best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 24

One of Us Is Lying

โ€ŒNateโ€Œ

Thursday, October 25, 12:20 a.m.

I ease my motorcycle into the cul-de-sac at the end of Bayview Estates and kill the motor, staying still for a minute to check for any hint that someoneโ€™s nearby. Itโ€™s quiet, so I climb off and give a hand to Bronwyn so she can do the same.

The neighborhood is still a half-finished construction area with no streetlights, so Bronwyn and I walk in darkness to house number 5. When we get there I try the front door, but itโ€™s locked. We circle to the back of the house and I jiggle each window until I find one that opens. Itโ€™s low enough to the ground that I haul myself in easily. โ€œGo back out front; Iโ€™ll let you in,โ€ I say in a low voice.

โ€œI think I can do it too,โ€ Bronwyn says, preparing to pull herself up. She doesnโ€™t have the arm strength, though, and I have to lean over and help her. The windowโ€™s not big enough for two, and when I let go and step back to give her room, she scrambles the rest of the way and lands on the floor with a thud.

โ€œGraceful,โ€ I say as she gets to her feet and brushes off her jeans. โ€œShut up,โ€ she mutters, looking around. โ€œShould we unlock the front

for Addy and Cooper?โ€

Weโ€™re in an empty, under-construction house after midnight for a meeting of the Bayview Four. Itโ€™s like a bad spy movie, but thereโ€™s no way all of us could get together anywhere else without drawing too much attention. Even my donโ€™t-give-a-crap neighbors are suddenly in my business now that Mikhail Powersโ€™s team keeps cruising down our street.

Plus, Bronwynโ€™s still grounded.

โ€œYeah,โ€ I say, and we feel our way through a half-built kitchen and into a living room with a huge bay window. The moonlight streams bright across the door, and I twist its dead bolt open. โ€œWhat time did you tell them?โ€

โ€œTwelve-thirty,โ€ she says, pressing a button on her Apple watch. โ€œWhat time is it?โ€

โ€œTwelve-twenty-five.โ€

โ€œGood. We have five minutes.โ€ I slide my hand along the side of her face and back her up against the wall, pulling her lips to mine. She leans into me and wraps her arms around my neck, opening her mouth with a soft sigh. My hands travel down the curve of her waist to her hips, finding a strip of bare skin under the hem of her shirt. Bronwyn has this unbelievable stealth body under all her conservative clothes, although Iโ€™ve barely gotten to see any of it.

โ€œNate,โ€ she whispers after a few minutes, in that breathless voice that drives me wild. โ€œYou were going to tell me how things went with your mom.โ€

Yeah. I guess I was. I saw my mother again this afternoon and it wasโ€ฆ all right. She showed up on time and sober. She backed off asking questions and gave me money for bills. But I spent the whole time taking bets with myself on how long itโ€™d last. Current odds say two weeks.

Before I can answer, though, the door creaks and weโ€™re not alone anymore. A small figure slips inside and shuts the door behind her. The moonlightโ€™s bright enough that I can see Addy clearly, including the unexpected dark streaks in her hair. โ€œOh, good, Iโ€™m not the first one,โ€ she whispers, then puts her hands on her hips as she glares at Bronwyn and me. โ€œAre you two making out? Seriously?โ€

โ€œDid you dye your hair?โ€ Bronwyn counters, pulling away from me. โ€œWhat color is that?โ€ She reaches a hand out and examines Addyโ€™s bangs. โ€œPurple? I like it. Why the change?โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t keep up with the maintenance requirements of short hair,โ€ Addy grumbles, dropping a bike helmet on the floor. โ€œIt doesnโ€™t look as bad

with color mixed in.โ€ She cocks her head at me and adds, โ€œI donโ€™t need your commentary if you disagree, by the way.โ€

I hold up my hands. โ€œWasnโ€™t going to say a word, Addy.โ€ โ€œWhen did you even start knowing my name,โ€ she deadpans.

