“That's okay. I'm good with this,” I said, lifting the bottle. I used the rusted bottle opener to pop the cap off and took a long drink, knowing she was still watching me. Earlier tonight I had my first beer ever. Now I was on my third one, which was going down more smoothly. The key, it seemed, was to take long drinks and not let it stay in my mouth long enough to touch my tongue. Yeah. Refreshing. I took a deep breath and let it out into another cold breeze, pulling my sweater closer to my goose- bumped skin. I was about to rejoin the girls, when a sudden conversation shift near the fire stopped me.
“I'll tell you one thing,” Dash McCafferry said. “This is going to go down as one of the great disappearing acts of all time.”
“Maybe he's at his grandmother's in Boston,” Josh Hollis suggested.
Dash shrugged. “Eh, I'm sure they already raided the old bat's place.”
Thomas. They were talking about Thomas. I couldn't believe that the last time I was here, he was here as well. It had been approximately forty-?eight hours since anyone had seen Thomas Pearson. He had disappeared from Easton without leaving so much as a note behind. And, according to his roommate Josh
5
Hollis--who stood near the fire with the other guys just then, staring into the flames--Thomas had gone without packing one stitch of clothing, not even his favorite black T-?shirt. On Friday morning Thomas had told me he loved me, had made me promise I would be there for him no matter what, and had then proceeded to vanish.
I wondered how much Josh knew--about me, about what Thomas and I had done together. Had Thomas told Josh what we had done in their dorm room? I wasn't sure. I hadn't known him long enough to find out. But now, every time I saw Josh, I wondered if he knew what I'd done and the thought made me squirm. I didn't need half the school knowing I had lost my virginity to a guy who maybe meant well but was clearly too troubled to be in a healthy relationship. Lost my virginity to a guy who I now knew (even before he vanished) I probably should not be with, but who I still felt irresistably attached to anyway. Lost my virginity to Thomas Pearson, the most popular guy at Easton and also, as I'd recently discovered, the campus's foremost drug supplier. I still couldn't believe it.
Josh took a swig of his previously untouched beer. He had such a baby face that he looked out of place holding the green glass bottle. His blond curls danced in the breeze and he wore a l
ong, striped scarf over a wrinkly, rust-?colored T-?shirt and brown corduroy jacket. He had that artsy, earnest, creative thing going. I liked that about him. I also liked the fact that he had a loud voice--loud enough for me to eavesdrop without letting on.
“What about their place in Vail?” he offered.
6
“Dude, Pearson is not holing-?up anywhere obvious. Believe me,” Dash said with an elaborate snarfle of phlegm. For an extraordinarily good-?looking guy--chiseled, blond, Abercrombie-?esque--he had some serious hygiene flaws. He spat into the fire and took a swig of his beer.
“Very attractive, Dash,” Noelle called across the clearing.
“Thanks, babe,” he replied, and then got back to the topic at hand. “I just can't believe they called the local police in. It's such a waste. If Pearson is crashing anywhere, he's crashing in New York.”
“You think?” The hope in Josh's voice gave life to my own.
“Are you kidding?” Gage Goolidge said. Gage was of the skinny, tall, metrosexual variety, with dark hair that stood straight up from his head--he looked like a member of some British pretty-?boy band. “Thomas Pearson is pulling the biggest punk of all time right now. He's got the entire eastern seaboard looking for him and he's off somewhere partying himself sick.”
'Yeah, maybe," Josh said, chewing on his inner cheek and staring at the fire.
“No maybe,” Dash told him. “Trust me. Halloween is in less than a month. And you know what that means.”
“The Legacy,” Josh said.
“Exactly.” Dash removed one finger from his beer bottle and pointed it at Josh. “Pearson is not going to miss that. If his ass isn't there, I'll give up the Lotus.”
“That's serious, man,” Gage said.
7
“No shit.”
“It's true,” Josh said, nodding. “Pearson is the Legacy.”
“Dude. If he's there, we should drag his sorry ass back up here and collect our medals,” Gage said.
“Aw, yeah,” Dash replied, smacking hands with Gage over Josh's head.
The Legacy? What the heck was the Legacy? I pushed myself away from the tree where I had been lounging, figuring Noelle and the others could clue me in, but before I could take a step, Natasha Crenshaw intercepted me.
“Reed! Where are you going?” she asked, slinging her arm around my neck.
I froze, wondering what the joke was. Natasha Crenshaw was my new roommate at Billings House. And the only reason she was my new roommate was because her best friend, Leanne Shore, had gotten kicked out for cheating in the biggest public scandal Easton had seen all year. Ever since I'd started to unpack my stuff yesterday morning, Natasha had been seething with resentment. It dripped from her very pores.