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Her father moved quick and sure, so he knew where he was going. She could hear his boots crunching old dried leaves on the skinny trail, so she kept back. It wouldn’t do for him to hear her.sh0novelsGo

Something screeched, made her jump a little. She had to slap her hand over her mouth to muffle the giggle. Just an old owl, out on the hunt.sh0novelsGo

The clouds shifted, covered the moon. She nearly stumbled when she stubbed her bare toe on a rock, and again she covered her mouth to smother her hiss of pain.sh0novelsGo

Her father stopped, making her heart pound like a drum. She went still as a statue, barely breathing. For the first time she wondered what she’d do if he turned around, came back toward her. Couldn’t run, she thought, for he’d surely hear that. Maybe she could creep off the path, hide in the brush. And just hope there weren’t snakes sleeping.sh0novelsGo

When he moved on she continued to stand, telling herself to go back before she got into really big trouble. But the light was like a magnet and drew her on.sh0novelsGo

It bobbled and shook for a moment. She heard something rattle and scrape, something creak like the back door.sh0novelsGo

Then the light vanished.sh0novelsGo

She stood in the deep, dark woods, breath shallow, and cold prickling over her skin despite the hot, heavy air. She took a step back, then two, as the urge to run fell over her.sh0novelsGo

The click came back to her throat, so sharp she could barely swallow. And the dark, all the dark seemed to wrap around her—too tight.sh0novelsGo

Run home, run. Get back in bed, close your eyes. The voice in her head pitched high and shrill like the cicadas.sh0novelsGo

“Scaredy-cat,” she whispered, clutching her own arms for courage. “Don’t be a scaredy-cat.”sh0novelsGo

She crept forward, almost feeling her way now. Once again the clouds shifted, and in the thin trickle of moonlight she saw the silhouette of a ruined building.sh0novelsGo

Like an old cabin, she thought, that had burned down so only the jags of foundation and an old chimney remained.sh0novelsGo

The odd fear slid away into fascination with the shapes, the grays of it all, the way the thin moonlight played over the scorched bricks, the blackened wood.sh0novelsGo

Again she wished for morning so she could explore. If she could sneak back there in the light, it could be her place. A place where she could bring her books and read—without her brother nagging at her. And she could sit and draw or just sit and dream.sh0novelsGo

Someone had lived there once, so maybe there were ghosts. And that idea was a thrill. She’d just love to meet a ghost.sh0novelsGo

But where had her father gone?sh0novelsGo

She thought of the rattles and creak again. Maybe this was like another dimension, and he’d opened a door to it, gone through.sh0novelsGo

He had secrets—she figured all adults did. Secrets they kept from everybody, secrets that made their eyes go hard if you asked the wrong question. Maybe he was an explorer, one who went through a magic door to another world.sh0novelsGo

He wouldn’t like her thinking it because other worlds, like ghosts and teenage witches, weren’t in the Bible. But maybe he wouldn’t like her thinking it because it was true.sh0novelsGo

She risked a few more steps forward, ears cocked for any sound. And heard only the thunder, rolling closer.sh0novelsGo

This time when she stubbed her toe, the quick cry of pain escaped, and she hopped on one foot until the sting eased. Stupid rock, she thought, and glanced down.sh0novelsGo

In that pale moonlight she saw not a rock, but a door. A door in the ground! A door that would creak when opened. Maybe a magic door.sh0novelsGo

She got down on all fours, ran her hands over it—and got a splinter for her trouble.sh0novelsGo

Magic doors didn’t give you splinters. Just an old root cellar, or storm cellar. But though disappointment dampened her spirits as she sucked her sore finger, it was still a door in the ground in the woods by an old burned-out cabin.sh0novelsGo

And her father had gone down there.sh0novelsGo

Her bike! Maybe he’d hidden her bike down there and was right now putting it together. Willing to risk another splinter, she put her ear to the old wood, squeezing her eyes tight to help her hear.sh0novelsGo

She thought she heard him moving around. And he was making a kind of grunting noise. She imagined him assembling her bike—all shiny and new and red—his big hands picking the right tool while he whistled through his teeth the way he did when he worked on something.sh0novelsGo

He was down there doing something special just for her. She wouldn’t complain (in her head) about chores for a whole month.sh0novelsGo

How long did it take to put a bike together? She should hurry back home so he didn’t know she’d followed him. But she really, really, really wanted to see it. Just a peek.sh0novelsGo

She eased back from the door, crept over to the burned-out cabin, and hunkered down behind the old chimney. It wouldn’t take him long—he was good with tools. He could have his own repair shop if he wanted, and only worked for the cable company out of Morgantown to provide security for his family.sh0novelsGo

He said so all the time.sh0novelsGo

She glanced up at the snap of lightning—the first pitchfork of it—and the thunder that followed was more boom than mumble. She should’ve gone home, that was the truth, but she couldn’t go back now. He could come out anytime, and he’d catch her for sure.sh0novelsGo

There’d be no shiny red bike for her birthday if he caught her now.sh0novelsGo

If the storm broke, she’d just get wet, that’s all. It would cool her off.sh0novelsGo

She told herself he’d just be five more minutes, and when the minutes passed, he’d just be five more. And then she had to pee. She tried to hold it, ignore it, squeeze it back, but in the end, she gave up and crept her way farther back, back into the trees.sh0novelsGo

She rolled her eyes, pulled down her shorts, and crouched, keeping her feet wide to avoid the stream. Then she shook and shook until she was as dry as she was going to get. Just as she started to pull her shorts back up, the door creaked open.