getting tired . . .â
We were nose to nose. Straight nose. Square jaw. Clear eyes. Yes, I thought, yes, very cute. Cuteness confirmed.
âIâm going to try to find a way out,â I said breathlessly, twisting around. My task was made much harder by Celia, still trying to get Milesâs attention.
And also by the flicker of light behind Celia, the pungent smell of burning hair, and someone yelling, âYOUâRE ON FIRE!â
Chapter Fifteen
T he two seconds between the realizations that I wasnât on fire and Celia was were a very blissful two seconds.
Celia screamed and batted at herself, making it hard to see if the fire had caught her hair or her clothes or both. Someone ran up behind her and dumped a bucket of water over her head, dousing her. She stood motionless for a moment, the ends of her hair curled and black, her makeup running in streaks down her face.
âWHO DID IT?â
Everyone stared at her. Sheâd been sitting too far from the fire for it to reach her, hadnât she? The back of her sweatshirt was as singed as her hair. She didnât seem hurt, though. She seethed, eyes roving through the crowd, until she zeroed in on me.
I had my camera pointed at her. Iâd gotten it out before I realized that her burning hair was not a delusion.
âYou were right next to me!â she screeched.
I shoved my camera into my pocket and tried to retreat, but the bench hit the backs of my knees. âYou think I did it?â
âYou were RIGHT. NEXT. TO. ME. Who else?â
I donât know. Only the ten or so people behind you.
I stood there looking stupid, because thatâs what I do when Iâm accused of something I didnât do. Forget making a case or, you know, denying that Iâd done it.
Denying hadnât helped me in the past.
âOh my God, you did do it! What the hell is wrong with you?â Celia grabbed at the burnt tips of her hair, her face contorting in rage. She looked between Miles and me, then cranked her bitch level up to eleven. âYouâre jealous !â
I stared at Miles. Miles stared at me. We both stared at Celia.
âThe fuck?â Miles said.
Then Celia lunged at me, and everything fell to pandemonium. Someone pulled me over the bench and through the sea of bodies as everyone converged, ready for a fight. People were going every direction, yelling, screaming, the music suddenly louder than ever.
As soon as we broke free, I saw it was Art dragging mealong, his mammoth muscles straining against his shirt. I would have been thankful if it wasnât for the fact that he usually showed up when Miles was pulling a job. If Art had been there waiting to yank me out of harmâs way, then Miles must have been involved with the fire, right?
I set my jaw; as soon as we were back on the driveway, I yanked my arm out of Artâs grip, grabbed his huge shoulder, and spun him to face me. âDid Miles do that?â
âNo,â he said immediately. He scrubbed at his short hair.
The brush of invisible fingers crawled up the back of my neck. I jabbed a finger at him. âYou had better be telling me the truth, Art Babrow. Not just what Miles tells you to say.â
âScoutâs honor,â Art said, holding up his hand.
I didnât believe him. I couldnât. It felt like I had cotton packed down my throat. I was suffocating. I tugged on my hair with both hands, turned in a full circle to make sure there were no cameras on the houses or the lampposts, and set off down the sidewalk.
âWhere are you going?â Art called. âI know you didnât drive here yourself.â
âIâm going home!â I yelled.
Home. Home was good.
âIsnât your house a few miles away?â
âProbably.â
âThe fuck ,â someone said. The privacy fence gate clacked closed. âWhere are you going? I told you to keep her here.â
I looked behind me; Miles had caught up to
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