I fix my clothes and slide off the hood of Dutchâs ruggedly expensive truck, landing to the grass on shaky legs. He sweeps those dangerous fingers over his blond hair, studying me with eyes the color of a dancing flame, honey and gold.
âI need to get back to school,â I murmur, failing to hide the slight tremor in my voice.
âYou need to cool off first.â He gestures to my top. âAnd button up properly. Walk into Redwood looking that disheveled and everyone will know what we were doing.â His brows go up. âNot that I have a problem with that.â
My eyes flash. âI donât need you telling me what I can and canât do.â
âYour face is red, Cadey. Maybe try not to blush so hard when you make a point.â
I cup my cheek. âItâs from sunburn.â
He smirks.
Eager to get away, I march to the backseat and grab my phone.
Jinxâs message pops out at me.
Heart racing, I click on the video and watch the murky feed. Itâs a shot taken from one of the cameras in the hallway near the classroom that burned. How did she get this footage? The police couldnât pull anything from those cameras.
âWhat are you watching?â Dutch asks.
I jump in my skin, pause the video and hide it behind my back. âNothing. Can we go now?â
He stares at me for a long, tense moment, and then he nods once.
âLetâs go.â Dutch opens the passenger side door for me.
âIâll take the back.â
âFrom now on, you ride up front with me.â
I want to argue because itâs pure habit to be contrary at this point, but all I can think about is the video. The faster I get to Redwood, the faster I can view it privately.
Dutch starts driving.
âYour mother told me she had to fake her death because she saw something she shouldnât have,â he says, and I shrug. Everything that comes out of momâs mouth is questionable. The only thing I donât doubt is the lengths she would go to find her next fix. âDo you know what she saw?â
âA murder apparently.â The confession rolls off my tongue with careless ease.
Dutchâs fingers tighten on the steering wheel and he whips around. In his eyes are a tight, smoldering frustration.
When I see his reaction, I realize how casual I made that sound.
âBut she could be lying,â I add as he pulls into the parking lot of Redwood Prep. âItâs possible she just owed a debt she couldnât pay and saw dying as an easy way out.â
He frowns at me.
âNo oneâs bothered us yet, so Iâm sure weâll be fine.â
â
â He turns the engine off, pockets the keys and pins me down with his dark glare.
âYou know as well as I do that momâs not a reliable source.â
âShe could be telling the truth this time.â
I shake my head. âSheâs an , Dutch.â I donât normally share my thoughts so freely, but heâs already stepped into this mess. Itâs not like I can pretend my life is something it isnât. âSheâll do anything, say anything to convince you of her story.â
âPeople donât fake their own deaths for the fun of it, Cadey.â
Jinxâs video keeps pressing at the back of my mind.
Dutch is choosing the worst time to talk about this.
âItâs not your problem,â I grind out.
âOf course itâs my problem. Everything that concerns you is my problem.â
I stiffen at his possessive tone. âDonât think what happened on the hill means anythingâs changed. You and I are still mortal enemies.â
âYou screw all your mortal enemies?â he asks, cocking a brow at me.
He has a point.
Rather than answering the question, I twist around and face him confidently. âYou and I⦠we mess around sometimes. We⦠use each other to let out steam. Thatâs it.â
His jaw works for a minute, like heâs thinking hard about my words, and then he gestures with his chin toward Redwood.
âGo inside before you say something even more ridiculous, Cadey.â
I scowl at him, the urge to fight snapping through me.
Itâs an easy choice.
I sprint into Redwood and duck into the nearest bathroom. After locking myself in a stall, I lift my cell phone again.
Thumb up. Breath shaking.
I slam the play button.
The video starts again, a steady picture of the hallway. Suddenly, thereâs a pop and the tinkle of glass breaking. A slight fills my ears.
On my screen, a shadow falls on the floor.
The outline of the true culprit.
My head is reeling.
Iâm so close to the truth, I can taste it.
But why am I so nervous?
