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    In the Shadows

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      changed course, pushing straight up and gasping for breath along

      with him. She immediately guided his hands to the foundation of

      the building.

      He clung to it, filled with fear and relief and also a deep shame.

      He hadn’t protected Cora and Minnie at all. He’d nearly gotten

      them killed. And Minnie had been the one to save his life.

      “Everyone okay?” Minnie said, breathing hard.

      “Yes,” Cora answered. She was next to Thomas and Charles.

      Charles was shivering violently in the cold water, his lips blue. The

      sun was nearly down, and the waves slammed them mercilessly

      against the foundation.

      Arthur looked up to see the flames eating through the wood

      on this side of the building.

      Minnie followed his gaze. “It doesn’t matter if he’s waiting or

      not — we have to get away from this building. I’ll swim ahead and

      check.”

      “Wait, you can’t —” Arthur started, but she had already dis-

      appeared under the water. Every second was agony until she

      popped back up again, on the far side of the boathouse.

      “Come on! I don’t see him anywhere. You can go along the

      side of the building, and then it’s only a few feet to the pier.”

      Thomas guided Charles, helping him along, followed by Cora.

      Minnie swam back to Arthur, clinging to the side next to him and

      going slowly. Arthur noticed dark, wet smears where her hands

      had touched.

      “You’re bleeding!”

      She shrugged, grimacing. “The mussels. They’re nasty sharp

      beasts.”

      This, of all things, filled him with so much rage he was certain

      he would kill Alden with his bare hands if he saw him again, no

      matter the consequence. But now he had to focus on survival. He

      followed Minnie around the edge and let her grab his waist and, in

      a jumble of flailing limbs, help him to the pier.

      They pulled themselves out of the water and collapsed next to

      the others, shivering and out of breath. The heat from the build-

      ing next to them was almost pleasant, but they needed to get away,

      and fast.

      “Daniel’s at the station,” Cora said in a breathless pant. “We

      need to tell him what Alden did.”

      Arthur shook his head, trying to clear it of the smoke, water,

      and pain. “Daniel, then,” he said, his voice coming out far lower and

      angrier than normal. Cora put her arm around Minnie; Thomas

      supported Charles; and Arthur walked behind all of them like a

      shadow.

      He didn’t want to hold that spot anymore, he found.

      Arthur was grateful for the shield of twilight around them.

      Otherwise their appearance would have attracted more stares and

      curiosity than he could handle at the moment. It was nearly full

      dark by the time they reached the sheriff’s office.

      Cora and Minnie charged ahead, moving toward the door, but

      Arthur heard voices inside.

      “Wait,” he hissed. He moved against the still-warm bricks of

      the building and motioned for the others to do the same. Crouch-

      ing next to the propped-open window, they heard Daniel.

      And Alden.

      “. . . burning right now. I saw them as I was walking by, and

      when I turned around at the end of the pier, the building was

      on fire.”

      There was a clatter of chairs, and then Daniel sprinted out of

      the building, followed by the sheriff. They ran in the direction

      opposite Arthur and the others, heading for the small fire station

      on the next street.

      Arthur looked up to see Alden standing on the steps to the

      office, looking down and smiling at them. He tipped his hat, then

      walked at a leisurely pace back toward the boardinghouse.

      “Oh, no,” Cora whispered. “We can’t go to Daniel now.”

      “We’ll tell the truth! He’ll believe us!” Minnie wrung her

      hands, the jacket Charles had given her slipping off one shoulder.

      “Minnie,” Thomas said, shaking his head. “He already thought

      we lied to him about Mary. And who would you believe: the well-

      dressed, wealthy summer visitor, or five soaking-wet, smoke-covered

      kids? Arthur’s bleeding from his head. Your hands are cut to pieces.

      I have burns on my legs. We look guilty.”

      “But who can we tell? Who will help us?”

      “No one,” Arthur said, his heart as dark and heavy as the night

      around them. He had hoped that the day would never come. It

      was time to discover his father’s secrets and pray that they would

      offer him a way out, a way to save those he loved.

      The secrets that had killed his family were his only hope for

      saving Minnie and Cora.

      December 2, 1967

      Two Weeks Later

      eighteen

      T

      hom paced nervously, always keeping his brother in

      his peripheral vision. Charles couldn’t stop shivering,

      lying on the sofa with three quilts over him. Cora and

      Minnie had met them in the small library, hair still wet but clothes

      changed. Arthur had disappeared somewhere — Thom wasn’t

      sure where. It was getting late — soon Mrs. Johnson would chide

      them for not being in bed — but none of them were anywhere

      near being able to sleep. They wouldn’t be able to until Alden

      was gone.

      “I still say we should tell Mama,” Minnie said. She looked

      small and pale, sitting on the sofa with her legs tucked up beneath

      herself. She toyed with a heavy gold locket around her neck that

      seemed familiar. “She’ll know what to do.”

