Dead Silence (34 page)

Read Dead Silence Online

Authors: Kimberly Derting

Tags: #Romance Speculative Fiction

The new guy. He turned to Kisha, ignoring everyone on the stage now. He didn’t need them or their insignificant band.

What he needed was a girl. For Colton.

“I’ll be right back,” he shouted, straining to be heard above the riffs from the stage and the screams of the crowd around him. “Stay here.”

Kisha just nodded, her attention already fixated on the band as she swayed, her eyes glittering with delight.

 

When he first saw the girl he knew two distinct things about her.

First, that she didn’t belong in a place like this. Even as far as all-ages clubs went, this one was rough and dirty and seamy. The people who ran it rarely paid attention to the teens who passed through their doors, so even though the bartender wouldn’t serve minors, it was easy to sneak in booze. And even easier to score if you needed something stronger. It was his kind of place, but definitely not hers.

He could tell the girl had tried to fit in though. That her makeup was heavier than she was probably used to, and that she’d gone for the death metal vibe of the club with her short black skirt and fishnet tights, and a T-shirt with a cat—like Hello Kitty—but with a skull head instead. He’d seen plenty of suburban kids trying to fit in by shopping at Hot Topic, and this girl was no different from the rest.

The second thing he noticed about her was less obvious, but he’d recognized it anyway. It was something about the way she carried herself, despite being from the suburbs. Something about the way he’d seen her glare at the boys she caught watching her, and the way she lifted her shoulder in an I-don’t-give-a-fuck shrug. This girl was bold, even though she was a fish out of water.

He knew right away that this was Colton’s girl.

She wasn’t alone, though. She was with a friend—a pretty girl with curls who was just as out of place as she was, although much less brash about it. The curly-haired girl looked apologetic, and even grimaced as they squeezed through the crowd, trying not to spill their drinks—sodas most likely, since these didn’t look like the kind of girls who brought their own flasks. There was another kid too, a boy who hadn’t bothered trying, and gave off an Abercrombie vibe that didn’t generally sit well among the metalhead crowd. He practically hovered over the curly-haired girl.

The other guy, the dark-haired one who trailed in their wake, was never really close enough to be with them, but not so far away that he could be overlooked either. Unlike the others, this guy could easily blend in with the crowd at this club.

Evan watched the girl as the song came to an end, as the audience blew up, shrieking with applause, and he forced himself not to picture Kisha among them, cheering for the band that had cut out his heart.

When the next song started, he saw the curly-haired girl slip away from the others at their table, and then Abercrombie went after her, disappearing into the mosh pit just as quickly as she had. The other guy left too, but went in the opposite direction, and he wondered if he was ever really with them at all.

Didn’t matter, really. Because they’d just given him a golden opportunity. One he was prepared for, he thought, as he wound his way toward the table, his fingers toying with the tiny plastic bag in his pocket.

He had a chance now. To get to her.

Colton’s girl.

CHAPTER 17

VIOLET STOOD BACK FOR SEVERAL MINUTES, maybe longer. She’d gotten caught up in listening to them, like some lovesick fan. But the song they were playing now wasn’t one she’d heard before, not one of the ones on their YouTube page or their website.

 

Everyone knows
I can’t see
Innocence
Do you want to suffer?

 

The lead singer’s voice was hypnotic, guttural and warbling, and she felt like he was calling out to her, and her alone. The pulses continued to flash in her eyes, making it harder and harder to see, which seemed odd in a way she couldn’t quite put her finger on.

Still, that voice called to her.

 

Eyes brim with need
Pull me down
’Neath the dark
Scrub your sins away

 

Emptiness
One last breath
Baptized in blood
Do you want to suffer?

 

The meaning was almost as chilling as the vocals themselves, hitting a little too close to home considering why she was here. She turned once, to look for Jay or Rafe or Chelsea, but the bodies around her had swallowed her up, creating just enough space so she could breathe. So her heart could beat.

And then it hit her, almost at the same time she recognized the line in the song, “Do you want to suffer?”

She knew that line. She’d seen it before. Smeared in blood on the wall where the couple had been slaughtered . . . the place where Veronica’s body had been found.

And now, right here in this club, there was that strange flashing, blinding her. Only it wasn’t just the strobe lights, Violet realized. There was something else too, something closing in on the edges of her periphery.

Same as before.

From the lake house.

