Into the Woods (Anomaly Hunters, Book One)

Home > Fantasy > Into the Woods (Anomaly Hunters, Book One) > Page 1
Into the Woods (Anomaly Hunters, Book One) Page 1

by J. S. Volpe




  Into the Woods

  (Anomaly Hunters, Book 1)

  By J. S. Volpe

  Copyright © 2012 J. S. Volpe

  All rights reserved

  Cover photo: File licensed by www.depositphotos.com/Cosma Andrei

  CONTENTS

  Title

  Copyright

  Part One: The First Day of the Rest of Their Lives

  1. Calvin Beckerman

  2. Cynthia Crow

  3. See Emily Play (I)

  4. Calvin and Cynthia

  5. Anna West and John Coyote

  6. Robert May

  7. Donovan Crow and Violet O’Donohue

  8. Roger Grey

  Part Two: Winding the Clock

  9. Echoes (I)

  10. Echoes (II)

  11. Echoes (III)

  12. Blackwater

  13. House of Mystery

  14. See Emily Play (II)

  15. Summit

  16. Where Angels Fear to Tread

  Part Three: Confrontations

  17. The Intrepid Investigators

  18. Wendy Crow

  19. Black and White

  20. Reconnaissance

  21. The Old Witch

  22. See Emily Play (III)

  23. An Incident on Grace Road

  24. Aftermath

  Part Four: The Other Side of the Door

  25. See Emily Play (IV)

  26. End of the Line

  27. The Golden Key

  28. Closed Doors

  29. House of Secrets

  30. Red on Yellow

  31. Convergence

  32. Full Circle

  Epilogue: Two Endings and Three Beginnings

  Also by J. S. Volpe

  Part One:

  The First Day of the Rest of Their Lives

  Chapter 1

  Calvin Beckerman

  1

  Calvin Beckerman’s first hint that his life was about to change forever was the rising wail of sirens as he waited to cross McArthur Road. The sound cut straight through the blare of the song currently playing on his iPod (“Motorway to Roswell” by the Pixies), and with a frown he hit Pause, tore his eyes from the crowd of students filing into May High School across the street, and looked around.

  Two police cars were racing toward him down McArthur, their red and blue lights flashing, other cars slowing and pulling aside to let them pass like the Red Sea parting for Moses. In no time the cop cars were blasting past Calvin, the sudden loudening of their sirens making him wince even with the earbuds plugging his ears. The warm, dirty wind of the cars’ passage flattened his jeans against his legs and sent whirls of autumn leaves skittering across the pavement.

  He watched the police cars recede into the distance. When they were many blocks away, looking no larger now than Hot Wheels cars, they veered off down a side street.

  The light changed. Calvin unpaused his iPod and hurried across McArthur, patting road dust from his jeans and his “Cthulhu for President” T-shirt and his close-cropped blond hair. He wondered what was going on. It wasn’t often you saw cop cars zooming down the somnolent streets of May, Ohio. Part of him hoped something big and exciting and maybe even catastrophic had happened. A giant sinkhole. A pack of rabid gorillas on the loose. The onset of the zombie apocalypse. Anything to liven up this dull little town. He felt as if he had been waiting all his life for something remarkable to happen, but nothing ever did.

  Well, no. That wasn’t entirely true. Something pretty remarkable had happened recently: Calvin had found the girl of his dreams—his beautiful redheaded fellow senior, Cynthia Crow.

  Calvin and Cynthia had spent most of their lives advancing through the May school system together, but they had never really gotten to know each other until this year when they got paired up as lab partners in Chemistry. He was shocked at how well they got along. Both of them were smart and well-read, with creative, probing minds and wry and often irreverent senses of humor. They seemed to be perfectly in tune on some essential psychological level. While they sat there in lab waiting for chemicals to catalyze, they had the most fascinating and wide-ranging conversations Calvin had ever had with anyone. One day after a debate about the existence of ghosts (he pro, she undecided but leaning toward con) he knew that this was The Girl.

