Killman Creek (Stillhouse Lake Series Book 2) Read online

Page 4


  I wish he would.

  “Hey,” I say. I make it quiet, but not too quiet. “I know you’re faking it, loser.” He doesn’t answer. Doesn’t move. His breathing continues smooth and even. “Yo, Squirtle. Don’t play.”

  Connor finally sighs. “What?” He sounds totally awake. He doesn’t even sound annoyed. “Go back to sleep. You’re grumpy when you don’t get your not-beauty rest.”

  “Shut up.”

  “Hey, you wanted to talk. Not my fault you don’t like what I say.” He sounds normal.

  He’s not normal.

  I flop back on the bed. The bed smells like the dollar store, like old sweat and nasty feet. This whole room smells like the dollar store. I hate it. I want to go home . . . and home is the house Mom and Connor and I worked to make so nice. The one with my own bedroom, and a wall I painted with purple stenciled flowers. The one with Connor’s bugout zombie defense room.

  Our house sits right on Stillhouse Lake, and it represents something I thought we’d never have again: security. My memories after the day we had to leave our first home—the one in Wichita—were a blur of plain rooms and gray cities, for years. We never stayed anywhere long enough to feel like we were home.

  Stillhouse Lake was different. It felt permanent, like life was really starting again for all of us. I had friends. Good friends.

  I had Dahlia Brown, who started out being the kind of girl I hated and ended up being my best friend in the world. It hurt to leave her back there, like some discarded, broken toy. She didn’t deserve that. I don’t deserve it, either. I had a sort-of boyfriend, but it’s a little bit of a shock to realize I don’t really miss him at all. I haven’t thought about him.

  Only Dahlia.

  We’d left our house just as it was, and I wonder if it’s been completely trashed by now. Probably. News of just who we are, who our dad is, had broken in the middle of all the craziness with Officer Graham, and I remember what happened to our old places when people found out. Spray paint on the walls. Dead animals on the doorstep. Broken windows and vandalized cars.

  People can be really shitty.

  I can’t help but imagine what our house by Stillhouse Lake might look like now, if people took out their anger on it instead of us. It makes my chest get tight and my stomach boil. I roll over on my side and angrily punch the cheap pillow into better shape. “Who do you think that text was from?”

  “Dad,” he says. I don’t miss the slight inflection, the tiny hitch, but I don’t know what it means. Anger? Fear? Longing? Probably all those things. I know something my mom probably doesn’t: that Connor doesn’t really, really get why Dad is a monster. I mean, he does, but he was seven when our lives spun out; he remembers a father who was sometimes awesome to him, and he misses that. I was older. And I’m a girl. I see things differently. “Guess now she’s going to go after him.” Now I hear a different intonation. One that I recognize.

  So I dig. “Makes you mad, doesn’t it?”

  “Like it doesn’t you? She’s going to dump us like strays,” he says. This time, the cold, flat tone isn’t subtle at all. “Probably with Grandma.”

  “You like staying with Grandma,” I say. I’m trying to be upbeat about it. “She makes us cookies and those popcorn balls you like. It’s not exactly torture.” I’m horrified the second the word drops off my lips, but it’s too late. I’m angry with myself, a searing red flash that sizzles in my nerves like they’ve turned into firecracker fuses. In the next second I’m back in a cabin high up in the hills, being dragged down into a basement. Locked in a tiny little cell not much bigger than a coffin, along with my brother.

  I know my mom wonders what happened to us in that basement. Connor and I haven’t talked about it, and I don’t know when, or if, we will. She’ll try to make us, sooner or later.

  I just want to be able to close my eyes and not see that winch and the wire noose that dangled from it, and those knives and hammers and saws glinting on the pegboard mounted on the walls. That room outside the cell looked just like my dad’s garage workshop—the pictures I’ve seen of it, anyway. I know what happened there. I know what could have happened to us, in Lancel Graham’s replica dungeon.

  Most of all, I wish I could forget the stupid rug. Somehow, Graham found an exact replica of my dad’s rug. Well, it was really my rug, because it was one of my first memories: a soft spiral-braided rug in pastel greens and blues. I loved that rug. I would lie facedown on it and scoot around on the floor, and Mom and Dad would laugh, and Mom would pick me up and slide the rug back in place by the door, and it was love, that stupid rug.

  One day when I was about five, the rug disappeared from the spot in the hall, and Dad put a new one there. It was fine, I guess. It had a nonskid back, so nobody would go sliding around on it. He told us he’d thrown the other one away.

