“Does anyone know what
time it is?” Paley asked. They’d been looking around the storage room she’d
gotten them into for fifteen minutes. No one seemed interested in venturing up
the stairs, not that she really wanted to, but she didn’t want to spend the
rest of her night wandering around the dusty storage room either.
Brighton glanced at his
watch. “A little after nine.”
“Oh, wow. Is it really that late?”
Paley asked, trying not to sound suspicious.
“Why? What’s your problem?” Brody
said as he peaked around a stack of grimy boxes. “It’s not like you have a
curfew or anything.”
“Yeah, I know,” she said, laughing
uneasily. “I just… I’m supposed to check in with my case worker before it gets
too late. Ya know, gotta keep an eye on me.” God, she was a horrible liar. Of
course, she didn’t really have to call Mrs. Fletcher. In fact, she hoped never
to lay eyes on the ogre again, but the others didn’t know that and she wanted
an opportunity to go through Brody’s phone, see if Quinn had called or messaged
him. She wasn’t about to be tricked twice in the same evening, and she had a
feeling that was exactly what they were planning. “So…” She raised her eyebrows,
hoping she looked sincere. “Can I borrow your phone?”
“Have at,”
Brody said, digging his cell from his pocket.
What? The kid was even too cool to finish
his sentences?
Paley suppressed an eye roll, took
the phone and mumbled thanks. She glanced at the others, made sure no one was
paying attention, then walked across the room to a darkened corner that
provided a little privacy. She dialed a random number and let it ring a couple
of times before hanging up. That way, if Brody checked, it’d look like she
called her case worker. She pretended to carry on a conversation for a minute,
then glanced over her shoulder. The others were completely oblivious to her.
Working quickly, she scrolled through the phone and found the messages from
Quinn. She didn’t feel bad snooping through Brody’s phone because she was
pretty sure they’d brought her out here just to scare her. They’d probably made
up the entire suicidal nun story for that purpose, though she had to admit, it
was a pretty good one.
“That’s what I thought,” Paley
whispered as she found the message she was looking for. Quinn and his
girlfriend were on their way to Jackson Hill. Brody had told Quinn to sneak
into the campanile so he could scare her. “Not going to fall for that again.”
“I can’t
believe this,” Brody said.
Paley
wheeled around, expecting to find him hovering over her scowling. Instead, the
others were still across the room. She took a deep breath, told herself to calm
down. She clicked out of the messages and made her way toward them. “What’s going
on?” she asked, trying to sound as natural as possible, though her heart was
still jackhammering against her ribcage. She wasn’t about to get frightened now
knowing that Quinn and his girlfriend would soon be somewhere in the building
waiting for Brody’s instruction to leap out and scare her.
“Look
at what Brody found,” Hannah said. She knelt on the dirty floor and shone the
flashlight down a tunnel just big enough for a person to crawl through. “He
pulled out a couple of loose bricks, and there it was.”
“What
is it?” Paley asked, kneeling beside her.
“Some
sort of passaged, I think,” Brody said. “We should check it out. No telling
where it leads.”
“It
looks flooded,” Hannah said, with a frown. She brushed away a string of
cobwebs. “I’m not about to go down there.”
“Chicken,”
Brighton taunted.
Hannah
ignored him. That seemed to be her default response to Brighton, one Paley
seriously considered adopting. The guy was a totally jerk, and not just because
he’d managed to scare her half to death.
Brody
shrugged, so nonchalant. “If Hannah doesn’t want to go, we’ll check it out some
other time.”
“Okay,”
Paley said, standing. She dusted off her jeans. “So I guess that leaves the
upstairs.” She looked toward the darkened spiral staircase and wished she hadn’t
given her flashlight to Hannah. For a split second she thought she saw
something move deeper into the darkness. A shiver ran down her spine, ice cold
like a breath from the grave. She really didn’t want to go up there, and it had
nothing to do with the scare she had earlier.
“Or,”
Brody said, his voice soft, drawing Paley’s attention away from the stairwell. “We
could see what’s behind door number two. Brighton, help me move these,” Brody
instructed as he pushed on one of the rusted file cabinets behind the
dirt-begrimed counter.
Door
number two? Paley hadn’t noticed another door, and as they moved the file
cabinet out of the way, she didn’t know how Brody could have seen it either. Unless he’s been here before. Try as she might, she couldn’t shake that
feeling. Hell, they’d probably all been there before and she was playing right
into their elaborate prank.
