Love's Cruel Redemption (The Ghost Bird #12)(66)
“Danielle?” she called out in a nagging voice. “Don’t make them wait on you. Get out the door.” She glanced over at Nathan. “Good morning.”
“Good morning,” he replied.
She disappeared again into the kitchen.
Danielle clenched her teeth as her lips curled into a snarl. She went down the hallway to her room and picked up her bag. Derrick appeared a minute later, fully dressed.
“Where are you going?” Danielle asked him. “Get your own ride.”
“He said I could go, too,” Derrick said. “Any chance not to go on a suicide trip on those busses...”
“Still overcrowded, hm?” Nathan asked.
“I think there’s five to a seat now,” he said. “One of the other busses broke, and we’ve been taking on extra people since.”
Nathan wasn’t sure how many more busses could break down. He was pretty sure those busses were well overloaded as it was. They were critically dangerous.
By the time they emerged from the house, Silas was parked in the driveway. The blue sedan’s exhaust steamed against the frosty chill outside. Silas sat behind the wheel, phone close to his face, waiting. His broad shoulder was pressed up against the window. When they got close, Silas put his phone away and sat up properly.
???
“Morning,” Silas said to Nathan. He looked a little better today, like at least he had gotten a little sleep. When and where wasn’t clear. Nathan was sure no one really managed to make it home before three. That’s if Silas actually made it home and didn’t just sleep somewhere else.
Nathan got into the front seat next to him. Danielle and Derrick got into the car in the back.
“We have room for one more?” Nathan asked. He turned to face Danielle. “Can you go in and get Marie?”
Danielle looked horrified. “You’re kidding.”
Nathan exhaled slowly and shrugged. “It’s either you or me.”
Danielle didn’t say anything. He supposed he was pushing it to get her involved in getting them to school today. He sensed she was barely holding back from yelling at him for the stunt he pulled at her home and getting her to go to school today.
The only reason she wasn’t yelling at him was probably Derrick.
It’s not like he was doing it for his own benefit.
They’d passed the Lee house, but no one was outside when they went by. Silas pulled into the drive of the two-story gray house but pulled in close to the large shed near the back, where he could sit in a blind spot. There weren’t windows on this side of the house. Nathan motioned to Silas’s phone in the cup holder and Silas nodded, indicating Nathan could take it with him.
This time when Nathan got out, he hurried to get inside the garage.
Once he was out of sight of both the house and the car, he used Silas’s phone to check the house cameras.
It was still super early. Mrs. Sorenson was asleep in bed. He should be okay going in, but he’d have to be as quiet as a Luke.
He went to the door inside the garage. It was locked, but he pulled keys out of his pocket and used one to get in.
From there, he tiptoed up the back stairway. On the landing, he paused, listening.
Sang’s old room door was open. The others were closed. He peeked into the open room first.
There were clothes spilling out of the closet, all over the floor. The short black-painted wardrobe that had been in the attic had been pulled out. It was open, with only a couple of hangers inside. The bed was there, stripped but had books on it that looked like Sang’s old ones from before she stopped going to classes.
The whole place was a mess. Did Mrs. Sorenson do this or did Marie? The attic space was compromised now for sure anyway.
Nostalgia slithered into him as he checked once by the window, the one he’d climbed up to a few times to get to Sang.
The heavy feeling in him returned from that same night, knowing something was wrong in this house for Sang. He didn’t know what at the time. He had no idea. He could only feel it. The memory of her green eyes and the way she tried to ward him off before he was caught.
Now he knew the full of it, he shuddered from all the memories of her being here. He’d never let her come back. They’d come so far.
He went to Marie’s door next, and then at great risk of her screaming, he knocked quickly once and then opened the door slowly.
Marie was in bed, her body bunched up next to a pillow. She picked her head up quickly and then threw darts with her eyes at him. “What are you doing here?” she whispered hoarsely.
“We need to get you to go to school today,” he said.
“I don’t want to,” she said.
“You don’t have to go to class.” He stepped in and closed the door behind him. He kept his voice low as he stepped softly over to her. He squatted down, sitting on his heels to be more at her level and hopefully appearing less threatening. “I just need you to come with me.”
Marie sat up and pushed a palm to her face, rubbing at her eyes. She yawned. “Why? I don’t want to go.”
“Just for a little while,” he said. “This will help get you out.” He didn’t tell her it was to get Danielle to go along with this more than her. “It’s part of the process. When we get there, you’ll both sit in a room quietly and take a test. That’s all.”