Siren (16 page)

Read Siren Online

Authors: Tricia Rayburn

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 10-12), #Children's Books - Young Adult Fiction, #United States, #Family, #People & Places, #Supernatural, #Social Issues, #Siblings, #Horror, #Ghost Stories (Young Adult), #Family - Siblings, #Sisters, #Interpersonal Relations, #Visionary & Metaphysical, #Maine, #Sirens (Mythology)

147

near my left temple. "I think Zara might be home."

"Really?" She checked her watch.

"I think I heard a car door slam." Resisting the urge to press my fingers against the growing pressure, I was relieved when Paige closed the book and dashed to a hallway window.

"Game over!" she squealed. She flew back into the room, her silver eyes shining at having come so close to being caught. She replaced the journal in the desk, and the quilted scrapbook on top of a tall white bookshelf. "She was just getting out of the car."

She grabbed my hand and pulled me with her, toward the door. I couldn't get out of the bedroom fast enough, but stopped abruptly when Paige ran into the hallway.

"What?" She looked at me. "What is it?"

I still stood in Zara's room. I held my breath and looked slowly over one shoulder. The three walls that weren't lined by floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the ocean were lined with floor-to-ceiling mirrors. I hadn't noticed before because their reflections were muted by sheer white curtains. The windows were closed, but the curtains, which had hung motionless while Paige and I sat on the bed, moved now, floating away from the mirrors. They revealed bursts of silver light, like a thousand paparazzi stood in front of each mirrored wall, their camera flashes all going off at the same time.

"Paige!"

The pressure exploded in my head at the sound of Zara's voice downstairs, but I hardly felt it.

148

"When you see Louis tonight, I have a few choice words I want you to share!"

Paige squeezed my hand before releasing it. If she saw the lights, she didn't say so. "I'll go tame the beast. Meet me in my room."

I followed her as she ran for the stairs, but when she was halfway down, I turned around. Paige had closed Zara's door behind us, and the lavender carpet glowed white in the light shining out from under the door.

He has to want to be found...
.

I stood in front of the closed door, my heart slamming against my chest. The last thing I wanted was to go back inside Zara's room, but my body seemed to be moving without checking with my brain first. Something was pulling me back. Something strong, something that didn't care whether Zara discovered me there.

"It's just a disco ball," I whispered, placing one hand on the doorknob. "It's just a disco ball reflecting the afternoon sun."

I shielded my closed eyes with both arms and turned away as soon as I opened the door. The whole room was engulfed in a blinding silver cloud. I waited, my heart threatening to fly through my chest. The cloud thinned after a few seconds, and I opened my eyes slowly. When I could see into the room without cringing, I stepped through the doorway.

The curtains reached toward me as I moved in the glittery haze. The bursts of light still danced across the mirrors, but they were smaller now, softer. Like a million tiny lightning bugs had pushed out the paparazzi.

149

One pocket of light didn't fade. It shone strong, a beacon cutting through the fog, from the top of the white bookshelf.

It's okay, Nessa.... You're okay.... I'm here...
.

"I don't know what I'm doing," I whispered again, my voice cracking. "I don't know what you want me to do."

I neared the bookshelf, and my brain screamed to turn back, to leave it alone and run out of the room, out of the house. But my feet kept moving. They didn't stop until I stood in front of the bookshelf, engulfed in silver.

He wants to be found.... He just can't see past the light...
.

My hands shook as my arms stretched up. I braced for something as my fingers touched lace--searing pain, my palms burning, my entire body melting into a liquid pool--but my hands actually grew steadier. I slid the scrapbook from the shelf, cradled it in one arm, and turned through the pages. I turned past Xavier Cooper. Alex Smith. John Martinson. Trevor Klemp. Zach Holbrook. Eric Park. Max Hawkins. And at least a dozen others Zara had led into loving her, then left behind. I turned until I reached the very last head shot, and then I sank, with the light, to my knees.

"Caleb Carmichael," I said softly.

He looked younger than the last time I'd seen him, on top of the cliffs, so I assumed the school picture was from the year before. He was smiling. He seemed happy. My stomach turned for him, for this younger, happier Caleb who had no idea what he was going to have to endure several months later.

Keep going, Nessa.... You must keep going...
.

150

I forced myself to turn the page, not wanting to see what came next. In this collection of romantic targets, Zara had eventually hit the bull's-eye every time. If she'd zeroed in on Caleb, even if she'd done so before things had developed with Justine, I didn't want to know. I didn't want to know what they'd done together, or how long it had taken for her to win him over. I didn't want to know that he'd cared for anyone else the way he'd cared for Justine.

"'May first,'" I read aloud. The starting date was written in pink ink under a paper napkin with a navy blue anchor in its center and "The Lighthouse Marina Resort and Spa" across its top edge. Underneath the date was only one other word.

Bingo.

"I don't care how you do it, just
do
it!"

Zara's voice was closer. I flipped through the remaining pages, relieved and confused when they were blank. Caleb was the scrapbook's last target, and the napkin was the only memento marking his connection to Zara.

Go, Nessa ... now...
.

I snapped the scrapbook shut, jumped to my feet, and replaced it on top of the bookshelf. The silver light was gone, the sheer white curtains hanging straight and still against the empty mirrored walls. Every part of my body seemed to be working together again, and when my brain screamed to run, my feet listened. I flew from the room, closed the door behind me, and was at the other end of the hallway just as Zara started stomping up the stairs.

