Near the Bone Christina Henry (famous ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Christina Henry
Book online «Near the Bone Christina Henry (famous ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Christina Henry
âListen, I think we should get out of here. If she is home sheâs clearly not welcoming visitors. Besides, there were all those private property signs posted.â
Mattieâs eyes widened. There were private property signs around their cabin? How had she never noticed them? She knew how to read.
William probably doesnât let you go anywhere near the signs. The signs are only important to keep away people who might drift in this direction, and heâs always made certain that you wonât accidentally encounter anyone. But the whole mountain isnât private. Griffin and William both said something about the clearing and the caves being public land.
âYou said that guy had a gun, right?â C.P. continued. âAnyone who lives alone in the middle of the woods with a bunch of âkeep out, private propertyâ signs posted is not going to welcome unexpected visitors. We should move on before he comes home and decides to shoot us on principle.â
âYeah,â Griffin said.
He still stood very close to the door. His voice was so close that Mattie almost imagined he was inside the room with her.
Maybe I could trust him. Maybe I could. He seems kind. He sounded worried when he talked about me. Maybe . . .
âAnd the property is marked on the map, so we donât even have an excuse. Anyway, come and look at these prints in the snow,â C.P. said. âThese look a lot like the ones you took pictures of yesterday.â
Mattie heard Griffin move off the porch. She unwound her coiled body and slid her stockinged feet over the floor cautiously, so as not to make a sound. She wanted to see the two men. She wanted to know what they were doing.
She twitched the curtain aside, just a fraction of an inch, just enough to make a slit to peer out between the curtain and the window frame.
The two men were crouched in the center of the clearing inspecting the prints in the snow. They had their backs to the cabin and all she could see were their caps and their large backpacksâGriffinâs orange, C.P.âs blue. Their voices were low and Mattie couldnât make out what they were saying. Her strangerâGriffin, his name is Griffinâtook several photographs with the camera that was still slung around his neck.
Both men stood, their eyes on the ground, and carefully crept around the clearing, stopping occasionally to take more pictures.
Mattie released the curtain and inched back when she realized that they were going to follow the creatureâs tracks around the cabin. She didnât want them to accidentally catch a glimpse of her. They passed within a few feet of the window, and she caught some of their conversation again.
â. . . have to hurry because Jen is going to meet us on the trail in about an hour and we donât want to miss her,â C.P. said.
She hadnât seen his face yet, this friend of Griffinâs, just the back of his head covered by a red knit cap with a large fluffy ball at the crown.
I had a hat like that once. Except it wasnât red. It was blue and white and maroon stripes with a blue puffy ball at the top, and there was a big âAâ on the front.
Mattie couldnât remember what the âAâ was for, though. She had a flash of men swooping around on ice, holding sticks in front of them, but she couldnât quite remember what they were doing or why.
She shook her head. That wasnât important right now. She had to know what the strange men were doing, and if they had moved on. Mattie had a vague notion of going outside to sweep away the evidence of their prints, and then her own. Then William would never know they had come and she wouldnât have to face his wrath.
Mattie stepped silently into the bedroom. She knew of old where the boards creaked and how to avoid them. This was practically second nature now, as she never wanted to wake William if she got out of bed in the night. And she didnât want the two men outsideâif they were still thereâto know she was inside.
She inched away the curtain and peered out.
Griffinâs camera obscured his face and Mattie saw his finger depressing a button over and over. C.P. was gesturing excitedly at the symbols in the snow, the ones the creature had left the night before, the ones that had convinced William that the creature was a demon come to try him.
Mattie couldnât quite hear what they were saying, but their intention was very clear. They were interested in the creature, like William was. And they were going to follow its tracks.
No, she thought. They canât.
If Griffin and C.P. followed the creature from the cabin, then the animal would think that she and William had ignored the warning. The creature would kill Griffin and C.P., and it would come back to the cabin for her and William.
It sounded crazy, even in her headâthe idea that an animal could think and reason like a person. And maybe it didnât think and reason exactly like a person, but it clearly wasnât simply made up of instinct like every other animal in the woods. Mattie couldnât let the two men outside risk being sorted into piles like the creatureâs other victims.
And I donât want it to come back for me, either.
But what should she do? Go outside?
No, I had better not. Itâs not safe. Itâs not just about William, either. I donât know if I can trust them.
But she couldnât just allow the strangers to wander blithely into danger.
She stood, irresolute, unable to warn them, unable to force herself to break Williamâs dictate.
How will you ever run from him if you canât even do this?
Samantha again. She was very sassy for such a small girl.
âYouâve got a sassy mouth on you.â Williamâs voice, one of those long ago and far away threads that seeped forward from the back of her mind, followed by a memory of painâa great swipe of his hand across her face.
Just
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