Paranormal After Dark
Page 145
Kate pulled her back. “Chill out, Claire!”
By this time Steph was standing too.
“Why don’t you get more towels?” Steph asked, nudging her in the opposite direction. “I didn’t bring enough.”
“You want me to drive all the way home?” Claire asked, resenting the distraction. Her house was ten minutes away.
“No. Just borrow some from the girl’s locker room. No one will know.”
“Unless I tell,” Corey said. “Then you’ll have to donate all that money to the school or something.”
“I guess we’ll owe you one,” Kate said, touching his arm.
Claire picked up Steph’s wet towel and tossed it at Kate.
“I’ll be right back,” Claire said and stomped off. What was Kate’s problem? You’d think she would’ve learned by now.
She threw open the front door of the school and kicked the nearest garbage can. Mrs. Summers stuck her head out the office door. “Everything okay?”
“Yeah. Sorry,” Claire mumbled.
“What do you need?”
“I have to use the bathroom. And…” She went out on a limb. Mrs. Summers, the high school’s secretary, had never let her down before. “Can we borrow some towels from the girl’s locker room?”
Mrs. Summers shrugged, making her shoulder-pads and red, curly hair bounce. “Help yourself. Just make sure you wash and return them this week. I think the swim team’s going to start summer practice soon.”
“Thanks. We will.” Claire smiled and walked to the rear of the empty school. She took a left into the locker room, leaving the lights off as there was just enough light spilling in from the natatorium that she could see the towels sitting on a shelf nearby.
She must not have been paying attention to where she was going because all of a sudden she tripped. She thrust her hands out to break her fall, but not before smacking her head against the tiled floor. Moaning from an instant headache, she rolled over and sat up to see what had tripped her. An odd figure lay several feet away. A blanket? No, too hard. Was that a hand?
Claire tried to stand to turn the lights on, but her head spun. She sat back down on the floor. The natatorium’s faint light wasn’t enough to make out details, but something looked very wrong with the heap in front of her. And felt wrong, too.
She moved closer, crawling on her hands and knees, while her eyes tried to adjust to the darkness. She reached out and touched the hard form. Her fingers grazed what felt like skin, but it was cold, as cold as the tiled floor.
She leaned forward, but still couldn’t tell what she was looking at. She pulled her cell phone out of her pocket and turned it on in the direction of the object. Only inches from her face, dull light illuminated the frozen, milky, white eyes of a girl, a dead girl.
Claire screamed and scrambled backwards, dropping her phone with a clatter that shattered her nerves.
She didn’t remember much after that. She knew she was running down the hall, feeling emotions she swore she’d never feel again. Along with them came violent memories of her father that threatened to bring her to her knees. She was screaming or was that terrifying sound only inside her head?
Claire heard Mrs. Summers calling her name as she raced past the office. The front door opened, but Claire didn’t know if she was the one who had opened it. Everything was a chaotic blur until she smashed into something warm and solid. Arms came around her and held her tight.
“Hey, what’s wrong?” a male voice said. Calm and smooth. Ethan’s voice.
She buried her face into his chest to hide her wet eyes. “We need to call the police. A girl. It’s horrible.”
“Claire? Are you all right?” Mrs. Summers asked behind her.
Ethan’s arms held her close. “She said we need to call the police.”
“What’s happened, Claire?”
She felt a palm press on her shoulder. She turned her head and whispered to Mrs. Summers, “There’s a dead girl in the locker room.”
Mrs. Summer’s face turned the same shade of white as her blouse. “Are you sure?”
Claire nodded. She knew death too well. Something horrible had happened to that girl.
Mrs. Summers rubbed her back. “Take care of her, Ethan. I’ll call the police.”
She turned and walked away.
After she left, Ethan said nothing. He simply held her and stroked the back of her head while she tried to stop shaking. It almost felt like old times.
Pull it together, Claire. She forced herself to think of something else. The band. Singing. The Fire and Ice concert. Her breathing slowed.
Not far away she heard her friends laughing. I should be with them, Claire thought, but she couldn’t move.
Then she heard a familiar voice say, “What are you guys doing?”
Ethan’s arms dropped and he stepped away. She thought she would fall, but she remained upright.
Ethan lowered sunglasses back over his eyes and said, “Claire’s upset.”
Logan, who must’ve just arrived, moved to her side. “What happened?”
She shook her head and tried to speak, but only managed to mumble.
He wrapped his arm around her shoulders. “Come on. Let’s get you out of here. You can tell me later.”
Claire leaned her head against his shoulder and walked with him toward Kate and Steph. She loved Logan. They’d been friends since the first grade when she’d peed her pants, and he covered for her by saying he pushed her into a puddle—and he never let her forget it either. Since that day she had tried to repay him, but he always did something else that left her forever in his debt, including finding the apartment complex they were all going to live in come fall.
Kate moved away from Corey when she saw them approaching, but Claire noticed the way Corey’s hand lingered on Kate’s arm. She used her hatred of him to strengthen her, to rebuild the emotional wall that had crumbled the moment she saw the dead girl.
