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Authors: Mary Downing Hahn

Tags: #Suspense

Mister Death's Blue-Eyed Girls (8 page)

BOOK: Mister Death's Blue-Eyed Girls
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She wipes her nose with the back of her hand. "Don't you know?"

"Know what?" Fear nibbles at me.

"He killed them," she says in a dull, heavy voice.

"Buddy?" I shake my head. "He couldn't have. Not Buddy. It was someone else, a stranger, a crazy man."

"You saw him on the bridge," she says. "He must have done it just before we came along."

"No, not someone we know, Ellie." It makes it so much worse. Horrible, even. "Not someone we go to school with."

"He did it. I
know
he did."

"How do you know?"

Ellie thumps her chest. "Here, I know it
here.
" She scrubs her eyes with the back of her fist. "Let's go. He won't find us at your house."

My legs go weak again. This is not something I'd thought of. "You think he's looking for us?"

"We saw him on the bridge. We saw the fight they got into, we heard him say he'd kill her."

"But he wouldn't kill
us.
"

"We're witnesses, Nora."

I find myself thinking about mysteries—books, movies. What were the three things? Motive, means, and opportunity, yeah, that's it. Buddy had a motive, he had an opportunity, but did he have the means? "Does he have a gun?" I ask Ellie.

"Cheryl told me he has a rifle. They used to go down in the woods and shoot tin cans for target practice. She saw him kill a squirrel once. After that she wouldn't go shooting with him. She can't stand seeing an animal hurt."

"He could have shot
us
this morning," I whisper.

"There were some tenth-graders coming along behind us," she says. "They probably saved our lives."

"But suppose," I say, "suppose we hadn't overslept and we'd all walked to school together like we planned. We'd all be dead. All four of us."

"Oh, God," Ellie whispers. "Oh, God."

I try not to think of Ellie and me dying in the park with Cheryl and Bobbi Jo. No one should be dead. Not them, not us.

By now we're crossing the trolley tracks, only two blocks from my house. I glance behind me, almost expecting to see Buddy's old black Ford coming after us. My street is empty except for my brother's friend Jeff, riding his bike in slow, lazy loops.

The sun beats on our heads and shoulders, and the sidewalk scorches our bare soles. It's hard to think straight. Nothing feels real. I'm lost in a nightmare. I'll never be safe again. Death is everywhere—behind every tree, around every corner. How have I escaped him for so long?

The car isn't in the driveway. Just when I really, really need her, Mom has gone someplace. How can she not be here?

Ellie follows me to the kitchen. I open the refrigerator and find a pitcher of cherry Kool-Aid. I get the ice tray and pry out enough cubes for two glasses. Then, despite the heat up there, we climb the stairs to my room.

While my old table fan whirs and creaks, we gulp down Kool-Aid and then suck on the ice cubes.

"Should we call the police and tell them about Buddy?" Ellie asks.

"I don't know." The idea of talking to a policeman scares me.

Ellie bites her fingernail. It's the first time I've ever seen her do that. "They were only ten minutes ahead of us," she says. "
Ten minutes.
And we didn't hear a thing. Or see a thing. How can that be?"

"No," I say. "We heard those bangs—remember? We thought it was a car backfiring."

She pauses, thinks, gnaws harder on her fingernail. "You think it was the gun?" she whispers.

I notice how tightly I'm holding my glass. My whole body is tense, both inside and out. I try to relax but I can't. It's like gym when the PE teachers make us lie on the floor in our ugly blue gym suits and tell us to relax inch by inch from the toes up. As soon as I'd move from my toes to my ankles, my toes would tense up again. I never made it past my hips.

"What should we do?" Ellie asks.

Usually I'm the one who asks that question. "I don't know."

Just then I hear the back door open and close. For a moment I freeze, terrified Buddy has tracked us down.

Mom calls, "Nora, are you up there?" Without waiting for an answer she runs up the stairs.

She stares at us, one hand pressed to her heart. "Oh, thank God, thank God." She gathers me in her arms as if I'm five years old and hugs me so tightly I think my ribs might break.

"Two girls were murdered in the park this morning, I just heard it on the radio. They didn't release their names. I was so scared." Mom hugs Ellie, too. "I'm so relieved, so relieved." She's almost in tears herself.

"We were there, Mom, we were there just after it happened." I'm sobbing hysterically, clinging to her, soaking her blouse with tears and snot. "We saw the police cars and the ambulances. It was horrible."

