all interrupted.”

That got an eye roll from Kerns’s little brother. The Highlander peeled out with one of the kids throwing half a donut at my skateboard and “Sweet wheels, Spaceman.” Sager waited till they were gone. He headed into the school without looking at me.

“Sir?” I said. “Thanks.”

“What’d I tell you about calling me sir?” The rain was coming down harder. “Watch yourself, Nazzaro. You really want to find what you’re looking for?”

A few minutes later Nicole left Sabbatini’s office with a bulky plastic bag tucked under her arm. I stepped back from the glass door, hopped my skateboard and rode a curb rail in the vicinity of her car. “Hey.”

“Hey. Waiting long?” she said.

“Nah.” I kicked my board into a spin like the dude in Tony Hawk: Shred. I would have looked super-slick if I’d caught it with my hand instead of my chin. “So, that hurt.”

“Ooh. Icepack?” Nicole opened the car door and held up a stuffed CVS bag.

The Highlander was ripping up the road again, coming from the opposite direction. John Kerns and his crew slowed to a roll when they saw me talking with Nicole. Kerns had his phone out, clip in progress.

“Get in,” Nicole said, getting behind the wheel.

I’d checked the schedule, and the wrestling team was away on a meet two towns over, where Dave Bendix was likely grinding somebody through the mats into the floorboards. The meet would end in less than an hour. Dave would check his phone and find the link to the video mini-Kerns was recording. “Yeah, I better not,” I said, indicating the Highlander with a nod. “I don’t want Dave to get the wrong idea.”

“Right, so you don’t need to worry about that. David and I are over.”

“Sorry to hear that.”

“I promised my mother I’d be gone for forty minutes max, and if I’m late, she’ll freak and call the cops and put out an APB for me.”

I got into Nicole Castro’s car, eyeing the Highlander. It sped out of the lot.

“Mind holding this?” She handed me the Sabbatini package. Shaped like an Amazon box a foot wide and half as thick, it weighed about as much as a gallon of battery acid packed in on all sides by bricks of C-4 explosive. “When?” I said, my eyes on the package.

“When what?”

“When did you break up with Dave?”

“He broke up with me.”

“Are you serious? Why?”

“I saw you, Jay.” She geared the car. “At the media center window before. Watching me as I drove in.”

“So?”

“You wanted to meet at four.”

“Right.”

“Why not right when school ended?”

“Nicole, relax, I wanted to bang out my homework before we hung out.” This was true, too. I honestly spent about ten minutes on my calculus work sheet.

She looked at me over her glasses. “I have to ask you something.”

“This is going to hurt, isn’t it?”

“Are you a truthful person?”

I frowned. “Mostly.”

“Okay, that’s the right answer.”

“Stop.”

“Hitting too close to the bone, am I?”

“No, I mean stop.” I reached between the seats and jerked up the handbrake, but it only slowed the car when we needed to have stopped dead fifty feet back.

“Oh my god-” Nicole hit the brakes and the car fishtailed as a deer flew across the road. Another half second, and we would have clipped it. It was a doe, so no antlers, but she was big, and she would have totaled the car, rolling right up the windshield and into us. Nicole pulled over. “How’d you see that?” she said.

“In my peripheral. . Yeah.”

“It’s not true, you know? What they say about the eyes. You lose one, the vision migrates to the other? At least it hasn’t happened yet.”

The sunglasses weren’t helping her either. Sky darkened by thunderclouds, hundred-foot pines close to the road, heavy evergreen. Driving in the near dark with one eye? That sucks, if it’s even legal. “I meant to ask you if you were allowed to drive.”

“I had to take a vision test. I now have special accommodations.” She showed me her temporary license. In big black letters it said VISION IMPAIRED. “The real card is supposed to come in two weeks. The woman said it’s bright green with a red stripe.”

“Christmas all year round,” I said. Total idiot.

“Of course I’m not supposed to be driving unsupervised anyway.”

I knew that much. You had to be seventeen to drive without an adult in the car, but nobody followed that rule. You couldn’t. In Brandywine, if you didn’t drive, you were stuck with me, on the bus. “I’d offer to drive, but my only experience is Grand Theft: San Andreas.”

“And the forklift.”

“Tops out at five miles an hour. It’s a good ride, though. Come on down to work one day, we’ll take her out for a spin in the appliances aisle, blades high, ram a few refrigerators, get the adrenaline going before start of shift.”

She scanned the woods. “The doe.”

I checked the woods, following Nicole’s line of sight. The doe was grazing with her fawn. “She’s fine,” I said. “Not even close.”

Nicole broke down. She grabbed my hand. We sat there like that. A truck whipped past. The Subaru shook. She took her hand back. “Sorry.” She put the car into drive.

The package had been thrown to the floor when she stopped short. I picked it up, pretending to accidentally spill it. No wonder I’d thought it was shaped like an Amazon box: It was an Amazon box. It definitely weighed between twenty-five and thirty pounds.

“Death by chemistry,” Nicole said. “Check it out.”

I opened the box-slowly. Advanced Placement Chemistry, a Teacher’s Guide, last year’s.

I could scratch Sabbatini and Schmidt off my list. Add them to the Sager scratch-out and I’d knocked off three suspects in one day. Not bad. I was feeling relieved until I remembered I still had no idea who was after Nicole. The only specific people left on my list were Kerns and Dave, and both continued to be nowhere in terms of motive.

Nicole tapped the teacher’s guide. “How do you print a book twenty-eight hundred pages long? Murderers. How many trees did it take to make that?”

“Um, like, not even one. Just a guess.”

“At least break it up into chunks. No book should be longer than two hundred and fifty pages, ever. I’m supposed to lug that thing around?”

“Beats going to the gym,” I said. “They tell you to wipe the sweat off the machines with your towel, but all that does is spread the bacteria around. Even those sani-wipe things are only marginally effective. And then if you forget your flip-flops, you have to wear plastic bags on your feet. You have no idea what I’m talking about.”

“I can only assume you mean for the showers.”

“You assume correctly.”

“Do we have a little OCD working there?”

“A tinge.” I checked out the book. The student version had the answers in the back, but this one had them written out step-by-step. “Firing your chem tutor?”

“Total perv. Dude was always looking down my shirt. Besides, he quit.”

“You bummed him out because you’re smarter than he is. Hate when that happens.”

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