“No, baby, I don’t think you had anything to do with what happened,” he said, trying for a smile but failing. “It’s late. Go upstairs. Things will be better tomorrow.”
For a moment, all I could do was stare at him in icy disbelief. Tears built in the back of my throat, and when I could move, I flew past him. I wasn’t sure what I was running from, but it didn’t matter where I went. What Mom had said haunted me as I stripped off my clothes and changed with shaky hands.
I sat down on the bed, pulling my legs up to my chest. Resting my head against my knees, I dragged in deep breaths that did nothing to quell the rising panic. Carson might have believed I wasn’t capable of such a thing, but what was I supposed to think when my own mother thought I was?
chapter twelve
Mrs. Messer had this thing with her glasses. She put them on when she started talking, took them off before she finished a sentence, and then nibbled on the temple piece. Within the first five minutes of our session on Wednesday, she’d already completed the cycle five times.
I slid down in the seat, smothering my yawn with my hand. She’d spent the better part of our time together checking over reports from my teachers.
She placed the papers in a folder and set it aside. “As expected, none of the teachers have any concerns. If anything, you’re actually paying more attention in class now than before.”
“Well, I guess that’s one good thing.”
Her smile was tight-lipped. “How’s everything been at home?”
I schooled my features blank. “Everything’s okay.”
On went the glasses. “Your mother contacted me yesterday. She’s concerned about how you’re adjusting to everything.”
Jerking up in my seat, I snapped my mouth closed. Mom hadn’t spoken to me since the blowup on Monday night. And I was okay with that. “She called you?”
“Yes. She’s worried that you’re having a hard time connecting things from before the … incident with your life now.” Off went the glasses. “Do you want to talk about it?”
My teeth ached from how hard I was clenching my jaw. “It’s more like she’s having a problem with the way I am now.”
Mrs. Messer nibbled on the end piece. “Something to do with a boy …?”
Heat swept over my cheeks. “I was eating ice cream with a boy and she freaked out.” I couldn’t believe my mom had called her! Mom hadn’t made good on calling an actual therapist, but telling the school counselor was bad enough. Gripping the arms on the chair, I took a deep breath. “I’m not the same person I was before the incident. And you know what? I think it’s a good thing. I was a complete and utter bitch before.”
Putting the glasses back on once again, her lips twitched as if she really wanted to smile. Not the fake, tight smiles she always gave me. “Well, if it makes you feel better, I did explain to her that she would see personality changes.”
“I bet she took that well,” I grumbled. “She thinks I’m …”
“She thinks what, Samantha?”
I started chewing on my thumbnail as my foot anxiously tapped the floor. The urge to spill my secrets came at me fast and hard, and I wanted to cave. “I don’t know. She’s embarrassed by me. I think she’s always been.”
“I’m sure that’s not true,” the counselor said, watching me. “Have you been able to recover any more memories?”
Focusing on the picture of the cherub-faced little boy in the photo on her desk, I gave a lopsided shrug. “Just bits and pieces, and they don’t make much sense. There hasn’t been a rush of memories, even though I’ve been doing like you’ve told me. I thought … I thought the news about Cassie would trigger something, but it hasn’t.”
“And how are you handling the news about Cassie? Do you still feel apathetic toward her?”
I hated it when she said things like that, even though I understood what she meant. My inability to recall the feelings surrounding my relationship with Cassie did make it hard to share in the grief everyone felt over her sudden death. “I’m trying to remember her.”
“That’s not what I meant,” she said.
Returning to my thumbnail, I refused to answer. “Can I ask you a question?”
Mrs. Messer nodded.
“Do people who start to get their memories back see … weird things?”
Her eyes blinked slowly behind her glasses. “What kind of weird things?”
I shrugged again. “I don’t know. Like just seeing weird stuff or hearing voices?”
She took off the glasses, folding them this time. “Some memories can come back in the form of voices or images that may seem strange. If you could give me an example …”
I waited for her to put the glasses back on or to chew on them, but when she did neither, I knew I’d thrown her off her game. Not good. Just from her lack of fiddling with her glasses, I guessed hearing and seeing weird things wasn’t normal.
When I didn’t elaborate, she moved on, but I knew she’d come back to it again, probably on Friday. “Cassie’s funeral is on Monday. That may be a hard … event for you—”
“Or maybe it will help me remember something.”
“Maybe,” she agreed, scribbling something down on her pad.
My session was over, and I had to hurry to my locker so I wouldn’t be late. The first thing I saw when I opened the metal door was a note, written on yellow paper, folded in a triangle. Looking around before I opened it, I made sure no one was lingering nearby.
These notes baffled me—hell, they frightened me. If it had been me … if I’d done something to Cassie and somehow hurt myself in the process, what explained these notes? What was worse? Being responsible for Cassie’s death or the possibility that the culprit was still out there? The same person who was stalking me with a never-ending supply of legal notepaper?
I didn’t have an answer. Sighing, I unfolded the note.
You know why she was at the lake.
Part of me wanted to laugh as I folded up the note, adding it to the other one in my bag, but a familiar unease coated my throat. Obviously I didn’t know why she was at the lake. Whoever was leaving these things needed to get a little clearer about my situation, which brought up bigger questions.
Who was leaving these notes, and how much did they know?
Closing my locker, I turned as Del rounded the corner and sauntered toward me. A little stab of guilt shot through me as I remembered how badly I’d wanted to kiss Carson.
Del wrapped his arm around my shoulders and kissed my cheek before pulling back, tugging lightly on my ponytail. “You look tired. Doing okay?”
I smoothed my hand over my hair self-consciously. “I really didn’t put much into getting ready today. …”
“It’s okay.” He wrapped his hand around mine as we started down the hall. “Everyone understands you’ve been through a lot, and with the news about Cassie, no one expects much.”
My brow arched, but I didn’t say anything. Stopping outside of my math class, he kissed me good-bye—this time on the lips. Not a bad kiss at all. It was warm and dry, soft. Even patient, but my toes still curled for all the wrong reasons.
Del pulled back, searching my eyes intently. “You sure you’re just tired?”
Mysterious notes, the possibility that I might have had a hand in what happened to Cassie, and crazy thoughts aside, I had serious boy troubles. As if my life couldn’t get more complicated, I was lusting after the wrong guy according to everyone else—my brother’s best friend—while my boyfriend patiently waited for me to snap out of it.
I needed to figure out how I felt about Del if there was any hope for us because stringing him along wasn’t fair. If I was no longer the girl who’d fallen in love with him, it wasn’t right to keep up this … this charade.