Normal. We'd been trying to find it all semester. Now, with everyone safely back inside Easton's gates, we settled into some semblance of it. Everyone was busy studying. The library, still the Billings Girls' home away from home, was now jam-packed with students from every class holding cram sessions and project meetings. Even I was able to absorb information again, which was a very good thing, since I had so much to catch up on. I found that Dean Marcus's grounding turned out to be a blessing. Since I spent every waking hour outside of class in the library, studying was about all I could do.
There were still a few clues here and there that not all was right in the world of Easton. Especially for me. Every now and then I would see someone out of the corner of my eye and think it was Thomas. My heart would catch and I would turn, and the guy in question would actually look nothing like him. It was just my brain playing tricks on my already battered heart, and I'd have to remember all over again that Thomas was dead. Even though I was with Josh now, it hurt every time. To know that he was gone forever. That I'd never see that smile again. It still hurt.
Meanwhile, Josh refused to be anywhere within a five-foot radius of Noelle. Since I had to sit at the same table with her at all times, it made seeing him difficult, but we found our ways. Timing our bathroom breaks so that we'd be coming out at the same moment, walking from classroom to classroom together, sitting at the far end of our table at mealtimes, ignoring the conversation around us. Still, the chill between them was palpable, and Noelle hadn't said all that much to me either since our showdown in the cafeteria. I hoped she wasn't using that time to plot against me. I was not in the mood for more hazing.
Also, there were the headlines. Each day they grew more and more scathing. Easton Academy was dragged through the muck every which way possible. The school was derided for turning out murderers and drug dealers in one article, yet taken to task for installing security cameras in the next--as if the board didn't have the right or the cause. The student body started to develop a palpable anger. There were details in one article that could only have been related by someone who attended the school. Whether it was an alumnus or one of the kids who had been pulled out after Thomas's death, no one knew. But no one wanted to believe it was someone who was still on campus. In our delicate state of being, that kind of betrayal would have been too much for anyone to take.
I tried to ignore all of it. Josh was safe, and I had to keep my grades up if I wanted to come back to Easton in the spring. Of course I still wanted to see Thomas's murderer brought to justice, but my role in that particular drama was over. As Detective Hauer had suggested in the beginning, I decided to let the police do their job, and I would do mine: pass finals. That's exactly what I was trying to do late one Tuesday night in the library. I was so engrossed in my chemistry flash cards that I didn't even notice when Dean Marcus walked in. "What's he doing now? Checking up on us?" Noelle grumbled from across the table and a couple seats down. "I feel bad for him," Cheyenne said. "Look. He's aged at least ten years since the beginning of the term. I bet he wishes Headmaster Cox had never retired." "Who's Headmaster Cox?" I asked. Everyone looked at me like I'd just asked how to add two and two.
"Headmaster Cox ran this place for thirty years," Ariana told me. "He retired last semester. Dean Marcus is technically the dean of students. He's only acting as head of the academy until they can find a new headmaster." "How did you not know that? Everyone knows that," Kiran said. "She's new, remember?" Cheyenne defended me. I glanced up then and found Dean Marcus talking with Mrs. Lattimer way down at the far end of our sequestered area. He looked frail, like he hadn't eaten in days, and he was obviously graying. Cheyenne was right. This school year had taken a big toll on the man. What an awful year to be acting as interim headmaster.
"Maybe he should quit," Noelle said. "Spare us all the misery." "Noelle!" Cheyenne was shocked. "Dean Marcus is Easton. I couldn't even imagine this place without him." "I could," Noelle said. "Gladly." "You don't mean that," Cheyenne protested, shaking her blond hair back. "Yes. I do. The guy's an asshole, Cheyenne," Noelle said. "He grounded us. Us! This weekend is the last weekend before finals and we can't even leave this library, let alone campus. I mean, who does he think he is?" "He's the dean of students and he's worked here since he was a professor. He cares about this place and its reputation," Cheyenne replied flatly. I saw something register in her eyes. An idea. "In fact... we may be able to use that to our advantage."
"What do you mean?" I asked, intrigued. "I think I just came up with a way to get us off campus after all." "You have a plan," Noelle said doubtfully. "Yes." Cheyenne grinned, sitting up straight. "Yes. In fact, I do."She placed her hands on the table and stood, then smoothed the front of her white sweater and patted her hair. My skin prickled with curiosity. She turned and strode right over to Dean Marcus and Mrs. Lattimer, all confidence and smiles. "What's she up to?" Kiran asked, pulling her earbuds from her ears. Noelle sighed and returned to her work. "I could not care l
ess."
