guess.â
The bruise already appeared to be fading.
Brand gently touched my shoulder. âYou should probably tell her about how cold youâve been.â
âCold?â Althea was looking at me. âIs this true?â
âYes.â I shivered. âI just canât seem to warm up. And . . . I forgot to mention . . . I . . . uh . . . saw an image of Grandpa.â
âWhat kind of image?â
âWell, it was more like a feeling that he was buried.â
âHmm,â she said. âHmm. This is all making sense. I should have told you from the beginning. Yes, I should have.â She stood up. âJust wait here. There are a few things I want to show all of you.â
Then she disappeared into the house.
17
âWhatâs she doing?â Angie asked.
We could hear Althea banging around inside, closing and opening doors, dropping things.
âIt sounds like sheâs remodeling the living room,â Michael said.
âMy guess is Grandmaâs setting something up for us.â Brand was sipping from his iced tea. âIâm not sure if I want to know what it is.â
I sat back. The sunâs rays couldnât even warm the top layer of my skin. I wanted to find a parka, a pile of blankets, or a roaring fire, but I knew none of these things would be enough to heat me up.
âWe talked to Mom and Dad,â Michael said to me.
âWhat did they say?â
âThey want us to get home at onceâAngie is supposed to come all the way to Missouri since her parents are still in Europe. Dad was quite upset that we couldnât take another bus today.â
âWere they upset about Grandpa too?â
Michael nodded. âYeah, really shaken up. Mom started crying. Dad was asking me all these questionsâand I didnât have any answers. Dadâs going to fly out here, but he canât get away until tomorrow.â
âWell, why donât we wait till he gets here?â
Michael shook his head. âNo. He made me promise I would go home tomorrow. That all of us would go.â
I sat back. So we would have to leave in the morning, no doubts about it. Had I run away just to delay something that was going to happen anyway?
âHey,â Michael said suddenly, âdid you know Dad speaks Icelandic?â
âA little. I didnât think he knew too much, though.â
âHe and Althea talked for at least five minutes in Icelandic . . . I donât think she wanted us to know what they were talking about.â
âDid you understand anything they said?â I asked.
âI heard them mention Thursten once,â Angie answered.
âMe too,â Michael said, âand another name . . . Kormak or something. But other than that it was all noise. I couldnât make any sense of it, other than it sounded serious.â
âIâll tell you what it was about.â Althea was standing at the door. âBut not right now. Come into the house. I have a few things to show you.â
I stood up, shaky. I was beginning to feel like I had just finished a marathon. We all made our way through the sliding door into the living room. The coffee table had three old books on it. I recognized them as the ones I had glanced at in the morning. There was also a metal vial and a huge, heavy-looking iron cross. Beside them was a pot of tea and five cups.
âHave a seat,â Althea motioned and we sat down. Me on the couch beside Brand. Angie and Michael in separate chairs. I shivered. Now that I was out of the sun, I felt even colder. âAll of you should drink some of that tea. Especially you, Sarah. Itâll warm you up.â
I doubted this. I poured myself a cup, sipped it. It had a sharp taste, a tangy lemony scent. I canât say it was good, but I felt it burst against my tongue, down my throat, and spread throughout my body as if it were entering my bloodstream and heating
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