  But on the day that our lives ended, the day Dad became a monster, that rug, my rug, was on the garage floor, right under the winch and the noose and the swinging body of a dead woman. He’d taken a piece of my life and made it part of something awful.

  Seeing one just like it in Lancel Graham’s horror basement broke something in me. When I close my eyes at night, that’s what I see. My rug, made into a nightmare.

  I wonder what Connor sees. Maybe that’s why he doesn’t sleep. When you sleep, you give up the choice to control memory.

  Connor hasn’t responded to my torture gaffe, so I stumble on. “You seriously want to go with Mom if she’s hunting Dad?”

  “She acts like we can’t take care of ourselves,” he says. “We can.”

  I agree that I can, but I’m also old enough to face the ugly truth about our dad and what he can do. I don’t want to have to fight him. The whole idea hurts, and it terrifies me. But I also don’t want to be left on my own with Connor, responsible for keeping both of us safe. I almost want Grandma, even if her cookies are kind of terrible and her popcorn balls too sticky. Even if she treats us like we’re toddlers.

  I shift the blame. “Mom’s never going to let us fight him. You know that.”

  “So off to Grandma’s house we go. Like Dad can’t guess that.”

  I shrug, but in the dark I know he can’t see me. “Grandma’s moved and changed her name, too. It’ll be just for a while, anyway. Like a vacation.”

  It’s eerie how Connor doesn’t move, doesn’t shift. I never hear so much as a rustle of those stiff motel sheets from him. Just a voice in the dark. “Yeah,” he says. “Like a vacation. And what if Mom never comes back for us? What if he comes back for us? Do you think about that?”

  I open my mouth to confidently tell him that’s never going to happen, but I can’t. I can’t get it out of my mouth, because I’m old enough to know that Mom isn’t immortal, or all-powerful, and that good doesn’t always win. And I know—Connor knows—that our dad is incredibly dangerous.

  So I finally say, “If he does find us, we get away from him. Or we stop him, any way we can.”

  “Promise?” His voice suddenly sounds his age. Only eleven. Too young to deal with this. I forget how young he is, sometimes. I’m nearly fifteen. It’s a big gap, and we’ve always babied my little brother.

  “Yeah, doofus, I promise. We’re going to be okay.”

  He lets out a long, slow breath that’s almost a sigh. “All right,” he says. “You and me, then. Together.”

  “Always,” I tell him.

  He doesn’t say anything else. I can hear Mom talking in a low voice to someone outside; I think it’s Sam Cade. I listen to the soft blur of their voices, and after a while I hear that Connor’s breathing has deepened and slowed, and I think he’s finally, really asleep.

  That means I can sleep, too.

  Mom surprises us at oh-my-God in the morning with doughnuts and cartons of milk; she and Sam are already up and dressed, and they have coffee. I ask for some. I get shut down. Connor doesn’t bother. He drinks his milk and mine, when I pass it to him while Mom isn’t looking.

  She surprises us
when she tells us she’s not sending us off to Grandma, all the way up the coast. Instead, she’s sending us back to Norton. Not home, but close. And I can’t help but feel a little relieved, and at the same time a little anxious, too. Being almost home seems dangerous in a whole lot of ways . . . not so much because Dad would find us, but because I immediately realize it means I can’t really go home, to our old house. To my room. Being so close and not home? That’s kind of worse. Worse still: Dahlia. I can’t talk to her. Can’t text her. Can’t even let her know I’m there. That’s the definition of suck.

  But I don’t tell Mom that.

  Connor perks up a little when he realizes that instead of weeks with Grandma, he gets to hang out with Javier Esparza, who is a quietly awesome badass. His presence always feels strong and reassuring, and I don’t doubt he can defend us. Connor needs a guy to bond with. He and Sam Cade got close, but I know Sam’s got his own battles. He’s going with my mom, no question about that.

  So we’ll be staying at Mr. Esparza’s cabin, which he sometimes shares with Norton police officer Kezia Claremont. Also a quiet badass. They’re totally sleeping together, which I guess we’re not supposed to know. I approve of Kezia, though. It also means we have twice the firepower protecting us. I know Mom’s doing it for that reason, but I’m still glad, for Connor’s sake. I hope having Mr. Esparza around might break him out of his rigid silence.

  Packing isn’t much of a problem. We’ve been running for so long, Connor and I are both pros at throwing our stuff in bags and being ready to go in moments. Actually, Connor doesn’t even have to do that. He packed early, while I was still asleep. We keep score on things like that, and he silently points to his bag to let me know he wins. Again. He’s got his nose in a book already, which is his way of blocking out any attempts to converse. Plus, he loves books.

