Six Months Later (15 page)

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Authors: Natalie D. Richards

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Action & Adventure, #General, #Love & Romance, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance

BOOK: Six Months Later
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Chapter Seventeen

We drive to his house first, and he drops his backpack inside. I call my parents while he’s gone, claiming a study session with some of my SAT friends. He slides back into the car around the time I hang the phone up, and then he’s watching me. Holy crap, I’m not sure I’ll ever look at this guy without thinking of kissing him.

“Are they cool with it?” he asks.

“Yeah, why?”

“Good. Turn off your phone.”

I open my mouth to argue, and he frowns at his hands on the steering wheel. “What do you think the chances are that Blake won’t call or text you in the next couple of hours?”

“Hours?” I ask, feeling my brows arch.

He looks sideways at me with a smile that makes me blush. “You in a rush?”

“No,” I say, powering down my phone with trembling fingers. “So where are we going?”

“It’s a surprise.”

“I love surprises,” I say, grinning.

He grins right back, reaching over to take my hand. “Yeah, I thought you might.”

We drive twenty miles south of Ridgeview, and I don’t feel desperate to fill the silence. Instead, I revel in the peace of it, watching the stark beauty of the winter landscape roll past my window.

Before I know it, we’re in the heart of Corbin, a town about the same size as ours without the benefits that come with being on the lake. I have no idea why he’s brought me here, especially after five, when the few shops and businesses are closed.

Adam pulls into a gravel lot near the center of town, a construction zone if the fencing and rubble is any indicator. I crane my head, spotting a large building, or the bones of what will someday be a building. The first few floors seem roughed in, but the ones above that are all steel beams and sky.

Adam parks the car, and we both get out, staring up at it. “I come here once a week. Things are slow now that it’s winter, but it’s still coming along.”

I nod, moving next to him, sliding my hand into his palm. He squeezes my fingers and kisses the top of my head.

“So can we get in?” I ask.

He cocks a brow at me, that bad boy smirk curling his lips. “Legally?”

I return his smirk and look back at the building. “C’mon. I’ll race you.”

I have no hope of outrunning Adam, but lucky for me, he has no interest in winning. He follows me through the bare floors, around support beams, and up a flight of cement steps. The second level is just like the first, floors and beams, but there’s open air above us. I tip back my head, gazing at the crisscross of the beams in the waning sunlight.

There’s something about this place or maybe just about Adam that makes me buzz with energy. I feel like anything is possible. I pace around while Adam checks something on the other side of the floor. I can almost hear his mind working, gears and chains clicking as he runs his thumb along a concrete ledge.

I watch him from a distance, touching poles and scuffing my sneakers on the floor. And then, on a whim, I decide I want to go higher.

It’s easier than I thought it would be. I find footholds and corners, and before I know it, I’m another floor up. And then another.

The wind whips through my hair, making my eyes water as I stare out over the roll of unfamiliar neighborhoods and houses. The beam in front of me is ice-cold, but I hold it anyway, terrified and exhilarated.

I laugh, despite myself, and then I hear Adam approaching behind me. I squeeze the steel in front of me even tighter as his arms wrap around my waist from behind.

“You weren’t supposed to climb up the beam work,” he says into my hair.

I shrug. “I’ve always been a monkey. Mom says I crawled out of my crib on my first birthday.”

“I can see that about you,” he says.

God, he smells good. And he’s so warm. I’m pretty sure this is what heaven would be like. If I could choose everything about heaven.

“So what is this place?” I ask.

“The county’s new government offices,” he says. “Or that’s what it will be next spring when they finish it up. Simple design, but they’ve got an incredible arch planned for the entry. You can see the structure of it there.” He points down to a section way too close to the ground for me to want to focus on.

“Have you seen planning pictures or something?”

“I saw blueprints,” he says. “They’re better.”

“Architect porn,” I muse, and he murmurs affirmatively before resting his chin on my shoulder.

My smile just keeps getting wider. I’m sure I look like a lunatic—wind-chapped and grinning like the Cheshire cat. “You’re going to build stuff like this one day, aren’t you?”

“I want to build stuff twice as beautiful as this,” he says.

I turn around in his arms, careful to keep my feet on the beam before I steady my hands on his waist.

He lifts his brows at me. “You are a fearless little thing.”

“I used to be.”

“Used to be? Not very many people would climb up here. Not sure I would have if I wasn’t coming after you.”

“I’m not afraid of things like this,” I say, and then I sigh and tilt my head. “But whoever did this to me…I’m scared of them.”

