Read Dead Is Just a Rumor Online
Authors: Marlene Perez
Dead Is Just A Rumor
Marlene Perez
Table of Contents
G
RAPHIA
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Boston New York 2010
Copyright © 2010 by Marlene Perez
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Graphia, an imprint
of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. For information about
permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions,
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company,
215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York, 10003.
Graphia and the Graphia logo are registered trademarks of
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
The text of this book is set in Adobe Jenson.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Perez, Marlene.
Dead is just a rumor/Marlene Perez.
p. cm.
Summary: Psychic teen Daisy Giordano has her hands full trying to
find out who is behind the blackmail letters being sent to paranormal residents
of Nightshade, while also worrying about her werewolf boyfriend going away to
college and the possibly lethal cooking lessons she is taking with a sinister chef.
[1. Supernatural—Fiction. 2. Psychic ability—Fiction. 3. Werewolves—Fiction.
4. Sisters—Fiction. 5. High schools—Fiction. 6. Schools—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.P4258Ddj 2010
[Fic]—dc22 2009050010
ISBN 978-0-547-34592-5 (pbk. original: alk. paper)
Printed in the United States of America
DOM 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
4500241884
To Michael, for all the moral (and tech) support
CHAPTER ONE
"
I heard a rumor about you,
" Penny Edwards said to me. The gym was crowded and noisy, so I had to move closer to hear what she had to say. The girls' volleyball team was practicing at one end and Samantha was at the other end, barking orders like a gorgeous blond drill sergeant. I couldn't hear Samantha from where I stood, but whatever she said sent her minions scurrying.
I smothered a sigh. Penny had never been one of my favorite people, but I thought she'd changed over the last few months. Apparently, I was wrong.
"What rumor?" I said, not really wanting to hear the answer.
"That you and Ryan are shoo-ins for king and queen of the Midnight Ball." She smiled at me and I caught a glimpse of the kinder, gentler Penny.
"I hope not," I said. "Samantha's been working really hard on the ball. I hope she and Sean win." Samantha Devereaux was my best friend, who for a time had been my worst enemy—or at least a thorn in my side—and was back to being my best friend again.
We'd been through a lot during our junior year at Nightshade High, but I was expecting smooth sailing for our senior year. Or as smooth as it could be, considering that we lived in a town that was a little different, to say the least.
"Samantha's definitely a contender," Penny said. "Especially since everyone who is a resident of Nightshade gets to vote."
"Well, please tell everyone I don't want another crown." Last year, I'd been crowned homecoming queen in a bizarre turn of events. I didn't want to sound ungrateful, but that was enough glory for me. Samantha thrived in the spotlight. I did not. Now that she and I were finally friends again, I wasn't going to let some tinsel crown come between us.
Penny gave me a half wave and headed to the locker room. I watched her go.
"Daisy, look out!" Samantha warned me as a giant orange jack-o'-lantern rolled down the aisle. I put out a hand and concentrated. It rolled to a stop in the nick of time and narrowly missed squashing me flat.
You had to stay on your toes when you lived in Nightshade, and having psychic powers helped. I looked around the gym to see if anyone had noticed my public psychic slip, but everyone's attention was on the volleyball game going on at the other end.
"Halloween is over a month away, you know," I said, gesturing toward the bright decoration.
Samantha peered at me from behind a huge box of orange and black streamers, cardboard black cats, and ghosts. "It's not just any Halloween," she replied. "It's Nightshade's two hundredth anniversary celebration. I'm one of the chairs."
"I know. I was just telling Penny how hard you've been working." Samantha volunteered for practically every committee the high school had. Now that it was finally our senior year, she didn't seem to be slowing down at all.
"Gotta go!" I said, as I remembered the other thing Sam liked to do, which was rope me into volunteering for whatever pet project she was involved in. I'd wait for Ryan somewhere far, far away from my volunteering-happy friend.
"Don't you dare take a step out that door, Giordano!" she said, only half teasing.
I repressed a sigh. Sam was unstoppable. Besides, I had to admit, I had fun when I was around her. At least, most of the time.
"I have plans for those psychic powers of yours," she continued. "How else are we going to hang these decorations on the ceiling?"
"Okay, if you promise not to try to squash me with a squash again."
"Who's trying to murder you this time?" Ryan said. He put his arm around me and gave me a hello kiss. My boyfriend was the best thing about senior year, although I had to push away the thought of what would happen to us once we graduated. I'd worry about that when the time came.
