The Complete Private Collection: Private; Invitation Only; Untouchable; Confessions; Inner Circle; Legacy; Ambition; Revelation; Last Christmas; Paradise ... The Book of Spells; Ominous; Vengeance (85 page)

BOOK: The Complete Private Collection: Private; Invitation Only; Untouchable; Confessions; Inner Circle; Legacy; Ambition; Revelation; Last Christmas; Paradise ... The Book of Spells; Ominous; Vengeance
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“The catalog does not do this place justice,” she said.

“What did I tell you?” my father replied with a hint of pride.

He, after all, had seen Easton before. My mother had not. She had always been in too much of a bitter, prescription-pill haze to join us on the long drive from Croton, Pennsylvania, to Easton, Connecticut. Or even to care that I was leaving. But that was all over now. Mom was sober. Had been since January. She’d gained weight. Had color in her face. Actually washed her hair now. Daily. I had only been home to see this behavior for two weeks, but seen it I had. With my own two eyes. Before that, I had spent most of the summer on Martha’s Vineyard with Natasha and her family, waitressing at a waterside seafood restaurant and learning how to sail from Natasha and her dad. Once Natasha had left for Dartmouth, I had come home for a quick pit stop to find the house clean and freshly painted, the fridge fully stocked, my mother’s bed actually made. Two weeks later I was still adjusting to the new and improved Mom.

“Reed, it’s beautiful,” my mother said, turning to me with a smile. Actually focusing her eyes on me. No darting. No glazing over. Focused. On me. “I still can’t believe you go here.”

I sighed. “Neither can I.”

Especially after everything that had happened last year. In my first few months at Easton I had fallen in love for the first time, lost my virginity, made friends with the most powerful girls at school . . . and stood by totally naïve while one of them had brutally murdered my boyfriend. And that was only the beginning.

But no. I was not going to think about that. I sat back and clenched
my hands into fists, digging my fingernails into my palms. I was making a new start this year. Last year was over. Last year couldn’t touch me. Those people were all gone. Transferred or committed or just gone. This year could be anything I wanted it to be.

My heart fluttered with nerves and excitement as my father pulled out of the trees and onto the circle in front of the underclassmen dorms. Kiki Rosen and Diana Waters stood next to a black town car as their oversized Coach and Louis Vuitton suitcases were unloaded for them. Kiki had chopped her blond hair into a pixie cut and had dyed her bangs pink, but she still had an iPod permanently attached to her ears. Diana had grown her hair out so that it tumbled over her shoulders, and she seemed taller—older. They looked up as my car passed by and waved. I waved back and smiled. Familiar faces. Last year on this day I had known no one. Last year I had felt like I might never belong. Now there were people to welcome me. Everything really was going to be different.

My dad pulled the Subaru up in front of a sleek white Mercedes and killed the engine. I climbed out and stretched, looking up at the gleaming windows of Bradwell. I could tell from the walkway that the rooms had already been decorated and personalized. Curtains hung in several of the windows, and someone up there was listening to Avril at top volume. There had been a few changes at Easton this year. According to the information packet I’d received over the summer, there was a new headmaster, and he was already making his presence known. One of his changes was the arrival schedule. Freshmen and sophomores had already been on campus for twenty-four hours,
giving them time to settle in before the upperclassmen arrived, and making the circle less packed and chaotic for unloading. My mother got out and tipped her head back, shielding her eyes with her hand as she looked up at the gray stone facade.

“This was my first dorm,” I told her. “Billings House is behind it, on the quad.”

Just saying the word
Billings
brought on a rush of anxiety. I had almost died there. Someone who I’d thought was my friend had actually attempted to murder me on the roof. The very person who had killed the guy I loved. Or thought I loved. I wasn’t sure if I’d ever know how I’d really felt about Thomas Pearson, now that he was gone.

My fingernails dug into my palms again. Billings wasn’t that place. Not anymore. Ariana was gone. This year—just like spring semester last year—the house would be full of friends. A light breeze tossed my hair back from my face. I looked up at the sun and smiled.

It was a new year. I took a deep breath, letting hope crowd out the fear.

“Well, that’s everything,” my father said, slapping his hands on his jeans. “These other girls sure have a lot of stuff.”