I grin at her. โ€œYouโ€™ve gotten kinda feisty since you lost all the hair.

And the boyfriend.โ€

She rolls her eyes. โ€œWhere are we doing this? Living room?โ€

โ€œYeah, but back corner. Away from the window,โ€ Bronwyn says, picking her way through construction supplies and sitting cross-legged in front of a stone fireplace. I sprawl next to her and wait for Addy to follow, but sheโ€™s still poised near the door.

โ€œI think I hear something,โ€ she says, peering through the peephole. She opens the door a crack and steps aside to let Cooper in. Addy leads him toward the fireplace but nearly goes flying when she trips on an extension cord. โ€œOw!ย Damn it, that was loud. Sorry.โ€ She settles herself next to Bronwyn, and Cooper sits beside her.

โ€œHow are things?โ€ Bronwyn asks Cooper.

He rubs a hand over his face. โ€œOh, you know. Livinโ€™ the nightmare. My father wonโ€™t talk to me, Iโ€™m getting torn apart online, and none of the teams that were scouting me will return Coach Ruffaloโ€™s calls. Other than that Iโ€™m great.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m so sorry,โ€ Bronwyn says, and Addy grabs his hand and folds it in both of hers.

He heaves a sigh but doesnโ€™t pull away. โ€œIt is what it is, I guess. Letโ€™s just get to why weโ€™re here, huh?โ€

Bronwyn clears her throat. โ€œWell. Mainly toโ€ฆcompare notes? Eli kept talking about looking for patterns and connections, which makes a lot of sense. I thought maybe we could go through some of the things we know. And donโ€™t know.โ€ She frowns and starts ticking things off on her fingers. โ€œSimon was about to post some pretty shocking things about all of us. Somebody got us into that room together with the fake cell phones. Simon was poisoned while we were there. Lots of people besides us had reasons to be mad at Simon. He was mixed up in all kinds of creepy 4chan stuff. Who knows what kind of people he pissed off.โ€

โ€œJanae said he hated being an outsider and he was really upset nothing more ever happened with Keely,โ€ Addy says, looking at Cooper. โ€œDo you remember that? He started hitting on her during junior prom, and she caved at a party a couple weeks later and hooked up with him for, like, five minutes. He thought it was actually going somewhere.โ€

Cooper hunches his shoulders like heโ€™s remembering something heโ€™d rather not. โ€œRight. Huh. I guess thatโ€™s a pattern. Or a connection, or whatever. With me and Nate, I mean.โ€

I donโ€™t get it. โ€œWhat?โ€

He meets my eyes. โ€œWhen I broke up with Keely, she told me sheโ€™d hooked up with you at a party to get rid of Simon. And I asked her out a couple weeks after.โ€

โ€œYou andย Keely?โ€ Addy stares at me. โ€œShe never said!โ€

โ€œIt was just a couple times.โ€ Honestly, Iโ€™d forgotten all about it.

โ€œAnd youโ€™re good friends with Keely. Or you were,โ€ Bronwyn says to Addy. She doesnโ€™t seem fazed at the idea of Keely and me getting together, and I have to appreciate how she doesnโ€™t lose focus. โ€œBut I have nothing to do with her. Soโ€ฆI donโ€™t know. Does that mean something, or doesnโ€™t it?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t see how it could,โ€ Cooper says. โ€œNobody except Simon cared what happened between him and Keely.โ€

โ€œKeelyย might have,โ€ Bronwyn points out.

Cooper stifles a laugh. โ€œYou canโ€™t think Keely had anything to do with this!โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re freewheeling here,โ€ Bronwyn says, leaning forward and propping her chin in her hand. โ€œSheโ€™s a common thread.โ€

โ€œYeah, but Keely has zero motive for anything. Shouldnโ€™t we be talking about people who hated Simon? Besides you,โ€ Cooper adds, and Bronwyn goes rigid. โ€œI mean, for that blog post he wrote about your sister. Addy told me about it. That was low, really low. I never saw it the first time around. Iโ€™d have said something if I did.โ€

โ€œWell, I didnโ€™tย killย him for it,โ€ Bronwyn says tightly. โ€œIโ€™m notย sayingโ€”โ€ Cooper starts, but Addy interrupts.

