Tommy Nightmare (Jenny Pox #2)

Tommy Nightmare (Jenny Pox #2) Read Free Page B

Book: Tommy Nightmare (Jenny Pox #2) Read Free
Author: JL Bryan
Tags: Horror, Paranormal, Southern, Plague
Ads: Link
weed-and-dirt
front yard. He watched Mrs. Tanner step down off the front porch
and pull on a pair of boots.
    A station wagon trundled up the front drive.
Mrs. Tanner raced toward it, waving her arms. She leaned in at the
driver’s side, and the driver immediately turned out the
headlights.
    Mrs. Tanner climbed into the back seat of the
station wagon.
    Tommy watched it drive along the rutted dirt
track, towards the stables and barns, then around the corner of the
house and out of sight.
    Tommy pulled on a shirt and picked up his
shoes. He followed after Mrs. Tanner, avoiding the squeaky spots in
the hall, and the third and seventh step. She’d left the front door
slightly ajar, so he did, too.
    Tommy walked in the direction they’d gone,
keeping himself to the shadows of the farm buildings as much as he
could. The moon was bright overhead, leaving too little
darkness.
    The station wagon was parked next to the
stable, with nobody inside. A crucifix hung from the rearview
mirror. Tommy tracked them up to the church, where the barn door
stood half open. Tommy circled around the barn, picked one of the
knotholes on the side, and looked through.
    Mrs. Tanner stood next to the pine casket,
which was elevated on a pair of sawhorses. There were two other
people with her. One was a very heavyset Mexican-looking woman in a
loud dress, with bright scarves nested around her throat. She was
shaking her head while Mrs. Tanner talked in a low voice.
    The other person was the most beautiful girl
Tommy had ever seen. She had deep, rich brown eyes and braided
black hair, with skin that reminded him of butterscotch. She was
about a year or two older than Tommy, dressed in jeans and a black
T-shirt with a glittering butterfly on the front. She was chewing a
giant pink wad of bubble gum.
    “You bring us here, all the way out here,”
the older lady was saying to Mrs. Tanner, “All this sneaking
around, and you have only twenty dollars for pay?”
    “There’s more,” Mrs. Tanner whispered. “A lot
more. The old man told me. I just need to find out where. Then I
can pay your fee.”
    “What if he don’t really have the money?”
    “He bragged about it. He said his son—my
husband—had no idea. I need that money.”
    “You going to keep for yourself?” the lady
asked. “No telling you husband?”
    “That’s between us,” Mrs. Tanner said. “I
wiped this old man’s ass for the last four years. I want to get
paid.”
    The hefty lady sighed and eased herself down
onto one of Mr. Tanner’s homemade pews. She spoke in Spanish to the
younger girl. The girl blew a big pink bubble and shrugged.
    “How much money?” the older Mexican lady
asked.
    “Lots,” Mrs. Tanner said. “Ten, fifteen
thousand.”
    “You pay one thousand,” the lady said.
    “That’s too much!” Mrs. Tanner said.
    “Maybe you find the dead man’s money
yourself. Come on, Esmeralda. This lady is crazy.”
    The girl shrugged and started for the open
door.
    “Wait!” Mrs. Tanner said. “Wait. Okay. If you
can really do what they say, and you find the money, I’ll pay you
a…a thousand dollars.” She almost choked on the words.
    “Good.” The hefty lady pushed herself to her
feet and approached the casket. “Open,” she said.
    Mrs. Tanner took a deep breath. She lifted
the lid of the cheap coffin and slid it to one side. The big lady
looked inside the casket and curled her nose.
    “How long?”
    “About two days now,” Mrs. Tanner said.
    “Is ripe.” She waved a hand in front of her
face.
    “Well, that happens,” Mrs. Tanner said. “Mr.
Tanner doesn’t believe in embalming.”
    The hefty lady sighed. “Esmeralda.”
    The girl turned to face them, and she pouted.
She said something in Spanish. Tommy couldn’t follow it, but from
her tone and expression, she was obviously complaining.
    The older lady—the girl’s mother, Tommy was
guessing—snapped at her. The girl sighed and trudged over to the
casket. She pinched her nose with one hand.

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