Unsung Requiem: The Ghost Bird Series: #13

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Unsung Requiem: The Ghost Bird Series: #13 Page 42

by C. L. Stone


  The upstairs each had three bedrooms, a shared full bathroom with the biggest bedroom having an attached bathroom with a shower.

  There were no windows on the second-floor hallway, which worried Victor a little, but there was the fourth door. Behind it was a narrow stairwell that led to the attic.

  And it was the attic that was fantastic. Over a thousand square feet of usable space, and another door inside leading to the other townhome, of which that one was identical. It was a little warm up there in the attic, but the space was magnificent. It was something you wouldn’t find in homes here, a room as big as this. There was also a small ladder that led to the roof, which was flat on top and offered a unique view of the neighborhood.

  What could they do with it? He wasn’t really sure, but he was positive the others would know how to utilize it. Additional bedrooms, maybe secret rooms they could build in? He especially liked that the homes were attached to each other directly inside, even if they had to climb around up through the attic.

  Perfect. He couldn’t help feeling overjoyed about the prospect of living there.

  Would Sang like it?

  Which room would she want? She’d have her choice at this point. Between Nathan, her, and Victor, they’d get to choose which house and rooms they occupied.

  He also liked that the home wasn’t as descript and picturesque on the outside. Compared to other historical homes on this block, this one didn’t stand out quite as much. There was no grandeur, no formal gardens… there was no yard at all really. The back patio barely had enough space for a little sitting area. The roof was really the only space, and they shared that with the other homes on either end. But it was plenty of room up there to not be disturbed.

  No one really would be as interested. It wasn’t like his parents’ house, all grand and eye-catching and meant to be seen.

  “What about the connected homes?” Mr. Buble asked. “Who owns those?”

  “The one on the corner just rents hers out, usually during the summer,” she said. “And lives in it during the winter. Sometimes she doesn’t even rent it out, just loans it to family. The other is owned by an investor, and he keeps trying to sell it off, but for far more than it’s worth. He takes it off the market and puts it back up again. It’s always empty.”

  So there might be a chance to purchase the one later, if they could talk to the investor and talk him down perhaps… And maybe the woman next door… could they own the whole building eventually?

  Not that they needed it. The two in the middle would be all they needed.

  But the potential…

  When the tour ended, Mr. Buble and Victor met with Miss Ruby downstairs, shaking hands again.

  “Thank you for this,” Mr. Buble said. “Who do we send the offer to?”

  “To me, directly,” she said. “I do my own paperwork.”

  “Ah,” Mr. Buble said. “Very smart. Have you had offers?”

  “Three, but they’re trying to lowball me,” she said.

  “Really?” Mr. Buble said, surprised. He looked to Victor. “Well, do we like it?”

  Victor did like it. He didn’t know why, he just knew. It worked. At least for now.

  He was still a little close to his parents, but if he was careful, and pretended to be someone else for a short time, it shouldn’t be a problem. No one would recognize him.

  “Let’s get it,” Victor said, unable to help himself from beaming.

  Mrs. Ruby beamed at him. “I knew I liked you, Ken.”

  Mrs. Ruby wandered off with Mr. Buble. Meanwhile, he turned back to the house.

  His house.

  His. And Sang’s. And Nathan’s. Gabriel would come soon.

  It was all happening.

  Eventually, they’d get the others out. How it’d happen, he didn’t know.

  But for once, for the first time, he felt free.

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  Books By C. L. Stone

  The Academy Ghost Bird Series:

  Introductions

  First Days

  Friends vs. Family

  Forgiveness and Permission

  Drop of Doubt

  Push and Shove

  House of Korba

  The Other Side of Envy

  The Healing Power of Sugar

  First Kiss

  Black and Green

  Love’s Cruel Redemption

  Unsung Requiem

  Her Song in His Heart (Coming Soon!)

  The Academy Scarab Beetle Series

  Thief

  Liar

  Fake

  Accessory

  Hoax

  Tempest

  Gone (Coming Soon!)

  Charleston’s Leading Ladies

  Evelyn

  Celeste (previously published as Smoking Gun)

  Rainee (Coming Soon!)

  Other C. L. Stone Books:

  Spice God

  Favored

  Girl in the Bearskin (Once Upon a Harem Book 6)

  READ AN EXCERPT FROM THE NEXT BOOK IN THE ACADEMY GHOST BIRD SERIES

  The Academy

  The Ghost Bird Series

  Her Song in His Heart

  ♥

  Book Fourteen

  ♥

  Written by C. L. Stone

  Published by

  Arcato Publishing

  She Was A Lost Girl

  The air in early February in Summerville, South Carolina matched my hopes for the task we had out for us: gloomy, threatening rain.

