Night Sky (11 page)

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Authors: Suzanne Brockmann

BOOK: Night Sky
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“Mom.”

“And the…the…athlete's foot from spending time in the locker room,” she said, picking up the salad bowl and taking it over to the table.

“You don't want me to run track because I might get athlete's foot or drop dead.” I followed her, trying to make her see how ridiculous she sounded.

But she just shook her head. “I'm sorry, Sky. I can't let you.”

“Yes, you can!” I insisted. I couldn't believe we were actually having this conversation. It was like she was
trying
to make everything difficult. The person who should most enjoy seeing me succeed was keeping me from living my life. “Just let your neuroses go for a second and
listen
to how crazy you sound!”

“I'm sorry,” Mom said quietly. “My answer is no.” She cleared her throat. “Excuse me, I have to use the bathroom.”

I knew she was going in there to cry. Well, it served her right. I hoped she felt as miserable as I did.

I sank into a chair and set my forehead down on the tabletop. I didn't feel like having pizza. I just wanted to go over to Calvin's and watch a movie and forget about everything for a while. My mom's BS was getting old.

—

Mom was still in the bathroom when the doorbell rang.

“That must be the pizza,” she shouted through the door. “Sky! Would you use your debit card to get that?”

With a sigh, I pushed myself to my feet and trudged to the front door, debit card in hand.

The first thing I noticed was her tattoos.

The girl had full sleeves tatted across both her arms underneath the tacky red Pizza Extravaganza shirt. And although her cap was tucked low over her face, she looked up at me as she shoved the pizza box in my direction. “Take it,” she demanded in a gruff voice.

We locked eyes. And my stomach did a somersault.

“Hey,” I started. “You're…”

“Keep your voice down,” the motorcycle girl from the Sav'A'Buck growled, “and take your effing pizza.”

I took the cardboard box distractedly with one hand, holding the debit card out to the icicle-eyed girl with my other.

“Put your money away and listen carefully.” The girl's voice was low and intense. “Tonight. Ten p.m. Coconut Grove Mall. We meet at the old twenty-plex.” Motorcycle Girl cleared her throat and glanced over my shoulder before adjusting her cap so that it once again shadowed her eyes. “And come alone.”

Just like that, the girl turned on her heel to leave. She was wearing the same steel-toed boots she'd had on last night when we'd almost gotten killed in the Harrisburg grocery store.

“Wait!” I hissed a little too loudly.

Motorcycle Girl turned around and placed an exaggerated finger over her lips, shushing me.

“I don't even know your name.” I took a step outside, my own whisper as stern as I could make it. “You really think that I'm just gonna go to an abandoned mall to meet some random person whose name I don't even know…?”

“It's Dana,” the girl interrupted me. “My name is Dana. Now be quiet and go inside. And get there tonight. Ten p.m. sharp. Don't be late. I don't like late. Late doesn't
work
for me.”

I scowled and opened my mouth to respond. But before I could utter another word, Dana took another step toward me. “Bubble Gum, you're gonna want to be there. It's about Sasha.”

Then, she turned and walked away.

“Ooh, that smells so good!” Mom said, startling me as she came to the door.

Motorcycle Girl—Dana—was already heading for the street, her boots clacking on the front walk.

“Did she deliver our pizza on a motorcycle?” Mom asked, as Dana started her bike with a roar.

“It's probably really energy efficient,” I said as I handed Mom the pizza and shut and locked the door. She was still just standing there, so I took it back from her and nearly ran with it to the kitchen table, wanting to get this over with.

“Wow, you're hungry!” Mom exclaimed, her voice so cheerful again that I knew she was faking it.

“Yup,” I said unenthusiastically.

Dinner was weirder than usual as I wolfed down the pizza. Mom sat beside me, dipping lettuce into her dressing and smiling sadly at nothing.

I made the mistake of glancing up at her, and she took that eye contact as an invitation to speak. “I can skip my mah-jongg game tonight, if you want.”

What? No!
“Why would you do that?” I asked.

“You usually babysit,” she said, “and…”

And the little girl I babysat for was missing. “I was actually thinking Calvin and I could spend the evening searching for Sasha if you'd—”
Let
me
ride
in
Cal's car with him
, I was going to say, but I didn't get that far.

“Oh, honey,” she said, putting her fork down. “I thought you'd heard.”

“Heard what?” I asked.