"Hi, Ryan," Sam said. "Where's Sean? He promised me he'd help." Sean was Samantha's boyfriend and Ryan's best friend.
"He's still in the locker room," Ryan replied. "But he mentioned you guys might need another hand."
Samantha's momentary irritation at her boyfriend disappeared. "Can you haul these outside?"
Ryan took the box from Samantha. "Where do you want these?"
"I rented a truck," she replied. "It's in the first stall in the parking lot." The first stall in the parking lot was Principal Amador's, but if anyone could get away with commandeering his spot, it would be Samantha.
Sean walked up, carrying a green gym bag under his arm.
"What took you so long?" Samantha said.
"Sorry, babe," he replied. "I got caught up talking to Wolfgang."
She made a face. "What were you doing talking to
him?
"
"He's helping Coach with the stats," Sean said. "I can't ignore him."
"Why not?" she replied. "After what he did this summer, he deserves to be ignored."
Wolfgang Paxton was a freshman who had been giving some of the football players a little something extra in their Wheaties, and the summer had ended with half the football team becoming werewolves. The ones who weren't already, I mean. Fortunately, the side effects of Wolfgang's "hairballs" turned out to be temporary.
"Don't worry," Sean said, soothing her. "He's calmed down since the summer."
Samantha held out her hand. "Keys, please. I need to take this stuff to the Wilders."
Sean opened his bag and dug through the contents. He didn't notice when a heavily embossed envelope fell out and landed on the polished floor.
I stooped down and picked it up. I wasn't trying to be nosy, but the blood-red wax seal aroused my curiosity. It looked like a fancy invitation, with creamy white stationery that was silky to the touch.
I handed it to Sean. "That's not mine," he said. He shoved the envelope into a pocket, then peered into the bag. "I must have grabbed the wrong bag." He hurried off to the locker room.
He returned a few minutes later, carrying an almost identical gym bag. "I grabbed Wolfie's by mistake."
Sam checked her watch. "C'mon," she said. "We're late."
Ryan and I just stood there until Samantha barked out, "Are you coming?"
"Coming where?" I said.
"The Wilder mansion," she replied. "I'm storing stuff there until we can clean up the haunted house."
"What haunted house?"
"That old deserted mansion up by the Wilders—Merriweather House. It's going to be the centerpiece of the town celebration. We're having the Midnight Ball there. It's supposed to be haunted."
"It sounds ... monumental," I said aloud, but I was thinking that it sounded like a monumental amount of hard work. Everyone in town knew the dance would be the culmination of the anniversary events, but I had just assumed it would be held at the Wilder estate, which was the biggest, fanciest place in town.
After loading the truck, Ryan and I got in his car and followed Samantha and Sean to the Wilder estate.
"How's your dad?" Ryan asked.
"He's ... okay," I said.
"That bad, huh?" Another thing I loved about Ryan. He could tell what I really wanted to say, without me having to say it.
"He's getting better, but he's still..."
"Distant?" Ryan guessed.
I nodded. "He says he doesn't want to talk about it." My dad had been through a traumatic experience. Most of Nightshade had thought he'd run off with another woman, but the truth was he'd been abducted and held captive by the Scourge, an anti-paranormal group. Mom had rescued Dad from their clutches, but not until he had been gone for six long years.
Dad hadn't left the house much at all since his return. Mom had made a few tentative noises about him going back to teaching, but he hadn't even called his old department at the university. He even talked about writing a book, but I hadn't seen any evidence that he was actually working on it.
The Wilder mansion was one of the oldest places in Nightshade. We pulled up the long driveway and parked. There was a restaurant on the property, but it only took up a minuscule part of the main house.
Samantha rang the doorbell, and it was the elegant Mrs. Wilder herself, the elderly matriarch of the shifter clan and the owner of the estate, who answered the door. She pointedly looked at her watch and said, "We start serving dinner in one hour."
"We'll be finished by then," Samantha promised.
"Excellent," Mrs. Wilder replied. "Bianca will show you the way."
Bianca materialized from the shadows. Bianca worked at Wilder's Restaurant, but her duties didn't end there. Bianca was a shape-shifter, too. She took the form of a sweet-looking black kitten, but looks could be deceiving.
Instead of the severely chic dresses I was accustomed to seeing her in, she was dressed in jeans and a sweatshirt. She still managed to look gorgeous. A familiar-looking envelope with a red seal was shoved into the back pocket of her jeans. Interesting.
"Hi, Bianca," I said.
"Daisy," she said. "Did you get your letter already?"