  A chill I couldn't shake.

  Gabriel and I stood close together, my arm behind his but touching. Waiting was the tough part. The door inside the garage could open.

  My stepmother could come out and find me here. It could trigger more trouble. While standing outside the two-story gray house it seemed large and hollow, even more so than when I had lived inside. The last time had been maybe a month before.

  Gabriel was so much taller now than when I met him last summer. His hair was cut short underneath now, and he had a mop of strands on top of his head, including the two blond locks near the front, a contrast against his natural russet color. Lean, strong, a punk rock, and gruff appearing.

  As we stood together, I noticed ink marks on his arm. I reached for it, drawing it near to see he'd drawn a scene out of a movie we'd watched last week, with a girl alone on a train with a spirit and a mouse. Drawn to look like a tattoo but a few spots had faded to show it was just pen ink.

  I was about to ask him if he'd been thinking about getting tattoos again when the door opened.

  My sister appeared and spotted us. Silently she stepped out, closing the door behind herself. Her hair was up at the moment, in a high ponytail on her head with a scrunchy tie, wearing jeans and a halter shirt I didn’t recognize, and new Nike sneakers.

  When did she get those? However, I did then notice there were empty delivery boxes piled neatly near the garbage bin just inside the garage. I hadn’t thought about them before. It didn’t matter. I imagined without me in the picture, she was able to get money to buy things, possibly on the internet now that our father had abandoned the house and everything in it. I wasn’t sure how finances were working for the house right now but I was glad she was able to get what she wanted.

  “I couldn’t find anything in the house,” Marie said. “I’ve looked every time she went into the bathroom.” She motioned to me. “You can double-check. I can ask her to do something…”

  She knew I could sneak in
quietly, without being seen. It was too risky though. I just hated to prompt whatever mental illness she carried, triggered often by my appearance. The heated divorce proceedings she was in were bad enough.

  “Maybe it’s in the boxes,” I said, pointing to the extremely large shed with two garage bay doors toward the back of the driveway. “Can we go look? If I find yours, too, I’ll bring it out.”

  She seemed hesitant but nodded. “I should stay inside. Less suspicious.”

  Not to mention she probably didn’t want to hang out with us for an afternoon sifting through boxes.

  Marie went back inside. We headed to the shed, moving quickly to a side door and entering, not even daring to turn the lights on inside. Instead, we used our phones as lights, scanning the space. We slowly made our way in, until Gabriel grumbled.

  “We’re not going to find much looking in the fucking dark like this.” He went back, turned on the lights.

  He continued, “If your stepmom…ex mom…asks about it, Marie can come back out and turn the light off…make some excuse.”

  Made sense.

  Part of me had that inkling of paranoia, guilt, and fear of getting caught, the same I carried with me nearly all my life in that house.

  The number of boxes seemed bigger than last time. Or maybe now standing here, I got the full realization of we never really moved in, or we carried so many items that I never thought to look at, mostly because I considered the items to be not mine to look through. My mother often scolded me for pilfering.

  Some boxes, I thought, had our old toys. We never really threw anything out, not toys, not kid clothes, and we didn’t have garage sales. We just put them in boxes and tucked them into the garage, as if boxing and tucking away was enough to forget they even existed.

  “There’s got to be something in here,” Gabriel said. “They couldn’t enroll you in school without a birth certificate and shot records.” He went to one of the boxes and opened the top, peering inside. “Could be anywhere though. This might take a while.”

  “Can’t we get the copies that were made at the school?” I asked.

  “Those we’ll delete,” Gabriel said. “But we need the originals. We can't have them brought up after you've left. We'll be lucky if your dad doesn't have them with him. We’ll already have to send Luke in to fetch anything related to you if he does have anything.”

  Being a Ghost Bird was tricky because it involved not having any background to trace you with. I still didn’t know the need for someone like me, but it seemed important. Our team took great care in ensuring my identity would be as obscure as possible. The outside world had to not be able to trace me.

  Gabriel picked up a couple of old dusty cloth, hardbound books out of one of the boxes. He opened them, flipping through pages. “Check every page. Sometimes things get tucked in, you know?”

  We each took a box at a time. Gabriel kept us organized by shuffling boxes to the opposite wall of the shed after they’ve been searched. The air was stifling and despite the colder weather, we were getting warm as we searched.

  Gabriel removed his shirt after a while. His bare chest glistened with a light sweat. Lean, strong, with various muscle lines. His jeans hung low enough from shuffling around that the start of a V-line at the lower abdomen showed.