With one arm around me and the other around Ellie, Mom tries to comfort us. "They've taken a boy in for questioning," she tells us, "but they haven't identified him."

"It's Buddy," Ellie says. "He did it, I know he did."

Mom looks puzzled so we try to explain, stumbling over words, interrupting each other, correcting each other. "Well," she says, "if you're right, I hope they keep him in jail, where he can't hurt anyone else."

The phone begins to ring and Mom hurries off to answer it. "Ellie," she calls, "it's your mother."

I run downstairs with Ellie. I can tell from what she tells her mother that Mrs. O'Brien heard the same news story and is just as scared as Mom was.

"We're all right, Mom," Ellie insists. "We're all right. No, I'm not crying, I'm okay, just scared, that's all, and—and—and..." Ellie does cry then. "Why did it happen, Mommy? Why did they have to die?"

Mom holds me tight. "Poor babies," she whispers. "Poor, poor babies."

Does she mean Ellie and me? Or Bobbi Jo and Cheryl? Or all four of us?

Mrs. O'Brien comes for Ellie. Ellie and I hug each other. How can I bear to let her go? "See you tomorrow" is meaningless. It's tempting fate to say it.

"Mommy, I'm so scared," Ellie sobs. "I saw him on the bridge. He was there, so close to where, to where ... where they were. He must have done it just before we got there. He could have killed us but he didn't have the gun, he must have hidden it in the bushes, he might come after us and shoot us later."

"Buddy's still at the police station," Mrs. O'Brien tells Ellie. "I hear they plan to keep him as long as they can. They're looking for the murder weapon. As soon as they find it..."

She strokes Ellie's hair. "Nothing will happen to you, sweetie. Your dad and I won't let you come to any harm."

I don't believe her. Mrs. Boyd couldn't keep Bobbi Jo safe. Mrs. Miller couldn't keep Cheryl safe. Danger is here, there, everywhere. Death strikes without warning on warm summer mornings as well as in the dark of night.

Finally Mrs. O'Brien and my mother pry Ellie and me apart. I go to the car with her. "Be careful," I beg her. "If you see him, run."

I stand in the street and wave until she's out of sight, then I go inside, climb the stairs to my room, sit on my bed, and stare out my window at the house next door. My head is a jumble of unfinished thoughts, unanswered questions, bits and pieces of songs, images of last night—Cheryl and Ralph dancing, Bobbi Jo and Ellie and me in the creek, the stones falling in the water, the Shadow's laugh ... and Charlie. Charlie and me.

Later the Same Day
Friday, June 15
Nora

B
ILLY'S
voice wakes me from a nap. I'm hot, grumpy. Dizzy from the heat. For a moment I don't remember what happened. Then it hits me like a punch in the stomach and I see the park and the kids running toward Ellie and me, crying, shouting.

"Hey, Mom," Billy is shouting downstairs. "Did you hear about those girls getting killed in the park? I wonder if Nora knows them. One of them went to Eastern. I bet she—"

Mom says something in a low voice. Billy bellows, "Really? She was
there?
"

Mom says more. "But I want to talk to her," Billy says.

"Not now, I said!" This time Mom speaks loudly enough for me to hear every word. "Let her rest. If she feels like talking to you later, she will. Otherwise, leave her alone. She's very upset."

I lie back on the bed and close my eyes. Thank you, Mom.

My thoughts drift back to the party. I see Cheryl with Ralph, her blond hair catching the last of the summer sunlight. I hear Buddy say he could kill her. I see the hatred in his eyes, I hear him say, "If you died tomorrow, I wouldn't shed one tear." I smell rubber burning as he speeds out of the parking lot. I see him on the bridge, cigarette dangling from his lower lip. I see his knee next to mine in his car, I see him at the top of the hill on Eastern Avenue. I think of the picnic we were supposed to have, the hot dogs and soda and potato chips, all of us there, planning our summer.

I glance at the Baby Ben clock on my nightstand. Five thirty. This time yesterday, none of this had happened. While we were making our plans, Death was making his plans.

I roll over and shut my eyes. I'm so tired. The soles of my feet hurt, my throat is raw from crying, my eyes burn. Later I'll take a bath, wash my hair, put some lotion on my feet, but not now, not yet. I just want to sleep.

I sink like a stone to the bottom of my mind, to a place so dark, there are no memories. No dreams. Nothing.

 

Hours later, I wake up. It's dark. Mom is leaning over me. "Are you hungry? I saved some dinner for you."

I shake my head. I'm not hungry. I don't want anything to eat. "How long have I been asleep?"

