Chapter 38
I trudge into town.
Fool,
my mind chants as one foot after the other stirs up the dusty road.
You FOOL,
it screams when I reach the gas station.
Fool, fool, fool,
it plays on repeat as I pace in front of the refrigerated drinks, waiting for a mechanic to give meâand my gallon of gasâa ride back to my car.
What was I thinking? Honestly, what was going on in my EMPTY brain cells? Following Mr. Willoughby, barging into his house. All on the basis of a comic book. Unbelievable.
But how could it be a coincidence?
a little voice asks.
Finding that comic was too fortuitous to be a coincidence.
Shut up,
I snarl at the voice. If it had a physical presence, I'd slam the voice against the wall until it was knocked unconscious.
It
was
a coincidence, so shut the hell up. You've already made me the biggest fool in Lakewood, if not the entire world.
Nothing new there. I always suspected I was a fool. Now I have irrefutable proof.
When I get in my car again, and it actually starts, I'm not sure where to go. Part of me wants to sit in the bathtub and cry, so much that you could use my tears as bathwater. The other part wants to see Sam.
I don't want anyone to find out what happenedâbut Sam doesn't count. He's different. He won't judge me. If anyone or anything can make me feel better, it's Sam.
Decision made, I drive to his house. Mrs. Davidson appears in front of the screen door when I knock. Her hands are covered in clear plastic gloves and bits of white meat. And a large purple bruise stretches over her left cheek.
“Good to see you, CeCe.” Her words are weak, with almost a translucent quality. As though they exist only because they're propped up on the aroma of carrots, celery, and garlic in the air.
“Mrs. Davidson, are you okay?” I venture. Something is wrong. That much is obvious. I'm just not sure what.
She holds up her gloved hands, indicating the shreds of meat like they are poison. “I'm making a chicken pot pie. Sam's favorite. I thought we could all use a bit of comfort after this afternoon.”
“What happened?” I ask softly.
“My ex-husband. If Sam weren't here, I . . . I don't know how far it would've gone.” Her voice cracks, but she straightens her spine and walks into the kitchen, gesturing for me to follow her. She attacks the cooked chicken breast on the counter, shredding the meat as if her lifeâor at least her dignityâdepends on it.
“No one got hurt, so don't worry. The fight involved more raised voices than fists. But Sam's been upstairs since his dad left, and he says he's not coming down until he finishes his article. He's taken over the whole floorâI've heard him stomping in the hallway for the last hour.”
I lick my lips, not sure what to say or do. If it were my mother, I'd take her in my arms and stroke her hair as though our roles were reversed. I'd lay her bruised cheek on my lap and hum the lullabies she used to sing me at night.
But she's not my mother. She's a stranger I've only met once, and with whom I've barely spoken. I don't know how to comfort her without prying. I don't know how to put myself out there, to risk being shot down, when I've proven, without the slightest doubt, what a fool I am.
“Is that why you didn't pick up the phone at four o'clock?” I ask instead. “I called, and then again half an hour later, and no one picked up.” I pull the slip of paper out of my back pocket. It looks like it's been through the wash. And no wonder. Between the dip in the creek and my anxious grip, it's had rougher treatment than the spin cycle. “Sam gave me your home number, since he turned off his cell.”
“No, no. My ex-husband was gone by then.” She looks over her shoulder and frowns. Three lines slice across her forehead. “That's strange. I was here the whole time, and I never heard the phone. Would you mind checking to see if it's broken, CeCe? As you can see, my hands are full of chicken.”
She wiggles her fingers in the air. I lay the slip of paper on the counter and pick up the phone on the wall.
“There's a dial tone,” I murmur. “I wonder why it didn't ring.”
Frowning, I press some buttons to navigate the menu, searching for the “missed calls” log. I hit the wrong button and enter the “dialed calls” log. I'm about to exit when I see something.
“I got it.” Mrs. Davidson squints at the slip of paper. “You were calling the wrong number. His âseven' here looks like a âone.' ”
But her words are a long-distance buzz in my ears. My vision is fuzzy, and my lungs feel like they're being squished between two metal plates.
I blink. And blink again. But no matter how hard I try, I can't erase what I'm seeing. On September 18, before Sam and I became partners or friends, there are six calls to my cell phone number. Six calls on the same day the hotline posters were doctored.
I didn't recognize his home number when he first gave it to me. But there's no denying
my
phone number on this screen.
There has to be an explanation. Was he legitimately trying to call the hotline? He never mentioned it when I told him about the doctored hotline posters. Did Briony make those calls? Doubtful. With her uncanny ability for friendships, she doesn't need to pour her heart out to a stranger.
Without meaning to, I begin to build the case against Sam.
He knew my call counselor scheduleâso he knew exactly when I would be at the hotline. He was the one who suggested anyone's head could be Photoshopped onto an image. He was the only person I confided in about Phoenix. And my mom's journal. And my suspicions.