“They announced it this morning,” Mom told me, tears filling her eyes. “They've called off the search. The blood they found in the back of Mr. Rodriguez's truck was… Oh, honey, I didn't want to tell you like this. Let's not talk about this now.”

“Why, because we're having so much fun?” I carefully wiped my mouth with my napkin and put it down next to my plate. My heart was pounding. “Just tell me. What
about
the blood in the truck?”

“The DNA tests were positive,” she said, and she must've known that I didn't understand, because she added, “It was Sasha's blood. And there was way too much of it. She couldn't have survived…whatever atrocities were done to her.”

Obviously, she could see that I still didn't understand, that I
couldn't
understand, and she put it into even plainer language. “Sky, the police have upgraded the case from a kidnapping to a murder investigation. There's no way Sasha could have lost that much blood and still be alive. I'm so sorry, sweetheart.”

Sasha was
dead
?

I saw a flash of Sasha's empty eyes from my nightmare, and the slices of pizza I'd just wolfed down formed a sudden solid lump in my stomach.

I thought about Dana's brief message—Ten p.m. Coconut Grove 20-Plex. It's about Sasha—and I looked up at my mother, who still had those tears brimming in her eyes.

I pushed myself to my feet. “I'm really sorry, Mom, but I think I'm going to throw up.”

Chapter
Eight

In truth, I was fine.

Or at least as fine as I could be, having just received the awful news that the police believed that Sasha was dead. I refused to believe it. There must've been a mistake.

“Maybe I should call Dr. Susan,” Mom said to me through the bathroom door. Her college roommate had become a doctor, and the rare few times I'd gotten sick, she'd made a virtual house call via our computer's intermittently working video-chat service. Come to think of it, the only time I'd ever seen a doctor besides Dr. Susan was last year's visit to the emergency room, after the accident.

“I don't need to talk to Dr. Susan,” I groaned. “I think it's just food poisoning. Plus, I've got my period too, so… Ohhh, uhhh,” I wailed.

Someone who heard me might've wondered if I was milking it just a little too much, but they didn't know my mom. I had to sell it, hard, so that when she checked on me tonight and I was just a lump in my bed, she'd believe I was finally sleeping and leave without checking further.

I didn't know how long it was going to take—my meeting with Dana, aka Motorcycle Girl, at the old cineplex over at the long-deserted Coconut Grove Mall. But I
did
know this: I
was
going to be there. If someone really had killed Sasha, then it had been someone who wasn't her father. I was determined to find out who and somehow make them pay.

I must've made another moaning noise, because Mom spoke again through the door. “My poor baby. I'll cancel my mah-jongg game.”

“No!” I said, quickly opening the door, and Mom frowned. “I mean, please,
please
don't cancel anything. I'm going to take some of that pink tummy medicine and go to bed. I'll be fine.”

“Are you sure?” Mom asked. “I hate to leave you by yourself when you're like this.”

I wanted her to think I was ill, but not sick enough to make her stay home tonight. I was working on a very slippery slope here.

“It would make me feel even worse if you had to stay home,” I told her, adding a trembling lower lip and puppy-dog eyes.

“Oh, honey.” Mom reached to hug me, but I scrambled back into the bathroom.

“I'm so sorry. I'm gonna…” I said, slamming the door closed.

“That's okay, sweetie,” she called after me. “Call me if you need me.”

Speaking of calling… I took my cell phone out of my back pocket. Thankfully, we had service, so I quickly dialed Calvin's number.

“What's up?”

“Cal!” I whispered, turning on the water in the sink, in case Mom was still lurking outside the door. “I need you to pick me up at nine thirty.”

“What's going on?”

“The motorcycle girl delivered our pizza tonight!”


What?
” Cal said.

“Yup.”

“Damn it, I
knew
I should have stayed!” Cal said, disappointed. But then he perked up. “What's happening at nine thirty?”

“That girl—her name's Dana—she told me to meet her at the Coconut Grove Twenty at ten o'clock. I think she knows something about Sasha's disappearance. Her…” I closed my eyes and said it. “Murder.”

There was silence on the other end of the line, for just a moment.

“Are you still there?” I asked.

“Yeah,” Cal said finally. “Yeah, I'm here. I didn't know if you'd heard about…But you have so… I'm just really sorry.”

“Skylar?” Mom called, and rapped gently on the bathroom door.

Crap! “I'm okay, Mom,” I said, coughing a couple times for effect.

“Sky?” Cal said through the phone.


Hang
on
,” I hissed back.

“Do you want me to get you anything?” Mom asked.

