The First Two Chapters of All Your Twisted Secrets
Six teens are locked in a room with a syringe of poison, a bomb, and a note saying they have to choose one of them to kill within an hour, or else theyβll all die. π±
All Your Twisted Secrets is a locked-room thriller R.L. Stine called βa frightening page-turnerβ thatβs a cross between The Breakfast Club and an Agatha Christie mystery. Six teens are locked in a room with a syringe of poison, a bomb, and a note saying they have to choose one of them to kill within an hour, or else theyβll all die. π±
Without further ado, here are the first two chapters of All Your Twisted Secrets!
Dear Amber Prescott,
Congratulations! It is our pleasure to inform you that you have been selected as a recipient of the Brewster Town Hall Scholarship in the amount of $20,000. We commend you for your musical talents and contributions to the community.
To celebrate your achievements, we invite you to dine with Mayor Timothy Meinot and the other five scholarship recipients on Tuesday, February 4th, at 7 p.m. at the Chesterfield.
Again, congratulations, and we look forward to meeting you at the Chesterfield.
Sincerely,
Scholarship Chair
Brewster Town Hall Scholarship Committee
I spent the last hour wondering if I would die tonight.
You can drop dead from a heart attack at seventeen, right? The prospect of tonightβs dinner party made my heart ricochet off my rib cage so fiercely I was convinced my days were numbered.
Whatβs so bad about a dinner party? Letβs start with the fact that my boyfriend, Robbie, was also invited to this little shindig, and we were on shaky ground. Our post-graduation plans were at odds, to say the leastβand as senior year dwindled, the tension mounted. It didnβt help that soon-to-be-valedictorian Diego scored an invite, too. Our friendship had recently morphed into something elseβsomething that made my cheeks flush, my nerves tingle, and my heart swell like a submerged sponge.
Putting the three of us in the same room could be catastrophic. If Robbie suspected I liked the class nerd, heβd introduce Diego to his fist in front of everyone. I had bigger issues with Robbie than another boy. But strike a match in a room doused with lighter fluid, and youβre bound to get burned. If I were even slightly capable of hiding my emotions, I might get through the night unscathed. Unfortunately, Iβm a crap liar, so splitsville with a side of bruising was basically inevitable.
Yep. A heart attack was imminent. I just had to get tonight over with, and everything would work out.
Hopefully.
I cranked up the Harry Potter score in an attempt to quell my nerves and ransacked my wardrobe, quickly determining that everything I owned looked hideous. I could either go ultra-casual or concert black (or funeral chic, as Sasha liked to call it) and either option was downright depressing.
After most of my clothes were heaped into a pile on the floorβmuch to the delight of my cat, Mittens, who swiftly nestled inβI discovered an old emerald sequined number I wore to a piano recital years ago. The dress now ended well above my knees, but it was the only garment within reach that wasnβt a complete waste of space.
βAmber, you look great!β Mom said as I raced up the stairs from my basement bedroom, tugging at the dressβs hem.
βYouβre only saying that because youβre my mom.β
βDonβt get all self-deprecating on me.β She scrunched one of my red curls, which already threatened to go limp. Her own red, stick-straight hair was cut in a typical mom-bob. βYou look sophisticated. Though that dress could stand to be a little longerββ
βIs Robbie here yet?β He was already ten minutes late. I peered out the front doorβs stained-glass window, searching for his black SUV while fidgeting with my amethyst bracelet. Mittens rubbed against my ankles, getting his white fur all over my black velvet peep-toe shoes.
βYouβre not allowed to date βtil youβre forty-seven,β Dad shouted from his office down the hall.
βIs this a bad time to point out weβve been dating for like a year?β I said. Even Mom mirrored my exaggerated eye roll.
Just as I rattled off a text to Robbie, his headlights flooded the driveway. I dropped my phone into my purse, and Mom handed me a jacket and kissed my cheek before I could bolt out the door. βText me when you get there.β
βGod, Mom.β I wiggled into the coat. βIn a few months, Iβll be in college. Should I text you whenever I go anywhere then, too?β
βThatβd be great, thanks for offering!β Her eyes twinkled mischievously, though with the flicker of sadness that never really left them. βLove you.β
βBye!β I called over my shoulder as I raced into the unseasonably muggy night and down the front walk, my unzipped coat flapping behind me. Mom wasnβt exactly overprotective. She let me do whatever, as long as I constantly let her know I was still alive.
I couldnβt say she didnβt have a good reason.
Robbie tossed his baseball mitt into the backseat. βHey, babeββ
βFifteen minutes late, Robbie? Really?β I slammed the passenger door and clicked on my seat belt in one fluid motion. I wasnβt usually one to pick a fight, but my nerves had me on edge.
βAmber. Chill. Practice went a little late.β His go-to excuse. Robbie leaned over and kissed me, the sweet scent of soap and hair gel flooding my senses. He gripped the back of my headrest and backed down the driveway. Mom gave a little wave from the living room window, and the curtains fluttered shut as Robbie floored the gas. βBesides, I had to stop at home to grab your present.β He reached behind my seat without taking his eyes from the road, grabbed a small box, and tossed it onto my lap.
βMy . . . present? For what?β
βOpen it.β He grinned, the corners of his gray eyes crinkling as dimples creased his cheeks. Curious, I plucked open the red ribbon securing the small white box and found a charm bracelet inside. Several tiny silver music notes dangled from an amethyst-beaded band. βI thought itβd go with your other bracelet.β He motioned to my grandmotherβs amethyst bracelet on my right wrist.