He leans in, kissing me once, long and soft and deep enough that I almost forget where I am. When he pulls pack, I wish I could just freeze everything about this moment so I could keep it with me.

“No one’s going to hurt you, Chloe,” he says softly.

“You going to protect me?” I ask, leaning in to kiss the underside of his jaw.

He groans a little. “As long as I make it off this building alive, I am.”

We climb down and settle into his car. There’s nothing open, so we make do with gas station fare: a pack of Twinkies and two tall, steaming cups of coffee. Mine goes down like heaven without a single nauseous afterthought.

“I thought I’d never drink coffee again,” I say, cradling the paper cup to me like an old friend.

“I’m a bad influence.”

“Yeah, I’m glad you brought that up,” I say. “You’re supposed to be this bad boy, so what gives?”

“What gives?”

“Yeah, you’re like…like Clark Kent.”

“Clark Kent?” He looks less than pleased at the comparison.

“Well, you did come to my rescue in the library.”

“Right, that.” He shrugs. “I figured it’d be a good way to get around to kissing you.”

“Making me freeze to death while you studied for another hour
after
rescuing me? Interesting strategy.”

He smirks again, and I think I understand why girls go for the bad boy. Or at least, the guys who appear to be bad boys.

“I think it’s all an act,” I say, licking Twinkie filling off my finger. “This bad boy thing. You do it to pick up girls.”

“Is it working?” he asks, leaning closer.

“Jury’s still out,” I say, but when he kisses the side of my neck, I’m pretty sure the verdict is in.

***

It’s eight o’clock at night when the waitress drops off our pancake platters. I pour what must be a half gallon of syrup over the top, and Adam laughs.

For ten minutes, I pick at my food while I talk. Adam listens to me outline all of the weird things I’ve pieced together, from my missing Julien file right down to the mystery Daniel/Dr. Kirkpatrick phone call. I even mention the hypnosis research, though I still can’t imagine how that would factor in.

I take a break to dig into my now lukewarm stack, and Adam leans back thoughtfully, his plate mostly clean.

“So how does it tie together? Did Dr. Kirkpatrick somehow hypnotize you into forgetting all about the last six months? Why?”

“I have no idea.”

Adam’s brow furrows. “I don’t know, Chlo. She did relaxation stuff but nothing like what you’re talking about. And I can’t figure a motive. Something like this would destroy her career.”

“Maybe she’s being blackmailed? Maybe she wants more money? Who knows what drives people to crime?”

“Typically, what drives people is pretty transparent. I mean, I’ve met the lady. She doesn’t really have an evil vibe.”

He’s got a point, but I’ve got more than a point. I have freaking evidence. Sort of.

“Adam, she was talking to someone about Julien. Someone named Daniel. As in possibly Daniel Tanner, one of the sponsors of our little study group.”

“Or as in Daniel Smith down at the post office or Daniel Starinsky who runs the gas station by the school. Do you know how many Daniels are in Ridgeview? For all we know, Julien has another doctor named Daniel and she was talking to him.”

I push a piece of pancake slowly through a river of syrup. “You think I’m grasping at straws.”

Adam reaches across the table, fingers covering my hand. “You want to know what happened to you, and I get that.”

“But?”

“But you’re too ready to point the finger. Maybe at people who didn’t do anything wrong.”

“She sounded nervous, Adam. Why would she be nervous about me talking about Julien if she hadn’t done anything wrong?”

“Maybe she was upset. Julien was in our group, Chlo. Maybe she got attached to her, and she’s worried about how upset she thinks you are about it.”

His points feel like they’re picking mine apart. And not doing a bad job of it either. “Fine,” I say with a sigh. “I’ll let it go.”

Adam smiles, but there’s something a little wary in his eyes when he shakes his head. “No, I don’t think you will. I’m pretty sure you don’t let much of anything go.”

“Careful. Being this smart can’t be good for your bad boy rep,” I say.

He steals one of the sausage links beside my pancakes, and the conversation shifts. He points out the beams in the ceilings, and I talk about an article I read on the mood impacts of decor like this, with vintage photographs and household items displayed as artwork. It’s the first time I’ve felt normal since I woke up in the classroom.

The drive home is long and quiet. He keeps the radio low, and I use the seat belt in the middle so I can curl up under his arm. I find a jagged scar, just above his wrist, tracing it with my fingers while I watch the road unfold before us.

For a while I think of what I should call this. Is he my boyfriend? It feels like such a small, childish word for the way I feel. And some part of me knows I should be afraid of this, this feeling of absolute rightness I have being pressed up against him.

But then he kisses the top of my head, and I smile. After that I don’t think much at all.