  For weeks now, he had been trying to screw up the nerve to ask her out. He had never asked a girl out before, never been on a date, never kissed a girl (well, except for that time he kissed Julie Tanner in first grade, but that was just to make her scream and run away). Simply thinking about asking Cynthia out made his heart palpitate and his palms ooze sweat. But he knew he had to try. She was too awesome to let slip away. He lay awake at night agonizing over the best way to do it. He scoured books and websites for tips and methods and reassurances. He tried to embolden himself with positive self-talk. On some level he understood that all of this nervous preparation was a delaying tactic, but he kept doing it anyway.

  But then last night, after reading an online sob story about some guy who lost his dream girl because he waited too long to ask her out, Calvin swore to himself he would pop the question at school today. He didn’t dare wait any longer. And today was Friday, which was perfect: If she said yes, they could schedule a date for sometime over the weekend. If she said no, he had all weekend to lick his wounds and figure out how to face her on Monday.

  So today was the day. No question about it. But when? Chemistry would provide the best opportunity since they had time alone to chat during lab. But they shared Sociology right after that, which meant if she turned him down, they would then have to spend a very awkward fifty minutes sitting two seats away from each other, and he wasn’t sure he could deal with that. Maybe it would be best to catch her at the end of school as they were leaving the building…

  After stopping at his locker to hang up his backpack and grab the books he needed for his first few classes, Calvin hurried to his homeroom. Cynthia was in the same homeroom, and he was hoping to discuss the latest episode of MythBusters with her before the bell rang.

  But when Calvin strode into Mr. Quimby’s homeroom, he found Cynthia’s desk empty. He looked around, thinking she must be talking with someone, but she was nowhere in sight.

  Heart sinking, he trudged to his desk, the only other empty desk in the room. The next thirty seconds consisted of him repeatedly swiveling around in his seat to see if she was at her desk yet, seeing that she wasn’t, checking the open doorway in hopes that she was even now coming in, seeing that she wasn’t, then turning back around to face the front of the room, a little glummer than before. Had he psyched himself up for nothing?

  When the bell rang, her seat was still empty. Crap. It wasn’t like Cynthia to be late. She must be sick.

  He had completely forgotten about the police cars.

  2

  Calvin was on his way to first-period Trigonometry when a tall, dark figure fell into step beside him. He looked up. It was Brandon Taylor, another fellow senior. Brandon had black-rimmed glasses and a head of thick, dark-brown hair that he had at one time or another gelled into every style imaginable and dyed every color of the rainbow. Like usual, he was dressed all in black, with a black T-shirt, black jeans, black Doc Martens, and a black leather jacket adorned with thin silver chains and a picture of a dancing, top-hatted skeleton on the back. Brandon had painted the skeleton himself. Brandon and Calvin were more than acquaintances, but not quite friends. They hung out together during eighth period study hall and discussed cool bands and horror movies and Brandon’s latest offbeat art projects, but they had never met up outside of school.

  “Hey, man,” Brandon said. “Got a minut
e?”

  “Um, sure,” Calvin said. “What’s up?”

  Brandon leaned in and said in a low, confidential tone, “Well, you know, I was just wondering if you knew anything about what happened?”

  Calvin shook his head. “What happened with what?”

  Brandon’s jaw dropped. “Oh, man. I thought you’d know already, what with you being close buds with Cynthia Crow and everything.”

  Calvin felt a surge of mixed emotions at this remark. On one level his breast swelled with joy and accomplishment on learning that a third party considered him and Cynthia “close buds.” But this feeling was overshadowed by a jolt of alarm at the implication that whatever had happened involved Cynthia.

  “What?” Calvin said. “Is she okay?”

  “Yeah. Well, no. Well, sort of. It’s not her; it’s her sister.”

  Calvin fished around in his memory for the name of Cynthia’s ten-year-old sister.

  “Emily?”

  “Yeah. That’s the one.” Brandon leaned in farther and lowered his voice even more until it was barely audible in the noisy hallway. “She disappeared. It sounds like she got abducted or something.”

  “What? When?”

