Desire in Frost

Home > Young Adult > Desire in Frost > Page 7
Desire in Frost Page 7

by Alicia Rades


  “Maybe if we put on something you know,” he offered, changing the settings on the dash to play the radio.

  My mouth dropped open. “You want me to sing?”

  “Come on,” he encouraged. “It will be fun. It’s just us two in the car.”

  I stared at him in disbelief.

  He looked over at me for a moment before fixing his eyes back on the road.

  “You can’t be serious,” I objected.

  “I am.”

  I recalled a time when Derek, Emma, and I tried to sing karaoke. Emma was the one with a voice, but we couldn’t stop laughing at ourselves long enough to sing decently. I hadn’t sang in front of anyone but my two best friends practically my whole life. I wasn’t about to start embarrassing myself now, especially not in front of Robin.

  “You’ll just make fun of me, like you always do,” I told him.

  Robin sighed. “No, I won’t. And I do not always make fun of you. I’ve been known to give you a few compliments every now and then. Seriously, Crystal. You need to lighten up and have some fun. You’re always so serious.” He poked me while he said this. Part of me wanted to retaliate and slap him in the face, but I actually found myself laughing.

  The song on the radio changed. After a moment, I noticed my favorite song was playing. It was the kind of song with an upbeat tempo that you simply couldn’t listen to without dancing.

  “Come on,” Robin pleaded. “You have to know this song.” He reached over and turned it up. He smiled and began dancing and singing in his seat. His head bobbed to the beat while one arm moved along with it.

  I couldn’t help it when a smiled formed across my own face while watching him. When the song hit the chorus, I reluctantly joined in. I was quiet at first and sat unmoving in my seat. Robin looked over at me, a smile still fixed on his face while he sang and danced. The look he gave encouraged me.

  I closed my eyes and let my head fall back as I laughed. If Robin could act this weird in front of me, he surely wouldn’t judge me to do the same. So I raised my voice and sang along. When it got to the part in the third verse where the artist was speaking instead of singing, Robin let me take it away. I even added motions and facial expressions as I sang. And then the singer belted out a really high note. I was shocked to hear the same note coming out of my own body. And it wasn’t half bad!

  When the song ended, Robin and I were both still laughing.

  I watched him from where I sat and was completely stunned when I noticed I was having fun with him again. Robin, the guy who always had a criticism on the tip of his tongue. Robin, who I had absolutely nothing in common with except his uncle. Robin, who seemed so cool on the outside but admitted to having some dark interior I still hadn’t cracked. Then again, I hadn’t been worrying about the secret I was sure he was hiding because I was too worried about—

  Hope. Oh, my god. How could I be having so much fun when Hope was still out there and needed my help? A wave of guilt rushed over me.

  Robin was still singing along to the next song when he glanced over and noticed me looking out the window again. “Crystal, are you okay? I thought we were having fun.”

  “Yeah. No. I mean, it was fun. It’s just . . .” I didn’t know how to finish. Just then, my phone rang, saving me from an explanation. The caller ID told me it was Derek.

  “Hi,” I greeted. “Did you find your dog yet?”

  “No,” Derek said, a hint of sadness to his voice. I felt sorry for him. “That’s why I’m calling. I was wondering if maybe you could . . . I don’t know . . . Use your powers or something.”

  I remembered the way Emma and I talked about the same thing earlier, but I knew I couldn’t do it. I had to have something to touch if I was going to find Derek’s dog. Besides, I’d never found a living being before.

  “I’m sorry, Derek. I don’t think I can.” I lowered my voice. “Besides, I thought you didn’t even believe me.” It was true. After I’d told Derek I was psychic, he’d been having a tough time accepting it as truth.

  “I want to, Crystal, and right now, you’re my only hope.”

  “Derek, I’m literally across the country. Why don’t you have Emma try to find him? She’s been making a lot of progress lately.” I quickly realized what I was saying in front of Robin. “Just suggest it to her, okay?”

  “Yeah, okay. Thanks, Crystal.”

