The Hidden - Jessica Verday [73]
“Let me out of here!” My voice was working now, and so were my fists. I banged them on the sides of the wood as hard as I could. “Let. Me. Out!”
“And leave your best friend down there to rot away all by herself?” Vincent laughed. “I couldn’t do that. That would just be … cruel.”
His laughter filled my head. His voice was so loud that I shoved both fingers into my ears to try to drown him out as a red rose was tossed down upon me.
“Ashes to ashes,” he said, then tossed another one. “Dust to dust.”
“Nooooooooo,” I screamed again. “Nooooo!”
“This is what happens. After.” Kristen’s voice was back again. “This is what happens after you fall in love,” she said. “Just take it from me.”
A bony hand wrapped around my wrist. With every fiber of my being, I wanted to shake it off. Wanted desperately to climb out of that hole and leave everything behind. But instead I did something worse.
I turned to look at her.
She was nothing but a skeleton head, with no skin and only globs of hair. Her jawbone worked with a creaky back and forth hinge motion, and the teeth looked like they were ready to fall free from their sockets.
My stomach revolted. I was going to be sick.
“You should have known,” the head cackled. “Look at me. Just look at me!”
Chapter Nineteen
TELEPHONE
… it is a favorite story often told about the neighborhood round the winter evening fire.
—“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”
I told Caspian about my dream the next morning, and he was just as unsettled about it as I was. He thought maybe it had something to do with what had happened at the séance, but I wasn’t so sure. Deep down I was worried that it was a whole subconscious metaphor for me being afraid of death and all that.
I was thinking about it at school on my way to fourth period, when I ran into Cyn. She was coming down the opposite hall, and I turned to go the other way.
Cyn hurried to catch up as soon as she caught sight of me.
“Abbey, wait!” she called.
I was tempted to ignore her. I couldn’t stop thinking about that dream, and it felt like dark clouds were hanging over me with every step I took. I really wasn’t in the mood to talk about what had happened with her and Kristen. But I stopped anyway.
“What is it, Cyn?” I said slowly.
She looked around us and pulled me over to a section of empty lockers. “I wanted to talk to you about last night. Are you pissed at me?”
I shifted my books. “No. It’s not you. I’m just in a bad mood.”
“Is it because you heard?”
“Heard what?”
“It’s stupid.”
“What is it?” I demanded. “What’s stupid?”
She glanced down at the floor. “God, I could use a cigarette.” Then she glanced up at me. “Trying to quit.”
She was wearing some type of bangle bracelets, and they all clanked back and forth as she fidgeted. It was an explosion of sound that felt like nails on a chalkboard.
I wanted to shake her as she stalled. “Just tell me, Cyn,” I finally said.
“It’s douche bag Mark. He told a couple of people about what happened at the séance.”
What do they know? What did they hear? “Told people what?”
“About the lights going out. He said that you got scared and bailed. I told him he was an asshole, and then I keyed the side of his car to make sure he got the point.”
“Thanks?”
I tried to look serious, but I couldn’t help but laugh. He was spreading rumors about me being afraid of the dark, and Cyn thought that would upset me? It was like that game we used to play in elementary school, telephone. God only knew what the rumor had morphed into now. Talk about funny.
“Why are you laughing?” she asked.
I choked back another giggle. “Because,” I said. “That’s pretty much the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard. Compared to the things they were saying about me when Kristen died …” I shook my head. “It would take a lot more than that to upset me.”
“Yeah, okay. Glad you find it funny,” Cyn said.
“I do find it funny. But thanks for sticking up for me. I really appreciate that.”
She gazed at me with a mix of humor and disbelief on her face. Then her expression turned serious. “Abbey, did I say anything to you at