Blue is for Nightmares

Blue is for Nightmares

by Laurie Faria Stolarz

Narrated by Casey Holloway

Unabridged — 7 hours, 15 minutes

Blue is for Nightmares

Blue is for Nightmares

by Laurie Faria Stolarz

Narrated by Casey Holloway

Unabridged — 7 hours, 15 minutes

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Overview

"I Know Your Secret . . ."

Boarding school junior Stacey Brown has nightmares too real to ignore. Her nightmares come true. This time they're about Drea, her best friend who's become the target of one seriously psycho stalker. To try and protect her, Stacey's working with what she knows-candles, cards, incantations, and spells...
 
Praise for the Blue is for Nightmares series: ¿ A 2007 YALSA Popular Paperback¿ A 2005 YALSA Quick Pick¿ A 2004 YALSA Teen Top Ten Nominee

Editorial Reviews

School Library Journal

Gr 7-10-Stacey's nightmares have proven to tell the future in the past, and now they have returned. The person who is in danger in the teen's dreams is her roommate. Determined to discover who is out to kill Drea, the protagonist performs a series of spells taught to her by her grandmother to ferret out the murderer. Seemingly, all of the girls' friends and acquaintances are suspects. This mystery will initially attract readers who are into Wicca and spells, but may not be successful in keeping their interest. Stacey's bedwetting (at age 16) is a troublesome plot point that remains mostly unresolved at the end. The girls' adventures are unfettered by adults for the most part, and since the story takes place at a boarding school, it is hard to believe that so much could go on unnoticed. Stolarz's first novel is an admirable attempt, but falls short when compared to the works of other mystery-writing greats such as Nancy Werlin and Carol Plum-Ucci.-Kimberly L. Paone, Elizabeth Public Library, NJ Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177554488
Publisher: Everand Productions
Publication date: 02/23/2021
Series: Stolarz Series
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

One

They're always the same. Always at night, in the forest,
looking for Drea. The sound of his body lurking somewhere
behind me. Branches breaking. Leaves crackling.

Wind whirring in my ears, watering my eyes. And the pain
in my stomach-sharp, raw, scathing. Real.

My nightmares make me dread sleep.

I pinch the safety end of the razor blade between three
fingers to write. Then I grab the virgin candle and carve the
initials D. O. E. S. into the rounded side, tiny flakes of
sparkling blue wax crumbling from the surface with each
incision and every drag of the blade.

They're Drea's initials, but she doesn't suspect a thing,
just keeps scribbling away in her diary, like any other night,
sitting up in her bed, only a few feet away.

With the last curl of the S, I place the razor to the side
and pluck a branch of sage from the drawer. It's perfect for
burning, all dried up-the leaves shriveled, twisted and
gray. I wind a piece of string around it for a cleaner burn, so
it won't be as smoky, so I'll have less chance of getting in
trouble. Then I drop it into the orange clay pot by my bed.
"Going to bed?" Drea asks.

"In a few." I unscrew the cap off the bottle of olive oil
and pour a few droplets onto my finger.

She nods and yawns, caps her feather-tipped pen, and
closes up the diary. "Just do me a favor and don't burn the
dorm down. I have a serious history presentation tomorrow."
"All the more reason," I joke.

Drea and I have been roommates for a little over two
years, so she's used to rituals like this.

She rolls over onto her side and pulls the coversup to her
chin. "Better not stay up too late. Don't you have a French
test tomorrow morning?"

"Thanks, Mom."

I watch as she closes her eyes, as her lips settle for sleep,
as the muscles around her forehead loosen and relax. It's
sickening. Even after midnight, with no visible trace of
makeup, not a smidgen of cover-up, hair knotted up in a
rubber band, she still looks perfect-angled cheeks; salmonpink,
pouty lips; loopy, golden hair; and cat-shaped eyes
with curled, jet-black lashes. It's no wonder why every guy
at Hillcrest wants her, why every girl hates her-why Chad
keeps coming back, even after three breakups.

I touch the top end of the candle with my oily finger. "As
above," I whisper. Then I touch the bottom. "So below." I
wet my finger with more of the oil and touch the center
surface. I drag my finger upward, return it to the center,
and then drag it downward, careful to keep the carved letters
pointed in my direction so she won't see.

"Wouldn't it be easier just to wet the whole thing at
once?" Drea asks, her eyes, open, watching me.
I turn the candle counterclockwise, blocking the letters
with my palm, and continue moistening the circumference
in the same fashion. "Probably, but that would confuse the
energies."

"Of course," she says, rolling over. "How ignorant of
me."

When the candle is fully anointed, I light it with a long,
wooden match and place it on the silver holder my grandmother
gave me before she passed away. It's my favorite
holder because it was hers and it's sort of dishlike, with a
curly handle that winds around the base.

I close my eyes and concentrate on the waning moon
outside, how it's an opportune night to make things go
away, how the sage and the engraved candle will help. I
light the branch and watch it burn; the leaves curl up and
dance in the orangy-yellow flame, then turn black and disappear,
the way I pray my nightmares will.

When the sage is no more than ashes, I carry the clay pot
over to the corner sink and fill it with water, watching the
blue-gray smoke rise to the ceiling in long and curly swirls.
I return to my bed and position the candle on the night
table, Drea's initials facing toward me. Then I grab a black
pen from the drawer and draw a capital G across my palm-
G for grandmother, so I will dream of her tonight, so I will
dream of nothing else.

I crawl inside the covers and watch the candle burn the
letters away, the capital D in Drea's initials already half
gone.

