The Secrets of Lily Graves (22 page)

Read The Secrets of Lily Graves Online

Authors: Sarah Strohmeyer

I closed my eyes, trying to stay focused. “My point is, you can't protect your daughter by sending her to
India. Only Sara can protect herself.”

“That's not true.” He stood, clearly fed up with our conversation. “I can protect Sara. And I will. I am, after all, her father.” He walked to the door and opened it. “If you don't mind, there is a lot of packing I need to finish, as well as praying to do for your soul.”

I got up and went to the door. Only then did I notice the suitcases and boxes lined up on one side of the foyer. This was really happening. They were taking Sara away from me.

Forever.

That evening, I drove through the gloaming like I'd just lost my best friend. Which I had. It was the unfairness of the situation that riled me the most. Sara was almost eighteen, an adult. Who were the McMartins to make an arbitrary ruling that she had to follow them halfway around the world?

I was so upset by this that I forgot Boo was at work and drove straight home, parking her car at its usual spot in front of the carriage house before traipsing through the garden to the back door. Oma was at the stove, standing on a stool and stirring a pot.

“You're home early,” she said, laying down the spoon as I slumped into a kitchen chair. “How did the physics quiz go?”

I shook my head. “Blew it off.”

“Oh, dear, Lily. You have to stop doing that.” Oma found a tin of cookies and offered me a chewy molasses one, her specialty and usually my favorite. But I had no appetite.

Mom came bustling in holding the guest book from last night. “I thought I heard you in those awful boots. Do you have any idea what this means?” She pointed to an entry beside Alex Bone's name, written in dramatic cursive. It said:

You took something of mine. Give it back.

An hour before, that would have given me the chills. But now, after learning about what they were doing to Sara, nothing mattered. Not even Stone Bone. “He's a twit, Mom. Ignore it.”

“That's odd,” Oma said, reading over my shoulder. “Usually people write ‘So sorry for your loss' or ‘Our prayers and thoughts are with you.'”

“What does it mean?” Mom asked again.

“It means that Alex Bone is a loser drug addict who only thinks about himself.” I closed the book and put my head on the table.

They wouldn't even let me talk to Sara. They probably wouldn't even let me say good-bye. Probably they
thought I was the one leading her into temptation.

I felt a slight hand on my shoulder and smelled the distinctive scent of rose perfume. “Can you give us a minute, Oma?” Mom said.

After Oma left, Mom pulled out a chair and sat next to me, fingering the hair on my forehead, straightening it like she used to do when I was a little girl. “You went to the McMartins', didn't you?”

I nodded and braced for the inevitable I-told-you-so.

“Sara should have said something sooner. Ken told me last night that he and Carol had planned this last spring. They would have left during the summer if Sara hadn't needed to do college interviews.”

I had to admit that it felt nice to have Mom's sympathy. “It sucks.”

“I know and, personally, I think it's a mistake. Second semester senior year is the fun semester. Sara's going to be missing out on so much.” Mom handed me a tissue. This was one of her magic skills, pulling Kleenex out of nowhere.

“What am I going to do?” I said, blowing my nose. “It just won't be the same without her.”

“You'll do what you've always done, Lily. You'll be yourself and let others come to you. That's what you did with Sara and . . .”

I said, “Matt.”

Mom sighed. “You two have been seeing each other behind my back, haven't you?”

“You wouldn't let me see him in front of your back, so . . .” I smiled. “Anyway, he really is a good guy. He's not who you think, and trust me, he had nothing to do with Erin's death.”

“Maybe you're right,” she said slowly. “However, this town wants an arrest and I'm afraid if they don't get one soon, there's going to be a riot.”

The office phone rang. Oma picked it up.

“Whoever did it was older and got Erin pregnant,” I said. “And he probably forced her to drink . . .” I caught myself in the nick of time. “. . .
poison
that caused her to die fairly quickly. Then the murderer staged it so it looked like a suicide.”

“Alex Bone?” Mom said.

“You've been talking to Bob.”

“No,” she said. “I've been listening to you.”