I’m half-asleep when I speak again, a sudden thought stirring me from my drowsiness. “I haven’t remembered anything.”

“What’s that?” he asks, his voice rumbling through his chest next to my cheek.

“All the times we kissed today, I didn’t remember anything. I usually remember things when you touch me.”

“Only me?”

“Only you,” I say. “But today I didn’t. I didn’t remember anything.”

“Maybe the wrong part of your mind was engaged tonight,” he says, tickling my side until I laugh out loud and smack his arm.

But he’s got a point. With his lips against mine, my mind definitely doesn’t function at its highest level.

He walks me to my door but hesitates when I lean in for another kiss.

“Did you turn into a pumpkin?” I tease.

“Cute,” he says. “I just haven’t met your parents yet. Seems a little rude to make out with you on the doorstep.”

He’s smiling, but that same tight look is back on his features. He looks around the road and then back at me before pressing a quick kiss to my lips.

“Sweet dreams, Chloe.”

I nod through a yawn then snag his hand as he’s turning away. “You’re still going to help me get to the bottom of this, right?”

“How can I resist an offer like that?”

I kiss him again, lingering a little before I draw back. “You can’t. I won’t let you. I’ll see you soon?”

“Not soon enough.”

I’m not sure my feet even hit the ground as I walk inside. I’m floating on a bubble of hormonal giddiness. I swear, I should have chirping birds trailing behind me.

I glide into the kitchen, smile so wide my cheeks hurt. It dies on my lips when I flip on the overhead light, illuminating my mother leaned against the sink.

“I think we need to have a little talk.”

Chapter Eighteen

There are no little talks with my mother, and this one is no exception. It’s like sitting through a eulogy or a recitation of the local phone book. Except I’d prefer either of those things over this.

She doesn’t yell either. Just drones on and on about the endless depths of her disappointment and my failure to live up to my potential.

“Are you even listening to me?” she asks.

Not
really.

“Yes.”

She shakes her head, signaling the move into act three. The Guilt Effect. “Chloe, when you tell me you’re out with friends to study, I believe you. That trust is broken now.”

“I said I’m sorry,” I say, pressing my still-tender lips together. “I’m not sure what else you want me to tell you.”

“Well, I’d ask you where you’ve been, but I’m not even sure I want to know.”

I look up then, and there’s no mistaking the way she’s looking at me. I haven’t checked a mirror to be sure, but I know there’s no chance my hair and lip gloss are anywhere close to being intact.

“It’s not as bad as you’re obviously thinking,” I tell her, hoping it will appease her.

It doesn’t.

“You know, did you ever stop tonight to think about how Blake would feel if he knew you were out with another boy?”

“Mom, please.” This is
so
not a conversation I want to have with her.

“Don’t
please
me,” she says. “I thought I raised you better than this. That boy cares about you. And he could provide you with a hell of a lot better future than Adam Reed.”

I stand up then, chair legs scraping on the hardwood floor. “You were spying on me?”

“I was worried about you. When Blake called tonight, I had no idea where you were.”

“Wait a minute, Blake called here?”

“Isn’t that what I just said?”

“He called here
tonight
?”

“Yes, tonight. He said he was out with most of the SAT group and wanted to see if you were interested in joining them. Which was really interesting news to me, since you were supposedly already with them.”

Fear moves through me as cold as the air I just walked out of. “What did you say to him?”

Her eyes go dark with anger. “Don’t worry, Chloe. At that point I didn’t know, so I didn’t spill your little secret. But I can’t tell you how deeply it disappoints me that all you’re worried about is hiding your liaison with
that
boy
.”

“No, Mom, I’m not thinking about my
liaison
. And I’m not thinking about
Adam
either, who, by the way, has an academic record that makes me look like a trained chimp. Right now I’m thinking about Blake, who’s been practically stalking me since I broke up with him.”

Mom crosses her arms and rolls her eyes. “Don’t you think that’s a bit dramatic?”

“I think you see whatever the hell you want to see. With me. With Blake. Even with Adam, who you don’t know anything about at all.”

“I know he’s got a criminal record, and I’m not talking about a string of parking tickets. Did he tell you about that, Chloe? Did he tell you about the time he got arrested? Because I was on shift at the hospital that night. I stitched up his arm while the officers read him his rights.”

***

Mr. Chow moves in the front of the class, holding a stack of papers. I glance around. The faces around me are getting familiar. Julien grins at me, and I return it, glad I’ve hit it off with someone so quickly. Almost as glad as I am that I get to spend every Tuesday and Thursday evening in the same room with Blake Tanner.

