The S-Word
Page 1
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contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Acknowledgments
Readers Group Guide
About Chelsea Pitcher
For Chris
one
LIZZIE WASN’T THE first person to kill herself this year. Five months prior to her final ascension Gordy “Queerbait” Wilson hanged himself in his basement. Rumor has it he used the belt his father beat him with. For two hours he hung there, feet hovering above the ground, before Daddy came down the stairs in search of a cold one.
I guess that’s the difference between Gordy and Lizzie.
Lizzie didn’t go quietly.
I’m Angelina Lake. I was Lizzie’s best friend. We were inseparable, until she hooked up with my boyfriend at the prom. Maybe you’ve heard about it? Every jackass in the blogosphere had a field day with the story: Little Miss Perfect Steals Prom Queen’s Beloved. My Lizzie with my Drake. The whole school came to my defense. And while Drake got off with a boys-will-be-boys slap on the wrist, Lizzie became the Harlot of Verity High.
It started with a single word, painted in the corner of her locker. I was coming out of English when I saw it. It was the Monday after prom, and Mrs. Linn had asked me to run some papers to the office. I’d barely taken three steps when Lizzie’s locker caught my eye.
SLUT
The word was unmistakable. Even in tiny black writing, the marker stood out against the beige. I stepped up to it, running my fingers over the word.
SLUT
Why had they written this? Heartbreaker would have been a better word. Backstabber. But slut? Lizzie never touched anybody before Drake. She was Princess Prude.
Still, there it was.
SLUT
For a second, I thought about erasing it. I slid my nail across the S to see if it would chip. It didn’t, but I had plenty of pens in my bag. Three seconds and the word would be blotted out. Hidden, and even the vandal would forget. But if I left it there, and everybody could see it . . . well, how long before another one appeared?
Yeah, even then, I knew the word would multiply. I don’t know how. I could just feel it at the base of my neck, like fingers scratching me there. Warning me of what was going to happen.
The bell rang.
People poured into the hallway. My locker had been next to Lizzie’s all year, so no one batted an eye at the sight of me hovering there. Besides, most of us were still suffering from that two-day, post-prom hangover funk. Walking on shaky legs. Stumbling. Then everything went quiet, like all the oxygen had been sucked out of the hall. I knew people were watching me, even though my body blocked the graffiti.
I turned.
The hallway pulsed with bodies, but it didn’t matter. Lizzie’s were the only eyes I could see. It was the first time I’d seen her since prom night. The first time I’d looked at her since her limbs were entangled with Drake’s. Here she was dressed in a sweatshirt and jeans, quite the departure from baby-blue satin and ivory lace. She didn’t look like a princess anymore. Her eyes caught mine and we were frozen, both of us staring across the crowded hall, mesmerized by the wreckage of our friendship.
Everyone was watching.
My skin felt hot, and I didn’t want to move away from the locker, to reveal what was written there. Would she think I’d done it? Should I care? In the two days since I’d stormed out of the hotel room, leaving Drake to zip up his rented tuxedo pants while Lizzie tugged at the broken strap of her dress, I’d checked my phone a thousand times, waiting for her to explain.
Drake had called. Drake had apologized. Drake had begged for my forgiveness.
Drake had blamed Lizzie.
That’s when I told him to fuck off. It takes two to tango, and these two did way more than that. But my God, at least he’d called.
So there I was, mouth open, lips trying to form the word: Why?
Why hadn’t she called?
Why wasn’t she sorry?
I searched Lizzie’s face, trying to separate the image in front of me from my darkest memory. But everywhere I looked, I saw him. I saw his fingers tucking a strand of pale hair behind her ear. I saw him staring into her eyes, telling secrets. Did his lips trail in a semicircle around the curve of her chin, teasing and teasing until she gave in? Did they think of me at all?
I closed my eyes.
The movement hurt. My eyes stung, but it went deeper than that. I could barely swallow, my throat felt so sore. And Lizzie just stood there, pretty pink lips—kissable lips?—pursed in a frown.
Are you sorry?
I took a step forward. The crowd parted to let me pass.
Do you care?
Lizzie opened her mouth, as if to speak. But she must’ve thought better of it, because those kissable damn lips closed.
Or was I just the girl you used to get to Drake?
I tried to turn.
But I couldn’t. I was waiting for something. Maybe just for Lizzie to say my name. For godsakes, this was the girl who’d slept over at my house every Saturday since we were five, who’d held me when I cried over my parents’ divorce.
I tried to catch her eye. She studied the floor.
Lizzie, look at me.
Tell me you’re sorry.
Tell me you don’t hate me enough to hurt me this way.
Lizzie said nothing. When the tardy bell rang, she walked away. And as all the dramatic tension oozed out of the hallway, the onlookers left as well.
So did I.
Over the next few days, I checked my phone less and less often. My stomach didn’t drop quite so hard when I opened my locker to find no notes. A week went by, and still, Lizzie said nothing.
