Read You Can't Come in Here! Online
Authors: P.J. Night
“About ten minutes ago.” Ryan grabbed a cookie from the package too. The elementary school bus got home before her middle school bus. Mom and Dad must have called just as Ryan let himself into the house. “There's a blizzard or something. They're going to call back.”
And just at that moment, the phone rang.
“Guess that's them.” Kelly hurried to the phone on her mother's desk in the far corner of the kitchen. Her mom referred to her desk as “Command Central.” In the middle sat a huge calendar with all their activities, and scattered about were school directories, recipes printed from the Internet, magazines she hadn't yet read, and
a whole mess of other papers. Kelly never understood what gave her mother the right to be on her case about cleaning her room when her desk was such a disaster.
“Hi,” Kelly said, sitting on the wooden desk chair.
“Kelly, honey, I'm so glad you're home,” her mother panted. She sounded strangely out of breath.
“Of course I'm home. Got to get ready for my party. Lots to do,” Kelly reminded her.
“Oh, Kels.” Her mother sighed. “Listen, about that. Daddy and I are stuck in Philadelphia.”
“Ryan told me.” She glanced above the desk at the enormous bulletin board covered with articles and downloads. Her mom, among a million other things, wrote a column for their weekly town paper called It Happened Here. It was about all the unimportant things masquerading as history that had happened in their little Vermont town since the French trappers first arrived. Kelly kept telling her mom no one cared. But the editors kept asking for columns. She guessed it gave the newspaper a reason to exist, because there was certainly no real news going on in her town. The bulletin board was like a mini history lesson, if anyone cared to read the columns, which she didn't. Kelly usually just read the photo captions while she was on the phone.
“It's snowing like crazy here. They canceled all flights out of the airport.” Her mom sounded tired. She'd been up since dawn.
“What are you going to do?”
“We thought of renting a car, but the weather report says the storm is heading up the East Coast. A big nor'easter. Should be in Vermont by nightfall. The roads will be a mess.” Kelly could hear her dad in the background, trying to tell her mom something. “The only sensible thing for us to do is to spend the night in a hotel here.”
“Oh. Okay.” Kelly had never stayed alone in the house overnight. She felt fine with it, though. She had babysat for little kids down the street, and that was no big deal. She could totally handle Ryan. Between the TV and his videos games, he'd stay out of her way. Besides, Paige and June were sleeping over tonight. An early birthday celebration. She'd have company.
“Daddy and I will leave first thing in the morning to get back home,” her mom promised. Kelly could hear the worry in her voice. “What, Dave? How can they not have rooms? Look, the meeting wasn't my brilliant idea. It's fine . . . whatever . . . anywhere . . .” Her mom argued with her dad in the background. They had a
company together, Authentic Vermont Blankets. Supposedly there was something about the sheep in their state that made superior wool for blanketsâor at least, that was what her parents advertised. They had flown to Philadelphia this morning to try to convince some big store to sell their wool blankets instead of Amish quilts.
Kelly peered at a photocopy of a news clipping on the bulletin board about a woman named Mary Owens. She had never noticed this one before. The picture showed a young woman wearing a mod 1960s minidress and tall white patent-leather boots. A one-of-a-kind homemade necklace was draped about her neck. She sat serenely on a sofa, a playful smile on her thin lips. A Christmas tree decorated with candy canes filled the space behind her.
Her mom sighed. “Your dad could only find us a room in some ramshackle motel.” Kelly could hear other voices and the muffled reverberations of loudspeaker announcements. She guessed they were still at the airport. “Kel, listen. I need you and Ryan to stay put. No going outside. And lock the doors.”
“Sure.” She studied the perfect swoosh of Mary's chestnut hair across her forehead. She wondered if her shoulder-length dark-brown hair could do that too. Doubtful.
“Chrissie is coming over at six,” her mom continued. “She's bringing a pizza for dinner.”
Kelly tore her gaze away from pretty Mary Owens. “Chrissie Cox? Why is she bringing us dinner?” Chrissie was her best friend Paige's older sister.
“Chrissie will be staying with you and Ryan tonight.”
“A babysitter?” Kelly cried. “You got us a babysitter? I'm way too old for a babysitter! I'm in middle school.”
“I know how old you are,” her mother said. “But I'm not leaving you and your brother overnight alone. It's not safe. Plus, a big storm is coming.”
“But Mom, we won't be alone,” Kelly reminded her. “Paige and June are coming for the sleepover.”
“Kelly, that can't happen tonight. Not without me or your dad there.”
“That's not fair! It's not my fault there's a storm. It's my birthday!” Kelly cried.
“No, it's not,” Ryan piped in behind her.
She shot him an evil glare. He crossed his eyes at her. “Real mature,” Kelly muttered.
“We'll move your birthday celebration to next weekend,” her mother said. “Besides, your birthday is really on Tuesday,” she rationalized, as if Kelly didn't know
when it was. “So next Friday will work just as well.”
Kelly groaned. Typical of her mother. She always moved holidays to suit her own schedule. They often had Thanksgiving on a Sunday so her mother's whole family could drive in, and Easter on a Saturday so they didn't have to fight the weekend traffic home from Boston.
“Butâ” She had planned so many great things for tonight.
“No buts, Kelly. I'm counting on you. I'll call back when Chrissie gets there,” her mom said. “Dad and I need to find this motel before the roads become impassable.”
“Okay.” She sighed. She wasn't happy, but she didn't have a choice. She knew that. No sleepover. She passed the phone to Ryan. As he babbled about some science project in school with pennies and sugar water, Kelly took a closer look at Mary Owens. The caption under the picture said the photo had been snapped at a Christmas party right before her untimely death.
Kelly stood on the chair and unpinned the article. She began reading from the beginning. All the while, she had the strangest feeling that the gaze of the young woman in the picture was fixed on her. Wanting her to know what had happened. Mary's story was so tragic.
Killed in a freak avalanche. Suffocated under the weight of the snow.
Staring into her soulful eyes, Kelly wondered what it felt like, alone, buried under all that whiteness.
“Mom said we should watch the Weather Channel.” Ryan had hung up the phone and was standing behind her. “What's that?”
“One of Mom's articles. Scary stuff.” She pinned it back onto the bulletin board before he could reach for it. “I'm going to my room.” She glanced out the window over the sink. The sky remained its usual winter gray. Thick clouds but no storm.
All this craziness over nothing,
she thought.
I've been looking forward to this sleepover all week, and now I have to sit here with a babysitter, totally bored.
She had no idea of the horrors that lay ahead.
A lifelong night owl,
P.J. Night
often works furiously into the wee hours of the
morning, writing down spooky tales and dreaming up new stories of the supernatural and
otherworldly. Although P. J.'s whereabouts are unknown at this time, we suspect
the author lives in a drafty, old mansion where the floorboards creak when no one is
there and the flickering candlelight creates shadows that creep along the walls. We
truly wish we could tell you more, but we've been sworn to keep P. J.'s
identity a secret . . . and it's a secret we will take to our
graves!
Simon & Schuster, New York
Cover art by Aly Turner
© 2012 by Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Ages 8â12
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
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Copyright © 2011 by Simon & Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
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YOU'RE INVITED TO A CREEPOVER is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Text by Michael Teitelbaum
ISBN 978-1-4424-2095-3
ISBN 978-1-4424-2157-8 (eBook)
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 201047765