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All the Pretty Dead Girls Part 9

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"The wounds of our Lord."

It was Maddie, whispering behind him. Pierre glanced around to see her make the sign of the cross and drop to her knees. "It's a miracle! Praise Jesus!" She grabbed at her husband's hand. "Pray with me, Pierre!"

He pulled his hand away from her, and turned to his sons. They were standing in the doorway, their mouths open. "Didn't you hear me? Call an ambulance!" Still, they just stood there. "Now!" "Now!"

Frankie turned and disappeared down the hallway again.

"Is-is Bernie all right?" Michael stuttered.

Pierre couldn't answer. He turned back to his daughter, placing his hand on her forehead. "How did this happen?" he asked her. "Did you cut yourself?" He forced himself to look at the wounds. They did not appear deep, but the blood was fresh and flowing freely.

"She spoke to me, Papa." Bernadette's face was wreathed in smiles. "She told me that I am blessed."

He grabbed a shirt near the foot of her bed and began wrapping Bernadette's hand, trying to stop the blood.

"No!" Maddie pushed him away. "Don't!"

"Are you crazy? She'll bleed to death!"

Bernadette looked up at him serenely. "No, Papa, it's a miracle."

Maddie began mumbling, "Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you..." Hail Mary. Hail Mary.

In the distance, Pierre heard a siren.

For the first time in a very long time, he started to pray.

17.

It was three days after Bonnie Warner's disappearance that Sue once again saw the face at the upper window.

And just as before, the face was screaming.

All of her books fell to the sidewalk as Sue stared up at the window, transfixed.

"No," she mumbled. "It can't be..."

A terrible thought entered her mind. Was the face always there? Always screaming? Maybe it was-because until now, Sue hadn't had the courage to look up at the window again. Every day as she'd left her dorm, she'd studiously kept her eyes averted, and it would be the same when she returned.

But today, on her way back to the dorm from cla.s.s, when life on campus was just starting to return to normal after the scare of Bonnie's disappearance, Sue had summoned the nerve to look up.

And there, from that same third floor window, she saw a girl screaming as if in mortal terror.

"Malika!" Sue shouted, spotting her roommate across the yard. "Come here!"

"What is it?"

"Look up at that window! On the third floor!"

Malika turned around and peered upward. "Which window?"

"The one where-"

Sue's words trailed off. The face was no longer there.

"Where what?" Malika was asking.

Sue leveled her eyes at her. "This is the second time I've seen a girl at that window, and she's always screaming."

Malika grinned. "So, some weird chick is s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g around."

"No." Sue shook her head. "It's not."

"It's not, huh? So what is it, a ghost?"

"I know it sounds crazy," Sue said, trying to laugh.

"Sweetie, you are still jumpy about Little Miss Bonnie," Malika said. "Everybody is. Just let it go."

Sue let out a long sigh and looked up again at the window. Just a dim darkness behind the gla.s.s. Nothing there.

Nothing behind the window of the room I was somehow convinced was my mother's.

Maybe Malika was right. Bonnie's disappearance had indeed unsettled her. She kept remembering that dream she'd had the night Bonnie disappeared-of a blond girl on a bicycle. The coincidence unnerved her.

For three days, everywhere Sue went, someone was talking about Bonnie. The story of the missing girl and the bicycle covered with blood had made the national news and become the buzz of the campus.

Given Wilbourne's rather prim reputation, of course, the story was almost always discussed in a hushed whisper, and few of the faculty would address it directly. The vast majority of the students had known Bonnie Warner only by sight, if that. Those who actually knew her from either having had a cla.s.s with her or from living on her floor at Bentley Hall were-for the last few days anyway-minor celebrities on campus. Bonnie apparently hadn't been an outgoing girl, preferring to spend her time in her room studying or surfing the Internet. There were a couple of girls-Tish Lewis, for example-who knew her better than the rest, but even they didn't know a whole lot about her. She'd had a Brooklyn accent so thick you could only cut it with a meat cleaver, and was on scholarship. But other than that, no one really knew much about her, except that "she'd seemed nice."

Driving the talk, of course, was an undercurrent of fear, an unspoken terror that someone was out there, watching the campus, stalking them...There were still bloodstains on the road-blood that had been identified as Bonnie's. So much of it had been spilled that police didn't think she could possibly be still alive. But there was no trace of her body anywhere. That made the whole thing even creepier.

Malika put her arm around Sue. "Come on," she said kindly. "Let's go to the caf and get you some food. You are trembling, baby."

Sue agreed to be led away from Bentley Hall. She didn't dare look back up at the third-floor window again. She wondered if she ever would.

But at the cafeteria, Sue's mind wasn't on food, Even as she grabbed a tray and took her place in the line, she was thinking back to a girl she'd known at Stowe. After the winter break of her soph.o.m.ore year, Sue had found out that one of her fellow students had been killed in a weird skiing accident. There followed a terrified hush over the girls at Stowe, much like that which had fallen over the girls of Wilbourne. Everyone talked in whispers, just as they were doing now here in the caf, as if speaking in normal tones would somehow be disrespectful to the dead girl.

