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Chapter no 25

One of Us Is Lying

โ€ŒBronwynโ€Œ

saturday, November 3, 10:17 a.m.

This time Iย doย drop my Nano.

It slips from my hand and thuds softly onto our rug as I watch one of the police officers flanking Nate open the cruiser door and push him, not very gently, into the backseat. The scene cuts to a reporter standing outdoors, brushing windswept dark hair out of her face. โ€œBayview Police refused to comment, other than to say that new evidence provides probable cause to charge Nate Macauley, the only one of the Bayview Four with a criminal record, with Simon Kelleherโ€™s murder. Weโ€™ll continue to provide updates as the story unfolds. Iโ€™m Liz Rosen, reporting for Channel Seven News.โ€

Maeve stands next to me, the remote in her hand. I pluck at her sleeve. โ€œCan you rewind to the beginning, please?โ€

She does, and I study Nateโ€™s face in the looping video. His expression is blank, almost bored, as though heโ€™s been talked into going to a party that doesnโ€™t interest him.

I know that look. Itโ€™s the same one he got when I mentioned Until Proven at the mall. Heโ€™s shutting down and putting up defenses. Thereโ€™s no trace of the boy I know from the phone, or our motorcycle rides, or my media room. Or the one I remember from grade school, his St. Pius tie askew and his shirt untucked, leading his sobbing mother down the hallway with a fierce look that dared any of us to laugh.

I still believe that Nateโ€™s the real one. Whatever the police think, or found, doesnโ€™t change that.

My parents arenโ€™t home. I grab my phone and call my lawyer, Robin, who doesnโ€™t answer. I leave her such a long, rambling message that her voice mail cuts me off, and I hang up feeling helpless. Robinโ€™s my only hope for getting information, but she wonโ€™t consider this an emergency. Itโ€™s a problem for Nateโ€™s future lawyer, not her.

That thought makes me even more panicked. Whatโ€™s an overworked public defender whoโ€™s never met Nate going to be able to do? My eyes dart around the room and meet Maeveโ€™s troubled gaze.

โ€œDo you think he might haveโ€”โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I say forcefully. โ€œCome on, Maeve, youโ€™ve seen how screwed up this investigation is. They thoughtย Iย did it for a while. Theyโ€™re wrong. Iโ€™m positive theyโ€™re wrong.โ€

โ€œI wonder what they found, though,โ€ Maeve says. โ€œYouโ€™d think theyโ€™d be pretty careful after all the bad press they got this week.โ€

I donโ€™t answer. For once in my life I have no idea what to do. My brainโ€™s empty of everything except a churning anxiety. Channel 7 has given up pretending they know anything new, and theyโ€™re replaying snippets about the investigation to date. Thereโ€™s footage fromย Mikhail Powers Investigates.ย Addy in her pixie haircut, giving whoeverโ€™s filming her a defiant finger. A Bayview Police Department spokesperson. Eli Kleinfelter.

Of course.

I grab my phone and search for Eliโ€™s name. He gave me his cell the last time we spoke and told me to call anytime. I hope he meant it.

He answers on the first ring. โ€œEli Kleinfelter.โ€ โ€œEli? Itโ€™s Bronwyn Rojas. Fromโ€”โ€

โ€œOf course. Hi, Bronwyn. I take it youโ€™re watching the news. What do you make of it?โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re wrong.โ€ I stare at the television while Maeve stares at me. Dreadโ€™s creeping through me like a fast-growing vine, squeezing my heart and lungs so itโ€™s hard to breathe. โ€œEli, Nate needs a better lawyer than whatever random public defender theyโ€™ll assign him. He needs somebody who gives a crap and knows what theyโ€™re doing. I think, um, wellโ€” basically I think he needs you. Would you consider taking his case?โ€

Eli doesnโ€™t answer straightaway, and when he does his voice is cautious. โ€œBronwyn, you know Iโ€™m interested in this case, and I sympathize with all of you. Youโ€™ve gotten a shit deal and Iโ€™m sure this arrest is more of the same. But Iโ€™ve got an impossible workload as it isโ€”โ€

โ€œPlease,โ€ย I interrupt, and words tumble out of me. I tell Eli about Nateโ€™s parents and how heโ€™s practically raised himself since he was in fifth grade. I tell him every awful, heart-wrenching story Nateโ€™s ever told me, or that I witnessed or guessed. Nate would hate it, but Iโ€™ve never believed anything more strongly than I believe he needs Eli to stay out of jail.