Then I close my eyes and brace myself for sleep.

Two

I sit across from my grandmother at the kitchen table,
snarfing down one of her famous grilled egg sandwiches
and a stale bag of potato chips. I watch as her hands curl
around the English muffin, and admire the amethyst ring
on her fourth finger-a chunky violet stone that all but
reaches her knuckle.

"Here." She notices me looking at it and tries to pry it off
her finger. No go. She moves over to the sink and douses
her hands in soap and water to lubricate the skin.
"It's okay, Grandma. You don't have to."

"I want to," she says, finally slipping it off and handing it
to me. "Try it on."

I do; it's a perfect fit.

"It's your ring. I bought that for you when you were
born. I've just been keeping it for you, until I thought you
were old enough. Look at the initials inside."

I take it off and peek-the letters S. A. B. engraved in the
gold. Stacey Ann Brown.

"It's beautiful," I say, handing it back to her.

"No," she says. "I want you to have it. I think it's time.
Plus it fits your finger better than mine."

I slip it back on and kiss her cheek. "Thanks, Gram." I excuse
myself from the table to go outside for some air. It's already
nighttime, the sky an inky black canvas dotted with
tiny dabs of light. A long, cloudlike puff of air smokes
though my lips, and my teeth begin to chatter.

I can hear someone crying beyond the yard. I start walking
toward the sound, and soon I'm past the fence, into the
woods. With each step the crying gets louder, more insistent.
"Drea?" I call. "Is that you?" It sounds just like her. I
can just imagine her getting in another fight with Chad and
trying to come and find me at Gram's.

Arms outstretched, I run in the direction of the whimpering.
But then I have to stop. There's a singeing pain right
below my stomach. I place my hands over my belly and
breathe in and out. I have to pee.

I glance back in the direction of the house, but can't
seem to see it now with the layering of trees and brush.
Everywhere it's black. Even the dabs of light that I saw before
are now painted over with dark branches.

A stick breaks from somewhere behind me. Then another.
"Drea?"

I hold between my legs and hobble as best I can toward
that faraway voice, dodging branches and brush with my
one outstretched hand. I can feel the ground turn to mush
beneath my feet. It slows me down until I stop altogether,
try to catch my breath.

I can still hear Drea's voice, but it's farther away now,
deeper into the forest. I strain to hear something else, anything
that might tell me if I'm still being followed. But
there's only the wind, combing through the frail, November
leaves, whistling in my ear.

I take a small step and feel the ground get deeper, swallowing
up my foot in a bottomless pit of heavy muck. More
sticks break behind me.

I try to step out of the mud, to get out, but when I pull
up my foot, my sneaker is gone.

Pain sears my stomach. I struggle to get away; I grab
hold of a tree limb for support but end up slipping, landing
down against my butt, the muck seeping in through my
pants.

I count to twelve-the one-Mississippi, two-Mississippi
method-and jam my thighs together, but it will only be
minutes before I wet myself.

"Stacey," whispers a male voice from somewhere in the
darkness.

I close my eyes and bury my head into my legs. Drea's
faraway crying turns into a wail. She's calling me now, by
name.

"You can't hide, Stacey," he breathes.

I can't give up. I search the ground for a rock or stick to
protect myself. I find a rock. It isn't very big, but it has a
nice, rough edge.

I arch my neck back to look up at the sky, knowing that
the North Star will guide my way. I squint and blink hard to
find it, but it's useless. Any trace of light is hidden beyond
the treetops.

I crawl free of the mud completely, wrestle myself up,
clench the rock into my palm, and trek for several seconds
with my arms outstretched, brush scratching at my face
like claws, until I reach a circular clearing. I look up to
where the treetops have parted and can make out the sliver
of the moon, approaching first quarter.

A rustling in the bushes distracts my attention. I look
over, blink a few times, and see a man's figure standing between
two trees a few feet in front of me. He doesn't move
and neither do I, just extends his arm, as if to show me
what he's holding. It's a bouquet of some sort.
I strain my eyes to see, using the moon as my light. And
then it becomes clear to me-the size, the color, the way
the petals fall open like a bell. They're lilies.

I know what lilies mean.

I run as fast as I can, my feet like a pair of mismatched
ice skates over leaves and sticks.

Then I stop, clench my eyes, hear a full-fledged wail tear
out of my throat. My one bare foot. I reach down to feel
it-a narrow branch, stabbed into my arch as far in as it will
go. I bite down on the skin of my thumb for several seconds,
until I can swallow down some of the pain. I can't
stay here. I need to get away. I have to be quick. I go to pull
the stick out, but the throb in my stomach won't let me
bend.

I clench my teeth, marry my thighs, and pray for all of it
to go away. I lick my lips and squeeze my legs tighter.
Tighter.

But it isn't enough. The warmth swells between my
thighs. The front of my pants fills with dampness. I squeeze
my legs to hold the water in place so he won't hear me, but
my muscles ache from the effort. I feel my face tense, my
eyes fill up. I can't hold it. The trickling leaks through my
thighs, makes a pattering sound on the leaves beneath me.

"Stacey," he breathes, "I know your secret." The voice is
slow and thick, the breath so close to the back of my neck
that I reach back to swat it.

I open my mouth to scream but my throat is clogged,
filled with dirt. It's everywhere. Up my nostrils. In my eyes.
I grip around my throat to keep from choking, and realize
the rock is still clenched in my palm. I dig my nails into its
jagged ridges and throw it. Hard.

Crash. The sound of broken glass fills my senses. And
when the lights come on I'm sitting up.

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