โ€œLetโ€™s stay on track. What about Leah, or even Aiden Wu? You canโ€™t tell me they wouldnโ€™t have liked revenge.โ€

Bronwyn swallows and lowers her eyes. โ€œI wonder about Leah too. Sheโ€™s beenโ€ฆWell, I have a connection to her I havenโ€™t told you guys about. She and I were partners in a Model UN competition, and by mistake we told Simon a wrong deadline that got him disqualified. He started torturing Leah on About That right after.โ€

Bronwynโ€™s told me this, actually. Itโ€™s been eating at her for a while. But itโ€™s news to Cooper and Addy, who starts bobbing her head. โ€œSo Leahโ€™s got a reason to hate Simonย andย be mad at you.โ€ Then she frowns. โ€œBut what about the rest of us? Why drag us along?โ€

I shrug. โ€œMaybe we were just the secrets Simon had on hand.

Collateral damage.โ€

Bronwyn sighs. โ€œI donโ€™t know. Leahโ€™s hotheaded, but not exactly sneaky. Iโ€™m more confused about Janaeโ€™s deal.โ€ She turns toward Addy. โ€œOne of the strangest things about the Tumblr is how many details it got right. Youโ€™d almost have to be one of us to know that stuffโ€”or spend a lot of time with us. Donโ€™t you think itโ€™s weird that Janae hangs out with us even though weโ€™re accused of killing her best friend?โ€

โ€œWell, to be fair, Iย didย invite her,โ€ Addy says. โ€œBut sheโ€™s been awfully skittish lately. And did you guys notice she and Simon werenโ€™t together as much as usual right before he died? I keep wondering if something happened between them.โ€ She leans back and chews on her bottom lip. โ€œI suppose if anybody wouldโ€™ve known what secrets Simon was about to spill and how to use them, itโ€™d be Janae. I justโ€ฆI donโ€™t know, you guys. Iโ€™m not sure Janaeโ€™s got it in her to do something like this.โ€

โ€œMaybe Simon rejected her and sheโ€ฆkilled him?โ€ Cooper looks doubtful before he finishes the sentence. โ€œDonโ€™t see how, though. She wasnโ€™t there.โ€

Bronwyn shrugs. โ€œWe donโ€™t know that for sure. When I talked to Eli, he kept saying somebody couldโ€™ve planned the car accident as a distraction to slip into the room. If you take that as a possibility, anyone couldโ€™ve done it.โ€

I made fun of Bronwyn when she first brought that up, butโ€”I donโ€™t know. I wish I could remember more about that day, could say for sure whether itโ€™s even possible. The whole thingโ€™s turned into a blur.

โ€œOne of the cars was a red Camaro,โ€ Cooper recalls. โ€œLooked ancient. I donโ€™t remember ever seeing it in the parking lot before. Or since. Whichย isย weird when you think about it.โ€

โ€œOh, come on,โ€ Addy scoffs. โ€œThatโ€™s so far-fetched. Sounds like a lawyer with a guilty client grasping at straws. Someone new was probably just picking up a kid that day.โ€

โ€œMaybe,โ€ Cooper says. โ€œI dunno. Luisโ€™s brother works in a repair place downtown. Maybe Iโ€™ll ask him if a car like that came through, or if he can check with some other shops.โ€ He holds up a hand at Addyโ€™s raised brows. โ€œHey,ย youโ€™reย not the policeโ€™s favorite new person of interest, okay? Iโ€™m desperate here.โ€

Weโ€™re not getting anywhere with this conversation. But Iโ€™m struck by a couple of things as I listen to them talk. One: I like all of them more than I thought I would. Bronwynโ€™s obviously been the biggest surprise, andย likeย doesnโ€™t cover it. But Addyโ€™s turned into kind of a badass, and Cooperโ€™s not as one-dimensional as I thought.