Her name was Lori Powers, Sue remembered with a jolt, Sue remembered with a jolt, and I didn't like her very much, and my first thought when I heard she was dead was "Good!" and I didn't like her very much, and my first thought when I heard she was dead was "Good!"

Lori had been a loudmouth, always bragging and name-dropping. Her father was a playwright-musicals, and he'd had several shows on Broadway at the time. Lori had long thick brown hair and gray eyes, but was inclined to be over-weight and she talked several decibels louder than she needed to. Sue made a point out of avoiding Lori as much as she possibly could, but she remembered now-she had forgotten-that on their last day of school before winter break, she'd found herself in an argument with Lori.

"Watch where you're going, you clumsy b.i.t.c.h!" Lori had shouted at her as Sue b.u.mped into her in the hallway. Lori's books had gone flying. Sue instinctively knelt to help her retrieve the books-but something had snapped inside her, and she started shouting back at her.

"If anyone's a b.i.t.c.h around here, it's you, Miss Lori Powers!" Sue stood, refusing to help any longer. "You can take your att.i.tude and loud mouth and go f.u.c.k yourself!"

The girls who witnessed this little scene were shocked. Sue was no demure little thing-far from it-but such language was out of character. She could never explain her rage in that moment. Lori, like many a bully, had no response when confronted, just gathered up her books, her face red, her eyes filled with tears. Sue had just stood there, arms akimbo, glaring at her, until Lori hurried out the doors of the school.

A few days later, she skied headfirst into a tree and died.

That's weird, Sue thought as she placed a gla.s.s of orange juice on her tray. Sue thought as she placed a gla.s.s of orange juice on her tray. Lori Powers! I haven't thought about her in years. Poor thing. I never got to apologize to her. Lori Powers! I haven't thought about her in years. Poor thing. I never got to apologize to her.

She added a bowl of Cheerios and another cup of coffee to her tray, and headed out to the eating area.

She sat at the end of a table where three girls were huddled. They glanced over at her before going back to their conversation as if she wasn't even there. Sue shrugged. She didn't recognize any of the girls anyway. And they're probably just gossiping about poor Bonnie Warner. And they're probably just gossiping about poor Bonnie Warner.

Malika settled her tray across from her and gave her a bright smile. She was just having coffee and a granola bar.

"What's your first cla.s.s this morning?" she asked.

Sue opened her backpack and took out one of her textbooks. The Sacred Feminine, The Sacred Feminine, written by her instructor, Dr. Marshall. "Theory of Religion," she told Malika. "This is a really fascinating book." written by her instructor, Dr. Marshall. "Theory of Religion," she told Malika. "This is a really fascinating book."

"I know," Malika said. "I've read it. I had Dr. Marshall. She's awesome,"

Sue nodded. "Yes, I like her very much."

In fact, of all her teachers, Dr. Marshall was the warmest and most interesting. Dr. Lloyd was a dreary droner in English Comp, and Dr. Adamson in Biology was a spitter. She'd sat three rows back from the front and still she'd gotten sprayed. The rest were so dull that she hadn't yet memorized their names.

Malika's phone twirped from inside her backpack. She groaned. "My parents have been calling every day," she said, taking it out and switching the ringer to vibrate. "Ever since they heard about Bonnie. Just to make sure I'm okay."

Sue smiled. Her grandparents hadn't called. She was surprised-and both relieved and disappointed at the same time. Disappointed because, after all, it would simply show that they cared-but maybe they hadn't heard about it, as unlikely as that seemed. But relief was greater than disappointment, because Sue feared their reaction. They might make me come home, They might make me come home, she thought. she thought.

Maybe I ought to call and tell them, and a.s.sure them there's no need to worry, Sue mused as she spooned some Cheerios into her mouth. Sue mused as she spooned some Cheerios into her mouth. No, why wake a sleeping dog? No, why wake a sleeping dog?

When she was about seven years old, her grandfather, the esteemed lawyer, had been involved in a case with a steel company battling its union. The union, her grandfather had said many times over dinner, was incredibly corrupt-so any notion that they were interested in the welfare of their members was ludicrous. Union leaders, he insisted, were only interested in money and power, and by G.o.d, he was going to break the stranglehold the union had over his client. As the battle went on, things kept getting uglier and uglier, until one day the FBI had shown up at her grandfather's office.

Her grandparents didn't tell her anything at first, but she'd noticed the armed guards outside their apartment.

"That horrible union boss has apparently threatened us," her grandmother told her grimly one morning over breakfast. "That's how these thugs operate. They can't get what they want by civilized means, so they threaten with violence. So, I know it's going to be rather, well, embarra.s.sing embarra.s.sing for you, but your grandfather has hired a bodyguard to go with you everywhere-school, the park-anytime you leave this apartment, he's going to go with you to make sure no one takes you from us." for you, but your grandfather has hired a bodyguard to go with you everywhere-school, the park-anytime you leave this apartment, he's going to go with you to make sure no one takes you from us."

