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Ouch. Spencer shot Amelia the nastiest glare she could muster. Way to ruin the moment.<br />

When she turned back to Zach, he pecked her politely on the cheek. “Call me. We should do brunch at the Rosewood Country Club. Tons of people have<br />

secrets there.”<br />

“Uh, absolutely,” Spencer said, trying not to sound disappointed.<br />

She walked to the front door, avoiding the patches of snow and ice on the sidewalk. As she fumbled for her keys, her cell phone chimed. She pulled it out,<br />

hoping it was a text from Zach. Can’t wait to see you without my sis next time, perhaps. Or, even better, I did want to kiss you. I hope I can soon.<br />

But it was a message from an anonymous sender instead. The schnapps immediately drained from Spencer’s head, leaving her feeling instantly sober.<br />

She looked around, searching for two eyes peering through the bushes, a figure moving through the trees. But there was nothing.<br />

She took a deep breath and pressed READ.<br />

Hey Spence. Everyone has secrets, indeed. And guess<br />

what? I know yours. –A<br />

Chapter 14<br />

Bffs 4-Evr<br />

On Wednesday afternoon, Emily stood in front of Steam. As usual, every stool in the café was taken. Naomi Zeigler, Riley Wolfe, and Kate Randall held<br />

court under the big Italian poster of La Dolce Vita. Kirsten Cullen and Amanda Williamson stood at the counter and argued over which cupcake they<br />

wanted to split.<br />

Students swept down the hall, heading to lunch or their next classes. First, Emily spotted Hanna through the crowd. She had a faraway smile on her face,<br />

seemingly oblivious to the people around her. Then, almost a split second later, Spencer rounded the corner, talking loudly to Scott Chin, one of her<br />

yearbook coeditors. “I had an amazing time at the Kahns’ smorgasbord last night, didn’t you?” she said.<br />

And next, possibly because Emily was thinking about her, Aria strutted down the hall, arm in arm with that new exchange student from Finland who was<br />

living with Noel Kahn.<br />

Not a single one of them glanced at Emily. The horrible A note in Ali’s mailbox seemed a zillion miles from their thoughts. Why couldn’t Emily forget about<br />

it, too?<br />

“Hey, Emily!”<br />

Chloe emerged through the clot of students. Emily waved. “Hey!”<br />

As Chloe ran toward her, Emily felt a happy rush. This was their first lunch together, but since Emily had visited Chloe on Monday they’d friended one<br />

another on Facebook, commented on each other’s posts, and had a lengthy IM chat last night before bed, gossiping about people in their classes,<br />

teachers to avoid, and the long-standing rumor about how the A/V supply room was where horny couples went to have sex.<br />

Chloe looked Emily up and down, a smirk on her face. “Now, where have I seen that outfit before?” She gestured to Emily’s Rosewood Day uniform plaid<br />

skirt and white blouse, then fingered her own identical blue blazer. “It’s so bizarre to go to a school that enforces uniforms. We look like members of a<br />

cult.”<br />

“I’ve had to suffer through it for twelve years,” Emily groaned. Then she turned toward the cafeteria. “You ready?”<br />

Chloe nodded, and Emily followed the crowd of kids into the cafeteria, which was rapidly filling up with students. As they walked through the food lines,<br />

Emily gave Chloe a brief run-down. “The sushi is good, but don’t get the chicken teriyaki—it comes out of a can.”<br />

“Got it.”<br />

Emily selected a Caesar salad and a package of pretzels and put them on her tray. “The pasta bar is okay, but for some reason only kids in band and<br />

orchestra eat pasta. No one else.”<br />

“What about soft pretzels?” Chloe pointed at the pretzel rack.<br />

“Pretzels are fine,” Emily said vaguely. Actually, the big soft pretzels used to be Ali’s signature lunchtime food in seventh grade. Once they became part of<br />

Ali’s clique, Emily, Aria, and Spencer ate pretzels, too, and lots of girls in their class copied them.<br />

A charred smell wafted out of the kitchen then, reminding Emily of the fire in the Poconos. Even though the flames had reached the tops of the trees, even<br />

though the police had sworn over and over that there was no way Ali could have survived the explosion, Emily still had a horrible feeling Ali had gotten<br />

away. The very night after it happened, she’d had a dream about finding Ali in the woods beyond her parents’ cabin, covered in burns. Ali had opened her<br />

eyes and stared straight at her. “You just dug your own grave, Emily,” she said laughingly, reaching out to claw Emily with catlike talons.<br />

“You coming?” Chloe called, staring at Emily inquisitively.<br />

Emily looked down. She’d stopped dead in the cafeteria line, lost in thought. “Of course,” she said, scurrying through the checkout.<br />

They found a seat by the windows. Pure white snow blanketed the practice fields.<br />

Chloe pulled out her phone and pushed it across the table to Emily. “Look at this picture of Grace. My mom sent it to me this morning.”

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