And when the second scribbling of SLUT appeared on her locker, I said nothing too.
IN THE WEEKS that followed, things got significantly worse for Lizzie Hart. Our once Untouchable Saint was now the Slut. And that word did exactly what I thought it would do. It multiplied, making little S-word babies. It spread to Lizzie’s notebooks, her book bag, even her car. It burrowed its way under her skin like a disease, poisoning her from the inside.
You could see it.
I could see it.
I said nothing.
Then someone created that playing card. You know, the one of Lizzie wearing nothing but a crown of stars? People passed it around and added little details. Some genius even came up with a title:
Lizzie Hart, Queen of Sluts.
That name followed her everywhere. I thought she’d never get away from it. But Queen Lizzie found a way. She did the one thing we never expected.r />
She died. And the S-word died with her.
Until today.
It’s the Monday after Lizzie’s funeral, two weeks shy of graduation, and someone’s written SUICIDE SLUT all over the senior lockers.
And the weirdest thing? The words are in Lizzie’s looping scrawl.
two
BY FOURTH-PERIOD LUNCH, everyone’s talking about the ghost of Lizzie Hart. A couple of girls from the Cheer Bears have gone home sick. Not that I blame them. They weren’t exactly sugar sweet after Lizzie got busy in the bedroom with my boyfriend. Dizzy Lizzie, Tizzy Lizzie . . . weird no one ever said “Busy Lizzie.” Maybe because the words don’t look like they rhyme.
My classmates aren’t exactly geniuses, you know?
Needless to say, I’m certain the deranged graffiti artist can be tracked down without the help of a ghost whisperer. I knew Lizzie better than any of these people; if she was going to rise from the grave, the last thing she’d do is make an appearance outside of English. I mean, seriously. Besides, I don’t believe in ghosts or gods or any of that imaginary-friend crap. (I’m not like her preacher daddy.)
A flesh-and-blood person is pretending to be her. Just like flesh-and-blood people ruined her life.
So let’s start with the obvious suspects, shall we? The ones I should’ve questioned when SLUT first appeared.
The easiest to track down will be Kennedy McLaughlin, head of the Cheer Bears and vixen extraordinaire—the only girl in our class to be branded with the S-word prior to seventh grade. Rumors have speculated that Kennedy would’ve been crowned Prom Queen if not for Lizzie’s prom-night tryst with Drake. According to some (Kennedy’s followers, no doubt), people only voted for me out of pity. Of course, with that logic, she should blame the school board too. All that funding poured into abstinence-only education, and they go and put prom in a hotel ballroom.
Half the senior class rented rooms.
Miss Popularity is found on the bleachers of the football field, positioned perfectly so the boys below can see all the way up her long, long legs, past the hem of her skirt, and then . . . nothing. Her legs cross at the thigh, cutting off the view just when it gets interesting. We girls learn early what to show and what to hide, to walk that tightrope between useless prude and usable slut.
Hooray for choices, right?
Kennedy’s surrounded, per usual, by her loyal subjects. Little gnats in cheering uniforms. Not to worry, I’m wearing mine under my jacket. It is Monday, and there is such a thing as tradition. Or maybe I’m just playing a part these days.
Kennedy dismisses her girls as I approach. The sea of red skirts parts to let me through. Some of the girls have on red-and-white-striped kneesocks. Others wear petticoats beneath their skirts. Once cheering season is over, we get pretty creative with the uniforms. I call this look Circus Freak Chic.
“We need to talk,” I say when the wave of girls recedes.
“No shit, honey bear.” Kennedy stands, smoothing her skirt, and I feel like I should bow or something. After all, the girl is gorgeous. With her bleached-to-high-heaven hair and candy-apple lips, she looks like a vampire who’ll suck the life out of you and make you like it.
Plus, she’s got that ass people rap about.
“You want to get out of here?” she asks, holding out a hand. I don’t take it. “You look like you need a drink.”
“What I need is a lobotomy.”
“That’s cute, Angie. Everyone’s really falling for the act. A little white makeup and you’ll be on the train to Teenage Gothica.” She tugs at my hair as we walk down the bleachers. Last weekend I dyed it inkblot black. I even gave myself Bettie Page bangs. And no, I didn’t ask the girls’ permission. So even though I’ve got legs up to my neck and blue eyes people describe as “startling,” I’ve gone and committed Cheerleading Sacrilege.
“Hope you’re not planning to strip me of my pom-poms,” I say with a gasp.
Kennedy sighs.
Together we snake through the park surrounding Verity High. I can see my breath on the air. Spring may have sprung in the southern parts of Colorado, but here in the Rockies it still feels like winter. I wrap my jacket tighter around me as we leave the campus behind. Nobody tries to stop us. Half the seniors have early release, and besides, security sucks at this school.
Even after everything that’s happened.