  I wish we had that in common. I make the promise to myself, again, to borrow some from him.

  We’re in the car and navigating traffic on a foggy highway half an hour from the moment Mom sets the doughnuts down.

  I doze, mostly, with my headphones blocking out the nonconversation. Mom and Sam are being very quiet. Connor’s turning pages. I amuse myself by making a new playlist: SONGS TO KICK ASS AND TAKE NAMES. It’s a boring drive, and the pounding rhythm of the music makes me want to go for a run. Maybe Mr. Esparza will let me do that when we get to his cabin, though I kind of doubt it; we’re under house arrest, again, hiding from all the boogeymen in the shadows—not just of the real world of Dad and his friends, but all the amped-up Internet trolls. One pic, and somebody will paste me all over Reddit and 4chan again, and things will get very, very bad, very fast.

  So probably no run.

  We drive for a couple of hours, then stop at a big-box store, where Sam buys four new disposable phones; I’m temporarily thrilled to discover he had to buy real smartphones, even though they’re still kind of clunky. No flip phones available. These are plain black, nothing special. We unshell them in the car and trade numbers. We’re all used to this by now. Mom liked to buy me and Connor different colors of phones, just so we wouldn’t get them mixed up, but Sam didn’t think of that; all four phones are the same. Mom confiscates mine and Connor’s and does her Mom thing, which locks off all the Internet functions before she gives them back and disables as much as she can. Normal course of business. She’s never wanted us to see the flood of ugliness out there about Dad, and about us.

  I slide the phone into my pocket, plug my headphones into my iPod, and crank up the music. I am jamming to Florence + The Machine when I realize that Sam hasn’t started the car. He’s got a slip of paper out, and he’s entering a phone number into his own device, then making a call.

  I move my headphones out of my ear and pause the music in midwail to listen.

  “Yes, hi, is Agent Lustig available?” Sam listens for a few seconds. “Okay. Can I leave a message for him? Ask him to call Sam Cade. He’ll know the name. Here’s my number . . .” He reads it off to her from the package. “Ask him to call me soon as he’s able. He’ll know what it’s regarding. Thanks.”

  He hangs up and starts the car, and as we pull out onto the road and drive on, I realize he’s not planning to share with the class. So I take one for the team. “Who’s Agent Lustig?”

  “Friend of mine,” Sam tells me. He’s honest with us, or at least, as honest as he thinks he can be. That’s something I really like about him.

  “Why are you talking to the FBI? He is FBI, right?”

  “Because they’re tracking your dad,” he says. “And also, we need to understand something about Absalom. I’m hoping that the FBI might have more information.”

  I know about Absalom, and I frown. “Why?”

  “Because Absalom might have someone else besides Graham to send after us,” he says, after a glance at Mom to confirm it’s okay to tell me about that. “And they might have traced us this far. Which is why we’re using new phones now.”

  Mom finally chimes in. “Absalom could be a group, not just a person. If so, they could be helping your dad stay hidden, while also working to find us for him.”

  “If there’s danger, why are you taking us back to Norton? Why can’t we just stay with you?” Connor asks. He lowers his book but keeps the place with a finger between the pages.

  “Seriously?” Mom is trying to sound amused, but she just sounds grim. “You know the last thing I’m going to do is take you anywhere near trouble. My job is to keep you away from it. Besides, this has been hard enough on you already. You both need to be somewhere safe, and you need rest.”

  And you don’t? I think it, but I don’t say it, which is weird for me. Instead, I say, “You don’t have to go, you know. The cops are chasing him. So is the FBI. Why can’t you just stay with us?”

  Mom takes her time with the answer. I wonder if she even understands it herself.

  “Sweetheart, I know your father,” Mom says. “If I’m out in the open, it means he might do something stupid and expose himself to come after me. And that means he gets caught faster, and fewer people get hurt. But I can’t take that risk if you’re with me. Understand?”

  Sam again says nothing. I’m watching his hands on the steering wheel. He’s pretty good at covering up what he thinks and feels, but not that good, because I see the slight whitening of his knuckles.

  “Yeah,” I say softly. “I get it. You’re bait.” I fiddle with my iPod but don’t put the headphones back in. “Are you going to kill him?” I don’t know what I want to hear.

  “No, sweetie,” Mom says. But I don’t hear any conviction behind it. I know that Sam wants to put a bullet in Dad’s head. Maybe more than one. And I get it. I get that Dad is a monster who needs to be slayed.

