Bleeding Kansas

Read Online Bleeding Kansas by Sara Paretsky - Free Book Online

Book: Bleeding Kansas by Sara Paretsky Read Free Book Online
Authors: Sara Paretsky
Ads: Link
basketball or working on the X-Farm compare to Abigail’s hacking off the head of a snake that slithered through the great gaps in the floorboards or lying on top of her baby to keep him from crying while Border Ruffians ransacked the house? But when she was ten, Lara dutifully started a diary. Sitting next to her mother at the dining-room table, she would write about her day at Kaw Valley Eagle or how she rescued the meadowlark fledglings she’d found in the cornfield.
    When she turned thirteen, the previous year, she also turned secretive. The privacy of the deserted Fremantle house became like a cloak of invisibility she could wrap around herself. Lara left her diary behind the mantel, where her mother wouldn’t be able to find it, and she would sit in the east-facing master bedroom, where there wasn’t a danger that Dad would see her flickering candle from the wheat field when she wrote in it. For the same reason, Chip and Curly hung out in the back parlor, the one used for receiving special visitors back in pioneer times.
    Tonight, she and Chip wanted to retrieve the private things they’d left here. Chip was especially worried about his stash of dope, but Lara didn’t want to lose her diary.
    When they got to the coal chute, Chip undid the cover and slid down first. He waited at the bottom for Lara, who dallied: she was terrified, and didn’t want him to know. For all the money they’d put into building a fancy house, the original Fremantles had left the basement unfinished. It had a dirt floor, where snakes and wolf spiders roamed. Lara didn’t mind them so much in the daylight, but she didn’t want to land on one in the dark.
    â€œCome on, Lulu,” Chip yelled up at her. “We want to make it snappy.”
    She shut her eyes, took a breath, and slid down the chute. He caught her at the bottom.
    â€œPoint the light on the ground. I don’t want to step on a spider. And don’t fool around with me, I don’t like it,” she added as he crawled his fingers up her scalp.
    They ran up the steep stairs to the kitchen. The house smelled like bleach, from yesterday’s cleanup, but the acrid stench of cat spray underlay the bleach, making Lara sick to her stomach. Chip pushed through the swinging door into the dining room while Lara headed for the staircase to the second floor.
    Her foot was on the first step when the kitchen door opened. She couldn’t hold back a scream.
    â€œHello, Lulu.”
    â€œDad! What are you doing—”
    â€œWhat am I doing here? More to the point, what are you two doing here?”
    â€œIt was a dare,” Lara said quickly. “Chip dared me that I was too chicken—”
    â€œLara, don’t lie to me. If you don’t want to tell me the truth, just keep quiet.”
    Lara flushed and dug her nails into her palms so she wouldn’t cry. Chip said he was sorry, they had left a few things here.
    â€œSo you have been breaking in here!” Jim said. “I tried talking to you about this Friday, and you were too cowardly to tell me the truth. How do you think that makes me feel? I was asked to keep an eye on this place, and not only did you take advantage of my responsibility here, you lied to me.”
    When neither of his children spoke, Jim said, “And what ‘things’ did you leave here? Dope? Don’t tell me you’ve been letting Lulu smoke.”
    â€œNo, of course not. Me and Curly, we come over here sometimes.”
    â€œAfter what you said Friday night? When I—”
    â€œI told you Curly wasn’t buying drugs for me. That’s the truth.”
    Jim breathed hard through his nose, then he turned to look at Lara. “And what were you coming here to get?”
    Chip said, “She just tagged along for the adventure. She was going to watch from the upstairs window to see if you were coming, but you beat us to it.”
    Jim’s hard eyes stayed on his

Similar Books

Betrayal

H.M. McQueen

The Penal Colony

Richard Herley

Ekaterina

Susan May Warren, Susan K. Downs

The Mage's Tale

Jonathan Moeller

Dream Thief

Stephen Lawhead