      Thom shook his head. “If we talk to your mother, Alden’ll

      just tell her that we were in his room, going through his

      things.” He didn’t say what he thought next, which was if

      the man was willing to burn two boys to death, he certainly

      would have nothing against harming Mrs. Johnson if she got in

      his way.

      “What about —” Cora was interrupted by the door being

      shoved open with such force it dented the wall.

      “What have you done with it?” Arthur shouted, as loud and as

      physically here as Thom had ever seen him. Before Thom could

      get away, Arthur had rushed across the room, grabbing him by the

      collar and shoving him against a bookshelf. The wood dug into

      Thom’s back.

      “Arthur! Stop it!” Cora shouted, hurrying to pull him off

      Thom. Arthur wouldn’t move.

      “I know it was you. I want the case back. Now.”

      Thom met the other boy’s gaze with a steady one of his own.

      “It’s in my room. You can get it whenever you want. I won’t apolo-

      gize; we needed information, and you had it.”

      Arthur slammed him against the bookshelf again, the air

      whooshing from Thom’s lungs in a painful burst. “Did you take

      anything? Is it all there?”

      Clenching his jaw, Thom shook his head. Arthur’s fist

      slammed against his stomach, making him double over in pain.

      “Stop it!” Minnie screamed. “It’s my fault! I told them where

      you’d buried it.” She ducked under Arthur’s arms, smashing her-

      self between him and Thom, voice laden with tears. “I’m sorry.

    &
    nbsp; I’m so sorry. But they are going to hurt Charles.”

      When Arthur dropped Thom’s collar, Thom slid to the

      ground, stomach still sharp with pain. He was getting rather tired

      of being attacked tonight. The next person to hit him would be

      hit back, no matter who it was.

      “I don’t care if they hurt Charles,” Arthur said, his voice now

      the quiet one Thom was used to.

      Thom stood with a growl, anger boiling to the surface. It was

      only Cora’s hand on his chest that kept him away from the other

      boy. Of course Arthur didn’t care — he’d made that abundantly

      clear. But Charles was everything Thom cared about. In that

      moment Thom knew that, because of Arthur’s desire to protect

      the girls, he was as much a threat as Alden.

      Minnie stepped forward, trying to wrap her arms around

      Arthur’s waist. He moved away from her, his eyes cold.

      “I care if they hurt him,” she said, her shoulders shaking.

      “We’re leaving.” Arthur grabbed Minnie’s wrist and turned to

      Cora. “Right now. We can’t stay here any longer — it’s not safe.”

      “Are you mad?” Cora asked. “We can’t leave!”

      “I’ll make you. If I have to tie you both up and throw you in a

      trunk, I’ll make you, so help me.”

      “And then what?” Charles glared at him. “How are you going

      to take care of the two of them? Where will you get money? Where

      will you stay? How is running away with them any safer than stay-

      ing here?”

      Minnie twisted her arm, pulling free. Her huge eyes impossibly

      sad, she shook her head, then went and sat next to Charles on the

      sofa. Thom watched, glad that in the midst of all this, Minnie was

      choosing his brother. He could see the pain in Arthur’s face, and it

      filled him with a vicious happiness.

      You have no one, Arthur.

      “I can’t leave,” she said.

      “Neither can I.” Cora dropped her hand from Thom’s

      chest and, to his shock, took his own in hers. Her fingers were

      long and soft in his.

      “We’ll protect them,” Thom said. He looked from Cora to

      Minnie, finally settling his gaze on Charles. “All of them. With or

      without your help.”

      Arthur left the room without a word.

      Early that morning, so early the sky was still blushing away the

      remnants of night, Thom made his way to Arthur’s attic room, case

      in hand. He knocked on the door, but it swung open under his fist.

      “Arthur? Listen, I wanted to say sorry, and ask —” Thom

      stopped short on the threshold of the room. Sitting on Arthur’s

      bed, holding a stack of letters, was the witch.

      “Hello,” she said, smiling dreamily at him, her eyes flitting

      around like a butterfly, alighting on his for only a second before

      flying away again. “I came to see the Liska boy, but he’s not here.”

      Her lip jutted out in a pout.

      “Oh. I’m sorry.” Thom immediately felt like a fool. Here was

      the witch — Mary — whom he knew was involved with Alden

      and Constance, which meant she was probably part of the Ladon

      Vitae. She had obviously snuck into the house in the middle of the

      night doing who knows what, and Thom was apologizing to her?

      “Listen,” he said, trying to sound firm and menacing. “I want

      to know what this is all about. I know you’re part of them, that

      secret society. Who are you people? And what do you have against

      Charles?”

      Mary shuffled the stack of letters, pulling some out and strok-

      ing her finger along them. “Hmm? Who’s Charles?”

      “My brother!”

