âIÂ went to your room that morning. She answered the door in your jerseyâsaid you were in the shower. She offered to let me wait, but she warned me that you two were back together. That Iâd look really desperate just showing up at your room like that.â Kennedy swallows hard and breathes deep. Like the memory alone is causing her actual pain.
âShe never told meââ
âNo, she wouldnât have, would she?â Kennedy looks into my eyes, smiling bitterly. âI was going to wait. I thought I at least deserved to hear it from you.â Her voice strangles at the end, her eyes shinier than they should be. âBut then Cashmere asked me what I had really expected. She said you were a hero and I was a zero and nothing was going to change that. Did I really think you would leave someone like her for someone like me?â She licks her lips slowly.
âI was still reeling from the night before. From the excitement, the total fucking joy over what weâd done. But when she put it like that . . . I believed her. So I left. William stopped me in the quad on the way back to the dorm. He asked me out . . . and I said yes.â
I canât speak; Iâm too busy reliving those moments, seeing them now from her side. And realizing all the things I didnât do, all the things I never said.
âI liked you,â I whisper to the table. Then I look at her. âI liked you so much.â
I still do. Behind those contact lenses, under makeup and designer clothes, sheâs still her. I can still taste her, feel her on my fingertips, so smooth and slick. Fearless in the way she wanted me, clutched me close like sheâd never wanted to let go.
Her forehead crinkles with confusion. âBut you did get back together with Cashmere. You didnât speak to me that whole year untilââ
Kennedy obviously still doesnât understand jack shit about men. Or boysâbecause back then, I was definitely a boy.
âYou told me our hookup meant nothing to you. That I was nothing and you were dating William. When I got pissed about it, you told me you hated me.â I wipe a hand down my face. âI got back together with Cashmere because you didnât want me and she did. She was a substitute. I didnât want to look like a loser. And I didnât speak to you because it was too fucking hard.â
âWe were friendsââ
âNot to me.â I shake my head, capturing her gaze and holding it tight. âNot after that night. I didnât want your friendship, KennedyâI wanted you. And if I couldnât have youâI had to pretend you didnât exist. Because then I could tell myself I wasnât missing out on everything I knew I was.â
But Iâd still thought about her. Iâd dreamed about her.
And I missed herâall the time.
She gazes at the table, lost in her thoughts. Then she looks up, wetting her lipsâseeming like sheâs decided something.
âSo thatâs why you did it,â she says softly. âYou wanted to get back at me, and hurt me. Congratulationsâyou succeeded.â
Something in her tone puts me on alert, and I lean in closer. âWhat exactly do you think I did?â
Her mouth is hard. âYou set me up. You humiliated me. You . . . broke me that night, Brent.â
I double-check. âThe night of the senior dance?â
âYes.â
This is it. This is what Iâve been waiting fourteen years to know.
I tell her, âPretend that youâre a witness on the stand. Start from the beginning and tell me about the dance. Make me understand.â
Kennedy scrapes her lip with her teeth. âIn April, I started getting instant messages when I was online. From you. They said âIâm sorryâ and âI miss you.â You talked about how you wanted to be with me, but you couldnât break up with Cashmere right then. You said it was a family thingâsomething about a business deal between your fathers.â
She takes a drink of her beer, then goes on.
âI didnât believe it was you, at first. I thought it was a prank. But the messages kept coming, and they sounded so much like you. So as a test, I asked you about our first kiss. Where it was.â
She pauses and I hold my breath.
âYou said the roof, on New Yearâs Eve, when we were nine. And thatâs when I knew it was you. I was so excited. For so long, Iâd wanted . . .
âAnyway, the week before the dance, you sent me an IM saying you wanted to see me. You wanted to dance just one dance with me. You asked me to meet you by the lake behind the auditorium. Vicki didnât like it, but I was too far gone to care. I called Claire and asked her to come help me with my makeup and a dress. She was so happyâlike a fairy godmother.â
Her voice cracks on the last word, and I feel sick. Because I know how this story ends.
