Wicked Little Secrets: A Prep School Confidential Novel (23 page)

BOOK: Wicked Little Secrets: A Prep School Confidential Novel
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CHAPTER

THIRTY-ONE

 

I get an anxious feeling in my stomach as Anthony gets off at the exit for the Wheatley School. I haven’t felt this sick about going there since my mom dropped me off over three months ago. At least then I didn’t know what I was facing. Now I know I’ll eventually have to see Brent, finish my homework, and go to sleep in the room I should be sharing with Isabella.

I tighten my grip on Anthony. As if he can sense what’s wrong, he stops at Dunkin’ Donuts. He lets me rest his head on his shoulder for a while. I like the way his chin falls right at my hairline, his stubble grazing my forehead.

“How are we going to pull off sneaking into that woman’s yard and digging up her garden?” I ask.

Anthony shifts in his seat. “I’ll drive by her house this week and figure out her schedule, see when she’s not home. Did you notice the sticker on her car window?”

I shake my head.

“UMass Nursing School,” he says. “Maybe we’ll get lucky and find out she works nights.”

I don’t want to go back to school. I’m fine with staying in this smelly Dunkin’ Donuts with Anthony forever, but he has to get home to watch his dad before his mom leaves for work at seven.

When he drops me off, we share a kiss good-bye that would probably get a couple thrown out of a church on their wedding day.

Anthony’s eyes are closed when I pull away.

“What?” I ask.

He shakes his head with a little laugh. “I just can’t believe we’re back here.”

I wait for him to say more, to ask what exactly
we
are, or if I’m using him to get over Brent. But we both know those kinds of questions aren’t Anthony’s style. I close my eyes and wait for the wave of guilt at kissing him, but it never comes. Instead, I feel free. Brazen. Like myself, only amplified. It’s how I’ve always felt around Anthony.

“I’ll e-mail you until they ship my new phone,” I tell him.

He nods, his eyes tracing a line from my face down to the hips of my jeans. I flush.

“Be careful,” he says. Then he rides away.

*   *   *

Maybe it’s because she still feels like she’s the reason Brent and I broke up, but Remy follows me around like a sad basset hound until dinner. Kelsey and April are quiet in a way that makes me seriously curious about what went down at the party after I passed out. When we get to the dining hall, Remy leads us to a table for four.

“Thanks,” I say, as we settle in. “I’m not ready to face him yet … or any of them really.”

The way April and Kelsey stiffen across the table from me says that the guys have just walked in.

“They look confused,” April narrates. “Wait, now Brent is telling them to find another table. Okay, they’re moving away from us.”

“Apes,” Remy hisses. “Really?”

“It’s fine,” I say. “Everything will be fine in a few days.”

“Do you think you’ll get back together?” Kelsey asks, pushing her glasses up and down like she does when she’s nervous.

I bring myself to look over at Brent. I’ll admit, I half expected him to show up outside my door after our fight, professing apologies and undying love. But he looks unfazed as he cuts Cole on the soda-fountain line. They exchange jabs. Cole looks over at us and offers me a meek smile. I return it, but Brent keeps his eyes on his cup as he fills it with half root beer, half Diet Coke.

I ignore the pang in my chest. I guess this is what a real breakup is supposed to feel like—getting crushed just seeing the other person going on with his or her life, doing the little things you used to do together, like experimenting with different soda combinations. I’ve never known this feeling before. I’d always considered guys disposable, and I’ve dumped my fair share. A breakup is new territory for me.

I realize the girls are still waiting for my answer.

“No, I don’t want to get back together. He’s just … not the person I thought he was.”

Remy rubs my back, holding in her usual advice and judgment. I hear her voice in my head, the things she said after she told me she slept with Casey Shepherd.

Anne, just promise me you won’t hate me. If they start saying stuff about me.

How many other people know about her and Brent? How many people are going around thinking my best friend here is the reason Brent and I broke up?

Kelsey’s voice pulls me back to the table. “I don’t think anyone knows what kind of person Brent is. He doesn’t let us.”

