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who is coming down the stairs. “Was he up there?” I ask. For a moment, I have a sliver of hope, but then he shakes his head. “Did you check all the rooms?” I press him. He nods. “Yes. I didn’t see him.” That stab of panic is starting to escalate. My legs have turned to jello. “He’s not in the
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1 год назад
Huu Truong Espritgames
the marble floor. “You’re telling me that shithead laid his hands on you because you’re moving in with me?” “I didn’t say that.” Daire slowly turned his head, and his dark hair fell across his hooded eyes. “Prove it. Pull up your sleeve.” “No, I⁠—” “Gavin, I’m not gonna touch you after whatever you’ve been through. But if you don’t pull up that fucking sleeve, so help me God…” I reached for my sleeve and tugged it up my arm, and as five very distinctive reddish-purple welts came into view, Daire cursed and shot to his feet...
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Espritgames Huu-Truong twitty.ru › huutruongespritgames Huu Truong Espritgames на RUTUBE: 11 видео — смотреть онлайн и бесплатно (32052375) rutube.ru › channel/32052375/ Listen to Radio Mayak Tomsk from Tomsk live on Radio Garden: https://radio.garden/listen/radio-mayak-tomsk/8suhA1e0
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Huu Truong Espritgames на RUTUBE: 11 видео — смотреть онлайн и бесплатно (32052375) rutube.ru › channel/32052375/ His heart beat so fast that it thumped in the sides of his head. In the way sometimes in dreams you just know something, Eddie knew that something was chasing him. He knew that it wasn’t the hopping monsters with the wiggly thumbs that came out of their faces—the ones Dad once called Lurchers. He knew it wasn’t the woman the size of a truck—the one who was all mixed up with wires and marble tile and other stuff that it takes to make a building. Dad said her name had been Micah. Dad said she was dead. But that’s not why Eddie knew the thing chasing him in his dreams wasn’t Micah. He knew because that’s what the dream was. In the dream, something else chased him, it wanted him for a reason he didn’t understand. He could almost say that reason out loud, like it was on the tip of his tongue. Something to do with that day he went inside the skyscraper. As the thing chased Eddie, everything it passed became more of itself. Eddie didn’t know what that meant—more of itself—but he knew it was true. He didn’t know what would happen when the thing caught him. But it terrified him. At least twice a week, this dream had woken him up in the middle of the night. Each time, the monster chasing him got closer and closer. Last night, when he sat up in bed to switch on his lamp, he could still feel fingers brushing the back of his neck. Too many fingers. Layers of them. A car passed at the bottom of the hill, kicking up gravel that had spilled out of the driveway. Eddie avoided looking Grandpa in the eye. He traced the path away from this conversation: down the gravel driveway, onto the road, around the bend and into town. He wanted to escape. But he didn’t dare pedal away in the middle of Grandpa talking to him. On the other hand, Grandpa wanted to talk about Eddie’s dreams, which were about the skyscraper. Dad forbade Eddie from talking about that. He didn’t want Dad to get mad. Eddie knew that Dad wouldn’t leave him if he got mad. He used to think that if he wasn’t helpful all the time, Dad would leave. But Grandma never let
1 год назад
Eddie noticed that Grandpa felt the same way. So did Dad. Breaking rules didn’t mean Eddie would be alone again. But the thought of purposely going against what Dad said made his cheeks burn with guilt and fear. Grandpa reached his hand toward Eddie’s shoulder, hesitated, and then rested it on the bike’s handlebars. “Your Dad’s worried about those dreams. I told him every kid has nightmares. He’s really afraid, though. I shouldn’t be telling you this. I know you two have been through a lot.” “Dad worries,” Eddie said. “I know about worrying. I remember him having nightmares as a little boy, and I worried he was stressed about me starting a new job, or that I’d been too harsh in disciplining him.” Grandpa put his hands back in his pockets. “Chris isn’t worried about what’s causing the dreams. He’s scared about the dreams themselves. Like they’re dangerous.” “Dreams aren’t real,” Eddie said. He’d learned that monsters were real. And the whole world had learned that skyscrapers could appear overnight and then disappear just as fast. But that didn’t mean dreams were real. “I agree with you on that one,” Grandpa said. “That’s got my mind turning circles. Why is your Dad worried about dreams? Has he been doing okay?” Eddie looked at Grandpa. His oversized glasses perched on his nose. Brown age spots had spread in just the years Eddie had lived here. “What do you think?” Grandpa asked. “He talks to you. I know you two went through something strange inside that building. Chris has never told me exactly what. I got the idea he didn’t think I’d believe him. And now that he’s scared of these dreams of yours—well, what do you think? Is he okay?” This was an adult question. Eddie never considered whether Dad’s head was on straight. Of course it was. He’d saved Eddie from the skyscraper. He’d gone onto that cruise ship and made sure the monsters Espritgames Huu-Truong twitty.ru › huutruongespritgames