โBronwynโ
Wednesday, October 17, 12:25 p.m.
At lunch on Wednesday, Addy and I are talking about nail polish. Sheโs a font of information on the subject. โWith short nails like yours, you want something pale, almost nude,โ she says, examining my hands with a professional air. โBut, like, super glossy.โ
โI donโt really wear nail polish,โ I tell her.
โWell, youโre getting fancier, arenโt you? Forย whatever reason.โ She arches a brow at my careful blow-dry, and my cheeks heat as Maeve laughs. โYou might want to give it a try.โ
Itโs a mundane, innocuous conversation compared to yesterdayโs lunch, when we caught up on my police visit, Nateโs mother, and the fact that Addy got called to the station separately to answer questions about the missing EpiPens again. Yesterday we were murder suspects with complicated personal lives, but today weโre just being girls.
Until a shrill voice from a few tables over pierces the conversation. โItโs like I told them,โ Vanessa Merriman says. โWhich personโs rumor isย definitelyย true? And which personโs totally fallen apart since Simon died? Thatโs your murderer.โ
โWhatโs she on about now?โ Addy mutters, nibbling like a squirrel at an oversized crouton.
Janae, who doesnโt talk much when she sits with us, darts a look at Addy and says, โYou havenโt heard? Mikhail Powersโs crew is out front. A bunch of kids are giving interviews.โ
My stomach drops, and Addy shoves her tray away. โOh, great. Thatโs all I need, Vanessa on TV yakking about how guilty I am.โ
โNobody really thinks it was you,โ Janae says. She nods toward me. โOr you. Orโฆโ She watches as Cooper heads for Vanessaโs table with a tray balanced in one hand, then spots us and changes course, seating himself at the edge of ours. He does that sometimes; sits with Addy for a few minutes at the beginning of lunch. Long enough to signal heโs not abandoning her like the rest of her friends, but not so long that Jake gets pissed. I canโt decide whether itโs sweet or cowardly.
โWhatโs up, guys?โ he asks, starting to peel an orange. Heโs dressed in a sage button-down that brightens his hazel eyes, and heโs got a baseball- cap tan from the sun hitting his cheeks more than anything else. Somehow, instead of making him look uneven, it only adds to the Cooper Clay glow.
I used to think Cooper was the handsomest guy at school. He still might be, but lately thereโs something almost Ken dollโlike about himโa little plastic and conventional. Or maybe my tastes have changed. โHave you given your Mikhail Powers interview yet?โ I joke.
Before he can answer, a voice speaks over my shoulder. โYou should. Go ahead and be the murder club everybody thinks you guys are. Ridding Bayview High of its asshats.โ Leah Jackson perches on the table next to Cooper. She doesnโt notice Janae, who turns brick red and stiffens in her chair.
โHello, Leah,โ Cooper says patiently. As though heโs heard it before.
Which I guess he did, at Simonโs memorial service.
Leah scans the table, her eyes landing on me. โYou ever gonna admit you cheated?โ Her toneโs conversational and her expression is almost friendly, but I still freeze.
โHypocritical, Leah.โ Maeveโs voice rings out, surprising me. When I turn, her eyes are blazing. โYou canโt complain about Simon in one breath and repeat his rumor in the next.โ
Leah gives Maeve a small salute. โTouchรฉ, Rojas the younger.โ
But Maeveโs just getting warmed up. โIโm sick of the conversation never changing. Why doesnโt anybody talk about how awful About That made this school sometimes?โ She looks directly at Leah, her eyes
challenging. โWhy donโtย you? Theyโre right outside, you know. Dying for a new angle. You could give it to them.โ
Leah recoils. โIโm not talking to the media about that.โ
โWhy not?โ Maeve asks. Iโve never seen her like this; sheโs almost fierce as she stares Leah down. โYou didnโt do anything wrong. Simon did. He did it for years, and now everybodyโs sainting him for it. Donโt you have a problem with that?โ
Leah stares right back, and I canโt make out the expression that crosses her face. Itโs almostโฆtriumphant? โObviously I do.โ
โSo do something about it,โ Maeve says.
Leah stands abruptly, pushing her hair over her shoulder. The movement lifts her sleeve and exposes a crescent-shaped scar on her wrist. โMaybe I will.โ She stalks out the door with long strides.
Cooper blinks after her. โDang, Maeve. Remind me not to get on your bad side.โ Maeve wrinkles her nose, and I remember the file with Cooperโs name on it she still hasnโt managed to decrypt.
โLeahโsย not on my bad side,โ she mutters, tapping furiously on her phone.