âMy dress was whiteâit was lovely, and it made me feel lovely too. My hair was down, curled and shinier than I ever remember it being.â
She looks at my face with the saddest smile.
âAnd I wore contact lenses, for the first time in my life.â
My hands fist on the table; my throat so dry I can barely swallow.
âI waited by the lakeâI could hear the music from the auditorium. I heard a sound, like a footstep, and I called your name. But no one answered.â
She takes a deep, slow breath.
âAnd then, I got hit in the chest with mud. There was more than one person and they were laughing. It seemed like it came from all directions, all at once. It was cold and gritty. It hit my arms, my dress, my face. A stone cut me.â She motions to a tiny scar on her cheek. âIt only lasted a few seconds, but it felt like forever. I fell down and I begged them to stop. And I cried.â
Sheâs not crying now. Her eyes are dry and far away.
âI didnât even realize it had stopped at first. I stayed there on the ground for a long time. I couldnât believe you had done this to meâand I was so angry with myself for believing you. Eventually, I stood up, wiped myself off as best I could. I knew Iâd have to walk past the auditorium. And of course, it was just my luck that the entire senior class was outside when I did.â
I remember seeing herâher eyes wild and wounded. I didnât know what had happened, and she wouldnât talk to me.
âYou looked so horrified, Brent. So devastatedâand when you wrapped your jacket around me, I almost believed you really didnât have anything to do with it. But then Cashmere came up, offered me a tissue, and pretended to be so sympathetic. I could see in her eyes that she was laughing, but she sounded really convincing. So I knew you must have been a part of it too.â
I can still hear her, her voice a raw whisper when she told me, âYouâre sick. Thereâs something wrong with you. Stay away from me. Just . . . stay away.â
âThen Vicki and Brian came and took me to the infirmary, then back to our room.â
And there it is.
Rage makes my hands shake on the table. So fucked up.
Did I say sometimes kids are assholes? Noâsometimes theyâre sociopaths. And apparently I was dating their queen.
âI should have followed you,â my voice scrapes out. More than anything, I want to go back in time and kick the shit out of my seventeen-year-old self. âThat nightâI should have gone with you to the infirmary. Iâve always regretted it.â
She says nothing.
âWhen I went to your dorm the next morning, you were gone.â
âClaire came to get me,â she answers quietly. âShe tore into Headmaster Winston on the phone and convinced him to let me finish my classes online.â
âI waited for youâall summer, I kept going to your house. You never came home.â Itâs important that she knows I looked for her.
âClaire and I spent the summer in Europe. The whole thing actually made us closer.â
âI didnât know.â
Her head tilts to the side and she shakes it in doubt. âBrent, come on . . .â
I just barely keep myself from shouting. âWhy would I lie? After all this timeâall these years, what could I possibly have to gain from lying to you now? I wouldnât do that to you. I didnât know.â
But still Kennedyâs not convinced. âThe messagesâthey came from your school account.â
âIt had to be Cashmere. She was always in my room, and she knew all my passwords. She was the only one who . . . would want to hurt you like that.â
Thereâs never a good reason to lay your hands on a woman. But if my ex-girlfriend was here now, Iâd have a hard time holding to that.
Kennedyâs face is blank as she examines the evidence from all angles. âHow did she know about the kiss on the roof? I didnât believe it was really you, until that moment.â
I rub the back of my neck; the muscles are tight and knotted. âMaybe I told her about it at some point? Or during one of the stupid Truth or Dare drinking games we used to play. Somebody probably asked me about my first kiss.â
Her eyes soften just a bit. âYou considered me your first kiss?â
The corner of my mouth quirks. âYou were a girl, your lips were on my faceâso yeah. Iâve always remembered it that way.â
She nods.
Slowly I reach out and cup her jaw, holding her. âDo you believe me? I need you to believe me, Kennedy.â
She searches my eyes. âI donât know. All these years, I was so sure. Now . . . talking to you . . . what you say makes sense.â Her jaw goes tight. âBut I wonât be anyoneâs fool ever again.â
I drop my hand, drain the rest of my beer.
