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Authors: Lee Nichols

BOOK: Deception
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6

On the drive home, I planned how it would play out: Bennett would transfer from Harvard to Berkeley and move into Max’s room. We’d meet for study breaks and candlelit suppers. His family also sold antiquities, so he’d help me with the shop, and in no time my parents would return and Bennett and I would be in love.

In reality, I worshipped him like a god the entire ride home in his Taurus rental and he, apparently, knew he was divine because he rebuffed me like Apollo spurning a lowly shepherdess. Although after spending the night in a halfway house, I did look as though I’d rolled with the sheep.

Still, despite the urge to pick straw from my hair, I was relieved to be home. And grateful. Only … how had he known to come?

Suddenly unsure, I paused with my thumb over the security print. “Why are you here? How did you know I was in trouble?”

He flashed a crooked grin. “Always a safe bet.”

“Hey! I’m never in trouble

I mean, except now. And that’s not what I meant. How did you know where to find me? And those fake papers


Bennett’s phone jingled. “Saved by the iPhone,” he said, and stepped away.

I stood there with my thumb hanging out, watching him. He eyed me as though I were trying to eavesdrop, which I was, so I went inside and tried to eavesdrop from there.

I heard him murmuring, but couldn’t make out the details. He said either “love you” or “you, too” before hanging up. Was he talking to his girlfriend?

He came inside and said, “I’ve gotta run.”

“The last time you left,” I said, “you didn’t come back for two years.”

He took my hand and looked at me with his cobalt eyes. “So you
did
miss me.”

“That’s not

” Okay, yeah, that’s exactly what I meant.

He grinned. “I’m not going to leave you again, Emma.”

Then he told me to stay out of trouble

like I was ten

and disappeared. My hand tingled where he’d touched me. After staring dreamily at the doorway for a few minutes, I pulled myself together. What was it about him?

I wasted the afternoon cleaning up from the party and avoiding the hallway outside my dad’s study, still not wanting to think about the scary smoke or the death mask in the shop downstairs. Truth was, I wasn’t sure I didn’t belong in some sort of home. Was I really going crazy?

I ate leftover chips and salsa by myself for dinner, wondering when Bennett would be back. I didn’t light the candles on the table, figuring that’d look desperate. I did, however, devise a revenge strategy for the traitorous Natalie that involved shaving her head of perfect hair

I just wasn’t sure she’d let me get close enough with the razor.

The doorbell rang late that night, as I was steeping my chamomile. I brought my mug to the front door and let Bennett inside. He looked tired and almost solemn, with his jacket rumpled and his hair mussed. I, on the other hand, had applied some discreet lip gloss and donned my gray silk robe, trying to look effortlessly chic on my way to bed.

I intended to say something sultry and sophisticated, but instead blurted, “Where have you been?”

“Why?” he asked, his eyes suddenly keen. “Did something happen? Are you okay?”

“Um …” My mind blanked, startled by his burst of interest. God, he was gorgeous when he gave a damn. “No, I’m all right. Nothing happened. Well, except someone turned my dad’s Indian oil lamp into a bong.”

“That’s so Bollywood,” he deadpanned, though he looked relieved that it was nothing more serious. “Get some sleep. Tomorrow’s a big day.”

Ugh. Tomorrow was Monday. How was I going to face Natalie and everyone?

“Our flight leaves at two, so you can pack in the morning,” Bennett continued.

“Our what?”

“It’s direct, straight to Boston. You can take three suitcases.”

“Massachusetts?”

“I believe that’s where it’s located, yes.”

I ignored the sarcasm. “When I agreed to your guardian thing, I didn’t know you were gonna drag me to
Boston.

“Well, you can’t have thought I was going to move
here
.”

“No,” I said, in a small voice. “What about school?”

He looked at me for a moment, and I thought maybe he’d take my hand, but instead his eyes just grew tired again. “You’ve been accepted at Thatcher Academy, a private day school in Echo Point, where my parents are trustees. It’s just north of Boston and we have a house nearby. You can stay there.”

“With you?” Maybe this little fantasy of mine could still work.

He pulled out his iPhone and started scrolling through messages. “No.”

I nodded, trying to keep the tears at bay. “Just for the record, this really sucks.”

He brushed past me down the hall. “Yes.”

But did it suck more than going crazy? More than living in a halfway house?

No. No, it didn’t.

So I decided to stop being emo and went to bed. I slept better than I had in years. He may have been distant and dictatorial, but the idea of Bennett sleeping on the other side of the wall comforted me.

I woke early and set to packing. After watching my mother do it so often, stuffing my own suitcases was second nature. I was ridiculously excited about the plane ride

I hadn’t left San Francisco since the Incident, when I was seven. Pre-Incident, my passport looked like I’d been adopted by the Jolie-Pitts, but one doctor had said, “She needs stability,” and my parents had anchored me to the city.

