Game Changing Rules: The Elites Of Weis-Jameson Prep Academy Book 3
Page 22
Is everyone just that drunk? Or high on their quickly approaching escape from the hell hole? Or maybe we’re in one of those short periods of time when no one is sure who is in charge. With no one at the top of the food chain, maybe we can all just be nice to each other. It happened once before after Thomas died and a chunk of the Elites went under investigation.
I shrug it off and turn to pick up my cup, eager to steal some more of Bridgett’s liquor. I just want to drink and dance and keep thoughts about Emmett or anything else that’s painful as far from my brain as possible. I throw myself back into dancing until I’m covered in sweat and my feet are aching.
“Wanna take a break?” Bridgett suggests finally, but only after her flask is empty.
“Absolutely!” I yell back.
I follow her over to a line of folding chairs where a few sad, lonely looking kids sit along with another couple of kids who look pale or green, like they’re about to vomit. As I crash down into one of the chairs, still panting and out of breath, I start to feel a tinge of queasiness myself. I do my best to ignore it.
I stare around the room, laughing at how crazy some of the students are dancing. Bridgett and I point out our favorite ones to each other. But the more I look around, the more the lights start to bleed together. I feel my head bob slightly out of my control as it grows heavy. The sick feeling in my stomach grows and the only thing that seems to make it stop is closing my eyes. But the moment I do that, I feel like I could pass out within seconds. I quickly stiffen up, trying to stay awake.
“You okay?” Bridgett asks, looking at me with concern. “Did you drink too much?”
I try to answer, but my throat and mouth suddenly feel dry as cotton. But I know I didn’t drink too much. I’ve drank plenty before and made myself sick more than once on a lot more than what we had tonight. This doesn’t feel anything like that. This is something else entirely.
26
Chapter Twenty-Six
I sit as still as possible, hoping this sudden sickness goes away. But the longer we sit, the worse I feel. The booming speakers swell in and out, sounding too close one minute and a million miles away the next.
“Want to dance some more?” Bridgett leans in to ask. “I love this song!”
“What?” I groan, thinking how much I do want to dance. But I can’t even tell what song is on, much less how to stand up and flail around without falling over right now.
“I love this song!” she shouts louder, starting to dance from her seat.
I sway a little, wanting to join her, but I almost fall out of the chair. Thankfully she doesn’t notice, but I know this is quickly becoming too much for me to hide.
“I don’t feel good,” I moan, feeling like vomit might come up with the words. My throat tightens and my vision vibrates. I’m overwhelmed with the need to get the hell out of here.
I shoot up from the chair, falling against her a little before taking off towards the exit. The music fades and everything suddenly seems distant, like I’m submerged underwater. My head sways to such an extreme that every step makes me feel like I’m going to fall over.
“Want me to come with you?” she calls out after me.
I think she calls out after me. Maybe I made it up. I can’t tell anymore.
All I can manage is a dismissive wave back at her, hoping she’ll just leave me alone. I may have decided I don’t care what anyone else in this school thinks about me, but I don’t want to look like the loser who couldn’t handle her alcohol in front of Bridgett.
I’m suddenly very glad I decided to wear these tennis shoes because I’m positive I’d fall right over if I were trying to manage walking in heels at this moment. The smells wafting from the refreshment tables mix in with the scents of fresh flowers, hairspray, cologne, perfume, breath mints, and alcohol. It all swirls together, making me terribly nauseous.
I push forward with a weaving walk, my voice slurring as I try to give normal greetings to the people staring at me. My arms wave in front of me, but I feel like I have no control over where they’re going. Then I nearly fall as I bump into the corner of a bleacher.
As I stumble past, I eye the tower of water bottles and think I should grab one, but I’m so disoriented, I’m scared of sending them all crashing to the ground. Then I notice the punch bowl and remember what happened when I filled up my cup. That guy distracted me, and I sat it down for a while. Did someone drug me?
I turn back towards Bridgett, wanting to ask for her help. But she seems to have disappeared back onto the dance floor. I know I’ll never manage to hunt her down in the bouncing crowd. If I don’t get out of here right away, I’m going to throw up or faint right here in the middle of everything. Part of me thinks if I’ve been drugged, it’d be worth it to humiliate myself and make a scene if it meant getting some help. But then again…what if whoever did this to me is watching? Waiting to swoop in and carry me off before anyone can see what’s happened?
I don’t feel capable of making any rational decisions right now, so I decide to follow my instinct to escape. My dress feels like it’s constricting around me, growing tighter, and I just have to go. I have to get out of here. I’m hit with a gush of cold air as I stumble out the exit, escaping the swelling heat of the dancing bodies in the gym. I lurch to the side with shuffling steps, hunched over against anything to steady me.
I feel a little better once I can brace myself against the wall in the hallway. I take long, slow steps, my feet feeling like cement blocks, as I drag myself to the bathroom. I’m faintly aware of how sweaty my palms have gotten as I feel my way down the shiny, slick painted cinderblocks. But everything is starting to feel further away. Even the things that are only inches away from my face. But the bathroom door up ahead weaves back and forth, seeming within reach one minute and then when I extend my hand for it, it vanishes back to the other end of the hall, seeming miles away.
