We Know It Was You (13 page)

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Authors: Maggie Thrash

BOOK: We Know It Was You
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“So . . . Yom Kippur's coming up soon. . . .”

Mrs. Flax gave Virginia a quick, menacing look, before turning her attention to Benny in the backseat. “Shouldn't
you be using this time to study for your science test?”

“I'm pretty sure the test is canceled,” Benny said.

“They canceled everything,” Virginia added.

Mrs. Flax frowned. “I thought Winship was a
serious
school.”

“Well, everybody's pretty freaked out . . . ,” Virginia said meekly.

Mrs. Flax pursed her lips, appearing to concentrate on the road. A cheerleader was dead, then not dead, then a teacher was dead, then revealed to be a Peeping Tom. The whole school was in chaos over it, but Mrs. Flax was clearly unimpressed.

“This is not a nice neighborhood,” Mrs. Flax muttered as they pulled up to the huge public library on Margaret Mitchell Square. Benny had convinced his mom that he and Virginia were attending a Model UN meeting with some students from other schools. Benny didn't like having to lie; he preferred to conduct his investigations in as straightforward a manner as possible. But he was willing to demonstrate a little moral flexibility when necessary. There was no way in a million years that his mom would drop him off downtown to go to a place like the Sapphire Lounge.

Benny and Virginia waved as Mrs. Flax pulled away from the curb. They watched the car until it turned a corner out of sight.

“Which way are we going?” Virginia asked.

“That way,” Benny said, pointing to a deserted railroad
yard in the distance. It was clustered with seedy storefronts, illuminated by a huge neon light in the shape of a blue jewel.

The Sapphire Lounge parking lot, 7:45 p.m.

R.I.P. PERVERT
, the sign read.
SAYONARA MOLESTER
, read another. They lay in a pile next to Gerard's car. It was “a night of jazz and remembrance” at the Sapphire Lounge, organized by Mr. Choi's bandmates in honor of their fallen sax player. Gerard had read about it in the paper and immediately sent an e-mail to the entire school announcing that he was staging a protest. He'd hoped Angie and the other cheerleaders would come. Maybe even Brittany would make an appearance, and the local news would send a camera team. He imagined himself on television surrounded by the most beautiful girls at Winship:
Local boy is hero to victims of Peeping Tom
.

Except no one showed up—no one but Gottfried the weird German exchange student, anyway. And it seemed like Gottfried had just come for the donuts. He'd eaten four already, and they'd only been there twenty minutes.

“Slow down,” Gerard told him. “People could still come, and there won't be any donuts left. Look, there's someone now!” He pointed down the street, where he could see Scooby-Doo and some skanky girl.
Oh my God, is that Virginia Leeds?
What the hell was she wearing? It seemed really inappropriate for a protest against perverts. But whatever, better to have a skank at your protest than no girls at all.

“Hi, guys!” he said. “Thanks for coming! Grab a sign!”

“Hurrow,” Gottfried said, his mouth full of donut.

“Hi, um . . .” Scooby was edging away from the signs.

“We're not protesting,” Virginia explained. “We're attending.”

“You're
attending
? You're attending a night of jazz for a lecher! No jazz for lechers!” He quickly rummaged through his pile of signs and produced one declaring
NO JAZZ FOR LECHERS
.

“Gerard, jazz is like the soundtrack of lechery,” Virginia said back. “It's like saying no ukuleles for whimsical girls.”

Gerard threw his sign on the ground. “Fine! Fine! Go celebrate the local pervert!”

“You're being embarrassing, Gerard,” Virginia said. “Choi's dead. He can't visually assault anyone anymore. You need to chill.”

“Leave him alone,” Benny said. “Let's just go.”

“Bye-bye!” Gottfried waved at them, wiping donut crumbs from his mouth.

Gerard scowled as he watched them walk away. He didn't need that pair of freaks anyway. Benny was just an uppity Jew, and Virginia looked like a slutty alien, her gold skirt shining and her pale legs glowing blue under the light of the neon sign.

The bar, 8:00 p.m.

