Lucky (18 page)

Read Lucky Online

Authors: Cecily von Ziegesar

Tags: #Romance, #Young Adult, #Chick-Lit

Sage turned to look at her roommate. “And she was totally interrogating me about what Easy and Callie were doing in the stables on Saturday.” Callie blushed, and Easy squeezed her hand under the table.

“But that means,” Alison started, then stopped, staring at the ceiling as if she was trying to work out a difficult algebra problem in her head. “She said this weird thing to me about Alan helping me
study
,” she said. “It didn’t register at the time, but …” She scrunched up her face. “Little bitch.”

Tinsley smirked and leaned back in her leather chair so far that Brett hoped it would topple to the floor. She stacked her black leather Sigerson Morrison heels on the table. “Wow, that’s underhanded. You’ve got to kind of admire it.”

Understanding washed over Heath’s face. “I was only kidding about the naked rule… .” Brandon’s eyes narrowed at his roommate, and Heath put both hands up, as if to proclaim his innocence. “So basically, we’re all in here because we said or did compromising things in front of that little prospective?” he cried, glancing around the room. He looked like he was both indignant and impressed.

“Yeah, or because we were mean to her. And then she ran and told her uncle. It’s so freaking
unfair
.” Alison grabbed a piece of her hair and started nibbling on the ends angrily.

“I’ll tell you what’s unfair,” Benny said suddenly, shushing the room. She clicked her pointy nails against the countertop. “Kara’s probably sleeping off her hangover somewhere, while we’re all trying to decide who gets kicked out of school.”

Brett winced at the mention of Kara’s name. She wasn’t sure if it would be better or worse if Kara were actually here. Why had she skipped the meeting? It was probably in protest—Kara was the one person gutsy enough to actually do something like that.

Heath spoke up again, this time a bit more forcefully. “I told you, cut her some slack. She just had a late night is all.”

Benny shrugged her shoulders. “Heathie, I know you’re feeling guilty because you got her drunk so you could make out with her or whatever, but honestly, we were all up as late as you two and
we
all still made it here.” Benny stuck out her tongue at Heath and then realized what she’d blurted and turned to Brett with an apologetic look.

Brett felt the whole room staring at her. She was tired of shrinking from her classmates’ gazes and sat up straighter in the dean’s high-backed chair. “We saw you, in the woods,” she said evenly, swiveling the chair slightly to gaze right at Heath. She hoped no one asked who “we” included—no need to drag Jeremiah into this.

Heath’s handsome face turned a shade pinker. “Brett—I, uh … can we go somewhere and talk?”

Brett shook her head, her gaze still locked on Heath. “You can say whatever you need to say right here. There are no secrets at Waverly, right?” She crossed her arms over her chest and looked around the table at her classmates, narrowing her green eyes. Everyone looked away or put their heads down on the table, as if they were trying to fade into the background. Yeah, right. They all wanted to hear the dirty details. Jenny, at least, met her gaze and gave her a sympathetic look with her warm brown eyes.

Heath looked around sheepishly, seeming unsure about whether Brett was serious. He pulled down on the bottom of his orange T-shirt, smoothing out some of the wrinkles. Finally he made eye contact. “I’m so sorry, and I know it was totally wrong and all, but …” Heath ran a nervous hand through his messy hair. Apologizing was probably not something he was used to. “But the thing is, it didn’t seem like things were working out between you two anyway. And I know that’s no excuse, but honestly …” A dreamy look came over Heath’s face, and the room was silent. “I haven’t felt this giddy about a girl since the days of Juliet van Pelt.” Across the table, Brandon immediately shook his head, and Brett wondered who Heath was talking about. “I mean,” he tried again. He looked at Brett pleadingly, the look on his face reminding her of the way Bree used to plead with their parents when she was in high school and wanted her curfew extended. “Don’t you know what it feels like to like someone so much that nothing else matters?”

The Usual Suspects sat in shocked silence—Heath Ferro, sounding like a character from a chick flick? But Brett was the most shocked of all. She
did
know what it felt like to care about someone that much. But she didn’t feel that way about Kara—she felt that way about
Jeremiah
. She was still in love with him, no matter how hard she’d tried to distract herself or convince herself otherwise.