  “Derek, aren’t you supposed to be in class?”

  He gave a bit of a laugh. “It’s lunch time, Crystal.” I looked at the clock. I had forgotten about the time difference. “I’ll see you later, Crystal. Bye.”

  I hung up.

  “Was that your boyfriend?” Robin asked.

  “Well, he’s a boy, and he’s a friend,” I replied.

  We sat in silence most of the rest of the way there apart from me telling Robin where to go. When we drove up to the house I knew Hope was staying in, all the nerves in my body went into overdrive.

  13

  My palms grew clammy, and my pulse quickened. I could hardly breathe as I prepared to face the man who had haunted my dreams for weeks. And then the obvious hit me. I couldn’t just walk up to his door and demand he give me Hope. Why had I even come here? Couldn’t I just call the cops now that I knew where the house was?

  No. I knew I couldn’t do that. They would never believe in a psychic vision, and if I could somehow explain how I knew Hope was here, it would look like I was somehow involved.

  “Well,” Robin said. “Are you going to go meet your friend?”

  My head reeled as I considered the consequences of my actions. What would happen when I went up to that door? How would I help Hope get back home? What was I even doing here? Still, we couldn’t leave now. I wouldn’t be able to explain what was going on to Robin, and I couldn’t possibly abandon Hope.

  I closed my eyes and took a deep breath. “I just need a minute, okay?”

  “That nervous? Is this an old boyfriend or something?” I wasn’t in the right mindset to place Robin’s tone.

  “No,” I answered. “Nothing like that. Just a girl who used to live in my town.”

  But is she actually here? I wondered. The whole time we’d been driving down to Florida, I felt like I was getting closer to Hope, but now sitting in front of the house I was led to, I didn’t feel her presence. And there were a lot of other things that didn’t add up, like how Penny told me to help her sister, Hope, only Teddy said he knew Hope didn’t have a sister, not to mention that I couldn’t make sense of who would bring Hope all the way down to Florida. Could I be misinterpreting everything and headed down the wrong path once again? I shuttered at the possibility.

  I needed to know if Hope Ross was in that house one way or another. If it wasn’t Hope Ross, then I needed to know who else needed help and why I was sent here.

  I stared at the house in front of me. It looked like a normal house, albeit small. It was a light shade of blue, complete with a small deck attached to the front and a decent sized lawn. Nothing about the house screamed danger. In fact, the house looked like a peaceful place to raise a family, but I knew that something dark lurked behind those walls.

  A lump formed in my throat when I thought about knocking on the door. I swallowed to force it back down. My voice quivered when I spoke, but I didn’t take my eyes off the door. “Will you come with me?” I asked Robin because I wasn’t sure I could do this alone.

  I knew I had to do it nonetheless. The front door called out to me, taunting me for coming this far but not having the courage to investigate. I had to do this. I had to prove to myself—and to Teddy—that my abilities were leading me down the right path, that they weren't flawed.

  “Sure,” Robin agreed, opening his door and stepping out of the car.

  I had no choice but to follow him. My hand shook when I reached for the door handle, and I nearly missed it as my extremities came to life in a nervous shutter.

  I stepped out of the car into the bright sun. My knees locked in place. Was Hope in there? Wa
s this going to work? Why couldn’t I just see the future and see what would happen if I knocked on that door? All these thoughts kept me from pushing my legs forward.

  “Crystal.” Robin’s voice called me to attention.

  I looked up at him in a daze.

  “Are we going to do this or not?” Robin’s eyes ran over my face, and then he stepped closer and gripped my shoulders in support. I caught a whiff of his scent and almost crumbled into his arms. His eyes were full of seriousness, an emotion I’d rarely seen in him. “Are you okay? You look pale.”

  I felt like I was going to hurl, but I took a deep breath instead and pushed all my nerves down my throat until they gathered at the pit of my stomach. “I’m fine,” I assured him. “I’m always pale.” I faked a smile to show him I was okay, but I didn’t think any confidence showed through.