Throughout this entire investigation, Sam always seemed to know things about me before I had a chance to tell him. He knew my mother had died in the old shed, for example. And the fact that I was a call counselor. I thought it was because he was a good reporter. But maybe it's because he's been engineering my harassment from the beginning.
I place the phone back in its cradle. My hands were gripping the handle so hard my fingerprints shine on the surface. It's not that I think Sam is Phoenix. That would be ridiculous. He's my age, and he wasn't even in town when my mom committed suicide. Clearly, he's not preying on any young girls and convincing them to take topless photos.
But maybe he wanted to write a good story so desperately he was willing to manipulate the situation to get what he wanted. Maybe the harassment was designed to send me running straight into his arms. Maybe all those kisses were a way to get close to me, to discover tidbits about my mom I never would've otherwise confided.
Well, it worked. If Sam is actually behind the harassment, I'm an even bigger fool than I thought.
“Are you okay, dear?” Mrs. Davidson stirs the roux on the stovetop, her eyebrows knit together. “You look pale all of a sudden.”
I bare my teeth in what I hope passes for a smile. I'm not going to jump to conclusions. I did that with Mr. Willoughby and look what happened. “I'm fine. Is it okay if I go see Sam now?”
“Go right ahead. You know where his room is.”
I move into the hallway like a moth flitting around, not sure where to land. I walk up the stairs to the second floor. The entire hallway is strewn with Sam's school supplies. His worn navy backpack with the broken zipper. A calculator jumbled with a protractor and some graph paper. His black-and-white composition notebook.
And papers. Lots and lots of crumbled-up papers, possible early drafts of his article.
Without fully understanding why, I pick up a ball of paper, smoothing it out and skimming my eyes over the words.
A headline marches across the page: Secret Journal Reveals Sex Suicide's Sexual Past.
I stumble backward and sag against the wall as I read. And then my legs give out entirely, and I collapse to the floor.
The article lays it all out, in black and white. How seventeen-year-old Tabitha Brooks began dating her teacher. How she became increasingly isolated from her friends. How she was made to perform oral sex under a wooden desk in a classroom filled with students.
Sam's memory for details is uncanny. He remembered the names of Tabitha's best friend and even the boy with whom she was supposed to double-date. He described her outfit down to the thong. He even included a few quotes that came directly from my mother's journal.
How did he remember all that? I'm not sure I even gave him all those facts.
It's almost as if he had the journal right in front of him.
No. That's impossible. The journal has been in my backpack the entire day. Why, I haven't even taken it out since first period ...
A chill runs over my spine. Oh my god. Sam watched me adjust the journal in my backpack. He knows I brought it to school. He could've taken it when I wasn't paying attention.
My heart drilling holes in my ears, I pick up Sam's navy backpack and look inside. Sure enough, my mother's yellowed-page, leather-bound journal lies inside.
There's no mistake. Sam Davidson stole from me.
I clutch my chest, a sharp pain spearing the very center of me. When I thought my mother betrayed me, a blade lodged in my heart. And now it's being twisted and turned, shredding and destroying.
Until there's nothing left.
And the worst part? The hand that wields the blade belongs to Sam.
The boy with whom I was beginning to fall in love.
Chapter 39
I hover at the entrance to Sam's room. He hunches over his computer, his fingers flying over the keyboard. An empty mug sits on his desk, next to a faint coffee ring. More crumbled-up papers fill a wire-mesh trash can, and he's muttering to himself.
Any other time, I might have admired his discipline. Now, it takes all my strength not to drive my fist through the computer screen.
“You ass,” I say. “How could you do this to me?”
He cocks his head like he's trying to hear something. A whisper on the air, maybe, or his conscience. If he even has one.
After a moment, he continues typing. That's when I realize he's wearing headphones. The words are a refrain inside my brain; my throat's clogged with lies and betrayal. I don't want to say the words again, and the fact that I have to makes the anger flame even higher.
I march into the room and slam my mother's journal on his keyboard.
“CeCe!” Sam jumps and removes the headphones. “When did you get here? Did you get your phone back from Mr. Willoughby?”
I blink. Mr. Willoughby? Oh right. Sam still doesn't know what happened. “He's not Phoenix,” I say flatly. “He's in a serious relationship with Ms. Hughes and doesn't have time to mess around with young girls. But that's not why I'm here.”
I jab my finger at the journal.
He studies the book as if he hadn't stolen it. As if he weren't planning to betray me. Noâlike he hadn't already betrayed me. “This isn't what you think . . .”
“You used âsex' twice in your article headline, did you know that? Isn't that a âno-no' in journalism, repeating words in the same headline? Or maybe there's an exception since sex sells. Sex wins awards and gets you scholarships. Isn't that right, Sam?”
