him relentlessly, and then her brother had killed himself.
The other girls seemed to remember Taylor at the same time. Mackenzie wrapped her chunky knit sweater tighter around her body. âI didnât mean . . .â
âIn fact, sheâs one of the worst of them,â Caitlin went on. âBecause she didnât even care. She didnât even feel bad.â
An awkward silence fell. Mackenzie stared miserably down at her hands. Julie glanced from one girl to the next. Ava clicked her pen, again and again.
Then Parker took a deep breath. âI know itâs kind of sick,â she said, her voice low, âbut sometimes I think the judge was right. Some people deserve to be punished.â
Tears almost formed in Julieâs eyesâit was the first time Parker had spoken in class in ages. But then she glanced around at the shocked faces. Okay, maybe what Parker said was a little harsh, but Julie didnât want her to recede into her shell again.
âRight?â she piped up. âI mean, I know some people who deserve punishment. Personally, first on my list would be Parkerâs dad. The judge let him off too easy.â
The girlsâ muscles stiffened, the way everyoneâs always did when Parkerâs accident came up. The whole school knew what Parkerâs dad had done to her that nightâthe evidence was all over her face, for starters, plus heâd ended up in jail, which never happened in a place like Beacon.
They continued talking, mentioning people in their lives whoâd wronged themâeach of the girls had someone who had hurt them, tooâwhen suddenly Caitlin leaned forward.
âYou know who Iâd get rid of?â Her eyes glinted as she looked across the room, toward another groupâs table. Nolan Hotchkiss leaned back in his chair, his arms crossed over his chest. He laughed loudly at something, a mocking sneer on his handsome face. âHim,â she said in a dark voice.
The table went silent again. Admitting that Nolan was a jerk seemed dangerous somehow. If he ever found out, theyâd be his next targets.
âNolan is an asshole,â Ava breathed. âHe started rumors about me. Awful ones.â
Mackenzieâs cheeks were blazing red. She stared down at her hands, picking at the edge of her cuticles. âHeâs got . . . something heâs been holding over me, too.â
Julie nodded. She hated Nolan for his role in Parkerâs incident. If it hadnât been for him, maybe none of it would have happened. Parker would still be her old self.
Ava scratched her pen along the table. âHow would you do it? If you were going to kill him, I mean?â
A light came on behind Caitlinâs eyes. âYou know how Iâd do it? Oxy. Everyone knows itâs his drug of choice.â
âAnd then heâd be . . . gone ,â Parker said wistfully.
âOr cyanide,â Caitlin had continued. âJust like in the old movies. Itâs completely odorless and colorless. Difficult to detect. Heâd be dead in minutes.â
Mackenzie had snickered. âThat certainly would do it.â
âFinally.â
Julie looked up. She and Carson had reached the front of the line, and Carson was pumping beer into a red Solo cup. He handed it to Julie. âWell, cheers, Julie Redding,â he said, touching his cup to hers. âI hope to get to know you better.â
âI hope so, too. . . .â Julie was about to say more when something on the television in the den caught her eye. The chief of police stood at a podium in front of dozens of reporters, his face lit by camera flashes. Across the bottom of the screen, the text read: POLICE HOLD PRESS CONFERENCE ABOUT HOTCHKISS DEATH .
âOh my god,â she said. Without thinking, she left the keg, grabbed the remote off the side table, and turned the volume up.
More kids drifted over, too. âCut the music,â Asher
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