Authors: Hannah Reed
On second thought . . . I made a perfect one-eighty and grabbed my sister by the arm. “Hurry,” I said. “We need your help.”
“Wha . . .”
But Stanley and I had her flanked, with a grip under each arm, practically dragging her along. Holly was about to get a taste of reality.
We hustled to my truck, stuffed Holly between us, and shot out of the parking lot and up Main Street. We had to wait a few seconds at the bridge, which was still under construction, still down to one lane. Those ticking seconds felt like forever. In between ticks, Holly had a bunch of questions, which I answered in bullet points for both her and Stanley’s benefit.
Traffic from the opposite direction passed by, and we were off again.
“Slow down,” Stanley advised. “We want to get there all in one piece.”
Adrenaline was steering the truck, not me. “But Lori has a head start,” I argued. “And we’re ahead of Hunter, not behind, so we’re the rescue team.” I had visions of a mass riot going on in the apple orchard. “Do you have a concealed weapon on you, Stanley? We might need it.”
Holly squealed. “OMG! Let me out. Pull over right here. I’ll walk back.”
“Where’s your sense of adventure?” I asked her. “It’s about time you had some fun.”
“Fun? Lori’s instigating a mob into violent action, and Stanley needs a gun. You call this fun?”
“Much more interesting than having your nails done,” I said with a wee bit of sarcasm.
“Manicures are loads of fun. Let me out.”
“We need you.” Holly certainly played the need card often enough. Now it was my turn. “You have special skills, ones we need. I need you.”
“If you’re talking about wrestling, I only use it if I absolutely have to.” Did I detect a certain tone of pride? “To fight on the side of good, to vanquish evil.”
Oh brother, weren’t we full of ourselves today? Although her voice had that recognizable Fischer humor in it.
“You’re the best,” I laid it on thick. “Trust me, you don’t have to get actively involved unless you want to. You can watch from the sidelines. But there’s strength in numbers.”
“How many of them are there?” she wanted to know. She was hooked.
“Believe me,” I said, throwing my future credibility into the toilet and flushing it down without a moment’s hesitation. “We’re one on one.”
“When you’re packing,” Stanley said. “The odds are in your favor. We’ll end this peacefully.”
Holly relaxed about the time we turned into the driveway leading to the farm. “Well, okay then,” she agreed. “This doesn’t sound so bad after all. But no shooting, Stanley.”
I tried to veer off toward the orchard, but cars were scattered haphazardly across the path.
A moment later she said, “There sure are a lot of cars out here.” Then, “OMG!” She added a few choice swear words to the mix, which indicated a significant spike in her level of apprehension.
Holly tends to exaggerate big-time. Everything in her world is ultra, supersized drama.
So most of the time her reaction to any given event can be discounted for what it is—Holly overreacting.
Except this time, there was really only one word for the situation: chaos!
Twenty-five
The first tip-off that something was very wrong?
Al’s potbellied pig ran straight for the front of my truck. I slammed on the brakes, threw the gears in park, and bolted out the door. Ms. Piggy usually is totally laid-back and greets visitors with a sweet little curly Q tail wag. Right now she looked plenty upset. I’ve never in my life seen a pig run that fast. At first I thought she was going to bowl right through me, but at the last second she dodged around my waving arms and kept on going toward the road.
“Who let the animals out?” I yelled, not expecting an answer and not getting one.
Right behind Ms. Piggy came a flock of turkeys, moving faster than Olympic runners, their scrawny, pea-brained heads bobbing like crazy. They were shouting something extremely important back and forth in their own language. Several of them took to the air over the truck, beating their wings and actually clearing the treetops. A pygmy goat ran across our path, heading in a totally different direction than the pig and turkeys.
The peacock named Pretty, dragging his tail instead of displaying it, zigzagged along without any obvious plan, all the while making a chilling noise that sounded suspiciously like a woman’s scream—Holly’s, to be exact.
“What the hay?” Stanley said for the second time in less than thirty minutes, but with a little more dramatic flair this time.
He stood at my side, just as dazed as me.
Holly did her usual shtick when it comes to wildlife (which means both domestic and wild animals as far as she’s concerned)—she slunk down and cowered inside the truck.
I tried to drag her out. She kicked and screamed. “I’m telling Mom,” she claimed, voicing her standard threat. Which she’s never, ever actually made good on, so it had no effect on me whatsoever.
Stanley had to help me. Once we had her standing outside, I used my fob to lock the truck’s doors so she wouldn’t sneak back in.
Greg ran up, breathing hard.
“Most of them went that way. Toward town,” I told him.
“Now what am I going to do?” Greg said. “Not only this, but there’s a lynch mob in the orchard.”
“Business as usual,” I said. “Try to make catching the animals a game with prizes for the families. In the meantime call the store and have Carrie Ann organize a search party. We’ll take care of the mob.”
Stanley and I raced over to what was left of the campsite, with Holly dragging along at a distance. Gone were the tents and all other signs of habitation. All that was left were the smoldering remnants of a fire.
No sign of the van, either. Maybe Aurora had gotten through via telepathic radio, or Lucinda had zeroed in on Lori on her own, or . . . whatever. The how didn’t matter. Thankfully, the witches were gone.
