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"Jessica or Kristy?" "Jess. She's missing."
Little frosted three-leafed clovers tumbled into my bowl. I hadn't seen Jessica in years. She was
in Daniel and Jude's grade growing up, but her family had moved to the city when she was a
sophomore. "Doesn't she run away on a bimonthly basis?"
"Yeah, but never seriously. She's never missed a holiday before. When she didn't show up for
Thanksgiving, her parents called the police. Her friends said they were with her at a party
downtown the other night. They said she was there one minute and gone the next. It was in the
paper." Charity scraped the bottom of her bowl. "The Markham Street Monster strikes again."
I dropped the cereal box. "Is that what they're saying:
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"Yep. There was even a little blurb at the end of the article about James wandering away. I don't
know how they even heard about that. They say the monster might have tried to take him." There
was a sudden edge to her voice. She looked at me over the cereal box. "You don't think--"
"They're just trying to freak people out to up their sales." I wished I could believe what I was
saying, but I knew now the article might be right. "Where's the newspaper anyway?"
"Jude surfaced a few minutes ago. He took it back downstairs," Charity said. "The paper said the
police are waiting for test results on that blood before they release a statement."
My heart did a little flip-flop in my chest. What would they find with those test results? I pushed
away the bowl of too-sweet cereal.
Charity turned the page of her book. A large silver-gray wolf stared back at me from the page. I
couldn't help shuddering as I thought of those animal tracks deep in the ravine.
AFTERNOON
I told myself I was not waiting for Daniel. I was simply working on my make-up assignment for
Mr. Barlow, out on the porch, in November, where I might just happen to see Daniel if he
decided to come back. I settled
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sideways into the porch swing, where I could see the walnut tree in the side yard, and the
street--hut like I said, I was not sitting around waiting for a guy.
It may have been the lack of focus, but no matter how hard I tried, my attempts to draw the
walnut tree still didn't feel right at all. I was fighting the urge to chuck my charcoal pencil across
the porch when I heard someone come up beside me.
"I'm glad to see you haven't given up on me," Daniel said.
"Took you long enough," I said, trying not to betray that I'd worried he wouldn't show. "Where'd
you take off to anyway?"
"Maryanne Duke's."
I glanced up at him.
"Apparently, she left her house to the parish. Your dad is letting me stay in the basement
apartment until I figure some things out. I moved my stuff over there this morning."
"I'm sure Maryanne's daughters are just crazy about that."
Daniel smirked and sat down next to me on the swing.
"Did you see the newspaper this morning?" I asked, trying to sound nonchalant. Daniel's grin fell
into a frown.
"Do you think they're right? That the Markham
195
Street Monster is responsible for what happened to Mr. Day's granddaughter? That it tried to take
James?" He shook his head.
"But you're the one who said James couldn't have gone that far on his own. And how did his
slipper get down in that ravine?"
Daniel just stared at the palms of his hands, like he was hoping the answer would somehow he
written there.
"Monsters are real," I said. "They still exist right here in Minnesota, and in Iowa, and in Utah.
Don't they?"
Daniel scratched behind his ear. "Yes, Gracie. My people wouldn't still exist if monsters didn't."
1 suddenly shivered, even though we were sitting in the sun. I'm not sure I wanted to be right.
"That's just too weird to wrap my head around. To think that for nearly seventeen years I've been
walking around completely oblivious to what the world is really like. I mean, I could have
walked right past a monster without even knowing it."
"You've met one," Daniel said. "The other night."
"I did?" Then my mind drifted back to the party at Daniel's apartment. "Mishka," I said, thinking
of her black, black eyes and how I'd felt so fuzzy in the head around her. "And you're friends
with her?"
"It's complicated," Daniel said. "But she's only dangerous when she doesn't get what she wants.
That's why I went with her. I didn't just abandon you for a haircut.
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I knew if I chose you over her, she might decide to ... target you."
My heart felt like it was twisting into a knot. "You don't think that's what happened, do you?
Maybe she followed you here and decided to go after my little brother--"
"No. That's not what happened."
"Then what did?"
"I don't know," he mumbled. He was quiet for a moment, and then he looked at the drawing I
held on my lap. "I can help you with that."
"You're doing it again," I grumbled.
"What?"
"Dodging my questions, like everybody else. I'm not stupid or fragile or weak, you know."
"I know, Grace. You're anything but." He blew his floppy bangs off his forehead. "I'm not
dodging your questions. I just don't have any more answers to give you." He tapped my sketch
pad with one of his long fingers. "Now, do you want help with your assignment, or not?"
"No, thanks. I'm in enough trouble over the last time you 'fixed' one of my drawings."
"That's not really what I meant," he said. "I'll be staying after school every day to work in the art
room. I could use your company. Help keep that Barlow guy off my back. But we could start
today. I could show you some new techniques I've picked up over the years."
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"I bet you could." I sighed, realizing that our discussion about monsters was over--for now. "But
this drawing is totally hopeless." I tore the page out of my sketch pad and was about to crumple
it up.
"Don't." Daniel grabbed it from me. He studied it for a moment. "Why are you drawing this?" He
pointed at my skeleton of a tree.
I shrugged. "Because Barlow wants us to draw something that reminds us of our childhood. This
is all I could think of."
"But why?" Daniel asked. "What exactly about this tree are you trying to capture? What does it
make you feel? What does it make you want?"
I gazed at the real tree in the yard. Memories trickled into my mind. You, I thought. It makes me
want you. I looked down at my drawing pad and hoped mind reading wasn't one of Daniel's
many hidden, demon-hunter talents.
"Remember when we used to race up that tree--see who could go the highest the fastest?" I
asked. "And then we'd perch up there, and we could see the whole neighborhood? It felt like if
we could just climb a little bit farther into the thin branches, we could stretch up and brush the [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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