* * *
"Did my gown come in?" Natasha asked, clutching her cell phone to her ear as we walked back from the library later that night. It was a beautiful crisp night with thousands of stars blanketing the sky. I kept my head tipped back as we walked; for the first time in weeks, I was able to focus on the beauty of the world. "How does it look? Okay. Yes. We'll have the last fitting the day before Christmas Eve. No, I'll do it. I'll call him, Mom. You have other things to worry about. Okay. Love you too."
She hung up the phone, smiling. "Aw! Miss Moral Center loves her mommy! How sweet," Noelle teased. Natasha rolled her eyes but said nothing. "What's the gown for? You 'coming out' to society?" Kiran asked, cackling. "Kiran," Ariana scolded, "that is so inappropriate." "No. It's hilarious. Really," Natasha said flatly, patting Kiran's shoulder. "And they say models have no brains." Kiran scoffed but could not, in fact, come up with a comeback. Which clearly pissed her off. "No, the gown is for the embassy ball on Christmas Eve," Natasha said. "I go every year." "The embassy ball?" I asked. My vision fogged over for a second as I snapped my head forward. Reverse head-rush. "My mother is the ambassador to the United States from Zimbabwe," Natasha said. "She holds this ball in D.C. every year." I almost tripped on my own feet. "Your mother's an ambassador? You never told me that." Natasha shrugged. "Never came up." I felt stung. I thought Natasha and I had grown close, but this was a huge thing she'd never deigned to share with me. "I can't believe you never told me." "I don't know what your mother does," Natasha pointed out. Oh. Right. And you never will.
"What does your mother do?" Kiran asked, tilting her head toward me. "Nothing interesting," I replied, wishing like hell I'd kept my mouth shut. "No, come on, Reed. Tell us," Noelle teased. "I'll bet she drives a bus. No! She works in a mill." I felt like I was going to burst into embarrassed tears at any second. Noelle was just goading me. She knew all about my family-- or so she'd implied on several occasions. She'd probably read my file at some point, considering she seemed to have access to anything she wanted. I wondered if she knew only that my mother was on disability, or if she also somehow knew that all my mother ever did anymore was pop pills and make everyone's lives miserable-- for the few hours a day she was awake.
Up ahead the windows of Billings glowed with welcoming light. If I could just deflect this until we got inside . . . "Do people really still do that?" Kiran asked. "You may as well just tell them, Reed. I'm sure it's nothing to be ashamed of," Ariana said. At that moment the front door of Billings opened and Cheyenne popped her head out. "Hurry it up, girls! We're all meeting in the parlor." Noelle paused. I knew all thoughts of my family's occupations were forgotten. I'd been saved by mini-Martha. "Oh, this girl has gone too far. She's calling meetings now?" Cheyenne had disappeared from the library with Dean Marcus about an hour earlier. Apparently whatever they had talked about had gone Cheyenne's way, because she was grinning from ear to ear as she held the door open for us and ushered us in. We all dropped our coats and bags in the foyer, where a fire crackled and the Christmas tree twinkled, and followed her to the parlor. The rest of the dorm had already gathered. Mrs. Lattimer stood by the doorway, her expression pinched, her hand at the collar of her shirt.
"Have a seat, have a seat," Cheyenne said to us, like she was the hostess and we were the guests. Noelle ignored her and stood behind the couch. Natasha dropped onto an ottoman, but Ariana, Kiran, and I stayed standing. As annoyed as I was at Noelle, it felt like the type of moment for choosing sides, and my instinct was still to stay on hers. Cheyenne stepped over Vienna's outstretched legs and faced us at the front of the room. She was practically oozing with self- satisfaction. "I have exciting news," she said. "The dean and I have made a deal. Trey Prescott and I have agreed to do an exclusive interview with the New York Times, all about how amazing it is to be a student at Easton, and in return . . . he's going to let us off campus this weekend!" There were excited gasps all throughout the room. Noelle's hand tightened around the ornate wooden frame of the couch.
