Poor Little Dead Girls (2 page)

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Authors: Lizzie Friend

BOOK: Poor Little Dead Girls
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“Call me,” he said. “Every week. And don’t smoke.”

She laughed. “Come on, Dad. We both know what smoking would do to my mile time.”

He held up his hands, palms out.

“Just had to say it.” He took a last glance around the quad and slowly shook his head. “Oh, and don’t go joining any of those creepy secret societies either. Or start playing squash. Rich people tend to have really weird ideas about what people should do for fun.”

She arched a brow. “I’ll be fine, Dad. This isn’t a Lifetime movie.”

He chuckled, then laid a big hand on each of her shoulders. “You know, your mom would be really proud of you for doing this. She always wanted the best for you.” His voice broke, and she nodded. She could feel her eyes start to sting.

“And I’m proud of you, too. I love you, and I’m going to miss you like crazy. Try to have fun, though, okay? And don’t forget why you’re here.”

He pulled her in for a big hug and then climbed into the driver’s seat.

“Remember, kid: You’re every bit as good as all of these girls, and you’re probably a heck of a lot better than most of them. Don’t forget that.” He started the car, draped an arm out the open window, and called out, “Go get ’em tiger,” as he drove off toward the gate.

She waved at his taillights, letting the realization sink in that she wouldn’t see him again until Christmas. After the Camry was long gone, and limo after black limo had roared off behind it, she finally pulled herself away.

She followed two blondes as they glided up the steps toward Ashby’s entrance, the heavy double doors yawning open to swallow them whole. At the top she squared her shoulders, and closed her eyes. Cool air billowed out onto the landing, raising goose bumps on her skin and pulling her forward. She took one more deep breath, opened her eyes, and stepped inside.

Chapter 2

She blinked. The inside was like a cross between a luxury hotel and the kind of rickety old mansion you would see in a bad horror movie — the kind where it’s always raining and the characters get killed off, one by one, starting with the black guy and the girl with the biggest boobs. It was beautiful in a stuffy, old-fashioned kind of way, but it made her feel heavy, like the building had its own gravitational pull.

The small foyer opened into a wide great room with high ceilings, thick oriental rugs, and couches arranged in clusters around tiny coffee tables. Directly ahead was a marble staircase that curved up from the floor in two directions, each one leading to a different wing. She followed the matching blondes up the one to the right, swimming in the wake of their heavy perfume.

She found her room on the third floor and pushed inside. The other two beds were still empty, but she knew that wouldn’t last. Room assignments at Keating were supposed to be random — part of the school’s commitment to their “code of sisterhood” (Keating girls were all one family, regardless of age, race, or inheritance). But, the school was 95 percent white, and, according to Jessica, the girls from the richest families always ended up rooming with their closest friends. Which meant Sadie’s roommates were probably going to be other scholarship kids — or lepers.

She shut the door behind her and sat down on one of the beds, a classic four-poster tucked into the corner next to a wide bay window. She glanced outside and watched as a girl in enormous sunglasses stood in the road with her hands on her hips. She was berating a chauffeur as he walked by, clutching a pink garment bag and shrinking away from her like she was contagious.

She sighed, her breath fogging up the antique panes. “Screw ’em, right Dad?”

Suddenly, she felt exhausted. They had been driving for three days, and she had barely slept. She reached into one of the big, plastic bags she had brought along, packed with bedding, picture frames, and useless little knickknacks her dad had convinced her she might need at school (“You definitely need a solar-powered flashlight, Sadie. What if there’s a power outage?”). She pulled out her new, bright yellow comforter and threw it on the bed. Without even bothering to take off her shoes, she curled up right on top of the mattress and pulled it over her head.

In the warm, muffled darkness under the blanket, she tried to remind herself why she was here. Lacrosse, lacrosse, lacrosse. A college scholarship would make everything worth it. Even if she had stayed in Portland and managed to get into one of her dream schools, they would never have been able to pay for it. Keating was a good thing. As long as she survived the next two years.