Just when I think I’ll tumble down right here in the hallway, I reach the door. My hand fumbles across the handle and I realize it doesn’t seem right. I don’t remember any bathroom at this school having a handle like this, but just as I think it, I crash inside, falling to the floor as the door gives way in front of me. I hit the ground like a ton of bricks, but somehow don’t feel anything from it. My body is completely numb, reminding me of the shots you get in your gums at the dentist, except every inch of my skin feels that way.
I try to lift my head and I swear it’s shaking. But I can’t tell if my head is shaking or just my line of vision. That’s when I notice the buzzing fluorescent lights up above and the cold concrete floor against my arms and legs. The shelves lined with mops, buckets, and cleaning solutions let me know I’m not in the bathroom at all. I’ve fallen into a closet.
I want to get up, but no matter how many times my brain sends the command, my body won’t respond. Unable to move anything else, I blink rapidly, trying to focus on anything I can. Then I hear voices coming from an open door at the other end of the room. My head falls back down to the floor against my will, and I can see the shadows of two people standing on the other side of the wall.
“Do you regret it?” a familiar male voice asks.
“No,” a woman replies sternly.
At first, I’m unable to place them, but then I recognize the man’s voice. It’s Coach Granger and I’m positive the woman he’s speaking to is his assistant, Jada.
“My brother made some mistakes, but he was a good man,” she adds with a cold resolve in her tone. “He was trying to turn his life around, and had those assholes not planted those drugs right in front of his face, he’d still be with us today. I know he would’ve stayed sober this time or asked for help. Even as a junkie, he was never the kind of sick person these spoiled, entitled brats like Malcolm are.”
“It’s a shame,” Coach replies. “But I think the world is better off without people like him in it.”
“What about the other one?” Jada asks. “That Lily girl?”
“Let her be,” he says.
“She’s suffering enough locked up in rehab and I doubt her parents will be signing off on her release any time soon.”
“But Dad…” she argues.
“I said let her be. I’ll keep an eye on that whole situation and let you know if anything changes,” he barks, leaving no more room for debate.
My head is swimming as I try to understand it. Dad? Jada is Coach Granger’s daughter? Why wouldn’t he tell us that and what the hell are they talking about?
“What about you?” she asks him. “Do you have any regrets?”
“No,” he sighs. “We had no choice. The police and the courts weren’t going to do anything. We had to take justice into our own hands. My son deserves to rest in peace without the guy responsible for his death roaming around free, hurting anyone else.”
“And what about that Emmett kid? How did that DNA evidence get in the car?” Jada questions.
“I don’t know. I had nothing to do with that,” he explains. “But I bailed him out. I’ll find some way to make sure he doesn’t take the fall for this.”
I can’t tell if the pounding in my chest and rising sickness in my gut is from whatever is happening to me or realizing that Jada and Coach Granger are discussing how they murdered Malcolm. I want to call out for them to help me but interrupting a murder confession seems like a terrible idea even in my impaired state.
But if they killed Malcolm…how did Emmett’s DNA get on the car? Was he telling the truth when he insisted someone was trying to frame him? And what does this mean for all of the threats made against me?
“How were you so certain his car would crash that way?” Jada asks.
“I’ve seen it happen before,” he grumbles. “And if I hadn’t been there that time, she would have died. That’s when I got the idea for how we would pull this off without getting caught.”
When Coach Granger saved me from plummeting off the cliff in my car, it inspired him to get rid of Malcolm. So whoever tried to kill me wasn’t connected to his murder at all. But there are still so many unanswered questions, and they swarm around in my head making me feel dizzier than I ever have in my life. Impossibly dizzy. Like my brain could explode from the spins.
My eyes start to hurt from the bright lighting, and once again I find that the only thing that makes me feel better is to close them. But each time my heavy eyelids fall, it gets harder to open them up again. I panic, wondering if I’m dying. My survival instinct starts to overpower my better judgment and I try to scream out to get Coach and Jada’s help. Maybe they’ll hurt me or kill me, thinking I know their secret, but right now I feel like I’m dying regardless. So I might as well take the risk.
But nothing comes out of my mouth. I can’t even tell if my lips are opening at all. Any sense of tingling or fuzziness in my limbs fades as my vision tunnels. The disconnect between my brain and my body grows bigger and bigger until finally I’m left trapped inside of myself, completely motionless. I can’t speak, scream, or move at all. And as their distant voices fade, I realize my hearing is disappearing too. I don’t know when I stopped being able to open my eyes, but I become vaguely aware of pitch-black darkness just before I slip off into nothingness.
27
Chapter Twenty-Seven
My mind wakes up before my eyes can open. I hear the whirring rev of a car engine and the sound of air gushing through open windows. As the wind bursts by, I slowly come to enough to realize how cold it feels against my skin. But the fabric seat beneath me is warm. I push my face against it and am relieved to be able to move again.
That’s when the red flashing warning lights start rapidly firing off in my brain. I’m in a car. But who’s car? Who’s driving? This is bad. Somebody drugged me. I think I can assume that much. Did they follow me into the closet and capture me?
