The Secret of Zormna Clendar by Julie Steimle (great reads .TXT) đ
- Author: Julie Steimle
Book online «The Secret of Zormna Clendar by Julie Steimle (great reads .TXT) đ». Author Julie Steimle
âWhat is it?â Brian followed the Streigle brothers. âWhat happened?â
Alex turned back five steps and said with a shrug, âWe forgot, itâsâŠuh, itâs our auntâs birthday today. We didnât tell her we were going to the dance tonight. We have to go.â
He didnât give Brian or the others time to respond. Both boys dashed out of the hall towards the main door, leaving their friends to wonder on their own.
So hasty. So strange.
And Jennifer was sure it had nothing to do with some forgotten birthday. Deciding to find out for herself, Jennifer hurried down the bleacher steps and rushed to the girlsâ bathroom to check in on Zormna.
The next heat started up immediately. The whistle blew.
Zormnaâs teammates lingered near the bathroom entrance. Jennifer had to push through to get in, including shove pass Mrs. Ryant and the school nurse. Both adults looked worried. Obviously they had questions about the mark on Zormnaâs shoulder also.
âZormna?â Jennifer searched around the room, peeking into the one side then the other for an occupied stall.
âI said Iâm fine!â Zormna shrieked back.
Jennifer leaned against the stall door. âYou know, I had heard you always changed in the stall. I never knew why until now. Everybody thought you were just reallyâŠâ Jennifer went speechless, trying to find the word without ruining their relationship further.
âWhat? Prude? Paranoid? Weird?â Zormna would not let her finish anyway. The door opened, causing Jennifer to stagger upright.
Zormna was dressed and mostly dry, yet still barefoot. With a huff that contained a pretended look of unconcern, Zormna nudged Jennifer aside. âI just donât like people staring at me when all I have on are those flimsy undergarments. Those things should be outlawed.â
âRightâŠ.â Jennifer followed Zormna to her shoes. She whispered, âTell the truth. You didnât want anyone to see that mark on your arm, did you?â
Zormna stiffened. Her breath went shallow.
âItâs what you showed that lawyer on the first day,â Jennifer guessed. âAm I right?â
Stiffly, Zormna nodded.
âWhat is it?â Jennifer asked.
âProof of who I am,â Zormna said, but low like it was the deadliest secret.
Jennifer rolled her eyes. âIt was the same mark onââ
Zormna slapped a hand over Jenniferâs mouth, staring fiercely into her face. âDonât talk about it.â
Then she let go. She scooped up her shoes, padding barefoot to the exit.
âWhy not?â Jennifer gasped. âWhatâs the big deal? Dadâs got a tattoo. Iâm sure heâd show it to you.â
Zormna stiffened in the doorway. Turning slowly, she said, âDonât you tell him especially, or your mother. They might be nice people right nowâbut if they knew, Iâd be a dead woman.â
And she went out.
A dead woman? Jennifer rolled her eyes. Zormna had to be exaggerating.
*
A lot was on Toddâs mind when he headed home from the Olympics. He had to wash up, change for the dance, and sneak a little something to eat. Mostly he wanted to be at the dance early to help set up. He had taken his cue from Jeff and Alexâs early departure, which seemed a good idea to a great many people at the time.
When he arrived home through the side door, Todd found his parents standing in the kitchen, talking intimately over a plate of sandwiches.
âThis has got to be one of the best days of the year.â Todd marched inside in the highest of spirits.
His parents grinned at him, patiently listening. Todd proceeded to give them a rundown of the day, while digging through the cupboards for a snack. They didnât say much. They just let him talk. He even furnished the details about the wrestling match between Jeff and Zormna.
ââŠYou should have been there to see it.â Todd grabbed a handful of Oreos, then thought better of it and snatched up a banana also. He stuffed the cookies into his pocket. âAnd then she just walks off with mud covering half her head. I donât know any girl like that.â
They chuckled, nodding. Though, Todd noticed his father roll his eyes with his usual degree of amused annoyance. Todd even recounted how well Jennifer did in the games.
âFourth in javelin for her grade,â he said. âPromise me never to give that girl a spear.â
They laughed.
âOf course Zormna placed first,â Todd added, shaking his head at the memory. He took out a carton of milk. âBut Iâm sure you guys know what an athletic super-girl she is. âIrish ninjaâ Jennifer calls her. Did you know she won the hundred-yard dash and the hurdles? And she placed second in the mile. And that was against some of the boys in the track team. But best of all was watching her swimming.â
Todd was about to drink out of the carton, but with a peek towards his mother he grabbed a glass instead.
His parents shared knowing smiles.
Pouring the milk, Todd continued. âShe looked real hot in that bathing suit, by the way. She finally consented to swimming with a shirt off. I thought half the school was going to die from it.â Seeing his motherâs disapproving looks Todd cleared his throat and said, âBut anyway, no one would have known she couldnât swim a week ago with the way she went. She flew so fast in the water it was too bad she only placed third in her heat. Give her a month, and Iâm sure she would have come in first.â
He took a gulp of milk then wiped his mouth, thinking more on that.
His parents were sighing again in that infuriating âWe know a lot more about her than you do sonâ way that they had adopted whenever he shared something new about their houseguest.
Which put him to mind to ask, âDid you know that Zormna has a funny round mark on her right shoulder? Like she was branded?â
They blinked at him at first, not quite sure they heard him right. His father looked at his mother. And she glanced back to her husband, sharing incomprehensive looks. But their expressions quickly turned dark. They both narrowed their eyes. With decided frowns, practically grinding their teeth, they said, âSay that again?â
Todd pulled back. âWhat?â
âWhat did you say you saw?â Mr. McLenna asked. There was fury in his eyes, none the like Todd had ever seen before.
