for company or a hand to hold.
âFine, if you insist,â Helen Davis said. âSend the girl.â
* * *
HARRY McKENNA DECIDED HE WANTED CARLIN lin as soon as he spied her in the doorway to the library one rainy afternoon. In the low branches of a weeping beech, there sat a pair of phoebes, birds who mate for life and sing an uncommonly tender song. Most birds hide in the rain, but not these phoebes, and the girl with the green eyes was pointing them out to Gus Pierce, who had somehow managed to be lucky enough to be there beside her at the moment when Harry first saw her.
Carlin was laughing, unaware of the rain; her hair was damp and silvery. Harry knew right then that he had to have her, never doubting for a moment that like everything else he had ever wanted, sheâd be his before long. He began to attend swim meets, watching from the bleachers, applauding her efforts with such vigor that before long everyone on the team was whispering about Carlinâs not-so-secret admirer. In the dining hall, he watched from a nearby table, his interest so apparent and scorching that girls all around him wilted from the heat.
âYouâd better watch out,â Gus Pierce said to Carlin when he observed Harry McKenna. âHeâs a monster.â
But of course, as soon as she heard that remark, Carlin did what any sensible girl might have done and looked for herself. She expected to find some leering creature, but instead she caught sight of the most beautiful boy sheâd ever seen. Yes, sheâd been aware that someone had been rooting for her at swim meets, and sheâd known that someone had been following her, and sheâd surely heard Amy and Pie gossiping about her Harry, how gorgeous he was, how unattainable. But Carlin had had her share of admirers and she hadnât paid the slightest bit of attention to this one, until now. She smiled at Harry McKenna for an instant, but that one look was enough to assure him that with the right amount of patience and fortitude he would get what he wanted.
Harry had always been well versed in seduction; he had a gift for such things, as though heâd been born with compliments tumbling from his mouth. Already, heâd been through the prettiest of the senior and junior girls. There were girls whose lives he had ruined, and those who persisted in calling him long after his disinterest was evident, and still others who waited steadfastly for him to return and be true. He was bored by such girls and primed for a challenge, and it amused him to wait for Carlin outside the gym. When she came out with her teammates, there heâd be, so obvious in his intentions that the other girls would elbow one another and trade jealous remarks. Before long, Carlin had begun to walk back to St. Anneâs with him. They held hands before they looked into each otherâs eyes; they kissed before they spoke. It should not have brought Carlin pleasure to know how the other girls at St. Anneâs envied her, and yet it did exactly that. Her skin flushed prettily whenever she felt their resentful eyes upon her. If anything, she had become even more beautiful. In the dark she was luminous, as though sheâd been ignited by the other girlsâ spite and lust.
Of course, she told Harry nothing of her real background; he had no idea that she hadnât the money for a cup of coffee at Selenaâs, had barely enough for books, and that her wardrobe was sorely lacking. She had no decent socks, no winter clothes, no boots. Sheâd been forced to take Miss Chaseâs suggestion and had begun to work for Miss Helen Davis, twenty hours a week of shopping, cleaning, and running errands. As for Miss Davis, she found that having Carlin around was not as dreadful as sheâd imagined it might be. This particular girl was quiet and quick. Unlike most of the spoiled students at Haddan, she knew how to use a mop and a broom. Carlin had begun to fix Miss Davisâs
Nancy Herriman
Alexander Gordon
Sara Shepard
David A. Adler
Marisa Silver
D. H. Cameron
Susan Meier
Gakuto Mikumo
Terry Deary
Lyn Gala