  But Dad is also a memory to me. A strong, warm figure tucking me into bed and placing a kiss on my forehead. A laughing man whirling me around in the sun. A father kissing my boo-boo finger and making it better. A giant shadow scooping me up off that soft braided rug and folding me in warm, protective arms.

  I look away, out the window, and I don’t argue with any of it. Thinking about my father, both as the monster and the man, makes me feel short of breath and sick, and I don’t know how I’m supposed to feel. No, that’s a lie: I know I’m supposed to hate him. Mom does. Sam does. Everybody does, and they’re right.

  But he’s my dad.

  Connor and I don’t talk about this—not ever—but I know he feels this, too . . . the way it pulls and rips inside to try to match up these two very different things. I think about that colorful old rug again, a piece of home inside a monster’s den. I can’t decide if that was him trying to still be Dad, or if the monster was all there ever was, and Dad was a mask he wore to mock us.

  Maybe it’s both. Or neither. It’s exhausting, and I put the music back on and try to drown it all out.

  I sleep for a while. When I wake up, we’re close. Sam turns the car off the main freeway and onto smaller state highways, and we glide through a dozen small towns
before the turnoff comes for Norton, and Stillhouse Lake. I watch that buckshot-riddled old sign glide by with a pain deep in my stomach. I want to jump out of the car and run down that road, run straight for home and throw myself into my bed and pull the covers over my head.

  We avoid heading into Norton proper and instead take a side road off into the deeper woods. It’s mostly mud and ruts, and bumpy; even Connor finds it too hard to read with all the jolts, and he slides a bookmark in place with a stubborn sigh of frustration. We go maybe half a mile and then loop around a broad turn to come up to a small, old, neatly maintained cabin surrounded by high iron fencing.

  Javier Esparza is sitting on the porch. He’s at least a dozen years older than I am, if not more; he’s dressed in a khaki-green T-shirt and dark jeans, and he looks more like a soldier than people in uniform. As he stands up, I see that he’s got a shotgun in easy reach. He’s also wearing a semiautomatic handgun in a holster on his belt—more obvious than the way my mom wears hers, in a shoulder rig currently concealed under her leather jacket. He’s also got a big killer of a dog—a rottweiler—lying panting at his feet.

  As Mr. Esparza stands up, so does the dog, all muscle and attention focused right on us.

  Mom gets out of the car first, and I see Mr. Esparza relax slightly. He looks down at the dog and says something in Spanish, and the dog sinks back down. Peaceful, but still watching. “Hey, Gwen,” he says to my mother, coming forward to open the gate. “Any trouble?”

  “Nothing,” she says.

  “Nobody following?”

  “Nope,” says Sam as he exits the driver’s side of the car. “Not behind or ahead. And no drones.”

 