โ€œAll right, all right,โ€ Eli says finally. โ€œI get it. I really do. Are either of these parents in any shape to talk? Iโ€™ll make time for a consult and give them some ideas for resources. Thatโ€™s all I can do.โ€

Itโ€™s not enough, but itโ€™s something. โ€œYes!โ€ I say with brazen fake confidence. Nate talked to his mother two days ago and she was holding on, but I have no idea what effect todayโ€™s news might have on her. โ€œIโ€™ll talk to Nateโ€™s mom. When can we meet?โ€

โ€œTen tomorrow, our offices.โ€

Maeveโ€™s still watching me when I hang up. โ€œBronwyn, what are you doing?โ€

I snatch the keys to the Volvo from the kitchen island. โ€œI need to find Mrs. Macauley.โ€

Maeve bites her lip. โ€œBronwyn, you canโ€™tโ€”โ€

Run this like itโ€™s student council?ย Sheโ€™s right. I need help. โ€œWill you come? Please?โ€

She debates for half a minute, her amber eyes steady on mine. โ€œAll right.โ€

My phone almost slips out of my sweaty palm as we head for the car. I mustโ€™ve gotten a dozen calls and texts while I was talking with Eli. My parents, my friends, and a bunch of numbers I donโ€™t recognize that probably belong to reporters. I have four messages from Addy, all some variation ofย Did you see?ย andย WTF?

โ€œAre we telling Mom and Dad about this?โ€ Maeve asks as I back out of the driveway.

โ€œWhat โ€˜thisโ€™? Nateโ€™s arrest?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m pretty sure theyโ€™re in the loop on that. Thisโ€ฆlegal coordination youโ€™re doing.โ€

โ€œDo you disapprove?โ€

โ€œNotย disapprove,ย exactly. But youโ€™re flying off the handle before you even know what the police found. It could be cut-and-dried. I know you really like him, butโ€ฆisnโ€™t it possible he did this?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I say shortly. โ€œAnd yes. Iโ€™ll tell Mom and Dad. Iโ€™m not doing anything wrong. Just trying to help a friend.โ€ My voice sticks on the last word, and we drive in silence until we reach Motel 6.

Iโ€™m relieved when the front desk clerk tells me Mrs. Macauleyโ€™s still checked in, but she doesnโ€™t answer the phone in her room. Which is a good signโ€”hopefully sheโ€™s wherever Nate is. I leave a note with my phone number and try not to overdo the underlines and capital letters. Maeve takes over driving responsibilities on the ride home while I call Addy.

โ€œWhat the hell?โ€ she says when she picks up, and the vise gripping my chest loosens at the disbelief in her voice. โ€œFirst they think itโ€™s all of us. Then itโ€™s musical chairs till they finally land on Nate, I guess.โ€

โ€œAnything new?โ€ I ask. โ€œIโ€™ve been away from screens for half an hour.โ€

But thereโ€™s nothing. The police are being tight-lipped about whatever they found. Addyโ€™s lawyer doesnโ€™t have a clue whatโ€™s happening. โ€œYou want to hang out tonight?โ€ she asks. โ€œYou must be going nuts. My mom and her boyfriend have plans, so Ashton and I are making pizza. Bring Maeve; weโ€™ll have a sister night.โ€

โ€œMaybe. If things arenโ€™t too out of control,โ€ I say gratefully.

