Read Deadly Little Games Online

Authors: Laurie Faria Stolarz

Tags: #Fiction - Young Adult

Deadly Little Games (2 page)

BOOK: Deadly Little Games
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Across

8
. I wear a ________ on my wrist, because it’s only a matter of time.

17.
I stabbed him in the ________.

Down

20
. You made ________ bed, and now you’ll have to lie in it.

T
HE BELL RINGS JUST
as I splash some water on my face, trying to get a grip. I tell myself that sculpting Adam’s mouth was no big deal, and I’ve no reason to freak. But then why can’t I shake this feeling that something’s desperately wrong?

I hurry out of the bathroom, down the hallway, and into the gymnasium. No one’s on the court yet. Most of the kids are probably in the locker rooms, changing into their sweats and sneakers.

But not Ben.

He has permission from Principal Snell to skip the actual “physical” part of phys ed class. Instead he’s given the humiliating task of keeping score on the sidelines. Snell, along with most of the teachers at school, believes that Ben suffers from a fear of crowds, a fear that makes things like contact sports and switching classes with everyone else somewhat of a challenge for him. And so he’s also been granted a License for Lateness—a pass that allows him to arrive at all his classes a few minutes behind everyone else, to avoid careening into people in the hallway.

The real reason that Ben avoids crowds is that he has psychometric abilities: abilities that enable him to sense things through touch. One might think having a power like that would make him want to touch people all the time—to find out all their dirty little secrets. But nothing could be further from the truth.

Almost three years ago, during a hike through the woods, Ben touched his girlfriend Julie’s hand and sensed that she was cheating on him. Unable to control his need to sense more, he gripped her harder. Julie drew away, and though Ben tried to pull her back, she ended up tumbling backward off a cliff.

And dying almost instantly.

After that happened, Ben tried to avoid touch altogether. He dropped out of public school to be home-schooled by tutors, shut himself off from everyone he knew, and barely ventured outside his house. But then, a couple years later, he thought he’d try to have a somewhat normal life again and moved in with his aunt, two hours away, to enroll at our school.

That’s when he accidentally touched me.

And everything changed.

Ben sensed that my life was in danger. And he was right. This past September, my ex-boyfriend Matt was plotting to take me captive in a twisted attempt to win me back. Then, just three weeks ago, Ben knew that someone was trying to deceive me. If it hadn’t been for his keen awareness in both of those instances, I might not be here right now.

I wonder if he’ll be able to sense that Adam’s been on my mind, that I sculpted Adam’s mouth, reminded of a kiss that didn’t happen. And that just last night, when I couldn’t fall sleep, I went down to the pottery studio in my basement and sculpted Adam’s eyes, with the lids closed—the way he looked the instant before he tried to kiss me.

After a few minutes, boys start making an appearance on the basketball court for a little pregame, while girls sit up on the bleachers looking on.

A couple of minutes after that, Ben finally arrives.

As usual, he looks amazing. Dressed in layers of charcoal and black, his dark brown hair is rumpled to perfection, and his smile nearly steals my breath.

“Hey,” he says, “what are you doing here? Aren’t you supposed to be in class?”

“The nurse’s office, actually,” I say, flashing him my pass.

“Is everything okay?”

I nod, wondering if I’m overreacting. There’s obviously nothing going on between Adam and me. But then why do I feel so guilty?

“Well, it’s good to see you,” he says. “But you know Muse won’t let you stay.”

“I know.” Mr. Muse makes it his life’s mission to suck the fun out of every sport imaginable, including those of the romantic nature. “So, maybe I could just get a squeeze good-bye?”

“You bet,” he says, coming closer. He smells like watermelon candy and the fumes from his bike. It’s a scent I want to bottle up. And pour right over me.

Ben holds me close. His hands graze my lower back, igniting every inch of me. “Are you sure everything’s all right?”

“I’m fine,” I whisper, hating myself for lying to him.

“Because, you know you can tell me anything, right?”

“I know,” I say, feeling worse by the moment.

Ben runs his fingers through the ends of my hair and breathes into the crook of my neck.

“I just wanted to see you,” I whisper.

He takes a step back and looks into my face. His dark gray eyes are wide and searching. “How come I feel like you’re not telling me everything?”

My pulse races, and my mouth goes dry. Meanwhile, the basketball makes a continuous slapping sound on the court behind us. I look over Ben’s shoulder. All the boys are on the court playing basketball now. John Kenneally and Davis Miller, both notorious for giving Ben a hard time because of his history with Julie, pass the ball back and forth.

I do my best to ignore them, to ignore the echo of their shouting voices and the smack of the ball as it hits the backboard. But then Ben grips my hand tightly—until I almost have to pull away.

Only, before I can, he does. He takes a couple more steps back, letting go of my hand.

“Is something wrong?” I ask.

“Why don’t
you
tell
me
?” He backs away even farther, as if he can’t even stand being next to me now.

“Nothing’s wrong,” I blurt. “Everything’s fine.” I take a deep breath, my mind reeling. I struggle to think of something to say, just as a cluster of boys, en route to scoring a basket, plows right into Ben.

