Bad Habits: A Dark Anthology - Yolanda Olson Page 0,29
front of her, nailing down her wayward scapular, and rolled on her feet. “The car is just over there.” She aimed her chin in the direction across the street, then eyed my small black suitcase. “Is that the only luggage you have, child?” No censor, just observation.
“Yes, Sister.”
“Very well then,” she said in a very pleasant but resolute tone. We both followed her to the stop light and crosswalk and waited for the crossing sign to blink. “I trust your Mother Superior explained everything to you about the Blessings of Hope and our small parish. Did you have any questions?”
On my way here, after growing bored of looking at nothing but highway, I had read all the information in the packet Mother Margret had given me. A few glorified bake sales and an auction were what I was volunteered for. There was a small note about spending an hour a day with any one of the homeless people who Trevorstone Parish fed on a nightly basis, the only time they opened their doors to the outside.
“No, not really,” I answered her.
“Very well. Sister Abigail will be the one you will report to every morning and night,” she gestured absently at the beady-eyed woman beside us.
Ah. The “Gail” Mother Margret mentioned. Wonderful.
Just then, a gust of wind blew, taking my veil and headpiece along with it. Long strands of blonde hair whipped across my face, stinging like a thousand bees. “Drat!” I turned around and watched as my veil danced on the sidewalk behind me, only to lift up into the air to hitch a ride on a truck that passed by.
“Well, there goes that.” I turned back around to see the two Sisters staring at me. It wasn’t a good stare. Whatever they saw there was anything but good.
When the automated voice of the cross walk reminded them to get going, they shook themselves, and we crossed the street, me trying to tame my hair with one hand while carrying my luggage with the other.
When we got to the car—just an ordinary sedan, not too new, not too old—Sister Hazel took the driver’s side and gestured to the back seat. “In you go, child.”
With a sigh, I climbed in. I finger-combed my crazy hair and attempted to braid it into a long tail as the Sister drove us through the quiet streets of Trevorstone.
Aside from the aloof welcome I’d received, I was still quite excited. Trevorstone was indeed a tiny town, and I assumed the street where the bus dropped me off was the only busy place in the whole town. We passed no shops or houses, just endless fields of wheat, until I finally saw some evidence of life. A gas station, a bank, and a small strip mall. At the light, we turned left, and before I knew it, we’d arrived.
The convent was small and only one-story, pretty much just a slab of concrete with a red roof. Connected at the side was the church and parish office. As far as size, the whole place was less than a tenth of Our Lady of Heavenly Hope’s massive grounds.
I grabbed my luggage and exited the car, following the Sisters to a side door. The sun was just setting, and the night was cool upon my head, reminding me that my hair was still uncovered. As soon as I thought it, Sister Hazel had me sitting in a chair in the entryway once we were inside while she went to a small closet.
“Here,” she said, rummaging through something there. “Put this on for now. You can return it once you’ve had a chance to unpack.”
She handed me a plain gray veil, and I put it on quickly, adjusting the tail of my braid as best as I could.
Satisfied with this, she nodded, then whispered something to Beady-eyes, and told me to follow. Sister Abigail went on ahead in an opposite direction, while Sister Hazel led me down a hall, to where I hoped my room would be. I was in no hurry to meet the others.
At last we stopped at the end of the dark hallway that smelled faintly medicinal. Maybe this place had once been a clinic. The room was already open, but dark, until she turned on the light switch. A single bed, a night table, and a narrow wardrobe were the only things in the room. It was perfect. More importantly, it was a room for one person.