Simon stormed up the stairs with Luthor in tow, still dressed in their finery from the Winter Ball. Though the Inquisitor didn’t speak a word, the red flush across the back of his neck prominently displayed his seething rage.
At the top of the stairs, he pushed through the closed double doors, startling Patrick Mulvane as the governor’s advisor stacked papers on his desk in preparation for retiring for the evening. A stack of folders tumbled from the desk and spilled across the floor, much to Patrick’s dismay.
“The hour is late, gentlemen,” he said. “Is there something I can assist you with?”
“Yes,” Simon said through clenched teeth, “you can get out of my way so that I may pay a visit to Governor Godwin.”
Patrick eyes flickered to the doorway behind him, across which drapes had been pulled. The movement was incredibly subtle but didn’t escape Simon’s gaze. Without awaiting the advisor’s reply, Simon stomped toward the doors.
“You can’t go in there,” Patrick said quickly, moving to block the Inquisitor’s way. “The governor’s not in. He was tired after the ball and departed straight to his quarters.”
Simon didn’t stop. Patrick moved himself against the doors, spreading his arms as though to block the entirety of the entrance.
“I said he wasn’t available. Please show proper decorum and leave at once.”
Simon grabbed the advisor by the collar and pulled him close. “What you said was that he wasn’t in his office. Now you’re saying he’s not available. I’ll give you a chance to revise your story once more before I use you as a knocker while I open the door anyway.”
Patrick swallowed hard, his Adam’s apple bobbing as he stared in the angry face of the Inquisitor. Luthor stepped forward, placed his hands on the advisor’s shoulders, and gently moved the man aside before he got himself into further trouble.
The way now cleared, Simon grasped the door handles and pulled both doors toward him. The light curtains billowed as the doors flew open. Across the office, sitting behind his chair and clearly not surprised by the late visit, sat Governor Godwin.
Simon stared intently at the portly man. Even from the distance, he could see a thin sheen of sweat on the man’s brow. Though the governor tried his best to appear calm, he drummed his fingers impatiently on the table with one hand while absently straightening his fountain pen with the other.
“What can I do for you, Inquisitor Whitlock?” the governor asked.
“I suspected the truth, you know?” Simon began as he stepped into the room. His angry façade had faded, replaced by his normal stoic demeanor. “There were signs—pieces of the puzzle that I had to build on my own.”
“I’m not sure to what you’re referring,” Godwin replied.
“The werewolves, my good man. Do keep up. More importantly, there were signs that the werewolves were more than just mindless, savage brutes terrorizing your region. I would have brought all my findings to you earlier, but I didn’t see the point. You see, had you been aware that the werewolves were able to walk among you in human form, you most certainly would have told me. It would have been your sworn duty as a member of the Royal family.”
Simon’s voice began to rise, the anger creeping back into his words. “Certainly, a cousin of the king himself wouldn’t withhold such crucial information to an Inquisitor’s investigation, would he? Honestly, what would be the point? What could he possibly have to gain from lying and impeding an active investigation?”
Simon turned his attention fully toward the governor, who remained silent in his plush, high-backed chair. The Inquisitor locked his hands behind his back and strolled into the room.
“I found it odd when we first arrived, that you had so many foreign guards under your employment. With such a rich, indigenous population, it would only make sense to find cheap labor from the region in which you hoped to rule. What good would a governor be if he alienated the locals during his tenure? That alone was odd, but not suspicious.”
Simon strolled to the large window overlooking the courtyard below. The wind had picked up, carrying powdered snow across the road leading to and from the manor. It was practically indiscernible from what he had to assume was grass beneath the larger snowdrifts on either side of the path.
“On our way to the drilling sites, I noticed the campfires in the distance. I even remarked to Luthor that it was odd that the indigenous population and the werewolves could live in a form of stasis, if not peace with one another. Yet, when performing the autopsy on the wolf I slew, I found cooked meat in its gut, the likes of which would have been cooked and charred over a campfire.”
He turned away from the window and stared at the governor. The heavyset man glanced back and forth between Simon and Luthor nervously, drumming his fingers with an ever-increasing cadence.
“You can, of course, see where all this is leading. The werewolf that Luthor fought dropped a special brand of rifle, its kind I’ve only seen carried by your personal retinue. That’s when it struck me. Perhaps you had indeed hired the indigenous population to serve on your gubernatorial guard. Perhaps their desertion coincided remarkably with the first reports of werewolf attacks around Haversham.”
Simon walked over and rested his hands on the governor’s desk, leaning forward until he could smell the rotund man’s sour breath, as though he had imbibed far too much alcohol during the evening’s festivities.
