nothing to hide from him. âIâd appreciate that. Iâve got tons of homework.â
The trip to Gunbarrel Greens, their subdivision, started out as silently as their drives usually were. But again it was not a comfortable silence. Megan squirmed in her seat and longed to escape sitting there beside Derrick. She wanted to shout, âStop!â and jump out of the van. Could Derrick feel her fear? She had a feeling he could. She wanted to throw up a shield between them, hide her thoughts, her emotions.
âDerrick?â Megan had to ease the tension. Sheâd try talking. âRemember when you said I had given you a good idea? Ready to tell me what it was?â She tried to laugh casually.
âI doubt youâd understand it if I did tell you about it, Megan,â Derrick said.
âNow youâre insulting my intelligence.â Megan tried to tease, pretend she was offended by Derrickâs remark. âJust because youâre some kind of genius, doesnât mean you have the corner on intelligence. Try me. I might understand more than you know.â
âI donât think so.â Derrick really wasnât going to tell her anything.
âCome on, Derrick. If you tell me and I donât understand, then you can say, âI told you so.â You have my permission. I thought you liked me. That we were friends.â Megan kept talking.
Derrick stared at her while they waited for a stoplight. Then he turned his eyes back to the road.
Megan kept pretending that things were normal. âPick me up tomorrow for staff meeting?â She opened the door when they got to her house.
âSure, Megan. No problem.â
She slammed the van door; then had to open it, slam it again. No problem . She hoped there wasnât a problem. Please, please, she thought as she ran to her door. Let Robert be right. Let me look foolish. Let me be wrong about this, whatever it is. Let me be wrong about Derrick.
Chapter 10
By nine oâclock that evening Megan had a plan. It wasnât a good one, but it was the only one she could think of. She had to get inside Derrickâs house, into his darkroom. She might find something thereâwhat, she couldnât imagine, but something. A poisoned apple for the sleeping beauties?
Her mind had gone from rational thinking to silly, confusing theories all evening. If she could just stop her imagination from going in all directions until she had some more facts.
Even if she had to apologize to Robert, she needed him in on the plan. She dialed his number.
âRobert, I know you think Iâm being silly, but go along with me, please. Itâs important. I need you to give Derrick an assignment so Iâll know where he is for a couple of hours.â
There was a pause at the other end of the line. Then Robert laughed. âOkay, Megan. Iâll give him the city council assignment. Heâll hate it. But we need someone there, since theyâre talking about school funding, possibly some remodeling at the high school.â
âYouâll insist he go?â
âYes. Iâll find a good reason why I canât.â
Robert made good on his promise Tuesday morning. Derrick grumbled about having to go to the city council meeting, but in addition to the remodeling, a group of Boulder Highâs council was going to propose a joint city and school Renaissance festival. Robert wanted a report on both activities in the school paper. Megan had given him the word from Mrs. Leffingwell. He didnât like his paper being criticized and thought a picture of Boulderâs woman mayor and Boulder Highâs female student council president would be good on the front page of the next issue. He assigned Jim to write up a serious election story to go with the photos.
The day dragged on. Meganâs mind wasnât on school. She missed Cynthia. She ate her lunch alone in the newspaper office, looking over past issues.
School out,
Dan Wells
David Schiff
Amy Corwin
Simon van Booy
Anne O'Brien
Pierre Ouellette
Fred Saberhagen
Cynthia Bailey Pratt
Terri Anne Browning
Val McDermid