“Oh, man, gross!” Kevin exclaimed.
“Let’s get out of here!” Jimmy yelled, and with that, they both pounded out of the shed. Because what they’d seen up there on the old ceiling was at least a dozen bats, hanging upside-down by their feet. And in the brief flashlight beam, Kevin had been able to notice their faces looking down at them: tiny squashed, brown faces that twitched, their little mouths stretched open, showing rows of needle-sharp teeth.
“Wow,” Jimmy said, winded, once they got back outside. “Did you see all those bats?”
“Yeah,” Kevin said. “They sure are ugly.”
“You’re not kidding. But what were they doing there, all huddled together upside-down?”
“They were sleeping,” Kevin explained. “They sleep upside-down, in dark places, hanging by their feet.”
“They sleep in the morning?” Jimmy asked, astonished.
“Yeah, that’s what bats do. They’re nocturnal. That means they sleep during the day so they can be awake all night.”
“Wow,” Jimmy muttered again, the shock now worn off. “Just like vampires.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
And then came another thought:
The bats were just another reminder of all the weird things he’d found out, and this only reminded him of the dilemma he was in. If he told anybody, no one would probably believe him, and Aunt Carolyn, along with her servants Bill and Wally, would know he was onto them.
And who knew what would happen then?
Maybe nothing. Or maybe—
“Here we are,” Jimmy announced as the path finally opened up into the flat field overlooking the ocean. “The bluffs!”
“Yeah,” Kevin said without much enthusiasm.
“We beat the rain. With any luck we should be able to fly our kites for a while before it starts again.”
“Yeah,” Kevin said.
Jimmy set his box kite down, took out his spool of string, and connected it to the corner of his kite. Kevin feebly began to do the same.
“Hey, man?” Jimmy said, looking over. “What’s eating you?”
“Huh?”
“You’ve been acting weird all morning, and you’ve barely said a thing.”
“Oh, well, I’m just tired, that’s all,” Kevin made the excuse. That was about all he could think to say. He couldn’t very well tell Jimmy the rest, now could he?
“Well, I’m ready,” Jimmy said. “Here goes!” And then Jimmy, holding his spool tightly, took off running across the bluff. Instantly, his box kite launched off the ground and, seconds later, it was climbing high into the air. “Come on, slow-poke!” Jimmy called out. “Get yours up! This is great!”
“This is great, isn’t it!” Jimmy’s kite had climbed twice as high as Kevin’s.
In the next moment, though, his string jerked suddenly in his hand, and a big gust of wind blew into him hard from behind. At once, both kites began churning violently back and forth in the air. And above them, they could see the sky turning dark as rain clouds quickly moved in.
“The storm’s coming back!” Jimmy yelled.
“We have to reel our kites in quick or we’ll lose them!” Kevin yelled back in reply, his hair suddenly blowing every which way in the fierce wind of the oncoming storm.
His wrists moved frantically as he reeled in his bat kite which was now pitching so wide to either side he thought it might actually crash into the ground. But Jimmy struggled worse; his box kite was spinning uncontrollably. But then—
Kevin’s line broke.
“Aw, drat!” he exclaimed.
And his kite took off on its own, soaring unevenly toward the forest where it eventually disappeared into the treetops.
“I’ve got to go try to get it!” he yelled to Jimmy over the wind, and then he took off running just as giant raindrops began to splatter on his face. Thunder rumbled overhead, and lightning began to crackle.
“What luck!” he exclaimed aloud to himself.
There was his black bat kite, lying right there in the middle of the road. When he picked it up, he noticed that the wooden crossbar was broken, but that was no big deal.
Then he looked up, noticed something… strange.
Right next to him was a tall forked tree, a tree with two trunks sprouting from one root.
Kevin dropped his kite as he stared in frightened amazement.
On one of the tree’s forked trunks, there was a sloppy red symbol. At once Kevin realized,
Then it dawned on him, and a shudder coursed up his spine.
Kevin slowly backed away from the forked tree, his hands shaking. What had Aunt Carolyn said last night during her story? That villagers in olden times had painted crosses on their doors, in blood—
This was too much. He turned, leaving his kite on the dirt road, and ran. He wasn’t even sure where he was running to, as the rain pelted the forest and the lightning cracked. It was fear more than anything else that urged him to run, to get away, anywhere…