"Orchid V.I.P. room, here we come!" Vienna shouted, throwing up her hands. I thought Noelle might rend the furniture in two. I imagined all the girls sitting on the couch falling on their toned butts on the antique rug. "Actually, we're not going to New York," Cheyenne said, quieting everyone again. "The deal stipulated that we go to a prearranged spot. So we're going to my family's summer house in Litchfield." Noelle's grip instantly relaxed. She snorted a laugh. "Wow. How fabulous," she said. "Next you're going to tell us your dad and step- mom are going to be there to chaperone."Cheyenne glanced at Mrs. Lattimer. She nodded shrewdly, cleared her throat, and left the room. Noelle watched the woman go with her mouth slightly open. Someone other than her had just gotten Lattimer to leave us alone. Cheyenne was pink with pleasure.
"Actually, the dean did call my father and asked him to chaperone. Which, of course, Daddy said he would do." Everyone groaned. Cheyenne held up a hand. "But Dad just called me five minutes ago and told me he can't actually make it," she added. "He trusts me. Trusts us. So we're on our own." "And he'll cover for us?" Rose asked. "Of course he will," Cheyenne said. Just like that, she'd won the crowd over again. Cheyenne looked right at Noelle as everyone else squealed with delight. "So it looks like we'll be having our yearly off-campus party after all!"There was a round of cheers and the meeting started to break up. All around me, girls were planning what to wear, which guys to invite, how drunk they wanted to get. All the while, Cheyenne and Noelle continued to glare at one another. Noelle looked murderous.
Cheyenne was the first to break eye contact. She walked around the couch and approached us. "Nice work," Noelle said, crossing her arms over her chest. "You got the dean to agree to let us go hang out in Hicksville. What're we going to do? Go cow-tipping? Take a historical hayride through the square?" Cheyenne smiled and shook her head. "At least I got him to let us off campus, which was something you couldn't do. Oh, no, wait- something you didn't even try to do." Noelle stared down her nose at Cheyenne, silently fuming. "Well, maybe I'm just not a natural kiss-ass." "You can't just intimidate your way through life, Noelle. That's not how it works," Cheyenne said calmly. "Sometimes you have to work with people. Speaking of which, Reed, I have a favor to ask."
She shifted her attention to me before Noelle could formulate another comeback. "A favor?" "Yes. The dean thought it might be a good idea to have at least one scholarship student in on the interview. You know, to show the world that we're not just a bunch of overprivileged snobs," she said with a small laugh. "Of course, I immediately thought of you." * "Oh, I-" There was literally nothing I wanted to do less than have some reporter grill me on my months at Easton. Did I actually have anything good to say? "You won't have to talk about Thomas and all that drama unless you want to," Cheyenne said, correctly guessing the source of my hesitation. "You can focus on the teachers, the classes, the dorms. Tell them what a world-class education you're getting. I think the dean would really appreciate it." My gut twisted in twenty different ways, but I got her point. "Okay," I said. "If it'll help him ease up on us, then sure. I'm in." "That's great!" Cheyenne said gleefully. Then, much to my surprise, she grabbed me in a quick hug. "I'll let you know as soon as I have all the details. Have a good night, girls!" she trilled. Then she bounded out of the room like a happy puppy. I didn't dare look anyone else in the eye. I simply turned around, grabbed my stuff, and followed.
BUDDY-BUDDY
I was just dozing off that night--something I was pleasantly surprised I could still do after all those sleepless nights--when the door to my room opened, spilling dim light in from the hallway. I sat up straight in my bed and my heart caught when I saw Noelle's shadow entering the room. Ariana and Kiran were right behind her. Here it was. My new round of hazing. Well, this time I wasn't going anywhere without a real fight. "What the hell are you guys doing?" Natasha asked before I had the chance. Ariana flicked on the lights. She wore a white nightgown with lace at the wide neck and carried a Burberry shopping bag. Kiran, in a red nightie, placed a martini shaker and a bottle of vodka down on my desk. Noelle, wearing a black silk pajama set, added four martini glasses. I was officially confused. They were all in PJs, so they weren't dragging me anywhere, and apparently they were setting up a bar. "I couldn't sleep, so I went to Kiran's," Noelle explained. "Kiran thought a couple of drinks might help, but I never drink alone." She picked up the shaker and started shaking. "So here we are."
