Graveyard Slot Michelle Schusterman (e ink ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Michelle Schusterman
Book online «Graveyard Slot Michelle Schusterman (e ink ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Michelle Schusterman
âAt midnight, though?â I couldnât help but ask. âWasnât the library closed?â
âYup. I squeezed myself between the card catalog and the wall a few minutes before the library closed and waited until everyone was gone and it was locked up. Then, camped out at her shelf, I waited. Sure enough, right at midnight, there she was.â
My eyes widened. âYou really saw her?â
Roland nodded. âBarely, but yes. She disappeared after maybe a minute, but I saw her. I definitely saw her.â He smiled and shook his head. âMy mom grounded me for about a month, but I thought it was worth it. Until my brother came home that weekendâhe was in college by thenâand I told him about what Iâd done, that Iâd seen Ellie. He just started cracking up. Wanna guess why?â
He lifted Brunildaâs journal, and I frowned. âI donât . . . oh. Oh.â
âYep,â Roland said cheerfully. âThere was no Ellie. No librarian had ever been crushed by a shelf of books. Just a dumb story heâd made up to scare his little brother. He had no idea Iâd been obsessing over it for years. It was the family joke till I graduated high school.â He tossed the journal back on the pew. âAfter a while, I just went along with it. Went to prom alone and told everyone Ellie was my date, that sort of thing. The older I got, the more I wondered if maybe I had just imagined her. But a part of me still insisted she was real. It wasnât until I got to college that I started to figure it out.â
âWhy, what happened?â
âI met Sam,â Roland said simply. âWeirdo guy in my psych class who thought he could talk to dead people. I ended up telling him the whole story about Ellie. He said it was just like when heâd contact a dead person for some stranger and get a âmessage from the beyondâ that he couldnât possibly know; he received it because the person believed in what he was doing, and so they got the message they wanted. Sam said not believing is just as powerful as believing, and if I believed in Ellie, then maybe she was real after all. And I . . .â He paused, grinning. âThought he was nuts. But I also sort of understood what he was saying. Thatâs when I got into parapsychology.â
I sighed. âBut the point is, your brain tricked you into seeing things. You saw Ellie, but she still wasnât real.â
âNo?â Roland arched an eyebrow. âThen why did GuzmĂĄn and the rest of us see that table float? We didnât believe in Brunilda, but his students did. Their belief made her ghost real, and we saw proof.â
I sat back against the pew, frowning. It was starting to make sense now. All of it.
Roland was still watching me, brow knitted. âKat.â
âWhat?â
âYouâre crying.â
Startled, I touched my cheek, then wiped my face with the napkins. âUgh, sorry.â
âWhatâs going on?â
âNothing. Girl stuff, you donât want to hear about it.â Ignoring the skeptical look he gave me, I shoved the napkins into my pocket. âLooks like theyâre finishing up.â I pointed at Jess, who was shaking GuzmĂĄnâs hand, camera hanging at her side. Roland glanced over, too, and I slipped out of the pew and down the aisle before he could ask me anything else.
âMind if I jump in the shower first?â Dad asked as soon as we got back to our hotel room.
âSure.â I flopped back on the bed and pulled my phone out of my pocket. Whistling cheerfully, Dad grabbed his pajamas and headed into the bathroom. The whole cast was clearly thrilled about how things had turned out with GuzmĂĄn. Iâd spent the last hour pretending to smile and act just as excited. But I wasnât.
I opened my inbox first, keeping my right finger off the screen. The cut wasnât bleeding anymore, but it still stung.
From: invitation@justbridalstuff.com
To: acciopancakes@mymail.net
Subject: Monica Has Invited YOU to a Bridal Shower!
For: Katya Sinclair
WILL ATTEND WILL NOT ATTEND
Please join us for a bridal shower in honor of
MONICA MILLS
Sunday, March 1, at 6:00 p.m.
Maison Bellerose, Chelsea, Ohio
Hosted by Edie Mills
I closed the e-mail quickly and opened my blog dashboard. No new comments.
Sighing, I tossed my phone on the comforter, then pulled off the Elapse, too. I wouldnât be able to put off telling Mom I didnât want to be in her wedding much longer. I should just call her before we left for New York the next day and get it over with. The thought made my stomach turn over.
I rolled onto my side and winced as something sharp dug into my thigh. Sitting up, I ran my hands over the comforter, then stuck my hand in my pocket. And pulled out a rock.
I stared at it, bewildered. It was about half the size of my palm, and flat, with one side tapered to a razor-sharp point. Smooth, dark gray with a marbled pattern . . . like the rocks under the willow tree. When had I put this in my pocket?
Unsettled, I stood up and walked over to the desk to examine the rock under the lamp. I remembered playing with one of these when we were filming the sĂ©ance under the tree. But I hadnât even been wearing these shorts. And I didnât remember that rock having such a sharp edge. Sharp enough to carve words into tree bark. Oscar had said it looked like thatâs what I was doing tonight. But I hadnât.
Had I?
A sudden movement in the mirror made the blood in my veins freeze.
I carefully set the rock down on the desk, keeping my eyes averted. But I could see her in my peripheral vision: the girl standing next to me in the mirror. Not transparent anymoreâjust as solid, just as real as me. And I knew who she was before I even looked up at her
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