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I wasn't sure which was Paige's room. Not wanting to guess wrong, I froze behind a small potted tree. I didn't breathe as Zara reached the top of the stairs and a fresh jolt of pain shot between my ears. She stopped suddenly and cocked her head to one side, as though listening. Her back was to me, but when she stepped to the right instead of in front of her, toward her room, I ducked into the nearest room and gently closed the door behind me.

"Do you hear that?"

I turned slowly. Grandma Betty sat in her chaise, facing me. She held a needle in one hand and a half-finished project in the other, but both hands were still. She smiled as her eyes rested on the empty space above my head.

"She's talking to you."

I swallowed. "Who?" I asked this so quietly, I almost wasn't sure I'd said the word aloud. I stepped away from the door, as though Zara wouldn't be able to hurt me as much the closer I stood to her grandmother. Because Grandma Betty's supersonic, supersensory senior powers were obviously picking up Zara saying my name as she moved down the hallway. She heard Zara breathing, her muffled footsteps coming this way. She could sense Zara's anger at my presence and knew something very, very bad was about to happen.

Grandma Betty's cloudy eyes traveled slowly from the space above my head, stopping when they were level with mine.

"She's talking to you, Vanessa," she said. "Your sister. Justine."

152

CHAPTER 12

"'WILLIAM O'DELL and Donald Jeffries were found late last night on top of the boulders at Beacon Beach, a popular surfing spot ten miles north of Winter Harbor. It is believed their bodies had been there several days before Winter Harbor officials discovered them.'"

I sat in the parked Volvo, watching two little girls hurry toward an SUV with their mother.

"This is in the
Globe
, Vanessa. The
Globe!
People are dying practically every day there, and I had to wait for a Boston paper to pick up the story? Why didn't you tell me?"

The girls wore matching yellow sundresses and carried picture books. Ten years ago, they could've been Justine and me. My stomach turned at the thought.

"I hope you're not spending so much time with Simon that you're oblivious to the world around you. I will
not
let another Carmichael boy put one of my daughters in harm's way, do you understand?"

153

"Mom, I'm fine." I looked away from the girls and grabbed the door handle. "They were all water-related accidents. You know I don't go in the water."

"Your sister never jumped off cliffs before she started hanging around Caleb."

"Sorry ... is Dad there? I wanted to ask him about the kitchen faucet."

"The last time I handed the phone to your father, you used him to do your dirty work. You can talk to him when we're done."

I frowned. I really wanted to talk to Big Poppa, to tell him everything that was going on, to confess that I was more scared than I'd ever been, because there was no one else to tell ... but I didn't think I could make it through twenty more minutes of Mom. Plus, Simon was waiting.

"Never mind, I have to go. I'll call you later." I hung up before she could argue, turned off the cell phone ringer, and hurried into the Winter Harbor Library.

"Vanessa, I'm
so
sorry," Simon said when I reached the basement. He stood and gave me a quick hug. "I didn't know I'd be gone that long. How are you? Is everything okay?"

"I'm fine," I said, aware that my arms kept tingling even after he'd let go. "And things are better now."

Something flashed across his face as he looked down, but I couldn't decipher the expression in the basement's dim lighting.

"How was the research?" I asked. "Did you get any answers?"

"Yes, actually." He pulled out a metal folding chair for me

154

before sitting himself. "How many storms hit here while I was gone?"

"Four." I didn't have to think about it. The sky now turned as dark as night at least once a day.

"Know how many hit Ashville? And Gouldsboro and Corea?"

"Four?" I guessed.

He looked at me. "None."

"But those towns are only a few miles from here."

"It was seventy degrees and sunny every day in every town within a hundred miles of Winter Harbor."

My eyes traveled over the dozens of temperatures and weather conditions listed in the notebook he held toward me. "I don't understand. The storms don't always last long, but they're huge. How can they not be hitting anywhere else?"

"I don't know." He closed the notebook. "What I
do
know is that they originate and dissipate right over Winter Harbor--and only over Winter Harbor."

"Isn't that, like, scientifically impossible?"

"Not impossible--but highly improbable. And unfortunately, the weather isn't the only thing we need to figure out." He dragged a fat black binder across the table, opened it, and flipped toward the back. "I didn't mention it because I thought we'd already been through enough for one day, but when the police were inspecting the beach at Camp Heroine, they referred to 'the other ones.'"

I frowned. Not wanting me to have to revisit the scene of the accident, Simon had insisted I stay in the Subaru while he

155

led the police to the beach. Whatever he'd heard, he'd been processing on his own for four days.

"At first, I assumed they were talking about the other victims from the past few weeks," Simon continued, "but then they started throwing dates around. June 1970. August 1975. September 1983. May 1987. August 1989. When I asked what they were talking about, all they said was that they've never had a situation of this same magnitude, but they have had similar incidents over the years."

"I don't remember hearing about anything like this before."

"Me either. And there's nothing about weather-related deaths in those back issues of the
Winter Harbor Herald."
He turned the binder around and slid it toward me. "But there is this."

"'Orin Wilkinson, twenty-five, beloved son and brother, passed away in his rowboat, near the Winter Harbor Marina. His parents said he was never happier than when he was fishing, and that he was still smiling on the water, even in death.'"

"That's from May 1987." He swung another binder around to face me. "This one's from June 1992."

"'Jack Fleischman, twenty-nine, was found on Long Wharf, lying motionless on his surfboard, grinning from ear to ear.'"

"May 1998."

"'Vincent Crew, twenty-two, was discovered near Beacon Beach, his water skis still strapped to his feet, a smile frozen on his face.'"

"July 2003."

"'Lucas Fink, thirty-one, had been scuba diving off Ashawagh

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