Virginia crossed her legs, then uncrossed them. She hadn't realized exactly how short her skirt was until she'd tried to
sit in it. But she tried to stop squirming. She didn't want to seem like a child in front of all these scary people. Virginia had envisioned the Sapphire Lounge being full of jazzy flappers and cool lounge lizards. But most of the people here seemed grizzled and sad. She glanced at Benny. Somehow he was managing to look cool, despite his dorky mustard-yellow turtleneck. He was leaning against the bar, gazing intently around the club. There was a ring of shadowy booths against the walls, and a curtained-off stage. They could hear a drum kit being set up and a bass guitar being tuned. A handwritten sign in front of the curtain read
Asian Fusion Presents: Remembering Pat “Sax Machine” Choi.

“So what are we doing?” Virginia asked. Benny was always so tight-lipped about their plans, like he assumed Virginia would ruin everything if he let her in on a scheme. It was annoying, but Virginia was used to it.

“Looking,” Benny answered, scanning the room.

“You want a drink?”

Virginia swiveled around on her barstool, expecting to see a bartender. But it was Gottfried.

“Dey do not card me,” he said. “I get you somesing?”

“Um, sure. I'll have a sidecar. Dry, please, with Cointreau.”

Benny gaped at her.

“You got it,” Gottfried said. “Scooby?”

“Me? Um, just a tonic water?”

The crimson curtains opened partway, then got snagged
on something. A slim, sad-looking Asian man came out onstage and yanked them the rest of the way open.

“Hey, people,” he said, standing at the edge of the stage. “Welcome to Choi's night.” There was a smattering of hesitant applause. “We're here to remember our pal Choi. Not because he was the greatest guy on earth, but because he was our friend. Nobody's perfect. But everyone deserves to be remembered. So we're gonna play some of Pat's favorite tunes tonight. And everyone gets a soju on the house, 'cause Pat made the bar stock it, and now there's like twenty bottles, but no one else will drink it.” He paused.

“Is he crying?” Virginia whispered to Benny.

“The music will probably suck tonight,” the guy onstage went on, “because we don't have a sax player anymore. It's just me and Lucius. So, you know . . . give us a break.”

And with that, the other guy, Lucius, banged his drumsticks together and then started playing. The first guy picked up his bass and began soberly plucking the strings.

“Were you showing Zaire the bridge video? I saw you,” Benny said loudly over the music. “I'm not going to yell at you. I just need to know. Your actions affect me.”

“Benny, I swear I didn't. She asked me to fix the Internet, and I fixed it.”

Benny looked at her. He didn't say anything. He kept seeing the weird note in his mind.
Don't get so close to her.
It
was the second time in twenty-four hours that Virginia had been in the position of having to deny something—first with the boyfriend and now this—which was enough to raise a red flag in Benny's estimation.

“You don't trust me,” Virginia said. It didn't sound like an accusation, just a statement.
You don't have any milk in the refrigerator. You don't trust me.

“Well I mean, I barely know you. If you think about it.”

“Um, if you think about it, we've gone to the same school since we were thirteen, and I've been in Mystery Club for a month,” Virginia said.

“But this is our first case together,” Benny shouted over the band. “You know what I mean. I don't know what I mean. Just . . . forget it. I think you should go look around backstage. You're less suspicious than me.”

Virginia glared at him. Benny was in charge of everything, wasn't he? Even the conversation.

“Just go,” Benny ordered. “Poke around. Maybe Mr. Choi left some stuff back there.” He pulled out his phone and handed it to her. “Use the flashlight app if you need to. It might be dark back there.” As soon as the phone was in Virginia's hand, Benny kind of wanted it back. It felt too personal, sharing his phone with her. But it was too late now.

“Okay,” Virginia said, taking the phone. She slid off the barstool, but then hesitated. The bar was the only moderately well-lit area in the whole seedy place, and now
she was leaving? It seemed willfully stupid. But she forced herself to move. She could almost feel the darkness on her skin as she stepped into it.

Backstage, 8:15 p.m.

Virginia stood motionless in the dark, cramped space. She was terrified that at any second someone would barge in and yell at her. She reminded herself that as long as she could hear the music, it meant Asian Fusion was onstage and couldn't catch her. And if a bartender or someone walked in, she could just pretend to be lost. But she was so nervous she hadn't even started looking.

