Twisted Dreams (8 page)

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Authors: Marissa Farrar

BOOK: Twisted Dreams
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Chapter

 

10

 

 

M
usic
blasted from the sports hall, banners strung out front welcoming the new influx of students. Small clusters of students hung out on the grass outside, chatting to each other. A group of guys threw a football around and yelled at one another, distracted only by the girls walking around in heels and short skirts.

Despite the balmy evening, I’d opted for a long sleeve top in floaty chiffon, and another pair of jeans. I needed to keep my arms covered because, while the cuts from the previous night were now scars, they were still visible. I never felt comfortable showing off my legs.

The three girls walking with me didn’t have any of my inhibitions. Brooke wore a skin-tight short dress, while Kayla rocked a pair of low slung skinny-fit jeans with a top that exposed her stomach, and Erin sported a strappy cami that left little to the imagination, and a flippy, short skirt. I felt like a total frump walking beside them. The only benefit I could think of was that at least I didn’t need to worry about any of the guys checking me out.

The image of Riley in my room that afternoon jumped into my head. I remembered the way he had leaned into me, his dark hair falling into his eyes. How the corner of his lip had lifted in a smirk, and how he’d asked me if I really wanted him to leave.

A pleasurable shiver ran through me.

I didn’t care if the guys weren’t checking me out. There was only one person I wanted to be noticed by.

I pushed all thoughts of Riley to the back of my mind. It wasn’t as though he was going to be here. A strange part of me was disappointed, as if the evening was a waste unless I saw him. I had to remember how shaken I was the last time I’d been in his company. How he’d threatened me ...

Or warned me.

Either way, I couldn’t help feeling like I should be worried. I should want to stay well away from both him and anyone else to do with the carnival. But then why was my soul drawn to him?

We entered the hall. Banners were strung across the walls and balloons had been tied in clusters to every pillar and post. On stage, a small band rocked out. A few people danced, but most stood around in groups. A bigger crowd had gathered around the front of the stage, and they jumped up and down in time to the music. A bar was set up on the opposite side of the room, serving non-alcoholic drinks. Of course.

We got our drinks and hung out on the outskirts of the dancers. Though it felt safer being the middle of the group, I had the feeling everyone else was doing the same as me, our gazes constantly drifting over the shoulders of our companions to see who else was here. A group of guys spotted us and headed over.

“Hey, Brooke,” the leader of the gang said. He wore a big, loose sleeved shirt. Subtly, he lifted his arm and flashed what was hidden up his sleeve. A silver flask. “You guys want some of this?”

Brooke’s face brightened. “Sure!”

Sneakily, he poured a shot of clear liquid, vodka, I assumed, into each of our drinks. The addition would do little to me. Alcohol didn’t affect me. I hoped I wouldn’t be holding the hair back from the faces of any of my new friends later that evening.

I spotted a familiar face. She wore a bow in her hair, bright red lipstick that looked classy on her, and a cute dress with a flared skirt.

“I’m just going to talk to someone.” I excused myself from the others.

“Hey, Laurel,” I said, shouting in her ear to get her attention over the band.

She turned with a smile which faltered when she realized who was speaking to her. “Oh, hey, Beth.”

“Look, I wanted to apologize for not telling you the truth about what happened at the carnival earlier.”

She shrugged. “Forget it. It’s none of my business.”

“I don’t want you to think I’m some kind of pathological liar.”

This at least elicited a small smile. “Not a pathological liar, but someone who can predict the future?”

She said it with no trace of irony in her voice, and something tightened inside me. What did she know?

A scream cut through the bass and guitars of the band. The singer fell silent first, followed by the guitarist and the final crash and bang of the drummer. Voices rose in concern, and students started moving around us, toward the place the scream had originated from. Laurel and I glanced at one another and followed the crowd to find out what was going on.

The students created a circle around a girl lying on the floor. Her body twisted and jerked, her eyes rolled in her head.

“Jesus!” I breathed. “Is she okay?”

Then, before I could think anything else, a number of the older students, Dana and Flynn included, swept in.

“Shouldn’t someone call an ambulance?” I said, looking to Laurel, but she stood, transfixed on the scene in front of us. Her hand formed a fist at her mouth, her eyes wide and worried. She appeared more concerned than anyone else in the room, yet she didn’t make any move toward the fitting girl.

Dana crouched beside the girl, waiting until the fit had finished, and then Flynn swept her up in his arms. As he lifted her, I noticed something fall from her fingers. The slip of metal dropped to the floor, and as the group moved forward, someone kicked it, sending it sliding in my direction. I don’t know what made me do it, but I darted forward and picked the item off the floor, slipping it into the pocket of my jeans. Together, the older students walked from the hall, carrying the girl with them.

I realized the other girls, Brooke, Erin, and Kayla, were standing back around me again. We glanced uneasily at each other.

“Did she have a fit?” said Kayla. “Epilepsy, perhaps.”

Brooke shrugged. “Or maybe she took something she shouldn’t have? Perhaps her drink was spiked?”

The girls eyed their own cups nervously.

I noticed Laurel was particularly quiet, her line of sight still trained on the door where Dana and Flynn had carried the girl from the room. 

Digging the item I’d picked up from my pocket, I glanced down. It was a silver necklace with some kind of pendant on the chain. I would have to try to find the girl and return it to her, though I was sure she had other things to worry about right now. I didn’t want to go chasing after the group, waving the necklace around. I had attracted enough attention to myself already, and I didn’t intend on creating any more. It was better if I slipped the jewelry back to her unnoticed.

I twisted the pendant in my fingers and frowned. The pendant was a silver circle with a star in the middle. I had seen a symbol similar to that before. The last time I’d come across it, magic had been involved.

