Remember Me
Page 25
I start to leave. “Good luck with running.”
“Wick.”
I don’t know what I’m expecting when I turn around, but it’s not the hunched figure standing in front of me.
“Be careful,” he says, his voice a flattened nothing. “One day you’ll look back on this and you’ll remember how good it was. We were a team.”
“We were never a team, Carson.”
He lifts one shoulder in a halfhearted shrug. “Then you’ll remember me telling you this: They’re coming for you, and without me, you’ll have nowhere to hide. It’s just beginning.”
“You’re wrong, Detective. It ends tonight. It ends just like this.” And I walk out the door.
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What Happened After
By the time I leave Carson’s, all hell has broken loose. The cops are pissed I disappeared. The EMTs are pissed I disappeared. Bren has left me four voice mails because, due to someone’s infinite wisdom, she was notified and she’s pissed I disappeared.
I drive straight to the Fayette County hospital and plead a head injury.
Ten minutes later, I’m admitted. Twenty minutes later, the cops I ditched show up.
You’d think we’d all be happier to see each other.
Not.
The doctors keep me overnight in the hospital, and when I wake up, it’s so quiet, I think I’m alone . . . then I see Bren. My smile has never hurt so much and it is so worth it. She’s worth it. I escaped. It’s over.
But when I reach for Bren, she recoils.
“What are you?” she breathes.
My skin crawls. “Nothing.”
“You’re lying.”
We study each other, Bren using silence as a leverage that will never work on me. I know how this game is played. I’ll wait. Even if the silence drowns us.
Bren touches her fingertips to her lips, chin. “You didn’t find him on a hunch, did you?”
She should be talking about Bay or Ian or Jason. She’s not. She’s talking about Todd.
“You tracked him down,” Bren continues softly. “You hunted him.”
Him. Her husband still turns soft in her mouth, like Todd’s living under her tongue.
Stick to the story, Wick. That’s what is in the police report. That’s what you have to say. But, right now, I can’t say anything. For the first time, I want the words and I don’t have them. I want to explain and I can’t.
I look at her. “He deserved it, didn’t he?”
“Yes.” The word escapes on a hard exhale. Bren stands up, starts to pace.
“It isn’t like what you’re thinking.”
“Then what’s it like?”
I study the blanket . . . the hospital ID tag. Now is the time to say something and I have nothing.
“That’s what I thought,” Bren says, and I feel her take one step back. Two. Her breathing has gone shallow and loud. “Then it’s true? That you’ve been entrapping people online? You’ve been breaking the law? Why would you do that?”
How could I not? I don’t say that though. How do I explain that I lived in the dark so they could stay in the light? How do you explain that?
You don’t.
So I let Bren think I’m deranged. Damaged.
It might be pretty damn close to the truth anyway.
As long as we’re on the subject of truth, Ian and Jason came clean the night they were arrested. Technically, Jason confessed first: why he killed Lell (to save her from Kyle), why he killed Kyle (to keep him from Lell). His love and his hate seem so sound-bite tidy when the police explain it like that. Everyone nods and I have to struggle not to gag.
The boys partnered with each other for the money—and also to get revenge on the father they hated. Kyle, for all his imperfections, was the judge’s favorite child, the one who would inherit everything, the one who was openly praised, the one who was noticed.
Jason was at the party to see Ian when I roofied him, a mistake that made Jason see me as a loose end and Ian see me as his own. This actually came up with the cops—how I roofied Jason. He told them all about it and he might’ve had something there too since Ian backed his story, but Bren swore I never left her side during the party. I still don’t know if she lied for me or if she just didn’t remember. Either way, Ian won’t see the outside of a prison cell until he’s old enough to retire and Jason won’t be too far ahead of him.
Bay lived. For a while, we were a few doors away from each other at the hospital. Then he was transferred to a rehab center with promises that he should be able to go home soon. As far as I know, he never did. The house was repaired and went up for sale. He retired—effective immediately—from his position. He moved. No idea where. I guess I could find out if I wanted. I like pretending he disappeared though. It’s almost as good as pretending the whole thing never happened.
In the end, Bren checks me out of the hospital once both doctors (the first opinion and the second opinion) say I’m good to go. We go home and nothing’s the same. Part of me mourns it. Another part of me thinks everything is just so much easier now. There’s less need to include me. Less pressure to be perfect.
Less notice when I slip away.