My anger dissipated, replaced by a confusing mix of joy and dread. βBut whatβs this for?β
βWhat, I canβt get something nice for my girl for no reason?β His smile widenedβthat infectious grin that always made me feel like I was somehow the brightest star in his sky. It seemed genuine. Everything about Robbie was genuine. He wore his heart on his sleeve, which was a blessing and a curseβI never had to wonder how much he loved me . . . or how annoyed he was with me, especially recently. But the musical theme of his gift caught me off guard.
My music had been a sore point for us lately. Robbie wanted me to follow him and his baseball scholarship to Georgia Tech, as if ditching my dreams of studying music at USC or Berklee wasnβt that big a sacrifice. βBut you can play music anywhere,β heβd insisted. A couple of months ago we had a huge fight about it, and he convinced me to apply to Georgia Tech, suggesting we put off the discussion until I heard back from them.
Then I got my acceptance letter. Thatβs when I knew we were going to break up.
I mightβve fallen in love with Robbie, but Iβd been in love with music for as long as I could remember. I couldnβt let him tempt me into abandoning my dreams. Despite my resolve, I hadnβt figured out how to break the news.
But this was a shocking turn of events. I ran my fingers over the music note charms. It was such a thoughtful gift. Did he finally see my point of view? Was he willing to compromise?
As if on cue, he said, βI know we havenβt talked about school and stuff in a while.β School and stuff. How neatly all of my musical ambitions could be packed into one word. Stuff. He smoothed back his short dirty-blond hair. βHave you heard from Georgia Tech yet?β
My shoulders tensed. βNo. Not yet.β Fortunately, the darkness obscured my flushed cheeks. I was so pale, my own blood always ratted me out: Liar.
βWell, it has to be soon. I want to be with you.β Keeping one hand on the steering wheel, he entwined his fingers with mine. βWe can figure this out together. I love you, Amber.β
βI . . . me, too.β Oh, God. What should I do? He kissed my hand and released it, and I fumbled with the clasp on my new bracelet, securing it on my left wrist. I leaned against the window, watching identical two-story colonials whip by. We drove the rest of the way in silence until fat raindrops pelted the car, drowning out my thoughts.
βAh, crap.β I zipped my jacket under the seat belt. Just like washing a car, using a curling iron on my hair pretty much guaranteed rain. If we moved to California, I could singlehandedly resolve the drought crisis.
The corner of Robbieβs mouth quirked up. βItβs only water.β
βExplain that to my hair, would you?β I brushed aside my bangs.
Robbie glanced at me as he slowed in front of the Chesterfield. βHey. You look beautiful. Hair included.β
My cheeks flushed again. βThanks.β I shook away my anxiety and scanned the street for a parking spot. The Chesterfield was an upscale restaurant in the basement of an old warehouse converted into high-end retail space. On the weekends, locals bustled around this area pretending they lived in a vibrant city, when in reality, three square blocks constituted our entire βdowntown.β
There was no fooling anyone. We were lame suburbanites, through and through.
Fortunately, it was a Tuesday, and there were plenty of spots around the corner. Once Robbie parked, I unclipped my seat belt and bolted out the door. I held my hood over my head as I rounded the corner, careful to avoid any puddles. The sidewalk was deserted except for two middle-aged women dashing to a nearby car under huge black umbrellas. I hustled down the steep steps to the Chesterfieldβs front entrance without waiting for Robbie to catch up.
God forbid he rush to anything besides home plate.
I shook the water from my jacket in front of the host podium. Beyond, crimson velvet booths lined either side of the dimly lit room, and a bar stretched across the opposite wall. A pyramid of wine and liquor bottles towered behind the bar, light streaming out between them to create a halo effect. Classical music flitted from speakers dotting the ceiling above the tables.
Empty tables.
The room was deserted.
βAre you sure this thingβs at the Chesterfield?β Robbie asked from behind me.
βYeah. Look.β I pointed to a sign taped to the host podium. Brewster Town Hall Scholarship Event in the Winona Room. An arrow pointed to the right. βThis way.β
βWhere the hell is everyone?β
My heart fluttered as I stepped further into the room. βProbably in the Winona Room, where theyβre supposed to be.β
βNo, I mean everyone elseββ
βCome on, letβs go.β Letβs get this over with. I grabbed Robbieβs calloused hand and led him across the empty dining room. A familiar throaty laugh floated through an open doorway next to the bar.
I walked in to find a smaller but equally elegant room. A long mahogany dining table stood over an intricate red Oriental rug, which covered most of the gleaming, almost black hardwood floor. Since most of the room was underground, there were only two small windows nestled close to the ceiling. Matching mahogany sideboards spanned the walls under the windows and next to the door. Two china cabinets filled with glasses and trinkets sandwiched a red brick fireplace on the left, reflected in a giant brass mirror hanging on the opposite wall. Faux candles flickered in a brass chandelier hanging low from the center of the ceiling. The room felt medieval, and positively claustrophobic.
