by Angela Henry
SCHOOLED IN LIES
A Kendra Clayton Novel
Copyright © 2009 Angela Henry
This is a work of fiction. Names, character, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or a used fictitiously and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or Boulevard West Press except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and review.
SCHOOLED IN LIES: A Kendra Clayton Novel
ISBN-13: 978-0-615-33432-5
Boulevard West Press
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SCHOOLED IN LIES
A Kendra Clayton Novel
Angela Henry
Praise for Angela Henry’s Kendra Clayton Series
THE COMPANY YOU KEEP
"A tightly woven mystery..."
—Ebony Magazine
"This debut mystery features an exciting new African-American heroine... Highly recommended."
—Library Journal
TANGLED ROOTS
"Smart, witty, and fast-paced, this second Kendra Clayton novel is as likeable as the first."
—CrimeSpree Magazine
“…appealing characters…witty dialogue…an enjoyable read.” 4 Stars
—Romantic Times Magazine
DIVA’S LAST CURTAIN CALL
“It's the perfect script for a great summer read."
—Broward Times
"…this series is made of inventive storytelling, crackling wit and that rarity of rarities in American publishing: an authentic, down-to-earth slice of Black life."
—Insight News
This book is for all the people who love reading about Kendra as much I love writing about her.
Also by Angela Henry
The Company You Keep
Tangled Roots
Diva’s Last Curtain Call
Prologue
Summer 1996
JULIAN SPICER HAD BEEN pounding away at the same nail long after he’d driven into the loose roofing tile. He imagined the nail was the face of his idiot secretary. He still remembered the pathetic excuses and the tears as she tried to explain why she hadn’t given him the phone message that had come four days ago. Four days ago! How hard was it to give someone a phone message? It wasn’t rocket science. Not that it mattered now. By the time he’d found out about the missed message, it was already too late. He’d lost out on a major client account, an account that would have put his struggling business in the black. But Julian quickly came up with a way to save himself a lot of money. He’d fired his secretary on the spot.
He shouldn’t have hired her in the first place. He’d let himself be talked into it by someone he never should have trusted in a million years. Someone he thought he knew. He’d been wrong. But Julian had ended that association as well, just as quickly as he’d fired his secretary. Still, he felt like a fool every time he thought about the phone call that he’d received two days earlier informing him of a truth he had no idea even existed. Surely the caller had been lying. He found out all too painfully that it wasn’t a lie. He was being used. No big surprise. He’d always been a sucker for anyone with a problem. A soft touch is what his Aunt Emma always called him. Julian liked to think of himself as a fixer, someone who always knew what to do and how to do it, always full of answers and solutions. But what had that kind of attitude gotten him?
He turned his attention to another loose tile hammering away at it trying uselessly to pound away his hurt and frustration. By the time the nail was well beyond being hammered into place, he had found a new resolve: No more Mr. Nice Guy. From now on he would be all about his own business, his own needs, and his own ambitions and to hell with everybody else’s. Julian stood and ran a forearm across his brow to wipe away the sweat that threatened to run into his eyes. He was carefully edging his way across the slanted roof, toward the ladder propped against the side of the house, when he thought he heard a noise down below.
“Anybody down there?” he called out then waited for a response. Nothing. He was almost to the ladder when he heard the sound again. This time he recognized the unmistakable sound of footsteps on the gravel below. Figuring he probably knew who it was, and pissed that this person would have the nerve to show up at his house, Julian stopped in his tracks and angrily called out again.
“Who the hell is down there?” This time he was answered by a hard blow to the back of his head that knocked him unconscious and sent him tumbling off the roof onto the spikes of the wrought iron fence below.
One Year Later
She woke up in the dark. Confused and disoriented, she lay still for a few seconds and tried to get her bearings and figure out where she was. She tasted blood in her mouth. Tentatively, she touched her lower lip and discovered it was split. There was also an egg-sized knot on the back of her head, causing pounding that made even thinking painful. Curled into a fetal position on her side, she slowly turned onto her back and reached out a hand hitting something hard and unyielding mere inches from her face. She tried to straighten out her cramped legs but couldn’t. Where the hell was she and why was it so dark? Then another sensation cut its way through the mind-numbing pain in her head. Movement. She was moving.
A familiar smell filled her nose. Exhaust fumes. Car exhaust fumes. She was in a moving car. Judging by the enclosed space she was in, she quickly realized she was in the trunk. Panic welled up inside her and she started screaming and frantically beating on the inside of the trunk. But the car didn’t stop and after a few minutes both her throat and hands were sore. She was feeling around the trunk for something to pry open the lock with when the car came to an abrupt stop. She heard the opening and closing of the car door and footsteps crunching on gravel.
Fumbling around in the dark, her hand came to rest on a hard, round, plastic cylinder. A flashlight. She felt for the switch to the sound of a key being inserted into the trunk lock. When the trunk flew open, she flashed the light into her captor’s face. When she saw who it was, memories suddenly came flooding into her head, jolting her back in time, making her remember how she came to be in the trunk of a car with a murderer staring down at her.
