the paper basket down on the bench next to Isobelâs things. âI think heâs trying to cheer you up. You gotta cut him a break, though. He doesnât know anything about, yâknow . . . anything.â
Isobel knew Gwen meant Baltimore. And Varen. And her.
Even though Isobel didnât quite get Mikeyâs allure, she was glad he and Gwen had started dating. Or pseudo-dating or . . . whatever was up with them. Mikeyâs added presence to Isobel and Gwenâs locker run-ins and lunch breaks gave Isobel an excuse not to talk about things that fell into the âanythingâ category Gwen had mentioned. And a reason for Gwen to continue keeping her questions to herself. Aside from that, though, and perhaps most important of all, Isobel could tell Gwen was falling for the guy.
The tipping point, she knew, had been the morning Mikey had flown up to Baltimore to get GwenâJanuary nineteenth, the same morning an anonymous stranger had dropped Isobel off, soaking wet and half-dead, at the cityâs university hospital.
The same morning sheâd flat-lined.
Edgar Allan Poeâs birthday.
A week later Isobel had come home with her family. A week after that, sheâd returned to school to learn through Gwen, during their initial and only private locker visit since Isobelâs literal reintegration into reality, that Mikey had used money from a pizza delivery job to buy his plane ticket. Since Gwen had suffered a fractured arm at the hands of Reynolds while trying to help Isobel in the cemetery, the task of making the eleven-hour return drive in her Cadillac had fallen to Mikey as well. According to Gwen, however, heâd made the trek in under eight. Having ridden with him the night of the Grim Facade, Isobel didnât find that hard to believe. At all.
In addition to filling Isobel in on the details of her return, Gwen had also recounted how Reynolds had run from the police after Isobel had shut him out of the dreamworld. The responding officers, Gwen had said, had seemed determined to detain anyone involved in the scuffle, even if that someone happened to be the Poe Toaster himself.
No one had caught him, though. Heâd vanished, like he did every year, and Gwen had used the distraction of his flight to take refuge behind the headstone heâd flung her against. After that, sheâd made her own escape by slipping into the crowd of onlookers.
Because of the overshadowing story that the Baltimore Ravens had lost the finals, missing out on their Super Bowl ticket, the only mention of the Poe Toaster ordeal in the press had been how a few spectators had scaled the cemetery walls. Again.
And while Gwenâs parents (who thought Gwen had headed to New York to meet up with her cousins for a concert) had bought their daughterâs carefully constructed storyâone that included a mosh-pit mishapâIsobelâs parents had perceived much more of the truth.
Though they knew nothing of Isobelâs trip to the graveyard, Gwenâs involvement, or how everything tied to Poe, Isobelâs mom and dad knew enough to guess that she had gone to the city looking for Varen.
Her mother and father had interrogated her a thousand times over as a result. In each instance, Isobel had regurgitated the lie that she remembered nothing past the point of sitting down to dinner at a restaurant with her father.
No, she didnât know whose car their Baltimore waitress had seen her climb into. No, she didnât remember where the driver had taken her or why. No, she didnât know who had dropped her off at the hospital. No, she wasnât faking, and no, she wasnât lying. No. No. No.
Thankfully, Isobelâs psychologist, Dr. Robinson, had instructed her parents to stop the barrage of questions, to carry on with day-to-day life and wait for the memories to resurface on their own.
In truth, Isobel would never forget what had happened. Ever.
Bloodred