  “Sometime overnight, I guess. I don’t know all the details. I heard about it from Hailie Furness. She was in the office when they got a call about it, right before homeroom. They’ll probably make an announcement soon…”

  Brandon yammered on, but Calvin wasn’t listening. He was remembering his earlier wish that something big and catastrophic would happen. The memory made him squirm with guilt and shame. He hadn’t meant something like this. Not something so awful and real. And especially not involving Cynthia.

  He hated to imagine what she must be going through. He pictured her huddled on her bed, her willowy body racked with sobs, her green eyes leaking tears. The image filled him with cold, hard determination to do whatever he could to end her pain. Maybe he could even play amateur sleuth and find Emily himself. He envisioned himself striding toward the Crow house with Emily safe and sound in his arms while Cynthia and her family watched in breathless awe from their front porch.

  Which he supposed many people would argue was a ridiculously unlikely outcome. But you never knew what was possible till you tried, right?

  Calvin vowed to try.

  Chapter 2

  Cynthia Crow

  Cynthia Crow sat on the living room couch in the Crow house. Officer Bob Thompson of the May Police sat on the footstool in front of her, frowning slightly as he flipped through a small spiral notebook. Cynthia had given a full statement half an hour earlier, but Officer Thompson said he wanted to confirm something with her. Across the living room her brother Donovan sat in an armchair, looking frazzled and lost and much younger than his fifteen years. Stray wisps of his auburn hair stuck up from his sloppily tied ponytail and glowed hazily against the morning light that brightened the picture window behind him. Outside, a uniformed cop walked slowly along the edge of the woods that encircled the lawn, his head down as he scanned the brush for evidence. In the dining room across the hall Cynthia could hear her father Hannibal’s low tones as he spoke to his sister Wendy on the phone. He had called her to make sure she didn’t know anything about Emily’s disappearance. It wasn’t likely; Aunt Wendy lived in Boston. Periodically Cynthia’s mom Brenda cut in to tell Hannibal to ask this or that. Her voice was high and urgent.

  “Here it is,” Officer Thompson said. He set the open notebook on his knee. He was a fortyish guy with a brown mustache and a roll of paunch straining against his blue polyester shirt. Shortly after the cops had arrived, Cynthia’s mom had emerged from her state of near-panic long enough to give him a bright, brittle smile and ask him if he had ever stopped eating blue Play-Doh. It turned out Officer Thompson had been in Brenda’s very first batch of students when she started teaching first grade at the May Elementary School thirty years earlier. Thompson had breathed out a small, nervous laugh and said, “Yes, ma’am. I prefer lasagna these days.”

  That had been the only light moment of the whole morning. And from the look of things probably the whole day. And who knew how long after that.

  “I just want to confirm what clothes she’s got on before we send out the info,” Officer Thompson said. He nodded at the dining room. “Your mom and dad, they’re kind of…unfocused right now, so I figured I’d better double check the information.”

  Cynthia raised her eyebrows. “What, you think I’m focused?”

  He shrugged. “Well, you seem a little cooler-headed.”

  “If you say so.”

  “Now, then…” He studied what was on the notepad. “I have her down as wearing a green sweatshirt, blue jeans, white tennis shoes with lightning bolts on the sides, green socks, white underwear, and a lightweight waist-length green nylon jacket. Is that right?”

  “Yeah. Well, I think so. I mean, after we discovered she wasn’t there this morning, I noticed that her pajamas were folded up next to the bed, so I figured we should check her regular clothes and see if anything was missing. And those are the clothes not accounted for. So I guess if you want to get technical, we can’t say for sure she’s actually wearing them. They’re just not in her room anymore.”

  “Okay.”

  There was a thump overhead. Cynthia looked up, stiff, tense. She wondered whether the sound had come from her room or her parents’ room. Not that it ultimately mattered; the cops had said they were going to search the whole house, from attic to cellar, even though the family had already searched it before they reported Emily missing. Cynthia listened, head cocked. Another thump sounded. No, it was Mom and Dad’s room. Had hers already been searched, then?

  Officer Thompson noticed her tension and smiled reassuringly. “Don’t worry. They’re careful. They won’t break anything. They’ll put everything back the way they found it.”