But it didn’t matter anymore, and Jeremiah wasn’t going to hear it. First, she was a lying, cheating, teacher-sleeping-with slut. Then she was the jealous girlfriend who dumped him
again
for having tried to move on. And now she was a lesbian pyro? There was no way Jeremiah would ever love her, or even speak to her, again.

24
A
WAVERLY
OWL
KNOWS
THAT
WHERE
THERE’S
SMOKE
,
THERE’S
FIRE
.

“M
otive
,” Tinsley interjected, and everyone came to attention again. “
That’s
what we’re looking for. Motive and opportunity.”

Callie was relieved when Tinsley broke the stunned silence. Brett slumped back into Marymount’s chair, and Callie tried to give her a sympathetic smile, but her gaze was trained on Dean Marymount’s enormous leather-framed desk calendar.

“I think everyone in the room had an opportunity.” Heath laughed, looking relieved that they weren’t talking about him and Kara anymore. “Isn’t that why we’re all here?”

Tinsley shot Heath a look of death, her violet eyes piercing. “Okay, motive, then. We need to concentrate on motive.”

Callie knew where Tinsley was headed. She glanced at Easy, who was doodling on a blank sheet of paper. After hanging out with Tinsley and Chloe for a little while at the party last night, she had found her way to Easy, hoping they’d sneak off to the woods for some alone time. But he’d mumbled some excuse about being tired and then gone home early. He did seem pretty exhausted today, so she hoped he really was just tired. But her stomach tingled nervously at the possibility that he was still suspicious of her. She’d have to be really careful today.

“I don’t fucking get this at all.” Benny crossed her arms in front of her, flattening her already pretty flat chest. “Couldn’t the fire have just been an accident?” People started to nod in agreement.

“Whatever. Marymount wants blood,” Tinsley declared, sweeping a lock of glossy hair off her shoulder. “After all the info he got from his
niece
“—she nodded her head in the direction of the silver-framed family picture, which was now sitting in the middle of the conference table—”he clearly believes someone started the fire on purpose. He just can’t figure out who had the strongest motive, which is why we’re all locked in here.”

Tinsley’s words drifted around the room, and Callie watched her smug face as she waited for someone to contradict her.

“What kind of motive?” Callie asked tentatively, toying with a strand of wavy blond hair. She glanced up at Easy, who wrinkled his forehead furiously as if to ask,
What the hell are you doing?

“Well, let’s see.” Tinsley tilted her head toward the ceiling, pretending to be deep in thought. “What are some good motives? How about jealousy?”

Callie tried not to look at Jenny, who was seated directly across from her and Tinsley. She picked at one of her raggedy cuticles instead. She’d started biting her nails again recently, a bad habit she’d thought she’d given up years ago. Maybe this weekend she’d take the train to Manhattan and get a decent manicure. She could really use a spa day after all this stress.

“Jealous about what?” Brandon asked. He took a delicate swig from his bottle of Evian. Callie stared at the bottle enviously.

“That’s the question,” Tinsley said. Callie stole a glance at Jenny, who shifted in her seat. She was nibbling on the rim of her now-empty paper coffee cup. “Someone was jealous of something.”

“Or someone,” Callie added. She shrugged her shoulders casually, as if the thought had just occurred to her, and pulled her white cardigan tighter across her chest.

“Wait, are we talking about someone trying to
murder
someone else?” Sage Francis asked, her thin blond eyebrows rising skeptically.
Shut up, Sage,
Callie wanted to shout. “That’s crazy.”

Tinsley let out a natural-sounding laugh that only Callie recognized as fake. “Not murder.” She shook her head, as if amused by Sage’s outlandishness. “But maybe someone was angry and jealous enough to do something so stupid and thoughtless, it could have killed someone.”

“Like who?” Easy asked defiantly, his blue eyes flashing, as if daring Tinsley to name Jenny.

Callie slunk down in her chair.

“Yeah, like who?” Julian echoed Easy’s question. He’d been so quiet, Callie had almost forgotten he was there.

Callie looked at Tinsley. Her violet-eyed best friend seemed to be feeding off all the doubt in the room, drawing her strength up around her as she prepared to strike. Tinsley stared at Jenny, who at first pretended not to notice but acknowledged her when everyone else at the table stared at her, too.

“What?” Jenny finally asked, her little chin sticking out in defiance. She stared right back at Tinsley, surprising everyone. “If you’re going to say something, just say it.”