He falls hard, landing on his back with a grunt that makes me wince.

“Ben!” I hurry to his side, just as Mr. Muse finally shows up, ordering everyone out of the way.

Still, I stay with him. I try to take his hand again, but he pulls it away.

Meanwhile a smattering of snickers erupts behind me—from the pack of boys who collided with him.

“Just go,” Ben says, avoiding my gaze.

“I’m not going anywhere. Not until I know that everything’s okay.”

“Go,” he insists.

Mr. Muse demands that I leave, threatening me with a trip to Principal Snell’s office. “Where are you supposed to be now, anyway?” he asks me. He helps Ben up and into a chair.

Meanwhile, I reluctantly head to the nurse—for real this time—because I truly feel like I’m going to be sick.

I
SPEND THE REMAINDER
of the block in the nurse’s office before heading to the cafeteria for lunch, where Kimmie, Wes, and I sit at our usual spot by the exit.

“So, let me get this straight,” Kimmie says. “You and Ben are fighting because you were fantasizing about macking with your ex?”

“Except, Adam isn’t exactly my ex,” I remind her. “We only went out a few times.”

“But you still want his tongue in your mouth,” Wes says, pointing at me with a sausage. He’s stabbed the center with a plastic fork.

Wes has been our friend since freshman year. He’s a fairly uncomplicated boy by day; most of his drama shows up at night. His dad, a former juicehead turned dickhead, hates the fact that Wes isn’t “more dick, less chick”—he actually says that. He also calls him Wuss instead of Wes.

“You’re sick,” I tell him.

“But tasty.” He takes a bite of sausage.

“At first I thought Ben’s touch power was a bonus,” Kimmie says. “But if he can read your mind on cue—learning about all your seedy fantasies—then maybe it’s more of a drawback.”

“First of all, I don’t
have
any seedy fantasies,” I tell them.

“Maybe that’s your problem,” Wes says.

“No,” I say, correcting him. “My problem is that I’m thinking about Adam, and I don’t want to be.”

“You’re not just
thinking
about him.” Kimmie raises her ruby-studded eyebrow at me. “I thought those lips you sculpted in pottery class looked a little too luscious to be Ben’s.”

Wes leans forward and readjusts his wire-rimmed glasses. “What am I missing?” he asks, eager for the dirt.

“Three words,” Kimmie says. “More. Random. Body parts.”

“Except, that’s four words,” I say.

“Well, whatever.” She rolls her eyes. “It’s still significant. Not to mention creeptastic.”

She’s obviously comparing my sculpture of Adam’s mouth to the one I did of Ben’s arm a month ago, when I was trying to remember the branchlike scar that runs from his elbow to his wrist. A day or two after that, I sculpted Ben’s eyes, as if they were peering at me through glass.

Both of those sculptures turned out to be premonitions.

Ben isn’t the only one who’s able to sense things through touch.

Over the past several months, instead of making my usual bowls and vases, I’ve been sculpting things from my future. First it was a car—the same one I spotted on the day Matt took me captive. Then there was the pinecone, which looked just like the air freshener that dangled from the rearview mirror of Matt’s car. About a month ago it was a swordfish, similar to the wooden cutout affixed over the door of Finz restaurant, the place near where Debbie Marcus was hit by a car.

Debbie was a girl at school whose friends made it look like she was being stalked. They sent her creepy notes, making her believe that Ben (once on trial for the murder of his girlfriend on the cliff that day) wanted her to be Victim Number Two.

Debbie believed it, too. One night, on a walk home from a friend’s house, anxious that Ben might’ve been following her, she wasn’t really paying attention to where she was going and was struck by a car. The accident almost took her life.

When she came out of her coma two months later, even though Ben wasn’t to blame, she was determined to make him pay—to make someone pay—for her lost time. And so she tried to frame him for stalking me in hopes that he would be forced to leave our school once and for all.

“Wait,” Wes says. “Are you to imply that our dear Chameleon is once again having premonitions by way of pottery?”

“I’d appreciate it if you wouldn’t call me reptilian names,” I say.

“Would you prefer it if I called you a freak?”

“Plus,” I say, failing to dignify his question with a response, “it hasn’t
only
been body parts. What about the car, the swordfish, the pinecone?”

“Well, I still suspect something shady’s going on,” Kimmie says. “I mean, why Adam’s mouth?—why not Ben’s or your own? And why did it look all pouty, like he wanted a kiss?”

“There’s more.” I tell them about last night, how, when I couldn’t sleep, I sculpted Adam’s eyes.

“See?” Kimmie folds her arms. “More body parts.”

“Whatever,” I sigh, refusing to get into it again.

“Do you think you’re sculpting this stuff and thinking about him because you miss him?” she asks.

“Or this could be your subconscious’s way of trying to sabotage your love life,” Wes suggests. “I saw something similar on
Love Rehab
.”