Sasha Harris and Diego Martin were already seated, laughing over some joke that must have had nothing to do with her perpetual need to one-up him. Robbie coughed, and Sasha paused mid-chuckle, peeking around the back of her chair. Spotting me, her eyes lit up. βHey, lady!β She zipped around her chair and stretched out her cheek, kissing the air on either side of my face. βThank God you guys won this, too. Otherwise tonight would be such a drag,β she said under her breath.
Sasha was everything everyone else wanted to beβcheer captain, drama club director, class president, and potential valedictorian. βSleepβ wasnβt exactly in her vocabulary. In a bizarre twist of fate, she also happened to be my best friend at the moment. Tonight she wore a form-fitting strapless red dress, and her shining chestnut hair flowed in loose waves over her bare shoulders, not a single strand out of place.
βGetting to meet the mayor is kind of cool, though,β I said. βIs he here yet?β
She released Robbie from a hug. βNope, not yet. But heβs the opposite of cool, just FYI. I mean, come on. Who grows up wanting to be mayor of Podunk?β
I shrugged off my damp jacket, hung it on the ornate coatrack next to the door, and smoothed back my bangs. The curls Iβd coaxed into my hair already fell limp. Damn rain. βIck. Itβs like an oven in here.β
βUgh, I know.β Sasha flapped her hand like a fan. βCβmon, youβre next to me.β She pointed to the seat closest to the door. Eight high-backed chairs surrounded the tableβthree on each side, and one on either end. On my empty gold-rimmed plate sat a place card for Ms. Prescott. Hers had one for Ms. Harris. Fancy. I pulled out my tall chair and glanced across the table, locking eyes with Diego.
Oh, here we go.
Strands of black hair fell over his forehead, and as he held my gaze with his intense copper eyes, a smile slid onto his lips. βHi, Amber.β My mind flashed back to a few weeks ago, when those eyes were mere inches from mine. Letβs face itβyou could pretty much fry an egg on my face.
βHi.β The word came out like a breathy wisp of wind. I set my purse on the floor and sat, silently cursing myself for being so obvious. After all, nothing ever happened between us. It almost did a few weeks ago. But almost doesnβt count.
βCongratulations,β he said. βLet me guess . . . you won because of your music?β
I laughed nervously, fidgeting with the music note charms on my new bracelet. βYeah. Mr. Torrente mustβve nominated me. I mean, Iβve basically been teaching his orchestra class for the last four years,β I rambled.
Oh, God. If Robbie caught wind of the weirdness between me and Diego, tonight would be a nightmare. I faked a cough and covered my mouth, trying to hide my flaming cheeks. Thankfully, Robbie was oblivious as he fiddled with his phone next to the coatrack, shaking his head.
βCan you believe theyβd give Diego one of the scholarships?β Sasha whispered when Diego pulled out his phone. βTwenty thousand dollars must be chump change to him now.β
As if being ridiculously smart wasnβt enough, Diego was sort of a celebrity in our school. Heβd invented a weird sponge that changed colors when it got wet, and was on the show Bid or Bustβa reality TV show where inventors try to win funding from wealthy entrepreneursβthe summer before our freshman year. After getting bids from all of the investors and securing a deal, he and his dad sold millions of SpongeClowns.
βWell, heβs probably going to be valedictorian,β I whispered back.
Sasha tilted her head and grinned, though there was fire in her eyes. βNot if I have anything to say about it.β
βI canβt get a signal in here.β Robbie took his seat next to me, unbuttoning the top button of his plaid shirt. βIs it just me, or is it like ninety degrees in here?β
I reached for my water and took a small sip. βYeah, itβs hot.β
βUgh,β Sasha groaned, and I followed her gaze over my shoulderβPriya Gupta walked in, scanned the room, and visibly cringed. Saying that Priya used to be my best friend was an understatement. Sheβd been like a sister to me. She avoided my gaze now, casting her doe eyes to the floor as she hung her jacket and tugged down the loose sleeves of her white boho dress. When Robbie greeted her, she merely grunted in reply. Grief settled on my chest like a pile of stones, but I remained silent as Priya took her seat next to Diego. They muttered their hellos, and she busied herself examining her fingernails.
βHi, Priya,β Sasha said in a singsong voice.
Priyaβs jaw set in a rigid line. βHi.β I smiled at her, but she wouldnβt look at me. My throat constricted. Would she ever talk to me again? Didnβt she know how much I missed her?
βCongratulations! I had no idea you qualified for a scholarship,β said Sasha. Priya was no valedictorian, but her grades were stellar.
Priya quirked her eyebrow. βOh, you mean you cared who else would win?β
Sashaβs smile faltered. βWhatβs that supposedββ
I elbowed Sasha. βLeave it.β She scrunched her eyebrows at me. βYou donβt want the scholarship people to hear you fighting.β Sasha nodded, and Priya made a psh noise and went back to scrutinizing her fingernails.
Diego met my gaze again, and my insides pooled into a puddle around my feet. Just then, Robbie reached for my hand under the table, and I jolted. He laughed. βDidnβt mean to scare you.β His hand was cool despite the warmth of the room, and he kissed my cheek as Diego watched. Oh, God. How was I going to get through this night?
βIβm starving,β said Priya, fishing through her purse. βUgh, I forgot to bring a granola bar.β
Diego grabbed his backpack from the floor. βI have a candy bar somewhere in here. Want it?β
She waved him off. βNo, no, itβs fine. Thanks, though.β As she eyed the ornate silver platters dotting the table, Scott Colemanβstoner extraordinaireβloped into the room. He wore his standard outfitβa black leather jacket over a black T-shirt and torn jeans, topped off with a black beanie.
