romanticized it all. Alice romanticized everything. Edith had known that the first time theyâd met. Under the romanticism, though, there was a simple need, naked and raw. Edith maynot have spent any time in bed with men, but she knew that need as thoroughly as she knew the difference between Single and Double Bergamot Earl Grey tea.
Alice disappeared, going off on a side path somewhere. She was not a straightforward woman. Edith did not find it odd that she would not be able to take a straightforward path home. She was about to go back to her chair and her book when she saw somebody else, and the somebody else gave her pause. Mark DeAvecca. Practically everybody in school thought Mark DeAvecca was taking drugs, handfuls of them. They were trying to ease him out of the school without actually confronting him about it becauseâEdith had heard this from one of the secretaries in the dean of Student Lifeâs officeâthey had done a secret search of his room and not been able to find a single thing. Even his roommate hadnât had anything, and that was Michael Feyre, who came from one of the less savory neighborhoods of Boston and had connections. There was obviously something wrong with Mark. He sat through classes and didnât hear a word that was said. He handed in homework that was only half-done, or didnât hand it in at all, or did it and then left it on the study desk heâd been using in the library so that it was lost, never to be found again. She would have thought he was stupid beyond belief except that she remembered him from the first two weeks of classes, when he had been very different.
It probably is drugs,
she thought, watching him move unsteadily down the path toward her window. She wondered where he had been. He seemed to be coming from the direction of Maverick Pond, but that made no sense. There was nothing out at Maverick Pond this time of year, and the cold was bad enough to give you frostbite if you decided to go out there and contemplate nature. Mark DeAvecca did not seem to be the kind of person who would want to contemplate nature under any circumstances. She had a lot of sympathy for that.
He had stopped on the path and turned to look behind him. Edith bit her lip and made up her mind. She stepped outof her apartment into the hall. She stepped out of the hall onto the back stoop. She hated being outside on the campus on weekend nights. It was always too deserted.
âMark?â she called to him.
He looked up. âMs. Braxner?â
Edith did not correct him. The culture of the school didnât matter to her at all. She preferred to be addressed formally, and all the students addressed her formally. Even Alice Makepeace addressed her formally on occasion, but that was a story with a different moral and not one she wanted to think about now.
âYou look frozen,â she said. âWorse than frozen, really. Where have you been?â
Mark looked around. âOut to the pond. And around. I was talking to Philip for a while.â
âPhilip Candor?â
âYes.â
âAbout what?â
Mark looked around again. âI went back to Hayes and I was going to go to bed, but it was still bothering me, so I sort of turned around and came back out; and then I went down there to see, and it wasnât there. Of course it wasnât there. I imagined it, I guess.â
âImagined what?â
âNothing,â Mark said. âThis is where? What house is this?â
âLytton.â
âOh, right. There was somebody named Bulwer-Lytton, am I right? They didnât name the house after Bulwer-Lytton though, did they?â
âNo. He was an English writer from the nineteenth century. Famously bad.â
âOkay.â
Edith hesitated. She did not usually fraternize with students. She did not like this pretense of equality that Windsor Academy was so desperate to foster. She didnât like to know too much about her
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