“I’m taking Claire home,” Logan said to the group.
“Huh? Why?” Kate asked. Steph stood up from the sidewalk.
Claire tried to hide her eyes, which were still brimming with tears, but they saw.
“Oh no! Claire, what’s wrong?” Kate said, rushing over with Steph beside her. As far as Claire knew, this was the first time she’d ever cried in front of them.
Corey smirked. “Did you get busted stealing towels?”
“Shut the hell up,” Logan said.
Corey stepped forward. “You going to make me?”
Logan met him halfway.
“Enough!” Claire said, finding her voice and the rest of her strength. “The police will be here soon.”
Logan turned to her. “Why?”
“Because I found a girl in the locker room. Dead.”
Everyone went silent for a long moment. Finally, Logan said in a hushed tone, “I can’t believe it! That’s horrible. Are you okay?”
Claire straightened her shoulders. “I’m fine.”
As long as I don’t close my eyes. She looked away. Not far off, Ethan was leaning against the school, looking in their direction. She couldn’t help but wonder what he must be thinking.
“Do we know her?” Steph asked, staring at the school.
She followed her gaze. “I don’t think so.”
Mrs. Summers came out of the front doors and walked toward them. Claire knew by the frightened look in her eyes that she’d seen the body too.
“The police will be here any minute,” Mrs. Summers said when she reached them. “They’ll want to talk to each one of you, especially you, Claire. Why don’t you all come wait in the office? It’s going to be a long afternoon.”
Mrs. Summers was right. The police took forever doing whatever it was they did when someone dies, and afterwards they interviewed each one of them. Claire had to be interviewed twice—once on site and again at the police station. And by the questions they were asking, she got the feeling they thought the girl had been murdered.
At the sugg
estion of a police officer, she called her mother, but when Claire told her what had happened her mother asked if she could deal with it on her own. She was at work and they needed the money, she reminded Claire. Yes, definitely more important.
Fortunately, Logan stayed with her the entire time, one more thing she’d owe him for. Afterwards, he drove her home. It was nighttime, and although the sky was dark, the windows in her home were darker.
“Is your mother home?” Logan asked when he turned off the car’s engine.
Claire stared out the window. “It’s a Saturday night. She won’t be back for hours.”
“Working?”
“Something like that.”
“You going to be okay tonight?”
“I’ll be fine,” she said, but inside she trembled.
Logan opened his door. “Let me at least walk you in.”
She waited for him to round the car, her hands gripping the dashboard. The car felt safe. Her home was empty. A cracked shell.
Logan opened the passenger door. “It’s going to be okay. You’ll see.”
She forced a smile and stepped outside, away from the shelter of the car, and followed him across long, green grass that was in desperate need of a cut. It slowed her down, making her want to stop. To not move forward.
“I’ve never been questioned by a policeman before,” Logan said. “What a freak show.”
She wasn’t listening. Panic threatened to choke her the closer she came to the front door. Why was she so scared? It wasn’t like she hadn’t seen death before. But never had it been so unexpected and in her face. Every time she closed her eyes she saw the girl’s open, pale, blue eyes, staring at her like they wanted to tell her a secret.
Logan stopped walking. “Do you have a key?”
She stared at the front door. “What?”
“A key to get in?”
“Right. Sure.” She removed a key from her pocket and tried to slide it into the keyhole, but she was shaking so badly that it fell from her hand.
“Claire?” Logan asked. He bent down and picked it up.
“I’m fine.”
“Look at me.”
She couldn’t do it. She’d already cried once today, and that was once more than Logan had seen in all the time they’d known each other. Her darkened image reflected back in the door’s window. It was so dark she couldn’t see her eyes.
He stepped between her and the door.
“Look at me,” he said again.
Her eyes slowly met his and she shook her head. “I can’t be alone. Please. Don’t leave me.”
Tears fell again. That made twice.
He hesitated before putting his arms around her, but when he did, she didn’t recoil from being touched. Not surprisingly she hadn’t when Ethan had held her, either. There were benefits to feeling numb.
“It’s okay,” Logan said. “I’m not going anywhere.”
She inhaled deeply, her breath quivering while more tears fell. He was staying. She wasn’t alone. She had faced death once before with her sister. Give her anything else to battle, and she could do it, but death was something she just didn’t know how to fight.
Chapter 4
ALBERT CLOSED HIS eyes and opened them again. Through a shops front window, jammed into long line of tourists all hoping for ice cream, Claire Williams waited her turn. She looked the same as always: long dark hair, tanned skin, and bright green eyes. But she wasn’t the same. Not even close.
The hard exterior he’d grown accustomed to over the years had crumbled the day she’d discovered the girl’s body. He’d seen her exposed, had felt her naked emotions bleeding onto his arms. To experience the vulnerability of someone who appeared void of feeling had made him reconsider his whole outlook on life. If Claire could do this, then maybe others could too. Maybe even his father.
Albert wondered what it’d take for his dad to show emotion, to destroy his obsessive need to control. That’s what emotions were to him—uncontrollable.
