“It’s a long shot. You know that, right?” I asked.
“It’s better than anything we’ve got right now. No one knows where he is or what he’s doing. This is our best chance. I think we should take it.”
So ten minutes later, we all sat in my car as I drove us to Sian’s house.
It wasn’t a large house like ours, but it wasn’t small either with a nice private yard.
After pulling into the driveway, I turned off the engine and looked toward the house. There was no sign of life, but that meant nothing.
“I’m not going to lie, guys, but I’m kind of getting the chills. You don’t think Sian’s house is haunted, do you?” William asked.
I glanced in the rearview mirror. “Are you crazy right now?”
“I feel like I’m being watched.” William looked up at the house. “Come on, a dark house. Anyone else feeling it?”
“You watch way too much horror,” I said as I climbed out of the car and looked up at the house.
It was dark outside and the streetlight overlooking the house wasn’t working. I pointed at it. “Convenient,” I said.
Less light made it easier to move around.
We moved toward Sian’s house. She’d handed over the key to Lucas when she arrived months ago for us to take care of her. Gideon slid the key into the lock and turned it.
I didn’t know why, but it sounded so fucking loud.
Gritting my teeth, I knew we were doing something fucking crazy right now. We’d left the house without a word to our fathers, and now we were entering a known murderer’s house. This wasn’t the brightest of ideas. In fact, as far as ideas went, I was going to rate this a big giant, fucking stupid one.
Also, I was pissed at William. Now that he’d said he felt like someone was watching him, I had this overwhelming feeling someone was watching me too, and I didn’t like it.
I didn’t believe in ghosts or spirits or any of that kind of bullshit. I was the kind of guy who had to see it to know it existed, within reason, of course.
We entered the main hallway, and it was small in comparison to what I was used to. I bet this pissed Alexander off no end. He’d taken the All Saints girl, and still, he lived in a smaller home than all of them.
No company. No empire. Just his reputation as being a decent lawyer.
“Anyone else getting the sense that Alexander’s rage has been building for years?” William asked.
We all grunted our agreement.
Something felt off about this house. “I’m going to head upstairs, see if I find anything.”
“Scream or yell if you see a ghost,” William said.
I wanted to pound his fucking face. “There’s no ghost.”
“Says the guy who will be screaming like a girl the first time he sees one.”
I rolled my eyes, taking the steps up to the first landing. It was spacious.
At first, I didn’t make a sound, wondering if I could hear anything out of the ordinary. Nothing. I went to the first room and opened the door, stepping inside.
“Shit.”
“Fuck.”
“Call an ambulance,” I said.
With Joan here, we all knew Gideon had been right. Alexander had been living here, but now he was gone. The question was where?
We couldn’t answer that right now, but it looked like he’d stepped up his game as I held a seizing Joan. I tried to think of all my biology lessons to help me figure out how to help her.