Good Grades & Mystery Games: Chapter 36
Good Grades & Mystery Games (North University Series Book 2)
Have you ever tried to find the contact information for a guy that was pronounced dead three years ago? Because I have. And it wasnât an easy feat.
After scouring through records at Voss HQ, I couldnât find anything on Lucas. I know I should stop digging, but Iâm still confused as fuck as to how heâs just alive and breathing like nothing happened and why nobody told me about it.
I even considered asking Arthur what was going on, but weâve hardly spoken since he called me a whore in front of everyone at dinner. Even if I pestered him enough, I knew he wouldnât tell me anything, so I had to take matters into my own hands. Again.
Things have been tense in my family during the holiday period. Christmas was a shitshow. I spent Christmas Eve at my parentsâ house like always and we ate dinner in near silence. I spent Christmas day with the girls, but it didnât feel anywhere near as good as it usually does.
Because Evan wasnât there, and I didnât have a tray full of bacon to shove into his mouth like I did last year. Instead, I spent the day curled up in bed, watching The Grinch while I ate my bodyâs weight in chocolate.
For the first time in years, I stayed home on New Years Eve as I encouraged the rest of the girls to go out without me. Instead, I stayed in bed, alternating between texting my therapist or Evan. In the end I settled for neither, preferring the comfort of popcorn and a cheesy sitcom. Dr. Nelson is concerned, but I promised Iâd call her back eventually.
It took days, hours, and hours of staring at a screen and flicking through books and calling random people until I finally found Lucasâs number. I used my burner phone to call him so he would actually answer. Still, I have no idea what Iâm planning on saying until the phone connects.
âHey, itâs Scarlett. I know we got off on the wrong foot, but I just wanted to speak to you. You know, about you being alive and all that,â I say, trying to make light of the situation as I ramble on. I watch the black and white clock on my bedroom wall tick as he doesnât say anything. I double check that he hasnât ended the call on me, lifting my feet up to rest on my desk. âHello?â
âI already told you what you want you need to know, Scarlett,â he says finally. Good. At least heâs talking. Sort of. Iâm not a fan of his tone, though. He sounds annoyed â pissed, even.
âYeah, I know, but I just donât fully understand,â I say, trying to keep calm. âWhy would you come to the funeral? Risk being seen?â
âGiovanni was my best friend. In hiding or not, I was going to show up for him. He showed up for me. As soon as I heard what had happened, I had to go,â he explains. That makes sense. If I was undercover and my best friend died, I wouldnât care. But why is he undercover? What is he running from? Iâm sure people would be delighted to know he made it out alive. âAnd Iâm sorry for that. For you having to see what you did.â
It takes me a few seconds to realise what heâs talking about. Even though Dr. Nelson tells me itâs okay to be shutting out the memories of what happened, a part of me still feels guilty. I donât want to remember it because of how much it hurt seeing him like that, in so much pain. But those are also the last memories I have with him and the one I had before that â thinking he was covering up a crime scene in his backyard â is not any more pleasant. Blocking it out feels right for now.
âI never told you I was there,â I whisper. Our conversation was short at the funeral. Thereâs no way I would have dumped that on him. I was already in too much shock.
âReports,â he replies, âthey talk.â Of course, they do because I canât get one minute of privacy apparently, even after people walked past the scene, leaving us to clean it up. I tried to have the bad stories scrubbed clean, getting the best bits of Gios personality, but theyâve not made any changes, still casting him as the villain. âListen, Iâm glad you called, Scarlett, but I donât have time.â
I snort. âYou donât have the time? Youâre a dead man walking. What could you possibly have to do thatâs more important than answering a few questions from your best friendâs niece.â
âI can think of a few things.â
âYeah? Name one,â I challenge.
âBills,â he replies gruffly. Bills my ass.
âYouâre full of shit,â I argue, my temper rising.
âLook, I know youâre upset about your uncle, and youâre shocked. Itâs understandable. Right now, all you should focus on is school and your dad getting better if he wakes up.â
âWhen,â I correct, my throat goes dry.
âWhat?â
âWhen he wakes up. Not if.â
âRight. Iâm sorry,â he says. I donât respond to that. Just the thought of my dad not waking up makes my stomach swarm with angry butterflies. âI really do have to go. Take care.â
* * *
The girls have not left my side since the trip to Las Vegas. I thought we were attached at the hip in middle school and high school, but now itâs even worse. I canât decide if itâs a good thing or not. I meant it when I said they are my forever friends. But that also means theyâre up my ass twenty-four-seven as if theyâre talking me out of jumping off a cliff. No matter how many times I tell them Iâm fine, they canât help double and triple checking.
âDo you want some ice cream, Scar?â Wren calls from the kitchen.
âNo, Iâm good,â I reply.
âBaby, I want some,â Miles chimes up from his spot across from me on the sofa. Kennedy rolls her eyes and I scoff.
âI wasnât asking you,â Wren retorts. Miles sulks in his seat, pouting his lip and crossing his arms. God, heâs such a baby. How does Wren cope? She also canât resist him sometimes, so she asks, âWhat flavour do you want?â
âChocolate, please,â he replies happily, grinning at me like he won the lottery. I stick my tongue out at him, and he sticks his out at me. See? Heâs such a baby.