And two: I donโ€™t think any of them did it.

Bronwyn

Friday, October 26, 8:00 p.m.

Friday night my entire family settles in to watchย Mikhail Powers Investigates.ย Iโ€™m feeling more dread than usual, between bracing myself for Simonโ€™s blog post about Maeve and worrying that something about Nate and me will make it into the broadcast. I never should have kissed him at school. Although in my defense he was unbelievably hot at that particular moment.

Anyway. Weโ€™re all nervous. Maeve curls next to me as Mikhailโ€™s theme music plays and photos of Bayview flash across the screen.

A murder investigation turns witch hunt. When police tactics include revealing personal information in the name of evidence collection, have they gone too far?

Wait. What?

The camera zooms in on Mikhail, and he isย pissed.ย I sit up straighter as he stares into the camera and says, โ€œThings in Bayview, California, turned ugly this week when a closeted student involved in the investigation was outed after a round of police questioning, causing a media firestorm that should concern every American who cares about privacy rights.โ€

And then I remember. Mikhail Powers is gay. He came out when I was in junior high and it was a big deal because it happened after some photos of him kissing a guy circulated online. It wasnโ€™t his choice. And from the way heโ€™s covering the story now, heโ€™s still bitter.

Because suddenly the Bayview Police are the bad guys. They have no evidence, theyโ€™ve disrupted our lives, and theyโ€™ve violated Cooperโ€™s constitutional rights. Theyโ€™re on the defensive as a police spokesperson claims they were careful in their questioning and no leaks came from the department. But the ACLU wants to get involved now. And thereโ€™s Eli Kleinfelter from Until Proven again, talking about how poorly this case has been handled from the beginning, with the four of us made into scapegoats while nobody even asks who else mightโ€™ve wanted Simon Kelleher dead.

โ€œHas everybody forgotten about the teacher?โ€ he asks, leaning forward from behind an overflowing desk. โ€œHeโ€™s the only person who was in that room whoโ€™s being treated as a witness instead of a suspect, even though he had more opportunity than anyone. That canโ€™t be discounted.โ€

Maeve leans her head next to mine and whispers, โ€œYou should be working for Until Proven, Bronwyn.โ€

Mikhail switches to the next segment:ย Will the real Simon Kelleher please stand up?ย Simonโ€™s class picture flashes across the screen as people reminisce about his good grades and nice family and all the clubs he belonged to. Then Leah Jackson pops up on-screen, standing on Bayview Highโ€™s front lawn. I turn to Maeve, eyes wide, and she looks equally shocked.

โ€œShe did it,โ€ she murmurs. โ€œShe actually did it.โ€

Leahโ€™s interview is followed by segments with other kids hurt by Simonโ€™s gossip, including Aiden Wu and a girl whose parents kicked her out when news spread about her being pregnant. Maeveโ€™s hand finds mine as Mikhail drops his last bombshellโ€”a screen capture of the 4chan discussion threads, with Simonโ€™s worst posts about the Orange County school shooting highlighted:

Look, I support the notion of violently disrupting schools in theory, but this kid showed a depressing lack of imagination. I mean, it was fine, I guess. It got the job done. But it was so prosaic. Havenโ€™t we seen this a hundred times now? Kid shoots up school, shoots up self, film at eleven. Raise the stakes, for Godโ€™s sake. Do something original.

A grenade, maybe. Samurai swords? Surprise me when you take out a bunch of asshole lemmings. Thatโ€™s all Iโ€™m asking.

I think back to Maeve texting away that day Janae got so upset with her at lunch. โ€œSo you really did send that to the show?โ€ I whisper.