Kennedyâs silent for a moment. Then she says, âIâm ready to call it a night. Can we get out of here?â
I hear her. Revelations are fucking exhausting. I feel like Iâve taken a sledgehammer to the chest. Bruised and drained.
âSure.â I throw the bills on the table, slide my chair back, and hold out my hand to her.
Out on the sidewalk, I offer to grab Kennedy a cab.
âMy place is only a few blocks away. Iâll walk.â
âOkay, then Iâll walk you home. Lead the way, Lassie.â
She cracks a smile and pushes her hair behind her ear. âYou donât have toââ
âYeah, I really fucking do, okay? Just . . . let me do this. Please.â
She looks at me, eyes crinkling, nose scrunching up, like Iâm a puzzle sheâs trying to figure out. It makes her look youngerâcuter.
âAll right. Iâm this way.â
We walk side by side in easy silence, and about ten minutes later, we arrive. The house looks like a Victorian dollhouse, with a rounded tower on one side, a wraparound second-floor balcony, arched windows, and a spiked wrought-iron fence framing the roof. The same fencing surrounds the big corner lot. The house needs a paint job, new shutters, new steps where the old ones are sunk and unevenâbut thereâs so much potential. With a little love, it could be magnificent.
âIâm having it restoredâwhich is about as miserable as it sounds when youâre living here,â Kennedy says. âBut itâll be worth it. My Aunt Edna left it to me.â
My head turns sharply. âAunt Edna died? Shit, she was cool. Why didnât anyone tell me?â
Kennedy nods. âYou were on a skiing tripâI overheard someone talking about it at the wake. Your mother probably forgot to mention it when you came home.â
I look back toward the house. âIâm glad she left it to you.â Then I grin, easily imagining her as a kid in that big old house with its cobwebs and secrets. âI bet you had a blast going through the attic.â
Her eyes widen. âI did, yeah.â Bullâs-eye.
Because people really donât change when it comes to qualities like that. A love of adventure, of exploration, even if itâs of the past. She hasnât changed.
âMaybe you can give me a tour sometime?â
She still looks a little wary, distrustful of my intentions. Old habits die hard, and this oneâs gonna go down screaming.
She unlocks the front door, then turns. âGood-bye, Brent.â
I run my hand down her arm, âcause I just canât help myself. âGood night, Kennedy. Iâm . . . Iâm glad we talked. Cleared the air. And if I didnât say it before, Iâm really fucking glad youâre home.â
Her smile is smallâbut itâs there.
âMe too.â
I give her arm a gentle squeeze, then walk down the front steps toward the gate. Halfway there she calls, âBrent?â
I turn around.
âThis doesnât change anything. About the case, I mean. On Monday, I expect you to come at me with everything you have. If you go easy on me itâll mean you donât respect meâthat you think I canât handle it. And Iâd never forgive you for that.â
I give her a quick nod and she goes inside, closing the door behind her.
My eleven-year-old self was right: girls are weird.
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
I wake up earlier than usual on Saturday, with the echo of Kennedyâs words in my head. Curiosity rubs me raw, like two jagged sticks sparking a fire. So I skip my morning run and spend an hour in my home office doing online research.
Itâs amazing, and kind of fucking frightening, how much of our personal information is floating around out there, and how simple it is to access. After I get the info I wantedâan address just an hour outside of DCâI tap the address into Google Maps, then I head out.
When I knock on the door, I hear muffled voices inside, then the sound of walking feet.
And then the door opens.
And Victoria Russo, Kennedyâs old boarding school roommate, stares at me. âBrent Mason?â
I nod. âHey, Vicki.â
She looks good, almost exactly the same. Her laugh lines are a little more pronounced, but her shoulder-length hair is still jet black with a streak of bright blue, her nose is still pierced with a diamond stud, and she still has that sharp, no-bullshit-taking shine in her eyes. The last time I saw her she tried to kick me in the balls.
âWhy are you here?â she asks.
I look her straight in the eyes. âI need your help.â