'What'd you guys do? Lower your heads and run at each other from opposite sides of the yard?' asked Meredith.
'Something like that. He says he's going to watch Vickie now.'
'Do you think we can trust him?' Meredith said soberly.
Matt considered. 'As a matter of fact, I do. It's weird, but I don't think he's going to hurt her. And if the killer comes along, I think he's in for a surprise. Damon's spoiling for a fight. We might as well go back to the library for Stefan.'
Stefan wasn't visible outside the library, but when the car had cruised up and down the street once or twice he materialized out of the darkness. He had a thick book with him.
'Breaking and entering and grand theft, library book,' Meredith remarked. 'I wonder what you get for that these days?'
'I borrowed it,' Stefan said, looking aggrieved. 'That's what libraries are for, right? And I copied what I needed out of the journal.'
'You mean you found it? You figured it out? Then you can tell us everything, like you promised,' Bonnie said. 'Let's go to the boarding house.'
Stefan looked slightly surprised when he heard that Damon had turned up and stationed himself at Vickie's, but he made no comment. Matt didn't tell him exactly
'I'm almost positive about what's going on in Fell's Church. And I've got half the puzzle solved, anyway,' Stefan said once they were all settled in his room in the boarding house attic. 'But there's only one way to prove it, and only one way to solve the other half. I need help, but it isn't something I'm going to ask lightly.' He was looking at Bonnie and Meredith as he said it.
They looked at each other, then back at him. 'This guy killed one of our friends,' said Meredith. 'And he's driving another one crazy. If you need our help, you've got it.'
'Whatever it takes,' Bonnie added.
'It's something dangerous, isn't it?' Matt demanded. He couldn't restrain himself. As if Bonnie hadn't been through enough…
'It's dangerous, yes. But it's their fight too, you know.'
'Darn right it is,' said Bonnie. Meredith was obviously trying to repress a smile. Finally she had to turn away and grin.
'Matt's back,' she said when Stefan asked her what the joke was.
'We missed you,' added Bonnie. Matt couldn't understand why they were all smiling at him, and it made him feel hot and uncomfortable. He went over to stand by the window.
'It
He talked on late into the night.
'… And so, ladies and gentlemen, I give you the class of '92!'
Bonnie threw her cap into the air along with everyone else. We made it, she thought. Whatever happens tonight, Matt and Meredith and I made it to graduation. There had been times this last school year when she had seriously doubted they would.
Considering Sue's death, Bonnie had expected the graduation ceremony to be listless or grim. Instead, there was a sort of frenzied excitement about it. As if everyone was celebrating being alive—before it was too late.
It turned into rowdiness as parents surged forward and the senior class of Robert E. Lee fragmented in all directions, whooping and acting up. Bonnie retrieved her cap and then looked up into her mother's camera lens.
Act normal, that's what's important, she told herself. She caught a glimpse of Elena's aunt Judith and Robert Maxwell, the man Aunt Judith had recently married, standing on the sidelines. Robert was holding Elena's little sister, Margaret, by the hand. When they saw her, they smiled bravely, but she felt uncomfortable when they came her way.
'Oh, Miss Gilbert—I mean, Mrs. Maxwell—you shouldn't have,' she said as Aunt Judith handed her a small bouquet of pink roses.
Aunt Judith smiled through the tears in her eyes. 'This would have been a very special day for Elena,' she said. 'I want it to be special for you and Meredith, too.'
'Oh, Aunt Judith.' Impulsively, Bonnie threw her arms around the older woman. 'I'm so sorry,' she whispered. 'You know how much.'
'We all miss her,' Aunt Judith said. Then she pulled back and smiled again and the three of them left. Bonnie turned from looking at them with a lump in her throat to look at the madly celebrating crowd.
There was Ray Hernandez, the boy she'd gone to Homecoming with, inviting everybody to a party at his house that night. There was Tyler's friend Dick Carter, making a fool of himself as usual. Tyler was smiling brazenly as his father took picture after picture. Matt was listening, with an unimpressed look, to some football recruiter from James Mason University. Meredith was standing nearby, holding a bouquet of red roses and looking pensive.
Vickie wasn't there. Her parents had kept her home, saying she was in no state to go out. Caroline wasn't there either. She was staying in the apartment in Heron. Her mother had told Bonnie's mother she had the flu, but Bonnie knew the truth. Caroline was scared.
And maybe she's right, Bonnie thought, moving toward Meredith. Caroline may be the only one of us to make it through next week.
Look normal, act normal. She reached Meredith's group. Meredith was wrapping the red-and-black tassel from her cap around the bouquet, twisting it between elegant, nervous fingers.
Bonnie threw a quick glance around. Good. This was the place. And now was the time.
'Be careful with that; you'll ruin it,' she said aloud.
Meredith's look of thoughtful melancholy didn't change. She went on staring at the tassel, kinking it up. 'It doesn't seem fair,' she said, 'that we should get these and Elena shouldn't. It's wrong.'
'I know; it's awful,' Bonnie said. But she kept her tone light. 'I wish there was something we could do about