the museum closed that evening. And yet, instead of hopping in his car and debriefing on the day, like she always did, the moment his support group ended, she'd claimed she wanted to get some air. That she'd be fine (famous last words). She'd brushed off her both her father's concern and the questions she could see in his eyes as they headed out the door, and within a matter of minutes she was waving him away, setting off into the night.
Her destination was still home, but the path she was taking to get there was a more scenic route. A factfinding mission, she reasoned with herself. An opportunity to see who was out and about at night, the people who weren't afraid of being turned into popsicles.
The journey had led her past several hotspots, looping through the main stretch of town and on through to her quaint neighborhood. She was barely two blocks in, however, when she heard the barking of a dog nearby.
On impulse, she moved to the shadows. With the other sounds she'd heard in the darkness lately - familiar voices coming from impossible places, gunfire - you couldn't be too careful. But looking more closely at where the sound came from, Rosie could make out a familiar figure near the streetlight, dog leash in hand. Surely Knox wasn't up to anything nefarious, right?
"Can't a girl just walk home without bein' accused of skulkin'?" she asked, stepping into the light and towards her old... friend? Acquaintance? What was the word for someone you got along with until your incessant questions pushed them away? Theirs had been a complicated relationship as of late, but Knox had shown her kindness at Baylor's funeral. And with that in mind, she approached him casually.
"If I promise not to ask you any questions, can I pet your dog?"
Bobby Hugh was starting to lose his mind. Or at least what was left of it. As he fiddled through the reports in the newspaper and his notes from overhearing conversations at the diner...one thing was clear. Nobody really had a clue what happened on Christmas Eve. The cacophony of superstitions and 3rd person accounts was becoming overwhelming. It was almost loud enough to dull the guilt that Bobby Hugh was carrying for the past week.
He didn't do enough.
That thought was pierced almost immediately by Rosie's voice...cutting through his downward spiral. She had to be joking right? Bobby Hugh's Italian accent was a hail mary in an attempt to save a failure of a night. At least in his eyes. He smirked at her. "That's how Grandpa Hugh spoke. Well...kinda." He said still looking down at his notebook. He doodled some detailed stick figures of himself and rosie at the hospital. His notebook fluttered between gibberish and doodles. It was just the way Bobby saw the world.
He finally looked up to meet her eyes. "I'm sorry us boneheads couldn't pull it together in time for you to get your interview. I feel like we have more questions than answers now."
He pondered for a moment. "Something weird went down at the Cemetery right? Are you close with anybody from that group?"
Even though she'd just issued an apology of her own, Rosie had no intention of accepting Bobby Hugh's for something that was spiraling out of control from the start. Instead she dismissed his words with a wave of her hand, an easy shrug.
They'd been at the wrong place at the wrong time and they'd suffered the consequences as a result. But by some miracle they had still gotten into the hospital. Against all odds, they'd made it to Baylor's floor before everything really fell apart.
"I saw Dottie lookin' at us when we walked in, suspicious because we even spoke to Major 'n August. There was nothin' we could've done to change that. I appreciate that you were willin' to sacrifice yourself to let me get the interview, though. Even if by the time I got to him..."
What? By the time she'd gotten to him - something she did remember happening - had he already been dead? Or did that happen after? Did she get kicked out and black out from embarrassment? Until she had a better understanding of what happened, she there was nothing left to say.
Thank god for a distraction.
Bobby Hugh's mention of it cued Rosie to think seriously about what the paper had reported on - Buck. Knox. A mysterious "animal attack" that was almost certainly not an animal attack. She couldn't go asking Knox even more questions about things he probably didn't want to talk about. And Buck... they were just starting to get on the right track.
"I like what you're thinkin'. I know about Buck and Knox, 'cause of the paper. Was there anyone else?"