Six Little Secrets(6)



‘Teddy,’ Cece said. ‘Your name is on the other side.’

Teddy swallowed hard as if he expected the piece of paper to jump out and bite him.

‘Why does it have your name on it?’ Zoe asked. Her voice cut the air like a knife. It was the first time the others noticed she was in the room. But no one cut her off. They all wanted to know what was going on.

‘There’s more writing on the other side,’ Teddy said, his voice shaking.

‘What does it say?’ Q asked, leaning across the table.

‘Is this part of what that voice said?’ Jackie asked, her voice warbling slightly.

‘Should we read through all of these slips to make sure none of our names are on them?’ Cece suggested.

‘I’m pretty sure there would be another red one,’ Teddy said, licking his lips and swallowing hard.

‘How would you know?’ Holly asked accusingly.

‘Because this person wants us to find it,’ Zoe said. This had to be what the voice wanted. A shiver ran down her spine.

‘You all need to stop being so dramatic,’ Q said.

‘What does it say?’ Holly asked.

Teddy looked around at the group then down to the paper. He read it, his mouth silently forming the words.

‘The suspense is killing me,’ Q said with an eye roll.

Teddy jerked as if he forgot where he was.

‘Read it to us,’ Holly said.

‘Yeah, Teddy,’ Jackie said, leaning forward.

Teddy looked at Zoe for a moment. His face was ashen. What could he possibly be afraid of?

Teddy tore his eyes from Zoe and read the note aloud.





CHAPTER THREE




TEDDY



Five Days Earlier


Teddy closed his textbook and was out of his chair before the bell finished ringing. It was the first day of the week, and already he dreaded the rest. All he wanted to do was sleep. He had too much to do, though.

He wasn’t sure how Mom did it. Getting eight hours of sleep between two days made him completely zoned out, while she could go a week with that many hours. But she did what she had to do to make sure Teddy had everything he needed to succeed. At the same time, he worked hard both at school and outside to ensure he’d be able to return the favor to her someday.

Teddy was almost at his locker as his peers entered the hallway.

He picked up his pace.

‘Get out of my way, loser!’

He didn’t need to turn around to know who that was. Everyone knew that voice, even the terrified freshmen and stuck-up seniors.

Teddy glanced over his shoulder to see Jackie’s next victim.

It was Holly. The new girl.

Holly crossed her arms and lifted her chin to Jackie. But with Jackie’s friend’s right behind her, Holly didn’t stand a chance.

Teddy turned around and slammed right into someone.

‘Watch it!’ she said.

Teddy’s eyes locked on a pair of dark brown eyes. Ones that he saw in his dreams sometimes. But in his subconscious, they weren’t as sad. Or in that particular case, pissed off.

The roots of her natural hair were showing through the fading red strands. And her drastic haircut finally started to look somewhat normal.

He had some idea why she cut all of her hair off but never asked.

‘Sorry,’ Teddy said.

Zoe pushed passed him and down the hall.

He hung his head. After every interaction with her, he felt worse. There was so much he wanted to say.

His phone buzzed in his pocket. He waited until he got to his locker before he looked at it.

Pick me up at 4.

Teddy spun the combination on the lock. He was about to open it when someone touched his shoulder.

He flinched and whirled around.

‘Whoa!’ Kevin Jensen said, scratching at his acne-ridden cheek. ‘Didn’t mean to scare you.’

‘You didn’t,’ Teddy said. Without asking, he knew what Kevin wanted. It was the same conversation after each big exam.

‘What did you get on the test?’ Kevin asked, his mouth spread into a wide grin.

And Teddy went with his usual response. ‘That’s none of your business.’

‘Aw, come on,’ Kevin said. ‘I bet I got a higher grade.’

‘Ninety-five,’ Teddy said.

Kevin clicked his tongue. ‘I got a ninety-nine. You’re slacking.’

Teddy received a perfect score. He wanted to stick it to Kevin. Make him relax. Then Teddy could be valedictorian. His ticket out of this one-horse town.

‘I have to go,’ Teddy said. He didn’t have time for Kevin today. And he hoped to stop at home before meeting Declan. It was the only time he could see Mom.

‘Don’t study too hard,’ Kevin said with a laugh.

Teddy opened his mouth to say the first thing that came to his mind. He stopped short, not wanting to continue any conversation with his academic rival.

Another text from Declan came through.

I need some $$.

He sighed and pressed the HOME button. He clicked on his bank’s mobile app and made sure he had enough to lend Declan.

There was always enough, but knowing the exact numbers eased his mind.

He flipped over to his messages and responded to his cousin: I want it back in a week. Or I’m charging interest.

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