Tinsley smirked and Callie knew that it was over—Tinsley, once set on a course of action, was as impossible to stop as a wildfire spreading through dry brush. Ever since she’d arrived back on campus and found Jenny in her old bed, Tinsley had had it in for Jenny. Tinsley was used to being the most-talked-about person at Waverly, but Jenny, with her cute demeanor and gigantic chest, had stolen her thunder. Callie understood why Tinsley resented Jenny, though she still didn’t entirely understand why she
hated
her. It wasn’t like Jenny had stolen
her
boyfriend. “Well, Jenny, now that you ask …” Tinsley began poisonously.

“What makes
you
so innocent, Tinsley?” Julian cut her off before she could finish. Callie looked over at him, unable to believe that a freshman, no matter how cute or how tall he was, had the courage to challenge Tinsley Carmichael. The red leaves of the birch trees outside the window whipped angrily in the wind behind him, but he looked perfectly collected, as if he had an ace in his pocket and was waiting for the perfect moment to throw it down on the table. The Usual Suspects looked at Julian and then again at Tinsley, as if watching a tennis match.

Tinsley turned to face Julian. Her stomach turned over as she met his gaze. His normally warm brown eyes were narrowed. She dug her nails into her palms under the table. Did Julian really
hate
her? True, she hadn’t exactly been sugaring him up recently. But if she had to be honest with herself, she’d sort of hoped that once Jenny was out of the picture, he’d come crawling back for forgiveness. But if Julian was through with her, then he might as well be as miserable as she was.

“Of course, you assume I’m the bad guy here. You’re so quick to defend Jenny’s innocence,” she said evenly. She turned to face Jenny across the table. Jenny stared back rebelliously and refused to avert her eyes. “Jenny, why don’t you tell everyone about the picture you drew in Mrs. Silver’s class on Tuesday?”

Callie bit her lip, holding her breath. She couldn’t look at Easy, whose eyes she felt trained on her. All the color drained from Jenny’s face. Her mouth opened and closed a little, like a dying goldfish’s, as she clearly scrambled to figure out how Tinsley knew about her drawing of the fire. They’d really gotten lucky. Their plan had been for Chloe to convince the dean of Jenny’s guilt. But since Marymount had decided to let the
students
decide who was guilty, it was a good thing Jenny had been stupid enough to do something so incriminating—and that Chloe had been there to see it. She’d reported back to them about the drawing at the party last night. Even though Callie felt a teensy bit bad for Jenny, why would she draw something like that if she weren’t, like, subconsciously trying to admit to starting the fire?

Jenny’s face had turned a sickly gray, reminding Callie of the time they’d had to dissect a frog in biology class sophomore year. Brett’s face had turned exactly that color before she booted all over the lab table.

“Jeez, it was just a
drawing
,” Alison spoke up suddenly, sitting forward in her chair. She looked a little nervous about challenging Tinsley, but she glanced back at Jenny, whose color had returned to a more normal-looking pink.

“What … uh … was it a drawing of?” Benny Cunningham glanced from Tinsley to Jenny, as if uncertain with whom she should ally herself, before setting her brown-eyed gaze on Tinsley.

Tinsley crossed her arms, looking as though she’d been waiting for someone to ask her that very question. “Oh, just a detailed sketch of the barn burning down. With two people in it kissing,” she said casually, letting the words hang in the air.

Callie gasped. She hoped that she looked and sounded appropriately shocked. She’d never been much of an actress, but this was quite possibly the most important performance of her life.

“Who were the two people?” Easy asked, clearly annoyed. Callie stared mutely at a long scratch in the conference table. It looked as if someone had been so desperate to get out of the room that they’d tried to claw their way out.

“You asked the question,” Tinsley drawled, putting her palms on the table and rising to her feet, her emerald green dress draping regally around her slim, perfect figure. She leaned forward intimidatingly, looking so much like a little lawyer that even Easy’s father would have been impressed. “And now Jenny’s going to tell you the answer.”

Callie felt Easy’s smoldering anger burn through her clothes. Her tongue felt heavy, as if it were a cold, wet sponge stuck in her mouth, and she suddenly felt like
she
might be the one to vomit all over the table. Just knowing that Easy was angry made her wonder if the whole thing was worth it, but she’d gone too far to back out now.

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