canât believe Iâm saying this, Iâm here to rescue you. Now get up, before Mark Rodgers comes in here and kills you.â
Â
Nueve
I F I HADNâT believed Markâs version of what had happened that night on Rocky Creek Bridge, I did when I saw the expression that flashed across Zack Farhatâs face when I said Mark was coming to kill him.
Sheer panic. For a second, he lowered his hands to the king-Âsized mattress and began to push himself up from in front of the plasma screen, as if to go with me.
Never had I seen a more guilty-Âlooking individual, someone whoâd known heâd done wrong and had been expecting what was coming to him. ZackâÂa strong, dark, handsome boyâÂwas accepting his fate like a man.
Well, this is good , I thought. Not what I was expecting, but good . . . the first good thing to happen all day, as a matter of fact. Maybe things are starting to go my way.
Of course I thought too soon. It didnât last. Why would it?
Because a split second later, Zack seemed to realize something through his drug-Âinduced haze, and froze. The panic left, and was replaced by a look I recognized, because Iâd seen it before on the faces of a hundred guys just like him.
Nope. Never mind. No win for Suze. This guy thought he was smarter than me. He thought he was smarter than everyone.
Well, why not? Heâd already killed two Âpeople and gotten away with it. All he had to do was stick with his story, and he was home free.
Or so he thought.
He lowered himself back against his bed.
âWait,â he said, drawing the word out so that it had about five syllables, in true stoner form. âMark canât be coming here to kill me. Heâs dead.â
âYouâre right about the last part,â I said. âNot so right about the first. Markâs dead, but heâs not very happy with you for killing him, and Jasmin, too. See, thatâs why minors arenât supposed to smoke that stuff unless theyâre under a licensed physicianâs care. It makes them forgetful.â I hit him in the forehead with the flat of my hand on the word forgetful . âAnd also stupid.â I hit him again on the word stupid .
âOw.â He ducked and crawled to the far side of the bed so heâd be out of my reach. âStop that. What are you talking about? What makes you think I had anything to do withâÂ?â
âThe deaths of Mark Rodgers and Jasmin Ahmadi? Oh, gosh, Zack, I donât know. Maybe that ?â
I pointed to a far wall of his room, opposite a pair of French doors that led out to a balcony overlooking the Pacific Ocean (which for once didnât look so pacified, thanks to the storm). Taped to the wall were dozensâÂmaybe even a hundredâÂphotos of Jasmin, including the one from her headstone, which must have been one of her senior photos, since there were other equally posed photos of her in the same outfit, smiling confidently into the camera.
Only instead of sending these photos out with her graduation announcements, her grieving family had apparently sent them to her friends and family with an announcement of her death.
Zack had artfully arranged these particular photos in a large heart shape around a single photo of the two of them arm-Âin-Âarm from what appeared to have been a Halloween party, since he was dressed as a tiger and she a bunny rabbit (I estimated it was a party circa fourth grade, possibly the last time Jasmin had willingly allowed herself to be photographed beside him, at least on nondigital film).
Beneath this display Zack had lit a number of votive candles on a small table, and also laid out a copy of what appeared to be their school yearbook, open to a page showing Jasminâs prowess on the track team.
Oh, yeah. This guy wasnât a creeper at all.
âIf thatâs not a shrine,â I said, âI donât know what
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