"It's almost ten."

When I sit up, my head feels light. My feet hurt. My legs are weak. I'm sick, I think, too sick to get out of bed, too sick to do anything for myself. "Can I have something to drink?"

Mom hands me a glass of iced tea. "I thought you'd want this."

I take it gratefully and drink it all.

"Would you like to talk about it?" Mom asks. She looks worried.

"Why did it happen?" I ask. "Why?"

Mom sighs and sits on the bed beside me. Gently she runs one finger up and down the inside of my arm, something she did to help me sleep when I was little. It comforts me.

"They were just kids," I say. "They didn't do anything. Why did they have to die?"

"I'm sure God has a reason." Mom's voice is low. She doesn't believe what she's saying. I can hear the lie.

I'm tempted to say she's not fooling me. I know a lie when I hear one. But what's the point? She's just saying what people always say. Maybe she really believes it. Maybe she just wants to believe it.
God has a plan. There's a reason for everything.
Maybe that comforts her. Why doesn't it comfort me?

I sit up straighter, look her in the eye. "Why does God let horrible things happen to people?"

She tucks a frizzle of hair behind my ear, but before she can say anything I let more words tumble out of my mouth. It's as if everything I've never said out loud has broken loose. "If He's so powerful, why does He let wars happen and earthquakes and floods and fires and car crashes and plane crashes and cancer—"

"Hush." Mom strokes my arm again. "I know how upset and sad you are, but don't let it affect your faith. Maybe you should talk to a priest. Someone with more knowledge than I have."

I nod. Yes, maybe I should do that, maybe I will. Priests must know the answers to questions like mine. That's why they're priests.

"It's on the ten o'clock news," Billy shouts from downstairs. "They're talking to people in the neighborhood."

Mom stands up. "Do you want to see what they have to say?"

I shake my head and turn my back. I don't want to see any pictures or hear any newsmen talking about Cheryl and Bobbi Jo.

The phone rings. Billy shouts, "Nora, it's Ellie."

I go downstairs. From the living room I hear a newscaster saying, "It's hard to believe something like this could happen in a peaceful suburban park."

Without listening to more or taking a look at the TV screen, I drag the phone into the bathroom and shut the door.

"It's me," Ellie says. Her voice is hoarse and low. "Did you watch the news on TV?"

"No," I whisper.

"Me either."

We sit there connected by the telephone line, not speaking, just breathing.

Ellie breaks the silence. "The police are interviewing everybody who was at the party last night," she tells me. "Why don't you come over tomorrow? We can be together when they come to my house."

I hesitate. How can I tell Ellie I never want to come to her house again? I don't want to see Mrs. Boyd. I don't want to see the park. I want to go to some place I've never been, a place where nobody's friends are murdered.

"What's wrong?" Ellie whispers in her sad, croaky voice. "Don't you want to come?"

I swallow hard. I grip the receiver. My chest is so tight, I wonder if I'm about to have a heart attack. "I, um, I um, I mean I..." I wrap the telephone cord around my neck and wonder if it's possible to strangle yourself.

"Nora, please come," Ellie begs. "I don't know what to do. I feel like I'm going crazy or something, like I could scream and scream and scream."

I test the cord, pulling it a little tighter, but when it starts choking me, I let it go. "Me too. I feel the same way." It's true. Nothing will ever be normal again. Not me. Not Ellie. Not the Boyds or the Millers. Not Charlie or Paul or Walt.

"So will you come?" Ellie asks.

I nod slowly. "Yes," I say. "Yes. I'll come."

"About ten?"

"Yes."

We sit silently again, breathing into the phone. Before, we've always had so much to talk about, interrupting each other, laughing, making jokes. Now I can't think of what to say. And neither can she.

"It's awful here," Ellie says at last. "I can hear the Boyds crying right through the wall. Even Mr. Boyd. I heard Mrs. Boyd say, 'If only I hadn't let her walk to school with Cheryl. She didn't have any reason to go. Why didn't I say no?' Then Mr. Boyd said, 'You couldn't have known.' It was just like they were in our house."

Ellie pauses, blows her nose, draws a deep breath. "I tried watching TV but then the news came on and it's the big story. Reporters are all over the place, knocking on doors, asking questions. Even now, even when it's dark. They wanted to talk to the Boyds but Mr. Boyd slammed the door in their faces. So did my father. Oh, why did it happen, Nora, why?"

BOOK: Mister Death's Blue-Eyed Girls
9.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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