She rubbed her eyes, not caring that she was likely smearing her makeup. But it didn’t change anything. The flashing, and the colors too, were still there. Still clouding her vision.

It was the imprint. The one that matched the man with the slashed throat. Veronica’s father.

And the lyrics,
Do you want to suffer
. . .

It wasn’t a coincidence.

He was here. The killer.

Violet shoved her way forward, straining to get to the stage to see if she’d missed something before. It didn’t matter, though, if he was up there with them . . . if he was one of them. He couldn’t hurt her now, not in the middle of his show.

She watched the lead singer, still listening to the haunting sound of his voice.

 

Silence the voices in my head
Tell me which road to follow
Silence the voices in my head
I’m under their spell

 

Am I deaf?
Or is it mercy?
She begs to be spared

 

It wasn’t him, she was sure of it, even from here, she couldn’t feel the strange colors, the swirling and shifting kaleidoscope coming from him, so she turned to the drummer, whose drums themselves bore the brimstone cross.

 

If I should die
Torch me on an altar of sacrifice

 

Frustration welled inside her as she moved to the next member and the next, ticking each of them off her list. Something wasn’t right. It wasn’t any of them.

 

Monster or human?
Drowning in doubt
The evil consumes me

 

So who then? She whirled around as the chorus started again, straining through the flashes in her vision to see those around her. If he wasn’t onstage, then he was down here, in the crowd.

With her.

She searched and searched, stumbling now as the song started to wind down.

 

If I should die
Ashes . . . ashes . . .

 

She looked to her left and saw Rafe, but only the back of him as he moved in the opposite direction. She took a couple of steps his way but knew immediately that was the wrong way to go as her vision began to clear. Backtracking, it strengthened once more, but there were too many people, especially up here, near the stage.

The next song started, and this one Violet recognized. Screams erupted all around her, as everyone seemed to go wild. If it hadn’t been for the imprint, she would’ve stopped to listen too, but there was only one thing driving her now.

She tried to move toward it, to follow the path that was calling to her, but instead she got tangled in a mass of bodies and limbs, all pushing against her at once, all shoving her toward the front. Her chest tightened as she became trapped, enmeshed in the human prison.

Hopelessly, she glanced up to the stage, to see if there was any other way out. But there were just more people in her way. More bodies. And not enough room to maneuver.

It wasn’t hard to realize she had no option but to ride the song out, and maybe the one after that, as she struggled just to remain on her feet. She was pinched and grabbed, and she elbowed and shoved back, but mostly she concentrated on the music.

Because that’s all she could do right now.

STICKS AND STONES

AT FIRST HE THOUGHT HE’D MADE A MISTAKE.

She was as tough and as bold as he’d first guessed. But almost to a fault.

She was kind of a bitch.

He started to wonder if he’d chosen wrong. If she
wasn’t
the right girl after all. Colton deserved better, didn’t he? Colton deserved someone warmer, softer, at least in the right moments.

This girl seemed to be all hard edges, incapable of softness.

But he decided to wait a bit, to see if the roofie mellowed her out some.

It wasn’t hard to slip the powder into her drink. She was barely giving him the time of day, and no one else was watching him as
Safe Word
broke out into their anthem, “Fire and Brimstone.” But she’d at least given him enough space to stand beside her at the table.

He’d tried to talk to her, even before she’d started sipping her drink, but what he realized was that the more irritated she grew by his attempts at winning her over, the more agitatedly she chewed on, and drank from, her straw. Until she’d downed half her glass.

Along with half the Rohypnol he’d been able to drop in there when he’d casually opened his palm as he’d reached across the table—and her glass—for a napkin.

She had no idea what hit her, but by the end of the second song, she was chattier. And far softer.

And he was far, far more hopeful as she leaned on him, draping one arm over his shoulder to steady herself.

Kisha found them like that, as she watched Evan from where she stood in line for the bathroom. But instead of being jealous to find him with some suburban wannabe who hung on him like a cheap whore, she just smiled, asking him with her eager expression if this was the girl.

His nod said,
It’s her,
as he told the girl at his side, “Let’s get outta here.”

“Wha’s yer name?” Her words were starting to bleed together, and he knew they needed to move fast, before he lost her altogether and someone started asking questions. Before her friends came back.

“Evan,” he said patiently as she led her to where Kisha was waiting. “But you can call me Father.”

CHAPTER 18

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