The Overnight Guest(29)
But after-dinner dark was also the most unsettling time of day. If her father was in a bad mood or her mother sad, there was nowhere for her to go. She had to listen to the angry words, the tears, and the sharp slaps and punches. In these times, she would go to her favorite spot beneath the window and look at books in the fading light peeking through the gap between the shade and pane of glass.
The blackest dark came in the middle of the night. It was warm and velvety and sounded like her mother’s breathing right next to her.
It isn’t the dark you should be afraid of, the girl thought, it’s the monsters who step out into the light that you need to fear.
16
Present Day
While Wylie waited for the boy to come out of the bathroom, she opened the front door to let Tas outside. The storm had picked up steam again, the cold burrowing through the folds of her clothing. This time, Tas quickly returned.
The boy couldn’t stay in the bathroom the entire night. It was too cold. Wylie tapped on the door. There was no response.
“Are you okay in there?” Wylie asked. Still no answer. She turned the knob and the door swung open. The boy sat there, fists pressed to his eyes.
The child was as skittish as a frightened deer, and Wylie knew she would need to carefully choose her next words. “I know you’re scared. I know those pictures were scary. I write books about people who get hurt—I try to tell their stories. But I would never hurt anyone. Do you understand that?” The boy still refused to meet her gaze.
“I want to help you. I want to get ahold of your family, but I need your help to do it.”
She beckoned to the little boy to move toward her, but he remained fixed to his spot.
She couldn’t blame him.
Though it was the middle of the night, Wylie doubted the boy would sleep again after what he saw in those photos. She moved to the kitchen, and after a minute, she heard the boy’s soft steps behind her. “I bet you’re hungry,” Wylie said. “Would you like something to eat?”
The boy didn’t respond. “Well, I’m starved.” She opened the refrigerator. “Let’s see, what do we have in here? How about eggs and pancakes?” Wylie set the egg carton on the counter and pulled the pancake mix from the cupboard. “What would you like to drink?” Wylie asked. “I’ve got milk, juice, and water. Or coffee. Do you drink coffee? I bet you take it black.”
Wylie looked over to see if her little joke made the boy crack a smile, but his face remained inscrutable, and he rubbed a small hand across the top of his shorn head. “How’s your head?” she asked. “It must hurt.”
The boy fingered the bruise on his temple but didn’t speak.
“Oh, your clothes should be dry by now,” Wylie said. “I’ll be right back.” Wylie darted to the laundry room, retrieved the boy’s clothes from the dryer, and set them on a kitchen chair. “You can go on into the bathroom and get dressed. By the time you come back the first batch of pancakes will be done.”
The boy snatched the clothes from the chair as if expecting to be swatted and hurried from the room. Wylie cracked the eggs into a bowl and poured the pancake batter into a hot skillet.
Wylie flipped the pancakes and set the butter, syrup, and a bowl of grapes on the kitchen table.
“Do you like pancakes?” she asked as the boy sidled back into the room.
Wylie set a pancake on a plate and handed it to him. “You sit right on down and get started. I’ll join you in a second.”
Wylie brought a plateful of pancakes and the skillet of scrambled eggs to the table, scooped some onto the boy’s plate, and then added some to her own. She sat across from him at the round, oak table. “Go ahead and eat,” she urged, “you don’t have to wait for me.” The boy stared uncertainly up at her.
“Do you want me to cut your food for you?” Wylie asked, but the boy pulled his plate close and picked up the pancake with his fingers.
She watched as the boy dragged it through a puddle of syrup, brought it tentatively to his lips, and took an experimental lick. Deciding that it was okay, the boy ate the rest of the pancake and then started in on the second one that Wylie slid onto his plate. He ate without pause, barely taking time to chew and swallow.
“Slow down,” Wylie said. “There’s plenty more where that came from.”
The boy bent over his plate to sniff at the scrambled eggs and then wrinkled his nose.
“That’s okay,” Wylie assured him. “You don’t have to eat anything you don’t want to.”
The boy looked longingly toward the door.
“Remember the storm?” Wylie asked. “It’s not safe to go outside right now. The roads are very bad.” The boy shifted in his chair as if ready to bolt.
Wylie didn’t want to panic the child, but she didn’t want to lie to him any more than she already had. “I promise I’m going to do my best to get you home,” she said. “It can’t snow forever.” The boy seemed to think about this as a few tears escaped and slid down his cheeks.
“Don’t cry,” Wylie said in alarm. “How about we play a game?” Wylie asked, hoping to distract him.
The boy looked at her suspiciously.
“It’s called First You, Then Me,” Wylie said, standing up from the table. She picked up her plate and carried it to the sink. “First, you ask me a question, and then I ask you one. Do you want to start? All you do is ask me a question like what my favorite things are, and I answer it.”