Chapter One
Two weeks earlier
THERE WAS A TIME when sitting at the big round table in the middle of the cafeteria meant something. Sitting at that table was a status symbol. It was the table that separated the some-bodies from the nobodies. It was prime real estate and if you were lucky enough to sit there, everyone knew your name. I am, of course, talking about my high school days. A time when popularity was at a premium and only a chosen few achieved it, leaving the rest of us geeks, freaks, and loners to survive high school as best we could. But, now, eleven years later, looking around that same round table at the receding hairlines, beer bellies, the beginnings of crows-feet, and the overall world weariness caused by disappointment and unfulfilled dreams, all I could think was, Oh, how the mighty have fallen.
I was sitting in the cafeteria of Springmont High School at the committee meeting for the class of ‘86’s eleven-year high school reunion at the table used by the popular kids all those years ago. A table I would have gnawed my own arm off to be invited to sit at a decade ago. Not anymore. I didn’t want to be there and was having a hard time hiding it. I’d been roped into serving on the comm
ittee by Gigi Gregory, a former classmate and soon to be ex-friend, who was in desperate need of finding someone to take her place on the committee when her husband had surgery and she needed to take care of him, or so she claimed.
I should have smelled a rat when I’d asked Gigi what kind of surgery her husband was having. She looked distraught enough but never really got around to answering me. So I imagined it was something serious like open heart surgery or brain surgery. It wasn’t until a week later, after I’d already agreed to take her place on the damned committee, that I’d seen Gigi and her husband, Mitch, out to dinner at the Red Dragon. I watched as Gigi delicately placed a rubber doughnut shaped cushion down on the seat for her husband, Mitch, to sit on and saw the grimace of pain as he gingerly lowered his bottom onto the chair. Being my grandmother’s granddaughter, and nosy to boot, I went over to say hello. It was then that I discovered that Gigi’s husband was recovering not from open heart or brain surgery but hemorrhoid removal. Basically, I’d been roped into serving on the committee because of an itchy, inflamed ass. How fitting. That’s exactly how I could describe my high school years, a pain in my ass.
The meeting had been going on for more than an hour and so far the only thing we’d been able to agree on was that we hated each other’s ideas. After watching my idea of an eighties themed reunion complete with a Prince and the Revolution cover band go down in flames, I’d settled into a funk and cast silent death stares all around the table.
“How about a circus theme? That way we could bring our kids,” exclaimed Audrey Grant, formerly Fry, the perky ex-cheerleading Queen Bee of the class of ‘86.
Back in high school Audrey’s pouffy blonde mall hair and banging bod were only rivaled by her extreme flexibility. She could cross her legs behind her head, which, if you believed the rumors back in high school, she did with regularity. Audrey was now a married, stay-at-home mom to five kids under the age of six. Her blonde hair was now styled in a sleek chin-length bob and her once slim figure was filling out a white size sixteen blouse quite nicely while her once flexible legs were slightly chunky and encased in black stirrup pants. Audrey’s slim figure wasn’t the only thing MIA from our high school days. Her saccharine perkiness had been replaced by a perpetual worried expression that had etched fine lines into her forehead and tightly pinched lips that made her look like a laxative would do her a world of good. However, eleven years and sixty odd pounds had done nothing to lessen Audrey’s sense of self-importance and she only spoke to other committee members who shared in her level of former fabulousness, which obviously did not include me.
“The last thing I want to be bothered with at my high school reunion is a bunch of damned ankle biters,” replied Dennis Kirby. “All I want to do is party. Am I right, guys?” Dennis looked around the table for affirmation and laughed loudly when Audrey rolled her eyes and turned up her nose.
In high school, Dennis had been popular, in part, due to his resemblance to Sean Penn, a resemblance he never got tired of hearing about. He’d also been the star pitcher of our baseball team as well as a wrestling standout. However, with his glory days a distant memory, the muscular body of his teen years had turned to fat and Dennis now looked like Sean Penn would look if he’d eaten Cleveland. He was also still wearing his thick black hair in the same modified mullet from high school and was sporting a cheesy looking goatee that made him look like a pirate reject. He’d been voted class clown of our graduating class, even though most of his humor had been at the expense of dweebs like me.
I still remembered vividly one day during my sophomore year when Dennis had told me his friend Teddy had a crush on me and asked if I wanted to meet him. I, being supremely naive and thinking he was referring to Ted Johnston, the gorgeous star basketball player of our high school who looked like he’d been chiseled out of a chunk of semi-dark chocolate, said, yes, of course I wanted to meet Ted. Dennis pulled out a stuffed teddy bear and threw it at me nailing me right in the forehead. It wasn’t for nothing that he was the pitcher of our baseball team. Everyone laughed hysterically and I spent the rest of that year being referred to as Teddy’s girlfriend or being asked where my man Teddy was. Dennis had recently moved back to Willow and apparently still thought he was a walking laugh factory. Only the threat of me shoving my size eight running shoe up his ass kept him from asking me about Teddy when I’d arrived for the meeting.
