The Gaps Leanne Hall (readict books .TXT) đ
- Author: Leanne Hall
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âWhat are we going to do with our spare?â
Sarah hasnât spoken in five minutes and I wouldnât be able to tell you the last time that happened, hallelujah itâs a miracle. Iâd almost forgotten she was there.
I flip my headphones off.
âOh, I have detention. I got busted wagging RE this morning.â The lie slips out beautifullyâthe best sort of lie, the one you donât know youâre going to tell until itâs half-said. A good lie gives me a warm tingle. âI said I couldnât stay after school so Mrs Preshill said I had to do it in my free period.â
Sarah pouts. âWe have a theory. We need to tell you.â
I should be relieved, I suppose, that Sarah is talking about something other than herself. But if she says one more thing about Yinâs parents, I donât know what Iâll do.
Marley nods furiously behind her. âBut we shouldnât discuss it here.â
Sarah ignores that. âItâs Mr Martell. You know, Tyrone.â
I do know. Mr Martell is the schoolâs official photographer and heâs not ancient and heâs rumoured to have had sex with a handful of Year Twelves, or at least copped a handful of almost-legal Balmoral boob.
Mr Martell is supposedly hot, but his legs are bandy and heâs going to go bald early, you can already tell. Heâs a bagel in a shop full of sliced wholemeal bread: not that exciting, especially if there are donuts available right around the corner.
âDid I tell you about the time during theatre sports when I caught him pointing his camera right at my tits? Right at them! I should probably tell the police that.â
And there it is again. The me me me-nologue. Sarah is sparking with manufactured outrage.
âTeaghan said that Rochelle saw a folder on Tyroneâs laptop that was called âSports Day Cutiesâ,â Marley says. âHe had close-ups of all these girlsâ faces and was going to take them home, you know, to fantasise over.â
âFantasise?â I say. âDonât you mean âmasturbateâ? Also, you know that Teaghan lies for attention, remember?â
Thereâs no way that Rochelle could get access to that computer. Marley blinks at me, but Sarah takes up the thread.
âWe remember, Tal. But maybe Tyroneâs got a pervert room at his house with photos of Balmoral students covering the walls and thatâs how he plans who heâs going to take next. Itâs his special collection of favourite girls.â
âYou got that idea from Devil Creek,â I say.
Theyâre squashing the buzz I built up during lunch, the fuzz that crowded out the bad thoughts.
I see Iâm going to have to jog their memories. âThat happened at the end of the first episode, remember? When they found that creepy shed in the bush? It was for only a split second before the credits. Theyâll come back to it later.â
We binged three episodes of Devil Creek together on Saturday night, not together as in the same room, but messaging each other from our separate houses. No one else picks up any of the clues, though.
The small country town of Devil Creekâwhere everyone is suspiciously buff and good looking and totally not inbred or married to their cousinsâis rocked by the murder of the prettiest girl in town, Emily Blake, and of course sheâs the nicest person too. Only after sheâs dead do her secrets come outâand not just hers. Everyone in town is a suspect and the police still havenât found the murderer, and conveniently probably wonât until the very last moments of season one.
Mere hours after the first season of the show dropped, Yin went missing.
Iâm pretty sure theyâre setting it up to reveal that lovely dead ginger Emily Blake was slutting it up with both of the two hot-but-ignorant brothers, each without the other knowing, and if theyâre thinking that has anything to do with anything in the real world then they need to get a grip.
Yin doesnât talk to guys. Maybe she talks to them once a year when our orchestra joins our brother schoolâs orchestra for two weeks of orgiastic rehearsals and they compare their reeds or work on their embouchures or whatever.
I feel sick all of a sudden and thatâs not only an expression, because bile rises up into my mouth, acid and putrid, and I have to bend at the waist to stop things going further.
Iâm a terrible human being for entertaining myself with thoughts about a fake show about a fake murder while Yin was getting ripped out of her ordinary life. When I try to imagine the first moment she realised there was a strange man in her house, I canât breathe.
I pretend to be sure that sheâs gone for good because isnât it better to think the worst? Deep down, though, thereâs stubborn hope that I wish I could wipe away forever, just for some certainty.
I push it all down and straighten up, once Iâm sure I wonât puke.
âHello, are you listening to anything Iâm saying?â Sarah waves her hand in my face. âAre we going to Moose Juice on the way home?â
Weâre the only three people left in the hallway, but pre-weekend electricity still crackles in the air; the normal kind plus extra nasty electricity because girls go missing on weekends and donât come back to school on Monday morning. I realise that I donât want to do anything this weekend but lock myself in my bedroom and stay in bed.
âMaybe,â I say.
We get the announcement at lunchtime that theyâve cancelled our classes for periods five and six and instead our entire year level crams into the gym and we spend the final hours of the school week trying to maim each other.
âLadies!â hollers our new self-defence teacher, a blonde-haired, blue-eyed woman who used to be on TV and calls herself the Ninja Trainer. âIâm going to teach you to use your natural feminine strengths to defeat attackers who are bigger! And heavier! Than you! Get into sparring pairs!â
Iâve read that âIn the Unlikely Eventâ email three times and
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