When I try to move the rest of my body, unsure of what I even hope to accomplish, the car hits a bump and sends me rolling into the floorboard. I groan with the harsh thud against my bones as I hit the floor, my body contorting into the tight, uneven space.
“You’re awake,” a guy’s voice rings out from in front of me. I open my eyes and gather it’s the driver speaking. I know that voice. I know the curls of his hair.
Then he turns around to look at me, briefly taking his eyes off of the road. Emmett.
“You okay?” he asks with concern. “I can pull over if you want.”
At first, my heart calms with the sound of his voice. I feel safe. He’ll take care of me. But then the memories of the past few days come flooding back. Everything that Theo told me replays in my mind.
I faintly remember the conversation between Coach Granger and Jada just before I drifted off. I know Emmett didn’t kill Malcolm, but that doesn’t mean he didn’t try to kill me. Theo said he was the brains behind his father’s murder. That he’s only been motivated by money, greed, and power this whole time.
I start to squirm, half expecting to be tied up. But my hands and feet are free. I lift my arms and legs and climb back onto the backseat, still feeling heavy and unable to fully control my body.
“Pull over,” I command him. “I want to get out.”
“Ophelia, I need to talk to you,” he shoots back urgently.
“Pull over!” I scream louder. I grow frantic and panicked as I piece it all together, assuming Emmett had to have been the one who drugged me. After Coach dragged him out of the dance, he found some way to sneak back in and slip something in my drink. Or maybe he had help. I don’t know, but I’m positive it was him. “You did this to me,” I mumble through my groggy voice.
“No!” he insists. “I would never do anything to hurt you, Ophelia.”
“You and I both know that’s not true,” I argue back, refusing to minimize what he’s done to me any longer. That’s what got me into this mess with him in the first place. Always telling myself that it wasn’t so bad or trying to convince myself that there were two versions of him.
“It was you all along,” I tell him. “You’re the one who has been hurting me all along, and…and I don’t know why it took me so long to see it.”
“No, please don’t say that,” he begs. “Listen to me…”
“No!” I cry out. “I’m not listening to you anymore!” I reach for the handle, not caring if I fly out of the speeding car. But nothing happens when I pull it. “Pull over! Let me out of here!”
“Ophelia, please…” he tries again.
“I don’t care if you love me!” I shriek. “If you ever loved me at all, it hasn’t stopped you from hurting me! It was your idea to kidnap me! To hold me hostage in your mansion! And then it was your idea to murder Thomas! You turned me against my own father, who was only trying to help and…”
“You’ve got it all wrong!” he swears. “I don’t know who did this to you, but it wasn’t me. Where was Bridgett when this happened?”
“Stop it, Emmett! I’m not falling for your shit anymore! Let me out of here right now or I’m going to grab the wheel and force us off the road! I’ve done it before,” I remind him. “I’ll do it again. I don’t even care what happens, I just want to get away from you!”
I imagine my dreams of college and everything after it slipping away into nothingness, just as I did when I lost consciousness. It hurts to think about. I don’t want to die, but I’m not certain that won’t happen anyway if I leave it up to Emmett.
“What if Bridgett was working together with Theo this whole time!?” he suggests. “Think about it…We don’t know her. They just moved here. She comes from California where Theo used to live up until recently. What if he knew the Hendersons would steal everything away from me!? And he’s working with her to try and get Jameson Automobiles back!”
“It doesn’t make any sense,” I groan as my head starts throbbing, trying to figure it all out. The only clear and resounding conclusion I can come to is that Theo is right about Emmett. My dad and Bridgett aren’t the enemies, he is. No matter how much my heart wants to believe otherwise.
“I overheard
something when I was locked up,” he explains. “These detectives were talking about what they found in the car and said some of your DNA was there too. I think whoever framed me was trying to pin this on you too.”
“What?” I ask in disbelief. “You’re lying. I know you’re lying. You’ll say whatever it takes to get back into my head, but I’m not going to let it happen this time. And anyway…I know who killed Malcolm, and it had nothing to do with Bridgett or my father.”
He’s quiet for a moment. “Just because he didn’t do it, doesn’t mean he wouldn’t take it as a chance to bring us down.”
“You’re not making any sense!” I scoff, wishing this decapacitating headache would go away. I curl into myself across the seat, shielding my eyes from the lights as they whiz past.
“He framed me so he could get his hands on my designs without having to give me any credit or money for them,” he proposes. “And when that didn’t work, maybe he thought he’d try to go after you. I don’t have it all figured out yet, but I know they didn’t find your DNA until their second sweep of the car. And doesn’t Theo have friends in the Jameson police force? He used them to help make sure none of us were blamed for my father’s murder.”
“But you were,” I insist. “You were to blame. It was your idea to kill your father.” I cling to Theo’s words, but there is some possibility to what he is saying. Theo is one of the only ones who could have gotten both our DNA into that car after it had already been retrieved from the wreckage. “Why would he do it?” I ask again. “It still doesn’t make any sense.”