The Mary Shelley Club Goldy Moldavsky (android based ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Goldy Moldavsky
Book online «The Mary Shelley Club Goldy Moldavsky (android based ebook reader txt) đ». Author Goldy Moldavsky
âYou said âpranksters.â Plural. Everyone else thinks itâs only one person.â
The impenetrable smirk faltered. It was nearly imperceptible, but I caught it.
âIâll see you around, Rachel.â
When Freddie walked off, I didnât follow him.
Even though I wanted to.
6
PRANKSTERS. A GROUP of them.
I hadnât just imagined itâFreddie had slipped up. It seemed so obvious now. Of course he hadnât acted alone at the sĂ©ance. He couldnât have pulled that off by himself.
I didnât know how big the group was or who the major players were, but I had a pretty good idea of who else was in on it. Iâd been so focused on Freddie because he was the one in the shadows, controlling the buzzing with his portable speaker. But Iâd totally neglected to consider the one person who hadnât lurked in the shadows but had been center stage.
Thayer Turner and I shared third-period Women in Literature. We were studying Wuthering Heights, and Ms. Liu was trying to convince us it was a good book despite how much she hated everyone in it. As she ranted, I watched Thayer. From Ms. Liuâs perspective, it probably looked like he was taking copious notes, but from where I sat, one row over and one seat back, I could see that he was actually drawing an incredibly detailed face. It was grotesquely exaggerated, with dark, hollow eyes and crisscrossing scars.
âBut why didnât he do that?â Ms. Liu asked. âAny opinion on the matter, Mr. Turner?â
Thayerâs head snapped up. I had no idea what Ms. Liu was asking, and by the looks of it, Thayer didnât either. I watched as he put down his pencil, closed his notebook, and cleared his throat.
âWell, what I think youâre really asking me, Ms. Liu, is why did he think he had the right to ⊠do that? Why did he have the courage, the nerve, the audacity to ⊠do the thing that he did that you were just talking about a second ago? And the answer, which Iâm sure youâll agree with, is that itâs because Heathcliff is a total babe.â
âOkay, Thayer, thank you,â Ms. Liu said loudly, trying to drown out the chuckles.
âWhat?â Thayer said. âAll the descriptions in the book about him? Tall, dark, searing eyes warming Cath up on the moors. Break me off a piece of that Heath bar.â
âI said thank you, Mr. Turner. Ms. Chavez, care to answer the question?â
Sheâd caught me off guard and I stared at Ms. Liu for a beat too long. âSorry, what?â
âYour opinion on Heathcliffâs desire for revenge.â
âOh. Um.â My eyes danced over my notebook real quick. It was blank. âRevenge is bad.â
Ms. Liu looked as though she was waiting for me to say more. The ensuing silence in the room was deafening. A girl in Thayerâs rowâone of Luxâs friendsâmouthed âloserâ at me. Bram, sitting next to her, stared me down so hard I could feel myself wilting under his glare. From somewhere behind me, I distinctly heard the sound of an unimpressed snort.
The longer everybody looked at me, the more it felt like I had a bear trap around my neck. My mind went so blank that I couldnât even remember what book we were talking about, and I was pretty sure my mouth was making useless, halfhearted shapes.
But then the bell rang and everyone forgot I existed as they threw their stuff into their bags. I could breathe again.
Ms. Liu tried to feed us some last bits of information, but my focus was on Thayer. I channeled the adrenaline I was feeling into chasing after him.
As I ran out the door, I nearly collided with him. He was standing there, apparently waiting for me. âYou were watching me in class.â
âWhat?â I said. âNo, I wasnât.â
âIâm very observant. Donât try to lie.â
âIâm not lyââ
âYou followed me this morning, New Girl. Before first period and after second. I mean, I get itâIâm captivating. You can do whatever you want, but please try not to fall in love with me. It will only end in heartbreak.â
âUh.â It was all I could manage.
But then he winked and bumped my elbow with his. It felt like an invitation to walk the hall with him. So I did.
âI saw your drawing,â I said. âNice shading of the, uh, scars.â
âThank you! Artists are rarely appreciated during their lifetimes.â
âIt was Leatherface, right? I love Leatherface.â
Thayer served me a highly quirked brow. âWeird taste in guys, but who am I to judge?â
âI mean, heâs my favorite movie bad guy of all time.â
Thayer smiled but picked up the pace. âYouâre a horror fan.â
âYeah.â I rushed to keep up. âI knew you were one too by the way you told that story at the sĂ©ance. About Greta and Frank and the flies coming out Frankâs mouth. Youâre a good storyteller.â
âWell, arenât you full of compliments? I should let you follow me around all the time. But that story is completely true.â
I let out a laugh and Thayer looked at me sideways.
âCome on, Thayer, I spoke to Freddie,â I said.
âFreddie who?â
He was going to play dumb, just like Freddie had. Which meant I just had to cut to the chase. âFreddie Martinez. He told me about your group.â
Thayer stopped walking again, and this time when he looked at me, it wasnât with skepticism or charm or humor, but alarm.
âFreddie would never tell,â he whispered.
âSo there is a group. I knew it.â
âShit,â Thayer said. âShit shit shit.â He started walking again, faster than before, but I ran after him, compelled to find out more about this group. At first Iâd only cared about the sĂ©ance and clearing things up so I could get the target off my back. But I was fascinated by Freddie and Thayer, and I felt like they were part of something more. Something I wanted to be part of.
âIs it just about playing tricks on people?â
âNo. Keep your voice down.â
âDo you have to be a horror fan to join? How do you join?â
âNobody gets into the club without
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