Beneath Her Skin Gregg Olsen (good books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Gregg Olsen
Book online «Beneath Her Skin Gregg Olsen (good books to read .txt) đ». Author Gregg Olsen
Hayley led her sister into the living room, where most of the people belonging to the cars with out-of-state license plates were talking in quiet, anguished tones. The dining room chairs had been pulled from the big mahogany table and were arranged along the wall to provide necessary, but awkward, seating. The table itself was covered with an array of bowls of pretzels, chips and platters of pinwheel sandwiches Hayley recognized as a Costco deli product.
Costco? Wow, thatâs really sad, she thought. She hoped if she died her parents would at least have Subway cater a gathering in her memory.
Harper Berkley, it was clear, had been crying. He was a tall, balding man with caterpillar brows that could use a good waxing. His eyes were red-rimmed and his formidable presence had been Shrinky-Dinked by the circumstances. He looked so small, so sad. A woman neither girl recognized patted his shoulder.
âWeâre very sorry about Katelyn,â Hayley said.
âWeâre all in shock,â the woman said. âIâm Harperâs sister, Twyla. Katelynâs aunt.â
As identical twins, the girls were genetic anomalies, not idiots. They knew that the dadâs sister would be Katelynâs aunt. But now was probably not the time to point it out.
âThese cookies were Katelynâs faves. Just wanted to drop them off,â Taylor said.
âYeah, she really liked our momâs cooking,â Hayley echoed.
Harper thanked them with a quiet nod. To say anything was probably too painful. Sometimes one word can lead to a dam burst.
âThank you for coming,â he finally choked out.
Taylor and Hayley stood there a second in uncomfortable silence before retreating toward the front door. Both wondered how it was that with the inevitability of death, no one really had anything to say about it. It was as if one of lifeâs pivotal momentsâthe final momentâwas devoid of potential small talk. Death was a big, fat period to most people. Over and out. Dark and cold. A void.
By the staircase, Hayley felt a tug.
Taylor whispered, âGotta go up there.â She looked up the stairwayâs too-narrow risers toward Katelynâs bedroom.
Hayley shook her head emphatically. âNo, we are most certainly not going up there. Arenât you as creeped out by all of this as I am?â
âYou mean the Costco sandwiches? Or that our supposed BFF is dead?â
Taylor started up the stairs, turning to her sister with one last look. âHay, either you can come up with me, or you can make small talk with them.â She pointed back at the living area. âRemember the tugboat on the water? Weâre supposed to âlook.â Well, weâre here. We might as well.â
âYou win. Iâm coming,â Hayley acquiesced as they crept up the uncarpeted wooden risers, careful not to make much noise. Old houses like that one did a fine job in the noise department all on their own. Downstairs, they could hear Katelynâs grandmother complaining about something. A harsh, mean voice always travels like a slingshot.
Katelynâs door was ajar. Taylor didnât remark on it, but she noticed a faint black rectangle, an indicator of old adhesive residue on the door. She remembered how theyâd made nameplates after touring a signage shop in Daisies. Katelynâs, she remembered, was the standard issue of any preteenâKATIEâS ROOM: BOY-FREE ZONE!
Things had changed big-time since then.
They went inside, and Taylor closed the door behind them.
âWhat are we doing in here, anyway?â Hayley asked.
âNot sure,â Taylor said. âWhy do you need a reason for everything? Reason is something people say to make sense of things that donât make sense.â
âOkay,â Hayley said, with a slight smile, ânow that doesnât make any sense.â
Taylor didnât care. âBite yourself,â she said.
The posters and color scheme had changed dramatically since theyâd last stepped foot in Katelynâs bedroom. Previously, Katelyn had surrounded herself with bright walls, purple bedding and pictures of horses and orcas plastered everywhere. All of that was gone. The walls had been painted a dark, foreboding grayâa rebellion from Port Gambleâs newly enforced white interior dĂ©cor edict for its historic homes. Katelynâs animal posters had been replaced with images of wan, sad girls and ripped guys with Abercrombie abs. They were hot, hard and probably without a single brainwave firing inside their bleached, tousled heads. Hayley and Taylor didnât have any qualms about the way those guys looked, but like most girls in Kitsap County, theyâd never seen one in the flesh.
Okay, maybe one. But Colton James wasnât blond.
Without saying a word, they walked toward the bathroom.
Taylor knelt down next to the tub. It was a big old clawfoot, the exact same vintage as the tub in their house. It had not been re-enameled like the Ryansâ, however. The surface of Katelynâs was more cream than white, pitted in spots that made it appear dirty. Taylor could imagine Mrs. Berkley telling her daughter to âuse some damn elbow grease!â when she told her to clean it.
Or was she imagining it? Sometimes she didnât know where her thoughts came from. Other times, however, Taylor was absolutely sure they came from a source outside of herself.
Hayley left her sister alone. She was drawn toward a small desk next to Katelynâs unmade bed. A lamp with a breaching orca as its base, some black markers, and a couple of small, framed photos caught her eye, but she dismissed all of that. Even though those items had a definite personal connection with their dead friend, they didnât beckon for her to touch them. Her fingertips were hot, moist. There was a feeling in her stomach, knotted like a bag of jump ropes, that made her feel queasyânot throwing-up sick, but the kind of feeling that comes just before the onset of the flu. She was a little light-headed too. Her heartbeat pushed inside her rib cage.
This wasnât the first time sheâd experienced being drawn to an object. Neither twin could explain the sensation or the visions that sometimes came afterward. They had little control over it.
It was Katelynâs laptop that had lured Hayley to
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