I don’t know what to say, even though I know she’s right. The only times I felt like I truly got to see the real Brent were in moments of desperation—three months ago, when he got sick and had to tell me he had diabetes and was scared of telling people, and then three days ago, when he got so angry at me he snapped.

“Let’s eat,” I announce. “I’m not feeling sorry for myself, so you guys definitely are not going to sit around feeling sorry for me.”

We split up to go to our usual dinner stations—mine is the salad bar. I’m scooping grilled chicken onto my lettuce when I notice him down by the dressings. Our eyes connect. He turns away as I set my plate down and call his name.

“Brent.”

He doesn’t look at me. Real mature. But he doesn’t run away or anything, so that’s progress.

We meet each other halfway, at the middle of the salad bar. He runs a hand through his hair, and I get this weird, hopeless feeling, knowing I can’t do that to him anymore. I half expect him to hug me or something, even though that’s stupid.

“Hi,” I say.

“Hi.” Brent scratches the back of his neck and eyes me. “Is this really how we’re going to do this?”

“I’m not sure what you want me to do. Pretend I don’t care that you don’t trust me? Promise you didn’t say those awful things?”

Brent takes a step toward me. “You can
not
put this all on me, Anne. You spied on me and my friends. That’s psychotic.” He lowers his voice to a whisper. “Now you want me to believe my father killed Matt Weaver? What’s next, I’m leading a double life as a Craigslist killer or something?”

I can barely look at him I’m so angry. “You think I’m crazy.”

He sighs. “No, I don’t.”

“Really? ’Cause I’m pretty sure like five seconds ago you called me
psychotic.

“I said what you
did
was psychotic.” Brent tugs at the roots of his curls. “God, Anne. Would you listen to me?”

“No.” I lean in closer to him, so I don’t have to raise my voice to make my point and therefore make a scene. “You listen to me. One: What you guys to do the new recruits is psychotic. Two: No, I’m not going to stop until I get the truth about what happened to Matt Weaver. And three: I didn’t ruin Cole’s mother’s or Sleazebag Westbrook’s lives. They did, when they screwed each other.”

Brent’s face contorts and my stomach dips. Oh no. I turn over my shoulder to see Cole watching us from the soda machine, his cheeks pink. He looks away from us. I want to rush over and apologize to him, but I know he’ll just pretend he didn’t hear.

“Nice.” Brent shakes his head.

I don’t know how I got here, from falling headfirst for Brent to wanting to shove his face into a wall. But I never wanted to hurt Cole. Brent calls my name as I grab my salad and head back to my table.

“Why can’t we talk about this?” His voice is pleading. It cuts right through me and makes me think maybe I do want him back. I search his face, trying to see the Brent I fell for: the guy who doesn’t really care about being crew team cocaptain or SGA president—the guy who always believed me when no one else did.

“My dad is an asshole,” he says. “But he’s not a criminal. Think about my family and what this could do to them.”

One of the guys at his table calls him over, and Brent looks from him to me. I can see him calculating: Does he keep talking to me, or does he go back to his dinner as if nothing is wrong?

He lets out a little sigh of frustration. “Can we talk later—?”

“Whatever, Brent.” I turn away from him, blinking away the pressure building behind my eyes. If he wants to choose his stupid crew team over me, that’s fine. I’ve already made my choice.

 

CHAPTER

THIRTY-TWO

 

I’m one of the first people to get to art history the next morning. I sit at my desk in the back corner of the room; Cole and Murali sit to the front and left of me. They’re later than usual today, so I open my notebook while I wait for them.

My leg jiggles when I see there’s only a minute to the start of class. I can’t help it: The thought of being late (and watching other people being late) gives me hives. I inherited my compulsive need to be early everywhere from my anal father. I may not always be a model student, but at least I’m always on time.

Anyway, Cole and Murali are usually here early, too. So when Robinson hobbles into the room, sloshing coffee onto the floor and tittering about an upcoming exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, I get a little worried.

The classroom door bangs behind me, and Cole and Murali trail in. I raise my hand to wave them over, but they slip into the empty seats in the opposite corner, by the door. Murali’s eyes meet mine, his mouth unsmiling. Cole doesn’t look at me as he sets his laptop case down. His hair, which is usually neatly combed to the side, falls in front of his eyes.