We’ve walked for two blocks in silence when the sight of the staircase, nestled cozily between buildings, makes me feel warm. We go down the stairs and into the dark. Inside the hidden café, fake candles emit a pathetic orange light. I’m pretty sure this place has used the same dingy cleaning rag since the seventies. But that’s okay, because they let you smoke inside, and you can set your flask in your lap and they pretend not to notice.
We order two mochas and sit in an all-wood booth. The place is pretty much deserted. Kennedy offers me her flask but I decline.
“Suit yourself.” She sets to work making a poor-man’s Spanish coffee. “I take it you’ve seen the writing?”
I peer at her through my lashes. Guarded, like I’m some sort of detective. (Yeah. Right.) “What do you care?”
Real smooth, Angie.
She gives me a look. “So I didn’t love the girl. I’m not heartless.”
“No one expected you to love her.”
“Sure they did. Everyone’s supposed to love fairy princesses.” Kennedy ties back her hair with a ribbon. God forbid a strand should slip into her coffee and soak up some alcohol. Miss McLaughlin makes every drop count.
“Is that why you treated her the way you did?”
Kennedy scoffs. “I was nothing but cordial to your little friend.”
“You were icy at best. And after prom, you acted like . . .”
“Like what?” She narrows her eyes. In the light of the low-hanging chandelier, those hazel irises look golden, like she’s lit up from the inside. “Like she hurt my friend?”
Like she was already dead.
But I don’t say it. I can’t say it.
“You acted like you hated her,” I say instead.
“I was angry with her,” Kennedy corrects.
“Angry enough to brand her a slut?”
She leans back, making room for the accusation. “The entire school did that, last I checked. Or maybe just Drake Alexander.”
At the mention of his name, my eyes close. Yes, I thought I loved him. Yes, I invented a future for us in my head. So what? I’ll get over it eventually. I have no choice.
“I need to know who’s responsible,” I say, and I hate how desperate my voice sounds. These days, I could cry at any moment. It’s humiliating. “Do you know who went after her—”
“Went after her?” Kennedy cuts me off. “Were there torches involved?”
“You know what I mean.” I shake my head. “The S-word could’ve showed up on her bedsheets for all I know. Can you imagine?”
“Yeah, I can actually. I got tits when I was eleven. That automatically labels you as easy.” She smiles smugly. “But you know that.”
I cross my arms over my chest. “It was worse for her.”
“Only because she was a late bloomer.”
“So you’re not the one who wrote it?”
“No. Wait—before or now?” Her eyes are narrowed into slits.
I shrug, all nonchalance. “Either.”
“Are you serious?” She jerks forward. “You think I’d do it now?”
“What’s the difference? It was mean before, and it’s—”
“Awful now. Sincerely fucked up, Angie. Only a deranged psychopath would write it now. In her handwriting.”
I lean back. It’s impossible to get comfortable in this booth, but I want to give her the illusion of space before I ask my next question. My eyes trail to the darkened room, the dust hovering above our heads, the lights that flicker if you look at them the wrong way. But I turn and catch her gaze when I say, “So you know what her handwriting looks like?”
She doesn’t e
ven bat an eye. “Anyone who sat close to her could have mimicked her writing. She was always scribbling in that little diary.” She rolls her eyes. It’s so dismissive I want to scream. “God knows why she brought it to school.”
“She didn’t want her dad to see it,” I say without missing a beat.
Kennedy pauses, dropping her gaze. It’s like it never occurred to her that Lizzie had a family. “Well anyway, her handwriting was no secret,” she says more softly.
“So anyone could imitate it?”
She nods.
“But only a psychopath would?” I ask.
“Yeah.”
Finally, I lean in. “What about before? Before she—”
“Before is different.” Kennedy brings her cup to her lips. “Like I said, now it’s deranged. Back then it was just . . .”
“Life ruining? Suicide inducing?”
She fishes for the dregs with her tongue. “High school.”
NEXT MORNING I get a big fat dose of high school when Mrs. Linn sends me on an errand during first period. I’m heading back from the office when I see the piece of paper stuffed into my locker grate, just below a fresh scribbling of SUICIDE SLUT. I pull it down and skim the writing. I skim it again. I’m skimming and skimming and I know people will be coming into the hallway soon, but I don’t tear my eyes from the page. Even in poor copy, the script is unmistakable.
The looping little ls.
Fairy wings around the occasional i.
Pretty enough to have been written by an actual fairy.
Lizzie’s perfect handwriting.
Lizzie’s diary.
September 17th
This year is going to be different.
(I know. I’ve said this before.)
But now I really mean it! No more cowering in the dark. I’m coming out of the shadows—and I’m ready to be seen!
Ready to be loved, if love is ready for me.
I’ve spent so much of my life keeping my affections a secret. Keeping myself a secret, afraid of what people would think of me if they knew the real Lizzie Hart. Would they hate me? Would they push me aside?