Bad Moon Rising (Pine Deep 3)
Her head turn slightly. “M…Mike?”
“Yeah, Mom. Are you all right? Are you sick?” He stood behind the couch, not ten feet from her, still too conditioned to go any further into the room. Another of Vic’s rules.
“Mike?”
“Why are you sitting here in the dark, Mom?” He took a determined step forward through the resistant gloom. “Look, let me turn on the light…”
“NO!” she shrieked as she recoiled from him. “Just leave me be. ”
“Come on, Mom, what’s going on?”
She huddled into herself, turning away from him so that he couldn’t even see the silhouette of her face. “You shouldn’t be in here, Mike, you know Vic doesn’t like you to be in the living room. ”
“Mom, if you’re sick or…hurt…then we need to get some help—”
She made a sound and it took Mike a moment to realize that she had laughed. A short, bitter bark of a laugh. “I think we can all agree it’s a little late for that,” she said in a faux light tone that was ghastly to hear.
“Mom?”
“I’m okay. Just leave me alone, Mike. Just go to your room. Do your homework. ”
Mike stood there, uncertain. “Well…can I fix you something? Are you hungry?”
She turned farther away from him. He thought he heard her say “Yes,” but he just as easily could have imagined it.
“How about some tea? You want me to make you a cup of tea?”
“I think I heard her say go to your room,” Vic said from behind him.
Mike cried out and jumped as he turned. Vic stood there in the kitchen hallway, arms folded, leaning one shoulder against the wall. He was wearing a tank top and jeans and his arms and chest were cut with wiry muscle.
The moment hung in space and Mike waited for the first blow.
“Now,” Vic said. His voice never rose above a conversational tone.
Mike half turned. “Mom…?”
“Do as you’re told, Mike,” she said. “Everything’s fine. ”
Mike turned back to Vic, who was not looking at him; instead Vic was staring into the living room at the figure hunched over in the dark.
“Go on,” Vic said and still there was no heat, no edge to his voice.
Defeated by confusion, Mike nodded and backed away, then turned and ran up the stairs. In his room he crouched by his bedroom door, listening through a crack for any sound of yelling, of hitting, of a fight resumed. But everything downstairs was silent.
After twenty minutes Mike closed his door.
Chapter 20
Two days before Halloween
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nbsp; 1
Newton sat for over an hour on the hard bench at the Warminster train station, chewing butter-rum Life Savers and drumming his fingers. A paperback book on vampire folklore was open on his lap, but he was too jittery to read. Commuters looked at him with his rumpled outdoor clothes and his razor-stubbled face and assumed he was homeless and gave him a wide berth. Newton was aware of their stares, but didn’t care. In the three weeks since Little Halloween and the trip down into Dark Hollow he hadn’t slept more than three hours at a stretch. Insomnia kept him up, too much coffee jangled his nerves, and when he did drift off the dreams kicked in. It was better to be sort of awake and wasted than to be asleep and at the mercy of his overactive imagination.
For the hundredth time he looked up at the wall clock above the ticket booth. Just shy of three o’clock. Jonatha Corbiel was nearly half an hour late. As each northbound train pulled into the station he stood up and searched the faces of the debarking passengers. Jonatha had given him only a vague and sketchy idea of what she looked like. “I’m tall, dark, and top-heavy. ” Amused and intrigued by her description, he conjured images of a leggy beauty with a deep-water tan and a grad-student’s wire-framed glasses. Something like a brainy Jennifer Tilly or a scholarly Jennifer Connelly with olive skin. Maybe someone with the delicacy of a Maggie Gyllenhaal but with lots of wild curling black hair, dressed in the jeans, flannel lumberjack shirt, and Dr. Martens that comprised the dress code of the understipened Ph. D. candidate.