“I'm not going to submit that article to my editor.” He takes off his glasses and scrubs a hand down his face. I see a laceration on his temple, where his glasses might have cut into his skin if he had been knocked around. A dark purple bruise is beginning to form on his cheekbone.
My knees go weak. This must be from the fight with his dad. I want to trace my fingers along his skin, kiss him until the pain goes away. But I can't feel sorry for him. I won't. He doesn't deserve my sympathy, this bastard who was using me.
“The draft you read was just a warm-up exercise, CeCe. Something to get the words flowing. I wouldn't let them run something like this.”
“And yet, you wrote it,” I say. “You stole from me. After I trusted you, after everything we had together, you felt okay sneaking into my backpack and taking my mom's journal. A backup plan, in case you couldn't come up with anything better.”
I whip around and pace the room, in a line between his bed and dresser. “How could you, Sam? I thought you wanted to be a journalist. A serious investigative reporter, standing up for the little guy, protecting what's right.”
He stands and steps directly in my path. I could veer around him, but he's too big and the room's too small. “I do, and that's not why I took the journal. I have a contact who knows Tommy Farrow's sister. The girl with the striped tights, the one I helped on the first day of school? She's friends with Lila and is arranging for me to have a meeting with her. I thought if I showed her the journal, it would convince her to talk.”
I stare at him. It all sounds so reasonable, so believable. But I'm done trusting Sam Davidson. “If that's true, why didn't you tell me?” I whisper. “Why didn't you ask?”
“Because I knew you wouldn't let anyone else see the journal.”
My anger flares again. “Damn straight. You knew that, and you didn't care. You decided to invade my privacy and steal my property, anyway.”
He shoves his hands in his hair. “Don't you see you're not helping anything by hiding this? If the police knew, maybe they would reopen your mom's case. Maybe they'd be able to find Phoenix. And maybe it would all be over by now. Before anyone else gets hurt.” His voice is soft now, as fine as steel wire. And just as strong. “Before this scumbag gets his hooks even deeper into my sister.”
“Is this what this is about? You're publishing this article about my mom's journal because you think it's my fault this guy is on the loose. You're punishing me because you're pissed about your sister.”
“Of course not.” His chest moves with the force of the breath. “I told you already, it was a writing exercise. I never intended to publish it.” He seizes my hands. “You would know that if you even trusted me a little bit. But that's our problem. You don't take what we have seriously.”
I yank my hands out of his. “The hell I don't! I've given you more of myself than I have to anybody else.”
“For god's sake, CeCe,” he explodes. “You wouldn't even tell anybody we were together. Anytime we were at school, you were always looking around, making sure no one saw us. You wouldn't even bid on me at the auction.”
“What are you talking about? I did bid for you.” And then I remember the blindfold. He has no idea what Mackenzie did. No idea I stood up for him.
He continues, as if I haven't spoken. “You knew I was dreading it. And yet, you didn't care enough to save me from a date with a stranger. Did you read my profile in the program?” He steps forward, his eyes bright with an emotion I can't identify. “That was me on my knees, asking you to come forward with our relationship. To announce to the school what I meant to you. Because how you felt about me was more important than what other people say.”
I shake my head. “You knew I had to bid on Tommy that night. He wouldn't talk to me otherwise.”
“We could've found another way.” His voice is bitter, so bitter it leaks acid onto my tongue. “In all the years of their marriage, my mother never brought up my dad to anyone outside of the family. It wasn't that she didn't talk about the abuse. She didn't talk about him, period. She was ashamed of him, CeCe, ashamed of their relationship. It was as if she could make that shame go away if she pretended he didn't exist.” He draws himself up to his full height. “I've told you this before, I have no interest in being in a secret relationship. I don't need to be with someone who's ashamed of me.”
Heat rushes to every appendage of my body. “Don't you dare turn this on me. You'd do anything to win that scholarship, even if it means selling me out. Even if it means setting me up. I know about the phone calls, Sam. I know you dialed me six times the day the doctored posters went up. What were you trying to do? Rattle me so much, I'd run to you and confess everything?”
He gives me a blank look. “I don't know what you're talking about. I never called you until after we kissed.”
“It's right there on your call log, Sam!”
He shakes his head. “It wasn't me.”
“I don't believe you,” I say.
“Well, I don't believe you, either, so I guess we're even.”
We stare at each other. His face is hard, immobile. A statue carved out of marble. If I touched it, the cold would spread like a virus through my body, paralyzing me, too.
There's nothing more to say. Nothing to fix this breach between us. Nothing to make things return to the way they used to be.
That's the tragedy of life. Nothing good ever lasts.
When I can't stand it anymore, I turn and walk away from the new guy. The one who was different from everyone else. I thought he saw past the surface. I thought he knew me for who I really was.
He's different, all right. More than Tommy Farrow, more than Justin Blake, he aimed straight at my heart. And blew it to smithereens.