I took my toothbrush out of the mug shaped like a fish wearing lipstick—the shower curtain and toilet seat matched—and quickly filled it with water, shutting off the faucet, now
wanting
Mom to hear me through the door.

I dumped a little of the water out into the toilet as I made awful retching noises. It actually sounded like I was hurling. I was impressed with myself. “Oh, no, no, Mom. I just need to get this stuff out of my system.”

“Dude, that's nasty,” Cal said through the phone.

“Oh, sweetheart,” Mom said.

“I'll be out soon,” I insisted. “I'm already feeling
much
better. I'm just so tired now…”

“Okay, honey. I'm downstairs if you need me.”

I coughed again and made my voice waver. “Thanks, Mommy.”

I waited a couple seconds, and then turned the water back on and whispered into the phone. “Sorry about that.”

“Man,” Cal said, “why didn't you just puke and then call me back?”

“I wasn't really puking,” I replied. “I'm faking sick. Otherwise, there's no way in hell I'm getting out of the house tonight.”

“Well done,” Calvin said. He must've been wearing his hands-free headset, because I could hear him applauding my performance. “Bravo. And the Oscar goes to—”

“Just pick me up,” I ordered him. “Nine thirty. Don't be late!”

—

“If I end up getting hacked into a million little pieces tonight,” Calvin told me, “I just want you to know that I will definitely blame you.”

“All one million pieces of you?” I asked.

We'd driven all the way out to the unlit, hulking remains of the Coconut Grove Mall, where the twenty-theater cineplex had once been—and I quote—“the jewel in the mall's crown.” This mega mall was still technically in Coconut Key, but it was close enough to the town's border with Harrisburg to have failed miserably when the economy quadruple-dipped.

In fact, it had closed for good when Mom and I moved down here last spring. And in the relatively short time since then, the greenery that had once decorated the formerly upscale parking lot had grown like mad, with weird fingers of out-of-control tropical plants reaching crazily for the sky.

It was spooky. And dark.

The town had put a huge chain-link fence around the entire abandoned property, just inside the road that encircled the mall complex. Cal and I had already driven the perimeter, and we'd found two separate gates in the fence, but both were securely locked with bolts and thick, heavy chains.

We were making a second pass around the place, Cal driving even slower now, because I'd thought I'd seen… “There!” I said, pointing.

Cal braked to a stop, angling slightly so that his headlights shone on the fence. Or rather, on the hole in the fence. Someone had cut the chain links to provide an upside-down V-shape that would allow access to a crouching person. Or one in a wheelchair.

It was conveniently close to the mall's main theater entrance, and I suspected it wasn't in that location by accident.

Cal looked at me. “Seriously?”

I was scared too, but I was also anxious to hear what this girl, Dana, had to say. What exactly did she know about Sasha? And what could she tell me about G-T's or Greater-Thans?

“Think about it this way,” I told him. “If this girl wanted to hurt us, she wouldn't have saved our lives in the Sav'A'Buck.”

“Good point,” Cal said, but he didn't look convinced.

Still, he parked his car at the edge of the mall road. We got out, and he clicked the remote lock once, twice, three times before following me to that hole in the fence.

I bent over and slipped through, then turned, lifting back the sharp metal edges of the opening for Cal.

And then we were both inside.

The moon wasn't full, and the sky was typical Florida hazy, but the glow was still enough to light our way, especially when our eyes got used to the darkness.

The wheels of Cal's chair made a whirring sound on the pavement as we approached the silent, hulking building. An overloaded Dumpster sat near the doors, as if someone had started cleaning the place out, but then just given up and walked away.

“You ever go to the movies here?” I asked as we approached, mostly in an attempt to pretend this was just another normal evening out.

“Not in years,” Cal answered. “It was too dangerous to come here, even after they hired security guards to walk you out to your car.”

“Give me your phone,” I ordered. There was some kind of lock on the huge plate-glass doors, but I couldn't see it clearly enough.

Cal turned on his flashlight app before he handed it to me.

He knew that I'd left my cell-phone-slash-tracking-device on my bedside table, next to the convincingly Skylar-shaped lump of pillows I'd placed beneath the covers of my bed. In case my mom peeked in to check on me, I'd also left my pink boom box on its white-noise setting, so she wouldn't hear me not breathing.

Still, if Mom discovered I was gone, I was going to be grounded until I graduated from college.