"Letter?" I said, confused. My mind flashed to the heavy envelope Sean had dropped earlier.
"You haven't received it yet? Oh, forget I said anything."
When I frowned, she added, "Don't fret. It's not anything bad. I just don't want to spoil the surprise."
"If you say so," I replied. I'd had enough surprises to last a lifetime.
She smiled. "I do."
Bianca handed Samantha a key. "Mrs. Wilder has instructed me to give you the key to the room you'll be using to store the decorations. This way, please."
Bianca's midnight-black hair was in a ponytail and it swayed back and forth hypnotically as she led us to a part of the mansion I'd never been to.
We went through rooms even more luxurious than the converted restaurant and ballroom. Sean couldn't keep his astonishment in check and let out a low whistle.
"These are the estate's guest rooms," Bianca said. "It's documented that a famous buccaneer once stayed in one of the bedrooms."
We finally reached stairs much less opulent than the ones near the front entrance. The surroundings grew shabby.
"This part of the house is rarely used," Bianca explained. The wallpaper was faded and torn in places, and I detected the distinct odor of dust and mold, combined with a less familiar smell.
We reached our destination and Bianca motioned for us to enter. We stepped into an enormous room. A row of long narrow windows flanked one wall. At the opposite end, there was a jumble of tables and chairs, and a couple of large trunks. There was even a framed oil painting propped against a dressmaker's dummy. I couldn't decide what to look at next.
I set down the box I'd been carrying. "This is amazing!"
"Well, I'll leave you to it," Bianca said. "Daisy, I'll see you later."
After Bianca left, Samantha said to Sean, "Be an angel and get the folding table first."
"What are you going to do with the folding table?" I asked, after Ryan and Sean left.
"We don't have nearly enough decorations," she replied. "Even with the stuff I've managed to borrow. So, we're going to make more," she said.
"Who is
we?
" I said suspiciously.
"Relax, Daisy," she said. "I've already asked the cheerleading squad to help."
"Great," I said.
"I have bigger plans for you," she said. "I thought you could whip up something for the volunteers to snack on."
"How many volunteers?"
"Just a few," she said airily. "I asked Mrs. Wilder if we could use the kitchen here, but she said her new chef is temperamental."
"I can make some simple stuff," I said.
I had thought I was getting off easily, but my muscles were aching by the time we'd hauled all the supplies to the room. Half of the stuff would have to be moved again when we set up the haunted house.
After we were finished, Ryan took me home, even though Sean lived next door.
"Want to come in?" I was sweaty and tired, but he'd been busy with football practice the last few days and I hadn't seen much of him.
"Nah, I'd better not," he said. He shifted in his seat uncomfortably.
I knew what he was thinking. Despite my best efforts, he and my dad hadn't really clicked.
"Let's go out tomorrow night," I said. "It's Friday."
He gave me a hug. "That sounds great, but I know you want to spend time with your dad."
"I want to spend time with you, too. How about Slim's?"
Slim's Diner was where I worked part-time, but business there had slowed down. Lately I'd only been working the occasional Saturday. It worried me. I didn't know what I'd do if Slim's went out of business. Nightshade wouldn't be Nightshade without the diner.
"Side Effects May Vary is playing at the Black Opal," Ryan said. "But maybe we can hit Slim's after the show."
The front porch light went on, which was my signal to kiss Ryan good night.
When I went inside, my dad was waiting for me. "Where have you been?" he demanded. His hands were shaking.
"Helping Samantha," I said. "Are you okay?"
"Then why did Ryan bring you home?" That's what his agitation was all about.
I drew in my breath. "Ryan was helping, too. And he brought me home because he's my
boyfriend
and he wants to be with me," I said. "You like Ryan, remember?" Dad had never seemed to have a problem with Ryan back when we were little kids who played in the sandbox together, but it was a different story now.
It was hard for me to remember how happy I had been when Mom brought Dad home. Even though I was mad at him, at least it wasn't a doppelganger I was fighting with, which had happened when someone had created doppelgangers of Nightshade residents and tried to pass them off as the real people. This was my real dad and we were having our first real fight.
I stomped up the stairs—ignoring his "Daisy, come back here!"—and made a beeline for my room, but Poppy waylaid me outside the door.
"What was that all about?" Poppy asked.
"Dad again," I admitted. "I don't know what his problem is with Ryan."
"It's not Ryan," she said. "It's you."
"Huh?" I said. I had no clue what Poppy was talking about.
"Think about it," she said. "You're the baby, and when Dad disappeared, you were twelve."