  To my surprise, Robin grabbed my hand and led me up the walkway toward the door. I was nervous enough that Robin’s touch hardly had an effect on me. I caught my breath once again as we neared the steps. When we reached the door and Robin released my hand, much of my anxiety fled away. I can do this, I thought. I’m the only one who can do this.

  Robin looked at me expectantly. I raised a hand and knocked on the door. We both listened for footsteps but didn’t hear any. I let out a sigh of relief, but at the same time, a wave of disappointment washed over me. I wasn’t any closer to Hope than I was this morning. We waited another few long seconds. Nothing. I knocked again, louder this time.

  “Sorry you came all this way,” Robin said, “but I don’t think your friend is home.”

  I wanted to be relieved since this would allow me more time to come up with a plan of attack, but I couldn’t think straight. The thought of losing Hope once again consumed me. Why was I here if there was nothing to find?

  “No,” I insisted. “That can’t be right. She has to be here somewhere.”

  Someone has to be here. Otherwise, why am I here? All the nerves drained out of me when I thought this, and suddenly, all I felt was a burning desire to find Hope. I gripped the door knob and twisted. It didn’t budge.

  I turned from the door and looked around in exasperation, hoping there would be an answer nearby. There wasn’t much for activity. A few children were playing in a yard nearby, and a maroon car slowed along the street and then continued on its way. Then I noticed an elderly man sitting on a porch swing at the house next to the one I stood at. I started toward him.

  “Crystal, what are you doing?” Robin asked.

  Without looking back at him, I told him, “To get some answers. Just give me a minute alone, okay?”

  “Okay,” he agreed. His footsteps drift away as he headed back toward the car.

  A faint sensation washed over me as I made my way over to the man. Nerves, again, I told myself.

  The man smiled at me when I approached his porch steps. He was slightly plump with gray thinning hair and wrinkles around his eyes and mouth as if he smiled a lot. He was swinging back and forth on his porch swing to the rhythm of the light breeze. The air was cold against my nervous skin, which sent a chill down my spine.

  “Can I help you with something?” the man asked.

  I couldn’t help but hold onto the porch’s support beam when I made it to the top of the stairs. It was all I could do to not topple over in anticipation of answers.

  “Hi,” I greeted him with a smile. “Uh, my name is Crystal, and I’m just wondering if you know when your neighbors will be home. I came a long way to visit them, but they aren’t there.”

  He looked over at the blue house. “You’re looking for Lauren? She left this morning, and I haven’t seen her since.”

  Lauren? I thought. No, I’m not looking for Lauren. I’m looking for Hope.

  My stomach twisted at the thought of being wrong once again. How could my visions be so inaccurate? Why would I be here if the abductor didn’t take Hope here? The sickening feeling returned, and I once again felt a stab of anger and frustration when it hit me that I’d made another huge mistake. I thought I had a decent grasp on my abilities, but it turns out I didn’t, and that sent my self-esteem crumbling down.

  I took a deep breath anyway to calm myself. I wanted desperately to be right about something. “Does Lauren have a boyfriend or something?” I asked, wondering if the abductor took Hope here at some point. Maybe Lauren was Jeff’s girlfriend and he’d taken her here. Maybe she was a relative of his. “A brother or someone who has been hanging around?” I added.

  The man thought about this for a second. “Not as far as I’ve noticed. Just her.”

  “What about a child?” I asked desperately. “She doesn’t have a little girl with her?”

  “A little girl?” The man seemed taken aback. “No. Not since . . . ” He paused for a second. “No, I haven’t seen a child around lately.”

  I thanked the man and walked back to the car. I bit the inside of my lip hard to hold back the tears and mask my utter disappointment in front of Robin.

  “What was that all about?” Robin asked once I slid into the passenger seat.

  “I was just asking the guy a few questions.”

  “What guy?” Robin craned his neck to get a good look at the house I’d just been at.

  I didn’t say anything. Instead, I sat there frozen, realizing what his words meant. The man I just spoke with was a ghost, and the nerves I felt when I walked up to his porch were the effects of his presence.