Sasha gaped. βWhat are you doing here?β
βSame as the rest of you, methinks,β said Scott. He grinned at Priya, who offered a shy smile in return.
βNo way, man.β Robbie scrunched his nose. Scott reeked of cigarette smoke. βYou won a scholarship?β
Scott tugged at the collar of his leather jacket. βSeems so.β
βBullshit,β said Robbie, and Sasha clucked her tongue.
Wow. Nobody was going to get along tonight, were they? βGuys. Be nice,β I said, trying to lighten the mood. βMaybe heβs a closet genius.β
Scott winked at me. βHey, Red. Whatβs shakinβ?β
βBacon.β This had been our customary greeting ever since we used to play together as kids, before we realized how little we had in common.
He nodded approvingly as he extracted a folded letter from his pocket. βI got this letter. It said to come here. So here I am.β
βBut howβd you qualify?β said Sasha, smiling sweetly. βDo you have some secret talent youβve been hiding from us?β
βNope.β Scott shrugged and moseyed along the table. βBut who the hell cares?β He plopped in the empty seat next to Priya and unwrapped a stick of gum. βTwenty kay is twenty kay. Besides, I had no plans tonight, and I like free food, so no rind off my orange.β
Sasha cringed. βThatβs not an expressionββ
The massive oak door behind me slammed shut with such force it reverberated through my chest, and the glasses in the china cabinets rattled. Everyone jumped, and a few people gasped.
βWind tunnel?β I scooted my chair back and stood to open the door as thunder clapped outside.
βOh, right.β Robbieβs shoulders relaxed. βThe storm.β
As I squeezed past Sasha, she tossed her hair back and focused on Scott again. βAnyway, they donβt just arbitrarily hand out twenty thousand dollars.β Leaning on her armrest, she perched her chin on her fist, like the mere concept of Scott winning anything was utterly fascinating. βLike, Robbie has baseball, Amberβs a music prodigy, and Iβm the director of the drama club. There has to be some reason you won.β
βYeah?β Scottβs lips slapped with each chew. βWell, Iβm director of the give-zero-fucks club. Maybe that counts for something.β
βUh . . . guys?β I jiggled the doorknob. It turned in my grip, but the door wouldnβt budge. βI think the doorβs stuck.β
βSeriously?β Priya glared at me, like being trapped in a room together was her version of hell.
βYouβre just a little weakling.β Robbie strutted over and gave me a playful shove.
βI am not,β I muttered, returning to my seat. I fished my cell phone from my purse. No signal.
As Robbie fought with the door, I scanned the table. Diego was the only one not looking at his phone. He stared at one of the windows as lightning brightened the alley outside. Robbie cursed and gave the doorknob a final shake. βDammit. It really is stuck.β
I rolled my eyes. βTold you.β
βShit.β Sasha waved her phone above her head. βI have no signal.β
βMe neither,β I said.
βI havenβt had one since we got here.β Robbie took out his phone and shook it, like that would help.
βSame here,β Priya chimed in.
βWell, the mayorβs going to show up at some point, right?β asked Diego.
βYep.β I nodded. βHeβll be able to let us out, or get help, or whatever.β
βShouldnβt he be here by now?β Sasha checked her watch.
βHeβs probably just running late,β said Diego.
Sasha eyed Robbie, who slammed his fist against the lock and jiggled the doorknob again. βBut what if he had to cancel?β Her voice quavered. βWhat if he tried calling to let us know, but couldnβt get through? What if no oneβs comingββ
βSasha, chill out,β I said. Diego trained his eyes along the table with a frown.
βIf he couldnβt get through,β said Scott, βhis office would send some secretary here to tell us, right?β
βHuh, weird,β said Diego. βThe tableβs set for six.β Priya pointed at each place setting as she silently counted. Diego was rightβthere were eight chairs, but the ones on either end had no place settings, plates, or glasses laid out.
βYeah? So?β said Scott.
Diego and I exchanged a look. βThatβs bizarre,β I said. βIf the mayorβs having dinner with us, why is the table only set for six?β
βAre you saying nobodyβs coming to let us out?β Sasha said, an octave too high.
βSomeoneβll be here to serve food and stuff,β said Scott. βA waiter or something?β
βIt looks like they already did.β Diego motioned to the covered trays lining the table. βBut why would they serve dinner before we got here?β
Scott lifted the lid on the tray closest to him, revealing a whole roasted chicken and steamed veggies. βIs it just me, or is this kinda weird?β
βFor once, itβs not just you,β Robbie muttered, uncovering a salad platter.
βWell . . .β Priya licked her lips, eyeing a bowl of roasted yams. βWe might as well eat, right?β
βI guess so . . .β I bit my lip.
Robbie dropped the lid on the floor behind him. βWhatever. Letβs get this party started, shall we?β He uncovered another chicken platter. βThey got any booze in this joint?β
βYeah, but itβs all at the bar out there,β said Sasha, uncovering a platter of deviled eggs. βGross. How long have those been sitting out?β
I stood and lifted the lid from the biggest platter in the center of the table.
Sasha and Priya both shrieked, making me almost drop the lid. My heart fell into my stomach as everyone gaped at the contents of the tray.
A syringe.