The thought of Bennett sitting beside me curbed my enthusiasm. He’d be all cool and jaded about flying and I’d have to pretend I wasn’t thrilled during takeoff so he didn’t think I was acting like a child. Plus, his current demeanor

chilly and polite

was sort of a drag.

My wardrobe looked incomplete as I plopped it into the suitcase, so I decided to raid my mother’s closet. I found a few scarves and snagged two cashmere sweaters before pausing at her jewelry case.

My mother had amazing jewelry. I tried to lift the lid, but it was locked. Good thing I knew the key was taped to the back of the dresser. Sadly, she’d left only the glittering gems, nestled in the pink satin, that were too dressy for everyday. I rifled through, looking for a piece that would remind me of her, but nothing was quite right. My finger caught on the bottom of the case and the satin lifted and I found a little carved pendant underneath. Hmm. Had it fallen through the seams or was she hiding it there?

It was the size of a quarter, a delicate art nouveau design made of green jade. Though I’d never seen my mother wear it, for some reason it reminded me of her. I strung it on a gold chain and clasped it around my neck. I smiled, knowing I had something of my mom’s to take to Massachusetts, then locked the case and returned to my room.

As I passed through the hall I heard Bennett rustling around in my father’s study. I sidled past the urns and found him standing in the middle of the room, his arms in a defensive position. He wore a black polo, fraying khakis, and yesterday’s loafers. His skin was lightly tanned, probably left over from sailing in Nantucket all summer. God, I bet he looked great on a sailboat. Great with his shirt off. Great with

He made one final motion then stopped, breathing deeply.

Something felt out of place in the room, but I didn’t know what. I glanced at the musty old tomes in the bookcase about ancient burial rights, séances, and necromancy. Everything looked in order. Well, except for the obsession with the dead. I wished my parents would mix it up a bit and show some concern for the living every now and then. Even the
dying
would’ve been an improvement. Max had read every one of these books, but they’d told me to wait until I was older. Like I was eager to raid the library. If I wanted to commune with the dead I’d go graveyard-hopping with my friends.

Well, if I still had friends.

Bennett saw me in the doorway and dropped his arms.

“Tai chi?” I asked.

“What?”

“You were doing tai chi, right?”

He cocked an eyebrow.

“Or qigong or something,” I said.

“Tai chi, right.” He mimed holding a ball of energy, then tossed it into the air. “That’s the beach ball pose.”

I laughed. “No seriously. What are you doing in here?” But the question I wanted to ask was “Do the funeral urns freak you out?”

“I heard something in here, and I


“You heard him, too?”

“Who?” he asked.

I hesitated to reveal my imaginary smoky-snake guy for obvious reasons, but if Bennett thought he heard something, then maybe … Maybe what? He had nightmares, too? “Um … just the curtains in the breeze. I’m pretty sure that’s all I saw. I mean, with our security system


“Don’t play games with me, Emma. What did he look like?”

What games? I didn’t know what Bennett wanted to hear. He couldn’t know about the Incident, could he? If he knew and he was teasing me, that was just cruel.

Anyway, I wasn’t going to tell him about my nightmares. So I said, “When do we leave?”

Bennett checked his watch. “Right now.”

“Great,” I said.

Takeoff was nothing special. I didn’t get excited or anything.

I said: “Omigod! Here we go

woo-hoo! The front wheels are off the ground. There go the back wheels. We are officially airborne. We are
in
the sky. Look at all the tiny buildings. Hey! There’s boats and fields and … We’re in the clouds! Oops, nope

we’re
over
the clouds. Wow. It’s like a whole new world up here.”

Bennett spoke nothing but monosyllables the entire trip, like something was bothering him. Possibly me. But since he said no more than “yes,” “no,” and “mmm,” there was no way to tell for certain.

I knew people flew every day, but I still found it amazing to wake up in San Francisco and go to sleep in Boston. Of course, not as amazing as putting on someone’s death mask and reliving their dying thoughts. Or being smothered in your dreams by ashes in your father’s urn collection.

But those were delusions. Right?

We arrived in Boston late. Well, maybe ten at night, my time, but it still felt like one in the morning. Guess I was already adjusting. I’d never been to Boston

they really do have those crazy accents. I sort of loved it.

“Where did you pahk?” I asked Bennett.

He finally looked at me, struggling along with the luggage cart.

“I hope you didn’t pahk the cah too fah,” I told him.

A tiny smile finally escaped his stony face. “That’s the worst Boston accent I’ve ever heard.”

I felt a warm satisfaction at his tiny smile. And a warmer one when he relieved me of the luggage cart. We trekked to long-term parking where Bennett stopped at a decrepit Land Rover.

“You drive
this
?” I said.

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