I don’t remember who I am anymore, who I’m supposed to be. Sometimes I go back to my old neighborhood and stare at our house. I’m not sure how I went from the girl who lived there to the girl I am now. Did it happen when Carson started blackmailing me? When Todd preyed on Lily? When Tessa jumped?
Or when my mom did?
I don’t know. I don’t know that I’ll ever know, but I do understand this: I’d struggled to survive for so long, I didn’t recognize when I was safe. I won’t make that mistake again.
Funny how safe brings me to Milo, isn’t it? The boy has a thing for explosives. How does that make anyone feel safe? Milo knows something’s wrong and even though I don’t tell him . . . well, I’m sure he’s figured out things aren’t so great at home. I think it makes him try harder with me. Some days I’m grateful because it makes me feel like I’m still here. I still exist.
Other days . . . I wish he wouldn’t because this isn’t who I want to be.
Naturally, Milo disagrees. He thinks we’re brilliant together. I think we’re dangerous. We’re too alike. There’s nothing noble, nothing good about either of us.
Except it feels awfully good when we’re together.
What else? Oh, Carson’s still gone. No one knows where he went. Agents from the ATF and NSA are searching for him and he must have better skills than I would have given him credit for because they’re coming up empty-handed.
It’s an interesting development—not interesting enough to keep my days from stretching into one long smear though. I open my hacking-for-hire business again. Not because I have to; because I need it.
I need something to distract me from Lily’s anger, Bren’s watchful eyes, and the voice mail from my dad. He called one day while I was in the shower, left a message saying, “You owe me.” The old Wick would’ve puked. The new Wick . . . well, I replayed the voice mail twice and thought, Maybe. He’ll have to catch me first.
Tough words considering it kick-started another round of insomnia. I’m barely sleeping and, when I do, I dream of Joe. I wake up at two or three in the morning drenched in sweat, skin slippery as blood. I don’t feel bad—I don’t—but his murder left a stain.
I just need some time for everything to settle. Only it doesn’t, because I come home from school one day to find Bren waiting for me in the living room. There’s a guy with her, and even before he turns around, I know him. Maybe because part of me has been waiting for this.
Officer Hart—only it isn’t “officer,” is it? That suit and tie look like Fed—stands next to our couch, and when I step closer, he comes forward, ready to shake my hand.
“I’m so glad to meet you, Wicket. Your mom’s tol
d me all about you.”
I glance at Bren and my eyes snag on her hands. They’re clasped in front of her chest like she’s praying . . . or holding herself down.
“Wick,” Bren begins. “Considering some of the . . . difficulties you’ve been going through, Dr. Norcut recommended we contact Mr. Hart. He runs a program for at-risk youth, for teenagers dealing with loss. We want you to go. We think you need the help.”
She’s sending me away? It nearly kicks my legs out from under me. I straighten. “I think I’m doing fine.”
Bren’s mouth thins. “I’ll give you two a moment then.” She pushes off the couch, pawing her eyes. My skin goes hot then cold. She’s . . . leaving me.
Like an idiot, I open my mouth, snap it shut. That won’t work. I don’t know the words to bring her back even if I can name all my feelings—another gift from Norcut. There’s hurt and horrified . . . and hate.
I face Hart. This feels like a game, and when I see the way he grins, I know somehow I’ve lost.
“I was so looking forward to meeting you properly, Wicket. You have exceeded every expectation we could dream of.”
“Oh yeah?”
“We want to help you. We’ve seen what you can do, how determined you can be when properly motivated.” He lifts his brows like my biological mother is a punch line he’s waiting for me to get. “What you did with those video clips of your mother? Excellent job. I’ve enlisted dozens of kids over the years. Your results were the best.”
The best? My throat closes. I did an excellent job by following their clues? Or by taking down Joe? I’m not sure, but, suddenly, I feel very used . . . and afraid. What did Carson say? That he was protecting me from people who were worse? So that means . . . ?
“No smile?” Hart sighs and his eyes pull at the corners with some emotion I won’t name. “Let’s be friends. We’re the good guys, Wicket. Trust me.”
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Acknowledgments
[TK—please allow two pages]
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About the Author
ROMILY BERNARD lives with her partner in Atlanta, riding horses and working in corporate law. You can visit her online at www.romilybernard.com.
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Also by Romily Bernard
Find Me
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Copyright
HarperTeen is an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.
REMEMBER ME. Copyright © 2014 by Romily Bernard. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
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