  “Uh-huh.” It wasn’t the safety of breakables she was concerned about; she was worried that someone would go rooting around on her computer. She hated to be thinking about herself at a time like this, but there was stuff on her computer that would make it clear as day to anyone who looked that she was a lesbian, a fact currently known to no one but herself. If it came down to it, she supposed being forced out of the closet was a small price to pay for finding Emily, but she would really prefer to keep the closet door closed for the moment. She wasn’t ready for her friends and family to find out. Especially not her family, and especially not at a time like this. She wasn’t sure how to ask if the cops would look on her computer, at least not without making it obvious that there was stuff on it she didn’t want anyone to see, which of course would only make the cops want to check it out all the more. “Are they, um, are they looking specifically for Emily, or are they just looking around, or what?”

  “They’re just looking,” Officer Thompson said. “Sometimes we don’t know exactly what we’re looking for until we find it.”

  “I see.” Actually she didn’t. As answers went, that one was extraordinarily unhelpful.

  Thompson started to close his notepad, then saw something written there that made him stop. “Oh, that’s right. One other thing. Your mom gave us a photo of Emily. Something we can use to make fliers and send to news outlets. I just want to make sure—I mean, your mom’s kind of unfocused, like I said, so I just want to be sure this is a good photo. A good likeness.”

  He held out a photo. She took it. It was one of the photos Mom had taken during their trip to New England over the summer. It showed Emily in front of the Salem Witch Museum. Her pale face was framed by her long, straight black hair. Her dark-brown eyes were fixed on something slightly above and to the right of the camera. A small smile curved her lips.

  “Yeah,” Cynthia said softly, staring at Emily. She couldn’t help wondering if she would ever see Emily’s face again. Her real face, that is. The one that moved and talked and laughed and stuck out her tongue at her brother when he made fun of her inexplicable disdain of fish. Cynthia felt her throa
t tightening and tears building up behind her eyes, so she thrust the photo back into Officer Thompson’s hands before the sight of her sister’s face could reduce her to a hysterical mess and thereby destroy her mostly bogus aura of cool-headedness. “That’s…yeah, that’s a good picture.”

  As Thompson tucked the photo away, the front door opened. Just like every other time the front door had opened this morning, Cynthia and Donovan shot bolt upright and looked out into the main hall, hoping it would be Emily.

  And just like every other time this morning, it wasn’t her. Instead it was Officer Ronald Carter, a young cop with blond hair and glasses. Clutched in his left hand was a large brown paper bag containing something heavy enough to make the bag’s bottom sag.

  “Where’s the Chief?” Officer Carter called out.

  “Right here,” said May Police Chief Joseph Krezchek as he strode out of the dining room. He was a stocky, avuncular fellow with a head of wavy gray hair and a face that was trying hard to maintain a stern, in-command expression rather than the disorientation he was clearly feeling. The May Police rarely faced crimes more serious than stolen bikes and domestic spats.

  Behind Chief Krezchek came Hannibal and Brenda Crow. Cynthia thought they looked even worse than when she last saw them twenty minutes ago. Her dad’s eyes were bloodshot and puffy, and his normally neatly combed and parted hair was tousled as if he had just gotten out of bed. Even his mustache looked ruffled. Mom didn’t look any better. Her cheeks shone with tear tracks, and there were small coffee stains on the front of her dress. Cynthia wondered if the gray threads in her mom’s hair had multiplied or if she was simply noticing them more than usual.

  “We, uh, we’ve got a development,” Officer Carter said, glancing around. The hesitancy in his voice and the way his eyes kept flicking toward Hannibal and Brenda, as if he weren’t sure he should be talking about this in front of them, made Cynthia shoot to her feet and stride toward the hall. Donovan and Officer Thompson followed. As Cynthia entered the hall, she heard sounds of movement throughout the house—doors opening, floorboards creaking, footsteps thumping. Looking around, she saw cops emerging from doorways and peering over the railing of the balcony that overlooked the hall. Everyone sensed the import surrounding Officer Carter’s appearance.

 

‹ Prev