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‘Yeah,’ I said, ‘but some kids are bad and stay that way.’

‘I know.’

‘Tell me about what they did to Joel.’

‘After they took that picture of him, they posted it in the usual places, and then others reposted it, and before you knew it, everyone in the school, and probably thousands beyond, had seen it. Joel was humiliated. People wrote things like “faggot” on his locker. His home got egged. He didn’t come to school for a week. His parents threatened to sue the boys, their parents, even the school. Chandler and Michael agreed to a full public apology. They were required to put it all in writing. There was a face-to-face sit-down. Joel’s parents agreed to drop their threats of a lawsuit. Things settled down after that, but that hardly made up for what Joel went through. At one point, I’m told, he was thinking of taking his own life, he was so humiliated. I’m sure he’s getting some kind of counseling.’

‘Do you think the boys were genuinely remorseful?’

‘I’d like to think so,’ Lucy said. ‘I don’t think they foresaw how quickly things would get out of hand.’

‘No wonder you looked stunned at the idea that Joel would write a story for Chandler,’ I said, heading toward the address we had for the Blakelock home.

‘Even if Joel were able to find it in his heart to forgive them for what they did, it’s quite a stretch to think he’d help either one of them do their homework.’

‘Unless Chandler isn’t telling it the way it happened,’ I said. ‘Maybe he threatened Joel, intimidated him into doing it.’

But even if that were true, it didn’t explain the story’s content, or how prescient it was.

‘Who was the other boy?’ I asked. ‘How did this affect him?’

‘He couldn’t be seen in the picture,’ Lucy said, ‘and Joel never revealed who it was.’

‘You think it was another student from your school?’

‘Most likely. You’d think by now that people would have moved past this.’ She shook her head. ‘But you’d be so wrong. The country’s still split on same-sex issues. There are still people who think it’s a sickness or a choice. Some people are just born the way they’re born.’

There was something in the way she said it that suggested this was personal.

‘Is there someone close to you who’s gay?’ I asked.

Lucy glanced my way. ‘No, actually. I mean, I have a cousin. She’s gay, but she’s cool with it and doesn’t care what anyone thinks. It’s just I was thinking that so many of us are born wired a certain way. It’s who we are, and there’s nothing we can do to change it. Sexual orientation is just one thing. My daughter...’

When she didn’t continue after a few seconds, I said, ‘What about your daughter?’

‘Crystal. Her name is Crystal. She’s eleven. And she has... sometimes I don’t know if it’s a learning disability, or a tremendous gift. But she’s not like the other kids. She’s withdrawn, very much in her own world. And she draws all the time. Like comic books, or graphic novels they call them. She’s always escaping into her imagination.’

‘She sounds interesting,’ I said.

‘Yeah, well, she is that,’ Lucy said, and tried to laugh. She pointed. ‘I think the Blakelocks live just up here.’

‘Okay.’

‘You’re not talking to Joel without one or both of his parents there.’

‘Okay.’

‘I won’t let you badger him.’

‘Okay.’

‘I just wanted to make that clear,’ Lucy said.

‘Message received.’

Eight

I stopped out front of the Blakelock house just as two people were heading up the driveway. A boy and a girl. The boy was about five foot six and maybe, soaking wet, a hundred pounds. He had black hair swept across his head that obscured his forehead and most of one eye, and wore a simple white T and a pair of black pants with sneakers.

The girl looked big next to him, although she was probably no more than five-nine, maybe a hundred and fifty pounds. Her blonde hair was streaked pink and fell to below her shoulders.

‘That’s Joel and his older sister,’ Lucy said. ‘I can’t remember her name.’

The pair stopped and turned when they heard the car stop, and the passenger door open.

‘Joel,’ said Lucy.

The boy’s expression was blank, as though he didn’t even see her. The girl edged in front of him, as though running interference.

‘It’s me,’ she said. ‘Ms Brighton, from school.’

‘I know who you are,’ he said.

‘And you’re Joel’s sister, right? What’s your name?’

‘Franny,’ she said. ‘What do you want?’

I was slowly getting out the driver’s side. Franny fixed her eyes on me and said, ‘Who’s that guy?’

‘That’s Mr Weaver,’ Lucy said. ‘Joel, we need to speak to you for a minute. Are your parents home? Or at least one of them?’

‘What’s this about?’ Joel said, half behind his sister.

‘We’ve got a couple of questions.’

‘Is it about Michael Vaughn?’

‘Yes,’ she said.

‘Did you want to know if I was happy about him being dead?’

‘So you know.’

He held up his phone, which up to now I had not realized was in his hand. ‘Everybody’s talking about it. Someone even asked if I did it.’

‘God,’ Franny said. ‘People are just sick.’

‘Is that what you wanted to know? If I did it?’

‘No, Joel,’ Lucy said. ‘But there is something we need to talk about.’

‘Who’s that guy?’

‘Mr Weaver.’

‘Yeah, you said that, but who is he?’

Coming around the front of the car, I said, ‘I’m a private investigator.’

‘No shit?’ said Franny.

‘No shit,’ I said.

Lucy briefly shot me a look. ‘Is your mother home, Joel?’

‘Probably,’ he said. He nodded toward the blue minivan next to him in the driveway. ‘Her car’s here.’

Franny and Joel continued on to the front door and we followed. Joel didn’t get out a key, went straight in, followed by his sister.

Lucy put out her arm to stop me. ‘We’ll wait here.’

Like I was going to go barge in like I was part of a SWAT team. ‘Sure.’

About twenty seconds later, a woman came to the door. Late forties, round, hair so short it could have been a man’s military cut.

‘Yes?’ she said, and then, when she focused on Lucy, ‘Oh, hi.’

‘Hello, Ms Blakelock. This is Cal Weaver, who’s assisting me this afternoon. I need to ask Joel some questions, and I’d prefer it if you were able to be there.’

‘What’s this about? Is he in some kind of trouble?’

‘May we?’ she said, asking to be invited inside.

We were led into the kitchen, where Joel was already seated and waiting, a can of Coke in front of him.

‘What’s this about?’ his mother asked.

Joel shrugged. ‘I dunno. But I bet somehow it’s about Mike Vaughn.’

‘What’s that horrible boy done now?’ Ms Blakelock asked, her voice turning venomous.

Lucy said, ‘He’s dead.’

She whirled around. ‘What?’

Joel waved his phone. ‘It’s all over the place.’

‘Oh my God,’ Joel’s mother said.

Lucy, maybe seeking to make this meeting less confrontational, addressed her by her first name. ‘Alice, let’s sit down.’