Moonlit Mind

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Book: Read Moonlit Mind for Free Online
Authors: Dean Koontz
“We shouldn’t do that.”
    “Why not?”
    “I don’t know. We just shouldn’t, that’s all.”
    “How else are we gonna find out?”
    “We’ll wait and see.”
    Harley pouted. “I don’t understand why we can’t ask.”
    “For one thing, we were snooping.”
    “We overheard, that’s all.”
    “We were snooping, and you know it.”
    “That doesn’t mean we’ll get in trouble.”
    “We’ll get in trouble, sure enough,” Crispin said. “What we’ve got to do is—we’ve got to wait and see.”
    In Theron Hall, the main dining room, where the adults have dinner, is on the ground floor. They dine at eight o’clock.
    The children are served in a smaller, second-floor dining room at six o’clock.
    Clarette says that children eating with children, adults with adults, is a custom in that part of Europe from which the Gregorios hail.
    This could be true. Crispin has known his mother to lie, but he doesn’t know enough about Europe to doubt her on this point.
    Anyway, he’d rather eat with Harley and Mirabell than with his mother and stepfather. Here on the second floor, they can talk about anything they want over dinner. And they don’t have to choke down the fancy rich-people food that’s served downstairs, like poached salmon and snails and spinach soufflé. Here, they’re served the best stuff, kid food like cheeseburgers, mac and cheese, and tacos.
    Their dining room is smaller than the one for the adults, but it’s no less formally furnished. The dark wood sideboards are heavily carved, and the carving has gilded highlights. The table stands on ball-and-claw feet, the chairs have high ornate backs, the cushions are upholstered in tapestries, and a crystal chandelier hangs over them.
    Sometimes it seems as if no one in the Gregorio family was ever a child.
    The servants who bring dinner also inform the boys that their sister will not be joining them this evening. They have heard that she is not feeling well.
    Between the tortilla soup and the chicken nachos, Nanny Sayo stops by to report that Mirabell has what seems to be a migraine. Once the headache passes, the girl will eat in her room.
    Clarette sometimes complains of migraines, squirrels herself away in a dark quiet room, and is unapproachable for the duration. This is the first time that her daughter has suffered such a thing.
    “The condition can be inherited,” Nanny Sayo says. Before she leaves, she tousles Harley’s hair and kisses the top of Crispin’s head. “Don’t worry. Mirabell will be fine. But you must not bother her tonight.”
    When the brothers are alone again, Harley says, “There’s a party, all right. This sucks.”
    “There’s no party,” Crispin disagrees.
    “If it’s not a party, then what is it?”
    “We’ll just have to wait and see.”
    For the next couple of hours, nothing unusual happens.
    Being only seven years old and having spent hours stalking the farthest reaches of Theron Hall for the white cats that refused to materialize, Harley is ready for bed at eight o’clock. He says that he doesn’t care about any stupid old party, but he cares enough to want to pout in bed and retreat into sleep.
    Crispin is not sleepy, but he puts on his pajamas and slips under the covers before nine o’clock.
    He’s lying in deep shadows, the dimmer on his bedside lamp dialed down to the palest glow, when he hears the door open and someone approach his bed. The lightness of the visitor’s step and the swish of her skirt identify her as Nanny Sayo.
    She stands there for long minutes while Crispin pretends to sleep. He has the crazy expectation that she will get into bed with him, but she does not.
    After she leaves, he lies watching the digital clock blink away thirty minutes.
    Some things we know that we shouldn’t do, some things we know that we must do, and sometimes the shouldn’t and the must are the same thing.
    He gets out of bed and scopes the hallway, where the crystal fixtures in the ceiling cast light

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