âDo you want a croissant, Scarlett?â Wren asks again.
âMy answer is the same as before, Wrenny,â I say, trying not to laugh at her protective tendencies.
âYouâve got to eat something. Iâm worried about you,â she says, and I donât have to look behind me to tell sheâs frowning. Sheâs like a full-time mom right now. Each week, we switch who gets to play the mother and clearly this week itâs Wrenâs turn.
âWell, donât be,â I say. âWe just had pizza.â I turn to Miles, narrowing my eyes at him as he eats the chips on the table. âYour boyfriend is the one with a vacuum for a mouth.â
Miles flips me off as Wren laughs, padding into the room with two bowls of ice cream. She hands one to Kennedy in her bean bag as she retrieves it happily and gives the other to Miles before she slides into his lap. I hit play on the episode of New Girl weâre watching, and we all fall into a comfortable silence.
Even with Wren and Kennedy up my ass every two minutes making sure Iâm okay, Iâm getting used to preferring this over solitude. They make everything feel better. It helps me feel like everything is going to be okay. If I want to ignore something, theyâll pretend it never happened. If I want to shit-talk somebody, theyâll do it happily. They just get me and allow me to exist without feeling like a burden.
â« Itâll Be Okay by Shawn Mendes
When the episode transitions into a new one, I use the opportunity to sneak into the kitchen for a drink. Weâve been stocked on â what Kennedy calls â âSad Snacksâ for the last few days, the girls insisting that I need them.
As I reach for the shelf where the glasses are, Iâm hit with strong déjà vu, remembering Evan towering over me, touching my waist, his breath hot on my neck. The way I could feel his eyes lingering on my almost naked body. His strong, hot hand holding me, steadying me.
âDo you want me to get that for you?â
I turn around and Miles is behind me, placing the bowls into the sink. I realise that I must have been frozen on my way up to get the glass and he tilts his head to the side curiously. I blink at him a few times, trying to get the image of Evan out of my head.
âIâm okay,â I say, jumping slightly to reach it. I almost miss it, but I end up getting it anyway, triumphant as I move to the fridge to fill up the glass with the water dispenser. Iâm ready to make my escape back to my seat, but Miles grips onto my elbow, pulling me back into the kitchen. âCan I help you, Davis?â
âActually, you can,â he says cheerfully. âDo you think you could possibly, maybe, definitely be friends with Evan again?â
âWhat?â I almost laugh.
Miles and Iâs relationship isnât as close as it could be, so I donât know why heâs asking me. Heâs dating my best friend. I hear him fucking her more often than Iâd like and heâs annoyingly good to her. He likes to irritate me and call everyone stupid nicknames. And he talks too much, too. I guess weâre alike in that department.
âI know what he did was fucked up, but he cares about you, Scarlett. Iâve never seen him cry the way he did when he came back that night,â he says thickly, and it feels like a punch to the stomach.
âAre you trying to make me feel even worse than I do, Davis?â I ask, looking to the ground and then back up at him. Heâs watching me, trying to figure me out.
âYou feel bad?â he asks, genuinely shocked.
âOf course, I do. I know I shouldnât because heâs the one that hurt me, but I know that heâs never had a malicious bone in his body. I know heâs been waiting for me to look up and notice him, but Iâve been too stubborn and scared to admit that heâs not actually a bad person. Heâs done countless nice things for me to make up for it and I was too frightened to let him.â
Milesâ mouth hangs open in an âOâ shape as if I just told him Victoriaâs secret. I donât know what he and Evan have been talking about, but he looks like heâs seen a ghost.
âThen tell him that,â he says, exasperated.
âWhat?â I laugh.
âGo and tell him that. Heâs been making himself sick over you, Scar, and his bad mood is bringing down the vibes. Go and tell him that youâre sorry, that you love him so we can all move on with our lives already.â
âI never said I love him,â I say defensively.
âYou didnât have to,â Miles mutters. What the hellâ¦. Wren better gets her man in check because heâs seriously confusing me right now. âIâm not trying to force you, obviously. That will come on your own time, but it sounds to me that you understand each other more than you realise, and I canât take him looking like a sad puppy all day. Honestly, I think heâd prefer you to scream at him rather than this silence.â
âDo you really think so?â I ask quietly.
âOh, I know so, Scarely,â he replies, grinning. He really surprised me with that analysis of our relationship. I donât know when he started to sound so wise. I knew him back when I dated Jake, and Iâve never heard him talk like this. But heâs back to being annoying. Great.
âStop calling me that, you dork,â I say, laughing.
âNot until you and Evan become frenemies again,â he challenges.
âSince when were you two besties?â I ask, genuinely curious. âLast I heard, he said you guys werenât even friends.â
Miles clutches his chest dramatically. âOkay, ouch. He was in denial. Weâve come to a truce.â
âRightâ¦â I drag out, eying him suspiciously.
âAll Iâm saying is, when youâre ready, put him out of his misery. His bad vibes make me queasy.â He shudders for extra effect.
âYou make me queasy,â I mutter as I walk past him, back into the living room.
Maybe I do need to talk to him. Iâve had time to reflect, and I donât want a good thing to go to waste because Iâm scared. Watching Wren and Miles cuddle while we watch the show, they make it seem so easy. Almost dangerously easy.