Maeve turns into our street, and my heart sinks when I spy the line of white news vans in front of our house. It looks like Univision and Telemundo have joined the fray, which is seriously going to piss off my dad. He can never get them to cover anything positive about his company, butย thisย they show up for.

We pull into the driveway behind my parentsโ€™ cars, and as soon as I open my door a half-dozen microphones are in my face. I push past them and meet Maeve in front of the car, grabbing her hand as we weave through the cameras and the flashing lights. Most of the reporters shout some

variation of โ€œBronwyn, do you think Nate killed Simon?โ€ but one calls out, โ€œBronwyn, is it true you and Nate are romantically involved?โ€

Iย reallyย hope my parents werenโ€™t asked the same question.

Maeve and I slam the door behind us and duck past the windows into our kitchen. Mom is sitting at the island with a coffee cup between both hands, her face tight with worry. Dadโ€™s voice rises in heated conversation from behind his closed office door.

โ€œBronwyn, we need to talk,โ€ Mom says, and Maeve floats away upstairs.

I sit across from my mother at the kitchen island and meet her tired eyes with a pang.ย My fault.ย โ€œObviously you saw the news,โ€ she says. โ€œYour fatherโ€™s talking to Robin about what, if anything, this means for you. In the meantime, we got a lot of questions when we walked past that zoo out there. Some about you and Nate.โ€ I can tell sheโ€™s trying hard to keep her voice neutral. โ€œWe might have made it difficult for you to talk about whateverโ€ฆrelationships you have with the other kids. Because from our perspective the best way to keep you safe was to keep you separate. So maybe you didnโ€™t think you could confide in us, but I need you to be straight with me now that Nateโ€™s been arrested. Is there something I should know?โ€

At first all I can think isย Whatโ€™s the least amount of information I can provide and still make you understand I need to help Nate?ย But then she reaches out and squeezes my hand, and it hits me with a stab of guilt how I never used to keep things from her until I cheated in chemistry. And look howย thatย turned out.

So I tell her almost everything. Not about bringing Nate to our house or meeting him at Bayview Estates, because Iโ€™m pretty sure thatโ€™ll send us down a bad path. But I explain the late-night phone calls, the escape-from- school motorcycle rides, and, yeah, the kissing.

My mother is tryingย soย hard not to freak out. I give her a lot of credit. โ€œSo youโ€™reโ€ฆserious about him?โ€ She almost chokes on the words.

She doesnโ€™t want the real answer. Robinโ€™s answer-a-different-question- than-the-one-youโ€™re-trying-to-deflect strategy would work well now. โ€œMom, I understand this is a bizarre situation and I donโ€™t really know Nate.

But I donโ€™t believe heโ€™d hurt Simon. And he doesnโ€™t have anybody looking out for him. He needs a good lawyer, so thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m trying to help with.โ€ My phone buzzes with a number I donโ€™t recognize, and I grimace as I realize I need to answer in case itโ€™s Mrs. Macauley. โ€œHi, this is Bronwyn.โ€

โ€œBronwyn, so glad you picked up! This is Lisa Jacoby with theย Los Angeles Tiโ€”โ€

I hang up and face my mother again. โ€œIโ€™m sorry I havenโ€™t been straight with you after everything youโ€™ve done for me. But please let me connect Mrs. Macauley and Eli. Okay?โ€

My mother massages her temple. โ€œBronwyn, Iโ€™m not sure you understand how cavalier youโ€™ve been. You ignored Robinโ€™s advice and youโ€™re lucky it didnโ€™t blow up in your face. It still might. Butโ€ฆno, I wonโ€™t stop you from talking with Nateโ€™s mother. This case is messed up enough that everyone involved needs decent counsel.โ€

I throw my arms around her and, God, it feels good to just hug my mom for a minute.