She knew she shouldn’t complain. Her dad made good money and she had always had whatever she needed, but when Sadie had been just a few years old, her mother had gotten sick. Not physically sick, like with cancer, but she was in and out of intensive therapy programs, rehab, and even psychotherapy, for years. Her dad had done everything he could to get her mom the help she needed, but by the time she died, all of their savings were gone and they had a long list of debts to pay. Now all these years later, she only had one image left from that day: her dad, sitting on the floor in the living room with the lights off, tears streaming down his face.

A squeal came from somewhere outside her blanket force field.

“Get your ass up, Sadie. I’d know those nasty old shoes anywhere.”

Sadie peeked out from under the covers and saw Jessica standing in the doorway in a pair of crisp white shorts and a navy polo. Sadie jumped up and ran to the door.

“Oh my god, please tell me you’re my roommate.” She gave Jessica a big hug.

“I wish. They always put transfers together, so I’m guessing you’ll be with two other new girls.” Jessica jerked a thumb over her shoulder. “I’m down the hall with Madison Plath. Why don’t they just kill me now and get it over with? She has her army of feng shui consultants in there right now trying to reorganize the place.” She waved a hand at the empty beds. “Your roommates aren’t here yet? That’s kinda weird.”

Sadie shrugged. “Who knows? Rich people are never on time, right?”

“Very funny.” Jessica picked one of Sadie’s pillows off the floor and whacked her with it.

“For your information, I’ve been here since noon getting my crap together and waiting for your ass to show up. And here you are, sleeping on a bare mattress with all your crap strewn around the room in plastic bags.”

“Ugh, I know. I should probably hide the evidence that I bought all my stuff from Target, right? Just so they don’t immediately realize I’m a charity case.”

“Meh, who cares. Everyone Googles the new kids, so there’s no point trying to hide it. Want some help unpacking?”

They spent the next hour arranging all of Sadie’s clothes in the dresser, hanging her uniform skirts, blazers, and polos in the armoire, and trying to make the room feel like home.

“Posters help,” Jessica said, nodding toward the empty walls. “Madison already covered, like, half the room in Fever Stephens glamour shots.” She rolled her eyes. “It’s weird staring at his creepy airbrushed abs all day, but at least I don’t feel like I’m at my Nana’s.”

Sadie was pulling the last few items out of her duffel bag — a framed photo of her mom, dressed in yellow and holding a young Sadie on her hip, and a handful of medals from lacrosse tournaments — when they heard a knock on the door. It was three quick raps — authoritative, official. She opened the door to two imposing men in dark suits, each at least six feet tall with broad shoulders and dark glasses.

“You must be here about the aliens,” she deadpanned. They didn’t smile, but she heard Jessica suppress a laugh.

“Miss, please vacate the room,” the one on the right barked.

The two men kept their chins pointed straight ahead as they talked, giving the impression they weren’t really speaking to Sadie at all, but rather casting their commands out into the universe and just expecting it to obey.

“We need to do a sweep.”

What the hell? She looked back at Jessica, who was sprawled on the bed on her stomach, paging through last year’s Portland South yearbook. She just shrugged, but the expression on her face said this wasn’t usual procedure.

“Uh, this is my room. Is something wrong?”

“It’s protocol,” the giant on the left said to the space a foot above her head. “Please wait outside.”

It clearly wasn’t a request. She stood in the doorway and hesitated, wondering if this was some sort of hazing ritual new students had to go through. What did they think she would bring, unauthorized snack foods? Counterfeit designer jeans?

Before she could decide how to react, a tiny woman wearing a sleek black suit squeezed through Right and Left and extended a small, bony hand. Her icy blonde hair was pulled back into a tight chignon at the base of her skull, and she wore high black pumps and nude stockings, despite the heat. Even with the heels, she just barely reached Sadie’s shoulders.

“Hello ladies,” she said in a thick English accent. She nodded to each of them without smiling. “I’m Ellen Bennett, and I apologize for this rudeness on behalf of my staff.” She threw a look over her shoulder at Right, who cleared his throat in mild protest. “I’m the personal secretary and chief of security for His Grace Charles Windsor Everleigh the Third, Duke of Devonshire. His daughters, The Lady Gwendolyn Everleigh and The Lady Beatrix Everleigh will be your new flat mates. Now, which of you is,” — she paused and looked down at her clipboard — “Sadie Marlowe?”

