1. premonitions
My feet
rested against the dashboard of the Winnebago as we lumbered down the road, the
second vehicle in a small caravan of beat-up trailers and motorhomes.
The sun hadn’t completely risen yet, but it was light enough
that I could see outside. Not that there was much to see. The bridge stretched
on for miles across Lake Tristeaux, and I could see nothing but the water
around us, looking gray in the early morning light.
The AC had gone out sometime in Texas, and we wouldn’t have
the money to fix it until after this stint in Caudry, if we were lucky. I’d
cracked the window, and despite the chill, the air felt thick with humidity.
That’s why I never liked traveling to the southeastern part of the country—too
humid and too many bugs.
But we took the work that we got, and after a long dry spell
waiting in Oklahoma for something to come up, I was grateful for this. We all
were. If we hadn’t gotten the recommendation to Caudry, I’m not sure what we
would’ve done, but we were spending our last dimes and nickels just to make it
down here.
I stared ahead at Gideon’s motorhome in front of us. The
whole thing had been painted black with brightly colored designs swirling around
it, meant to invoke images of mystery and magic. The name “Gideon Davorin’s
Traveling Sideshow” was painted across the back and both the sides. Once
sparkles had outlined it, but they’d long since worn off.
My eyelids
began to feel heavy, but I tried to ward off sleep. The radio in the car was
playing old Pink Floyd songs that my mom hummed along to, and that wasn’t
helping anything.
“You can go lay down in the back,” Mom suggested.
She did look awake, her dark gray eyes wide and a little
frantic, and both her hands gripped the wheel. Rings made of painted gold and
cheap stones adorned her fingers, glinting as the sun began to rise over the
lake, and black vine tattoos wrapped around her hands and down her arms.
For a while, people had mistaken us for sisters since we
looked so much alike. The rich caramel skin we both shared helped keep her
looking young, but the strain of recent years had begun to wear on her, causing
crow’s feet to sprout around her eyes and worried creases to deepen in her
brow.
I’d been slouching low in the seat but I sat up straighter.
“No, I’m okay.”
“We’re almost there. I’ll be fine,” she insisted.
“You say we’re almost there, but it feels like we’re driving
across the Gulf of Mexico,” I said, and she laughed. “We’ve probably reached
the Atlantic by now.”
She’d been driving the night shift, which was why I was
hesitant to leave her. We normally would’ve switched spots about an hour or two
ago, with me driving while she lay down. But since we were so close to our
destination, she didn’t see the point in it.
On the worn padded bench beside the dining table, Blossom
Mandelbaum snored loudly, as if to remind us we both should be sleeping. I
glanced back at her. Her head lay at a weird angle, propped up on a cushion,
and her brown curls fell around her face.
Ordinarily, Blossom would be in the Airstream she shared with
Carrie Lu, but since Carrie and the Strongman had started dating (and he had
begun staying over in their trailer), Blossom had taken to crashing in our
trailer sometimes to give them privacy.
It wasn’t much of a bother when she slept here, and in fact,
my mom kind of liked it. As one of the oldest members of the carnival—both in
age and the length of time she’d been working here—my mom had become a
surrogate mother to many of the runaways and lost souls that found us.
Blossom was
two years younger than me, on the run from a group home that didn’t understand
her or what she could do, and my mom had been more than happy to take her under
her wing. The only downside was her snoring.
Well, that and the telekinesis.
“Mara,” Mom said, her eyes on the rearview mirror. “She’s
doing it again.”
“What?” I asked, but I’d already turned around to look back
over the seat.
At first, I didn’t know what had caught my mom’s eye, but
then I saw it—the old toaster we’d left out on the counter was now floating in
the air, hovering precariously above Blossom’s head.
The ability to move things with her mind served Blossom well
when she worked as the Magician’s Assistant in Gideon’s act, but it could be
real problematic sometimes. She had this awful habit of unintentionally pulling
things toward her when she was dreaming. At least a dozen times, she’d woken up
to books and tapes dropping on her. Once my mom’s favorite coffee mug had
smacked her right in the head.
“Got it,” I told my mom, and I unbuckled my seat belt and
went over to get it.
The toaster floated in front of me, as if suspended by a
string, and when I grabbed it, Blossom made a snorting sound and shifted in her
sleep. I turned around with the toaster under my arm, and I looked in front of
us just in time to see Gideon’s trailer skid to the side of the road and nearly
smash into the guardrail.
“Mom! Look out!” I shouted.
Mom slammed on the brakes, causing most of our possessions in
the trailer to go hurtling toward the floor, and I slammed into the seat in
front of me before falling to the ground. The toaster had slipped free from my
grasp and clattered into the dashboard.
Fortunately, there was no oncoming traffic, but I could hear
the sound of squealing tires and honking behind us as the rest of the caravan
came to an abrupt stop.
“What happened?” Blossom asked, waking up in a daze from
where she’d landed on the floor beneath the dining table.
“Mara!” Mom had already leapt from her seat and crouched in
front of where I still lay on the worn carpet. “Are you okay?”
“Yeah, I’m fine,” I assured her.
“What about you?” Mom reached out, brushing back Blossom’s
frizzy curls from her face. “Are you all right?”
Blossom
nodded. “I think so.”
“Good.” That was all the reassurance my mom needed, and then
she was on her feet and jumping out of the Winnebago. “Gideon!”
“What happened?” Blossom asked again, blinking the sleep out
of her dark brown eyes.