I looked up and down the line of cars. There were mountains of luggage and electronics and plastic boxes and linens. My two bags, new leather backpack, and bed-in-a-bag did look sorry in comparison. I reached into the car and pulled out my laptop case. It and the computer inside it had been gifts from Natasha at the end of the summer.

A girl who wins First Honors for two straight quarters cannot be seen
writing all her papers at a library computer
, she’d told me.
You are not a caveperson.

Yes, after two unstellar quarters at the beginning of the year (blame all the drama), I had come back in the spring with academic vengeance and taken Firsts in both March and June. Natasha, overachiever that she was, had been so proud. I smiled now, thinking of her. Of how much I’d miss rooming with her. My nerves sizzled with anticipation, wondering who my new roommate would be. I hoped it was someone good. Someone normal. Someone I could be friends with.

“Everything okay, kiddo?” my father asked, laying his warm hand on my shoulder.

“Everything’s fine. This is going to be a good year,” I told him with a confident smile. “Definitely better than last.”

“Well, that shouldn’t be too hard to accomplish,” he joked.

My mother and I both laughed. My heart was suddenly so full, it threatened to swallow me whole. Look at us. Standing there together. We could almost be a normal family. Normal. There was a word I didn’t get to use very often.

“Thanks so much, you guys,” I said, hugging my father first.

“Work hard, kiddo,” my dad said, kissing the top of my head.

I turned to my mother. Her eyes shone with tears. Something caught in my throat as I leaned in to hug her.

“I’m so proud of you, Reed,” she said haltingly.

“Thanks, Mom,” I replied.

Then they were back in the car. Starting the engine. Driving away. My mother pressed her fingertips to the window in a wave. I lifted
my arm in return. Waited there until the dented Pennsylvania license plate had dipped behind the hill. At that second I realized with a start that I was going to miss my mother. Actually going to miss her.

I picked up my things and headed for Billings filled with a whole new confidence. Suddenly, anything felt possible.

PEACE

“Against my better judgment, the dean of academics granted you both your electives. The Modern Novel on top of junior English shouldn’t be too challenging. But taking Advanced Placement Chemistry as well as the required Advanced Placement Biology in one year is a bit ambitious, even for you.”

Mrs. Naylor’s jowls had grown. They hung so low over her collar, she could have easily tucked them in. Her eyes swam in their sockets as she looked across her desk at me with a disapproving expression I had long since grown accustomed to. Behind her the wooden bookcases were jammed with dusty tomes, overflowing into haphazard piles on the floor. The rancid onion smell that always permeated her office now had a more sour tinge to it. Like something had crawled in here, eaten the rancid onions, then died.

“Well, I’m sure the dean wouldn’t have allowed me to take them
if he didn’t think I was up to it,” I replied sweetly, slipping my new schedule into my bag.

“On the contrary. Students who earn First Honors are always given their choice of courses, no matter what those of us who know better might think,” she said, the jowls flapping around.

I had to press my lips together to keep from laughing. Last year she had intimidated me. This year she and her badly drawn eyeliner were just ridiculous.

“Is there anything else?” I asked.

She narrowed her eyes. Folded her craggy fingers on her desk. “No. You may go. But I trust I’ll be seeing you and your drop slip very soon.”

I stood up, sliding the wooden chair back with a loud scrape. “I wouldn’t count on that.”

I turned my back on her irritated face, feeling very Noelle Lange, and smiled to myself. Very rarely, I managed to say exactly what I wanted to say at the moment I wanted to say it, and at those moments I always thought of Noelle. As I stepped out into the sun, I wondered where she was right then. Whether she was thinking of Easton. Whether she was wishing she were here. Last year I had heard that her father’s lawyers had exhibited their Olympic-level plea bargaining skills to get her kidnap charges reduced, then landed her the relatively cushy punishment of probation and community service. But I had no firsthand knowledge. I hadn’t heard one word from Noelle since Christmas Day, when she’d called to convince me to come back to Easton. Not an e-mail, not a text, not a phone call. Sometimes my
world felt empty without her in it. Sometimes I felt beyond lucky to be free of her.

But I knew one thing for sure: Without Noelle, I wouldn’t be here. I wouldn’t be alive, for one. But I wouldn’t be here at Easton if she hadn’t made me promise to come back. I wouldn’t have all those amazing memories from last spring. Wouldn’t have this hope fluttering in my chest as I strolled away from Hull Hall. If not for her, I’d be back in Croton, watching Tommy Colón make obscene hand gestures every time Principal Weiss turned his bad eye on the auditorium. High comedy, that.