âIâŠâ Todd clutched his glass to his chest, retreating a step. âWhat? I saw a mark on her shoulder. Like she was gang branded or something.â
âWhich shoulder?â his father growled out.
âIâŠthe right shoulder. Ok?â Dark chills sank from Toddâs chest down into the pit of his stomach. He put glass down on the counter, retreating another step. âWhatâs this all about?â
âTell me exactly what it looked like,â his mother said through clenched teeth.
Both father and mother looked like they had just drunk acid. So much hate that Todd could not describe nor fathom emanated from them.
âI donât know. It was circular. It looked kindaâ like a lopsided target.â
Mr. McLenna grabbed his son by his arms, and pulled him forward. âAre you sure?
Todd breathed shallowly. Looking to his mom for help, he saw none. He pushed back. âI donât know. Get off! I saw it from a distance, ok? Whatâs your problem?â
His father lowered his hands, though he still looked inclined to strangle someone. He looked to Toddâs mother, nodding sharply. âDid she ever say anything about it? To you, or Jennifer?â
Todd shook his head. âFirst time I knew about it. What gives? Youâve got a tattoo. Iâve seen it.â
Mr. McLenna nodded, drawing in deep breaths. Todd could tell his father was trying to maintain his temper. At what, he didnât know. Something was wrong about that mark on Zormnaâs arm, Todd guessed. Maybe it was an Irish gang thing. Maybe it was linked to some gang in Chicagoâas it had kind of upset Jeff also. He knew Jeff was lying about the whole birthday thing. Their aunt had a birthday party three months ago. Todd remembered it because on that same day they were going to go on an overnight campout with Brianâs scout troop and Jeff would not have missed out on that unless he had to.
âIt is nothing for you to be concerned about,â his father said. But his expression remained dark. âBut that girl will have to have a talking-to.â
Stepping back, Todd felt dreadânot for himself, but on behalf of Zormna. A âtalking-toâ meant she was in deep trouble.
Todd escaped to his upstairs room, happy to get out of his parentsâ company.
*
Jennifer could not get Zormna to divulge any more about the mark on her shoulder, so she settled for what they were going to do to celebrate their wins at the dance. Zormna had to wear a dress, Jennifer kept insisting. It was only right.
âNo dresses! For the last time,â Zormna protested. Yet she was chuckling.
âAh, come on!â Jennifer hung her shoulders, begging.
âNope.â Zormna shook her head.
They were close to home. They could see the house and were about to cross the street when Todd jogged out from the driveway and straight to them. He appeared agitated and breathless. He went directly to Zormna.
âHey, you two had better sneak in the front door, or through the back,â he said. âMom and Dad have lost it. I mean in a real bad temper.â
Jennifer froze. Had she not cleaned her room? She mentally tried to list something she might have done wrong.
She did her chores the day before. Check. She had no homework⊠check. Maybe this was about the phone bill. She had been texting Kevin a lot lately. Or maybe someone saw them making out atâŠ.
But Jennifer shook her head. It wasnât that big of a deal. And that was a while back before all the craziness with the FBI and Zormna.
She looked at Zormna.
Zormna stood pale. Her lips were white, her eyes averting to the ground. She murmured, âMaybe I had better skip the dance and go to my great auntâs house until they cool off.â
âYou think they are mad at you?â Jennifer said.
Todd cringed, nodding. âIâm sorry. I was just talking about the Olympics and theyâŠI had no idea it was a secret from them. Iâm so sorry.â
Todd rushed off.
It. What it? Jennifer stared after her brother as he hurried away. But Zormna seemed to know.
âIt?â Jennifer asked.
âHe told them about the Olympics,â Zormna murmured, walking slowly towards the house. âWhat he saw.â
Immediately Jennifer knew. It. The mark on her shoulder.
They came up to the kitchen door. Jennifer looked back to Zormna who walked like she was marching to the guillotine.
âMaybe we can sneak in and get some stuff for you,â Jennifer said.
Gazing up weakly in thanks, Zormna nodded.
They pulled open the door.
They stepped inside.
Jenniferâs parents were still in the kitchen, waiting for them.
âUh, hi,â Jennifer said, glancing from father to mother, taking in their glaring eyes and folded arms.
Zormna pulled back. Clearly what Todd had said was true.
âZormna, we would like to have a word with you.â Mr. McLennaâs voice was deadly grave.
âCanât it wait until later?â Zormna replied so meekly. She attempted, weakly, to slip past the two adults to the stairs.
Both angry adults bore down on her like tigers.
Zormnaâs voice shrank to a whisper. âThere is this dance we have to attendâŠâ
Their eyes narrowed like knives.
âWe need to talk with you now,â Mr. McLenna said frostily.
Zormna shrank back with a step. Her arms pulled in. She clenched them to herself in protection. Desperately, the tiny blonde looked to Jennifer for help. But what could Jennifer do for an Irish-ninja against her own parents? Her parents had never scared her like this. It was like they were different people altogether.
Mr. McLenna grabbed Zormnaâs arm, wrenching her towards the stairs. And the little blonde who had just flattened their state champ wrestler only a few hours ago went with him, not even resisting. They marched her all the way up to their bedroom.
And Jennifer tried to follow.
Her mother quickly turned and spoke with such rigidity that Jennifer pulled back. âWe want to talk to her alone.â
Jennifer halted at the bottom of the staircase. It was soâŠholy cowâŠimpossibly,
Comments (0)