Page 111 of Credence
I liked them.
The empty seat next to me weighs heavy, and I wish Jake was here. He offered, didnât he? I had to open my big mouth and refuse.
I havenât eaten much since I arrived, either. The food here tastes different.
âI spoke to him on the phone while you were there,â Mirai tells me. âYour uncle, I mean. I was afraid heâd be a jerk.â She laughs a little. âHe had a real attitude.â
I smile to myself, looking back out the window. âYeah, he does,â I whisper.
But Iâm full of pride. I like him that way.
âI invited them,â she says. âI offered to bring them out.â
âTheyâll never leave Colorado.â
Noah, maybe. Jake, unwillingly. And Kalebâ¦I canât see him anywhere else.
My breathing turns ragged as I think about what time it is there and what theyâre probably doing right now. Noah would be off doing his test runs, wasting way more time than he was allowed, and Jake will yell at him when he gets back before ordering him inside to help me with lunchâ¦
But no. I drop my eyes.
Iâm not in the kitchen. Noah will make lunch himself.
; Or run to town for cheeseburgers.
I wonder if he got that stain off the seat. Knowing Noah, he just left it. Heâs so lazy about some things.
âThe reverend will speak first,â Mirai speaks up, âfollowed by me, George Palmer, Cassidy Lee, and then Delmont Williams.â
I sit back in my seat and look out the front windshield, past the driver, to see the hearse carrying my parents. First to the funeral. Then to the crematorium.
My throat swells.
âThe reverend will then ask if anyone else would like to say something,â she continues in a slow, soft voice. âIf you decide you want to speak, feel free to go ahead then, okay?â
Her voice is like sheâs explaining this to a child. Like sheâs afraid Iâll wake up screaming if sheâs too loud.
âYou donât have to do that,â I tell her. âYou donât have to talk like that. Iâm not asleep.â
She stares at me, drawing in a deep breath as her eyes start to glisten. And then she turns away, so I wonât see.
âDo you remember your night terrors?â she asks, staring out the window. âWe talked about them when you were little.â
They came back in Colorado. I havenât told her that, and I wonât.
âIt happened every night,â she explains. âWe would wake you up, stop your screaming, and then put you back to sleep.â
I vaguely remember it. I was so young.
She swallows. âOne night, I just waited for you to fall asleep,â she says, âand I crawled in next to you.â
She looks back at me.
âNothing. No terrors,â she tells me. âAnd the next night, the same thing. No terrors when I slept with you.â
My chin trembles, and I clench my jaw to stop it.