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Read books online » Fiction » Crystal Grader by Tag Cavello (dark books to read .txt) 📖

Book online «Crystal Grader by Tag Cavello (dark books to read .txt) 📖». Author Tag Cavello



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Lucy was saying. “Will you tell me how these little study sessions go, Crystal? Give me details?”

“Of course,” Crystal replied, not certain how truthful the words actually were. “Our first kiss is going to be on my birthday. Like I said, we’re already two-thirds there, so it shouldn’t be too hard to dupe him into giving me one as a kind of gift.”

Lucy giggled. “And what comes after your birthday? Hmm?”

“That is what you would call wait and see. But you know something, Luce?” Crystal took a deep breath and let it out slow.

“What? Tell me?”

“I have got the whole coming year with him plotted out. Month by month. And like I told you on Halloween: This man is mine.”

***

The next day—Sunday—did not bring a stop to the high winds. Quite the reverse. Lucretia agreed to drop Crystal off at the Jackson farm after driving Lucy home, and the trees were swaying like stalks of wheat as they approached. Chubby, with fur flying, offered up several angry barks at the sight of a new car, but turned friendly again when Crystal put down the window to say hello.

“You know,” Lucretia said, bringing the car to a halt, “I’ve lived in Monroeville all my life and never even knew this house was here.”

“I think that’s sort of the idea,” Crystal replied. “I asked my history teacher about it at school. He told me it served as a fort during the Civil War, and that its owner really wasn’t keen on ambushes.”

A snort came from the driver’s seat. “I bet. Who was the owner?”

“Andrew Jackson.”

“No way—“

“Not the Andrew Jackson. But yes, that was his name.”

“Well he did a hell of a job with the location. 2004 and you still need to drive through half a forest to get back here.” Her next question was one Crystal had already heard. “Is this Jarett Powell guy a farmer too?”

No doubt she had noticed the barn off to the left, and maybe even a few rows of wheat behind the house. Crystal replied that Jarett was indeed a farmer, but that she wasn’t expected to do any field work during his leave of absence.

“I hope not,” her mom stressed. Then, grinning: “Otherwise your new name is Apple Jack.”

“Mom.”

“Well gee whiz, Mister Powell,” she said, in her best imitation of that yellow cartoon pony’s voice, “I got the field all plowed but the orchard’s a mess and the haystacks still need pitchin’. Yee-haw!”

“She doesn’t talk like that!”

Crystal was let out of the car with a promise to call home for another ride once her duties were complete. She waved as Lucretia turned the car around, then gave Chubby a hug.

“First thing we’re gonna do is give you a bath. How does that sound, huh?”

Chubby’s happy bark sounded like this was the best idea he’d heard all day. She walked him to the side door with the wind whipping at her hair and skirt. Her key turned in the lock.

A dour atmosphere waited inside. Shadows brooded in every corner. A narrow hallway leading to the kitchen had turned gray, and the top of the staircase looked nearly pitch. After turning on a few lights, Crystal went left into the living room. Here she switched on the television, then another light in the dining room and one more in the kitchen. Yet the shadows would not be driven back so easily, and it soon became apparent that the house was too large and too old for one girl to spend a cloudy afternoon alone in. Paintings on the wall regarded her as she passed; cracks in ancient wooden doorframes seemed to twist into frowning faces.

Even Chubby felt it. His tail had gone still, his eager prance the same. Drawing in a deep breath, Crystal forced herself to walk back through the living room and upstairs. Here her nerve nearly broke. One dark doorway after another gaped in the hall, while outside the wind continued howl. Crystal could not help but remember the bearded man she had seen looking down at her from the bedroom window on her first official visit to the house. Had that been nothing more than imagination? Or was he still haunting these rooms?

“Boo,” she called out, trying to make herself relax.

When no one answered, she led Chubby to the end of the hall. There was a small, cheerful little bathroom here, and after closing the door—and locking it—Crystal began to feel better. She bundled Chubby into the tub while singing a tune from one of Hannah’s CDs. Twenty minutes later the dog was shaking himself dry on the tiles, giving his mistress a decent shower in the process.

“If you weren’t such a sweet dog I’d be mad at you for that,” she told him, reaching into a cabinet for some paper towels. “No going outside until you’re completely dry, okay? House rules.”

Chubby gave a bark to show that he understood.

“Woof yourself.”

Once back in the hallway she got creeped out all over again. The urge to run downstairs, finish her chores, and get out of the house pressed on her thoughts. She went to the top of the staircase…and stopped.

A wide open door to Jarett’s bedroom was at the opposite end of the hall, giving birth to an altogether different—and formidable—urge. Crystal took a hesitant step towards it. Her fear of the environment was vague; she didn’t know how much of the supernatural she believed in, if any at all. On the other hand, her curiosity was becoming sharper by the moment. She was standing alone and unsupervised near the empty bedroom of the man she craved, the man she loved. Did it really make sense to let a few childish qualms—what Hannah sometimes called the heebie-jeebies—act as a barrier against what might be found inside?

