After a few hours, I grew bored and tired of being in the dark. I wondered what Cassi and Vega were doing right then. Probably eating snacks and watching movies and having a great time that in no way involved worrying that every moment might be their last.
I snapped open the curtains, the ones that looked out onto our backyards, and let in a familiar stream of moonlight that made the room seem bright.
I spent some time picking out the stars of the Big Dipper. Technically the Big Dipper isn’t a constellation but an asterism, which means it’s too small to be a constellation itself. It’s actually part of the Ursa Major constellation, but most people just like to point out that it looks like a giant pan. It’s the one thing besides the moon that Tripp can consistently pick out in the night sky, so I don’t bother to argue with him about it.
Then I got bored with the Big Dipper, too, so I opened my window and spent some time harassing Comet through the screen.
“Comet!” I called softly.
He stopped sniffing and perked up, one ear lifted higher than the other as he tried to figure out where the noise had come from.
“Hey! Comet!” A little louder.
He hopped in a circle, still trying to find me.
“Over here, boy!” Louder still, and I added some smoochy noises for good measure.
He gave a confused look to the eaves, where he was accustomed to seeing me, and then spun in a circle again.
“Keep spinning, you shoe-eating mutt,” I mumbled, and that, of all things, was what finally made him find me. It was, apparently, the worst possible dog torture to be able to see your master but not get to him. Comet ran to the fence and leaped and leaped at it, bouncing off with his front paws and spinning in circle after circle, panting and whining. He was in a real state.
“Yeah, well, it’s what you get, eating my shoe like that,” I whispered out at him. “I hope all that spinning makes you queasy so I can have my shoe back.”
As if he understood exactly what I was saying, he turned, bent his head, hunched his back, and barfed up what remained of my shoe. Then he looked at me and wagged his tail proudly. My shoe lay in the grass, all slimy and covered with sludgy brown dog food.
“You can keep it,” I said, and shut the window.
I was about to pull the curtains closed when I saw movement out of the corner of my eye. Of course! It was nighttime, the time Mr. Death usually headed out to his place of eternal unrest. I ducked below the windowsill and waited for him to pass by.
I counted to fifty and raised my head.
And there he was, his face right on the other side of the glass, staring in at me with his evil beady eyes.
“Yow!” I yelled, startled, and crab-walked backward until I ran into the bed. I scrambled under the bed and let the dust ruffle block my view of the window while I tried to get the panic to subside.
After a few seconds, I lifted the tiniest corner of the dust ruffle and peeped out. Mr. Death rubbed his jaw a few times and then turned and walked off, toward the trees, where he always disappeared. I scrambled back to the window, watching him as he plunged through the thicket, a box under one arm and a bag clutched in his other hand.
At first I just watched the tree line where he’d been, half expecting him to pop out at me again. But when he didn’t, I used the opportunity to explore a little bit.
The house seemed extra creaky around me, and even though I couldn’t see anything but shadows, I was too afraid to turn a light on. What if he came back? What if the darkness was cloaking something terrible, like an embalming table for a kitchen table or a coffin for a couch? What if I turned on the lights only to find something grisly?
I moved down the hallway and toward the kitchen on my tiptoes. As I got closer, I could hear the hum of the refrigerator. Which was good because I was starving.
The kitchen smelled like lemon cleaner, and the carpet gave way to slick linoleum. I tried to make out objects by their shapes—a toaster, a blender, a microwave.
I gripped the handle of the refrigerator.
What if I opened it up and there was nothing but faces lined up on the shelves in plastic containers? Did zombies save leftovers? It would seem reasonable that leftover faces would need to be refrigerated, so if Tripp was right about Mr. Death, I was about to be in for a face full of horror.
But I was so hungry.
And, besides, I was kind of curious what a face in a plastic container might look like. Would it look like when Tripp smushes his face against the car window?
I took a deep breath to steady myself, paused for a brief second, then yanked open the refrigerator door with a primal scream.
“Aiiiiieeeee!”
I stopped short.
Oh.
No faces.
Plenty of plastic containers, yes. Some bottles of soda. A cardboard box like the kind you get when you order takeout Chinese food. Ketchup, mustard, mayo. The usual. What kind of crummy zombie had such a boring refrigerator? There is nothing terrifying about pork fried rice.
On the middle shelf sat a plate with a sandwich on it, along with some raw carrots and grapes, a little bag of chips, and a note that read:
Just eat it, kid.
I reached for the plate greedily, but my hand stopped midway into the refrigerator. Maybe this was a trick. Maybe he wanted me to eat it because it was poisoned. Maybe I’d eat it and morph into a zombie like him. Wait. No, that’s not how zombies are made, is it? Boy, I wish I’d watched more zombie movies with Tripp. I wish I knew where Tripp was. Of all the nights for Tripp to pull a disappearing act!
I leaned forward.
It was roast beef. The good kind that came freshly sliced from the deli. Thick, pink slices spilling over the sides of moist bread.
My mouth watered.
There are worse ways to go than poisoned roast beef, you know.
I sat at the table and devoured every last crumb of that sandwich. And the chips. The grapes. Even the carrots. I opened the refrigerator again and, even though there wasn’t a note attached, grabbed a bottle of soda and washed it all down, then belched a belch so loud and long I wished Tripp had been there to witness it. I felt so much better.
I got up, put my empty plate in the sink, and threw away my trash, then wandered back through the house, wondering if Comet was still standing on our back porch, waiting for me to come back. Or if he’d eaten my shoe again. Comet did that pretty often, actually—ate things he’d already barfed up. And once, when Granny came to visit and brought her long-haired, smush-faced cat, Miss Penelope, he ate something she barfed up, too. The cat, not Granny. Though I wouldn’t be surprised if Comet ate human barf. He ate a whole shoe, after all.
Now that I was full, I was kind of sleepy, so I headed back toward my room.
But I couldn’t help stopping at the door next to mine. The one I’d stopped at before. It was still closed. I put my ear against the wood and cupped my hand over my free ear.
Nothing. Not even the scratching fingernails of hungry undead.
I got down on my hands and knees and peered under the door. I didn’t see much, except, yes, there was definitely a strange glow in there.
I stood up again and wiped my sweaty palms down the legs of my jeans. Earlier, Mr. Death had sure seemed like he didn’t want me to go into that room at all.
But there was a glowy light.
And possibly prisoners.
Come on, lights and prisoners! I had to go in. It was against human nature not to. If I was going to just keep walking and pretend I didn’t know anything about lights and prisoners, I might as well join Comet in his doghouse tonight and fight over his bowl of breakfast kibble in the morning.
I had to.
Slowly I lifted my hand and reached for the doorknob.
But before I could even make contact, there was a noise. The front door opened, letting in a stream of moonlight. Smoke roiled around a shadowy figure, which lurched into the house.
“That door is locked!” Mr. Death’s voice cut through the night.
I jerked my hand away from the door and dove into my bedroom. I pushed the table against the door again and sat on the edge of my bed.
Where did he appear from?
And, more importantly, what was in that room that he was so afraid for me to see?