Read Catch a Falling Star Online
Authors: Unknown
belt, a flash of annoyance crossing his features. “Look, don’t worry
about all the publicity stuff, okay? Let’s just hang out. Parker can
get a little —” He paused, taking a slurp of his own Starbucks.
“Well, let’s just say he takes his job a bit too seriously sometimes.
Don’t worry about the photos. Let’s just have a good day.”
“Okay.” I pulled a sheet of heavy stock paper from my purse.
Yesterday, I’d had an idea, something fun for Adam that would
show him our town but also be a little silly. So after Little Eats, I’d
stayed up until two a.m. finishing it. Now, clutching the handmade
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tour map I’d made, my idea seemed babyish, and I had a feeling it
was one of those ideas that seemed brilliant at midnight but totally
lame in the daylight.
“What’s that?” He grabbed at it.
Sighing, I handed it over. “It’s stupid.”
He scanned the page. “Did you
make
this?” Now he was really
laughing at me.
I tried to grab it back. “Don’t laugh. I made you a Little Star
Map. You know, like those Hollywood tours. Only it’s some of
our
most famous spots, famous people, famous legends. Parker said
you wanted a tour of Little and, well, this is what I thought we
could do. It didn’t take me very long.” I swallowed, embarrassed.
He didn’t need to know I’d spent hours on it. “Forget it, it’s dumb.
We should do something else.”
He shook his head, holding the map out of my reach. “We are
not
doing something else; we’re doing this. I don’t think anyone’s
ever made me something like this before.” He stared at the paper
again, his eyes serious, a shy smile on his lips. “I can’t believe you
made this.” He settled back into the seat, his gaze following a
group of kids on the other side of the street racing down the side-
walk, dressed in already-drenched swimsuits and armed with
Super Soakers, before letting those eyes, like the tide coming in,
fall back on me. “Thanks,” he said.
“Sure,” I managed, struck with the sudden, odd sensation
of floating.
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Standing beneath the shade of a monster oak, I pointed at the
Victorian house and Adam followed my gaze, staring up at the old
house, the yard quiet in the filtered morning light.
I leaned into the white waist-level fencing. “This is the Crowley
house, hence the name of the street. Anne Crowley lived here in
the late 1880s, and while it was officially a boardinghouse, most
people around here know that Anne Crowley ran a pretty success-
ful brothel out of it.”
“So our first stop is a brothel. I like your style.” Adam peered
up at the house, its green paint starting to peel at the edges. “It’s
not
still
a brothel, is it? Because this might not be the best publicity
spot for me, given my track record.”
“No, it’s a private house now. But I chose it as our first ‘Star
Tour’ spot because it’s one of our more famous ghost stories in
Little. And since you’re currently starring in a movie about ghosts,
I thought it’d be perfect.” I pushed through the white gate, motion-
ing for him to follow.
“Um, are you allowed to just walk on in there?” Adam grinned
at me from the sidewalk. He seemed at ease, loose, that usual dark
curtain drawn away from his face. With his hands stuck in the
pockets of his knee-length shorts, it struck me that at this moment
he could be any other guy at Little High. I guess, had life dealt him
a different hand, he might have been.
I held the gate for him. “It’s fine. The Roan family owns it
now, and they’re gone for most of the summer. I go to school with
Jack Roan, and he won’t care if I show you.”
“Show me what?” Adam raised an eyebrow at me. I felt myself
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blushing and quickly turned away. He followed me around the side
of the house and into the backyard. Fringed with dense trees, the
yard formed a sort of skinny, sheltered triangle, one slender point
of which ended at a weathered shack with no windows.
I walked to the middle of the triangular patch of lawn. “Okay.
Stand here. By me.” He joined me, and I closed my eyes. “Close
your eyes.”
“Seriously?”
“Do it.” I opened mine to make sure that he was following
directions.
Shaking his head, he closed his eyes.
“Feel how warm it is here?”
“It’s a pretty hot day.” He told me, his voice edged with
amusement.
“Right. Okay, here’s how it works; I’ll lead you. Don’t open
your eyes.” Opening my own, I led him toward the shack. Some-
where, someone was cooking bacon, the smell of it drifting on
the air. I guided him slowly, the way Jack had done with me for the
first time back in sixth grade. Right at the point where the lawn
met the path in front of the shack, the air temperature dropped
suddenly by twenty degrees.
Adam’s eyes snapped open. “Whoa.” He looked around. “What
is that?”
I’d been here dozens of times and it still rippled my arms with
gooseflesh.
As quickly as we felt it, it vanished, warmth flooding the air
around us.
“Weird, right?” I let go of his arm.
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He rubbed it absently, turning slow circles, studying the yard.
“Seriously, what
was
that?”
“That was Henry.”
He stopped turning, his hands finding his pockets again, his
eyes finding mine. “Henry?”
“The ghost.” At Adam’s bemused expression, I hurried to
explain that Henry used to work at Anne Crowley’s house as a
cook and gardener and all-around handyman, and the legend was
that he was desperately in love with one of the girls who lived at
the house, a sixteen-year-old girl named Emeline who was a part-
time dancer and a full-time employee of Anne’s. “Sick with
jealousy,” I continued, “he burst in on her during one of her, er,
um . . . sessions, and there was a chase, and then the guy she was
with killed Henry. Stabbed him right here on this path.”
Adam pointed at the ground, a smile twitching his features.
“This exact path?”
“Well, this spot anyway.” I shrugged. “It’s fine if you don’t
believe me, but you felt him. I saw you.”
His phone buzzed. “Mik wants to know if we’re dead. Should
I tell him, no — just consorting with them?”
“Next stop!” I headed toward the Range Rover. “Bye, Henry!”