Natasha and I looked at one another across the room. We could throw them out, but that might cause more trouble than it was worth. If we let them stay and have one drink, they'd go faster and happier. We communicated all of this silently; then, decision made, Natasha threw her covers aside with a huff and we joined them at the desk. "Make mine a double," Kiran said. Noelle expertly poured out a glassful of liquid. Ariana took a jar of olives out of her bag and speared two with a toothpick. "We should open a bar when we get out of here," Noelle joked to Ariana. "I think we would do very well," Ariana replied. I stared at them. They were in too good of a mood. Where exactly was this going? "Reed?" Noelle asked as Kiran took her drink and perched on Natasha's desk chair. "None for me, thanks," I said. "Oh! Is living with Miss Moral Center rubbing off on you?" Noelle asked.
"No, it's just I can't be hungover tomorrow. I have class and a lot of work," I said. "You're having a drink," Noelle told me, holding a half-full glass out. My heart thumped. "No. I'm not." "You're having a drink," she said. "You can either drink it, or I can dump it on your head. Your call." My teeth clenched together. I could have killed the person who decided
that having no locks on our dorm room doors was a good idea. Of course, a lock wouldn't have stopped Noelle anyway, I knew. She found a way around everything. "Fine." I took the glass from her and sat down on my bed with no intention of drinking it. Noelle smiled her triumph, then poured out drinks for Natasha, Ariana, and herself. Soon we were all seated around the room, sipping. Or pretending to sip, as it were. "So . . . ," Natasha said finally. "So what?" Noelle asked. "So what are you doing here?" I asked. "Can't friends share a midnight drink with friends anymore?" Noelle asked. "We just came to talk," Ariana clarified. "The term is almost over, and lately we haven't really had time to bond." "Bond." Kiran hiccupped a laugh. "I love that word."
Clearly she had been drinking way before Noelle had showed up at her room. Plus we figured it would be nice to have a little fun," Noelle said, lifting her glass. "Since we won't be having any this weekend." "Oh, so that's what this is about. You want to bash Cheyenne," Natasha said, leaning forward. "Who needs to bash her?" Noelle asked innocently. "Everyone already knows that her idea of fun is totally lame." "The rest of the dorm seemed to like it," I pointed out. "The rest of the dorm is too stupid to realize how boring it's going to be," Kiran said. "So you guys aren't going to go?" I asked. "Of course we're going to go," Noelle said. "If only to rub her nose in her incredible failure." They all laughed and clinked glasses. "I think you're just annoyed because she's managed to do what you couldn't," Natasha said to Noelle. "I think it kills you."
"Anyone can suck up to authority, Crenshaw. I prefer to do things my way," Noelle snapped. "Unfortunately, your way got us grounded," Natasha said under her breath. "Oh, like you had so many better things to do," Noelle said. "Last time I checked, your entire social life had been unceremoniously drop-kicked out of this school, never to show her pore- clogged face again."
Natasha looked as if she'd been slapped. Not only had Noelle just insulted Natasha's girlfriend, but she was throwing around Leanne's expulsion, when we all knew very well that Noelle was the one who'd gotten her expelled. "But let's not talk about the past," Noelle said, turning to me. "I want to talk about Miss Reed." Oh God. Here we go. "You seem very buddy-buddy with the automaton," she said. "Excuse me?" "Cheyenne. She's talking about Cheyenne," Ariana said firmly. "Yes, her. The dean's robot. What's that all about?" Noelle asked. "I'm not buddy-buddy with her," I replied. "She just asked me to do the interview." "Right. The interview. That which she used to go over my head and make plans without me. Without any of us," Noelle said.
"Look, I'm just trying to help us all out," I said. "The dean's pissed at us, and if this helps him be less pissed, then I'm going to do it. I don't love Cheyenne, but I think it was smart of her to offer an olive branch. After everything that's happened, we need a little good PR." Noelle stared at me. For a moment I actually thought she was seeing the validity of my point. But then she scoffed. She lifted the toothpick from her glass, brought her teeth down on the olive, and pulled it off. "She's got you all totally brainwashed," Noelle said, shaking her head like it was just too funny. "It's almost pathetic, really. I so hate to see my friends all brainwashed."
Unless, of course, it was by her own hand. "And that's why she needs to be taken down a peg." A heavy sense of foreboding settled over the room. "What do you mean, exactly?" Ariana asked, intrigued. Noelle shrugged and smiled. "I have my ways." "We know you do," Kiran said, half-gleeful, half-resigned. And suddenly I felt sorry for Cheyenne. Because when Noelle decided to knock someone down a peg, that person usually ended up getting knocked all the way down to the pits of hell.
THE FUGITIVE