Midnight Crossroad (Midnight, Texas #1)

Midnight Crossroad (Midnight, Texas #1) Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: Midnight Crossroad (Midnight, Texas #1) Read Online Free PDF
Author: Charlaine Harris
Tags: kickass.to, ScreamQueen
had when he watched her cross the room.
Some
way.
    It was not quite full dark outside, and the family of outsiders had finished their meat loaf and fried chicken. The little girl was beginning to pick on her younger sibling, and the mom was casting desperate looks toward the kitchen. Madonna was cooking, to judge from the sounds of pots and pans and the sizzle of frying, and Creek hurried out with the plates for the two men sitting together. She put them down, gave the men an impersonal smile, and scurried over to the booth to take the payment tucked into the black plastic folder the dad was extending.
    Just after the sun set, the bell over the door chimed as Bobo walked in with a man Manfred had never seen. As Manfred had noted before, his landlord was lucky enough to have a pleasing color palette; his hair was golden blond, his eyes were bright blue, his skin was a golden dusky tan. And he was tall, robust. His companion was more like—Bobo bleached and dried and shrunken. Instead of blond, his hair was platinum: the same shade as Manfred’s, but the newcomer’s hair was natural. His eyes were a pale, pale gray. His skin was . . .
    “White as snow,” Manfred whispered, remembering the old fairy tale Xylda had read to him. “His skin was white as snow.”
    Joe glanced at Manfred and nodded. “Be cool,” he said, very quietly. “That’s Lemuel.”
    Manfred planned on being cool as cool could be, since he wasn’t sure exactly what Lemuel was—but no one had given Nice Normal Family the same memo. The children fell silent as the newcomer glanced around the room. He smiled at the children, who looked terrified. At least they were too frightened to speak, which was almost certainly a good thing. The two visitors kept their eyes down on their plates after a quick glance upward, and they very deliberately did not look up.
    The Rev didn’t even stop reading his Bible.
    “This is beyond weird,” Manfred said in a voice no louder than a whisper, but the bleached man looked at him with a smile.
    Good God,
Manfred thought. He had a ridiculous impulse to jump to his feet and interpose himself between the bleached man and Creek Lovell, but it was really fortunate he didn’t act on that. Creek returned with the family’s change, and after she placed it on their table, she flung her arms around the bleached man’s neck—which Manfred wouldn’t have done for any amount of money—and said, “I haven’t seen you in so long, Uncle Lemuel! How are you?”
    Released from their table by Creek’s return, the mom and dad gathered all their belongings and shepherded the two kids, still openmouthed and staring, out the door of the Home Cookin Restaurant as quickly as possible. Manfred followed them with his eyes. Once outside, the mom stood on one side of the car, gripping the daughter’s hand, the dad on the other side with the boy in his arms. They spoke to each other briefly and intensely across the hood of the car before piling in and speeding away.
    “Uncle” Lemuel (if he was Creek’s uncle, Manfred was an insurance salesman) gingerly embraced the girl and gave her a kiss on the hair. Lemuel was not any taller than Manfred, and even more slightly built, but his presence was bigger than his body. The eye could not pass over Lemuel; it was caught and fascinated. Manfred thought,
I could have skipped getting all this body art if I’d dyed myself dead white
, but he knew that he was simplifying.
    The two strangers by the window had finally looked up now that Lemuel’s back was to them. They looked determined not to flee or flinch. The scene seemed frozen for a long moment, and then Lemuel’s eyes met Manfred’s and held. It was like being fixed in place by an icicle.
    Bobo started forward, gently nudging his companion, and the connection was broken.
Thank God,
Manfred thought, an acknowledgment he didn’t make very often.
    In seconds Bobo and Lemuel had seated themselves, Lemuel at Manfred’s right and Bobo in the
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