The Mary Shelley Club Goldy Moldavsky (android based ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Goldy Moldavsky
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I put down my sandwich. My stomach suddenly hurt but Saundra didnât notice my loss of appetite. She ate distractedly, her gaze locked on the center of the room. It was the prime real estate of the schoolâs upper echelon. Saundra watched Bram and his friends like they were doing something truly remarkable instead of the same eating and chatting as the rest of us plebes.
Thanks to Saundra, I learned everything I never wanted to know about Bram. He was the product of Andrew and Delilah Wilding, a publishing magnate of Scottish descent and a former model from Cairo, respectively. But I knew something about Bram that Saundra couldnât know. Like what his lips felt like.
âAll the guys in my old high school were ogres,â I said. Saundra was doing me a solid by not talking about the elephant in the room (my sudden notoriety and social ostracism), but I desperately needed to change the subject. âCould we talk about literally anything else?â
âOkay, we can talk about the party, which I am legit still not over. We got to find out that Luxâs legendary locks are actually extensions?â Saundra looked up and sighed. âYou pray to the scandal gods, but you just never think youâll get a response, you know?â
âYou didnât think it was a mean prank?â I asked.
âOh, donât tell me you believe those rumors.â
âWhat rumors?â
Saundraâs eyes lit up. If there was one thing she liked to talk about more than Bram Wilding, it was rumors. âI forgot youâre new and you donât know all of Manchesterâs dirty secrets.â She swept her plate to the side, as though she needed to make space for the enormity of what she was about to say.
âPeople think thereâs some big prankster in school pulling the strings behind everybodyâs biggest humiliations. Like one time, Erica Belcott got locked in the basement pool at the Y and when they found her, she was curled up in the fetal position on the diving board. She said someone had been flicking the lights on and off. Another time Jonathan Calden woke up in a dumpster behind a Red Lobster without knowing how he got there. And there was that one time when Julia Mahoney swore somebody was leaving her creepy notes written in red lipstick all over the place, and when she found a tube of lipstick in her backpack in AP Chem, she freaked out and knocked over the Bunsen and nearly set the class on fire.
âHence, the prankster theory. People think itâs all connected, that one person is behind it all. Theyâll say, âThat asshole got me.â But itâs like, uh, no, Jonathan, how about some personal responsibility? Waking up in a dumpster is your own fault for going to that Red Lobster in Jersey.â
Usually when Saundra dropped a bunch of names on me I zoned out like it was white noise. But a mysterious menace on the loose, screwing with peopleâs lives? âTell me more.â
âItâs been going on forever,â Saundra said. âI heard about the âpranksterâ before I even started high school. But itâs just one of those urban legends.â
My mind went to the boy Iâd seen when the lights came back up at the abandoned house. The one whoâd discreetly shut off his portable speaker while everyone was distracted. Iâd found out his nameâFreddie Martinez. A look around the cafeteria and I spotted him, the sight of the loose curls cresting over his light brown forehead unmistakable. He sat surrounded by a group of friends.
âWho are those guys?â I asked Saundra.
âUgh. The Tisch Boys. Theyâre in the Film Club together. Theyâre all going to the Tisch School at NYU to study moviesâsorry, film,â said Saundra. âAnd one of them is actually a Tisch. Carefulâthey might try to recruit you on account of their club not having a single girl in its membership. Itâs a huge optics issue. Once, Pruit Pusivic was trying to flirt with me and for a minute I was into it but then it hit me, like, Wait, do you really like me or are you just trying to get me to join Film Club? It really gave me trust issues.â
âOh.â
âExactly,â Saundra said. âThey think theyâre cool, but theyâre just pretentious nerds.â
I didnât think Freddie looked all that nerdy, though. Yeah, there were the thick glasses frames, but I kind of liked them. Plus, he had the relaxed posture and easy smile of someone with a healthy amount of confidence. And there was that jawline. Sharp enough to light a match on. His clothes were kind of messyâthe uniform oxford shirt wasnât ironed like the other boysâ, and his shoes were scuffed and in need of polishingâbut I got the feeling all of that was on purpose. A look he cultivated.
âAnd what about that guy?â I said, jutting my chin in Freddieâs direction.
âFreddie Martinez?â Saundra asked. âWhy?â
âJust curious.â
The look on her face said there were much more interesting people to gossip about at this school, but Saundra was always happy to show off her encyclopedic knowledge of the student body, even if it was only Freddie Martinez. She took a deep breath and launched into a list of Freddie facts.
I learned that he and I had something in common: In a school of one-percenters, we fell somewhere in the ninety-nine. He was a scholarship kid. His mom was a caterer who he helped out on the weekends, but he also sold cheat sheets and term papers. And apparently, for the right price heâd even take your standardized tests for you. Around here that was a lucrative side gig.
âBasically, heâll do anything for a buck, which is so tacky, but I guess it comes in handy if you suck at algebra or something.â Saundra took a breath. âThereâs also rumors he deals drugs, but personally I find those rumors so racist.â
It was a good thing she wasnât spreading them, then.
Freddie was deep in conversation with the guy sitting next
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