“No way,” Crystal said to herself, “not this girl.”

She went down to the bedroom and snapped on the light. Blue carpet and brown paneling sprang into view. Heavy curtains hung over the window. An alarm clock ticked on the headboard of a neatly made bed.

“Let’s check out the closet,” she said to Chubby. “How’s that sound?”

The reproachful look on Chubby’s face required no further castings for his opinion.

“Oh stop it. You’ve done worse.”

She opened the door. Most of Jarett’s wardrobe, as she was already well aware, was dark. Beneath it were two pairs of boots: one black, one brown. In fact everything about the closet looked very masculine. Crystal felt her curiosity jump, and then take off at a full sprint.

She removed a black shirt from the rod, carried it to the bed.

“No telling,” she said to Chubby, unbuttoning her blouse.

After a moment’s thought, she took off her brassiere as well, so as to throw Jarett’s shirt on over a completely bare chest. The effect forced a soft sigh from her lips. Her nipples grew hard and sharp. She walked back to the closet, selected another shirt, and tried that on. It felt nice, but surely there were more treasures to be found in the depths of Powell’s wardrobe, provided she had the gumption to look.

Crystal’s hand closed around a pair of faded blue-jeans. She brought them down to her nose, then down lower to her chest. From here the next step didn’t take long to ascertain, and she felt no hesitation whatsoever about carrying it out. Within seconds she was sitting on the bed, removing her shoes and socks. Then came the skirt. Her panties she thought about leaving on for a moment, until another axiom of Lucretia’s materialized in the accumulating steam: If something is worth doing, it’s worth doing right.

Of course it is.

“Thanks, Mom,” she giggled, pulling the last of her clothing off.

That was all the further she got. Because now the most intimate, sensitive parts of her body were in contact with the counterpane—Jarett Powell’s counterpane. All at once Crystal did not want to try on the faded jeans. All at once, Crystal did not want to try on a single damned thing.

She stretched back. The mattress was soft, the blankets tempting. It would be nice to hunker down into both for a nap. But of course that was a bad idea. Unfinished chores were in wait all over the house. Her mom was expecting a call before dark.

Crystal sat up…and that was when she noticed for the first time the one bit of color in all the darkness of Jarett’s closet. It came in the form of a box on the top shelf—a shoebox, or so it appeared from this distance. A pink shoebox.

She stood. Her bare feet padded across the room. The shelf looked a little too high to reach, presenting her with a divergence. Should she be content with what she had already discovered in this room today—which was more than enough—or try to uncover just a little bit more?

Throwing Powell’s shirt back on as a kind of nightgown, she went in search of something to use as a step. His writing chair was in the room next door. Crystal lugged it through the hall, stood on it and grabbed the box. It was heavy with something that shifted from side to side as she stepped down. Crystal was pretty sure she knew what.

Once back on the bed she pulled the cover off. And there they were. Dozens—hundreds, maybe—of folded papers. Most were letters, written in Jarett’s hand, yet betwixt and between these rather lengthy missives came an occasional, yellowed newspaper clipping from another age.

She decided to browse the clippings first. The dates on them clarified their decayed appearance. The latest had come off the press in May of 1981—almost twenty-five years ago.

Jarett Powell’s 5 RBI Game Seals Win For Truckers, one headline read.

Crystal wasn’t sure what RBI meant, though she knew it was somehow related to baseball. Two other articles in the box—one from 1980 and another from ’81—were also about high school baseball. It seemed that Jarett had been quite a star in his day for the Norwalk Truckers, which was bemusing, since no author bio Crystal had ever read made even passing mention of the fact.

The other clippings did not seem related in any way, either to baseball or themselves. One from 1978 talked about a July 4th fireworks raid on West Main Street, again in Jarett’s hometown of Norwalk. Another dated 1979 looked to be a fluff piece about video game arcades. The author thought they were a great place for kids to hang out and have fun, though he barely expounded upon why. He then called for entrepreneurs to move into town and set up shop. As newspaper articles went, Crystal felt pretty sure this one had been phoned in.

And then there were the letters.

At first she almost didn’t bother. There were many of them, they were lengthy (most were covered front to back in Jarett’s small, nervous handwriting), and the time was getting late. But when the addressee’s name flashed up from one of the pages—a girl by the name of Vicky—her heart sank into a pit of coals, where it began to smolder in fury. She picked up five more letters, only to find the same name on each. A random plunge to the bottom of the box brought back the name yet again. Seven letters, all addressed to the same girl. Chances were the entire box had been dedicated to her.

“Who the hell?” she hissed, as a cyclone of dry leaves rattled against the window pane.

But the letters couldn’t be new. They had to have come from the same time period as the clippings. A quick check on some of the dates written after the closings—Sincerely, Love Always, Yours Forever—confirmed this. It mellowed Crystal.

A little.

Still, she had to know who this Vicky person was. And so she started to read.

Before she finished it became necessary to get dressed and switch on some of the lights around the house. The day had run out of patience with her. And just a few minutes after full dark, Lucretia did too. It took five blows on the

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