Iโm almost afraid to ask. โWhat are you doing?โ
โSending Simonโs 4chan threads toย Mikhail Powers Investigates,โ she says. โTheyโre journalists, right? They should look into it.โ
โWhat?โ Janae bursts out. โWhat are you talking about?โ
โSimon was all over these discussion threads full of creepy people cheering on school shootings and stuff like that,โ Maeve says. โIโve been reading them for days. Other people started them, but he jumped right in and said all kinds of awful things. He didnโt even care when that boy killed all those people in Orange County.โ Sheโs still tapping away when Janaeโs hand shoots out and locks around her wrist, almost knocking her phone from her hand.
โHow would you know that?โ she hisses, and Maeve finally snaps out of the zone to realize she mightโve said too much.
โLet her go,โ I say. When Janae doesnโt, I reach out and pry her fingers off Maeveโs wrist. Theyโre icy cold. Janae pushes her chair back with a loud
scrape, and when she gets to her feet sheโs shaking all over.
โNone of you knew anything about him,โ she says in a choked voice, and stomps away just like Leah did. Except sheโs probably not about to give Mikhail Powers a sound bite. Maeve and I exchange glances as I drum my fingers on the table. I canโt figure Janae out. Most days, Iโm not sure why she sits with us when we must be a constant reminder of Simon.
Unless itโs to hear conversations like the one we just had.
โI gotta go,โ Cooper says abruptly, as though heโs used up his allotted non-Jake time. He lifts his tray, where the bulk of his lunch lies untouched, and smoothly makes his way to his usual table.
So our crew is back to being all girls, and stays that way for the rest of lunch. The only other guy whoโd sit with us never bothers making an appearance in the cafeteria. But I pass Nate in the hallway afterward, and all the questions bubbling in my brain about Simon, Leah, and Janae disappear when he gives me a fleeting grin.
Because God, itโs beautiful when that boy smiles.
Addy
Friday, October 19, 11:12 a.m.
Itโs hot on the track, and I shouldnโt feel like running very hard. Itโs only gym class, after all. But my arms and legs pump with unexpected energy as my lungs fill and expand, as if all my recent bike riding has given me reserves that need a release. Sweat beads my forehead and pastes my T-shirt to my back.
I feel a jolt of pride as I pass Luisโwho, granted, is barely tryingโ and Olivia, whoโs on the track team. Jakeโs ahead of me and the idea of catching him seems ridiculous because obviously Jake is much faster than me, and bigger and stronger too, and thereโs no way I can gain on him except I am. Heโs not a speck anymore; heโs close, and if I shift lanes and keep this pace going I can almost, probably, definitelyโ
My legs fly out from under me. The coppery taste of blood fills my mouth as I bite into my lip and my palms slam hard against the ground.
Tiny stones shred my skin, embedding in raw flesh and exploding into dozens of tiny cuts. My knees are in agony and I know before I see thick red dots on the ground that my skinโs burst open on both of them.
โOh no!โ Vanessaโs voice rings with fake concern. โPoor thing! Her legs gave out.โ
They didnโt. While my eyes were on Jake, someoneโs foot hooked my ankle and brought me down. I have a pretty good idea whose, but canโt say anything because Iโm too busy trying to suck air into my lungs.
โAddy, are you okay?โ Vanessa keeps her fake voice on as she kneels next to me, until sheโs right next to my ear and whispers, โServes you right, slut.โ
Iโd love to answer her, but I still canโt breathe.
When our gym teacher arrives Vanessa backs off, and by the time I have enough air to talk sheโs gone. The gym teacher inspects my knees, turns my hands over, clucks at the damage. โYou need the nurseโs office. Get those cuts cleaned up and some antibiotics on you.โ She scans the crowd thatโs gathered around me and calls, โMiss Vargas! Help her out.โ
I guess I should be grateful itโs not Vanessa or Jake. But Iโve barely seen Janae since Bronwynโs sister called Simon out a couple of days ago. As I limp toward school Janae doesnโt look at me until weโre almost at the entrance. โWhat happened?โ she asks as she opens the door.
By now I have enough breath to laugh. โVanessaโs version of slut- shaming.โ I turn left instead of right at the stairwell, heading for the locker room.
โYouโre supposed to go to the nurseโs,โ Janae says, and I flutter my hand at her. I havenโt darkened the nurseโs doorstep in weeks, and anyway, my cuts are painful but superficial. All I really need is a shower. I limp to a stall and peel off my clothes, stepping under the warm spray and watching brown-and-red water swirl down the drain. I stay in the shower until the waterโs clear and when I step out, a towel wrapped around me, Janaeโs there holding a pack of Band-Aids.
