“Impossible,” she said. “They can’t be stopped.”
“They can,” he insisted. He swallowed. This conversation had been far easier in his head. “Mr. Feiffer knew how to banish the Furies.” He remembered what Mr. Feiffer had told him—he knew how to get rid of the evil for good. JD felt his throat constrict. How might Mr. Feiffer have helped him, if he’d had the chance?
“Mr.
“Em, calm down.”
“I won’t let them,” she repeated, her voice rising shrilly.
They both jumped when they heard someone on the stairs.
“JD?” It was Melissa coming downstairs. Nothing good would come of scaring her. They looked at each other.
“Yeah, Mel? What’s up?” JD called out. Em swiped the tears from her face. They looked at each other again and a silent agreement flowed between them: No more. Not now.
“Do you need anything? You okay?” he asked Mel once she appeared at the foot of the stairs.
“Yeah, I’m okay,” she said, looking back and forth between him and Em. “Are
“We’re fine,” Em said. “Just had a little trouble sleeping and came down here to see if your brother was awake. . . . ”
“I couldn’t sleep either, really. And it’s already seven o’clock. Gonna be exhausted today. . . . ” Mel said as she disappeared into the kitchen.
“This isn’t over,” he whispered once Mel was out of earshot. He reached for Em’s hand. It felt small and cold.
“Not yet,” she said. Her voice was resigned. “But soon.”
Her premonitions played and replayed in his mind all day long. Stuck on the idea of the “red seeds,” he was making his way through the school parking lot that afternoon when he heard someone call his name.
He snapped his head up and saw Crow leaning nonchalantly against JD’s Volvo. He looked like shit, all scruffy and sloppy, in a big gray T-shirt and ripped jeans. Even now that JD knew that Crow was most likely
Anger flexed inside him. “Get off my car, man.”
“Listen, I don’t like seeing you any more than you like seeing me,” Crow said, straightening up. “I just came to talk to you about something.”
“By
“You’re in over your head, Lover Boy,” Crow said in the same infuriatingly calm tone. JD could smell cigarette smoke on him, and sweat. “Don’t drown.”
JD took a step forward, so he and Crow were only a few inches apart. “Or what? You’ll start following me like you’ve been following Emily?”
“Whoa, whoa,” Crow said, holding up his hands. “Calm down, Romeo. You’re really bummed that Em and I have been hanging out, huh?”
“Oh, is that what they call stalking nowadays?
“Wow, man. Ladies and gentlemen, he’s cracked the case,” Crow announced loudly, holding his arms out and spreading his chest wide. “Or maybe, just maybe, Fount, you knew that because
JD’s head was spinning. Black was eating at the edges of his vision, anger pumping through his blood. “Don’t screw with me. I saw you on Thursday. I could have called the cops. I should have.”
“So I needed to talk to her,” Crow admitted. ?All traces of his smirk were gone. His eyes were just slightly unfocused. “But I wasn’t following her.”
“You’re a liar,” JD said.
“I’ve been called a lot of things, but I’m
“Jealous of
“Sure.” Crow said. “I mean, I
Something snapped inside JD. Em wasn’t his girl, and Crow knew that, and him saying it made the whole thing worse. JD barreled into Crow full-force, pinning him against the car with his forearm pressed forcefully against Crow’s chest. They were face-to-face, just inches apart. JD’s adrenaline was flowing hard; he had never hit anyone before in his life.
“Shut up,” he spit. “Stay away from Em. Stay away from me.”
“Back atcha, asshole,” Crow said, pushing back against JD’s weight. He was weaker than JD expected. “You’re going to mess things up. Stay out of this.”
“Or what?”
“You don’t want to find out.”
With disgust, JD let Crow go. They glowered at each other for a few wordless seconds, both of them breathing heavy. Then Crow stalked off toward his ugly pickup truck. JD watched him go. He got into his own car and sat there for a minute, shaking. Finally he turned the key and drove away.
On the ride home, JD was jumpy and wired. He’d never come that close to hitting another guy, at least not since he was four years old on the playground near Sebago Lake. It felt shitty, like he’d accomplished nothing. But a part of him liked it too, this feeling of blood rushing right below his skin.
There were two pieces of mail waiting for him on the kitchen table: the latest issue of
The handwriting was unfamiliar and boxy, and as he pulled the note out, written in a heavy hand on lined paper, he saw it was dated just yesterday. But the date wasn’t what threw him. It was the gold snake pin that came tumbling out of the envelope. And the sender.
Walt Feiffer.
The letter in his hand was from a dead man.
ACT THREE
WHAT LIES AT THE HEART
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Being exhausted at school was nothing new, especially on a Monday.
But being exhausted at school with her hair still smelling like smoke, despite the fact that she’d taken a shower at JD’s house