An envelope.
And something that looked an awful lot like a bomb.
βWhat the actual fuck?β said Robbie. A shiver coasted down my spine as I stared at the syringe. It was filled with a pale beige liquid, and the needle was uncapped, glinting from the chandelier lights overhead.
βWhat the hell is that . . . that thing?β Sasha cried.
A couple of plastic canisters the size of milk cartons were strapped to half a dozen brown logs wired to a small digital clock and stack of batteries. Each canister was half full of some sort of yellow liquid. The clock faced the ceiling, its red numbers counting down from fifty-nine forty-five. Fifty-nine forty-four. Fifty-nine forty-three. Fifty-nine forty-two.
βLooks like a bomb,β said Robbie, clenching his jaw.
βI started the timer . . .β I said to no one in particular, gripping the lid in both hands. βWhen I lifted the lid, I must have started the timer.β
βThat canβt be real,β said Priya. βCan it?β
βAnd whatβs with the syringe?β asked Sasha.
βItβs labeled.β Diego leaned over to read, ββBotulinum toxinββholy shit.β He blanched.
βWhatβs butoolβwhatβs that?β asked Priya. She clutched his arm so hard her knuckles turned white.
Diego kept reading. βIt says, βWarning: Avoid contact with skin. A single drop can be fatal. Full injection causes immediate death.ββ
We all exchanged baffled expressions. βWhatβs in the envelope?β asked Robbie. Nobody moved.
Fifty-nine thirty. Fifty-nine twenty-nine.
I set the lid under the table and plucked the envelope from the tray, opened the flap, and pulled out a sheet of paper. Unfolding it, I cleared my throat and read aloud.
βWelcome to dinner, and again, congratulations on being selected. Now you must do the selecting. Within the hour, you must choose someone in this room to die. If you donβt, everyone dies.β
1 Year, 1 Month Ago
January of Junior Year
Iβd spent the last three years avoiding bitches like Sasha Harris.
But I had a favor to ask of her, and my future depended on it.
As director of the drama club, she chose each semesterβs play, and I wanted to compose the score for the next one. It was my only shot to get into USCβs film score program. Dad had recently broken the news that he couldnβt afford to fly me to auditions in the fall, so I had to think of some way to impress the pants off the college admissions officersβsomething the other two thousand virtual applicants wouldnβt attempt. With only three undergraduate film score programs in the country, the competition was fierce. Scoring our school play set to a live orchestra and sending in the recording was the best plan I could hatch.
But it meant I had to talk to her, Sasha freaking Harris, basically royalty at Brewster Highβhaughty, pretentious, and intimidating as hell, yet inexplicably revered. We hadnβt met until freshman year; our town had two middle schools that merged into Brewster High, and Priya and I had gone to Crompond while Sasha and her friends went to Hampton. But Iβd heard whispers of her mean streak, how cutthroat she could be. Had I witnessed her nastiness myself? No. Had I gotten close enough to? Donβt be ridiculous. I wasnβt about to risk being her next victim.
Until now.
So here I was on the first day back after winter break, watching her cross the cafeteria, plotting my approach. Her besties, Amy and Maria, hovered around her like gnats, wasting away the minutes by chewing over the latest gossip. I wasnβt sure what scared me more: rejection from USC, or Sasha.
βMy hands are shaking.β I raised my hand to eye level, showing off trembling fingers. βDammit, I canβt do this.β
My best friend Priyaβs posture relaxed. βOh, thank God. Letβs get out of here.β She spun to leave, her long, shiny black hair whipping my arm.
βWait!β I grabbed her wrist. βYouβre gonna let me wimp out that easily?β
βYouβre not wimping outβyouβre coming to your senses,β she rationalized, darting a glance at Sasha and her crew. βYou donβt need to score the stupid play. Iβm sure your recordings will get you into any music program you want.β
βAll the other applicants will have recordings, too.β I wiped sweat from my upper lip as the trio finally settled at an empty table in the middle of the cafeteria. βBut theyβll all submit the standard stuffβyou know, tracks for commercials, movie trailers, that sort of thing. I have to do something epic. Something to stand out.β
Priya raised her eyebrows. βWhat, your ten thousand YouTube followers wonβt make you stand out?β
βTen thousandβs nothing. Some other kids have way more. I have to do this.β
βWhat makes you think Sashaβs even going to consider it? They always pick some Broadway play, and the musicβs already done. Asking Sasha to compose new music for the play is like asking if I could join the freaking cheerleading squad. It wonβt happen.β
Priya had always wanted to be a cheerleader. Problem was, she never had the guts to try out. βIf I get her to agree, youβre so trying out for the cheerleading squad.β
Her eyes widened like saucers. βI am so not. Sashaβs captain now. Sheβd never let me in.β
I glanced at Sasha again. How had she hooked her talons into everything? It was like the girl was determined to be the center of attention at all times. And nobody said no to Sasha Harris.
Now I had to make sure she didnβt say no to me.
Taking a deep breath, I paused before tugging out the earbud lodged in my right ear, soaking in a last bit of energy from an epic fantasy battle scene track. Some people needed liquid courage, but I only needed a shot of music. The powerful chords and crescendos made me feel like I was bravely facing my foe, ready for combat.