“This is a timed math test,” Mr. Chow says, passing out the papers. “The objective is to move as quickly as you can to keep your mind sharp and prepared for change.”

“What’s the catch?” Blake asks, motioning at the desks that have been set up in pairs.

“Trading,” Mr. Chow says, smiling. “Every sixty seconds you will trade papers with your partner. This will keep you from looking ahead, a common mental pattern that can leave you anxious for future questions. Anxiety is like kryptonite to peak performance.”

“Sounds easy enough,” Julien says, and we smile at each other pointedly. She knows darned well math is a strong suit for me.

Mr. Chow shakes his head at this, chuckling. “I don’t think so, girls. I’ll be assigning the partners. Blake, you’re with Raul. Julien, with Tanja. Chloe, you’ll be with Adam.”

I
force
myself
not
to
grimace. I’ve avoided him since the fire alarm incident, and really, I think that’s preferable. We sit down across from each other, papers facedown and timers set.

I
look
at
my
cuticles
and
check
for
split
ends
while
Mr. Chow fiddles with a malfunctioning timer at another table.

“Pull any fire alarms lately?” Adam asks.

I
roll
my
eyes. “You just couldn’t let it go, could you?”

Adam
grins
up
at
me. “I really didn’t think you’d have the guts to go through with it.”

“I’m full of surprises, I guess.”

“Good,” he says. “I like surprises.”

***

The sound of my phone pulls me from my dream. Not my cell phone, but my house phone, a corded pink concoction that I almost forgot I still had. I grope blindly for the handle, lifting it clumsily to my ear.

“Hello?”

“So d-do you need a ride t-to a school or what?”

I bolt upright, clutching the blankets to my chest and grinning like a loon. “Yes! I mean, yeah. If it’s not too much trouble.”

“I’ll b-be there in twenty,” Maggie says. “By the way, your cell phone’s off.”

“Okay. See you soon.”

It’s better than Christmas. I practically dance out of my bed and to my bathroom. Then I rush back, finding my phone in the jeans I shucked off last night before falling into bed. I find a five-dollar bill in one of the pockets. Change from the Twinkies I bought.

I trace the red squares Adam doodled in the corner of the receipt to demonstrate some basics of structural stability or something. I think of my mother’s comments last night and then of the scar I felt on his arm.

So what? He’s not a bad person. Whatever my mom
thinks
she knows is obviously wrong.

I pick out clothes and head into the bathroom, glancing at the time on the clock.

Time. Timers. What a minute.

I stop, one foot into the hallway, and remember the dream I woke up from. Except it wasn’t a dream. It was a
memory
. Holy crap, it’s finally starting to come back.

I’m showered, dressed, and ready ten minutes before Maggie said she’d arrive. And it’s worse than a first date because I’m pacing in front of the door and chewing my lip. I’m half-convinced she’s never going to show. That she’ll stand me up and leave us right back where we were a couple of weeks ago.

The ragged putter of the pickup’s engine is heaven to my ears. I adjust my backpack and pick up both of the to-go coffee mugs I prepped. It’s almost like every other morning I can remember before all of this happened.

I head for the truck and hand her the coffee.

“You still drink it with cream?”

“You’re drinking it again?” she asks, obviously surprised.

I drop my bag on the floor with a smirk. “I haven’t changed that much.”

Mags takes a sip of her coffee, and I see her smile for the first time in what feels like forever. Okay. Yeah, it’s going to be okay.

I drink my coffee and listen to Maggie’s latest punk obsession, and I promise myself I will treasure this moment. I promise I won’t think about Blake’s dad or Adam’s scarred wrist or any of the stuff that’s happening. I don’t quite manage, but I’m close.

***

My day has taken a steep nosedive. Maggie barely said boo on the way to school. And I managed to tank not one but
two
quizzes in my first three periods. What the hell happened to my superpower brain?

I slide through the lunch line, grabbing a tuna sandwich that looks as pale and lifeless as I feel. I snag an apple and set it on my tray with a sigh.

“Bad morning?”

I try to bite back a smile, but it’s impossible. I feel the press of Adam’s arm against my shoulder, and my face practically blooms.

“I thought you might have bailed today,” I say.

“I never skip school.”

I frown up at him, furrowing my brows. “Why on earth not? You’ve got a godlike GPA. I’d probably only show up on Tuesdays.”

He just laughs and pushes his way down the line, paying for both of our lunches.

“So do I actually get to eat with you or is this a drive-by flirt?” I ask.