  14

  Robin suggested we get something to eat. I couldn’t do anything but agree. I thought it best to have something that would settle my stomach. As we drove back to a commercial part of town to find a restaurant, I once again tried sorting through my thoughts. Why had Penny led me here? Who was I supposed to find? Why did I find a girl named Lauren instead? Was I supposed to help Lauren in some way? I wasn’t sure I was capable of taking on another challenge since the ones I was already tackling were kicking my butt. Why does it seem like every move I make is in the wrong direction? I wondered.

  Robin pulled into the parking lot of a small family diner and managed to find a shaded parking spot behind the building. When we entered the diner, most of the tables were empty. We slid into a booth across from each other and ordered right away.

  “So, what do we do now that your friend wasn’t home?” he asked. “Can you text her and see where she is? I hate to have come all this way for nothing.”

  Robin leaned forward across the table. His eyes bore into mine in a way I couldn’t describe. It was like he was daring me to look away first. For a few moments, I completely forgot about his question and instead let myself fall into the eyes staring at me from across the table. My breath all but ceased, but my heart sped up until my fingers quivered. Without taking his eyes off me, Robin sipped on his ice water. I bit my tongue ever so slightly without realizing it.

  “So?” Robin snapped me back out of my daze.

  What was his question again? “What?” I asked, blinking a few times.

  “I said I hate to have come all this way for nothing. Didn’t she know you were coming?”

  “Uh, I kind of wanted it to be a surprise.”

  “Can you text her, see where she is?”

  “Oh, uh, yeah. Can you give me a minute?” I didn’t wait for an answer. I stood up and nearly raced to the bathroom.

  Once safely in a stall, I rested my head against the stall wall, closed my eyes, and took a deep breath. I cannot be thinking about Robin right now, I scolded myself. Hope is my main priority. Anything regarding my abilities is my main priority.

  I took a few more calming breaths and was thankful when I sank to the ground and the stall was big enough for me to sit cross legged in.

  Hope. I need to find Hope.

  As I let this desire consume me, I put all the practice Emma and I had been doing to work. I struggled to clear my mind and find something that would tell me where to go next. I only hoped it would lead me to the right place this time. Maybe Teddy was right. Maybe I was
embarking on a wild goose chase.

  I knew time was passing, but I didn’t know how long I sat there. Gradually, I became completely oblivious to my surroundings. I wasn’t in the bathroom anymore. I was floating in a different realm where I reached out to Hope. I could feel her slightly, and when I did, I pushed harder. She was lonely, but she wasn’t alone. She wasn’t hurt. I knew that much, and that was somewhat comforting to me. But it wasn’t enough. I put every ounce of power I knew I had into connecting with her. I had to find her. I wouldn’t accept any other alternative.

  I just want to go home, Hope’s thoughts said in my mind. I want to go home where I’m with my real mommy. I want my mommy to hug me again, to call me Hope. I just want to go home.

  My eyes shot open. I was close. I was really close to Hope, but that’s all I knew. I couldn’t go back to Gail and Wayne’s right now. I had to stick around until I knew more.

  I closed my eyes again to get Hope’s location, but nothing came to me. I shook off an odd feeling as I stepped out of the stall, but I nearly jumped out of my skin when I saw a man with green eyes staring back at me. My first instinct was to scream because there was a man in the girl’s bathroom, but I recognized those eyes. I quickly regained my composure and swallowed the lump in my throat. My mouth went dry, but I somehow still managed to croak out, “Scott?”

  He stared back at me, and I nearly broke down. My gaze locked on his in desperation. “You have to help me! I know I’m close, but I don’t know where Hope is. Why are you here? Can you tell me where she is?”

  “I didn’t know,” he said.

  Why is he here if he doesn’t know where she is? I thought. I need the answer, and being psychic isn’t doing anything for me!

  Just as I opened my mouth to speak, a knock rapped on the door. My eyes darted to the door for a second then back to Scott, but he was gone. The door creaked open, and I heard Robin’s voice through the crack.

 

‹ Prev