had chased and been consumed by . . .
 
 They were real.
 
 “Arthur!” Thomas hissed.
 
 “This is a bad place,” Arthur said. The initial shock of dread
 
 had settled into its old home in his bones now. The necklace wasn’t
 
 meant for him. He was never meant to see it. Unlike his father, he
 
 wouldn’t chase any of this. If they got out now, without being
 
 caught, then maybe he wouldn’t have to run.
 
 A soft creaking, the step of a light foot on the floor above
 
 them, had the same effect as a gunshot. Thomas and Arthur ran
 
 from the room just as they heard Cora scream outside.
 
 Thomas was through the door first and down the porch steps
 
 in a single leap. Arthur thought he’d keep going, but without
 
 pausing, Thomas scooped Cora up from where she had fainted to
 
 the ground, throwing her over his shoulder and continuing his
 
 mad race into the night.
 
 Arthur flew like their shadow down the hill, silent companion
 
 to Thomas’s crashing footfalls. When they reached the bottom,
 
 Thomas kept going, never looking back.
 
 Arthur wanted to do the same, more than anything. He
 
 wanted to fly and keep flying, to melt into the trees and disappear.
 
 He wanted to never have seen that beetle, the one his mother,
 
 weeping, sometimes drew on the skin over his heart, whispering
 
 about protection. He stopped instead, and turned back toward the
 
 house.
 
 There, on the second floor, a silhouette marked their retreat.
 
 As he watched, a dark hand raised and pressed itself against the
 
 glass.
 
 They had been seen.
 
 New Orleans