  Despite being elbow deep in boxes and shifting items, I became slightly distracted. All the guys on the team were so attractive in individual ways to me. Gabriel was no exception.

  His striking crystal blue eyes met my gaze, catching me staring at him.

  I blinked rapidly, gazing into the box, pretending to shift through items but not really looking for a few seconds after getting caught.

  After a few more boxes, we managed to find a collection of paperwork, tucked into a metal box that was unlocked. It had copies of information for both myself and my sister. Mine appeared to be photocopies but notarized by stamp and signature.

  I gazed over my own birth certificate, unsure if I ever really looked at it.

  October 6th. No hospital, home birth. Illinois.

  There were vaccination records as well, mostly scrawled out in pen and signed by a doctor.

  Gabriel looked it over. He looked at Marie’s as well, comparing. “They look exactly the same.”

  I looked over his shoulder as he held up the pages. The vaccination records were identical, as if we’d gotten shots at the exact same time. There were only very slight alterations to the dates. Even the signatures looked identical.

  It was the same with the social security card. My name, but a very similar number to Marie’s and only two digits off. And mine was just a photocopy and not a real one.

  “Forged,” Gabriel said. “Just enough for you to get your license maybe.”

  “I guess for us, that’s good news,” I said.

  Gabriel combed his fingers through his hair, gazing down at the paperwork. “We should keep going. And check the rest. Make sure there’s nothing left behind.”

  I knew why he said so. We were hoping this was the last time I’d be here. After this, unless Marie or my stepmom needed my help, I wouldn’t be back.

  Saying goodbye forever.

  We were about finished up when Gabriel pulled an old Bible out of a box. I thought I recognized it. It had an old leather cover, large with gold along the edges of the pages. My parents never went to church, though my mother often brought up sin and God in her ramblings.

  The old Bible in Gabriel’s hands didn’t seem particularly important to her or she would have brought it inside.

  Gabriel opened it up, reading an inscription. “It says Sorenson,” he said. He held it up to show it to me.

  As he did, something thin and small fluttered out from between the pages, landing on the ground between us.

  A photograph. An old Polaroid sort with a white frame.

  Gabriel picked it up, and he stopped, his mouth opening in surprise. “Jesus Fucking Christ,” he breathed. “Thought this was you for a second.”

  My heart raced. I blinked, aware of what he was saying but the meaning behind it not connecting.

  He flipped the photo to show me.

  It was me, or my image. Me with a tiny baby wrapped in a blanket. In a room with a brick fireplace in the background.

  At the white bottom border of the photo, there was an inscription: October 7th. Winchester, Kentucky. One day old.

  Kentucky?

  I didn’t know what to say. It had to be her.

  My real mother.

  Gabriel flipped it back to look at the photo again. He breathed the inscription. “You’re shitting me.”

  “I was born in Kentucky?” I asked. I hadn’t thought about it. I knew I had family there, that the Sorensons were from there, but I guess I assumed I was still born in Illinois. I hadn’t realized that might not be the case.

  “Yeah, that,” Gabriel said, still gazing at the photo. He lowered it a bit, turning the image slightly as he stared. “But…I didn’t think.” He looked up at me. “This is where my mom is from.”

  My eyes widened. “What?”

  He nodded slowly. “I’ve got family there still. Cousins. Haven’t seen them in years.” He blinked rapidly. He rolled his head back and closed his eyes. “God, don’t tell me.”

  “What?” I said, very worried about why he seemed so stressed out.

  He smirked and shook his head. “It’s a small town Sang and fuck us if we’re…I mean it could be…we’re related.” He added quickly. “Distantly. There’s no way. I never heard of some Sorenson family relation.”

  It seemed impossible. Still, my heart raced. Suddenly this was all too real. I’d held off thinking too much about my mom, where she was from, and what happened to her.

  And now it was here, staring me in the face.

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  About C. L. Stone

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nbsp; ● Marvelour of Wonder

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  Experience

  Spent an extraordinary number of years with absolutely no control over the capping of imagination, fun, and curiosity. Willingly takes part in impossible problems only to come up with the most ludicrous solution. Due to unfortunate circumstances, will no longer experience feeling on a small spot on my left calf.

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  Secret Keeper | Occasion Riser | Barefoot Walker Strange Acceptance | Magic Maker | Restless Reckless | Gravity Defiant | Fairy Tale Reader | Story Maker-Upper | Amusingly Baffled | Comprehensive Curiousness | Usually Unbelievable

 

 

 


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