    Smoke and Iron Read onlineSmoke and IronHonor Among Thieves Read onlineHonor Among ThievesPaper and Fire Read onlinePaper and FireAsh and Quill Read onlineAsh and QuillWolfhunter River (Stillhouse Lake Book 3) Read onlineWolfhunter River (Stillhouse Lake Book 3)Undone Read onlineUndoneGlass Houses Read onlineGlass HousesPrince of Shadows Read onlinePrince of ShadowsUnseen Read onlineUnseenMidnight at Mart's Read onlineMidnight at Mart'sThe Dead Girls Dance Read onlineThe Dead Girls DanceLast Breath Read onlineLast BreathStillhouse Lake Read onlineStillhouse LakeDaylighters Read onlineDaylightersMidnight Alley Read onlineMidnight AlleyBlack Dawn Read onlineBlack DawnFall of Night Read onlineFall of NightTwo Weeks Notice Read onlineTwo Weeks NoticeBitter Blood Read onlineBitter BloodCarpe Corpus Read onlineCarpe CorpusKiss of Death Read onlineKiss of DeathGhost Town Read onlineGhost TownIll Wind Read onlineIll WindFade Out Read onlineFade OutTotal Eclipse Read onlineTotal EclipseHonor Lost Read onlineHonor LostThin Air Read onlineThin AirBlack Corner Read onlineBlack CornerFirestorm Read onlineFirestormBite Club Read onlineBite ClubChill Factor Read onlineChill FactorWindfall Read onlineWindfallOasis Read onlineOasisDevils Bargain Read onlineDevils BargainTerminated Read onlineTerminatedFeast of Fools Read onlineFeast of FoolsLord of Misrule Read onlineLord of MisruleDevils Due Read onlineDevils DueLadies' Night Read onlineLadies' NightGale Force Read onlineGale ForceHeat Stroke Read onlineHeat StrokeKillman Creek Read onlineKillman CreekSword and Pen Read onlineSword and PenCape Storm Read onlineCape StormUnbroken Read onlineUnbrokenWindfall tww-4 Read onlineWindfall tww-4Heartbreak Bay (Stillhouse Lake) Read onlineHeartbreak Bay (Stillhouse Lake)Daylighters: The Morganville Vampires Read onlineDaylighters: The Morganville VampiresDuty Read onlineDutyHonor Bound Read onlineHonor BoundUnseen os-3 Read onlineUnseen os-3Firestorm tww-5 Read onlineFirestorm tww-5Blue Crush Read onlineBlue CrushDevil s Bargain Read onlineDevil s BargainPrince of Shadows: A Novel of Romeo and Juliet Read onlinePrince of Shadows: A Novel of Romeo and JulietBite Club mv-10 Read onlineBite Club mv-10Terminated tr-3 Read onlineTerminated tr-3The Morganville Vampires 14 - Fall of Night Read onlineThe Morganville Vampires 14 - Fall of NightBitter Blood tmv-13 Read onlineBitter Blood tmv-13Falling for Grace Read onlineFalling for GraceThe True Blood of Martyrs Read onlineThe True Blood of MartyrsFall of Night (The Morganville Vampires) Read onlineFall of Night (The Morganville Vampires)Devil's Bargain rld-1 Read onlineDevil's Bargain rld-1The Morganville Vampires (Books 1-8) Read onlineThe Morganville Vampires (Books 1-8)Two Weeks' Notice tr-2 Read onlineTwo Weeks' Notice tr-2An Affinity for Blue Read onlineAn Affinity for BlueCaine, Rachel-Short Stories Read onlineCaine, Rachel-Short StoriesKiss of Death tmv-8 Read onlineKiss of Death tmv-8WITCHGRAVE Read onlineWITCHGRAVEDark Rides Read onlineDark RidesThe Morganville Vampires Read onlineThe Morganville VampiresKillman Creek (Stillhouse Lake Series Book 2) Read onlineKillman Creek (Stillhouse Lake Series Book 2)Midnight Bites Read onlineMidnight BitesLine of Sight Read onlineLine of SightMorganville Vampires [01] Glass Houses Read onlineMorganville Vampires [01] Glass HousesBlack Dawn tmv-12 Read onlineBlack Dawn tmv-12Midnight at Mart ww-103 Read onlineMidnight at Mart ww-103Feast of Fools tmv-4 Read onlineFeast of Fools tmv-4Ill Wind tww-1 Read onlineIll Wind tww-1Devil's Due rld-2 Read onlineDevil's Due rld-2Black Dawn: The Morganville Vampires Read onlineBlack Dawn: The Morganville VampiresDead Girls' Dance tmv-2 Read onlineDead Girls' Dance tmv-2Minute Maids Read onlineMinute MaidsCarpe Corpus tmv-6 Read onlineCarpe Corpus tmv-6Total Eclipse tww-9 Read onlineTotal Eclipse tww-9Ghost Town mv-9 Read onlineGhost Town mv-9Lord of Misrule tmv-5 Read onlineLord of Misrule tmv-5Faith Like Wine Read onlineFaith Like WineTwo Weeks' Notice: A Revivalist Novel Read onlineTwo Weeks' Notice: A Revivalist NovelDaylighters tmv-15 Read onlineDaylighters tmv-15Stamps, Vamps & Tramps (A Three Little Words Anthology) Read onlineStamps, Vamps & Tramps (A Three Little Words Anthology)Unbroken os-4 Read onlineUnbroken os-4Unknown os-2 Read onlineUnknown os-24 - Unbroken Read online4 - UnbrokenCape Storm tww-8 Read onlineCape Storm tww-8Last Breath tmv-11 Read onlineLast Breath tmv-11Midnight Alley tmv-3 Read onlineMidnight Alley tmv-3Glass Houses tmv-1 Read onlineGlass Houses tmv-1Fade Out tmv-7 Read onlineFade Out tmv-7Fall of Night tmv-14 Read onlineFall of Night tmv-14Godfellas Read onlineGodfellasHeat Stroke ww-2 Read onlineHeat Stroke ww-2Carniepunk Read onlineCarniepunkOasis ww-102 Read onlineOasis ww-102Gale Force tww-7 Read onlineGale Force tww-7Working Stiff tr-1 Read onlineWorking Stiff tr-1