“Drive-by,” he says, then he looks over his shoulder at a table where Blake is glaring in our direction. “I think it’s too early to stir the waters.”

“Since when do you care what he thinks?”

“I don’t. But I think you still might.”

I feel like a balloon that lost its air. “So yesterday…”

“Was a
very
good day,” he fills in with another shoulder bump.

“But it was just a day,” I say, hating the hollow ache in my middle.

“Hm, I think I need to be more clear.” A wicked smile curves on his face as he leans close, his breath tickling the side of my neck. “I’m not going to kiss you in front of him. But you’d better believe I’m thinking about it.”

He backs away again, and I’m pretty sure he takes all the oxygen in the room with him because every breath I take feels thinner than the last.

“So this weekend,” he says. “Study date? We’ve got that pre-calc final.”

“I just tanked my quizzes in chemistry and English. You might need to trade me up for a better model.”

“Hell no. Math’s
your
subject. You’re not getting out of helping me because of a bad mood.”

He dumps his tray by the cafeteria door, keeping only the apple he stole from my plate. I can’t help but call across to him.

“You’re not even eating?”

“I paid for the company,” he says. He gives me one last grin, one that makes my whole middle squeeze in on itself, and then he’s gone.

Blake’s expression wipes the smile right off my face. I see him whip out his cell phone, texting something almost violently.

“Okay, I’m officially wanting t-to know what the hell you’re up to.”

I whirl with my tray, tuna sandwich almost sliding off. “Maggie?”

I don’t know whether to do cartwheels at the fact that she’s speaking to me in public or to be terrified of the bald accusation in her eyes.

“Yeah, we need t-to talk,” she says. “Back steps?”

“Definitely.”

We make our way out of the cafeteria to the back stairs of the school. During freshman year, I got in trouble once for being too loud in the cafeteria. When it became perfectly clear I was never going to learn to keep my trap shut, we found the back stairs. Right across from the girls’ bathroom, we could always claim feminine issues if the teachers asked.

I glance at the bathroom door, listening to the squeal of underclassmen inside. I remember those days, poised in front of the mirror, lip-glossing myself into a shimmery concoction for a boy that probably didn’t even know I existed.

We nibble our sandwiches in quiet for a while before Maggie puts hers down and brushes off her hands. “So what’s going on with you?”

“What do you mean?

“I mean your sudden g-guy switch. You’re t-trading in Blake f-for Adam?”

“It’s not like that,” I say, but really it’s sort of exactly like that.

“Are you sure you know what you’re doing?”

I put down my uneaten half sandwich. “No. I’m not.”

Maggie seems satisfied with this until she frowns. “I never got it, you know. The hot factor.”

“With Adam?” I ask.

She waves a hand dismissively. “No, not Adam. He’s g-got that whole tragic but beautiful thing happening, though I never thought you noticed.”

“I didn’t,” I admit, dropping my voice to a whisper. “But I do now. I can barely go an hour without noticing.”

“I was t-talking about Blake.”

I feel my nose wrinkle. “You didn’t get why I’d like Blake? Who doesn’t like Blake? He’s Mr. Nice Guy,” I say, though I’m sarcastic as hell.

Mags pushes her plate away and looks across the hall, shaking her head. “Maybe. Or maybe that’s what he wants everyone to think. I could never t-tell.”

“You never said anything to me.”

“I never thought your crush would come t-to anything.” She turns sideways on the step to face me.

It stings like a barbed hook, and I lean back, recoiling. “So you thought I never had a chance with him?”

“No. But I d-didn’t think he’d have a chance with you either. Not if you really knew him.”

I don’t know what to think then. I nod once, and Maggie picks at her sneaker.

“Did you look into Dr. Kirkpatrick?” she asks.

“I did. I thought I had something, but it might be a dead end.”

“Keep digging. I’m t-telling you, there’s something there.”

“What about Mr. Chow? Is he even still here this year?”

Maggie shakes her head. “I heard he got a teaching gig b-back in China. I don’t know—he seemed p-pretty harmless.”

“And my mild-mannered therapist didn’t?”

Maggie’s face pinches off. “Maybe. But she wasn’t.”

“Then I guess I’ll have to keep looking.”

“You don’t have to d-do anything.” She shrugs, sliding her disinterest back into place.

“Yes, I do. Julien said I know what happened to her. Do you think I can just let that be?”

“I d-don’t know how long you can
let
it
be
. Lately you haven’t exactly b-been the person I thought you were.”

“I’m
still
the same person. I haven’t changed.” Mags looks unconvinced, so I reach for her hand, giving her fingers a squeeze. “I know you don’t believe me.”

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