Also behind me was Indigo Garson, edging into the frame. I saw a slender arm, the curve of her shoulder, stringy strands of blond hair.
She was there.
And she was waiting.
Not for me.
For Maggie.
“Keep waiting, bitch,” I said aloud.
I raised the camera and took another picture.
Click.
Hum.
Slide.
In that photo, Indigo had moved to the other side of the study. She pressed against the wall, slightly hunched, her coin-covered eyes peering at me through a veil of hair. Her lips were twisted into a grin so sinister it turned my blood cold.
The only thing that kept me from fleeing the house was the knowledge that she didn’t want to hurt me. Not yet, even though that moment would surely arrive. But for the time being, she needed me to get to Maggie.
Convinced I was out of harm’s way for the short term, I moved to the closet, grabbed all the packages of film sitting inside, and carried them back to the desk.
I remained there as the pale light of morning changed to the golden sun of afternoon. Every so often, I’d take another picture,just to keep track of Indigo’s whereabouts in the room. Sometimes she was in a far corner, facing the wall. Other times she was just a sliver of purple on the edge of the frame. In a few photos, she wasn’t visible at all.
But I knew she was still there.
I felt the angry heat of her presence.
I continued to feel it until the daylight outside the office widows had given way to the lonesome blues of twilight. That’s when Indigo suddenly vanished—an instant cooling.
I grabbed the camera and took another picture.
Click.
Hum.
Slide.
I snatched the Polaroid from the camera and held it in front of me, watching the image take shape.
It was just like all the others—me and a woman standing in the background.
Only this time it wasn’t Indigo.
It was Jess. Standing just inside the study. Every muscle in her body tensed. Confusion streaking across her features like lightning.
I turned around slowly, hoping she was just an imagining brought about by hunger, thirst, and a need for sleep. But then Jess spoke—“Ewan? What are you doing up here?”—and my heart sank.
It meant she was real and that Indigo’s patience had paid off.
Maggie had come home.
Twenty-Three
Dane takes a step into the study. I take a step back, pressing against the edge of the desk.