Forensics Squad Unleashed

Forensics Squad Unleashed Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: Forensics Squad Unleashed Read Online Free PDF
Author: Monique Polak
Tags: JUV028000, JUV036000, JUV035000
you guys doing?” I ask.
    Mom has gotten back into position. She takes a deep breath in, then exhales loudly. “Your father wanted us to try meditating.”
    “It’s harder than it looks,” Dad says, getting up to give me a hug. He is still wearing his work clothes, and his shirt feels stiff against my face. “Tell us all about forensics camp,” he says into my hair.
    I stay by the door. I am afraid that if I walk into the den, my parents will try to make me meditate too. “It was cool. We learned how to do forensic photography and dust for fingerprints. Tomorrow we’re getting a case to solve. Hey, Dad, did you know there was something called forensic accounting ?”
    “I’ve heard of it. But they certainly didn’t offer that sort of thing when I was at university. If they did, I’d have signed up,” Dad says.
    Mom lets her hands hover by her sides, thumbs and index fingers touching.
    “How did Mason like forensics camp?” Dad asks. He sits back down across from Mom and does the same weird thing with his fingers.
    “I guess he liked it. If you don’t mind my asking—why are you guys doing that thing with your fingers?”
    “It’s called the Gyan Mudra,” Dad says. “Your mother and I just watched a DVD about meditation, and we learned how to do it.”
    “The Gyan Mudra is supposed to generate wisdom and calmness,” my mom adds.
    Calmness? That explains it. Meditating must be Dad’s latest scheme to help Mom chill out. And, knowing Mom, she’s probably hoping that meditation will help reduce Dad’s blood pressure. It is probably not a good time to point out that so far the Gyan Mudra does not seem to be working.
    “Maybe you’d like to try meditating sometime too. We could all stand to mellow out a bit,” Dad says. “Meditating could be a family activity.”
    I take two steps back. “Going to the beach is a family activity. Skiing is a family activity. Meditating is not a family activity. I think I’ll go up to my room and read. That’s my way of mellowing out .”
    For people who are supposed to be meditating, my mom and dad are talking an awful lot. I hear them as I go upstairs. “I don’t know where Tabitha gets that harshness,” my dad is saying. “Neither of us is harsh.”
    “Maybe the forensics camp wasn’t the best idea after all. Maybe it’s dredging stuff up for her from—” Mom drops her voice, which is how I know she must be talking about the break-in. Though the subject comes up a lot when she talks to clients, she avoids it when I’m around. I think she is afraid it might upset me. Which it kind of does, but less and less as time goes on.
    “The meditating might help,” my dad says.
    “I don’t think I like meditating,” Mom says. “It makes me anxious.”
    My dad laughs. Not a happy laugh. A worn-out laugh. “We have to give it a try, Lila. You need to learn to relax—not only for yourself, but for me and Tabitha. We need you—even if we don’t always show it.”
    I stop on the stairs and think about what my dad just said. I know I can be harsh—and the part about needing my mom feels true too. But that only makes me mad. I hate feeling needy. Maybe that’s why I try not to show it.
    Needy. Wasn’t that the word Mason used to describe the Chihuahua on the poster? Rexford. The dog who went missing. I remember Rexford’s small sad eyes. Am I really like that?
    And then I get a brilliant idea. I take the stairs back down to the basement two at a time and throw open the door to the den. Dad has turned off the flute music and blown out the candle. He is scooping up the ashes from the incense burner.
    “You know what might help us all relax—even more than meditation? A dog!”
    Dad rubs his eyes the way he does when he is waking up in the morning. “Dogs shed,” he says. “And drool and scratch the floors. You know how fussy I am about the house.”
    “What if I’d clean up after it?” I say.
    “And who’d walk the dog?” Dad asks.
    “Uh, me, I
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