βIβm doing this.β
βIβm officially not letting you.β Priya clutched my elbow as I started toward them. βAs your best friend, I canβt let you put yourself in Sashaβs warpath. Right now she barely knows we exist, and we should keep it that way. Remember what happened to your sister? Remember what people like Sasha can do?β
My throat constricted at the mere mention of my sister, and I yanked my elbow from Priyaβs grip. βLike I need the reminder?β
My sister Maggieβs death taught me to avoid girls with mean streaks like the plague. I knew what it meant to be the brunt of their jokes, victim to their cruelty. I didnβt know what Maggie endured until things went too farβfour years stood between us (she was a senior when I was in eighth grade), so we hadnβt attended the same school since elementary school. Guilt stifled me whenever I thought of Maggie, and how oblivious Iβd been to those girlsβ abuse.
By the time I learned the truth, it was too late.
After she died, I withdrew from my clique of girlfriends. Part of me was terrified theyβd eventually turn on me, too. But mostly, I couldnβt stand their pity. Most people were awkward as hell around someone in mourning. Theyβd stare at me with these wide, sorrowful eyes, and their uneasiness made me feel like I shouldβve been the one comforting them.
At the time, I couldnβt handle it. It was bad enough watching my parents grieve, and needing to be strong for them. Priya was the only one who acted normal around me, letting me pour my heart out without getting that disquieted look in her eyes, refusing to leave my side.
So instead of partying or flailing at school dances, we camped out in my room for movie marathons or βjam sessionsββIβd work on a song at my keyboard with huge red headphones glomming my skull, while sheβd sprawl on the carpet with Mittens, reading a fantasy novel or learning David Thurstonβs magic tricks from his Netflix show Manic Magic. As a textbook introvert, Priya was living her best life, but sometimes I missed being part of a big group.
βIβm sorry.β Priyaβs voice was strained. βI just donβt want to see you get hurt.β She eyed Sasha and her friends huddled over their table, whispering animatedly. They seemed prepped for the runway compared to their neighboring table, where Becky Wallace and our old clique donned a mix of too-big glasses, sweatshirts, and poorly executed French braids.
Suddenly, Sasha slapped the table, threw her head back, and laughed heartily. I couldnβt imagine having such boisterous self-confidence. People turned to gape, like they wanted in on the joke. If Sasha Harris thought something was funny, it must be worth hearing.
As long as it wasnβt about you.
My stomach clenched. I could let fear rule my future and keep being afraid of girls like Sasha. Or I could rise above this petty high school crap and do whatever I could to get into music school and someday produce epic movie and TV scores.
I had to do this. I had to.
Besides, what was the worst that could happen? She could say no. She could make fun of me. Torture me. Turn me into an object of ridicule and make me want toβ
βOof.β Someone behind me collided hard with my arm, tearing me from my thoughts.
βMy bad!β Zane Carter called over his shoulder as he headed for Sashaβs table.
As I rubbed my arm, Priya ogled him. βOh my God. He touched you.β
βThatβs kind of an understatement.β
Priya had worshiped Zane for years. He was the spitting image of her favorite magician, David Thurston. And with those blazing green eyes, shaggy chestnut hair, defined cheekbones, and perma-smirk, who could blame her?
Well, I didnβt get the appeal of the perma-smirk.
Either way, she turned wide-eyed and mute whenever he appeared, which made it kind of difficult to have any sort of meaningful interaction. I thought sheβd finally forgotten about him over winter break (I certainly had) until a couple of days ago, when she went to the grocery store with her mom and spotted him examining a protein shake nutrition label in aisle seven. I knew it was aisle seven because Priya told me about it seventeen times.
βYou know . . . if we go over there,β I said, βyou might get to talk to Zane.β I had to get this over with, and itβd be much easier if I didnβt have to approach Sasha alone.
βWhat?β Priya gasped. βHeβd never talk to me. No way.β
βWhy not? I heard he broke up with his girlfriend last month.β I nudged her with my elbow. βMaybe heβll be into you.β
βYeah, right!β
βCβmon, letβs go see.β I grabbed Priyaβs wrist and, ignoring her frantic protestations, dragged her to Sasha and Zaneβs table. Zane typed on his phone, elbows on his knees, as the girls giggled over something. βHey guysββ
Oh. Oh, no. Zaneβs baseball teammate Robbie Nelson sat next to him, scribbling last-minute answers on a homework assignment. I hadnβt noticed him with his baseball cap shading his face. He glanced up at me, and my stomach gave a small lurch.
Robbie had one of those faces you couldnβt help staring atβwell defined, with a high-bridged nose, angular jaw, and these wolfish gray eyes that made you go all deer-in-headlights when they landed on you. While I was invisible to Sasha, which was exactly how I wanted it, Robbieβs eyes would flick to mine in the halls, his head tilting like a question mark as he offered a shy grin. Iβd always look away first, flustered to be caught gawking. Since we didnβt have any classes together, he probably didnβt even know my name.
But I couldnβt let him psych me out. I had to talk to Sasha.
βSo, um, hey,β I started again. I tossed my hair back and flashed a wide smile, ignoring my wobbly legs. βHow was your winter break?β
The five of them only offered vacant stares. I kept smiling, forcing down the heat threatening to creep up my neck. My mind went blank, and words seemed like an altogether foreign concept. All the scenarios Iβd concocted in the shower this morning for what to say jumbled in my brain. What did popular people even talk about? Oh, hell. These people were the rulers of the roost, and we were like worms wriggling into their coop. What was I thinking?
