Publisher: Park Row Books
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In a snowstorm, the safest place is home. Or is it?
True crime writer Wylie Lark doesn’t mind being snowed in at the isolated farmhouse where she’s retreated to write her new book. A cozy fire, complete silence. It would be perfect, if not for the fact that decades earlier, at this very house, two people were murdered in cold blood and a girl disappeared without a trace.
As the storm worsens, Wylie finds herself trapped inside the house, haunted by the secrets contained within its walls—haunted by secrets of her own. Then she discovers a small child in the snow just outside. How long had the child been there? Where did he come from? Bringing the child inside for warmth and safety, she begins to search for answers. But soon it becomes clear that the farmhouse isn’t as isolated as she thought, and someone is willing to do anything to find them.
Three
“Not today,” her mother said. “It’s raining and we’d melt.”
The girl gave a little laugh and then hopped off the chair
she had dragged beneath the window. She knew her mother was teasing. They
wouldn’t actually melt if they went out in the rain, but still, it made her
shiver thinking about it—stepping outside and feeling the plop of water on your
skin and watching it melt away like an ice cube.
Instead, the girl and her mother spent the morning at the
card table cutting pink, purple, and green egg shapes from construction paper
and embellishing them with polka dots and stripes.
On one oval, her mother drew eyes and a pointy little orange
beak. Her mother laid the girl’s hands on a piece of yellow paper and traced
around them using a pencil. “Watch,” she said as she cut out the handprints and
then glued them to the back of one of the ovals.
“It’s a bird,” the girl said with delight.
“An Easter chick,” her mother said. “I made these when I was
your age.”
Together, they carefully taped the eggs and chicks and bunny
rab-bits they created to the cement walls, giving the dim room a festive,
springy look. “There, now we’re ready for the Easter Bunny,” her mother said
with triumph.
That night, when the girl climbed into bed, the butterflies
in her stomach kept chasing sleep away. “Stay still,” her mother kept
re-minding her. “You’ll fall asleep faster.”
The girl didn’t think that was true, but then she opened her
eyes, a sliver of bright sunshine was peeking around the shade, and the girl
knew that morning had finally arrived.
She leaped from bed to find her mother already at the tiny
round table where they ate their meals. “Did he come?” the girl asked, tucking
her long brown hair behind her ears.
“Of course he did,” her mother said, holding out a basket
woven together from strips of colored paper. It was small, fitting into the
palm of the girl’s hand, but sweet. Inside were little bits of green paper that
were cut to look like grass. On top of this was a pack of cinnamon gum and two
watermelon Jolly Ranchers.
The girl smiled though disappointment surged through her.
She’d been hoping for a chocolate bunny or one of those candy eggs that oozed
yellow when you broke it open.
“Thank you,” she said.
“Thank the Easter Bunny,” her mother said.
“Thank you, Easter Bunny,” the girl crowed like the child on
the candy commercials that she’d seen on television. They both laughed.
They each unwrapped a piece of gum and spent the morning
making up stories about the paper chicks and bunnies they made.
When the girl’s gum lost its flavor, and she had slowly
licked one of the Jolly Ranchers into a sharp flat disc, the door at the top of
the steps opened, and her father came down the stairs toward them. He was
carrying a plastic bag and a six-pack of beer. Her mother gave the girl a look.
The one that said, go on now, mom and dad need some alone time. Obediently, the
girl, taking her Easter basket, went to her spot beneath the window and sat in
the narrow beam of warm light that fell across the floor. Facing the wall, she
unwrapped another piece of gum and poked it into her mouth and tried to ignore
the squeak of the bed and her father’s sighs and grunts.
“You can turn around now,” her mother finally said. The girl
sprang up from her spot on the floor.
The girl heard the water running in the bathroom, and her
father poked his head out of the door. “Happy Easter,” he said with a grin.
“The Easter Bunny wanted me to give you a little something.”
The girl looked at the kitchen table where the plastic bag
sat. Then she slid her eyes to her mother, who was sitting on the edge of the
bed, rubbing her wrist, eyes red and wet. Her mother nodded.
“Thank you,” she murmured.
Later, after her father climbed the steps and locked the
door behind him, the girl went to the table and looked inside the plastic bag.
In-side was a chocolate bunny with staring blue eyes. He was holding a carrot
and wore a yellow bowtie.
“Go ahead,” her mother told the girl as she held an ice pack
to her wrist. “When I was little, I always started with the ears.”
“I don’t think I’m very hungry,” the girl said, returning
the box to the table.
“It’s okay,” her mother said gently. “You can eat it. It’s
from the Easter Bunny, not your dad.”
The girl considered this. She took a little nibble from the
bunny’s ear and sweet chocolate flooded her mouth. She took another bite and
then another. She held out the rabbit to her mother and she bit off the
remaining ear in one big bite. They laughed and took turns eating until all
that was left was the bunny’s chocolate tail.
“Close your eyes and open your mouth,” her mother said. The
girl complied and felt her mother place the remaining bit on her tongue and
then kiss her on the nose. “Happy Easter,” her mother whispered.
Excerpted from The Overnight Guest by Heather Gudenkauf, Copyright © 2022 by Heather Gudenkauf. Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
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