I wipe away the sweat forming above my upper lip.
On screen, orange and red glow against the lockers. Reflections of the mounting fire. The culprit walks closer and closer to the camera. Steady footsteps. Arms loose. No more perturbed by the destruction he caused than Vi would be if she broke a nail.
And then heâs there.
In the frame.
Familiar brown eyes. Broad shoulders. Thick, wavy hair.
The fourth member of The Kings.
The only friend I have among the ruthless boys of Redwood Prep.
Sol.
I gasp and the phone slips from my hand. It clatters to the ground. I hear the crack of glass. If I were in my right mind, Iâd be horrified. I try to be careful with my phone because I canât afford to fix it if it breaks.
But my mind is whirring too fast.
I cover my mouth with my palms, eyes wide and frantic.
Sol?
Sol⦠is the culprit.
At once, a wave of memories washes over me. Solâs, heavy, agonized glances in my direction. His constant attempts to tell me something.
I kept brushing him off. I was so sucked into Dutch, Jarod Cross, Serena, and the drama with mom that I didnât even stop toâ¦
Dropping to my knees, I flip the phone over and stare at the broken screen.
The video is frozen on the scene where Sol is facing the camera.
Itâs really him.
But why? What would make Sol do something like that? He had the protection of Dutch, Finn and Zane Cross. Those boys ruined my life and Mr. Mulliezâs to get Sol back to school. They were never going to let him leave Redwood Prep.
My fingers close around the cell phone and I hold it tight, ignoring the scrape of the broken glass against my palm. Shoving the device in my purse, I press my hand against the bathroom stall, struggling to catch my breath.
At that moment, a group of girls enter the bathroom in a cloud of giggles and perfume.
I hear the spritz of perfume and a rustle of fabric.
I suck in a deep breath and push the door open.
The girls gasp in shock when they see me. At once, they dip their heads and greet me like Iâm the queen or something.
I ignore them and shuffle to the sink, pooling my hands under the water in the faucet. The reflection in the mirror reveals my long brown hair, pinched lips and restless eyes. I look as stressed out as I feel.
âUmâ¦â One of the girls approaches me like Iâm a wild animal. âYouâre New Girl, right? Dutch Crossâs girlfriend? Iâve seen himâuhâ¦
you through the hall before.â
Great.
She tilts her head up, staring at me like my âlove storyâ with Dutch is something to freaking look up to. If she knew how sordid and twisted my life became after Dutch barreled into it, she wouldnât be so damn starry-eyed.
I dig my nails into the sink.
âI just wanted you to know that weâre such huge fans.â The girl flashes a brilliant smile. âIâm a scholarship kid too. Everyone at Redwood treated me like trash until you came along. They see us as something more than their punching bag now.â
The other girls nod enthusiastically.
âYou control Dutch Cross now. Which is, like, insane. He actually listens to you. Plus you hang out with The Kings. Youâre, like, the coolest kid ever.â
My head swings down, my chin hitting my chest. I release a shaky breath that rattles through my lips and fogs up the mirror.
âIf you ever need help, you can ask me. For anything.â The girl bats her eyelashes.
I want to growl at her to âgo awayâ, but I canât find it in me to rip that smile off her face. I canât find it in me to burst that bubble of hope and shove her face in the crap thatâs become my life.
When I still donât say anything, she finally gets the hint. With a small jerk of her chin toward the door, she leads her friends to the exits.
âWait,â I rasp.
The girls stop and spin in one fluid motion, like ballet dancers. Theyâre already leaning forward, already eager to do whatever I command.
I pull my fingers into fists, nails digging into the soft flesh of my palm.
âDo you know who Sol is?â
Her eyes bug. âOf course we know!â
âFind him for me and give him a message.â I sweep stone-cold eyes over the girls. âTell him to meet me in the music room.â
She gasps. âBut you canât go in there. They banned that place after the fireââ
âDo it.â I cut her off. âNow.â