Finally, Robbie broke the silence. βIt was nice. Youβre Amber, right?β
So he did know my name. Warmth spread through my veins. He reversed his cap, and his gray eyes sparkled under the fluorescent lights as he gave me his usual lopsided grin. His two front teeth were a little crooked, somehow making his smile even cuter.
He stood and swung over two chairs from a neighboring table like they were light as feathers. βI donβt think weβve ever met before.β
βI know, crazy!β I said, taking a seat. βOur class isnβt that big. But better late than never, right? Thatβs, you know, a thing people say.β I was totally blabbering, and despite my best efforts, I blushed profusely. Priya, of course, had reverted to her mute state. She stared at Zane, practically drooling.
Amyβs and Mariaβs smiles didnβt reach their eyes, betraying their suspicion. Why had we barged onto their turf? Before I could say anything else, Sasha reached over and ran a lock of my hair through her fingers. βOh my God, I love your hair color.β Her voice was so melodic, I couldnβt tell if she was mocking me. βWhich is it?β
βItβs . . . um . . . red?β
She laughed throatily. βObviously. I mean the swatch. The dye you use.β
βOh.β I smoothed my hair back. βI donβt dye it, actually.β
Her eyes narrowed. βBullshit. Thatβs virgin hair?β I stiffened, biting the inside of my cheek. Did she think I was lying? She leaned back in her chair, draping her elbow over its frame. βYou lucky bitch.β Her own chestnut hair fell in loose waves over her shoulders, sleek and shimmering, and the mole next to her left eye disappeared into the crinkles when she smiled brightly enough to warm the room. She was giving me a compliment. Snarky, but genuine.
βYou guys, Iβm having a brain fart,β said Amy, twirling a strand of shoulder-length blond hair. βAre cheerleading tryouts today or tomorrow?β
βToday.β Sasha cracked her knuckles one at a time. βI canβt believe Emily and Ellie moved to Wisconsin. What the hellβs in Wisconsin?β
βPotatoes?β Maria popped a bite of a muffin in her mouth and flicked a crumb from her periwinkle lace dress.
βThatβs Idaho, idiot.β Amy looked down her sharp nose at Maria. βWisconsin has cheese or whatever.β
Robbie rolled his eyes at them. βEither of you cheer?β he asked us.
Priya shook her head automatically, but I said, βPriya does.β Her eyes widened, the cords in her neck bulging. βWell, she wants to. She took gymnastics lessons for years.β I nodded at her encouragingly, but she seemed to be willing herself out of existence.
βHey, so did Sasha,β said Amy, suddenly interested in us. βThat gives you a leg up.β
βBut Sasha qualified for the Olympics when she was twelve,β Maria chimed in, her brunette ringlets bobbing. She always starred in our school musicals, and once even made it to the final casting round of some singing reality TV show.
βGuys, stop it,β Sasha said bashfully, but her smile faltered. βYou have to be sixteen to qualify; I just scored high enough to be able to.β
βWow!β I said. βWill you compete?β
Sasha shifted in her seat and clenched her jaw. βNo.β
βWhy not? Seems like an amazing opportunityββ
βI canβt.β The words left her lips as a whisper. βI broke my leg in a car accident. Needed surgery.β Lines creased her forehead as she cringed at the memory. Suddenly it was like the girl who had everything had nothing at all. The transformation was staggering. I had no idea about her accident. By the time high school started, Sasha seemed on top of the world.
βItβs fine now,β she waved off my concerned look, βbut it took a while to recover. I can do stunts and stuff again, but . . . itβs not the same.β
βStill . . . Iβm so sorryββ
Zane suddenly tossed his phone onto the table. βGood news. My folks are outta town this weekend.β He pointed at himself with both hands. βParty at my place on Friday.β
βNice.β Robbie bumped fists with him.
Sasha perked up, the glimmer returning to her eyes. βDo you have any booze? I thought your parents locked up their stash after last time.β
βYeah, they did. Weβll have to get some.β
I cleared my throat, eager to sidle into their conversation again. βIf you canβt, you could always have a game night or something. You know whatβs hilarious?β I was about to say Apples to Apples, my favorite game, but thought better of it. βCards Against Humanity. You can borrow my deck.β
βWhenβs the last time we had a game night?β said Sasha. βWhat were we, like, twelve?β Was she was mocking me or reminiscing?
βI love Cards Against Humanity.β Robbie grinned at me, dimples creasing his cheeks. βIβd be down for that.β His smile was infectious, and I found myself beaming back.
Zane punched Robbieβs arm. βLame!β
βWhatever, man.β Robbie shook him off. βBetter than sitting around staring at each other.β Zane shrugged and fiddled with his phone again. Robbie scooted his chair closer to me and wagged a finger between me and Priya. βYou two should join. Bring over that deck yourself.β
Oh. My. God. Robbie Nelson just invited us to a party. My heart skipped about twenty beats. I should probably be dead. βSure! Weβre free,β I managed to say.
βNice.β
βI guess we shouldnβt get too wasted, anyway.β Sasha snapped her fingers at Amy and Maria. βDonβt forget, my momβs taking us to see Phantom of the Opera on Saturday.β
βOn Broadway?β I asked. βI love that musical. Itβs so sad.β
βHer sister dropped out of college to be one of the ballerinas,β Amy said to me, pointing at Sasha, βand now sheβs understudy for the leadββ
βCan we not talk about my perfect sister right now?β Sasha rolled her eyes. βBad enough weβll have to fawn over her this weekend.β
βAt least we have backstage passes,β said Maria.