Look,
she commanded herself. She flicked on the flashlight app and shined it around. Dingy walls with water damage. Half-drunk drinks sitting on a plywood bench. Dirty carpet, a beige lamp. A large bass case on the floor. Virginia crouched down next to it and carefully opened the lid. The case was lined with green velvet, with some clippings stapled to the top. She moved the light across them.
LOCAL JAZZ TRIO PLAYS 24-HOUR JACO PASTORIUS MARATHON. ASIAN FUSION VOTED BEST HAPPY HOUR LIVE ENTERTAINMENT.

Then she froze. The last clipping wasn't about the band. It was a photocopy of a print picture, like from a yearbook or a newsletter. A young, bright girl in a Winship cheerleading uniform. But it wasn't Brittany Montague, or even Angie.

Virginia stared at it, assuring herself that she was seeing what she was seeing. She didn't want to go back to Benny
with bad information. The image was fuzzy, so Virginia leaned in close with the flashlight, her face inches away.

It's her. It's definitely her.

The bar, 8:20 p.m.

Gottfried sauntered over with two drinks in his hands. “For da lady,” he said, setting down the sidecar, “and for da gentleman.” He handed Benny the tonic water.

“Thanks,” Benny said, reaching in his pocket for some money. He didn't know how much a sidecar cost, but he assumed it was expensive.


Nein
, no no no,” Gottfried said. “Do not sink of it.”

“Please,” Benny insisted, but Gottfried shook his head. Benny let it go. He was awkward with money; all those Jewish stereotypes made him self-conscious. Mrs. Flax had always told him never to let his classmates pay for him, or else they wouldn't respect him or see him as an equal. But Benny had found the opposite to be true—the best way to blend in at Winship was to treat money the way they did, like it was pretend, and like there was so much of it, it was petty and pointless to keep track of the tab.

“So you're feeling better?” Benny asked him.

“Hm?”

“On Saturday you were quite ill.”

“Ah yes. I am very sensitive. When I'm stressed, my body just falls apart, you know?”

“What are you stressed about?” Benny asked casually.

Gottfried cocked his eyebrow. “Hm? Stressed? No! I am having a wonderful night!
Wunderbar
, we say!” Gottfried slapped Benny on the back, hard, and then strode across the club to join a pair of heavily made-up women in a corner booth. They had to be at least forty years old. They squealed when he sat down, and pinched his cheeks. Gottfried looked completely delighted.

“Benny!”

Benny swiveled around on his stool. Virginia was sprinting toward him like a dog with a squirrel in its teeth.

“What?”

“There's a
picture
in his guitar case. Of
Corny
.”

“Really?”
Benny exclaimed, amazed that she'd found something so fast.

“I opened the case and it was there. Oh my God.”

“People are stupid,” Benny said excitedly. “They leave evidence everywhere. It's not like on TV where everyone's a criminal mastermind.”

“Ooh, is this my drink?” Virginia grabbed the sidecar. She took a sip, wrinkling her nose. “It's good!” she said, unconvincingly.

Benny studied the bass player. He had long hair and looked younger than Mr. Choi by about ten years. His face was intelligent, but not very serious. Like the kind of guy who has a high IQ but sits around smoking pot all day.

“So what do you think?” Virginia asked.

“Maybe Mr. Choi's bandmates knew about his peeping
tendencies. Maybe he'd bragged about all the hot girls at Winship, and they wanted a piece of it.”

“Couldn't they just watch cheerleader porn on the Internet?” Virginia asked.

Benny shook his head. “This would serve a different desire than porn. Porn
invites
you to watch; this would be the thrill of seeing bodies that are forbidden to you.”

“Wow. Did you, like, read a book about perverts or something?”

Benny shrugged. “It could be him in the video,” he said, nodding toward the bass player. “The person standing at the edge of the bridge.” He stirred his tonic water, thinking. “This is going to be easy. All we have to do is dangle the video in front of him and see if he bites. I'll tell you exactly what to do.”

Virginia took another sip of her sidecar. “God, look at Gottfried.” He and the two older ladies were laughing uproariously in the corner booth. The fatter of the two appeared to be giving Gottfried an innuendo-filled palm reading. There were about ten drinks on the table in front of them.

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