Lori and her followers, however, still milled around, their ticking bomb defused for lack of a target.
“Who let the animals out?” I demanded. “Lori, you’re responsible for this, aren’t you?”
She ignored my accusation and said, “Where did your wand-carrying friends go, Fischer?”
“Watch how you talk to my sister,” Holly said, with a whole lot of intimidation in her tone. She might be a whimpering mess when it comes to creatures on four legs or with feathers instead of flesh, or my busy buzzing bees, but she isn’t one bit afraid of confrontations with her own kind. She joined right in, coming nose to nose with Lori. “You have some explaining to do,” Holly said.
“I don’t owe you two Fischer tramps a thing,” said the biggest slut in town.
“Okay,” Stanley interceded, sensing a fight on the way, “we’ll sort this out when the cops get here.”
I really wish he hadn’t clued them in.
“Thanks for the tip, Stanley,” Lori said. Then to her gang, “Our problem left town just in the nick of time. They got lucky. Let’s get out of here.”
I narrowed my eyes at Stanley. His met mine and appealed to me for forgiveness. My dream of watching Hunter cuff Lori went up in flames.
Behind Lori’s backstabbing rear end something in motion caught my attention. There came Dusty, Al’s miniature donkey, running at full speed right toward us. He would have missed Lori altogether if I hadn’t given her a tiny push sideways.
It was a direct hit.
Since Dusty is only about three feet tall, his head connected with Lori’s butt. What a glorious sight to behold!
Lori flew forward into Holly, who was standing next to me. Holly went into ready mode, an instinct from her wrestling days. The most that happened was that my sister had to take a few steps back to maintain her equilibrium. The look on her face said it all.
Game on.
“Clothesline her!” I suggested.
This wasn’t going to be a fair fight. There was nothing tough about Lori Spandle. She’s all smoke and mirrors. While Holly was taking down Lori, the rest of us stood around watching the instigator try to fight back. The smartest move to use with my sister in a situation like this is to call out something submissive, like ‘surrender.’ But Lori wouldn’t. She’s too dense.
“Don’t even think of ending this,” I said to Stanley.
Stanley grinned, catching my meaning. “And give up a ringside seat? No way.”
Once Holly got Lori on the ground, it was all over but the singing. Holly straddled the loser, one arm holding her down, the other arm raised in a victory salute.
“Amazing,” Stanley said, “and I didn’t even have to pull the trigger.”
Right after that, we were surrounded by Hunter’s team of pros. Unlike Johnny Jay and his need to announce himself to the world with lots of bells and whistles, the C.I.T. operates covertly. Nobody realized they were there until they were.
“Holly, let Lori up,” I whispered. My sister realized we had company and hopped off.
Lori got to her feet, unsteady and discombobulated, which made me snort with glee. Her hair stuck out like she’d been electrocuted, she wore most of her mascara under her eyes, and her face was twisted with rage. Downright scary. Nothing attractive about the woman now.
“I’m pressing assault charges!” she screamed at my sister, then addressed the people who had been following her, who were now backing away. “You saw what she did, right? Tell them what happened.”
Lori’s gang had had enough. It was one thing to bully strange, out-of-town women from the safety of the pack. It was another to get involved with the Waukesha police. They collectively stepped away, creating distance between them and their one-time leader, while Lori glared at them. She whipped around to Stanley. “You’re a witness.”
“I just got here,” he said. “I didn’t see a thing.”
She directed her anger at me. “What a coincidence that Hunter Wallace just happened by. What a little snitch you are.”
While I’ve never considered myself a tattletale, there was a bit of truth to her accusation this time. Only since this was more like an intervention, I felt guilt free.
Hunter whispered in my ear, “I thought we had agreed that you’d stay away from this camp.”
“I agreed to stay away from the witches,” I whispered back, keeping one eye on Lori, giving her a wide grin. “Do you see any of them here? No, you don’t.”
“I’m going to wipe that stupid smirk off your face,” Lori said, getting even hotter, assuming Hunter and I were talking about her. “You and your sister are going down.”
Which was sort of funny considering who had just been down.
“That’s enough out of you for one day,” Hunter said to Lori.
“I’m taking this to the town chairman,” she threatened. As though her husband Grant had any influence over anybody other than Johnny Jay, and the chief didn’t count. Out of his jurisdiction again.
“Grant will take care of you two,” she warned.
“Your husband’s too busy hanging out in the porno section of the library,” I couldn’t help saying.
One of her former followers snickered and said, “I saw him there yesterday. What, Lori? Can’t you keep him satisfied at home?”
That got everybody cackling.
Which reminded me of the witches.
And Al’s request for help.
Tomorrow I’d make a road trip.
It was time to pay a visit to my old stomping grounds on the east side of Milwaukee.
Twenty-six
Stanley and I were standing in the parking lot behind
the store. Holly had hopped into her Jag and peeled out, recovered from her recent rabble-rousing (frankly looking rejuvenated if you asked me) but late for another planning meeting with Mom and Tom.
“What’s the story with Claudene Mason and Iris Whelan?” I asked Stanley. “I hear Iris had the hots for you back in high school.”
Stanley actually blushed. “I suspected as much.”