Oma entered clutching the phone to her chest, her eyes gleaming. “It's for you, Lily. It's a boy!”

I took the phone. My grandmother was so silly when it came to the opposite sex.

“Hey,” Matt said, sounding urgent. “Where are you? I didn't want to call your cell phone.”

“I'm at home.”

“Okay, I'm right around the corner.” Then he hung up without so much as good-bye.

I stared at the receiver. “It was Matt. Sounded important.”

“Hot date?” asked Oma.

“I don't think so,” I said, as his blue truck careened into the driveway. We watched through the kitchen window as Matt leaped out and rushed to the door, banging three times.

Mom opened it and regarded him levelly. “You must be the infamous Matt Houser.”

He extended his hand. “Hello, Mrs. Graves. Nice to meet you. I like your daughter. She has my utmost respect. I have never, nor would I ever, harm anyone. On that you have my word. I did not murder Erin, nor do I know who did. But right now, if you don't mind, I need Lily. It's an emergency.”

Matt reached around Mom and extended his hand. I took it.

UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

HarperCollins Publishers

..................................................................

EIGHTEEN

I
t's Allie,” he said, taking shortcuts to the west side of town. “I called her when I got out of practice. She sounded loaded.”

I gripped the side of the car as we pushed fifty in a thirty-five-mile-an-hour zone. “Every ten miles of speeding only buys you one minute,” I said.

“And in this case, every minute counts.”

“Where are the other Tragically Normals?”

“Who?”

“Kate and Cheyenne.”

He shrugged. “Let's hope they're at Allie's house, because from the way she was sounding, she should not be alone.”

Darkness came early these days, and when we arrived at Allie's house, the sun was over the horizon and the streetlights were on. Matt took my hand and together we rushed up Allie's brick and white-sided colonial home. There were no cars in the driveway, no sign of parents.

“You sure she's here?” I asked, following him around to the back after the doorbell got us nowhere.

“She said she was home.” Cupping his hands on a plateglass window downstairs, he peered in and said, “The TV's on.”

I tried opening the sliding door, but it was locked. Every door was locked.

“I wish you'd heard her, Graves. It was like she was possessed. Kept talking about people watching her and there being no safe place for any of us and how all the walls were crumbling down.” He backed up to examine the upper windows. “She sounded so much like Erin. Paranoid.”

I had a flash memory of Allie turning off the light and quietly exiting Boo's prep room. That big Betsey bag. Ugh. Why didn't I think to check it? “Matt, we have to get in there. Or call 911. She might have taken something bad.”

“Like what?”

“Just . . . call her. I'll tell you later.”

Matt tried calling her on his phone. No answer. Then, placing two fingers in his mouth, he produced a whistle of such high-pitched frequency that he could have set off alarms.

“Allie? You in? It's me, Matt.”

A light flicked on and the curtains at an upstairs window parted slightly. A silhouette of a girl with long, dark hair appeared. Talk about ghostly.

Matt cupped his hands to his mouth. “Open up, Allie.”

She shook her head slowly and let the curtains fall.

In frustration, Matt tried the sliding door again, while I headed around the house to the garage, finding one of the two doors unlocked. Lifting it open, I fumbled for a light and yelled for Matt.

“Awesome,” he said. “I've been in this house before. That door in the corner leads to the kitchen.”

I went over to the door and turned the handle, and much to my relief, it opened. The two of us ran in, shouting Allie's name.

He took the stairs two at a time while I turned on lights. Everything appeared to be in order. I wondered when her parents would be home and what could be the reason for Allie's odd behavior.

Matt reached the landing and froze. Allie was singing. Or crying. It was hard to tell. “Oh my God. Lily,”
he said. “Come here quick!”

I found him standing in the doorway of Allie's bedroom, and there on the floor, next to a pile of clothes, was Allie Woo, pale, bloodied, and meticulously braiding her hair.

She lifted her gaze to me with dull, faraway eyes. “Oh, good, you came, Lily. I was so hoping you'd join us.”

