Blackwater: The Complete Caskey Family Saga Read Online Free Page A

Blackwater: The Complete Caskey Family Saga
Book: Blackwater: The Complete Caskey Family Saga Read Online Free
Author: Michael McDowell
Tags: Fiction, Literature & Fiction, Horror, Genre Fiction, Occult
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hotel, thrust his hand in again and moved it all about beneath the window inside the room. No second case was there.
    Now there was nothing for it but actually to look into the hotel room—to put his head into the blank opening and stare around, looking for Miss Elinor’s second bag.
    With an unpleasant consciousness that he was the only person in all Perdido at that moment, Bray sat down again in the boat and considered the matter. He might, if he peered into the window, see the case within reach. That, definitely, was the most hopeful possibility, for then he could bring it out almost as simply as he had brought out the other. He might, however, see the case out of his reach. This would necessitate climbing through the window. He would not do that—but that would be all right, because he could always report to Mr. Oscar that he could not get out of the boat because he had been unable to tether it.
    Bray stood up in the boat and steadied himself by grasping the awning. He looked in the window, but could not see the second case at all. It simply wasn’t there.
    Without thinking, he leaned inside the window and peered all along the outer wall. His fear had been subsumed by curiosity.
    “Lord have mercy,” he murmured. “Mr. Oscar,” he said to himself, rehearsing the speech that would procure pardon for his failure to bring back both bags, “I look all over that room, and it just not there. Would have gone but not no place to tie the boat to, I—”
    But there was—a little tongue of painted metal around which the cord of the venetian blind had been wound. Bray cursed his own eyes for picking that out. He knew he couldn’t lie to Mr. Oscar, no matter what his fear now, and still cursing his eyes and his inability to tell Mr. Oscar anything but gospel truth, he tied the slender mooring rope of the boat around that tongue of painted metal. When the boat was tethered to the window he carefully raised one foot onto the casement, and in a single slow bound found himself inside the hotel room.
    The carpet was sopping wet. Foul floodwater was squeezed from beneath his boots. The morning sunlight poured into the room through the window in the eastern wall. Bray approached the bed where Mr. Oscar had seen Miss Elinor sitting. Experimentally, he pressed a finger against the spread. It too was sopping—and coated with a black grime. Though he had pressed lightly, foul water formed a dank pool around that finger. “It wasn’t there,” said Bray aloud, still rehearsing the conversation he would have with Mr. Oscar. Why didn’t you look under the bed? demanded Mr. Oscar in Bray’s voice.
    Bray leaned down. Black grimy water dripped from the fringe of the spread all around. Beneath the bed was a grimy black pool of stinking water. “Lord my Lord! Where’d that white woman sleep?” cried Bray in a whisper. He turned around quickly. No suitcase. He went to the chifforobe and opened it. Nothing was in it but an inch of water in each of the drawers on the left-hand side. There wasn’t a closet in the room or anywhere else for the case to have been hidden—even supposing Miss Elinor had wanted to keep him from finding it, and Miss Elinor had particularly wanted him to fetch it. “Lord, Mr. Oscar! Somebody come and done stole it!”
    Bray was already headed back to the window, but Mr. Oscar, in Bray’s voice, demanded now, Well, Bray, why didn’t you look out in the hall?
    “’Cause,” whispered Bray, “that old room was bad enough...”
    The hallway door was closed, but there was a key in the lock. Bray moved over to the door and tried the handle. The door was locked, so he turned the key. The key itself was grimy and black. Bray pulled the door open.
    He looked down the long uncarpeted hallway. There was no case. He saw nothing. He paused a moment, waiting for Mr. Oscar’s voice to demand that he go farther. But no voice came. Bray breathed relief, and eased the door closed. He returned to the window and climbed
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