“That’d be me,” Sadie said, still absentmindedly shaking the woman’s hand. Ellen gave her a tight smile and slithered her hand out of Sadie’s grasp, drawing it back and holding it close to her chest in a fist.

“How grand.” With a quick wave of her hand, Right and Left marched into the room, brushing Sadie aside in the process. Ellen walked in after them and cast a calculating glance around the room. Her eyes stopped when they landed on Jessica, still lying on the bed with her chin in one hand.

“Would you be so kind as to go back to your own room, Miss?” she said. “I need to go over some details with Ms. Marlowe and ensure the room is up to our specifications.”

“I would be happy to,” Jessica said, giving Ellen a sweet smile that dripped with sarcasm. She walked toward the door and made a gagging gesture only Sadie could see. Sadie bit her lip to hold back a snort.

“Ms. Marlowe, can you come over here please?” Ellen smoothed a pillow on the window seat and gingerly sat down, crossing one thin knee over the other and looking up with poorly concealed impatience. Right and Left were making their way around the room, peering behind the furniture and scanning the walls with a small black device. Sadie crossed the room and sat down, leaning back against the cushions and tucking her legs underneath her.

“What’s up?”

Ellen looked at her for a moment, an odd expression on her face, then handed her the clipboard. She drew a black fountain pen from one of her blazer pockets and laid it on top of the form.

“I’ll just need you to read this carefully, then sign it. It is very important that you understand every detail of the contract, so I would be pleased to answer any questions you may have.” She didn’t look pleased to be doing anything, so Sadie just nodded and started reading. The contract was some sort of confidentiality agreement, one that prevented her from, as it stated, “revealing to the press, the public, her parents, the other students, or any other interested party anything she learned specifically relating to her status as roommates of The Lady Beatrix Everleigh and The Lady Gwendolyn Everleigh.” That and seven other pages of crap that didn’t make any sense.

Sadie finished skimming it and looked at Ellen. “Um, I’m not really sure I want to sign this. I’m not even really sure what it means. Why would you need this?”

Ellen sighed heavily. “Ms. Marlowe, what do you know about the Everleigh family?”

Sadie hesitated. “Well, I know they’re important enough to have bodyguards, and that their daughters are my roommates.” She held up the clipboard. “And apparently they don’t want anyone to know whether or not they wear embarrassing jammies?”

Ellen nodded gravely, ignoring her sarcasm. “Yes, Ms. Marlowe. They are important. His Grace is a very, very important man.” As she said this, she puffed out her thin chest and squared her shoulders, as if she were expecting Sadie to be floored by the prestige of her position. “And privacy is of the utmost importance to the Everleigh family. Keating’s code of sisterhood does not permit transfer students to live in private rooms, so we have been faced with a difficult situation.” She looked hard at Sadie before continuing. “The Everleighs want some reassurance that you will appreciate the gravity of this situation, and respect their privacy as public figures and members of the English nobility. Do you understand?”

“Okay,” she said slowly. “But I can’t guarantee I’m never, ever going to talk about my roommates. I mean, I can’t tell my friends what music they listen to or what we talk about? This is high school. That’s kinda what we do.”

“Well, you’ll find a more worthwhile way to spend your time if you want to continue living in this room, and if you want the pleasure of the company of some of the most celebrated young women in England. I might suggest poetry or classical piano. Beatrix and Gwendolyn excel at both of those pursuits.”

Sadie focused every bit of her energy on keeping her eyes from rolling into the back of her head. Her roommates were celebrated — celebrated, piano-playing, poetry-reciting British freaks who were definitely not going to be down for scarfing Cheetos and watching
Diva Divorcées
reruns after lights out. She could feel disappointment settling into her stomach like day-old Chinese food. If you couldn’t OD on trans fats and trashy TV with your roommates, what was the point of boarding school at all?

Ellen paused, then spoke slowly and deliberately, her eyes never leaving Sadie’s. “I would hate to have to request a transfer so early in the term,” she said, cocking her head to one side. “It would be quite arduous for the administration, and I know they frown upon students who make trouble regarding the roommate system. The code of sisterhood is such an important principle for the Keating community.” She paused again. “You’re a scholarship student, aren’t you?” She smiled sweetly, and her message was clear: You are expendable. You should think twice about making waves.

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