My hand reached for Matt, who gave me a be-strong squeeze before letting go and squatting next to Allie. “What's up?”

She giggled.

The room was a disaster, as if Allie had emptied every drawer and her entire closet of their contents. Dresses lay ripped to shreds. Heels were broken off their shoes. A pair of pink underwear dangled from a ceiling fan.

Allie curled into a fetal position and began rocking.

“We need to call an ambulance,” I whispered. “She's cut herself.” I pointed to the floor where a large maroon stain was spreading over the cream-colored carpet.

“Jesus,” Matt said, looking rather sick himself. “Allie. Why'd you do this?”

“You can't call the police,” Allie said. “They'll just arrest you.”

There was some truth to that, I thought, taking out my phone and dialing 911 anyway. And that probably explained why Kate and Cheyenne were staying away.

Some friends.

The dispatcher got on and I gave her Allie's name and approximate address. Then I gave ours: Lily Graves and Matt Houser.

“There's a suicide attempt,” I said. “Come quick.”

I described the scene as best as I could—possible drugs or intoxication, a seventeen-year-old girl, approximately one hundred and fifteen pounds and kind of out of it.

Matt held up her wrists to display superficial horizontal cuts. Enough to cause a lot of capillary bleeding and tons of pain, but not life-threatening.

I covered the receiver and said, “Tourniquet.”

He ripped a strip of white cotton from an already destroyed T-shirt and tied it at her right elbow, pulling it tightly. Then he did the same to her left. Allie, meanwhile, had gone limp, her arm flopping to the side.

“Do you think she's going to make it?” he asked, cradling her.

I put my nose to her mouth.

“What are you doing?” Matt asked.

“Sniffing for formaldehyde.” I exhaled in relief. “Vodka. And plenty of it.”

“Allie. Why?” He brushed back her hair, much like my mother for me had done only minutes before. “You're better than this.”

But Allie was out cold. I put two fingers to her neck and felt for a pulse that was stronger than I'd expected.

“She feels guilty. She blames herself for something that's not her fault.” I lifted my fingers from her neck and touched his cheek. “You know what that's like, right?”

Matt nodded and stroked Allie's shoulder. “It's not your fault. You did nothing wrong. You have to let it go and go on the best you can.”

He could have been advising himself.

Red and white lights flashed in the hallway. I ran downstairs and unlocked the front door for a crew of emergency technicians who arrived with radios crackling.

“She's upstairs,” I said.

A woman in a white EMT uniform took me aside. “Wait here. We'll need to ask a few questions.”

After several minutes, Matt came down and folded his arms. They were splotched with blood. “They're taking care of her. I think she'll be okay.”

“Absolutely,” I said, rubbing his back. “It was great the way you were talking to her. I'm sure she heard you.”

“I hope so. I'm sick of all this death and cutting.” Impulsively, he wrapped me in a hug and said, “Don't you start freaking out too, okay?”

“Come on.” I tried to make light of it, but the truth was that I had fallen for Matt Houser. Hard. I liked that he'd been a good enough friend of Allie's to check on her after practice, that he didn't flinch at blood or hesitate when it came to doing what he could to stem the bleeding. But mostly I liked that he was holding me tight and, every once in a while, brushing his lips against my hair.

“Hey,” he murmured, “you're shaking.”

Was I? I didn't like to consider myself the quivering female. Then again, there was something about being with Matt that allowed me to unravel. He was strong and he understood what I was going through. I wanted to lean against him and bury my face in his neck, to forget the blood and violence of the past few days. And I might have done just that if Detective Zabriskie hadn't chosen that moment to walk through the front door.

He took one glance at us in a clutch and said, “Why am I not surprised?”

Matt said, “Take it easy, dude. This time we're the good guys.”

Allie was transported to Potsdam Regional Medical Center. I overheard the EMT tell Zabriskie that she appeared to be suffering from acute alcohol intoxication and would be fine after she had her stomach pumped, though she might be admitted to the psych ward overnight for observation. Her parents, at a fund-raiser one town over, had been notified and were on their way.

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