She sighs when I let go. โ€œLet me talk to your father. I donโ€™t think a conversation between you two would be productive right now.โ€

I couldnโ€™t agree more. Iโ€™m on my way upstairs when my phone rings again, and my heart leaps when I see a 503 area code. I canโ€™t keep the hope out of my voice when I pick up. โ€œHi, this is Bronwyn.โ€

โ€œBronwyn, hello.โ€ The voice is low and strained, but clear. โ€œItโ€™s Ellen Macauley. Nateโ€™s mother. You left me a note.โ€

Oh, thank God thank God thank God.ย She didnโ€™t hightail it to Oregon in a drug-induced haze. โ€œYes. Yes, I did.โ€

Cooper

saturday, November 3, 3:15 p.m.

Itโ€™s hard to evaluate exhibition games anymore, but overall this one went pretty well. My fastball hit ninety-four, I struck out the side twice, and only a few guys heckled me from the stands. They were wearing tutus and

baseball caps, though, so they stood out a little more than your average gay basher before security escorted them out.

A couple of college scouts showed up, and the guy from Cal State even bothered to talk to me afterward. Coach Ruffalo started hearing from teams again, but it strikes me as more of a PR play than genuine interest. Only Cal State is still talking scholarship, even though Iโ€™m pitching better than ever. Thatโ€™s life as an outed murder suspect, I guess. Pop doesnโ€™t wait for me outside the locker room anymore. He heads straight for the car when Iโ€™m done and starts the engine so we can make a quick exit.

Reporters are another story. Theyโ€™re dying to talk to me. I brace myself when a camera lights up as I leave the locker room, waiting for the woman with the microphone to cycle through the usual half-dozen questions. But she catches me by surprise.

โ€œCooper, what do you think about Nate Macauleyโ€™s arrest?โ€

โ€œHuh?โ€ I stop short, too shocked to brush past her, and Luis almost bumps into me.

โ€œYou havenโ€™t heard?โ€ The reporter grins like I handed her a winning lottery ticket. โ€œNate Macauleyโ€™s been arrested for Simon Kelleherโ€™s murder, and the Bayview Police are saying youโ€™re no longer a person of interest. Can you tell me how that feels?โ€

โ€œUmโ€ฆโ€ย Nope. I canโ€™t.ย Or wonโ€™t. Same difference. โ€œExcuse me.โ€

โ€œThe hell?โ€ Luis mutters once weโ€™re past the camera gauntlet. He pulls out his phone and swipes wildly as I spot my fatherโ€™s car. โ€œDamn, she wasnโ€™t lying.ย Dude.โ€ He stares at me with wide eyes. โ€œYouโ€™re off the hook.โ€

Weird, but that hadnโ€™t even occurred to me till he said it.

Weโ€™re giving Luis a ride home, which is good since it cuts down the time Pop and I need to spend alone. Luis and I drop our bags in the backseat, and I climb into the passenger seat while Luis settles himself into the back. Popโ€™s fiddling with the radio, trying to find a news station. โ€œThey arrested that Macauley kid,โ€ he says with grim satisfaction. โ€œIโ€™ll tell you what, theyโ€™re gonna have a pack of lawsuits on their hands when this is done. Starting with me.โ€

He slides his eyes to my left as I sit. Thatโ€™s Popโ€™s new thing: he looks

nearย me. He hasnโ€™t met my eyes once since I told him about Kris.

โ€œWell, you had to figure it was Nate,โ€ Luis says calmly. Throws Nate right under the bus, like he hadnโ€™t been sitting with the guy at lunch all last week.

I donโ€™t know what to think. If Iโ€™d had to point a finger at someone when this all started, it wouldโ€™ve been Nate. Even though heโ€™d acted genuinely desperate when he was searching for Simonโ€™s EpiPen. He was the person I knew the least, and he was already a criminal, soโ€ฆit wasnโ€™t much of a stretch.

But when the entire Bayview High cafeteria was ready to take me down like a pack of hyenas, Nate was the only person who said anything. I never thanked him, but Iโ€™ve thought a lot about how much worse school wouldโ€™ve gotten if heโ€™d brushed past me and let things snowball.