At first, Sue had thought it was kind of cool to have a bodyguard, but as the weeks pa.s.sed, it began to annoy her. None of the other girls had one, and while it seemed to mark her as special at first, soon it made her stand out. That big hulking guy-he was named Sam Puglisi-was always there, even during recess in the playground as they played kick-the-can or Red Rover. If she went off to the swings or monkey bars by herself, Sam always followed, watching her. One day, she heard one of the other girls-Melissa Hardwick-make a snide remark about "Susie and her trained monkey," and the rest of the girls laughed. As soon as Sue got home that day, she'd asked her grandmother how much longer she had to keep Sam.

"Oh, Susie." Gran had sighed, a hand going to the rope of pearls at her neck. "Until this whole thing is over, I'm afraid. I probably shouldn't tell you this, but those horrible people specifically threatened you you. You're all we have, dear, and we have to keep you safe."

"But why can't Granpa just give them what they want?"

"Susan!" Gran's face went white beneath her makeup. "You mustn't think that way-ever. We cannot give in to this kind of behavior, ever ever. When monsters like this threaten you, you cannot back down-because then they will win, and these kinds of tactics are despicable. You're very precious to us, darling, you know that, but if your grandfather backs down, if he gives in to this, he'd have to give up his practice. Because then bad people like this union boss would know all they had to do to beat him was threaten his family and he'd back down." She forced a smile on her face. "Is Sam so awful that you don't want him around you?"

"No." She did like Sam. He teased her and made her laugh, called her "his other little girl" because he had a daughter her age at home. "But the other kids-they make fun of me."

"The next time they do, you tell those nasty little girls that you have to have a bodyguard because your grandfather is doing important work." She sniffed. "Much more important work than any of their their fathers are doing." Gran poured herself a gla.s.s of sherry with a shaking hand. "Now, run along and do your homework." fathers are doing." Gran poured herself a gla.s.s of sherry with a shaking hand. "Now, run along and do your homework."

Melissa Hardwick is just mean, Sue thought as she went to her room. Sue thought as she went to her room. The next time I see her I am going to tell her so. Granpa is doing important work, and I have a bodyguard so he can keep doing his work-and if she keeps being mean to me, I'll have to do something about it. Like pull her hair. The next time I see her I am going to tell her so. Granpa is doing important work, and I have a bodyguard so he can keep doing his work-and if she keeps being mean to me, I'll have to do something about it. Like pull her hair.

But Melissa Hardwick wasn't in school the next day, or the next. She was sick, their teacher said, and they all had to pray for her to get better. But Melissa never came back to school. She died-some weird childhood disease that just seemed to take her without hardly a warning. They didn't explain it in school-and Sue's grandparents had never discussed it.

But her grandfather won the case, and one day the guards were gone.

Sue looked around the caf and shivered.

Why had she suddenly remembered both Lori Powers and Melissa Hardwick?

They were dead girls. Just like Bonnie Warner.

18.

All day long, Sue continued to feel uneasy. She took notes in her cla.s.ses and did her best to pay attention to the lectures-it was easiest with Dr. Marshall, who made them laugh and told them stories about the days when the female divine was worshiped instead of denigrated-but Sue's thoughts kept drifting back to Bonnie. And Lori. And Melissa.

Dead girls.

She knew there was no way she could avoid looking up at that window again when she returned to Bentley Hall.

It was turning cool. Summer ended early up here, Sue discovered. The sun was low in the pink sky, drifting behind a cloud cover growing increasingly heavy. It might even rain. In the air hung the tart fragrance of the apple orchards nearby. Sue cast her eyes toward Bentley Hall in the distance.

She'll be there, she told herself. she told herself.

When she got close enough, she lifted her eyes to the window.

The girl behind the gla.s.s was screaming again, her silent plea for help.

Sue froze. This time she refused to look away. She stood her ground and overcame her fear and studied the face. It was a girl, all right, a young girl about her age, and her mouth was wide open, and screaming. This was no joke. She was terrified.

Yet all around her on the sidewalk, girls pa.s.sed Sue without noticing, talking and laughing among themselves.

Can't they see her? Am I crazy? What's wrong with everyone? Can't anyone hear her inside the dorm?

In that one flicker of her eyes away from the window, the face disappeared.

Sue took a deep breath. She counted the windows. One, two, three, four-fifth window from the left side of the building, on the third floor. window from the left side of the building, on the third floor.

She stood there for a moment, willing her heart to stop racing, taking deep breaths as she collected herself.

I'm going up there, Sue decided, Sue decided, and get to the bottom of this. and get to the bottom of this.

She hurried through the front doors, almost colliding with a squat brunette carrying an armload of books, bringing memories of Lori Powers back to her once again. Sue mumbled, "Excuse me," and gave the girl a weak smile before heading for the elevator. She hopped inside and pressed 3. Her heart raced as the elevator made its creaky ascent. When the doors slid open, Sue looked around. It seemed the floor was deserted. With a deep breath, she stepped off the elevator.

The third floor looked almost exactly like the second, an identical lounge across from the elevators. Except the lounge was deserted, as was the hallway in each direction. Never had Sue seen her own floor so still and quiet.

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All the Pretty Dead Girls Part 9 summary

You're reading All the Pretty Dead Girls. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): John Manning. Already has 639 views.

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