“Pass it! Pass it!”

About a dozen members of the boy’s varsity soccer team were scrimmaging in the center of the quad, the sleeves of their dress shirts rolled up, their shoes discarded on the sidelines in favor of cleats and sneakers. I paused. Something about this felt familiar. A déjà vu moment. I heard my name on the breeze, and my heart all but stopped.

Thomas.

I looked at the ground. This was almost the exact spot where I’d nearly tripped over him last year. Where we’d first met. First flirted. First started whatever it was we had. My scalp tightened. My fingertips tingled. He’d been here. He’d been right here. . . .

“Reed!”

I turned around and barely had time to catch my breath before Josh Hollis barreled into me at full speed. He grabbed me up in his arms, lifting me right off my feet.

“Hi!” I breathed.

I clung to him. Buried my face in that warm spot between his neck and his shoulder. He smelled exactly the same. Like evergreens and fresh paint. God, this felt good. This relief. Like coming home. Josh was my home. Not Martha’s Vineyard. Not Croton, Pennsylvania. Not Easton itself. But Josh. I hadn’t seen him since the last day of school in June, and while the summer had seemed to drag and drag without him, suddenly it felt as if no time had passed at all.

“God, I missed you!” he said, pulling back to plant a firm kiss on my lips.

“Me, too!” I giggled. Giggled. Reed Brennan didn’t giggle. Not often, anyway.

Josh tried to put me down again, but our feet tangled up and we went over. Laughing. His face hovered over mine. His blue eyes danced with happiness. His dark blond curls had been cropped close to his head in a neat, preppy cut, but one stray curl still stuck out behind his right ear, unwilling to conform.

“Hmmm.” Josh looked down at me, stretched out right there in the middle of the quad. “This could be something.”

My heart skipped a beat. “Could be.”

He glanced around quickly, checking for authority figures. Then, coast clear, he leaned in to kiss me, really kiss me, while his teammates hooted and hollered and shouted lewd things behind us. When Josh pulled back again, he ran the tip of his finger from my temple to my chin. He was breathless.

“Next summer,” he said quietly, “let’s not do this apart thing.”

TRADITION, HONOR, INTIMIDATION

I smiled, utterly and completely at peace. “Yes. Let’s not.”

“Reed!”

Constance Talbot threw her arms around me before I could even stand up from my pew in the chapel. Our heads bonked together, and she winced as she dropped her butt down onto the hard seat.

“Ow. Sorry. Got a little overexcited there,” she said, rubbing furiously at her forehead. She was sun-kissed pink under all those freckles, and somehow over the summer she had tamed her somewhat frizz-prone red hair into a sleek, straight picture of perfection. She wore a white T-shirt and a big gray cable-knit cardigan over a plaid mini. Shafts of colorful light from the stained glass windows danced across her face.

“It’s okay. You look amazing,” I told her.

“I know. I found this new hair straightener that is a gift from the gods,” she told me, swinging her long mane over her shoulder. “But
you
are, like, a surf babe! I would kill to be able to tan like that!”

“It comes from my mom’s side. She’s half Native American,” I said.

“How cool! I never knew that!” Constance blurted. Then her brow creased. “Actually, I know nothing about your family.”

“I don’t usually talk about them,” I agreed. But that, like many other things, had changed. “So, how was your summer?”

We had e-mailed all summer long, so I knew exactly how her months off had been, but still felt the need to ask. Her family had vacationed with Walt Whittaker’s family up at the Cape. She and Whit had spent most nights stealing away to the beach or making out on the widow’s walk at his family’s compound while the waves crashed into the shore. Constance could be very poetic via e-mail.

“It was good!” she said brightly. “Except . . . I guess I didn’t get an invitation to Billings.”

I blinked as the chatter in the chapel grew to an almost deafening level. The place was starting to fill up. “That’s right. I forgot about that.”

Every spring the girls in Billings selected new members to replace the outgoing seniors. Last year the Billings alumnae had sent a letter—a directive, really—informing us that it would be inappropriate to hold a vote and issue invitations that year, considering all that had happened. That meant there were still six empty spots in the house. And I had no idea how anyone intended to fill them.

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