I shone the light on the doors, and although heavy chains were wrapped around each of the door handles, the chains didn't seem to be locking anything together. I gave the door a push, but it didn't give.

“I don't get it,” I said, annoyed, as I gave Cal his phone back and tried the other doors with both hands. They didn't budge either. “Why would Motorcycle Girl tell me to meet her here if she knew it was going to be locked?”

From the darkness next to that Dumpster, a voice rang out clearly. “You gotta pull, not push.”

I'll admit it. I screamed.

Calvin probably wouldn't admit it, but he screamed too, as he aimed his flashlight app at the Dumpster like the light was some kind of protective ray.

“Oh, I'm sorry. Did I frighten you?” The motorcycle girl—Dana—stepped out from the shadows and into the flashlight's glow, still wearing those steel-toed boots. “I thought I told you to come alone.” She glared at Calvin as she scratched a gruff hand through the spikes of her platinum-blond hair.

I heard a faint click behind Dana and then an orange glow the size of my fingernail floated lazily in the darkness.

“You did,” I said. “But I don't drive, so I couldn't have gotten here without Calvin. Calvin, this is Dana.” I looked at her challengingly, despite the fact that my knees felt a little wobbly. “So who's
your
friend?”

“Forgive me,” Dana said, sounding anything but sorry. “I'm being rude. My friend here”—she pointed behind her at the orange glow—“is Milo.”

The glow became more prominent, and then a boy about Dana's age came into view behind her. His hair hung low and shaggy in his eyes, and he kept one hand stuffed into his jeans pocket, the other up to his mouth as he took a long drag on a cigarette.

“Ew,” I said automatically, watching the smoke waft up toward the sky.

Dana turned back to Calvin. “Now that we're all properly introduced, I need you to scoot, Scoot. Go wait in the car like a good boy.”

Cal looked at me, and I laughed a little even though nothing about this was funny. “Forgive
me
,” I replied, “but just because you ride a motorcycle and have a bunch of crazy tattoos doesn't mean you get to call the shots. His name's
Calvin
, and he's not going anywhere, unless you want me to leave too.”

With her chin tucked down, Dana glared at me. Her ice-colored eyes glinted through a thick shroud of dark eyelashes. Her blond hair stood out white, like a halo against the garish light from Calvin's phone. Behind her, Milo sucked on his cigarette. They were both silent.

I glared back at Dana, and the silence was tedious. I could hear the tick-tick of my watch as the second hand moved across its face.

And then, just as suddenly, Dana tilted her head up and let her mouth spread into a toothy grin. “Well, well, well,” she said, leaning back to tap the side of Milo's shoulder with her hand, “the girl really
has
got some sass. I
like
it.”

Milo nodded somberly. I watched him finally take the butt of his cigarette out of his mouth and drop it on the ground. He squashed out the few remaining wisps of smoke with his boot.

“What do you know about Sasha?” I asked.

Dana didn't answer. Instead, she nodded at Calvin, again keeping her eyes on me. “Does he know about you?” she asked. “Have you shown him yet?”

My pulse quickened, but I kept my voice calm. “Know about what?”

Calvin looked up at me. “Dude,” he whispered, “how does
she
know about that thing you did with your radio?

Dana nodded. “Thanks, Cal,” she said. “You just answered my question. Can I call you Cal, by the way?”

Cal opened his mouth to answer, but Dana interrupted him. “I guess you can stick around, Cal. Come on, let's get inside, away from these damn mosquitoes.”

And suddenly the words she'd said back at the Sav'A'Buck made sense.
Kinda
the
way
one
G-T can recognize another
. I realized that Dana knew I was a Greater-Than because she was one too.

And just like that, I remembered her hurling that sharp-edged box of soup at Calvin, back at the grocery store. My brain played the memory in weirdly accurate slow motion, and in my mind's eye, I saw her toss her apple into the air—and make it hang there—the same way I'd done with my hairbrush and the radio in my room.

My eyes hadn't believed it at the time—and she'd really only defied gravity for a few short seconds before she'd released the apple from her telekinetic control, letting it drop back into her hand.

Here and now, my heart was in my throat, and I couldn't speak as Dana turned and pulled open the doors to the abandoned mall. Milo flicked hair out of his eyes, took an old-fashioned flashlight from his pocket, clicked it on, and followed. But he held the door open for the two of us.

I looked at Cal and he looked at me. I desperately wanted answers, and not just to my questions about Sasha. I knew he didn't want to go with them, but when I held out my hand, he took it.

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