I called over my shoulder, and I could almost hear Adam smiling.
We stopped at three other spots before lunch. First, we drove to
see Cleo Smythe, a woman who’d lived in the same house for 103
years. “Born in that house, gonna die in that house,” I told Adam.
“Her words. Hi, Mrs. Smythe!” I waved at her where she sat in her
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squeaky porch swing, and she waved back, holding a sweating glass
of iced tea.
Second, I took him to see the old jailhouse, now housing a gal-
lery dedicated to Gold Country lore and photography. “Creepy,”
Adam had said, peering at a yellowed ancient picture of the gal-
lows, two open graves near it waiting for the hanging bodies.
“People were buried where we’re standing?”
“People are probably always buried where we’re standing,” I
said, nodding a hello to Bess Harding, who ran the gallery. Bess
had the thin, bent shape of a lily, but she perked up when she saw
Adam, even if she couldn’t seem to make eye contact with either
of us.
After the jailhouse, I directed Mik out to the highway, to the
turnoff that lead to the rolling green fields of Little’s surrounding
areas. I pointed out a few odd things along the way — rotting
barns, an abandoned water tower, a rusting 1950s Ford truck
embedded nose down in a field — before I had Mik pull onto an
inlet of gravel along the road.
We slid out of the Range Rover, the heat coming off the dusty
road hitting us. Our feet crunched over the gravel as I walked
Adam toward the final stop before lunch.
“This one’s my favorite.” We stepped into a puddle of shade
beneath a leafy oak. “The Fairy Tree.”
Adam stared up into its messy branches. “What is it?”
I told him how Drake and I used to come to this tree as little
kids, along with thousands of other children over the years. For as
long as I could remember, Mr. Costa, the old man who had owned
this property, would leave little treasures in the dimpled hollows of
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the tree, taking anything kids left him in return. I showed him the
pockets and nooks of the tree, smoothed from years of little hands.
“When he passed away last year,” I told Adam, “they found
every available surface of his home covered with the treasures
from dozens of years of Fairy Tree children — every surface thick
with them, like snow.”
I told him how last summer, a local artist took all of them —
each bouncy ball, drawing, action figure, rubber band, pound of
loose change, hair ribbon, smooth river rock, everything — and
fashioned them all into an incredible replica of this tree. “It’s in the
main entrance of the County Library. Sometimes, I just go look at
it, when I’m feeling sad, and I think about Mr. Costa. I almost took
you to see that, but I thought maybe you’d rather just see the tree
itself.”
Adam remained silent, running his fingers over the lacquered
wood sign at the base of the tree:
Costa Fairy tree
“There never was a merry world
since The fairies lefT off dancing . . .”
—
John selden
He stepped back, his mouth a thin line. Across the street, a
dusty sedan pulled over, idling in the hot sun. Adam didn’t turn
his head, but I knew he sensed it had stopped. He tensed only a
little, the way Extra Pickles would if he heard a distant door slam.
I started to ask him about it, but he pulled me in close to him.
“This is a good spot.”
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The sun through the leaves of the Fairy Tree covered us in
dappled spots of light, and I almost laughed at how close I suddenly
was to him, how abrupt he’d been. “Scene eight,” he whispered
into my ear, his breath tickling me. “First public kiss.” I knew this
was coming. I knew scene eight meant the first kiss. I knew it; I
just hadn’t expected it
right now
. The press of his lips against mine
caught me unprepared. His lips were warm, but because I hadn’t
really had time to take a breath, they left me feeling like someone
had just pushed me into a pool before I could inhale, leaving me
swirling, eyes open, underwater. I was breathless for all the wrong
reasons; still, there was the warmth of his mouth, that spicy smell
of his.
Then he pulled back, just an inch or two, his lips hovering
there, and I could tell he was watching the photographer, just on
the periphery. He was waiting him out. Dazed, I waited, too, the
suddenness of his kiss like a wave at the beach knocking me off
balance, leaving me shivering in surprise.
The idling car sped away down the street.
As Adam took several steps back, I knew something had shifted
in our day. I couldn’t quite pinpoint it, but somewhere between
the moment that car had pulled up and the space where he kissed
me, the curtain had been drawn again, the distance between us
thick. He gave me an almost businesslike nod. “That was a good
shot. And the Fairy Tree thing was perfect. Nice work.” Not meet-
ing my eyes, he hopped back into the Range Rover.
I stared off down the road, at the swirling dust of the depart-
ing photographer, the simplicity of the day congealing, returning
to the former, complicated space between us.
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I slid into the backseat again. When I’d noticed the scene about
the kiss in the script, I’d imagined something bigger, something
perhaps with a sound track or at least better lighting. Not some
out-of-the-blue face-smash for the quick camera click of a jerk in a
Budget rental car.
I guess I needed to dial down my expectations. It might have a
script, but this was no movie.
After leaving the Fairy Tree, Adam’s mouth a ghost print on me,
we stood in the cool, canopied entry to Ander’s Community
Gardens. “Ready for lunch?” I said flatly, motioning to the entrance.
He walked with me under the wrought-iron trellis swollen
with leafy jasmine and out onto a sprawling stone courtyard.
Dozens of people sat at ten or so wood picnic tables. I waved at
Dad, who was handing out sandwiches and chips at a table near a
fountain on the far side of the courtyard. I could see Adam take in
the scruffy nature of most of the picnickers.
I leaned into him, whispering, “This is Sandwich Saturday.
One Saturday a month, Little Eats provides lunch to the families
staying at the Welcome House. I always help out.” When he con-
tinued to stare blankly, I added, “This was on your schedule today.”
Maybe Parker hadn’t mentioned it to him?
“What’s the Welcome House?” His eyes took in the rows of
food, the people sitting at tables.