“Spoken like a man who doesn’t have any kids. Some of us have families now, man,” replied Gerald Tate, former class president of the class of ‘86, and I suspected, the real reason Gigi Gregory didn’t want to serve on the reunion committee.
Gerald was her ex-high school sweetheart, a relationship that had started freshman year in high school and lasted up until freshman year at college where upon he promptly dumped her for a hard partying waitress at the campus IHOP who was a decade his senior. Gigi’s still a tad bitter. Gerald was still a good-looking guy, tall, and with the exception of a beer gut, still in decent shape with hardly a blemish in his smooth brown skin, though his hairline looked like it was starting it’s midlife erosion a full ten years ahead of schedule. And I didn’t remember his eyes being quite so beady back in high school. Gerald was a financial consultant. I had no idea exactly what that meant beyond him having to wear a suit to work but I assumed he was more successful at it than being married. His third wife, and the mother of the last of his four children, had recently kicked Gerald to the curb. His first wife had been the infamous IHOP waitress.
“Hey, look, I like kids as much as the next person. I just don’t want them at the reunion. No offense, but I didn’t go to high school with you guys’ kids. Hell, one day they’ll have their own high school reunion. All I’m saying is let us have ours,” shot back Dennis. Everyone else in the room including Gerald murmured in agreement.
Audrey conceded defeat and gave a small tight smile. Dennis slapped her on the back in what was probably supposed to be a friendly pat. But Audrey’s face turned bright red and she looked like she swallowed her tongue.
“Shouldn’t we have a tribute?” asked a small voice that almost got drowned out by Dennis’s big mouth. We all turned to stare at Cherisse Craig.
Back in high school Cherisse had been even lower on the nerd totem pole than I was, if that was possible. Small for her age, made by her parents to wear clothes that made nuns look conservative, and extremely shy to boot, Cherisse caught all kinds of hell in school. Dennis Kirby, and the other kids of the round table, may have had a bit of fun at my expense now and then, but they turned torturing poor Cherisse into an art form. The worst time being when they instructed everyone in homeroom to mouth their words instead of speaking out loud until Cherisse ran screaming from the classroom because she thought she’d gone deaf.
If it weren’t for Cherisse’s closeness with her twin sister, Serena, who was the complete opposite of her persecuted twin and took no shit from anybody, Cherisse’s life would have been an utter misery. Serena left home right before graduation. I wondered whatever became of her. Knowing how horrible everyone at the table had made Cherisse’s high school years, I was stunned to see that she was a part of the reunion committee and even more surprised to see how much nicer she looked these days in her fashionable clothes and funky blonde dreadlocks. She was probably just as shocked to see me there as well.
“What did you say, Cherry?” asked Dennis Kirby, snickering. Cherry had been his crude nickname for Cherisse. His joke being that she’d probably never lose hers. Cherisse looked down at her lap before answering. Eleven years, new clothes, and a bold new hairdo obviously hadn’t eradicated her shyness.
“Well, I think we should do a tribute to Julian,” she replied, looking down at her lap again. “And my name’s Cherisse, fat ass,” she added, tossing a venomous look at Dennis. She’d grown some balls after all. Good for her. Dennis just snickered but I noticed he turned bright red, indicating that Cherisse’s barb had hit home.
Cherisse’s suggestion was met by cold silence by my fellow co
mmittee members. Having a tribute for Julian Spicer, the former head of the reunion committee killed in a freak accident while working on the roof of his house last summer, seemed like an excellent idea to me. Besides, Julian hadn’t just been a member of the round table gang along with Dennis, Audrey, and Gerald; he’d been their king. Fine as hell, athletic, and smart, Julian had been homecoming and prom king and was voted most likely to succeed. He’d been Audrey’s high school sweetheart. Plus, he was Dennis’s first cousin and probably the main reason the loudmouthed asshole was even in the round table clique. He’d also been in charge of the ten-year reunion. After his tragic death, the reunion was cancelled.
Not only would no one comment on the tribute idea, but their eyes were all shooting daggers at Cherisse, who in turn looked like she was about to cry. Why wouldn’t they want a tribute to Julian? I opened my mouth to ask what the hell was wrong with everyone when the new head of the committee finally spoke up.
“I think on that note we should wrap things up, guys. We’ll meet here same time next week, okay.” Ivy Flack cast a cool but not unkind look in Cherisse’s direction.
Ivy Flack wasn’t a member of the class of ‘86. She’d been a high school guidance counselor back in the day and was currently the principal of Springmont High. Ivy Flack was the reason I’d decided to major in English at college. She’d been my guidance counselor and had been able to get the unmotivated and unenthusiastic teenager that I once was excited about going to college. Though she was now at least in her mid-forties, she didn’t look much different then when we were in school and still wore her dark hair long and layered.