โ€œI really did,โ€ she whispers back. โ€œI didnโ€™t know theyโ€™d use them, though. Nobody ever got back to me.โ€

By the time the broadcast finishes, the Bayview Police are the real villains, followed closely by Simon. Addy, Nate, and I are innocent bystanders caught in a cross fire we donโ€™t deserve, and Cooperโ€™s a saint. The whole thingโ€™s a stunning reversal.

โ€”

Iโ€™m not sure you could call it journalism, butย Mikhail Powers Investigatesย definitely has an impact over the next few days. Somebody starts a Change.org petition to drop the investigation that collects almost twenty thousand signatures. The MLB and local colleges get heat about whether they discriminate against gay players. The tone of the media coverage shifts, with more questions being raised about the policeโ€™s handling of the case than about us. And when I return to school on Monday, people actually talk to me again. Even Evan Neiman, whoโ€™s been acting like weโ€™ve never met, sidles up to me at the last bell and asks if Iโ€™m going to Mathlete practice.

Maybe my life wonโ€™t ever be fully normal again, but by the end of the week I start to hope itโ€™ll be less criminal.

Friday night Iโ€™m on the phone with Nate as usual, reading him the latest Tumblr post. Even that seems like itโ€™s about to give up:

Being accused of murder is turning into a monumental drag. I mean, sure, the TV coverage is interesting. And it makes me feel good that the smoke screen I put in place is workingโ€”people still have no clue whoโ€™s responsible for killing Simon.

Nate cuts me off after the first paragraph. โ€œSorry, but we have more important things to discuss. Answer this honestly: If Iโ€™m no longer a murder suspect, will you still find me attractive?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll still be on probation for drug dealing,โ€ I point out. โ€œThatโ€™s pretty hot.โ€

โ€œAh, but thatโ€™s up in December,โ€ Nate replies. โ€œBy the new year I could be a model citizen. Your parents might even let me take you out on an actual date. If you wanted to go.โ€

If I wanted to go.ย โ€œNate, Iโ€™ve been waiting to go on a date with you since fifth grade,โ€ I tell him. I like that he wonders what weโ€™ll be like outside this weird bubble. Maybe if weโ€™re both thinking about it, thereโ€™s a possibility weโ€™ll figure it out.

He tells me about his latest visit with his mother, who really seems to be trying. We watch a movie togetherโ€”his choice, unfortunatelyโ€”and I fall asleep to his voice criticizing the shoddy camerawork. When I wake up Saturday morning, I notice my phone has only a few minutes left. Iโ€™ll have to ask him for another one. Which will be phone number four, I think.

Maybe we can use our actual phones one of these days.

I stay in bed a little later than usual, right up till the time I need to get moving if Maeve and I are going to do our usual running-slash-library routine. Iโ€™ve just finished lacing up my sneakers and am rooting around in my dresser for my Nano when a tentative knock sounds on my bedroom door.

โ€œCome in,โ€ I say, unearthing a small blue device from a pile of headbands. โ€œIs that you, Maeve? Are you the reason this is only ten percent

charged?โ€ I turn around to see my sister so white-faced and trembling that I almost drop my Nano. Anytime Maeve looks sick, Iโ€™m seized with the horrible fear sheโ€™s had a relapse. โ€œDo you feel all right?โ€ I ask anxiously.

โ€œIโ€™m fine.โ€ The words come out as a gasp. โ€œBut you need to see something. Come downstairs, okay?โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s going on?โ€

โ€œJustโ€ฆcome.โ€ Maeveโ€™s voice is so brittle that my heart thumps painfully. She clutches the banister all the way downstairs. Iโ€™m about to ask if somethingโ€™s wrong with Mom or Dad when she leads me into the living room and points mutely at the television.

Where I see Nate in handcuffs, being led away from his house, with the wordsย Arrest in the Simon Kelleher Murder Caseย scrolling on the bottom of the screen.

You'll Also Like