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SHUDDERVILLE SIX

Page 4

by Mia Zabrisky


  It began to sleet on the ride home. The asphalt grew slick and slippery. Benjamin could feel his tires gripping the road as he rumbled along in his pickup truck. He’d texted Cassie over an hour ago to ask how she was doing. She hadn’t responded yet, and it broke his heart to think he might never see her again.

  The sleet was dense and opaque in the headlights’ glare. He was shivering beneath his winter coat. He should’ve slowed down when he saw the mist crawl thickly across the road, but he wanted to get home. He was exhausted. The police had asked a lot of questions. Since it was impossible to explain, he’d made up a story about getting stuck in the snow and wandering onto Colton Thorpe’s property by accident. It was bullshit, but when the police discovered the dungeon in the basement and the deformed dog in the cage upstairs, they let him go. They told him they’d be in touch.

  Now he took the next corner a little too fast, and as he was coming out of the curve he struck something with his truck. Whack! There was a sickeningly heavy rocking motion as he stomped on the brakes, and the vehicle swung to the left, and then to the right. The truck whipped around and screeched to a halt just a few inches from a huge old elm. It took Benjamin a moment to catch his breath. He glanced in his rearview mirror but could see nothing on the road. What had he hit?

  He noticed the rear tailgate had slapped open. Money was tight. If he lost his gasoline-powered leaf blower, he wouldn’t be able to replace it for another couple of months. He turned the truck around, pulled over to the soft shoulder and put on his flashers. Then he unsnapped his seat belt and shoved the door open. His truck was covered in mud like an archeological ruin. He examined his front bumper. There was nothing wrong with it. He hadn’t lost anything out of the back of the truck. He examined the tailgate with its rickety hinges, slammed it shut, and walked around to the other side of the vehicle, where he discovered a big dent in the rear door. Shit. There was quite a bit of damage, and it would cost him.

  Fearing the worst, Benjamin turned to find out what he had hit. A dog? A deer? He’d once hit a raccoon going 70 mph, and the poor thing had just exploded. But tonight he hadn’t been going that fast.

  He walked along the road through the puckering sleet and came to the place where he must’ve hit something, because he could see skid marks in the slush. Something moved in the wind-stirred bushes by the side of the road. He saw a flapping movement, like a bat trapped in a spider web. Benjamin hated bats, their pinched faces oddly human. He squinted into the woods. Probably a deer or something.

  He looked around but found nothing. It was sleeting harder now. He kept his head down. His hands had gone numb from the cold. He shivered and hunched his shoulders and hurried back to the truck. He got in and gunned the engine.

  His headlights pierced the sleety darkness ahead, but before he pulled out onto the road, he saw something in his rearview mirror, lit by the red glow of his taillights. He got out and walked back to the bushes and stood there staring at the gently stirring branches. The sleet was nearly blinding, but he caught a movement behind the thorny branches. The fog parted around his shaky fingers as he pushed aside the underbrush and cringed.

  He saw tangled dark hair and pale skin. He saw a small, horribly malnourished body and wide, frightened eyes. He could count each of her ribs through her gauzy white nightgown—inappropriate for this weather and soaked to the bone—as she slowly rose to her feet. She was about five feet tall, exceedingly small and frail, and covered in blood. He noticed the track marks on her arms, old scars from hypodermic needles. She was shivering violently, goosebumps the size of golf balls popping out all over her exposed skin.

  He managed to choke, “Easy. I won’t hurt you.”

  Tears welled in her eyes. How old was she? Thirteen? Thirty? He had no idea. She looked ageless. He reached for her, wanting to pull her out of the woods and get her to a hospital, quick, but she bristled with anger. Her piercing gaze stopped him short. Her neck muscles tensed, her shoulders lifted, and something—some unknown body part—fanned open. Wings. She had wings.

  Recognition dawned.

  “Bella?”

  Two giant wings whooshed open, and the girl—the creature, the monster, whatever the hell she was—muscled her way into the air and flew off into the night. Her large graceful wings flapping like a bullfighter’s cape. He stared hopelessly at the clouds, into the sleet, trying to see her through the foul weather. Who would believe him? Nobody would.

  He raced back to his truck, put it in reverse, turned the vehicle around and gave chase.

  She would die of exposure.

  She would die of starvation.

  He had to help her if it was the last thing he did.

  YOU ARE LEAVING

  SHUDDERVILLE 6

  NEXT STOP

  SHUDDERVILLE 7

  A Note to Readers

  If you enjoyed this ebook, then I’d be grateful if you would recommend the SHUDDERVILLE series to your friends and family, through social networking sites and in reader’s reviews on Amazon. I’m currently working on the next few episodes, and they’ll soon be available on Amazon Kindle.

  To find out more, go to:

  http://mia-zabrisky.blogspot.com

  SHUDDERVILLE

  SIX

  Mia Zabrisky

  Copyright © 2012

  All Rights Reserved.

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the internet or any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  To find out more:

  http://mia-zabrisky.blogspot.com

  Layout provided by Everything Indie

  http://www.everything-indie.com

 

 

 


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