I’m still watching them unpack as if there’s no circle of empty seats around me. As if they haven’t sat next to me every morning since I started this class. Robinson is passing out glossy cards with the MFA exhibition information on them.

“Friday night is the opening.” Robinson beams. “As curator of paintings of the Americas, I’ll be hosting the event. Free admittance for Wheatley students. The free champagne, on the other hand…”

I tuck the card in my bag, my gaze still on Cole.
Please look at me.
He does, for half a second, as if he’s checking to see if I’m watching him. The hurt in his eyes cuts me to a million pieces, and I wish, for the hundred-thousandth time in my life, that I had the ability to keep my mouth shut.

What I said about Cole’s mom and the senator was awful, but I was only trying to get to Brent, to make him show some sort of indication he gives a crap we broke up. I don’t know if he just doesn’t care or if he’s really that emotionally challenged. Or maybe it’s my fault because he finally felt comfortable enough to tell me he loved me and then found out I lied to him about the Matt Weaver thing.

I watch Cole, thinking about how he wears his hurt for everyone to see. Then Anthony, who wears his anger like a badge. For the first time, I feel the weight of how much I miss Brent. Not because of his adorable, not-perfect smile or the way he hugs me from behind or even the way he’ll stay on the phone with me until midnight because I’m bored or need him to explain the complicated sci-fi movie we watched earlier. I miss the way that with Brent, things felt simple. Even when they weren’t.

Even if they’ll never be, and that’s why we’re not together anymore.

I remind myself that I’m not going to pull my grade up from a B
+
in this class by thinking about boys, and I turn my laptop on. Every Sunday night, Robinson e-mails us links to the paintings we’re going to discuss during the week so we can look at them on our computers while he lectures (read: play Bubble Breaker and read the online edition of
Entertainment Weekly
).

Today, I actually want to pay attention.

Until I see the e-mail from the unknown recipient in my inbox.

To:
[email protected]

From:
[email protected]

 

Subject:
I have what you need

I open the e-mail, expecting a message from a Nigerian prince requesting a business partnership with me. I definitely
don’t
expect what the first line says:

I can tell you what happened to Matt Weaver.

I look around to make sure everyone is watching his or her own computer. I scroll down to see how long the e-mail is before I read the rest. It’s only a couple of lines.

Meet me by the Massacre Monument in Boston Common, today at 5. E-mail me back to let me know you’ll be there.

And I would be, if I were you. I have proof.

I bang out a response so fast I retype it three times to get it right, no typos.

Who are you??

I sit back as the e-mail floats into cyberspace. Robinson starts walking down the aisle, noticing people are starting to doze off. I minimize my e-mail window and pull up the painting we’re looking at today: Thomas Sully’s
The Passage of the Delaware.

I keep my eye on the e-mail tab for the rest of class, waiting for it to change to “Inbox: (1).” It never does.

*   *   *

I can’t tell Anthony about the e-mail. He’ll tell me not to go and insist it’s probably a trap. He’d say it might even be one of the men in the photo, in which case it would be totally stupid to go alone. He’d be right, too—but that’s what pepper spray purchased off the Internet is for.

Also, I figure my chances of being kidnapped or killed in a place as crowded as the Boston Common are significantly lower than being killed by my vice-principal in the forest. And that didn’t happen, so there you go.

I don’t have to make excuses to Remy about why I’m missing dinner, since everyone assumes I just don’t want to see Brent. Good. I hope they all sit together like the big dysfunctional-yet-happy family they were before I came and messed everything up.

The map I printed tells me to get off at the T station called Downtown Crossing. I have to switch train lines fifteen minutes out of Wheatley. The one I get onto is packed with commuters.

I spend the train ride trying to figure out who sent me the e-mail. He or she said to meet at “5,” and it looks like I’ll be at Downtown Crossing by 4:40. I do some calculating in my head: The person must have known how long it would take me to get to the Common at the end of the day, which could mean they know what time the last class at Wheatley ends.

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