“All my suspicions were founded this evening, of course. You, yourself, saw the woman transform before our very eyes, flesh tearing away to give room for the strong, fur-covered body. Her narrow face ripping as the beast’s elongated maw burst forth. While I stared at the creature in horror, knowing it had been a diminutive, red-haired woman not moments before, you and Mr. Dosett seemed far more upset that she had escaped.”
The Inquisitor lowered his voice, as to ensure his words carried the extra weight. “Which begs the question, for how long have you known the truth?”
The governor looked over, making eye contact with Simon. His pupils were dilated and beads of sweat dripped visibly from his brow. “I don’t have to answer your inquiry. You forget yourself. You forget to whom you’re talking.” With every word, he grew more emboldened. “I’m the governor, cousin to the king himself. How dare you interrogate me as though I were a common criminal?”
Simon slammed his open hand down on the table, and the fire that had grown in the governor’s belly extinguished itself immediately. “I have not forgotten who you are! Perhaps it is you who have forgotten your place. The king, your cousin, charged me to conduct this inquiry. It is the king, your cousin, who fears the infiltration of magic into our kingdom. What do you think our king will do if he found a member of his own family impeded my investigation? Do you believe he would turn a blind eye to your transgression because of your relationship? I’ve been to the capital city, Governor Godwin. I’ve seen nobles dragged into the square, and I have seen their heads taken from their shoulders for less!”
The governor blanched as Simon’s final words echoed in the broad room. The portly man raised his hand to his neck subconsciously and rubbed the soft flesh.
“This will be the last time you and I have such a conversation, sir,” Simon said, his voice deadly calm once more. “You will tell me what you know about the werewolves, all of it.”
Simon took a seat in one of the two chairs across from him and motioned for Luthor to sit in the other. The apothecary took his seat, but his eyes shifted toward the Inquisitor.
The governor coughed and fidgeted with his formal attire. “It began a few months ago. We noticed some of our local guards missing from their posts. We inquired as to their absences, of course, but none of the tribespeople seemed any the wiser as to their whereabouts. It wasn’t long before nearly all the locals were missing from their positions, both within this estate and without. We, that is, Mr. Dosett and I, cornered one of the last remaining locals here in the home. The woman, a maid, sought to evade us, but Mr. Dosett was far quicker. When corner
ed, the queerest thing happened, an event that you yourself witnessed this very eve. The maid tore away her dress until she wore only her unmentionables. Then, as though her own skin had become a prison, she clawed at her flesh until the werewolf concealed underneath burst free.”
The governor retrieved a handkerchief from his desk and blotted the sweat from his balding head. “You can imagine my shock and horror. Luckily, I had at my side Mr. Dosett, who responded far quicker than me, or even the guards I had at my disposal. Mr. Dosett drew his blade and struck the creature down where it stood.”
Realization dawned on Simon, and he nodded understandingly. “That was the first creature I viewed, the one that had already been autopsied before my arrival.”
“Indeed, it was. The attacks began shortly thereafter, I assume in retaliation for the death of one of their own kind.”
Simon stroked his thin moustache for a moment, as he absorbed the governor’s explanation before shaking his head. “I don’t believe that is a legitimate justification. Their attacks are far too precise and localized to be something as simplistic as revenge based. There’s something you’re not telling me, something that will assist in finding an answer to the question that has plagued me since my arrival—why.”
For the briefest of moments, the governor seemed prepared to elaborate, but then his eyes grew mysteriously distant and his jaw went slack. Simon leaned forward in time to see the man’s pupils dilate further.
“Governor Godwin?” Simon asked cautiously.
The governor sat in his chair unmoving, staring at a point between Simon and Luthor, but clearly unseeing through glossy eyes.
“He seems afflicted,” Luthor remarked as he moved his hand into the governor’s line of sight, to no avail. “He practically appears under the influence of a powerful sedative.”
Simon shook his head. “I’ve seen something similar while I apprenticed during my training. A local snake oil salesman had an uncanny ability to work a crowd into a virtual frenzy at the mere mention of purchasing his placebo chemical mixture. It was a remarkable gift, one that we believed to be supernatural until we observed his powers of hypnosis. The results of those under the hypnotist’s sway appeared similarly to how the governor now appears to us.”
“He’s hypnotized?” Luthor asked. “But how and when?”
“I could only begin to speculate. The hypnosis itself is merely a theory, though his reaction could have been triggered by my line of inquiry.”
Simon slammed his hand down on the desk once again. “Governor Godwin,” he said loudly.