“Is it locked?” Hannah asked, shining her
light directly into Brody’s eyes.
He smiled, easing the flashlight
from her hand. “Trade ya,” he said to Paley, and he passed her the flashlight
in exchange for his cell phone.
“It’s not locked,” Brighton said.
He turned the knob and pulled the door open, exposing a darkened corridor. The
smell of mildew and dampened earth wafted out on of a gust of cold air.
“Where do you think that leads?”
Paley whispered.
Brody smiled, his white teeth
shining too brightly in the dim light. “Let’s find out.”
“I don’t know,” Hannah said
hesitantly. She looked uneasy. Maybe she wasn’t in on the prank after all. “Maybe
we should wait on Quinn and Nora. Shouldn’t they be here by now?”
“They’re not coming.”
“What?” Hannah sounded upset. “Why
not?”
Brody wrapped an arm around her
waist and smiled. “Take it easy, Han. Nora got sick at Horrorville. Quinn thinks
she ate something bad, so he took her home.” He kissed the top of her head. “Don’t
look so disappointed. You’ve still got Paley here to keep you company.” He gave
her a dark look, his blue eyes ominous. “She’s not so bad,” he said, sounding almost
sarcastic.
What was his problem? He’d lied so
easily to his girlfriend, all the while smiling at her and rubbing her back. The
guy was a bigger creep than Brighton, just better at hiding it. Whatever. Paley
would play along with his little game. Besides, it wasn’t like there was
anything to be afraid of now that she knew the whole thing was a setup. She
looked around the room, her eyes drawn to the staircase again. Fickle shadows
leapt and danced in her flashlight’s buttery beam. Just shadows, she told
herself, nothing more, but she couldn’t ignore the unease slithering through
her like a serpent.
“Paley.”
“Huh?”
She snapped her head around to find Brody, Brighton, and Hannah all staring at
her. “What’s up?” she asked, trying to will away the oily feeling of unease pooling
in her stomach.
Brighton
chuckled, the noise like nails on a chalk board to her. “I said, do you want to
check this way out or try the stairs?”
“Whatever,”
she said, shaking off another chill. What was it about those stairs that
freaked her out so much? “I’m up for whatever.” She was not about to be the one
to chicken out on this.
“Okay,
then we’re going this way,” Brody said, nodding toward the open doorway. “Let’s
try to stick together. Brighton, take the lead. I’ll bring up the rear. Girls,
ya’ll stay between us. Who knows what we’re in for?” He said it mysteriously,
but Paley was pretty sure he already knew. He didn’t just find the hidden
passage and the blocked off door by accident. No one’s that good, Paley
thought, or that lucky.
Paley
followed Brighton down the dank, fetid corridor. Hannah walked beside her while
Brody trailed behind. The sound of their collective footfalls echoed down the
empty halls, reminding Paley of how alone they were. It wouldn’t be easy for
Quinn and Nora to sneak up on them, at least not while they were in the stone passageway.
“This place reeks,” Hannah said,
holding a hand over her nose.
“The air smells fresher up here,”
Brighton said. He was several paces in front of them. “I think this must lead outside.”
“Or there’s an open window or
something,” Paley mused aloud.
Brighton jogged ahead, eager to discover
where the air seeped in from. “Up here,” he called, sounding very far away as
he faded into the darkness. Paley could barely make out his flashlight beam,
then it disappeared altogether.
“Where did he go?” Hannah asked,
her voice feather soft, almost frightened.
“I don’t know,” Brody said, obviously
irritated. Apparently losing Brighton wasn’t part of the plan, or at least,
that’s what he wanted them to think. “C’mon.” He grabbed Hannah by the hand,
placed his other on Paley’s back. “We’d better find him.”
Her heart began a slow tattoo in her chest as they walked together down the empty corridor, Brighton nowhere in sight. "He couldn't have just vanished," Paley said. "He's probably flipped his flashlight off and is hiding, waiting for us to come up on him."
A haunting scream cut through the night, bringing them to a sudden halt. "That wasn't Brighton," Hannah said, her voice quivering.
"No," Brody agreed. "That was a girl."
3 comments:
I’m eager to learn where this story is going. You’ve built a very interesting scenario. Will there be ghosts in the ghostly cathedral, or will it all be smoke and mirrors? Either way, I can’t wait to know what happens. I love a good haunting!
Thanks, Alex. Glad to know you're still with me. :) Haven't seen you around for a while.
I can't wait for part five!!!
-Moe
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