I canât sleep so I pull my whiteboard out of the closet, set it on an easel and work on Sloaneâs case beneath the strained light of my lamp.
Over the last eight months, Iâve been collecting data and piecing scraps of related information together.
The night Sloane was murdered, she got a call from Harris.
She left my place in a hurry.
By the end of the night, she was found in pieces in a bodybag.
Iâm trying to pin together what happened after Sloane left my place. It makes no sense that a sixteen year old would disappear without a trace and then suddenly turn up dead at the hands of a psycho. A crime of passion? Since when? Sloane never told me about having a boyfriend and she talked to me about everything.
Well, everything except why Harris was calling her that night.
All the journalists and reporters were happy to swallow the story the police fed them. Despite telling the cops about Harrisâs call, no mention of it was reported in the news.
What was mentioned was Sloaneâs âproblematicâ history. The media blasted the fact that her mother was a stripper. One particular comment said Sloane was âknown to be promiscuousâ. It was as if sheâd earned what happened to her.
Thinking about it infuriates me and I stare harder at the whiteboard, wishing the pieces would snap together on their own.
âWhat am I missing, Sloane?â I whisper, tapping my pen against a picture of Redwood.
My last big break in the case was ages ago. I made friends with the officers responsible for Sloaneâs case and took them out for drinks. Once they were drunk enough, I started questioning them about Sloane.
Someone let a nugget slip. Sloane was seen at Redwood the night of her murder. The higher-ups were told to scratch that out of the files, but it had already made the rounds in the precinct.
Harris.
Redwood.
Itâs all linked to Sloaneâs demise.
However, I havenât made any progress since then.
Feeling like my head is about to explode, I push the whiteboard back into its hiding place, throw my clothes on top of it and slip downstairs.
Iâm dunking my fork into leftover cobbler when I hear heavy footsteps. I freeze, seeing a tall shadow.
Itâs Finn.
He comes to an abrupt stop on the stairs. Heâs entirely naked from the top up, and Iâm surprised by how ripped he is. Under his neat Redwood Prep uniform and cold manners, the bassist is shredded.
Finn swings his head around as if heâll move back up the stairs.
âYou donât have to run,â I say, pushing the plate at him. âWant some?â
He narrows his eyes at me, considers it for a moment and then patters to the kitchen, bare-foot and mysterious.
I bring a fork out of the drawer and hand it to him.
He takes it hesitantly.
I push the plate further in his direction.
Finn scoops out a bite and, the moment the cobbler gets into his mouth, his expression tightens.
âItâs good right?â
âYeah,â he mumbles. âYeah⦠wow.â
I think thatâs the first thing heâs ever said to me.
Momâs cobbler must be made of magic.
We eat in companionable silence for a while.
âIâm sorry about today,â I say quietly.
Finn glances up at me, an eyebrow arched.
âI heard you got suspended.â
âOnly for a day,â he responds, his voice vibrating through me.
It always catches me by surprise how deep his voice is. Finnâs bassy timbre reminds me of the drums I learned to play tonight. Rolling and dark and powerful enough to rattle the walls. Since he rarely speaks, he must always catch people off guard.
âZane was the one who got a week-long suspension.â Finn pushes his fork around. âSince he threw the first punch.â
My shoulders roll with tension. âItâs okay to blame me.â
âBlame you for what?â Finn balances on his elbows. âHe decided to protect you, so we all protect you. Thatâs how it is.â
My throat tightens.
He pushes the cobbler away. âThat was good. Thanks for sharing.â
I nod.
He moves to the fridge, grabs a water bottle and heads to the stairs. I set the plate in the sink and pour water on it so it can soak. As I move, I feel someone staring at me.
I look up.
Finn is paused at the base of the stairs, watching. The light hits his sharp cheekbones and makes his almond-shaped brown eyes glisten.
I wait, sensing that heâs about to say something.
âZaneâs always been obsessed with doing things people say he shouldnât. If you tell him he canât have something, heâll kill to get his hands on it.â
âHeâs a rebel.â
âHeâs an idiot.â Finnâs lips soften at the edges. âBut heâs brave. Way more than me or Dutch. He doesnât hold back. Doesnât overthink. He just goes for it.â
âPerfect way to get hurt.â
âOr a perfect way to feel alive.â
I stare at Zaneâs brother, feeling a bunch of dark emotions in my chest.
âYouâre that thing he canât have. You know that, right?â
âI know.â
âBut itâs different with you.â
My mouth goes dry. âWhat do you mean?â
âFor the first time in his life, I donât think Zane wanting you has anything to do with it being wrong.â
I flinch when I hear the word âwrongâ. âBut it is.â
âHeâs eighteen. Legalââ
âHeâs a student. And Iâm his teacher. Weâre not a love story, Finn. Weâre a scandal. And scandals can only exist in the dark.â
âNot if you convince everyone the light is on.â
Something shakes loose in my brain.
âConvince everyoneâ¦â I mutter excitedly. âOh my gosh.â
Finn looks at me like Iâm crazy.
âFinn, youâre incredible!â I rush forward, grab his face, and give him a kiss on the cheek. His eyes widen, but Iâm already flying past him.
Inside my room, I haul out my whiteboard and fish through the photos I took of the files in the basement.
How do you break the rules in plain sight?
Convince everyone the light is on.
Finn was right. If you tell everyone whatâs wrong is right, eventually, theyâll believe it. Even more, theyâll argue with everyone who tries to convince them otherwise.
My fingers whip through the printed files.
My heart is pounding in my ears.
While I was investigating the basement, I found old administration documents that referenced âThe Grateful Projectâ. They were nothing but long inventoriesâwine, decorations, cups, food, cleaning services. I took the picture out of principle but didnât expect to get a hit.
âI know I have it. Where, where?â I mutter, thumbing through the pictures I printed out.
The Grateful Project was a school-sanctioned meeting between donors and scholarship students. I attended a couple with Sloane during my years at Redwood and thought it was just another way for the school to humiliate us, but what if it was something more?
âCome on,â I hiss.
When I was snooping, I found a ton of invoices for The Grateful Project. Back then, I thought all those documents were just copies of an original, but nowâ¦
Finally, I land on one.
The words âThe Grateful Projectâ are stamped over the top of the page. Thereâs a list of items, presumably used for that particular event.
âDate,â I mutter.
There.
I grab my phone and scroll to an old calendar. Official âGrateful Projectâ dinners happen in December or early January.
This invoice is dated March.
A foreboding feeling washes over me.
Iâm getting close to something big.
âNames, names.â I slide my thumb down the paper.
There are no names.
âDamn it.â
I start to put the page down.
And then I snap it back up.
My eyes narrow on a series of numbers.
Iâd recognize that sequence anywhere.
Itâs Sloaneâs student ID.