The governor was startled, jumping slightly and blinking away the slack-jawed expression. “Forgive me, gentlemen. I appear to have dozed momentarily. It was a long night full of excitement, what with the ball and the werewolf. What was your question again?”
Simon stared at the man for a moment before offering a polite smile. The Inquisitor stood, Luthor following suit immediately afterward.
“You do seem quite drained, Governor,” Simon offered. “Why don’t you retire for the evening and get some rest? My questions were not so important that they couldn’t wait until another time.”
“Yes, of course,” the governor mumbled, still seeming to struggle to gain his bearings. “Rest would do this weary body some good. Again, forgive me for my absentmindedness. I believe it merely comes with age, though I would leave that prognosis to a more qualified man.”
Simon laughed politely. “We will speak again, Governor. Have a good evening.”
The Inquisitor and Luthor walked out of the room. Despite his reason to excuse himself from the conversation, the governor didn’t get up from his chair but remained in place, staring at the two men as they left.
In the antechamber, Patrick frowned as the two men passed. Once they were nearly to the office’s outer doors, he slipped into the governor’s office, pulling the doors closed behind him.
As Simon opened the outer doors and they both stepped into the hallway beyond, Luthor turned sharply toward his friend. “Exactly what just happened?”
“As I said while we were still in the stupefied presence of the governor, I believe the man has been hypnotized.”
“By whom?”
Simon arched an eyebrow and glanced disapprovingly at the apothecary. “Do you truly need to ask that question? Has it not made itself readily apparent already?”
“Gideon Dosett.”
“Gideon Dosett,” Simon confirmed. “A strong relationship with the governor has clearly served him well during his rapid expansion into Haversham. If he is a hypnotist, it would also explain why Misters Orrick and Tambor seemed so quickly drawn under his spell. Yes, it all does seem to make a remarkable amount of sense.”
The two men descended the stairwell, their booted feet clicking on the marble steps.
“Except that it doesn’t explain why the werewolves despise him so,” Luthor said as the reached the second floor landing, on which both their rooms were located. “Certainly some innocuous hypnosis isn’t justification for the amount of damage they’ve caused to Mr. Dosett’s various businesses.”
Simon frowned as he considered Luthor’s comment. “No, I wouldn’t assume so. Nor would I assume that the werewolves would justify killing so many of Mr. Dosett’s employees simply because some of their number fell under his thrall.”
They walked down the hall, approaching their respective rooms. An image of a brash, redheaded woman flashed through Simon’s mind.
“Mattie said that if we understood why the werewolves hated him so, then we could finally conclude our investigation. If the members of this estate have mental reservations from answering our questions, then tomorrow we’ll have to seek the answers elsewhere.”
Simon pulled a key from his pocket and slid it into his door. With a turn, the door clicked open. Luthor did likewise, though he paused in his open doorway. His eyes locked on the window across the living room and the stars that reflected through the glass.
“Sir,” Luthor said in a panic. He glanced hastily around his room, searching for rope or similar cord. “The moon is rising. If the change is to occur, it’ll happen soon. Quickly, you must restrain me.”
Simon slipped his key back into his vest pocket and smiled at his companion. “My dear Luthor, the moon rose while we were still at the party. Clearly it holds no sway over you, nor are you evidently infected with lycanthropy.”
Luthor released a breath and his shoulders slumped with relief. As quickly as his relaxation appeared, his shoulders tensed once more. “You knew that evening would come while we attended the party. You risked uncountable lives by taking me there on tonight of all nights.”
“I had a hunch that we would be able to debunk your concerns of a transformation.”
“A hunch, sir?” Luthor asked, visibly shaken. “It’s terribly irresponsible to risk lives on nothing more than an educated guess.”
“A correct educated guess,” Simon corrected.
Luthor shook his head. “Hindsight is hardly a justification for irresponsible behavior. There’s no way you could have known.”
“Just as there was no way I could have foreseen the indigenous population being the werewolves, and yet I did. Someday, you’ll learn to trust me. Perhaps after we expose Mr. Dosett for the criminal he is.”
“You’re unconscionable. Good night, sir,” Luthor said. “Sleep well but do be cautious, especially in regards to Mr. Dosett. If he has this remarkable ability, it behooves us to approach him with caution when we are forced to confront him. It won’t do us any good to solve the mystery, only to fall under his spell.”
Simon cringed at Luthor’s blasé use of “spell”. Though the werewolves were clearly mystical in nature, Simon was perfectly content thinking that the reason for their incited anger was something far more mundane.
“Until tomorrow, Luthor. Sleep well.”
Simon stepped into his room, closing the door behind him.