      “I had a brother once. Brothers are horrible, aren’t they? He

      used to do the most awful things to tease me. I would do anything

      to see him again.” She sighed, a soul-weary sound, and set the let-

      ters back down, carefully tucking a picture into the ribbon.

      Thom scowled in frustration. “Yes, but what do you want with

      my brother?”

      “I don’t want anything with him. I don’t want anything at all

      in the whole world.” She stood, the hem of her nightgown-like

      dress dragging across the floor as she walked toward him. He

      wanted to back up. There was something unnerving in the way she

      was finally looking at him, something strange about her eyes that

      he couldn’t figure out. If she were a melody, she’d be discordant.

      Her tongue darted out to wet her cracked lips. “Except an end-

      ing. Oh, how I ache for an ending. Would you give us one?” She

      cocked her head, considering him.

      “If you help me keep my brother safe, I’ll do whatever I can

      for you.”

      She nodded slowly, finally looking away from him. He felt as

      though it was easier to breathe. “Hmm. Who does your father

      love more?”

      “What?”

      “Which would hurt worse — being the son loved so much he

      is worthy of sacrifice, or being the son who’s spared because he is the

      lesser?” She raised a hand and rested it on Thom’s cheek. He

      flinched, but she didn’t seem to notice. “I think the latter, but

      you’ll have to tell me.”

      Thom swallowed hard. A sacrifice. Constance had spoken of

      that, and it was on the list next to his father’s name, too. “He loves

      Charles more,” Thom whispered. “He always has.” It hurt some-

      thing deep inside him to finally say it out loud, to admit to this

      stranger what he had always pretended not to know.

      She nodded, patting his cheek. “Then Charles is the offering.”

      “Should we run?”

      She drifted past him, lingering at the top of the stairs. “There

      isn’t enough time.”

      “I’ll fight him. Alden. I’ll kill him if it means keeping my

      brother safe.”

      She turned toward him, a smile splitting her face in two, eyes

      bright with delight. “You should! You absolutely should. I thought

      it would be the Liska boy, but you might do as well.” Laughing,

      she picked her way lightly down the stairs.

      “So that’s the answer? Kill Alden?”

      “No, silly. Kill us all,” she said just as she disappeared

      from view.

      April, 1968

      nineteen

      C

      harles sipped his tea on the front porch and

      watched as a crooked man, obscured by a lengthy

      Beard, scuttled up the walk, decapitating flow-

      ers with his unused cane.

      “Afternoon,” Charles said, nodding.

      The man looked up, startled. When he spoke, his mouth

      twisted in a way that echoed the sense of crookedness woven

      throughout his body. “Afternoon.”

      “You’ll be here to see Alden?”

      The man paused, leaning against the porch railing. Charles

      could smell him this close, and he smelled of mothballs and garlic

      so strongly the tea lost all its appeal.

      “And how did you know that?”

      Charles shrugged. “You have the same eyes. Too old and too

      young at once.”

      The bearded man’s smile grew and he tapped the side of his

      nose with one heavily knuckled finger. “Clever boy.”

      Charles leaned back against the pi
    llows propped behind him

      in the rocker. He had figured some of the story out, reading

      Arthur’s father’s notes while Cora and Thom had plotted. Alden,

      Constance, this man — they liked being part of something secret

      and powerful. Everything they did, then, would naturally further

      this power. His father was wealthy and influential. Whether they’d

      helped him get there or merely taken advantage once he was, it

      didn’t really matter. Every member of their group would do what-

      ever they had to in order to keep their secrets and their power.

      Well, except for Mary. She was the cog that his machine-

      oriented mind could not solve. Why would they include a woman

      so obviously out of her mind? Maybe she was someone important,

      after all.

      But leaving Mary aside, he still couldn’t figure out what their

      goal here was. If his father owed them money, surely it would have

      been simpler to kidnap him days ago. If they wanted to scare him

      into doing something for them, a threat made far more sense than

      locking Thom in a burning building.

      Until that had happened, Charles hadn’t been bothered —

      indeed, he had been entertained and enjoyed Thom’s frantic

      attentions focused elsewhere. Now he was quietly seething over

      these people running around in his life, setting strange things in

      motion, hurting people he cared about.

      He was angry, and being angry made him tired. “You know,

      you could simply tell me what’s going on. All of this cloak-and-

      dagger nonsense wears a body out.”

      The man stood straight, tugging on the coarse ends of his

      black beard. “Ah, but where would be the fun in that? We need our

      diversions, too. Your body may get worn out, but ours merely get

      bored.” He leaned forward, a cold gleam in his eyes making

      Charles scared for the first time. “Would you like to see a magic

      trick?”

      The door opened and Alden, his hair perfectly oiled, stepped

      out. “Not now,” he said, not so much as looking in Charles’s direc-

      tion. Charles was glad for that, because he knew his fear of Alden

      was written all over his face. The point of being out here was to

     


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