My phoneโ€™s filled with text messages, but the only ones I care about are a string from Kris. Other than a quick visit to warn Kris about the police and apologize for the oncoming media onslaught, Iโ€™ve barely seen him in the past couple of weeks. Even though people know about us, we havenโ€™t had a chance to be normal.

Iโ€™m still not sure what that would even look like. I wish I could find

out.

Omg saw the news This is good right?? Call when you can

I text him back while half listening to Pop and Luis talk. After we drop

Luis off silence settles between me and my father, dense as fog. Iโ€™m the first to break it. โ€œSo howโ€™d I do?โ€

โ€œGood. Looked good.โ€ Bare-minimum response, as usual lately. I try again. โ€œI talked to the scout from Cal State.โ€

He snorts. โ€œCal State.ย Not even top ten.โ€ โ€œRight,โ€ I acknowledge.

We catch sight of the news vans when weโ€™re halfway down our street. โ€œGoddamn it,โ€ Pop mutters. โ€œHere we go again. Hope this was worth it.โ€

โ€œWhat was worth it?โ€

He pulls around a news van, throws the gearshift into park, and yanks the key out of the ignition. โ€œYourย choice.โ€

Anger flares inside meโ€”at both his words and how he spits them out without even looking at me. โ€œNone of this is a choice,โ€ I say, but the noise outside swallows my words as he opens the door.

The reporter gauntlet is thinner than usual, so Iโ€™m guessing most of them are at Bronwynโ€™s. I follow Pop inside, where he immediately heads for the living room and turns on the TV. Iโ€™m supposed to do postgame stretching now, but my father hasnโ€™t bothered to remind me about my routine for a while.

Nonnyโ€™s in the kitchen, making buttered toast with brown sugar on top. โ€œHow was the game, darlinโ€™?โ€

โ€œFantastic,โ€ I say heavily, collapsing into a chair. I pick up a stray quarter and spin it into a silvery blur across the kitchen table. โ€œI pitched great, but nobody cares.โ€

โ€œNow, now.โ€ She sits across from me with her toast and offers me a slice, but I push it back toward her. โ€œGive it time. Do you remember what I told you in the hospital?โ€ I shake my head. โ€œThingsโ€™ll get worse before they get better. Well, they surely did get worse, and now thereโ€™s nowhere to go but up.โ€ She takes a bite and I keep spinning the quarter until she swallows. โ€œYou should bring that boy of yours by sometime for dinner, Cooper. Itโ€™s about time we met him.โ€

I try to picture my father making conversation with Kris over chicken casserole. โ€œPop would hate that.โ€

โ€œWell, heโ€™ll have to get used to it, wonโ€™t he?โ€

Before I can answer her, my phone buzzes with a text from a number I donโ€™t recognize.ย Itโ€™s Bronwyn. I got your number from Addy. Can I call you?

Sure.

My phone rings within seconds. โ€œHi, Cooper. Youโ€™ve heard about Nate?โ€

โ€œYeah.โ€ Iโ€™m not sure what else to say, but Bronwyn doesnโ€™t give me a chance.

โ€œIโ€™m trying to set up a meeting with Nateโ€™s mom and Eli Kleinfelter from Until Proven. Iโ€™m hoping heโ€™ll take Nateโ€™s case. I was wondering, did you get a chance to ask Luisโ€™s brother about that red Camaro from the parking lot accident?โ€

โ€œLuis called him last week about it. He was gonna look into it, but I havenโ€™t heard back yet.โ€

โ€œWould you mind checking in with him?โ€ Bronwyn asks.

I hesitate. Even though I havenโ€™t processed everything yet, thereโ€™s this little ball of relief growing inside me. Because yesterday I was the policeโ€™s number one guy. And today Iโ€™m not. Iโ€™d be lying if I said it didnโ€™t feel good.

But this is Nate. Whoโ€™s not a friend, exactly. Or at all, I guess. But heโ€™s not nothing.

โ€œYeah, okay,โ€ I tell Bronwyn.

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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