He sounded like Toby again.

'Jeer, you scared me!

What're you sneaking in a cemetery for? Boy, that's not funny!' They

weren't as close as they had been, but Jack thought the child's eyes no

longer seemed strange, Toby peared to see him again.

'Holy Jeer, on your hands and knees, sneaking in a cemetery.' The boy

was Toby again, all right. The thing that had controlled him was not a

good enough actor to be this convincing. Or maybe he had always been

Toby. The unnerving possibility of madness and delusion confronted

Jack again.

'Are you all right?' he asked, rising onto his knees once more, wiping

his palms on his jeans.

'Almost pooped my pants,' Toby said, and giggled.

What a marvelous sound. That giggle. Sweet music. Jack clasped his

hands to his thighs, squeezing hard, trying to stop shaking.

'What're you ...' His voice was quavery. He cleared his throat.

'What are you doing up here?' The boy pointed to the Frisbee on the

dead grass. 'Wind caught the flying saucer.' Remaining on his knees,

Jack said, 'Come here.' Toby was clearly dubious. 'Why?'

'Come here, Skipper, just come here.'

'You going to bite my neck?'

'What?'

'You going to pretend to bite my neck or do something and scare me

again, like sneaking up on me, something weird like that?' Obviously,

the boy didn't remember their conversation while he'd been ...

possessed. His awareness of Jack's arrival in the graveyard began

when, startled, he'd spun away from the granite marker. Holding his

hands out, arms open, Jack said, 'No, I'm not going to do anything like

that. Just come here.'

Skeptical and cautious, puzzled face framed by the red hood of the ski

suit, Toby came to him. Jack gripped the boy by the shoulders, looked

into his eyes.

Blue-gray. Clear. No smoky spiral under the color. 'What's wrong?'

Toby asked, frowning. 'Nothing. It's okay.' while first, you and

me?

A Frisbee's more fun with . Frisbee tossing, hot chocolate.

Normality hadn't erely returned to the day, it had crashed down like a

weight. Jack doubted he could have convinced anyone that he and Toby had

so recently been deep in the muddy river of the supernatural.

His own fear and his perception of uncanny forces were fading so

rapidly that already he could not quite recall the power of what he'd

felt.

Hard gray sky, every scrap of blue chased way beyond the eastern

horizon, trees shivering in the frigid breeze, brown grass, velvet

shadows, Frisbee games, hot chocolate: the whole world waited for the

first spiraling flake of winter, and no aspect of the November day

admitted the possibilities of ghosts, disembodied entities, possession,

or any other-worldly Compulsively, he pulled the boy close, hugged

him.

Вы читаете Winter Moon
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