house was safe before we had him here.”
That was smart. Michael was a really good father, I realized. “He’s coming tomorrow?”
Michael nodded, and part of me felt happy to imagine Dan here, exploring and just adding one more bit of life to the empty old house.
We ate in silence for a few minutes, the house emitting creaks and groans here and there as the lawn outside the windowpanes in the back door went from green to taupe to black with the fading light of the sun. As we finished up, I started to relax a little bit. The house felt like a whole world apart from everything I’d known before, its own universe of worn fabric, ruined wallpaper and creaky old floors. Even with a Tucker here, the place felt comforting in some way, and despite my need to pull together some funds and jumpstart my life in New York again, I found myself taking a deep breath and relaxing a little bit.
“So,” Michael said as we sat in relative silence, eating. “Finance, huh? Has that always been your calling?”
I thought about that. Did I have a calling? “Honestly? No. I wanted a job that would pay well. I knew I wanted to live in a big city, to make my own way, and finance seemed appropriate since math and numbers had always come easily to me.”
He nodded, his fork poised in the air as his eyes held mine. “And if you hadn’t had to think about money, if you could have chosen anything, what would you have done, Addison?”
“Call me Addie, please.”
“Okay. What would you do if you could do anything, Addie?” His head tilted slightly to the side, and I realized he was really listening, waiting for my answer. When was the last time I’d felt that kind of rapt attention from Luke? Maybe never. Our lives were about his life, mostly.
I let my mind roll back to dreams I’d had as a kid, before I knew how important money was going to be in my life. “I used to want to be a decorator. Or an interior designer.” It sounded so vapid to me now. “Silly.”
Michael was still watching me intently. “Why is that silly? That’s a real job. And not many people have the kind of foresight to know what works together in a space. I definitely don’t.”
I lifted a shoulder, suddenly a little uncomfortable at his validation of my one-time dream. I had dismissed it, set it away from me as unworthy of my lofty city goals. I knew there were interior designers in big cities, but I had never been sure how to approach that, how I would build clientele, get my footing. I didn’t think that kind of job came with the same starting salary as mergers and acquisitions work. “It just always seemed insubstantial to me, I guess. Like it would be something fun. Not work.”
“That sounds like the perfect kind of work to me.” He smiled at me, his eyes lingering on my face, dropping from my eyes to my lips for a split second before suddenly clearing his throat and scooting his chair back from the table to clear his dish.
As I carried my plate to the sink, considering his statement, a shrill scream came from somewhere above us and my heart skittered to a halt and then took off at a gallop inside my chest.
What. The hell. Was that?
11
Old Houses and Unearthly Screams
Michael
It wasn’t like me to believe in things I couldn’t see or touch, but I was beginning to think maybe Daniel and his friends were right. This place was haunted.
The scream that came from upstairs had not been human, that much was sure. And it seemed to reverberate inside the walls long after the actual noise had faded back into the gauzy silence of the place. Addie was frozen over the sink, her eyes huge as she stared at me, and I wished I could stand up and offer some comfort.
Don’t worry, I’d say. These old houses are often plagued by sub-human screeches that make your skin crawl right off your bones. Part of their charm. Nothing to worry about.
But I didn’t know what the noise had been, and it had been creepy as fuck. My skin was prickled in gooseflesh and for a second my mind had screamed too, telling me to run.
Once silence had settled again, I tried to appear calm. Brave. I was about to address the sound we’d heard when another noise crashed