“Why?”
Brooke and I looked at each other. At least, I was pretty sure it was Brooke. In the low light, it could have been Elvis.
“It’s a long story.” I stopped on the last page of documents and read. “But it’s what’s not here that’s interesting. These are my dad’s papers, but there’s no death certificate for my grandfather.”
“There’s not one for your grandmother either.”
“No, but there is an autopsy report.” I held up the paper for a better look and startled.
“What?” Brooklyn asked.
Cameron leaned down and saw it immediately. “Wow.”
“According to this report,” I said, my voice suddenly hoarse, “my grandmother died the day I was born.”
I took the contents of the envelope up to my room for a better look and to study the report. Cameron said he had to do a perimeter check, so we hurried upstairs to learn what we could while he was gone. I didn’t want to slip and say anything about the magic picture trick. Not just yet.
The description of my grandmother’s death made me ill. I had to stop reading because I thought I’d be sick. According to the report, my grandmother died while being tortured. And the report, while very cold and technical, listed the multiple lacerations and contusions consistent with a person suffering from traumatic physical abuse and/or torture, and it did so in great and explicit detail.
My stomach turned. Why would anyone torture her?
And crazy thing was, my grandparents knew.
“Do you think your grandmother’s death was what your parents were talking about when you were born?”
“No. I don’t. They said he was still alive. He. ”
“Lor,” Brooke said, placing a hand on my arm to draw me back to her, “do you think your grandfather killed your grandmother?”
“No!” Glitch shouted.
We jumped and turned to him. He was busy doing a search on my computer for my grandfather’s name.
“No, he didn’t,” he repeated. “But he is in prison for voluntary manslaughter.”
“What?” I practically flew across the room to get a good look at the screen. “He is alive?”
“Well, he was fourteen years ago. Okay,” Glitch said, semi-reading aloud, “‘Frustrated with the authorities’ reluctance to pursue an anonymous tip, Mac McAlister tracked down the people whom he believed had kidnapped his wife.’”
Brooke was glued to Glitch’s other side and even Cameron was vying for some space to see what was going on. She pointed to the screen farther down the article. “‘In the gunfight that ensued, McAlister killed…’ Oh my gosh, twelve people.”
“‘He was shot numerous times,’” Glitch continued, “‘yet continued to search for his wife when the firing ceased.’”
Brooke interrupted again. “‘After the smoke had settled, twelve people lay dead with McAlister not far behind, but a passing vehicle heard the gunfire and called the police.’”
Glitch read, “‘Authorities arrived on the scene to find several dead bodies and McAlister unconscious and barely breathing. He had his wife cradled in his arms. She had been dead for hours.’”
I covered my mouth with my hands, the image the article evoked so heartbreaking, so agonizing.
Brooke looked at me, searching my reaction, her eyes wet with emotion. “I’m so sorry, Lor.”
“‘One thing the investigators noted as an anomaly was that every member of the group that neighbors referred to as a cult was unusually tall,’” said Glitch.
Brooke jumped to read. “‘Unusually tall.’” She looked back at me. “Do you think they were descendants?”
“Maybe,” I said, still stuck on the image of my grandfather holding my grandmother’s dead body in his arms.
“If so, Lor, we need to bring this up to your grandparents.”
“Wait a minute,” Glitch said, reading on. “It happened in northern New Mexico. Your grandfather is in prison here.” He looked at me, stunned. “He’s been here this whole time.”
I awoke to the sound of my own labored breathing as I tried to catch my breath. Fire had consumed my lungs as they begged for air. With dry gasps, I fought to provide it. It was the usual, of course. And yet, the dynamics of the dream were changing. I was beginning to welcome the demon inside. To swallow him with pleasure, his presence both strange and familiar at once. The thought of the demon inside me becoming a welcomed guest disturbed me on several levels.
“You do that a lot,” Cameron said, straightening up from his perch on the window seat. I’d forgotten to turn off the lamp on my desk and I could see his shadowy figure clearly. His eyes were hooded with weariness, making him look like he’d just woken up, which was good. Maybe he’d actually slept.
“I know.” I placed a hand over my chest and tried to slow my breathing. “I’ve been having nightmares.”
“Me too. Mostly about short chicks ordering me around like they own the world.”
I couldn’t help but chuckle. “You can’t be talking about me. I hardly ever order you around, and I don’t own even an inch of this world.”
He grinned and cast a quick glance toward the bossy short chick who was blinking awake as we spoke.
“Are you awake?” Brooklyn asked me through a yawn.
“No.”
“Me neither. Did you get any sleep?”
“No.”
“Me neither. I am just so floored by everything,” she said, sitting up in her bed. She looked over at
Cameron as he sat on the window seat, gazing out the window.
I glanced at the digits glowing atop my nightstand. Three o’clock. In the morning. I didn’t even know three o’clock in the morning existed. I thought it was a myth. Like mermaids and snowballs in hell.
“You snore,” Cameron said to Brooke without turning around.
“Okay, I may have slept a little, but I don’t snore. And how can you just sit there all night without crashing?” she asked him.
He finally turned to her. “I slept a little too, but I don’t need as much sleep as you do.”
“Oh, right. I keep forgetting. Well, I’m okay now. It’s your turn for the bed. I’ll take watch.”
With a soft smile, he said, “I’d feel a bit safer with me on point, but thanks.”
“Suit yourself.”
A thought occurred to me as I sat hallucinating due to lack of oxygen in my dream. “I wonder how Mr.
Davis is doing after today. And the creature whose name shall not be spoken aloud.”
“No kidding,” Brooke said. With everything that had happened, those two must have slipped her mind as well. “What do you suppose he thinks?”
“Do we care?” Cameron asked.
I shrugged. “Sure. Well, about Mr. Davis anyway. But Tabitha did seem pretty freaked out.”
“Thank goodness her parents are with the Order,” Brooke said. “They’ll know how to help her, what to tell her.”
I nodded. “Right. She’s been through a lot.”
Brooklyn gaped at me.
“Well, you know, what with Jared making out with her, then trying to kill us all. But what about Mr.
Davis? He already suspects Jared.”
“Suspects him for what?” Cameron said. “For killing his brother a thousand years ago? Whoever that was would have aged. He can’t possibly know anything.”
Crossing my arms over my chest, I scrutinized him with a dubious expression. “You mean besides the fact that both you and Jared have superhuman abilities? He was there, Cameron. He saw what I saw.”
“His mind will create a scenario that’ll fit with his interpretation of events. Most likely, we were both on some mind-altering drug that gave us super strength.”
I had serious doubts it would be that easy this time, but who was I to argue?