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"Haw," I said. Somehow, knowing Special Agent Johnson was on the case made me
feel better. Crazy, huh, considering how much having the Feds following me
around all the time used to bug me? "Haw, haw."
"And don't worry, Jessica," Special Agent Johnson said. "You and your family
are in no danger. We'll post plenty of operatives outside your home tonight."
Too bad that isn't what they chose to destroy in order to assure me of how
serious they were about their threats. Our home, I mean.
Instead, they burned down Mastriani's.
C H A P T E R
17
You'd have thought I'd be able to catch a break, wouldn't you? I mean, it
wasn't like I'd gotten any sleep the night before. No, they had to make sure I
didn't get any the next night, either.
Well, okay, I gotsome . The call didn't come until after three.
Three in the morning, I mean.
But when it did come, there was no sleep for anyone in the Mastriani
household. Not for a long, long time.
I, of course, thought it was for me.
And why not? It wasn't like the phone had rung not even once that night for
anybody else in the house. No, all of my mother's dreams for me were finally
coming true: I was Miss Popularity, all right.
Too bad the only dates I was getting were dates with, um, death.
Well, and Skip Abramowitz.
When the phone started ringing its head off at threeA.M., I shot out of bed
before I was even fully awake and dove for the extension in my room, as if
somehow, by catching it on the second ring, I was going to keep the rest of
the house from waking up.
Yeah, nice try.
The voice on the other end of the line was familiar, but it wasn't one of my
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new friends. You know, the ones who'd promised to kill me if I talked to Tisha
Murray anymore about the house on the pit road.
It was, instead, a woman's voice. It took me a minute to realize it was
Special Agent Smith.
"Jessica," she said when I answered. And then, when my dad got on the line in
his bedroom, and went, blearily, "Hullo?" she added, "Mr. Mastriani."
My dad and I didn't say anything. He, I think, was still trying to wake up.
I, of course, was tensing for what I knew was going to follow & or thought I
knew, anyway. Someone else was missing. Tisha Murray, maybe.
Or Heather Montrose. Despite the guard they'd put on her room in the
hospital, someone had managed to sneak in, and finish the job they'd started.
Heather was dead.
Either that, or they'd found someone. They'd found someone trying to sneak
into my house to kill me.
But of course it wasn't that at all. It wasn't any of those things.
"I'm sorry to wake you, sir," Jill said, sounding as if she meant it. "But I
think you should know that your restaurant, Mastriani's, is on fire. Could you
please "
But Jill never got to finish, because my dad had dropped the phone and was,
if I knew him, already reaching for his pants.
"We'll be right there," I said.
"No, Jessica, not you. You should "
But I never found out what I have should have done, because I'd hung up.
When I met him at the front door a few seconds later, I saw that I'd been
right. My dad was fully dressed well, he had on pants and shoes. He was still
wearing his pajama top as a shirt. When he saw me, he said, "Stay here with
your mother and brother."
I, however, had gotten dressed, too.
"No way," I said.
He looked annoyed but grateful at the same time, which was quite a feat, if
you think about it.
As soon as we stepped outside, we could see it. An orange glow reflected
against the low hanging clouds in the night sky. And not a small glow, either,
but something that looked like that burning-of-Atlanta scene out ofGone With
the Wind .
"Christ almighty," my dad said when he saw it.
I, of course, was busy consulting with my friends across the street. The ones
in the white van.
"Hey," I said, tapping on the rolled up window on the driver's side. "I gotta
go downtown with my dad. Stay here and keep an eye on the place while I'm
gone, okay?"
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There was no response, but I hadn't expected any. People who are supposed to
be covertly following you don't like it when you come up and start talking to
them, even if their boss knows that you know they're there.
Well, you know what I mean.
The drive downtown took no time at all. At least, it didn't usually. And yet
it seemed to take ages that night. Our house is only a few blocks from
downtown & a fifteen-minute stroll, at most, a four-minute drive. The streets,
at three in the morning, were empty. That wasn't the problem. It was that
orange glow hanging in the sky above our heads that we couldn't take our eyes
off of. A couple of times, my dad nearly drove off the side of the road, he
was so transfixed by it. It was a good thing, actually, that I was there,
since I'd taken the wheel and gone, "Dad."
"Don't worry," I said to him, a minute later. "That isn't it. That orange
light? That's probably, you know, heat lightning."
"Staying in one place?" my dad asked.
"Sure," I said. "I read about it. In Bio."
God, I am such a liar.
And then we turned the corner onto Main. And there it was.
And it wasn't heat lightning. Oh, no.
Once, a long time ago, the people who lived across the street from us had a
log roll out of their fireplace and set the living room curtains on fire. That
was how I'd expected the fire at Mastriani's to be. You know, flames in the
windows, and maybe some smoke billowing out of the open front door. The fire
department would be there, of course, and they'd put the flames out, and that
would be the end of it. That's what had happened with our neighbors. Their
curtains were lost, and the carpet had to be replaced, along with a couch that
had gotten completely soaked by the fire hoses.
But you know that night the night the curtains caught fire the people who
lived across the street slept in their own somewhat smoky-smelling beds. They [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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