Sasha nodded. βTrue. The guy who plays the Phantom is so hot.β She scrolled through her phone and leaned over to show me a picture of the dark, brooding Phantom.
βOh my God, Iβm so jealous,β I said. βOh, and . . . speaking of plays . . .β My heart thrummed wildly, but this was a perfect segue. βI have a question for you. Itβs about the school play. You know, in the spring. I was wondering if youβd considered putting on a play with original music.β
βWhy would we do that?β Maria asked a little defensively. As the drama clubβs perpetual prima donna, sheβd probably hate this idea. But Sasha was the one I had to convince. As director, she got to help the drama club supervisor, Mr. Norris, choose the play.
I swallowed hard. βIβd love to score the spring play. An entirely original score.β
βWhoa, seriously?β said Sasha. βThatβd be so much work . . .β
βPlease, hear me out.β I licked my lips. Sasha had to be stuffing her rΓ©sumΓ© to get into some Ivy League college. I knew what angle to take. βDirecting a play with an original score and a live orchestra would be way more impressive on your transcript than putting on some Broadway play.β
βMaybe . . .β Sasha groaned. βBut the sheer amount of coordination that would takeββ
βSasha, chill,β said Robbie. βLet her finish.β He threw me a reassuring smile. Was it weird that I wanted to throw myself in his lap? Probably.
But I was on a mission here. I took a deep breath and focused on Sasha. βIβd compose all of the music myself based on your stage direction, and Iβd coordinate with the orchestra. Mr. Torrente already agreed to this.β
βWhat, you think you could compose an entire musical?β Maria crossed her arms and scrunched her brow. βLike, yourself?β
βNot a musical. Itβd be a play, with an orchestral scoreββ
βOh, hell no,β said Maria.
But Sasha sat silent, arms crossed, glancing between me and Maria.
βWe donβt even have to do something completely original,β I went on. βWe could pick something like A Streetcar Named Desire, or Romeo and Juliet, and set it to new music.β
βNo way,β said Maria.
βItβs a great idea. Truly, it is.β Sasha shook her head. βItβd just be too much work.β
Frustrated, I huffed. βBut now that youβre the director, donβt you want to do something unique?β
βIβm sorry,β said Sasha, her tone uncertain. βBut we canβt.β She watched Maria slump back in her chair, relieved.
βButββ
βShe said no!β said Maria.
βWell, who the hell made her queen of the universe?β The words tumbled out of my mouth before I could stop them.
Oh, God. What did I do?
My cheeks reddened as Sasha frowned and tilted her head, narrowing her eyes at me. Mariaβs jaw dropped. Priya looked like she was literally about to start seizing. But Robbie looked impressed, and Amy struggled to stifle her laughter. Even Zane finally looked up from his phone.
After a moment so long it broke the laws of physics, Sasha threw her head back and burst out laughing. Everyone else followed her lead.
βOh my God! The look on your face!β Sasha finally said, wiping her eyes with her pinkies, careful not to smudge her mascara.
I let out a nervous chuckle, gripping my quivering fingers in my lap. Sasha rested an elbow on the back of her chair, poking her cheek with her tongue, sizing me up. Maybe she was impressed Iβd challenged her when everyone else sucked up to her all the time.
When everyone else quieted, Robbie said, βCβmon, Sasha, I think itβs a good idea. Nobody wants to see Bye Bye Birdie anyway.β
βThatβs true,β said Amy. βThatβs some lame shit.β
Sasha raised her eyebrows. βYou said you loved Bye Bye Birdie!β
Amy slinked back in her seat a bit. βEr . . . I kinda lied. Sorry.β
βWell,β said Sasha, βI do love Romeo and Juliet. So dark and romantic. Iβd be down for that.β
Whoa. Might this really happen? Hope blossomed in my chest as Robbie threw me a conspiratorial wink.
βYeah, I guess thatβd be fun,β said Maria unconvincingly. I felt kind of bad to deprive her of her singing glory, but sheβd dazzle as Juliet.
βCan I play Romeo?β asked Zane.
Robbie scoffed. βDude, youβre not even in drama club.β
The warning bell rang, and Sasha stood and draped her messenger bag over her shoulder. βAlright, alright. Letβs talk. But weβll need to get the rest of the drama club on board . . . everyone loves doing Broadway.β She snapped her fingers. βI have an idea.β
βWhat is it?β My heart leapt into my throat.
βIβll invite them to Zaneβs party on Friday. And itβd be amazing if you could bring some booze. You know, loosen them up a bit. Iβm sure theyβll at least hear you out.β
My stomach twisted in a knot. βBooze? You want me to bring alcohol to a party?β I had no idea where to get drinks.
βTequila would be great.β
βOr vodka.β Zane smirked. βOff-brand is fine, weβre not picky.β
Priya and I exchanged a wary look. βBut . . . I donβt have a fake ID or anything.β I stood and stumbled after them. βWhere am I supposed to get booze?β
Sasha gave an exaggerated shrug. βI mean, you could show up empty-handed. But if you want to impress them, youβll just have to figure it out.β
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