He looked up just in time to see Claire coming toward the front door holding a tall waffle cone. He quickly ducked into the neighboring tourist shop wanting to go unnoticed. He discovered days ago that when he did this, he could catch glimpses of her softer side that he never noticed before. Like the other day when she’d gone out of her way to help a handicapped kid cross the street, or another time when she tried to break up a fight (she ended it by throwing a few punches herself, but that hadn’t been her initial goal). Claire seemed to notice what others didn’t, and he was sad he hadn’t noticed it sooner.
As soon as she passed, he fell in step behind her with several people between them. Summers were always crowded in Bandon. Normally he hated the swell of tourists that came with the warmer weather, but lately he loved the cover. It gave him a chance to watch Claire unnoticed.
Claire didn’t seem to notice the people around her as she licked at her cone. She was always in her own world and had been for a long time. It was a world she often spoke of escaping. Maybe that explained her perma-pissed expression.
It’s not that Claire didn’t have good reason to be upset. Everyone knew her older sister died of cancer a few years before. At her sister’s funeral, Claire had sat by herself, dry-eyed, even after her mother had arrived late, drunk and slurring obscenities. Her father hadn’t shown up at all. And shortly after that he was sent to prison. No one really knew why, but there were rumors.
Claire paused at the corner of the street and looked around as if she was looking for someone. After a few seconds, she continued on. Albert followed. Since that day he’d held her, she had unknowingly become a bright light in his life, shining through the darkness that continued to plague him.
He closed his eyes tight, remembering the night with Mindy. The moment the Bodian drug had left his system, he couldn’t believe what had happened. The violent way he’d handled her appalled him so much that he was sick every day after. He’d even seriously considered suicide, but then Claire had cried. Her tears had given him hope. She was someone he thought he knew really well, but those tears had proved him wrong.
“Come on, Claire. Let’s go!” Kate called from the front seat of a beat-up Corolla across the street from her.
He followed Kate’s gaze until he found Claire in front of a t-shirt shop. She was handing a flyer to a girl he didn’t recognize.
“One sec,” Claire called back. A minute later she jumped into the car with Kate.
Albert walked over to the girl holding the flyer. “Can I see that?”
“You can have it,” she said. “Not my type of music.”
He took the paper and read over it. This weekend Grave Addiction and a few other local bands were playing at the Bandon fairgrounds. This was information he already knew. He folded the flyer and shoved it into his back pocket.
The whole way home he thought of Claire. He had to. If he didn’t, then his thoughts would return to the way Mindy’s head had slammed into the wooden bench, or how incredibly powerful the drug had made him feel. Either thought made him queasy. So did driving up his driveway.
He sat in the car for several minutes, staring at his family’s ordinary tan house and its ordinary lawn. But what it sheltered wasn’t ordinary. A therapist could spend their whole career studying his family’s jacked-up dynamics and still never come up with an explanation for their behavior.
Cursing under his breath, he opened the car door and headed inside. His father wouldn’t be home for another couple of hours, but his mom would be waiting for him. With a list.
“Where have you been?” his mother said the second he stepped inside.
He opened the hall closet and hung up his jacket and backpack, then removed his shoes. When he turned around, his mother was blocking his path to the kitchen. The bun at the back of her head was pulled so tight it strained the skin on her face.
“I asked you a question,” she said again.
“I just got off work.”
“You should’ve been home fifteen minutes
ago.”
“I was sitting in the driveway.”
She blinked. “Let me see your hands.” Her thin lips stretched to the sides of her face like a puppet’s.
“Why?”
“Are you questioning me?”
He raised his arms, palms turned up. She gripped them with vulture-like claws and inspected them thoroughly, even sniffing them.
“Did I pass?” he asked. For some reason, his mother always thought he secretly smoked.
Her claws curled into a fist, but she left one finger pointed at his chest. “You watch it young man or we’ll revoke your free time.”
“I have plans this weekend,” he said, trying to stay calm.
“Plans can change.” She removed a crisp piece of paper from her apron and handed it to him. “Maybe if you finish this by the time your father comes home, I might not tell him about your tardiness.”
“Fine.” He looked down at the paper. Usual stuff—cleaning the same places that had been cleaned twenty-four hours ago. Two more months. Then he was done with this shit.
“Well?” his mother said, still standing in front of him.
He looked up. Her stern puppet face had been replaced by the face of an angel. She batted her eyes and smiled.
“What?” he asked, totally confused.
“Don’t I get a hug? You are my boy after all.”
He paused, wondering if he should decline, but that would definitely seal his fate for the weekend. Leaning toward her, he reached around her back and patted lightly, trying to ignore the bile rising in his throat.
“That’s more like it,” she said. “Now be a good boy and don’t forget to shower after your chores.”
He left quickly.
His mother hadn’t always been psycho. He still had memories of a normal mom who used to take him to the park and read to him, but that was before his older brother of nearly eight years had turned into a meth head and ended up in prison for shooting a couple of people during a home invasion. The day Benjamin was taken away something had snapped in his mom’s brain, and she hadn’t been the same since. For years he tried to understand her craziness, even feeling sorry for her at times, but now all he felt was revulsion.