“I don’t know. Gideon slammed on his brakes for some reason.”
I stood up, moving much slower than my mother.
We had very narrowly avoided crashing into Gideon. He’d
overcorrected and jerked to the other side of the road, so his motorhome was parked
at an angle across both lanes of the highway.
“Is everyone okay?” Blossom had sat up, rubbing her head, and
a dark splotch of a bruise was already forming on her forehead. That explained
why she seemed even foggier than normal—she’d hit her head pretty good.
“I hope so. I’ll go check it out,” I said. “Stay here.”
By the time I’d gotten out, Seth Holden had already gotten
out of the motorhome behind us. Since he was the Strongman, he was usually the
first to rush into an accident. He wanted to help if he could, and he usually
could.
“Lyanka, I’m fine,” Gideon was saying to my mother, his
British accent sounding firm and annoyed.
“You are not fine, albi,”
Mom said, using a term of affection despite the irritation in her voice.
I rounded the back of his motorhome to find Gideon leaning
against it with my mom hovering at his side. Seth reached them first, his
t-shirt pulled taut against his muscular torso.
“What’s going on? What happened?” Seth asked.
“Nothing. I just dozed off for a second.” Gideon waved it
off. “Go tell everyone I’m fine. I just need a second, and we’ll be on our way
again.”
“Do you want me to drive for you?” Seth asked. “Carrie can
handle the Airstream.”
Gideon shook his head and stood up straighter. “I’ve got it.
We’re almost there.”
“All right.” Seth looked uncertainly at my mom, and she
nodded at him. “I’ll leave you in Lyanka’s care and get everyone settled down.”
As soon as Seth disappeared back around the motorhome, loudly
announcing that everything was fine to everyone else, Gideon slumped against
the trailer. His black hair had fallen over his forehead. The sleeves of his
shirt were rolled up, revealing the thick black tattoos that covered both his
arms.
“Gideon, what’s really going on?” Mom demanded with a worried
tremor.
He swallowed and rubbed his forehead. “I don’t know.”
Even though the sun was up now, the air seemed to have gotten
chillier. I pulled my sweater tighter around me and walked closer to them.
Gideon leaned forward, his head bowed down, and Mom rubbed his back.
“You didn’t fall asleep, did you?” I asked.
Gideon lifted his eyes, looking as though he didn’t know I
was there. And guessing by how pained he was allowing himself to look, he
probably hadn’t. Gideon was only in his early thirties, but right now, he
appeared much older than that.
That wasn’t what scared me, though. It was how dark his blue
eyes were. Normally, they were light, almost like the sky. But whenever he’d
had a vision or some kind of premonition, his eyes turned so dark they were
nearly black.
“It was a headache,” Gideon said finally.
“There’s something off here,” Mom said. “I felt it as soon as
we got on the bridge. I knew we should turn back, but I hoped that maybe I was
imagining things. Now that I look at you, I know.”
That explained that frantic look in her eyes I’d seen earlier
in the Winnebago, and how alert she’d been even though she’d been awake and
driving for nearly twenty hours straight. Mom didn’t see things in the way
Gideon did, but she had her own senses.
“It’s fine, Lyanka,” Gideon insisted. He straightened up
again, and his eyes had begun to lighten. “It was only a migraine, but it
passed. I am capable of having pain without supernatural reasons, too.”
Mom crossed her arms over her chest, and her lips were
pressed into a thin line. “We should go back.”
“We’re almost there.” Gideon gestured to the end of the road,
and I looked ahead for the first time and realized that we could see land. The
town was nestled right up to the lake, and we couldn’t be more than ten minutes
outside the city limits.
“We could still turn around,” Mom suggested.
“We can’t.” He put his hands on her arms to ease her worries.
“We don’t have any money, love. The only way we can go is forward.”
“Gideon.” She sighed and stared up at the sky, the violet
fabric of her dress billowing out around her as the wind blew over us, then she
looked back at him. “Are you sure you’re okay to drive?”
“Yes, I’m sure. Whatever pain I had, it’s passed.” He smiled
to reassure her. “We should go before the others get restless.”
She lowered her eyes, but when he leaned in to kiss her, she
let him. She turned to go back to our motorhome, and as she walked past me, she
muttered, “I knew we should never travel on Friday the thirteenth. No good ever
comes of it.”
I’d waited until she’d gone around the corner to turn back to
Gideon, who attempted to give me the same reassuring smile he’d given my mom.
“We could go back,” I said. “There’s always a way. We’ve made
it on less before.”
“Not this time, darling.” He shook his head. “And there’s no
reason to. Leonid assured me there’d be a big payday here, and I’ve got no
reason to doubt him. We can make a go of it here.”
“As long as you’re sure we’ll be okay.”
“I haven’t steered you all wrong yet.” Gideon winked at me
then, but he was telling the truth. In the ten years that my mom and I had been
following him around the country, he’d always done the best he could by us.
I went back and got into the Winnebago with my mom and
Blossom. Within a couple minutes, Gideon had straightened his motorhome out,
and the caravan was heading back down the road. At the end of the bridge was a
large sign that read WELCOME TO CAUDRY, POPULATION 13,665.
As soon as we crossed the line into town, the air seemed even
colder than before. That’s when I realized the chill wasn’t coming from
outside—it was coming from within me.
Copyright ©
2016 by Amanda Hocking and reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Griffin.

Comments
Post a Comment