Cold clutched at my heart.

“What have you got there?”

I turned at the sound of Laurel’s voice, quickly closing my fingers around the pendant.

“Oh, it’s nothing.”

She laughed. “Don’t be silly. I saw you pick something off the floor.”

For some reason, an instinct perhaps, or maybe something else, I didn’t want to show her. The pendant tingled and burned in my palm. I wasn’t imagining that there was more to this piece of jewelry than just a circle of metal.

“A button pinged off my jeans,” I told her. I gave a half-embarrassed shrug. “Guess I’d better start cutting down on that junk food.”

She frowned at me, her eyes narrowing behind her glasses, and my cheeks heated, knowing she didn’t believe me. My quip about me being a pathological liar was starting to feel like the truth.

Music started back up, and people began to close in around the gap where the girl had collapsed. Some couples started dancing again, while other stood in groups, chatting. But the mood of the party had grown subdued, as if an unseen force was pressing down on everyone. People smiled a little less willingly, danced with more reserve.

I kept my eyes peeled, trying to spot if Flynn or Dana returned to the party. I didn’t see them inside the hall, so figured I’d try outside. I told the others where I was going, but Brooke barely glanced in my direction, and the other girls just nodded and smiled, and then continued their conversation. Probably sick of my lies, Laurel had taken herself off to talk to a different group of girls.

Deflated, I headed outside. The air was warm, but felt cooler than the muggy interior of a couple of hundred sweaty, hot teenagers.

I caught sight of the now familiar shape of Flynn’s broad shoulders and buzzed head. He was sitting on the grass on his own, his back to me, looking out over the lit parking lot. I glanced to either side, but didn’t see Dana anywhere. He appeared to be alone.

Breaking into a gentle jog, I headed over to him.  His arms were rested on his bent knees, his feet planted on the ground. He must have heard me approach because he looked up at me with a frown.

“Beth. What are you doing out here? Shouldn’t you be with your friends?”

I shrugged. “I don’t think I know them well enough to call them friends yet.” I experienced a pang of guilt for brushing off Laurel so easily. She seemed like the kind of girl I could be friends with, as long as I never inadvertently touched her.

I sat down on the grass beside him. “I just wanted to check that girl was okay.”

“Melissa?”

“If that’s her name.”

“Yeah, she’s fine. Dana is a first-aider, and she’s taken her back to her room. She was coming around as soon as we got her out of the hall. It might have been the heat or something.”

“Really? It seemed a lot worse than the heat. Shouldn’t someone have called an ambulance?”

“Nah, no need to get the authorities involved. She was fine, I promise.”

The necklace in my pocket seemed to vibrate. I wondered how long it would be before the girl—Melissa—would notice the chain was missing. I had a feeling she would panic when she did.

I needed to find out more before I gave it back to her. From experience, I knew that those connected with magic weren’t always on the good side.

Something I’d considered earlier came back to me. I jerked my head toward the tall, expansive buildings of the dorms.

“So what’s with all the names?” I asked, referring to the names each building had been given. “It’s all a bit … herby.”

He laughed, making his Adam’s apple bob, and I relaxed slightly. “Goes back to when the town was first started. There’s a rumor some of the founders of the town were into their herbal medicine, if you know what I mean?”

I pretended I didn’t. “What, like drugs?”

“No, like spells and stuff.”

“Witchcraft?”

“Oh, don’t worry. It’s only a few rumors.”

Yeah, right.
I knew where rumors came from, and pretty much all of them had at least one foot in reality.

He rubbed at his square jaw with one strong-fingered hand. He was just a little too perfect, I decided. Too much like a young, aspiring catalog model. Definitely not my type, if I even had a type. But there seemed to be something behind the good looks and the swimmer’s body. There was a sharp glint of intelligence behind his green eyes.

“Seriously, Beth,” he said, looking at me. “Don’t worry about stuff like that. Just concentrate on getting good grades and doing what you want when you get into the real world.”

I smiled. “You’re parenting me again.”

“I was, huh? I really must stop doing that if I ever want you to think of me as anything but a father figure.”

I wasn’t sure how to respond to his comment, but the roar of a motorbike, its headlight blazing, rolled into the parking lot. The rider stopped the bike suddenly, letting it fall to the ground as he climbed off. My eyes widened, and I jumped to my feet. Riley stormed toward us from the direction of the parking lot, his leather jacket flapping in the wind his motion created. His dark blue eyes appeared almost black in the moonlight, his expression grim.

My heart leapt in my chest, and I bit my lower lip in anticipation of what was to come.

Flynn got to his feet beside me. He radiated tension, his shoulders back, fists at his sides.

“Hey, Icy,” Riley said, coming to a stop in front of us. He didn’t smile, his eyes narrowed. The flirty demeanor he’d displayed in my room had vanished. He was deadly serious. “We’ve just had the cops come see us.”

I stared back. “So what?”

“They’ve implied that you suspect the ride was sabotaged on purpose.”

My mouth fell open. “What? I never said that!”

I tried to remember exactly what I had said. I’d been so desperate to get out of the cop car and away from them, I might have mentioned something about sabotage, though I was sure I’d quipped that I was the one who’d sabotaged the ride and then changed my mind. In hindsight, that probably wasn’t the smartest of things I could have said.

“Yeah, well, now the guys I work for are seriously pissed. There’s going to be repercussions, Icy!”

The tightness of his jaw made his cheekbones appear even sharper, his cheeks shadowed hollows beneath them. His blue eyes were big, fringed with dark lashes, though at that moment his appearance was more dangerous than anything else.

Flynn stepped forward. “Don’t you threaten her!” he snapped, one finger pointed in Riley’s face. “Your type shouldn’t even be on campus.”

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