Kimmie rolls her eyes—yet again—at the suggestion. She grabs a straw and attempts to blow the wrapper into Wes’s recently overgrown yet still mousse-laden dark hair, but the wrapper fails to penetrate the hair’s crusty outer surface. “Camelia hasn’t even revealed the most disturbing piece in her jigsaw puzzle of a life,” Kimmie says.

“Right,” I say, knowing full well what she’s talking about. “While I was sculpting Adam’s mouth, I whispered the words ‘You deserve to die.’”

“At me,” Kimmie points out.

“More like, near you,” I clarify. “It’s not like I think
you
deserve to die.”

“Then who?” Wes asks.

“No one. It’s like someone put those words in my mouth—like the phrase got stuck in my head, and I couldn’t let it go.” I sink back in my seat, reminded of how sometimes, when I’m having one of my psychometric episodes—if I should even be calling it that—I’m able to hear voices.

About a month ago, I sculpted a horse kicking its legs up. It turned out to look just like the horse on the pendant that Ben gave to Julie shortly before she died. All the time I was sculpting the horse I kept hearing a voice in my head—a voice that told me to be careful.

The horse sculpture turned out to be a clue that someone was trying to trick me. That someone was Adam. Two years earlier, Adam (Ben’s best friend at the time) had been dating Julie behind Ben’s back. When Julie died, Adam, like everyone else, blamed Ben and wanted revenge.

And so last fall, when Adam learned that Ben had come to Freetown High seeking a somewhat mainstream life again, he secretly followed. Adam enrolled at the community college nearby and sought out Ben’s love interest—me—as a way to make him jealous.

“So, what now?” Kimmie asks.

“Maybe you should give Adam a call,” Wes says. “That is, if you don’t wish him dead—in which case you should probably stay as far away from him as possible.” He snatches my plastic utensils away. “I hear prison’s a pain in the ass.”

“No pun intended,” Kimmie jokes.

“Well, naturally, I don’t wish anyone dead,” I say, as if the explanation were even necessary.

“Does Adam wish
you
were dead?” Kimmie asks.

“How would I know?”

“Maybe someone wishes Adam were dead.” Wes scratches his chin in thought. “Or
maybe
you’re supposed to save Adam, the way Ben saved you last fall. I mean, you did say you sculpted his eyes while they were closed…meaning, he could have been dead.”

“Don’t tell me this is going to be another semester of psycho notes, creepy photos, and cheap lingerie,” Kimmie says, referring to some of the mysterious gifts I received when I was being stalked.

“Are you talking about Camelia’s past with Matt, or your own colorful dating history?” Wes asks her.

“Jealous that I
have
a dating history?” She blows him a kiss.

“Maybe we’re reading too much into things,” I say, interrupting their banter.

“It’s possible,” Wes chirps. “Your verging-on-obsessive, shrineworthy stalkerazzi sculptures could very well be your subconscious’s way of making it clear that you and Adam have some unresolved issues to attend to. And the twisted death-wish phrase could totally be chalked up to too many scary movies.”

“Or too many detentions with Mr. Muse.” Kimmie giggles. “My advice: give Adam a call. Be all casual, and ask him how he’s doing.”

“And if he’s gotten any death threats lately,” Wes adds.

I shake my head at the thought of contacting him again. It’s not like we ended things on totally terrible terms. It’s just that, despite how sorry he was afterward, despite the apologetic letters he sent asking for my forgiveness, what he did was downright cruel. “How am I supposed to explain to Ben that I’m calling his biggest enemy?…Someone I dated?”

“Who says he has to know?” Wes shrugs.

“He’ll touch her and know, Einstein.” Kimmie uses the knot of her beaded necklace to thwack him in the head.

“Well, if that’s the case, I’m surprised you even lied to him in the first place,” Wes says. “I mean, didn’t you figure he’d know the truth anyway?”

“What can I say? I’m an idiot.”

“Idiot or not, what you were sensing must have been pretty intense,” Kimmie says. “I mean, to feel so guilty about it that you cut class, got a nurse’s note, and willingly crashed Muse’s phys ed block. So, you sculpted Adam’s facial features. It doesn’t exactly make you a two-timing tramp.”

“And it doesn’t exactly explain why Ben freaked out in gym class,” Wes says. “Which brings us to the most obvious question: are you sure you aren’t holding anything back from us? Might you have sculpted something a bit more scandalous than what you’re actually admitting? A sexy little bowl or a naughty pot with a really curvaceous mouth?”

“Are there any other interesting body-part sculptures you want to tell us about?” Kimmie asks, playing along.

“No,” I say, grateful for their humor—and for the fact that, despite this funked-up situation, they can actually get me to laugh.

“Is there any way to block what Ben is able to sense?” Wes asks. “Might a hint of garlic around your neck or chanting incantations under a waxing moon prove effective in warding off his abilities?”

“I doubt it.” I smirk.

Kimmie reaches across the table to touch my arm in consolation. “Well, then, I hate to be the one to break it to you, but as far as Ben’s concerned, it looks like honesty is your only option.”

“A shame.” Wes sighs, shaking his head in sympathy. “If only there could be some other way.”

BOOK: Deadly Little Games
6.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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