โI got these for you. Your knees need them.โ
โThanks.โ I lower myself onto a bench and press flesh-colored strips across my knees, which sure enough are getting slick with blood again. My
palms sting and theyโre scraped pink and raw, but thereโs nowhere I can put a Band-Aid that will make a difference.
Janae sits as far away as possible from me on the bench. I put three Band-Aids on my left knee and two on my right. โVanessaโs a bitch,โ she says quietly.
โYeah,โ I agree, standing and taking a cautious step. My legs hold up, so I head for my locker and pull out my clothes. โBut Iโm getting what I deserve, right? Thatโs what everybody thinks. I guess itโs what Simon wouldโve wanted. Everything out in the open for people to judge. No secrets.โ
โSimonโฆโ Janaeโs got that strangled sound to her voice again. โHeโs notโฆHe wasnโt like they said. I mean, yes, he went overboard with About That, and he wrote some awful things. But the past couple years have been rough. He tried so hard to be part of things and he never could. I donโt thinkโฆโ She stumbles over her words. โWhen Simon was himself, he wouldnโt have wanted this for you.โ
She sounds really sad about it. But I canโt bring myself to care about Simon now. I finish dressing and look at the clock. Thereโs still twenty minutes left in gym class, and I donโt want to be here when Vanessa and her minions descend. โThanks for the Band-Aids. Tell them Iโm still at the nurseโs, okay? Iโm going to the library till next period.โ
โOkay,โ Janae says. Sheโs slumped on the bench, looking hollowed out and exhausted, and as I head for the door she abruptly calls out, โDo you want to hang out this afternoon?โ
I turn to her in surprise. I hadnโt thought we were at that point in ourโฆ acquaintance, I guess.ย Friendshipย still seems like a strong word. โUm, yeah. Sure.โ
โMy momโs having her book club, soโฆmaybe I could come to your house?โ
โAll right,โ I say, picturing my own motherโs reaction to Janae after being used to a house full of pretty-perky Keelys and Olivias. The thought brightens me up, and we make plans for Janae to stop by after school. On a whim I text an invitation to Bronwyn, but I forgot sheโs grounded. Plus, she has piano lessons. Spontaneous downtime isnโt really her thing.
โ
Iโve barely stowed my bike under the porch after school when Janae arrives dragging her oversized backpack like she came to study. We make excruciating small talk with my mother, whose eyes keep roving from Janaeโs multiple piercings to her scuffed combat boots, until I bring her upstairs to watch TV.
โDo you like that new Netflix show?โ I ask, aiming the remote at my television and sprawling across my bed so Janae can take the armchair. โThe superhero one?โ
She sits gingerly, like sheโs afraid the pink plaid will swallow her whole. โYeah, okay,โ she says, lowering her backpack next to her and looking at all the framed photographs on my wall. โYouโre really into flowers, huh?โ
โNot exactly. My sister has a new camera I was playing around with, andโฆI took a lot of old pictures down recently.โ Theyโre shoved beneath my shoe boxes now: a dozen memories of me and Jake from the past three years, and almost as many with my friends. I hesitated over oneโme, Keely, Olivia, and Vanessa at the beach last summer, wearing giant sun hats and goofy grins with a brilliant blue sky behind us. It had been a rare, fun girlsโ day out, but after today Iโm more glad than ever that I banished Vanessaโs stupid smirk to the closet.
Janae fiddles with the strap to her backpack. โYou must miss how things were before,โ she says in a low voice.
I keep my eyes trained on the screen while I consider her comment. โYes and no,โ I say finally. โI miss how easy school used to be. But I guess nobody I hung out with ever really cared about me, right? Or things would have been different.โ I shift restlessly on the bed and add, โIโm not gonna pretend itโs anything like what youโre dealing with. Losing Simon that way.โ
Janae flushes and doesnโt answer, and I wish I hadnโt brought it up. I canโt figure out how to interact with her. Are we friends, or just a couple of people without better options? We stare silently at the television until Janae clears her throat and says, โCould I have something to drink?โ
โSure.โ Itโs almost a relief to escape the silence thatโs settled between us, until I run into my mother in the kitchen and have a terse, ten-minute- long conversation aboutย the kind of friends you have now.ย When I finally get back upstairs, two glasses of lemonade in hand, Janaeโs got her backpack on and sheโs halfway out the door.
โI donโt feel well suddenly,โ she mumbles.
Great. Even my unsuitable friends donโt want to hang out with me.
I text Bronwyn in frustration, not expecting an answer since sheโs probably in the middle of Chopin or something. Iโm surprised when she messages me back right away, and even more surprised at what she writes.
Be careful. I donโt trust her.





