The room was circular, roughly, about twelve feet in diameter. Its
walls were high, at least fifteen feet or more. In its center lay a
wide pool of stagnant water, gray, cloudy-looking. Water bled off the
ceiling and dripped back into ita steady, sharp echo.
The floor was strewn with bones.
Hundreds of them, many cracked and broken.
There were so many it made them hard to identify. Piles, scattered
everywhere. I saw fish heads, crab shells, the thin delicate skulls of
birds. Others were a whole lot larger. Dogs? Maybe. I remembered
that day long ago when we'd peered into the house and watched the
carcasses come out one by one. It was possible they were dogs.
It was also possible they were bigger game.
"What is all this?" whispered Steven.
"I don't know."
We stepped carefully into the room. It was a relief to be able to
stand upright. A dozen bluebottle flies rose up to greet us. We
swatted at them.
I bent down for a closer look. I picked up one of the bigger bones.
Something had been at them. There were teeth marks. Something
I broke one in my hands. It was old and brittle. I felt a measure of
relief at that. It was easy to hope they all went back to the days
before Ben and Mary abandoned the house- some sort of burial